#770: Elizabeth Gilbert — How to Set Strong Boundaries, Overcome Purpose Anxiety, and Find Your Deep Inner Voice AI transcript and summary - episode of podcast The Tim Ferriss Show
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Episode: #770: Elizabeth Gilbert — How to Set Strong Boundaries, Overcome Purpose Anxiety, and Find Your Deep Inner Voice
Author: Tim Ferriss: Bestselling Author, Human Guinea Pig
Duration: 01:58:11
Episode Shownotes
Elizabeth Gilbert is the #1 New York Times bestselling author of Big Magic and Eat, Pray, Love. Her latest novel, City of Girls, was named an instant New York Times bestseller. Go to ElizabethGilbert.Substack.com to subscribe to “Letters From Love with Elizabeth Gilbert,” her newsletter, which has more than 120,000
subscribers.This episode is brought to you by: Momentous high-quality supplements: https://livemomentous.com/tim
(code TIM for 20% off)ExpressVPN high-speed, secure, and anonymous VPN service: https://www.expressvpn.com/tim
(Get 3 extra months free with a 12-month plan)AG1 all-in-one nutritional supplement: https://drinkag1.com/tim
(1-year supply of Vitamin D (and 5 free AG1 travel packs) with your first subscription purchase.)Timestamps: [00:00] Start[00:07:14] No cherished outcomes.[00:12:27] Self-compassionate ownership of responsibility.[00:17:24] The daily practice of writing letters from love.[00:23:54] Two-way prayer vs. one-way prayer.[00:32:29] The male approach to this practice.[00:35:59] How do you feel toward yourself vs. about yourself?[00:38:25] Understanding self-hatred to foster self-friendliness.[00:44:52] Setting boundaries and dealing with those who refuse to honor them.[00:51:47] Why (and how) Elizabeth avoids big family holiday gatherings.[00:53:47] Comfort in solitude.[00:55:10] Much abuzz about Elizabeth's new 'do.[00:59:24] Boundaries, priorities, and mysticism: a relaxed woman as a radical concept.[01:05:34] What mysticism brings to Elizabeth's reality.[01:08:58] A better question to ask than "What do I want?"[01:11:04] Elizabeth's hard-ass approach to project commitment.[01:18:12] Creativity guidance from Elizabeth's higher power.[01:22:40] How The Morning Pages influenced Eat, Pray, Love.[01:25:59] More productive questions to ask than "Why?"[01:27:48] The pointlessness of purpose anxiety.[01:32:31] Balancing presence with other aspects of a well-lived life.[01:37:49] Comfort with mortality.[01:41:53] What motivates Elizabeth's Letters from Love newsletter?[01:43:01] What can potential readers expect from this newsletter?[01:48:05] "Is the universe friendly?" — Frederic W. H. Myers[01:51:01] Parting thoughts.*For show notes and past guests on The Tim Ferriss Show, please visit tim.blog/podcast.For deals from sponsors of The Tim Ferriss Show, please visit tim.blog/podcast-sponsorsSign up for Tim’s email newsletter (5-Bullet Friday) at tim.blog/friday.For transcripts of episodes, go to tim.blog/transcripts.Discover Tim’s books: tim.blog/books.Follow Tim:Twitter: twitter.com/tferriss Instagram: instagram.com/timferrissYouTube: youtube.com/timferrissFacebook: facebook.com/timferriss LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/timferrissPast guests on The Tim Ferriss Show include Jerry Seinfeld, Hugh Jackman, Dr. Jane Goodall, LeBron James, Kevin Hart, Doris Kearns Goodwin, Jamie Foxx, Matthew McConaughey, Esther Perel, Elizabeth Gilbert, Terry Crews, Sia, Yuval Noah Harari, Malcolm Gladwell, Madeleine Albright, Cheryl Strayed, Jim Collins, Mary Karr, Maria Popova, Sam Harris, Michael Phelps, Bob Iger, Edward Norton, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Neil Strauss, Ken Burns, Maria Sharapova, Marc Andreessen, Neil Gaiman, Neil de Grasse Tyson, Jocko Willink, Daniel Ek, Kelly Slater, Dr. Peter Attia, Seth Godin, Howard Marks, Dr. Brené Brown, Eric Schmidt, Michael Lewis, Joe Gebbia, Michael Pollan, Dr. Jordan Peterson, Vince Vaughn, Brian Koppelman, Ramit Sethi, Dax Shepard, Tony Robbins, Jim Dethmer, Dan Harris, Ray Dalio, Naval Ravikant, Vitalik Buterin, Elizabeth Lesser, Amanda Palmer, Katie Haun, Sir Richard Branson, Chuck Palahniuk, Arianna Huffington, Reid Hoffman, Bill Burr, Whitney Cummings, Rick Rubin, Dr. Vivek Murthy, Darren Aronofsky, Margaret Atwood, Mark Zuckerberg, Peter Thiel, Dr. Gabor Maté, Anne Lamott, Sarah Silverman, Dr. Andrew Huberman, and many more.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy
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Summary
In this episode of The Tim Ferriss Show, Tim interviews bestselling author Elizabeth Gilbert, delving into key themes such as setting strong boundaries, overcoming purpose anxiety, and connecting with one's inner voice. Gilbert discusses the importance of approaching relationships without unspoken expectations, explores self-compassion and emotional independence, and highlights the transformative practice of two-way prayer. She emphasizes the need for self-love, especially in navigating personal challenges and societal pressures, ultimately encouraging listeners to embrace the present and prioritize personal well-being over external validation.
Go to PodExtra AI's episode page (#770: Elizabeth Gilbert — How to Set Strong Boundaries, Overcome Purpose Anxiety, and Find Your Deep Inner Voice ) to play and view complete AI-processed content: summary, mindmap, topics, takeaways, transcript, keywords and highlights.
Full Transcript
00:00:00 Speaker_02
Hello boys and girls, this is Tim Ferriss.
00:00:01 Speaker_02
Welcome to another episode of the Tim Ferriss Show, where it is my job to interview people from all different disciplines, all different walks of life, to tease out the habits, routines, thoughts, lessons learned, and so on that you can apply to your own lives.
00:00:12 Speaker_02
My guest today, one of my favorites, Elizabeth Gilbert. She is the number one New York Times bestselling author of Big Magic and Eat, Pray, Love, as well as several other international bestsellers.
00:00:23 Speaker_02
She's been a finalist for the National Book Award, the National Book Critics Circle Award, and the Penn-Hemingway Award.
00:00:29 Speaker_02
Her latest novel, City of Girls, was named an instant New York Times bestseller, a rollicking, sexy tale of the New York City theater world during the 1940s.
00:00:38 Speaker_02
You can go to elizabethgilbert.substack.com to subscribe to Letters from Love with Elizabeth Gilbert, her newsletter, which has more than 120,000 subscribers. You can find her on Instagram at Elizabeth underscore Gilbert underscore writer.
00:00:53 Speaker_02
But first, a few quick words from our lovely podcast sponsors who make products and services that I use. Every day, or every week, I personally vet everything.
00:01:05 Speaker_02
And that means that probably less than 20% of the podcast sponsors who wish to sponsor the show end up sponsoring. But I'm fine with that, and here are the few that made the cut.
00:01:16 Speaker_02
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00:01:29 Speaker_02
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00:03:03 Speaker_02
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00:06:30 Speaker_02
At this altitude, I can run flat out for a half mile before my hands start shaking. Can I ask you a personal question?
00:06:36 Speaker_01
Now is the appropriate time.
00:06:38 Speaker_00
What if I get the opposite? I'm a cybernetic organism living this year over a metal endoskeleton.
00:06:45 Speaker_01
Me, Tim, Ferris, Joe.
00:06:53 Speaker_02
Liz, it's so nice to see you. Thanks for taking the time.
00:06:55 Speaker_00
It's so nice to see you. It's so nice to be back talking to you. I love it.
00:06:59 Speaker_02
We both did something quite similar. You went back and listened to our last conversation, which I just had a blast recording with you. And I went back and I read all of the summary notes that I had from that last conversation.
00:07:14 Speaker_02
And before we started recording, you mentioned a few things. One, that the very last thing that you mentioned in that conversation will dovetail nicely into some of what we'll talk about today. And that'll be just a bit of foreshadowing for folks.
00:07:29 Speaker_02
So we won't go into that first. But secondly, I asked if you had any particular hopes for this recording and asked what would make it a home run or time well spent.
00:07:42 Speaker_02
And one of the things that you said, and this, so I suppose broadly what you said too, is you had no cherished outcome.
00:07:50 Speaker_02
And I like that phrasing, and I was hoping to hear you expand on that a bit, because I think it might be good medicine for a lot of what ails me.
00:07:59 Speaker_00
Oh, God. I mean, it's already a home run just getting to sit here and talk to you. And I know it hasn't been easy for our schedules to figure out when we can do this. So I'm just happy and relaxed to be here.
00:08:12 Speaker_00
And I'm also not concerned that you and I will ever have any trouble finding things to talk about. So that was part of it. But the no cherished outcome is actually a line from a translation of a Celtic poem. And it's called the Celtic poem of approach.
00:08:27 Speaker_00
And as well as I understand it, these are lines that were spoken when you're meeting new people and when you're moving out of one area into another tribe's area or you're, you know, you're going to be interacting with people in a new way.
00:08:41 Speaker_00
This beautiful poem of approach that I really love, and I'm probably not going to get the whole thing right, but it says something like, I will honor your gods. I will drink from your well. I bring an undefended heart to our meeting place.
00:08:55 Speaker_00
I will not negotiate by withholding. I am not subject to disappointment. I have no cherished outcome.
00:09:02 Speaker_02
And how do you apply that then to your own lives? What led you to hold on to that particular piece?
00:09:09 Speaker_00
It's my highest aspiration that that poem and that spirit is the foundational agreement of all my friendships. And I say those words, I have no cherished outcome, a lot. to my friends, and I hope that I mean it.
00:09:26 Speaker_00
And when I start feeling hurt or resentful or excluded or misunderstood, I'm like, sometimes the only way you can find out that you had a cherished outcome is when you didn't get it.
00:09:39 Speaker_00
Like sometimes I discover that where I'm like, I think I'm just easy breezy and I'm just hanging out. And then I'm like, oh, I had a secret hidden cherished outcome because something didn't happen that I wanted. And now I'm all like bent about it.
00:09:52 Speaker_00
So now I get to examine my resentment and ask myself whether I really want to honor I have no cherished outcome or whether I want to sulk. I seem to be better at no cherished outcome in friendships than I am in romantic relationships.
00:10:07 Speaker_00
Almost the minute a relationship becomes a romantic relationship, I have a list as long as my arm of cherished outcomes, and all of a sudden I can be disappointed, and all of a sudden I don't bring an undefended heart to our meeting place.
00:10:20 Speaker_00
But with friendships, which I have over time discovered to be actually the true loves of my life, I seem to be a little bit better at taking responsibility for myself and trying not to put outcomes on people.
00:10:33 Speaker_02
Why do you think that is, that there is such a difference for you between the number of cherished outcomes you might hold in romantic relationships versus friendships? Is it because, at least culturally speaking here in the US,
00:10:49 Speaker_02
There aren't as many stories or scripts related to friendships versus romantic partners, or would you explain it a different way?
00:11:03 Speaker_00
My thing has always been, and this is why it's been so interesting for me being single and celibate by choice over the last five years, there's nobody to blame, which is so great.
00:11:14 Speaker_00
And I think that it's that the minute somebody is attached to me as my partner, I do this weird outer body thing where I hold them responsible for whatever mood I'm in. And so if I'm feeling great, it's because they're the greatest.
00:11:30 Speaker_00
And if I'm feeling terrible, it's because they're the worst. And it's so unfair.
00:11:35 Speaker_00
And one of the really beautiful and educational things about spending a lot of time alone is like, oh, these mood cycles and these depressions and these euphorias are happening.
00:11:44 Speaker_00
This is like a weather system that's happening that isn't related to anybody. And it turns out all those years when I was analyzing those poor people in my relationships and holding them to account for the fact that I felt kind of not right,
00:11:59 Speaker_00
You know, it was like, oh, I haven't been with anybody in five years and I felt not right when I woke up this morning and there's no one to pin it on. It's so great. I love it. It's like, I love not having anyone to pin it on.
00:12:10 Speaker_00
I hate pinning things on people, but I don't seem to know how to not do it once we're in a romantic relationship. Should come with a warning.
00:12:18 Speaker_02
Yeah, a lot in life should come with a warning. So I have quite a few follow-ups, but I'm going to try to put them in some semblance of a coherent order.
00:12:25 Speaker_02
So my first question related to that is how do you think about responsibility or ownership for yourself in the sense that, or I should say rather what prompts that question is I was having a conversation with
00:12:36 Speaker_02
An executive coach recently, Jerry Colonna, actually, who's, I think, very good at what he does, former, very top-tier investor, who has a lot of questions I return to, one of which is, how are we complicit in creating the conditions we say we don't want?
00:12:51 Speaker_02
But in this- Such a good question.
00:12:53 Speaker_00
It's a really good one.
00:12:54 Speaker_02
It's a really good one. Wow. But the one I wanted to apply here was more a comment he made to me because I was talking about taking a radical ownership of things and seeing my role in just about everything. And he said, well,
00:13:07 Speaker_02
Taking responsibility for everything can be as bad as taking responsibility for nothing.
00:13:12 Speaker_02
And so I'm wondering, when you wake up and the weather system is dark and stormy, how do you work on yourself without picking on yourself, if that makes any sense?
00:13:21 Speaker_00
Oh, that's such a good question. God, I love that question, how are you complicit in, what, can you say it again?
00:13:27 Speaker_02
Yeah, how are you complicit in creating the conditions you say you don't want?
00:13:31 Speaker_00
Wow, another word for that is who are you blaming your life on today? Well, I think the only honest and humble answer that I can give to that question is I don't know.
00:13:41 Speaker_00
And I don't know where that line is, but it's easier for me when I'm not in a relationship. And it's simpler for me to say, okay, I can take some accountability for my own weather system.
00:13:56 Speaker_00
But as you say, I don't want to beat myself up about having weather.
00:14:00 Speaker_00
And I have to constantly remind myself that, I mean, I think the most compassionate thing that I say to myself or I hear said to myself all the time from a more loving presence is it is a very difficult thing to have a human incarnation.
00:14:16 Speaker_00
This is not an easy ride. Even a good life is a hard life. And it's so weird, it's so profoundly weird to be a consciousness dropped into a particular body, dropped into a particular family.
00:14:34 Speaker_00
arriving at a particular moment in history, like with, it's so strange. It's like, you know, I think I probably, I'm sure you, oh, I don't want to project this on you, but maybe you had this experience as a kid.
00:14:48 Speaker_00
Like, I remember as a kid looking at myself in the mirror and being like, I'm in here. Like, it's so weird.
00:14:55 Speaker_01
Yeah.
00:14:56 Speaker_00
What am I doing in here? And all of that is out there, and I'm in here. Something's inside of this experience, and it's really hard. So I think you have to start with that. Who told you you were supposed to get it right straight out of the gate?
00:15:09 Speaker_00
Who told you you were supposed to get it right seven out of seven days, or that you're constantly supposed to be improving like a Fortune 500 company, constantly going in this upward angle direction a certain percentage every quarter?
00:15:23 Speaker_00
There's billions of systems operating within your body alone. Hormonal systems and chemical systems and viruses and bacterias, like we're such a complex mechanism. It's so hard to figure out how to operate one of these things.
00:15:36 Speaker_00
And then just when, like I do really well in solitude, like I can get this thing humming. Like I can get this machine and this mind and this heart where it is like we are at a beautiful hum.
00:15:47 Speaker_00
But the instant you throw another complex human mechanism into my field, you know, then I've got to like adapt to their chemistry and to their, like, it's hard. I don't know. And I think it's hard is a really good way to start with self-compassion.
00:16:03 Speaker_02
So that it's hard. You, you did a retake a few moments ago where you said, one of the things that I say to myself, and then you corrected that and said, one of the things that I hear, why did you change that?
00:16:17 Speaker_00
Because I believe that I am loved beyond measure by magnificent, complex, amused God who has given me power over practically nothing. And really, like, very little that I have control over.
00:16:37 Speaker_00
But what tiny amount I have control over is extremely important. It reminds me of something a friend of mine who was a physicist said one time, that very little of the universe is matter. Very little. But what there is, is very important.
00:16:51 Speaker_00
And it's like that, I think, with control and power. I have very little control, have very little power, even over my own mechanism and my own being. But what little agency I have, I think it's important to use it well. But anyway, I...
00:17:06 Speaker_00
talk to that presence all the time. And I am in a nearly constant dialogue with it, and I hear it talking to me. So that's why I say I hear a loving presence saying, it's really hard, it's really hard. Like, I'm not telling you this should be easy.
00:17:24 Speaker_02
How long has that been the case? Is that a development in the last handful of years, decade? Has it been true since you were a kid?
00:17:31 Speaker_00
It's deepened. I think one of the things I'm so lucky about, my friend Rob Bell once said to me, you're so lucky you didn't grow up with an enforced religion. And I'm so fortunate about that.
00:17:41 Speaker_00
I went to church, like a nice little mellow New England church most Sundays as a kid, but I don't recall anybody talking about God that much. It was more of a social gathering.
00:17:54 Speaker_00
I think New Englanders are a little bit reticent in terms of being too heavy on the message. We sang songs and made crafts, and I don't remember it having very much to do with God. But I had a God awareness that was very powerful in me.
00:18:11 Speaker_00
And I remember going to the National Cathedral on a school trip when I was 10 in Washington, D.C. And yeah, I grew up on a farm, so I grew up with very rustic architecture.
00:18:21 Speaker_00
And to go from, I mean, that cathedral did what cathedrals are meant to do to medieval peasants to me. It put me into an awestruck state.
00:18:31 Speaker_00
And I remember coming home and wanting to replicate that state and trying to figure out if I could build a cathedral in my bedroom with like, stuff from my dad's woodshed and my mom's sewing kit. Like, I really did try it.
00:18:43 Speaker_00
I'm like, how do you make that? How do you make something that feels like that? And I think writing for me and my pursuit of writing and the arts was always driven by this sense of awe and wonder and mystery that something was moving through me.
00:18:56 Speaker_00
That was probably my first direct communication with it. But for the last 20 years, I've had a practice nearly every single day of writing myself a letter every morning from Unconditional Love, which is kind of a God presence.
00:19:11 Speaker_00
It's a bit more specific, the Unconditional Love thing, because I think God is more than that. But that's where I also hear direction and guidance and humor. Yeah, I need a very funny God. I'm not going to do well with a God that's too serious.
00:19:28 Speaker_00
I need a God who thinks I'm funny, like who thinks I'm adorable and funny. Like I need that. I can't be too beaten up by a higher power.
00:19:36 Speaker_02
How did you start that practice? When did it start or even begin germinating?
00:19:41 Speaker_00
It started in desperation when I was in my, going through my first divorce. I was 30 and the well laid out planned life that I had created very obediently, like I had done just what my culture had told me to do.
00:19:59 Speaker_00
I got married at 24 and worked hard and bought a house and made a plan to have a family. And then instead of having a family, I had a nervous breakdown, like quite literally. Everybody was moving in this one direction and my entire
00:20:16 Speaker_00
intellectual, spiritual, and physical system collapsed, which I now know, I now see that as an act of God. I now see that there is sort of the Tao, you know, that there is a force that was trying to communicate to me, this is not your path.
00:20:31 Speaker_00
I will kill you before I let you do this. I will kill you before I let you be a suburban housewife. I'm not allowing it. I will make you, put you in so much physical pain that you're gonna have to notice that this is not, the life for you.
00:20:44 Speaker_00
But I was also in so much shame of failure and letting people down and like, we just bought this house. Like, I just felt like the biggest asshole in the world.
00:20:54 Speaker_00
Like, I don't know why I can't just get in line and do this thing that everybody's saying to do. Anyway, that marriage ended and then I threw myself into another relationship and that ended.
00:21:05 Speaker_00
And I was like, I don't know how to orchestrate my life at all. And nothing, here I am 30 years old and nothing is what I had planned it to be five years ago.
00:21:14 Speaker_00
And I was in the deepest depression of my life and I didn't have much of a spiritual life at that point. But I remember waking up one night and just shame and getting an instruction. I mean, that's the only way I can explain it.
00:21:27 Speaker_00
And I comfortable with that language because I often have that happen in my creative life where I'm told what to do. This is what you're going to focus on. Here's what you need to do now.
00:21:37 Speaker_00
And I was given this instruction and it came in as clearly as I'm talking to you. And it said, get up, get a notebook and write to yourself the words that you most wish that somebody would say to you.
00:21:48 Speaker_00
because there was a great loneliness that I was feeling too, as well as the shame. And that letter began, you know, what that letter said was, I've got you. I'm with you. I'm not going anywhere. I love you exactly the way you are. You can't fail at this.
00:22:05 Speaker_00
Like you can't do this wrong. I don't need anything from you. This is a huge thing. to hear. I don't need anything. Talk about no cherished outcome. I don't need anything from you. You don't have to improve. You don't have to do life better.
00:22:21 Speaker_00
You don't have to win. You don't have to get out of this depression. You don't have to ever uplift your spirits. You could end up living in a box under a bridge in a garbage bag, spitting at people. and I would love you just as much as I do now.
00:22:38 Speaker_00
The love that I have for you cannot be lost because it's innate, it's yours. I have no requirements for it. And if you need to stay up all night crying, I'll be here with you.
00:22:50 Speaker_00
And if tomorrow you have a garbage day again because you've been up all night crying, I'll be there for that too. I'll be here for every minute of it. Just ask me to come and I'll be here with you.
00:22:59 Speaker_00
And the astonishing thing was that it, like even talking about it now, I can feel the impact that it has on my nervous system to hear those words, even in my own voice. And it was the first experience I'd ever had with unconditional love.
00:23:14 Speaker_00
I'd never heard anybody say, like, you don't need, I don't need you to be anything. You don't have to do better. Like, this is fine. This is great. You on the bathroom floor in a pile of tears, it's not, it's great. It's great. That's fine.
00:23:28 Speaker_00
We love you just like that. And that's so nourishing because it's so the opposite of every message that I've ever heard. And so I started doing that practice and it's taken me through.
00:23:38 Speaker_00
I've never had difficult times in the last 20 years, but I've never gone as low again as I went at that time because this is the net that catches me routinely before I can get that low. And that voice doesn't change.
00:23:55 Speaker_02
All right, this is getting into the juicy bits that I love to wade around in. So to follow up, you've helped a lot of people now draft or attempt to write similar letters. And I'm wondering a few things.
00:24:12 Speaker_02
You can answer these in any order you want, or you can take it in a different direction. One is if there are ingredients that seem to work better than others. Because everything seems to take practice, maybe these letters are no exception.
00:24:24 Speaker_02
The second is, do you find that people with some religious orientation or spiritual orientation towards a greater power have an easier time writing this?
00:24:38 Speaker_02
In other words, if the letter is from this power to yourself almost versus being from another version of yourself to yourself, does it differ in impact?
00:24:49 Speaker_00
I found out that what I was doing, there's a name for it, and it's actually a long spiritual tradition for people to do things like this, but it's a practice that's very common in 12-step recovery, and it's called two-way prayer.
00:25:05 Speaker_00
So it's essentially two-way prayer. So I call it love, but sometimes I call it God. For a lot of people, that word God is a weapon.
00:25:15 Speaker_00
I mean, especially people who grew up in what are called high-demand religions, or who grew up in really oppressive religious cultures, or abusive religious cultures, or for whom they simply cannot stomach that word, like obviously don't use that word.
00:25:29 Speaker_00
But two-way prayer, so one-way prayer is what most people are taught as prayer, which is a supplication. Get down on your knees. And I had done that in my life and like beg for help.
00:25:41 Speaker_00
But sometimes you spend so much time begging for help, you're not actually listening.
00:25:47 Speaker_02
Yeah. Too busy saying Marco to hear the polo.
00:25:49 Speaker_00
Yeah. I was like, Marko, Marko, Marko, Marko, Marko, Marko, Marko, and God's like, can I just, can I get, can I get, can I just, there's something I want to say.
00:25:59 Speaker_00
And so I would suggest if people are interested in this, you can look up two-way prayer because there are a lot of people teaching it, and they have made a sort of What were you saying? Is there like a practice or like instructions?
00:26:14 Speaker_00
Like they have found that certain things work really well. So I'm sort of quoting from kind of two-way prayer theory on this. The first one is that you can open up the channel by reading something. So go to a quiet place.
00:26:29 Speaker_00
Although at this point I've done it so long, like I can do it in an Uber, you know, but like go to a quiet place. and read something that to you feels holy. So it doesn't have to be any official religious text.
00:26:44 Speaker_00
Poetry works for me better than scripture, so the poems of Hafiz or Rumi or Mary Oliver or Walt Whitman, You know, I kept like letters, Song of Myself from Walt Whitman, which is essentially just a big letter from love.
00:26:58 Speaker_00
You can just open that up to any page and you read some of it. And I feel like those writers had direct access to the divine and they left the door open when they died, right? So you can just draft in on the sense that they create.
00:27:11 Speaker_00
So you read something that opens your heart in some way. And then you ask one question and one question only. It's not a deposition. And it's not a dialogue because the ego always wants a dialogue.
00:27:26 Speaker_00
Like the ego always wants, I feel like if I could reduce my ego down to two words, it would be, yeah, but. Like, it's always got a follow-up question.
00:27:35 Speaker_00
It's like, well, yeah, but you say, yeah, but you say that you love me, but yeah, but, you know, and it's like, part of the reason that two-way prayer is so beautiful is that you ask the question and then you stop talking.
00:27:45 Speaker_02
You get your opening statement.
00:27:47 Speaker_00
Right? And your opening statement is, dear love, what would you have me know today?
00:27:53 Speaker_00
And then the other thing that I've seen suggested in two-way prayer practice, and this kind of came intuitively to me, but I see that it's taught this way when people teach it, is the first line back to you from the divine should be an endearment, an affectionate nickname, my love, my child, my sweetheart, my little one.
00:28:13 Speaker_00
I hear little one a lot, my little one. my angel honey head. I've seen some of my friends have like tiny turtle penguin cheeks, you know, like some sort of like endearment.
00:28:26 Speaker_02
I'm stuck imagining what penguin cheeks look like.
00:28:30 Speaker_00
They're adorable. And that's very hard for some people because the idea of turning toward yourself as though you are worthy of endearment can be really hard for especially perfectionists and the most driven among us.
00:28:45 Speaker_00
Like you didn't earn, how did you earn sweet love? You didn't earn that. But this is a kind of love that doesn't have to be earned. So you start with that. And then, so the way I did it, the first night I did it was I literally just wrote
00:28:59 Speaker_00
what I wish somebody would say to me. And that's pretty straightforward as an instruction because you know what you wish somebody would say to you. You know how you want to be loved. You know how you want to be loved.
00:29:13 Speaker_00
It's right there, like, you know what you're dying for? We all know what we're dying for. Whether it's mother love or the missing father or the partner or the, like somebody who's just like, I've got you, I see you.
00:29:24 Speaker_00
I see you, I love you, you're amazing to me. I see that you're suffering, I'm with you and you're suffering. And then you just write that. But over time, what I think people will find, one of the biggest questions people have is like, well,
00:29:40 Speaker_00
It just feels like it's just me writing to me. It feels super artificial. I don't feel like I'm hearing God's voice.
00:29:46 Speaker_00
I don't feel like I'm believing that there's this eternal source in the universe that's completely loving and unconditionally adores me. I just feel like I'm doing this exercise of just writing words to myself.
00:29:59 Speaker_00
And that doesn't feel spiritual, and it doesn't feel rich, and it doesn't feel real. And the question I have heard is, what's so bad about that? What if it is just you? What if all it is is just you writing to yourself from a kinder voice within you?
00:30:14 Speaker_00
Wouldn't that be worthy enough to be slightly life-changing besides the terrorist who lives inside your head constantly telling you how you failed? Like, why not change the channel in your own head?
00:30:28 Speaker_00
And if that's all it is, and what if God is just the most loving voice inside your own head?
00:30:32 Speaker_02
Hmm, this makes me actually flash back to our last conversation because we have some proof for this in a different form, which is morning pages from The Artist's Way and Julia Cameron.
00:30:46 Speaker_02
Just getting your monkey mind on paper, even if it's actually the terrorist, can be incredibly powerful. And one of my friends, I remember he tried it for the first time for a week and he said he's very high functioning, works with
00:31:02 Speaker_02
a lot of household names I won't mention, but he said this is the closest thing to a magic trick, a real-world magic trick that I've ever come across.
00:31:09 Speaker_02
So that question, what if it is just the kindest voice in your head, I think helps to diffuse maybe the pressure that people would apply to themselves when trying this for the first time.
00:31:25 Speaker_02
And as you were talking about the very first example you gave, I was thinking, and I think this might have been Chip Conley, could have been someone else who said this to me, but that happiness is reality minus expectations.
00:31:34 Speaker_02
And I was like, there are a lot of ways to play with that collection of variables. One of which is saying, hey, you've already passed the grade. You could be under an overpass and that's acceptable, that's okay.
00:31:47 Speaker_02
You don't have to be that Fortune 500 company compounding it X percent per quarter. Yeah, yeah.
00:31:57 Speaker_00
Because you know those people, and I know those people, and I don't know that it's such a gentle, loving life that they're leading.
00:32:05 Speaker_02
Yeah, I think I know one of them intimately. I mean, at least somebody who kind of assumes that's the baseline minimal acceptable outcome, right, is, and life just doesn't seem to work that way. It's not linear. Even if you are,
00:32:24 Speaker_02
improving over time, but applying that pressure sometimes handicaps improvement in the first place. So question for you, this occurred to me and it may be a dead end, but I'm wondering, have you seen any difference in
00:32:39 Speaker_02
how men approach this or have challenges with it versus women or no difference? Is it kind of the ubiquitous set of challenges when you look at the number of friends, listeners, readers, et cetera, who have attempted this?
00:32:54 Speaker_00
It's hard to know because women tend to follow me more than men do, but I've invited a number of men. So every week, so on my sub stack, I share a letter from love that I've written, and then I invite a special guest to do it.
00:33:07 Speaker_00
And I've invited a number of men. I'm thinking right now about my friend, Arshay Cooper, who's such an extraordinary guy. He grew up on the South side of Chicago in, an absolutely bullet and drug-ridden ghetto, black, underprivileged, underserved.
00:33:25 Speaker_00
He's the subject and the producer of a gorgeous documentary called A Beautiful Thing. And he wrote a book by the same title. And when he was in high school with like no future,
00:33:37 Speaker_00
some guy showed up in his high school hallway with a rowing machine and was like, I want to start like the first black rowing team or the first black crew. Do any of you guys want to do it? And he was like, yes, I absolutely want to do it.
00:33:51 Speaker_00
And he now has become this ambassador teaching rowing all over the world in South Africa. And his letter from love that he shared is one of my favorite ones that I've ever that I've ever seen.
00:34:03 Speaker_00
His letter was addressed to that little boy who he was, who saw more violence before he was eight years old than most people on tours of duty in Afghanistan had seen, and how tenderly that child needed to be treated.
00:34:21 Speaker_00
and watching him, you know, this like athlete, this motivational speaker, this great leader, like turn toward himself or have love turn toward him in such a tender and intimate way was so moving, but he was open to it.
00:34:36 Speaker_00
He allowed that vulnerability to come through.
00:34:42 Speaker_02
Just a quick thanks to one of our sponsors and we'll be right back to the show. About three weeks ago, I found myself between 10 and 12,000 feet, going over the continental divide, carrying tons of weight, and I needed all the help I could get.
00:34:54 Speaker_02
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00:35:59 Speaker_00
There's something that I've learned in IFS, internal family systems therapy.
00:36:04 Speaker_02
Yeah, I was just going to bring that up. The hive mind is working.
00:36:08 Speaker_00
It all works within IFS too, but one of the things they say in IFS a lot is a prepositional change. How do you feel toward yourself versus how do you feel about yourself?
00:36:18 Speaker_02
May I just give a little bit of context for folks? So IFS for people who don't know, it's somewhat strangely named.
00:36:23 Speaker_02
So internal family systems can be thought of as, and please fact check me, I did an episode with Dick Schwartz for people who are interested, but parts work in the context of different parts of yourself.
00:36:37 Speaker_02
So you might have protectors, you may have exiles, these aspects of yourself that you have pushed away or compartmentalized in some way. and you facilitate dialogue between and among these different parts for the purposes of therapy.
00:36:53 Speaker_02
And it can be very, very powerful. So I just wanted to give people a little bit of context.
00:36:56 Speaker_00
Beautifully described, yeah. I've heard it described as group therapy for one. And he actually, Dick Schwartz, who founded it, started off as a group therapist.
00:37:06 Speaker_00
And when he started doing individual therapy, he was like, oh, this is just like group therapy. We've got voices yelling at each other inside this person who don't know how to communicate with each other, right?
00:37:16 Speaker_00
So yeah, that's a really beautiful summation of what it is, but the difference between even, I mean, try it, Tim, actually, can you feel the difference physically between if I ask you how you feel about yourself and how you feel toward yourself?
00:37:30 Speaker_02
That's totally different, right? Because toward yourself, I'm taking a friendly observer perspective.
00:37:37 Speaker_00
There's an empathy, right?
00:37:39 Speaker_02
And how do you feel about yourself also is so familiar linguistically. that it overlaps with a lot of the negative tracks that I already have had in my head, whereas how do I feel towards myself, that's not a construction I use.
00:37:54 Speaker_02
So it benevolently hijacks the whole thought process.
00:37:57 Speaker_00
Instantly. You know, you ask me how I feel about myself, I'll show you a list of everything that needs improvement, you know, and I'm wired to constantly be self-improving, and I'm sure you are too. How do I feel toward myself?
00:38:08 Speaker_00
I'm like, oh man, you're tired. Like you've got this chest cold you've had for seven weeks. You're finishing this project that's huge. You've got a lot on you, like honey. Yeah, it's hard. You're having a hard time, like it's hard.
00:38:22 Speaker_00
Suddenly it's like I'm a very different person toward myself.
00:38:25 Speaker_02
Let's actually hop from that. I'll mention one thing, then I wanna hop to something related, which is self-friendliness, and how you think about it, how others might think about it.
00:38:35 Speaker_02
I just want to say, in connection with IFS, and also a number of other workshops and seminars that I've done, I have not written a letter from love in the way that you describe it exactly, but I did write a version of it that sounds actually very similar to the last example you gave.
00:38:53 Speaker_02
And this is done in a fair amount of parts work is, you know, what would you say to X, which could be, I'm making this up, but like fear of inadequacy, at what age, right? How old are you?
00:39:03 Speaker_02
Five-year-old Tim, okay, what would you say to five-year-old Tim? So I have written letters to a younger version of myself and found it to be incredibly powerful.
00:39:15 Speaker_02
I mean, this was years ago that I did it, and it still sticks in my mind, and I remember a lot of the language that I used. But the question of self-friendliness sort of broadens and includes a lot of what we've been talking about already.
00:39:26 Speaker_02
Could you speak to self-friendliness in whatever way makes sense to you?
00:39:32 Speaker_00
Yeah, I mean, we always talk about self-love, but that's kind of lofty. And I think you could just start by being a little friendlier. You know what I mean? Like, just how about the common courtesy you would show to a stranger on the subway?
00:39:44 Speaker_00
Like, let's start with that. Like, just common human decency. So there's a story that I'm so moved and disturbed by it. So Sharon Salzberg, do you know Sharon Salzberg, the meditation teacher? So she met the Dalai Lama, and she's written about this.
00:39:58 Speaker_00
She met the Dalai Lama on his first visit to the West. And she was in a group of people who were the first Americans, North Americans to meet him. And it was at a time when nobody really knew who he was. He wasn't like the rock star who he became.
00:40:12 Speaker_00
He's this obscure Tibetan monk. And of course it took place somewhere in California and there were some academics in the room and some spiritual writers and teachers and meditators and this sort of elect group of people who were coming to meet him.
00:40:26 Speaker_00
And he was speaking through a translator because he didn't speak much English at the time. And somebody in the room asked him what Tibetan Buddhism and his teachings have to say about self-hatred and how to combat self-hatred.
00:40:41 Speaker_00
And don't you know that man had to talk to his translator for like 15 minutes and kept asking for the question to be repeated. He didn't understand the question.
00:40:55 Speaker_00
He kept thinking that he was mishearing the question, because he kept saying, wait, who is the enemy? Who's the person that you're having trouble with?
00:41:01 Speaker_00
And of course, being like Calvinistic Westerners in the room, raised on scarcity and, you know, your never enoughness and original sin, everybody in the room was like, no, I'm the one I hate. You know, and he was like, this doesn't even make sense.
00:41:20 Speaker_00
Like what you're saying doesn't even make sense. And when he finally grasped not only that he understood that person's question and what they were talking about, but that everyone in the room shared this problem, he was so devastated.
00:41:33 Speaker_00
And he said, I used to think that I had a really good understanding of the workings of the human mind, but this is new to me and this is very disturbing. Like, this is not okay. And essentially after that, he said, this is where we're going to start.
00:41:49 Speaker_00
And then that's basically what he became his mission in the Western world. And it's interesting, I was talking about it with Sharon Salzberg the other day, and she was saying, in Buddhism, they say,
00:42:00 Speaker_00
You know, that one of the things, if you want to evolve, is that you have to be less precious to yourself. You have to think of yourself as being less precious.
00:42:07 Speaker_00
But she said, in the West, we haven't even gotten to the point where we think we're precious yet to let go of it. She's like, I think we first have to find our preciousness. And then we can let go of it and then we can evolve.
00:42:21 Speaker_00
But if we don't even know that any of us, anything about us is precious, that's already a problem. And when the Dalai Lama started teaching people how to love themselves, he would say, talk to yourself the way your mother would talk to you.
00:42:33 Speaker_00
And then he found out about some of our moms and he was like, okay, grandmother, like he was just scratch that. He was like, has anybody ever said a kind word to you? You know, like it was, you know, and it really spotlights
00:42:46 Speaker_00
this sort of terrible dysfunction that we all kind of collectively have grown up in.
00:42:51 Speaker_02
Have you found other ways to counteract that outside of the letter writing? Are there any other practices or recommendations for people who are experiencing this? Many of whom are experiencing it secularly, right?
00:43:08 Speaker_02
They may experience it in the absence of a religious upbringing, as would be the case for me. Any other recommendations or thoughts?
00:43:17 Speaker_00
You just made me realize I didn't answer your second question about whether people who have some sort of religious or spiritual basis find this easier. Not necessarily, because some people still are praying to what James Joyce called the hangman god.
00:43:30 Speaker_00
And you're not gonna get a letter of unconditional love from the hangman god. You're gonna get a list of complaints about things that you need to do better. So sometimes those people have a really hard time doing it.
00:43:40 Speaker_00
There's one man I asked to do this, to write a letter from love, and he's a very well-known figure in the world. I'm trying to think how to not identify. I'm not even going to say more than that. But he's somebody who's very admired and is very good.
00:43:54 Speaker_00
And he had the most surprising response of people who have said no. Most people say no because they're either afraid that they're going to ask love to show up and love isn't going to show up. And that would be more painful than not asking.
00:44:07 Speaker_00
Or they feel like it's too vulnerable to expose themselves like this. He said no because he said, I have a feeling I know what unconditional love is going to say to me.
00:44:16 Speaker_00
It's going to say, you're trying too hard and you're doing too much and you don't have to try this hard and do too much, but I don't want to be let off the hook.
00:44:24 Speaker_00
because I want to keep aspiring to go further and higher, and I don't want to hear a voice that tells me that I'm okay just the way I am. I'm afraid that will make me stop. And I was like, oh honey, who hurt you?
00:44:38 Speaker_00
Oh dear, you can still do things, but might it not be nice to also hear that something loves you even as you're aspiring? You know, anyway, it was just, that was interesting. Sorry, but you had a second question.
00:44:52 Speaker_02
Yeah, well, the question was, I suppose, related, and that is, outside of writing this letter you've described, what other approaches or habits, anything at all, have you found helpful or seen helpful for others in counteracting self-antagonism, right?
00:45:10 Speaker_02
So fostering self-friendliness, in other words.
00:45:14 Speaker_00
Boundaries is what comes to mind, and some really hardcore ones, like- Makes me think of our mutual friend, Martha Beck. Yeah.
00:45:24 Speaker_02
Who you've known a lot longer than I have. Tell me what made you think of her for that. Well, the integrity cleanse.
00:45:30 Speaker_00
Yeah.
00:45:31 Speaker_02
Just checking in. I know we discussed it last time, but setting a timer to check in every 30 minutes to see if you're lying.
00:45:37 Speaker_00
If you want to even be in this conversation.
00:45:40 Speaker_02
Right. If your sister's like, yeah, you're coming over for the baby shower. You're like, oh, I'd love to beep, beep, beep. Like, no, actually, I really have zero interest.
00:45:51 Speaker_00
There are people who I am not skilled, this is how I word it, because I want to keep it on me. I'm not skilled enough to be able to hold my serenity when I'm around them.
00:46:01 Speaker_00
I lose the hard-earned peace that I try to generate every day through meditation and through two-way prayer and through the way that I live. I'm constantly trying to bring myself to a level of kind of humming nicely along.
00:46:17 Speaker_00
And there are certain people who I, Man, I just can't do it.
00:46:20 Speaker_00
And I think my younger self was spiritually ambitious enough that I was like, if you were a better human being, then you would be able to jujitsu your way through this, or you would compassion your way through this, or you would accept your way through this.
00:46:34 Speaker_00
And I'm at an age now at 55 where I'm like, no, I just can't do, I can't. Like I come home sick when I'm around those people. Like, I lose my attainments when I'm around those people, and it's not friendly for me to be around people who are cruel.
00:46:52 Speaker_00
And when I'm around people who are cruel, I become unwell, and I also then have to use something to, like, I get so dysregulated. Yeah. Like, I get, like, there's certain people, I'm around them, and it's like, I wanna have a drink.
00:47:11 Speaker_00
Like, I wanna have a drink, call a phone number I shouldn't dial, like, start smoking and driving fast, you know? Like, this dysregulates me so much, and it's just, it's not kind to myself to put myself in those situations again and again.
00:47:24 Speaker_02
So how do you or how have you created boundaries or put those relationships on probation or otherwise?
00:47:34 Speaker_00
I'm trying to think how to describe it that doesn't get to revealing too much personal stuff. I'm not here to say it's easy, but I do feel a sense of stewardship toward myself. And, you know, I mean, it's hard. I'll tell you this.
00:47:51 Speaker_00
I did an event with Rachel Cargill, the great writer and civil rights activist a couple of years ago. And somebody in the audience asked us, you guys both seem so calm and chilled. You have difficult people in your life.
00:48:01 Speaker_00
And I started laughing so hard, I rolled, literally rolled off my chair. And I was like, yeah, yeah. And she said, no, I don't. And I was like, wait, what? And I was like leaning in. I'm like, wait a minute, break that down.
00:48:15 Speaker_00
And she said, no, I don't have anybody in my life currently who's difficult because I won't do that to myself anymore. And here's the zinger. This is somebody with a tremendous sense of self value and self-friendliness.
00:48:28 Speaker_00
She said, the follow-up question in the audience was somebody said, what about people who you have to deal with? And you have to have them in your life, because they're in your family.
00:48:38 Speaker_00
And she said, I'm thinking as hard as I can, and I cannot come up with a single name of anybody who is entitled to be in my life, no matter what their biological relationship is to me. And that's a radical position to take.
00:48:52 Speaker_00
And Rachel Cargill lives a radical life. And that's somebody who is really prioritizing her own well-being. And she was like, I've blocked my mother for several years at a time because she was too destructive.
00:49:07 Speaker_00
She's like, I've got siblings I haven't spoken to in years. because they're too disruptive. And they're not entitled to have me in their life just because we were born into the same family. That's intense boundaries.
00:49:19 Speaker_00
So I will say only that I've done stuff like that. I've decided that not everybody's entitled to have me in their life.
00:49:27 Speaker_02
Just a practical, tactical question, since that's where my brain sometimes goes. Do you slow fade that person? You just start, like, first you respond after 24 hours, then it's a week, then it's two months, then it's never?
00:49:38 Speaker_02
Or do you have a conversation? Do you text them and you're like, hey? or is there some approach that you take?
00:49:45 Speaker_00
I'm going through a list in my head. I'm like, how did I do that one? How did I do that one?
00:49:49 Speaker_00
Some have been done, I would say elegantly, which to me means honestly, but I think again, you can keep it on the eye and just say like, I noticed that I become so dysregulated after these encounters that I can't do this anymore.
00:50:08 Speaker_00
This is too dysregulating for me. I can't do it. I'm out. And at times where I'm super dysregulated, I will say, I'm not well and I need to go get well. And I'm going to go take some privacy because that's also true.
00:50:24 Speaker_00
Like I can get so dysregulated that I become unwell. I'm thinking of a couple other people where I very honestly said, like, I'm in a place in my life right now where I need a lot of solitude and a lot of silence.
00:50:36 Speaker_00
And if that changes, I'll let you know. And then there's some people who I just stopped responding to.
00:50:43 Speaker_00
Because there being, I kept running through the scenarios of like how would an open and honest conversation about this go and it would be like, not good. I don't have any reason to think that this would go well.
00:50:55 Speaker_00
Like this is going to be a firestorm and I think I'm just going to leave. But it isn't easy, but I'm a lot healthier since I've done that.
00:51:05 Speaker_00
I think it's easier when you're older, too, because I think you get used to, like, you don't keep everybody in life, you know? You think as a young person, you can't.
00:51:14 Speaker_02
You can't, right? There's an ebb and flow. Even if you wanted to, you couldn't. And it makes me think of maybe bonsai is not the right example, because I do think of them kind of as little tortured trees, but pruning as opposed to accumulating, right?
00:51:29 Speaker_02
Curating as opposed to collecting. And I think as you get older, you just realize, okay, there is, at least as far as we know, in this corporeal body, an end to the story. Not generating more time.
00:51:44 Speaker_02
And some people just consume more life energy than they contribute.
00:51:47 Speaker_00
I mean, I always say some people are medicine. Like when you're with them, when you come away from them, you feel like you've gotten a dose of medicine. And some people need medicine. And when you're with them, you feel like they raided your pharmacy.
00:52:01 Speaker_00
And some people... need to be institutionalized. It's beyond that. It's just like, I can't do anything with this here. You know, one thing I have noticed is that I don't like holidays. I don't like the ritual of like big holiday gatherings.
00:52:20 Speaker_00
And I've let my family know that, that I'm like, I love you guys. and I'm gonna come and see you any day of the year except these days. So I'll come and see you in early December. I'll spend a week, we'll have a great time.
00:52:34 Speaker_00
I wanna have one-on-one time with you. I wanna sit at the table with you. I wanna go for walks with you. I wanna go for bike rides with you. I'm not coming for Christmas.
00:52:43 Speaker_02
Why is that? I'm so curious. Just as someone who, you picked my one favorite holiday.
00:52:49 Speaker_00
Oh, do you love it? That's so wonderful.
00:52:50 Speaker_02
Which is fine and great, but I'm curious, what is it about the gathering? Cherished outcomes. Cherished outcomes, meaning that you feel like you need to perform.
00:53:01 Speaker_00
There's some, I feel like there's so much on the table. And it's like the meal, even as a kid I found it so stressful. And like everyone's so tense. And it's like, why do we have to do this? And the answer is, you don't have to.
00:53:20 Speaker_00
But the people who love it should do it.
00:53:22 Speaker_02
Mm-hmm. Yeah, for sure. I just sit by the fire with my dog and drink hot chocolate. It sounds fantastic. It's not very stressful.
00:53:33 Speaker_00
No, I actually like spending holidays alone because they're quiet days. When you're alone, the phone's not ringing and work emails aren't coming in. Some of my happiest days have been holidays that I spent alone. I enjoy it.
00:53:47 Speaker_02
Have you always been comfortable with solitude or extended periods of being alone? Has that always been the case?
00:53:52 Speaker_00
to mix, but I love my own company, except for when I'm in some sort of super disrupted mental state, and then it's very painful to be with myself. But lately, like in the last 10 years, it's my favorite person to hang out with.
00:54:11 Speaker_00
And I live alone and I love living alone. And I love waking up and being like, here's our day. Like, what do we want to do? It's so, how do we want to spend this? And I'm a writer. I chose to be a writer. It's a very solitary time. And I love that.
00:54:28 Speaker_00
Like my most joyful moments of my life have been alone with my work.
00:54:34 Speaker_00
And I remember hearing Michael Chabon one time say, and I'm super social too, like I have a lot of friends and a lot of people who I love and care about, but I'm always happy to go back to being alone.
00:54:46 Speaker_00
Anyway, I heard him say one time, and he's got four kids, I think, but he said, you can love your books, but they can't love you back. And I thought, oh, my books love me back. My work loves me. It is a love story in two directions.
00:55:02 Speaker_00
It is a beautiful love story writing those books. And I feel that there's something very alive and connected in that that isn't just me.
00:55:10 Speaker_02
So for people who can't see, and even for people who can see video, your hairstyle has changed since we last spoke. How did that come to be? Is there a significance there?
00:55:22 Speaker_00
I've buzzed off my hair, gosh, about nine months ago. And I have been wanting to do this for 20 years and dreaming about doing this for 20 years.
00:55:34 Speaker_00
And I can't tell you how many times I've sat in my hairdresser's chair and been like, just take those clippers and just buzz it off. Just buzz it off. Just take it off. Like, I just want to be free. I want to be free. And I never had the courage to do it.
00:55:47 Speaker_00
And I had a lot of reasons for why I couldn't do that as a woman. What if my head has a weird shape? What if, I mean, I'm a public figure? What if I'm out there with a bald head? I just, I always was like, when I get older, I'll do it.
00:56:00 Speaker_00
When I get older, I'll do it. And then I had this amazing awakening, and it was last year, I went to an event in New York, and there were a bunch of people there who were in their 40s, 50s, and 60s.
00:56:13 Speaker_00
And this is New York City, so it's like one of the most progressive places in the world. And I looked around the room, and all the men, All of the men had clipped, like shaved or buzzed hair.
00:56:27 Speaker_00
And they all looked great, like yours, like they all looked great. Like it was a bunch of like silver foxes. They all had lines in their faces. They looked fantastic. And all the women had long or longish versions of some sort of complicated hair.
00:56:44 Speaker_00
that I know hair, so I know what it costs to have that hair. I know the keratin treatment you had to have for that hair to look silky. I know the dye job that you had to pay for. I know how much those highlights cost.
00:56:56 Speaker_00
I know that only 2% of women in the world are blonde, and that 45% of the women in that room were blonde, including me. And I was thinking about Dolly Parton's line where somebody said to her one time, do you ever get offended at dumb blonde jokes?
00:57:09 Speaker_00
And she said, no, because I know I ain't dumb, and I know I ain't blonde. And it's like, I ain't blonde and I ain't dumb, but I'm spending a lot of money to, and I just had this really reckoning moment where I thought, why are we doing this?
00:57:23 Speaker_00
Why do I have to do this?
00:57:24 Speaker_00
And so many of the most amazing reckoning and liberation moments of my life have been these moments where I was like, oh, I don't have to buy into this anymore just because I've been trained and taught and conditioned my entire life
00:57:39 Speaker_00
that I have to buy into this. I'm opting out. I'm out. I'm taking my toys and I'm leaving. And I thought I can just like get mad about the patriarchy and say that there's an unfair beauty standard for men and women.
00:57:50 Speaker_00
Or I can just claim the entitlement that these men have and just get some buzzers at CVS and clip my own hair and like never think about my hair again. And that's what I did.
00:58:00 Speaker_02
So you did it yourself.
00:58:02 Speaker_00
I did it myself. Yeah. And I do it myself every week. And it's like, this is the last money I'm ever spending on my hair.
00:58:08 Speaker_02
Now we can trade tips.
00:58:10 Speaker_00
I know. It's so great. And I was like, oh my God, the freedom. Like I wake up every morning. I'm like, my hair is perfect. Like I jump in a river, jump in a lake, jump in an ocean, get off, get off a plane. It's never not perfect. It's amazing.
00:58:23 Speaker_00
And I can't imagine any reason to ever have hair again. And it's part of, I don't know, I just think it's part of this amazing thing about becoming a free woman and a middle-aged, I am culture's nightmare.
00:58:37 Speaker_00
I'm a middle-aged, childless, husbandless woman. Like, I'm basically a bog witch, like, just like living, rattling around in a house by myself, talking to myself, watering my plants, shaving my head. And it's so cool.
00:58:56 Speaker_00
It's so exciting because I never saw a woman like this when I was growing up. And I never heard of a woman like this. I only heard cautionary tales about how tragic and sad unmarried, divorced, or widowed women were. And I'm all of those.
00:59:13 Speaker_00
I'm unmarried, divorced, and widowed. So I'm like the trifecta. And these have been the most creative, spiritual, and wild years of my life.
00:59:24 Speaker_02
We were exchanging various ideas, potential topics, before this conversation. In shorthand, because of course I want to talk about things fresh without knowing the answers I'm going to get. relaxed woman, a relaxed woman as a radical concept.
00:59:44 Speaker_02
What is this?
00:59:45 Speaker_00
How many have you ever met?
00:59:46 Speaker_02
Oh boy, I'm in a hot seat.
00:59:49 Speaker_00
No, it's not an, it's not, I mean, I haven't met that many relaxed men either, but like, you know, I think it would be a truly revolutionary thing.
00:59:57 Speaker_02
What are the characteristics of a relaxed woman? What does that look like?
01:00:01 Speaker_00
Well, first of all, I want to say that this is why I think it would be revolutionary. So let me start with why.
01:00:10 Speaker_00
When I think of the words that are commonly used to describe the women who we all admire, badass, fierce, tough, resilient, brave, strong, or in the Brene Brown realm, vulnerable, open-hearted,
01:00:28 Speaker_00
I aspire to be all those things, and I admire all those women who are all those things, but none of that feels revolutionary to me because women have always been all those things. Like, you have to be all those things as a woman in the world.
01:00:38 Speaker_00
You have to be resilient. You have to be strong. You have to be badass. You have to be fierce to survive as a woman. My ancestors were all that. Your ancestors were that, or we wouldn't exist. So it's not a revolution. It's not a revolution.
01:00:53 Speaker_00
What would be a revolution would be a relaxed woman because I never saw one growing up. I saw angry, tired women. And I saw some relaxed men, but I saw angry, tired women. And I was on the pathway to becoming an angry, tired woman.
01:01:10 Speaker_00
And that's when my body revolted and was like, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, we're not doing this. We're going in a completely different direction. So how do you not be an angry, tired woman? That's a really big question.
01:01:22 Speaker_00
And I think when I talk about this with groups of women, I always say, you know, I think we have to be careful because there's some part of us that thinks it would be irresponsible not to be angry. And it would be irresponsible not to be tired because
01:01:37 Speaker_00
I mean just look at the world and how much it needs us and on the personal level and on the political level and and how much there is to be angry about and how many of us were violated in our bodies at various times i mean there's there's a million reasons to not be relaxed and yet the question i have is if you were to
01:01:55 Speaker_00
step in, and this is a question I always ask to women, if you were to think of the biggest shit tornado going on in your life right now, whatever it is, the hardest thing you're doing, whether it's your activism or your family or your work or a medical issue or a bankruptcy or an addiction issue, like whatever it is, or a problematic family member, and if you were to go into that same exact shit tornado tomorrow and not one external thing changed, but you were relaxed,
01:02:24 Speaker_00
would you be more or less effective at handling it? Martial artists know that the most relaxed person in the room wins the fight. You know, like actors know this. Artists know this. Like this is where the flow happens. Athletes know this.
01:02:40 Speaker_00
And so I think for me, I've narrowed it down to three things that I need for me, for my system to be relaxed. And it's boundaries, priorities, and mysticism. And if I don't have those three things, I'm super stressed.
01:02:59 Speaker_00
And I would say that the mysticism is the most important, but the boundaries protect that.
01:03:02 Speaker_02
So boundaries, what was number two?
01:03:05 Speaker_00
Priorities.
01:03:06 Speaker_02
Yeah, priorities and then mysticism.
01:03:08 Speaker_00
And women are not taught that they're allowed to have priorities. Men are taught that they're allowed to have priorities, but women are supposed to prioritize everybody and everything.
01:03:17 Speaker_00
And you feel really guilty if you're not prioritizing everybody and everything. And I always suggest that you should maybe have like four priorities, like four or five. And there's nothing like
01:03:29 Speaker_00
tragedy to kind of make it clear what your priorities are, too. Like when my partner, Rhea, was diagnosed with terminal cancer, it became very clear to me very quickly who I cared about and what I wanted to be doing with my time.
01:03:40 Speaker_00
And I remember opening my inbox the day I found out that she had six months to live and seeing like this huge list of emails.
01:03:47 Speaker_00
And I just deleted them all without responding to them because I was like, the reason that these emails have been sitting in my inbox for months is not because I'm too busy, it's because I don't care. I don't care.
01:04:02 Speaker_00
And those are the three words that women are never allowed to say. Like a woman is never allowed to say, I don't care.
01:04:07 Speaker_02
Yeah, you're not too busy, you just don't care.
01:04:09 Speaker_00
I don't care. It's like, look, if I care, I'll get back to you immediately. Like this is what I've learned about my inbox. Like, same with my... Text messages, you will hear from me immediately if I care. If I don't, it's because I don't care.
01:04:23 Speaker_00
And it's okay, you can't care about everything.
01:04:26 Speaker_02
Or you just don't care enough in the hierarchy of your priorities.
01:04:30 Speaker_00
Priorities. Priorities, right? So who are your priorities? What are your priorities? What do you actually care about? Do you have the courage to say no?
01:04:38 Speaker_00
So boundaries, priorities, and then mysticism is the only thing that will actually relax my nervous system. And that is getting really quiet and connecting through two-way prayer, through a letter from love, and through deep meditation.
01:04:52 Speaker_00
Because I can't just live on this plane or I will lose my shit. The plane of the apparent and the real and the material and the Newtonian physics, it's like too stressful.
01:05:05 Speaker_00
And I need to have access to a deeper perspective to be able to be relaxed enough to actually say and mean I have no cherished outcome. Like right to the point of saying, like, whether I live or die, I have no cherished outcome. Can I be that relaxed?
01:05:22 Speaker_00
Can I be relaxed enough not to know what's going to happen? Can I believe that some other thing is orchestrating this? And my involvement might not be necessary in every single moment. This is a hard thing for women.
01:05:34 Speaker_02
Is that the key ingredient of the mysticism for you? Because there are different forms, for sure, that mysticism can take. I mean, you mentioned Hafez, you mentioned Rumi.
01:05:44 Speaker_02
I mean, you have different, let's just call it subsections of various religions that are associated with mysticism, like the Sufis in that particular case.
01:05:53 Speaker_02
Is that potential of a larger power orchestrating things so that you don't need to be involved in all the details, the key component of this third leg of the stool, the mysticism? Or are there other aspects to that?
01:06:05 Speaker_00
Well, there's love. So we have to then go back to, you don't have to win this, right? You're not going to be graded. A thing I often hear in those prayers and meditations is, we've got all the time in the world.
01:06:20 Speaker_00
And that's the exact opposite of the stress that I was raised under, the vice grip that I was raised under. Short amount of time, extremely important to win. No errors can be allowed, you know? So got all the time in the world.
01:06:33 Speaker_00
We got all the time in the universe. What's time? Plenty of time. It'll happen or it won't, like whatever the thing is. And that actually also happens to be true, that it will happen or it won't.
01:06:43 Speaker_00
Like even we know that our best laid plans sometimes, it's like, I guess this wasn't the thing that was supposed to happen.
01:06:49 Speaker_00
But then there's also where my body goes into a deep hum that I used to only be able to get from substances or love of another person settling me, that deep, deep, like, okay, everything is okay here.
01:07:04 Speaker_00
The thing that always works for me is a voice saying to me, you don't even know what you're looking at. You don't even know what you're looking at. And it just pierces my certainty because my certainty is one of the things that makes me so anxious.
01:07:20 Speaker_00
And this is a very convincing virtual reality that we live in. You know, it's very, very, very convincing. But the mystics and the physicists seem to agree that it might really not be what we see and what we're perceiving.
01:07:35 Speaker_00
I went to an event in Brooklyn a couple years ago and heard two Nobel Prize winning physicists talk about the nature of reality.
01:07:42 Speaker_00
And it was so wonderful to hear this Nobel Prize winning scientist say, the more I look at reality, the less I understand it. And all I can say after all these years of studying the nature of reality is that nothing is what it appears.
01:07:59 Speaker_00
And that what we used to think was natural law is at best some very local ordinances. We really were like five Einsteins away from even having the right questions to ask to even know what we're looking at here.
01:08:11 Speaker_00
And just because billions and billions and billions of people have the same senses and look at the world and come to the same conclusion about what they're seeing and agree doesn't make it true.
01:08:22 Speaker_00
And that settles me and it shouldn't it's kind of like the rugs and the floor and the ground are being pulled out from under you completely and that shouldn't be relaxing but i find it deeply relaxing.
01:08:33 Speaker_00
Because then the stakes suddenly become a lot lower it's like alright well. Since i don't even know what this game is that i'm in let me do what i can. and let the rest of it go. And it doesn't mean quit the game.
01:08:51 Speaker_00
You're still in the virtual reality game. Play it nicely, but play it knowing that you don't even know what you're looking at.
01:08:59 Speaker_02
Yeah, I'm still thinking of your correlation that you drew between certainty and anxiety, which seems very astute, and that most people would steer away from. They would rather be unhappy than uncertain because uncertainty
01:09:15 Speaker_02
equals, in a lot of minds, and this is true for me at times too, hidden risks. But it also, depending on how you kind of play the game and which poetry you read and so on, it also opens the door to the possibility of
01:09:31 Speaker_02
unexpected surprises, good surprises, good things. Makes sense to me. I've had a similar settling experience. I mean, it's sometimes enhanced, so I can't recommend that to a broad audience.
01:09:43 Speaker_00
Well, no, no, no, no, I get it. You know, and like, that's why people get enhanced. Because there's that sense of like, oh, wait a minute, this is bigger and more complicated.
01:09:54 Speaker_00
And I'm part of this, but I, wow, you know, like Steve Jobs' last words, wow, wow, wow, like whatever he saw in those last moments, wow, wow. I'm thinking of a relative of mine who I said one time, would you rather be happy or right?
01:10:08 Speaker_00
And they said, how in the world could I be happy if I wasn't right? And I think that it's actually quite the opposite for me. Like, probably wrong.
01:10:20 Speaker_02
Human history in a nutshell. It should be a book title.
01:10:25 Speaker_00
I mean, just look at my life. I have a long history of making decisions that are very bad for getting what I wanted and then finding out. This is another thing that I find is really wonderful about middle age.
01:10:35 Speaker_00
I've gotten what I wanted a lot in life, and it almost killed me. So I'm not so interested anymore in what I want. I'm good at manifesting what I want, and I'm good at almost dying for getting what I want.
01:10:48 Speaker_00
So maybe there's a better question to be asking than what do I want.
01:10:53 Speaker_02
Have you any thoughts on candidates for that better question?
01:10:58 Speaker_00
What would you have me know? What would you have me know? I mean, that's a really good one.
01:11:04 Speaker_02
This makes me wonder how you choose, and I've wanted to ask you this for a while, I don't think we got into it in our prior conversation, which is how do you choose Projects, how to spend your time, where to allocate your limited life force.
01:11:20 Speaker_02
Because there's what do you want, which is where a lot of people would start. Although that's a pretty, it can be nebulous in a handicapping way, because that could take you in all sorts of different directions.
01:11:30 Speaker_02
But how do you choose your projects, things to spend time on?
01:11:34 Speaker_00
I'm kind of a hard ass about it.
01:11:35 Speaker_02
Yeah, great.
01:11:37 Speaker_00
So part of the thing I've noticed that people tend to get stuck on sometimes is that they get this inspiration, right? So inspiration comes first, and inspiration is the breathing in of God, right?
01:11:50 Speaker_00
So like something, even the most empirical scientific atheist people in the world, when they talk about where an idea came from, they say, an idea came to me.
01:12:00 Speaker_00
Like they say that, like they don't even know they're saying that, but they're reporting accurately what the feeling is, because that's what everyone I've ever met who's had an idea, it's the eureka moment.
01:12:10 Speaker_00
It's like, oh, I just heard, saw, felt an inspiration. And I know the difference between something that comes from me and something that comes to me, talking about prepositions again. And I think most creative people do as well.
01:12:21 Speaker_00
Like, oh, this came to me, right? And then it can feel like an assignment or it can feel like a challenge. And it's like, Now I want to make this thing.
01:12:28 Speaker_00
But a place where I think people get sidetracked and distracted, it's very, very, very similar to meditation. Like meditation, spirituality, and art have so much in common.
01:12:39 Speaker_00
So this may sound familiar to people who are like, maybe you've had this experience. You start working on this thing that was this inspiration, and a couple weeks, couple months into it, couple days, another idea comes.
01:12:51 Speaker_00
And that idea seems more interesting than the one that you've already invested some time into. And then you're like, but I want to do this thing. This thing is like fresh and exciting. This is the really, really cool thing, right?
01:13:03 Speaker_00
And then you go and do that one. And then another idea comes and then it's like, you know, you're dealing with this melee. So oftentimes people say like to me, I'm working on a book and I'm halfway through it, but I've got this other idea.
01:13:14 Speaker_00
that I think is way better and this book feels really stale and it doesn't have any life in it.
01:13:18 Speaker_00
And I always say like, okay, well, I give you permission to quit working on that first project, but only if you have a proven track record of ever being able to finish a thing.
01:13:30 Speaker_02
That is so smart.
01:13:31 Speaker_00
Right? Because then it's legit. It's like, no, I've got this better idea. But do you have 30 unfinished things? Because if you have 30 unfinished things, now we have a problem. And I have those same things happen to me.
01:13:43 Speaker_00
I'm a third of a way, a quarter of a way, fifth of a way in a project, and then something so much more interesting comes along. And I'm like, but I know enough to know. It comes dancing. It's like a dancing girl. It just comes across the stage.
01:13:56 Speaker_02
I was just going to say, the hottest girl at the dance. The hottest girl at the dance.
01:14:00 Speaker_00
Just showed up. Just showed up, and you've been married for two months. And you're like, oh, I've been married for two months in the hot. But what I know,
01:14:08 Speaker_00
is that if I abandon my, let's call it wife, this project that I've been working on for a few months to go off with the hot girl, in a few months, she's gonna be just as boring and stale. And then a new hot girl's gonna come on.
01:14:22 Speaker_00
And I'm never gonna complete anything. So, you know, stick with the one you came to the dance with. And if I've got multiple ideas, and I'm not sure which one I'm beginning.
01:14:30 Speaker_00
I actually have a sort of like a team meeting, and I make the ideas, make proposals to me about how they...
01:14:38 Speaker_02
This is like project-based IFS.
01:14:42 Speaker_00
Totally. It's like I'm the angel investor and these ideas are like, you know, we want your time and money for this. And I'm like, what are you? What do you have for me? Why should I invest my money and time in you?
01:14:52 Speaker_00
And a lot of ideas, when I challenge them, like that disappear into the ether because they're like, I don't know, something about birds. I'm like, you haven't thought it out.
01:15:02 Speaker_00
And then some other idea is like, no, I want to write about this very specific thing. And it's going to take that, you know, I'm like, okay, so this one's got their act together.
01:15:09 Speaker_00
So when the bird idea is more formed, come back, like come back when you're ready. Come back when you're ready to be real and not just to be tantalizing me with like, so I'm a real hard ass about it. I don't mess around.
01:15:19 Speaker_00
I don't let these ideas push me around.
01:15:21 Speaker_02
I love it.
01:15:22 Speaker_02
Are there other ways that you, to quote the late Lord Rabbi Jonathan Sachs, he had this amazing line that has stuck with me, which is something along the lines of the key mission is to separate an opportunity to be seized from a temptation to be resisted.
01:15:39 Speaker_02
something along those lines. And I'm wondering how else you navigate that, right, with the multiple ideas.
01:15:47 Speaker_02
Because maybe there are cases, because you have a track record of finishing things, maybe there are cases where you get three months into something and you're like, you know what, this is not what I hoped it could be, and there's this other thing, and I want to switch planes midair.
01:15:59 Speaker_02
But how would you think about, or how do you think about distinguishing between those two?
01:16:05 Speaker_00
I've never done that.
01:16:06 Speaker_02
You've never done it?
01:16:08 Speaker_00
I've never switched planes midair. Oh, you haven't?
01:16:10 Speaker_02
Okay, so when you start a project, you basically have done the hard-ass due diligence up front, and you're like, nope, this is high conviction.
01:16:17 Speaker_00
It's so weird.
01:16:18 Speaker_02
I never thought of that.
01:16:20 Speaker_00
Yeah, I mean, this is like the mystery of a human brain or a human system because Like in my personal life, I'm so flaky. And in my professional life, I'm so clear. It's amazing.
01:16:32 Speaker_00
I think the universe gives us certain things that are sort of easier for us than other things. But yeah, because it takes me so long to do a project, because my projects, whether they're fiction or nonfiction, are so heavily research driven.
01:16:47 Speaker_00
you know, it can take three or four years to create one of these books. And so the last novel that I wrote, City of Girls, I was thinking about that book for 10 years before I started it.
01:16:57 Speaker_00
It was at those meetings for 10 years, you know, like, and the next novel that I'm planning to write, I've been thinking about for probably 15 years, but it's coming more into view.
01:17:05 Speaker_00
So there's some that are kind of on the horizon that are coming in, but I'm thinking of air traffic control. They come in an order. Something is feeding them to me in order. And I don't know what that something is. but one at a time.
01:17:17 Speaker_00
I can't do two at a time.
01:17:18 Speaker_02
What do you think contributes to that certainty in the professional realm?
01:17:22 Speaker_02
As I'm listening to and thinking about everything you've said in this conversation and also the review of the last conversation, but it strikes me that feeling like you have more than enough time, a voice has told you there's more than enough time
01:17:36 Speaker_02
relieves you of the perceived obligation to choose the best thing because you're running out of time. That's just pure speculation on my part.
01:17:45 Speaker_02
Second is feeling like there's a source you are hearing from versus having to independently make an ideal decision. may also give weight to the things as they come in, as you put it, through this air traffic controller.
01:18:02 Speaker_02
I'm just wondering what else might contribute to the clarity. There may be some interpersonal simplicity compared to dealing with other messy humans. I don't know.
01:18:12 Speaker_02
Anything else that you think contributes to the clarity and the not switching planes midair?
01:18:18 Speaker_00
I think part of it is that I enjoy it. I enjoy the work. And I never identified as a tormented artist. I've identified as a tormented person, but I've never identified as a tormented artist.
01:18:31 Speaker_00
Art has been, creativity has been the place where torment drops away. So the question, of course, is why? And I think, once again, I would probably have to say, I don't know.
01:18:42 Speaker_00
But I think, I'm getting a big smile on my face as I'm thinking about this, but I'm thinking like, Why shouldn't we do the thing that is so pleasurable? Why shouldn't that be a clue as to the thing that you're supposed to be doing?
01:18:55 Speaker_00
That you're on the right track because You know, long before I became a meditator, I had so much trouble meditating for years, but I would start to write and hours would drop away and I would not be aware of time.
01:19:08 Speaker_00
So writing gave me the thing that meditation promised, but I could never have happened in meditation until very recently where like time stops or changes and I'm here but not here. So that's just so pleasurable.
01:19:20 Speaker_00
But the other thing is like, sometimes I feel that it's a mandate. And I can't talk about the book that I've just finished, it's coming out next year, but I can say that it's the hardest thing I've ever written emotionally.
01:19:31 Speaker_00
And when I was doing my two-way prayers every day in the morning during this, especially the really hard part of writing it, and I have a really loving higher power, like I have a higher power who's constantly letting me off the hook for lots of stuff that I do not have to do.
01:19:45 Speaker_00
You know, it's like, You do not have to be involved in this. You don't have to be part of that chaos thing that's going on. You don't have to be part of this family gathering. You don't have to rescue this person. I get a lot of you don't have tos.
01:20:01 Speaker_00
You don't have to do this, you don't have to do that. Throughout this entire process of this book, because I was struggling, Every morning when I wrote it out on the page, that voice would say, I can see how hard this is for you.
01:20:16 Speaker_00
And I can see what this has cost, the toll that this is taking on you to tell this story. And I can see that you want to stop. Too bad.
01:20:26 Speaker_02
I've given you 47 hall passes, and this is not going to be the 48th.
01:20:30 Speaker_00
This isn't one of them. And sucks to suck. Get back to work. I'll see you on the page. I know you're tired. I know you want to take a day off. You're not having a day off.
01:20:40 Speaker_00
And I think the trust that has built up between me and that higher power over the decades
01:20:46 Speaker_00
largely because of the things that I am let off the hook for, has made me think, it goes back to the original part of the conversation where I said, like, I'm loved beyond measure by a God who has given me control over practically nothing.
01:20:59 Speaker_00
The wisdom to know the difference is one that I cannot find, but I get instructions of like, this isn't yours. We don't need you in this story. We don't need you involved in this situation. We don't need you speaking up about this thing.
01:21:13 Speaker_00
We don't need you doing this. We need you doing this. Yeah. And the reason I don't want you up in all this other stuff that's going on is because I very much need you in this. And so I want you to bring your full attention to this.
01:21:29 Speaker_00
And if that changes, you'll be notified. You'll be notified as something that happens a lot on the pages of Two-Way Prayer for me. I mean, I've gone through periods of time where I didn't have any creative ideas at all. Early pandemic, I was like,
01:21:41 Speaker_00
Wow, this would be a great time to write, but I actually don't have anything that's ready to go. And I remember writing into a prayer saying, should I be working on something right now?
01:21:48 Speaker_00
And instantly came the answer, when we've got something for you to do, you'll be notified. And I'm like, well, what do I do until then? And they're like, hang out, like hang out, be present to the world. It's amazing. Walk around, look at stuff.
01:22:03 Speaker_00
You don't have to be on duty at every moment, but when you have to be on duty, you really have to be on duty. And I think part of the aspiration that I have to both be a relaxed woman and teach and model that to other women is
01:22:17 Speaker_00
This is the opposite of what women have been taught. Wait, what if I'm not on duty all the time?
01:22:22 Speaker_00
What if I'm only on duty sometimes, and I have to follow a deep inner voice that tells me when that is, and what that is, and everything else, y'all can take care of yourselves.
01:22:32 Speaker_00
And that's something that we, as women, are not taught that we can ever say. Like, I'll do it. I'll do it.
01:22:41 Speaker_02
So I want to actually ask a question that is following up on something in our last conversation. And I would say I'd definitely put it in the category of me time, in a sense, which is related to The Artist's Way by Julia Cameron.
01:22:55 Speaker_02
So if I remember correctly, I am looking at notes, so hopefully I'm getting it right, that Ypres Love would not exist without the artist's way, if that's a true statement.
01:23:07 Speaker_02
I'm wondering which pieces of it, because I don't think we got into the specifics, but what pieces of it really made that the case?
01:23:15 Speaker_02
And for instance, one homework assignment that I've never done from the artist's way, I'm so embarrassed to say this, but it's true, is the artist's date. I've never done that. And so as an example, I'm wondering, was that a part of it?
01:23:27 Speaker_02
Is that a part of it for you?
01:23:29 Speaker_00
The artist's day is hard. Yeah. It's hard. I still have trouble figuring that one out sometimes. So here I can tell you exactly one. I can tell you exactly it. So one of the things that she does so cleverly in that course is that
01:23:43 Speaker_00
She keeps asking you the same question like 90 different ways. So there are all these questions each week that you have to answer. And then there's the morning pages.
01:23:51 Speaker_00
So they're twists and turns on like, if you could have three talents, what would they be? If there were three places in the world that you could visit, what would they be? If there was something you wish you had studied, what would it be?
01:24:01 Speaker_00
She's coming at it like from 20 different directions. And then there's this point that comes late in the process where she instructs you to go back and read everything you've written and start looking at what keeps showing up.
01:24:14 Speaker_00
Because I think one of the mysterious and magical things and weird things about our brain is like the secrets we can keep from ourselves where it's like I didn't even know that about me. So when I went back and read Italian was on every page.
01:24:29 Speaker_00
And I was like, apparently I really want to fucking learn to speak Italian. And I would not have said that that was like a massive priority of my life. But apparently my soul knew that it was an instruction because it was like Italian.
01:24:46 Speaker_00
I kept seeing Italian and I was like, why Italian? You know, it's not useful unless you are in Italy. It's not like Spanish or it's spoken across the globe. Why, why, why, why?
01:25:00 Speaker_00
And why is not a spiritual question and never brings a spiritual answer, so it's kind of useless. But I just went with it and I was like, okay.
01:25:08 Speaker_00
And one of my artist dates was to sign up for Italian classes without knowing why, just because it kept showing up on the page. So I did six months of Italian classes, like night school for divorced ladies at the Y, and I loved it so much.
01:25:24 Speaker_00
And I started watching movies in Italian and I started, I had no plan for anything I was going to do with it. And then I was like, well, wait, I want to use this Italian. Like I want to go to Italy and speak this language.
01:25:36 Speaker_00
But I also have been studying meditation a lot lately and I want to go to India. I also want to go back and then like out of that was bornate pray love. So it took me by surprise as much as anything.
01:25:47 Speaker_00
And maybe you've had that experience in your morning pages where it's like, I didn't even know that. Like I can hide things so far from myself that I can't even find them.
01:25:55 Speaker_02
It's true for my phone too. You mentioned that why is not a spiritual question and doesn't give you spiritual answers, something along those lines. Could you elaborate on that?
01:26:08 Speaker_00
Okay, anytime I howl into the void, any question that begins with why, I do not get an answer. I will not be answered. I can do two-way prayer from now till God leaves Chicago, from now till time gets better, and I go, why, why, why, why, why?
01:26:25 Speaker_00
And I will not be given an answer that's much more satisfying than what an adult would tell a toddler at some point of just because, because I said so, because is.
01:26:36 Speaker_00
I wrote a poem once called The Shortest Conversation I Ever Had With God, and it's God, colon, why? Oh, sorry, me, but why? Which is, again, the ego and God because is. But there are other questions that I can ask, and I do get answers.
01:26:50 Speaker_00
So if I ask questions that begin with how instead of why, how do you want me to move through this? I will be given direct instructions. Who do you want me to serve in this situation? Who do you want me to be? in this moment, answers very clear.
01:27:09 Speaker_00
What do you want me to do next? That's a really good one. That's a big one in AA. What's the next intuitive action? What's the next right action? What would you like me to do right now? Which is often like get a glass of water, turn the phone off. But why?
01:27:24 Speaker_00
And I think that goes back to you don't even know what you're looking at. I think that goes back to we're five Einsteins away from even having the right questions to get the right answers.
01:27:32 Speaker_00
But why is it, it turns into a black hole that I just fall into and it's this great echoing silence.
01:27:38 Speaker_02
Yeah, I can be stepping into the quicksand of blame and finger pointing, even if that's fingers pointing back at yourself, which it often is. It makes sense. And I was asking you about choosing projects.
01:27:50 Speaker_02
I want to ask you about anxiety, specifically purpose anxiety. What is purpose anxiety?
01:27:58 Speaker_00
You're smiling, so I see you already know.
01:28:00 Speaker_02
No, I don't, I don't. It's kind of right there in the title. Yeah, based on the words, I can imagine.
01:28:06 Speaker_00
Right, you can work it out in context. Yeah, I think I can work it out. Well, I mean, the story that most of us were taught was some variation of each of you was born with one unique offering, special spark that is only yours and only you can
01:28:26 Speaker_00
deliver on that thing. It is your job. It is your job to find out what that thing is that only you can do.
01:28:33 Speaker_00
Meanwhile, there's what, almost 8 billion people on the planet, so already here's some pressure, because it's got to be something that nobody else can do, which is going to be unlikely because there's a lot of us.
01:28:44 Speaker_00
And you should find out what that is very young, and then you should become the master of that thing, and you should devote
01:28:54 Speaker_00
the 10,000 hours way before you're out of adolescence, you should already be pouring yourself into this purpose that you are here to serve, and you should become the very best at that thing.
01:29:05 Speaker_00
And then it's not enough to become the best at that thing, you have to monetize it. It's not enough to monetize it. You also have to create opportunities for others and make sure that they're also being served by this purpose.
01:29:18 Speaker_00
And if all of this sounds exhausting, you are not off the hook, even when you die, because you must leave a legacy and you must change the world. So no pressure, but that's it. That's it. You must change the world.
01:29:33 Speaker_00
I think it's very male, I think it's very capitalistic, it's very self-centered, it's very like... yeah, you only must do this thing that only you can do, and the world must be altered, and they must know you are here.
01:29:50 Speaker_00
You must leave your mark on the world. And I think the world at this point is like, I wish maybe that you stopped leaving marks on me. Maybe we could use a little less of that. And I hardly know anyone who doesn't suffer from purpose anxiety.
01:30:02 Speaker_00
And I know people who are living lives that look from the outside like they have achieved tremendous purpose. It's a scarcity anxiety. So they're up at night wondering if they've done enough, have they done the right thing?
01:30:13 Speaker_00
Have they left enough of a legacy? Is this where their energy should have gone? It's a theology that is going to leave you unsatisfied because there's no way to know that you have achieved it.
01:30:25 Speaker_00
And you and I both know people who like are so admired and they're so stressed.
01:30:31 Speaker_00
And they're so unsure about themselves, and they feel like they've done it all wrong, and they don't know whether they've—there's a never-enoughness to it that feels a lot like capitalism. It's just how much—I'm thinking of J.P.
01:30:43 Speaker_00
Morgan testifying before Congress and them saying, like, how much money is enough, sir? And him saying, a little more. You know, it's the same with purpose. It's like, when will you know that you've made a big enough impact? A little more.
01:30:55 Speaker_00
And what would be the opposite of a purpose-driven life would be, I think, a life of presence. It's also focused entirely in the future constantly.
01:31:04 Speaker_00
And I don't think there's any way that you can live a relaxed or really truly rich or meaningful life if you're constantly thinking about your fucking legacy. I'm sorry. But it's like, that's it. You know, you're like, how much did I make?
01:31:20 Speaker_00
How much did I leave? How much did I impact? Meanwhile, the world is happening, and you're in it, and you're missing it.
01:31:27 Speaker_02
Yeah, I'm reflecting. I can't recall the exact, you might actually know the attribution here.
01:31:32 Speaker_02
I don't know if it's a fictional quote or not, but there's some, I want to say this huge statue in the desert that has deteriorated over time, and it's half buried, and the inscription reads something like, I am Ozymandias.
01:31:46 Speaker_01
I am Ozymandias.
01:31:49 Speaker_02
Lord, look upon my works in despair.
01:31:50 Speaker_00
My works in tremble, yeah.
01:31:54 Speaker_02
And it's like, yep, that's where it's all headed. On the side of, it's along similar lines, I often think to myself, all these guys are talking about legacy, and gals too, but a lot of the guys that I'm surrounded by.
01:32:07 Speaker_01
It's a pretty lot of guys.
01:32:08 Speaker_02
Yeah, and it's like, they're reading books, and so am I, about whether it's like Alexander the Great, or Genghis Khan, or Titan about Rockefeller, whatever it might be, hoping to glean things from these lives.
01:32:20 Speaker_02
Alexander the Great, tell me his last name. What was his full name? Nobody can tell me. Great.
01:32:25 Speaker_00
His middle name was The.
01:32:27 Speaker_02
Yeah, exactly. And it's like, we're at the very least thinking about legacy differently. But one thing I am curious to hear your thoughts on is, how do you blend
01:32:38 Speaker_02
In your life, do you try to blend presence with other ingredients for what you deem a life well-lived? And I'll tell you a story. So the story takes place at Omega Institute, and I love Omega Institute.
01:32:50 Speaker_02
And I've spent time there in upstate New York, and they have amazing classes. The one place that they have consistent Wi-Fi is in the cafeteria, coffee shop area where people eat their meals or some of them.
01:33:02 Speaker_00
I can picture it well.
01:33:03 Speaker_02
So I would sometimes go, because I was spending time in upstate New York, beautiful campus, amazing groundhogs everywhere. So I would go sit in the cafe and I would write. And I remember this conversation happening next to me.
01:33:15 Speaker_02
So I wasn't getting any work done, but I was eavesdropping on this conversation. And it was this man and this woman. And the guy asked the woman, I know you've been looking for a job for a while. Do you find a new gig?
01:33:25 Speaker_02
And she's like, no, I've been really busy being non-dual.
01:33:29 Speaker_00
Oh my God. Oh, that's like a New Yorker cartoon. That's so good.
01:33:33 Speaker_02
Oh God, that's so good. So there is maybe the shadow side of presence, which could be a lot of navel gazing. And maybe that's totally fine. And in the grand scheme of things, it doesn't make a difference.
01:33:44 Speaker_02
But for yourself personally, recognizing the presence seems to be very additive to one's life. Are there other ingredients that you weigh
01:33:56 Speaker_00
Can I first tell you a story? Yes, please. Okay, so I want to tell you a counter story about a purpose-driven life.
01:34:04 Speaker_01
Okay.
01:34:04 Speaker_00
But I like your question a lot, and I think this will lead into it nicely. We'll see. We'll see if this works. So I was in Los Angeles several years ago for a speaking event, and I had a free afternoon, and I was wandering around Venice Beach.
01:34:16 Speaker_00
And I looked across the street, and I saw that there was a guy standing on the top of a ladder, painting the awning of his storefront. And I instantly was able to see that the ladder was not steady.
01:34:30 Speaker_00
And I have a very severe ladder sensitivity, because I grew up on a farm. And my mom was constantly telling me, like, go hold your father's ladder, because my dad was always doing jackass things on the ladder in the farm.
01:34:41 Speaker_00
So just, I had nothing else to do and nowhere else to be. And I was the perfect person for the job to cross the street and just hold the guy's ladder. And I probably held his ladder for 45 minutes that day.
01:34:55 Speaker_00
And he never saw me, because he was doing his thing, but I felt better, because I was like, I'm just going to make sure this guy doesn't fall today. And I'm here, and it's a nice afternoon, and it was lovely.
01:35:06 Speaker_00
And then when he started to come down, and I felt like he was at a safe level, I just peeled off, and he never saw me, and I never saw his face, and we never had any interaction. But we had this beautiful little exchange.
01:35:19 Speaker_00
And as I was walking away, because I was thinking about purpose anxiety, And I was thinking, what if that was the entire purpose of my life?
01:35:25 Speaker_02
Just that moment. Just that moment.
01:35:28 Speaker_00
not things like that, like try to be kind to people, but that particular moment that they were like, however this thing works, it's essential that that guy not fall off his ladder.
01:35:40 Speaker_00
So we're going to need in like sector seven, you know, block D on this date, we're going to need somebody to, you know, really be alert and notice that and we're going to have to send them in.
01:35:50 Speaker_02
Have the proper farm training.
01:35:52 Speaker_00
put her on a farm, have her like grow up with a father who does jack, how are we gonna get her to LA? Make her a writer, give her a career, have her read.
01:35:58 Speaker_00
Like every single other thing I was doing in my life was just killing time until the moment when I was needed. And maybe I'm not needed again after that.
01:36:06 Speaker_00
And I would challenge anybody to prove to me that that isn't true because nobody can because nobody knows what's going on. And nobody even knows what they're looking at. So yes, you could go a little too far into that and you could just,
01:36:20 Speaker_00
smoke weed all day and be like, are we just a paperweight in God's desk, you know, or like ask questions like that. But I think presence is the greatest gift that you can give to yourself and to the world.
01:36:33 Speaker_00
And I think that line that I so often hear in meditation and on the page when I do two-way prayer of you'll be notified, is the very opposite of a purpose-driven life. Because a purpose-driven life is some sense that I'm going to forge.
01:36:50 Speaker_00
I'm going to like hack through this forest and make this trail. It's going to be named after me, and this is what I'll be remembered for. And it's so self-centered.
01:37:00 Speaker_00
And you'll be notified is a much humbler position to take, but it requires a great deal of listening. And it requires like also
01:37:09 Speaker_00
Lately, I've been doing these one day a week without my phone, because I want more moments like that, where I notice somebody on the ladder, because I'm not on my phone. And I'm super addicted to my phone.
01:37:20 Speaker_00
It's like, no, I'm not throwing shade against anyone who's addicted to their phone. We all are, you know? I'm not going to front that I don't stare at my phone 90 million hours a day, I do. But like, that's why I take Thursdays off from it.
01:37:31 Speaker_00
It's because I don't want to miss what's actually happening. And I want to be present to the notification when it comes.
01:37:39 Speaker_02
How did you choose Thursday? Is it because you might be social on Friday and the weekend? Yes. Okay.
01:37:44 Speaker_00
You know, Monday's like too much going on. Thursday just felt like a day that the world could maybe create without me.
01:37:50 Speaker_02
So I'm going to play devil's advocate and defend folks who may be in the purpose-driven lane for the moment. Because I agree that at face value, very self-absorbed, self-centered, however,
01:38:04 Speaker_02
Do you think it's possible, and this is a leading question so it may go nowhere, but that you're more comfortable with death and mortality than a lot of people and that insecurity, uncertainty, fear of death maybe that others have to a greater extent leads them to think about these things more than you?
01:38:22 Speaker_00
Wow, I did not think that was going to be the second half of the question. And I also want to say, here's the thing about purpose.
01:38:30 Speaker_00
If you actually are one of those people who from forever has known exactly what you're supposed to be doing, and you did become the master of it, and you have monetized it, and you are leaving a legacy, you have what I like to call not a problem.
01:38:43 Speaker_00
Yeah, keep going, great. Like, you're doing great. Like, but if you... The cello thing seems to be working for you.
01:38:50 Speaker_00
Like, but if you're berating yourself because you feel like there was something you were supposed to be doing, maybe they just need you to hang out until you get notified of something that could be as small as holding the ladder, I just want to say.
01:39:03 Speaker_00
And that maybe the future of the universe depended on that ladder being held that day. We don't know. But your question about death, I don't want to get cocky about like, I don't care about death. But it's not a fear that lives in me.
01:39:16 Speaker_00
And I know it's a fear that lives in a lot of people. I'm much, much, much more afraid of people not liking me than I am of dying.
01:39:24 Speaker_00
And that's what I have to suffer with more is like to try to figure out how to disappoint people and say no to people and set boundaries with people that they can survive it and I can survive it. This is like my work in this lifetime.
01:39:34 Speaker_00
But death to me, it doesn't keep me up at night. I'm not in an argument against it. I went with my partner, Rhea, all the way to her death and I wasn't afraid of the death. There were things around it that were scary, but.
01:39:47 Speaker_02
Has that always been the case? When did that fear drop away?
01:39:53 Speaker_00
I'm afraid of pain, don't get me wrong. Like I'm not interested at all in being in suffering. Maybe that's why I'm not afraid of death. I'm like, well, that seems better than suffering. So what's so bad about that? So I don't know.
01:40:07 Speaker_00
I come from like really pragmatic people. My mom's a nurse. My dad's a farmer. Like I saw a lot of death growing up. My mom worked with the dying a lot. By the time it came, it seemed like it was such a relief for everybody.
01:40:21 Speaker_00
Like there was grief, but also people were like shredded by end of life stuff. And she sat in a lot of dying people's houses for, you know, weeks and months on end and, you know, dying and struggling. And then there was this like, exhale of death.
01:40:37 Speaker_00
Okay, now that person has safely been delivered into death. That's the feeling I felt when Rhea died.
01:40:44 Speaker_00
Like those of us who were taking care of her and she had a pretty raucous death, but those of us who were taking care of her, it was like, we safely got her there. We safely got her dead. I know that's a strange thing to say, but like, it was hard.
01:40:56 Speaker_00
She was really willful. It was a difficult death. But then the moment of the death, instant after the death. There's such an incredible thing. Like something happens. It isn't what it was. Like something leaves.
01:41:15 Speaker_00
And then this look that was on her face after she died of like absolute delight. Absolute delight. We were all aghast at it. Why is she so happy? She looks so happy, so peaceful. It feels like going home to me.
01:41:30 Speaker_00
This place feels a lot weirder to me than death. Like this planet's bananas, you know, like having a body. I mean, that's why I used to love to do psychedelics so much before I stopped doing all that stuff. It's like, who wants a body?
01:41:44 Speaker_00
Like who wants to be incarnated? Like, oh God, it's so awkward. So no, life feels scarier to me than death.
01:41:53 Speaker_02
How did you choose to create your newsletter? How did that make the cut for you? How did that come in?
01:42:00 Speaker_00
Two things. One is I'm trying to get off of the nicotine crack pipe booze bottle that is social media.
01:42:10 Speaker_02
Yeah.
01:42:11 Speaker_00
And it's not easy to get off it because I feel like social media is like a party drug that started off as really fun. And now I heard somebody say so beautifully about social media, I wish I could remember who said it,
01:42:22 Speaker_00
everyone's now everyone's abusing it and no one's getting high anymore like the fun like like everyone's addicted to it and the high is gone and i'm looking for ways i love connection i loved that feeling at the beginning of social media that we can all connect with one another yeah before everyone started peeing in the pool
01:42:37 Speaker_00
Oh my God, you know, before everyone started propping up Putin. And it's like, wait, what pool party is this? Like, what just happened to democracy? Like, we've just discovered that this thing is very, very, very dangerous and venomous.
01:42:50 Speaker_00
And so I've been looking for another place to go to be able to have dialogue with people. And Substack so far has been a really good spot for that. It's like a reverse technology.
01:43:01 Speaker_02
So could you explain how that works? Because I think a lot of people thinking of a newsletter, they're like, well, hold on a second. How does interaction work in that type of format?
01:43:10 Speaker_00
You can comment. So there's like, so I send out a newsletter once a week. It's essentially like a 90s technology. It's basically a blog. So it's like a high end blog. So people subscribe and then
01:43:22 Speaker_00
a newsletter goes out to them and there's video attachments and things and then you can comment and then people can comment on each other's comments. So it's very similar.
01:43:29 Speaker_00
It looks very similar to what social media looks like, but because it's a subscription, it keeps the haters out because it's self-selecting. And I've been on this thing for a year and have had not one problem with anybody.
01:43:43 Speaker_02
That's incredible.
01:43:44 Speaker_00
I know it's incredible. I mean, it's also like a self-selecting thing because this is a group of really lovely people who are doing this beautiful project together. So that's how I decided to go over there.
01:43:53 Speaker_02
What could people expect if they went to elizabethgilbert.substack.com to subscribe to your newsletter?
01:44:00 Speaker_00
Well, every week I will talk to you and I will talk about this process of learning how to write and speak to yourself, toward yourself from a place of friendliness and love in order to combat this just awful virus of self-hatred that we all seem to be so infected with.
01:44:22 Speaker_00
that comes also with perfectionism and lack and just bringing a different voice into the cacophony of voices in your head.
01:44:31 Speaker_00
And I'll read one of the letters that I've written to myself from love and then there'll be a special guest and the special guests are really the best part because it's everybody from like, act like Tony Collette did one and Glennon Doyle did one and musicians and
01:44:47 Speaker_00
poets and artists and writers, but then also like random people who I meet. And I meet them in my travels and I'm like, you are radiating so much light. that I want to ask you, why are you so lit? Like, why are you so bright and shiny?
01:45:06 Speaker_00
And what is that? And what would love have to say to you if it could speak to you? And people who I meet and find inspiring, there was a young woman who I met in Denmark this year. I was on tour. And so she had read my book, Big Magic.
01:45:19 Speaker_00
And because of that book, she was Japanese and she was an engineer. And she worked on a construction site in Japan, but she'd always wanted to be an artist. And she started making art again after she read Big Magic.
01:45:30 Speaker_00
And then she took the leap and she quit her construction job in Japan and saved her money and moved to Denmark and is going to graphic design school. And her art is gorgeous. And I was like, hey, will you do A Letter from Love?
01:45:41 Speaker_00
Because obviously there's something moving through you that's really special. And I would love to hear what love has to say to you through you. And so it's like every week you'll get a special guest. I've had children do it.
01:45:55 Speaker_00
My friend's 11-year-old son, who was going through a really hard time being bullied at school, he wrote one. And it was beautiful. And love said to him, not everybody has to like you. You don't have to be everybody's cup of tea.
01:46:06 Speaker_00
That was literally in this 11-year-old kid's, you don't have to be everybody's cup of tea. Like, we love you. He felt there was a we. It's really interesting. A lot of people, when they write the letters, the voice that comes to them operates as a we.
01:46:19 Speaker_00
Like, it's some sort of consortium of, like, ancestors and spirits and guides, and it's like your team. Like, there's this feeling that people are getting where they're like, do I have a team?
01:46:31 Speaker_00
Like, I seem to have some sort of a team that wants to love me. So I've had developmentally disabled people do it and access love.
01:46:38 Speaker_00
There's this amazing artist named BJ who, in my town in New Jersey, there's this arts collective for developmental disabled people.
01:46:45 Speaker_00
He did a song about himself called I Love BJ Three Different Ways that's like one of the greatest songs I've ever heard. It's basically just him talking about how lovable he is. So that's what you can expect.
01:46:56 Speaker_00
And then if you're a subscriber, you can post your own letters from love each week. And what's happening in that community is that people are creating collectives and friendships.
01:47:07 Speaker_00
with each other, they're having meetups in cities around the world, and they're starting to become, like, it's the kindest corner of the internet, I truly think. And slowly, I feel like it's dissolving and breaking down the walls of self-hatred.
01:47:20 Speaker_00
It's what we're doing over there.
01:47:22 Speaker_02
I love it. And people can go to elizabethgilbert.substack.com. We'll put that in the show notes as well. That's the best place to direct people.
01:47:29 Speaker_00
Yeah, I mean, I'm on social media, but who cares anymore? That's where my heart is. My heart is in the Substack newsletter.
01:47:37 Speaker_00
And after years of doing this privately in my own space and then starting to gradually teach it in workshops, I finally feel like I'm ready to like really bring this to anybody who wants to try it.
01:47:50 Speaker_02
I love it. I know I said that, but I'll say it again. It's a solid cause, solid mission.
01:47:56 Speaker_00
It's my purpose.
01:47:58 Speaker_02
It's your purpose. Purpose that follows the presence. Is there anything else, Liz, that you'd like to say? Any requests you'd like to make of my audience? Comments? Public complaints about my podcasting style?
01:48:13 Speaker_02
Anything at all that you'd like to say before we land the plane?
01:48:16 Speaker_00
Yes, thank you for giving me the chance to make the public complaints about your podcasting style. I've been crawling out of my skin. I'll send you a bunch of notes. No, I just, I just want to say, can you imagine that something might love you?
01:48:32 Speaker_00
There's a quote that's often misattributed to Einstein. It wasn't Einstein. It was this 19th century philosopher named Frederick Myers.
01:48:39 Speaker_00
And his friend asked him if there was one thing that you want to know more than anything, if you could ask the Sphinx one question, what would it be? And Myers said, it would be this, is the universe friendly?
01:48:52 Speaker_00
And it's often misattributed to Einstein, saying that Einstein said that the most important question you could ask about your life was, is the universe friendly or not?
01:49:01 Speaker_00
He didn't in fact say that, but he did answer the question in his own way because he was examining that as well. And he said, subtle is the Lord, but malicious he is not.
01:49:12 Speaker_00
I hate to gender God, but anyway, I think it is a really interesting question to live in for your entire life.
01:49:19 Speaker_00
And it's a really interesting question that I ask myself when I'm in moments of great trial here on EarthSchool, which, as you know, I've already expressed my belief is a very difficult curriculum. And it's like,
01:49:31 Speaker_00
Is this a friendly universe or is this a malicious universe? And if it's malicious, then life is pointless suffering. And if it's friendly, the suffering might have a point. And if it's friendly, what might the point be? And where can I find that?
01:49:47 Speaker_00
And how do you want me to move through this now? assuming that it's friendly. How do you want me to move through this terrible looking thing?
01:49:55 Speaker_00
And so the question I think that I'm constantly bringing to people, especially when they say, I tried it and it just feels really weird and uncomfortable to say kind things to myself.
01:50:04 Speaker_00
I'm like, yeah, because you've got decades of training of saying garbage things to yourself. And anytime you try to do something new, it's going to be hard and it's going to feel awkward and it's going to feel, it definitely doesn't feel normal.
01:50:16 Speaker_00
Because normal is your history's greatest garbage can. You are just a pile of worthless, you know, like it's, you have never done enough. You'll never be enough. You should be ashamed of yourself. Who do you think you are?
01:50:27 Speaker_00
I mean, that's the normal dialogue that Annie Lamont calls Radio K-Fucked. That's playing in most of our heads at all the times. And what about our negative bias thinking?
01:50:41 Speaker_00
is always trained toward worst possible outcome, but could it just as likely be that you are loved and lovable as despicable and somebody who should be ashamed of themselves? Why not? And why not try it on?
01:50:55 Speaker_00
Try it on like a pair of boots and take it for a walk and then do it again tomorrow and see what it does to your mind.
01:51:01 Speaker_02
Thank you, Liz. I love spending time with you.
01:51:03 Speaker_00
I love spending time with you, Tim. You are such a delight. You are just such a delight. I never know where we're gonna go. And I'm always so happy about where we went. It's a fun adventure always talking to you. So thank you. I really appreciate it.
01:51:18 Speaker_02
I really, really appreciate the time and the thoughts and the wisdom and the reflections. And to everybody listening, as always, we will have the show notes, links to everything, including This is substack at elizabethgilbert.substack.com.
01:51:33 Speaker_02
You'll be able to find all that at tim.blogslashpodcast. And until next time, be just a little bit kinder than necessary, not just to others, but to yourself. And as always, thanks for tuning in. Hey guys, this is Tim again.
01:51:47 Speaker_02
Just one more thing before you take off, and that is Five Bullet Friday. Would you enjoy getting a short email from me every Friday that provides a little fun before the weekend?
01:51:57 Speaker_02
Between one and a half and two million people subscribe to my free newsletter, my super short newsletter called Five Bullet Friday. Easy to sign up, easy to cancel. It is basically a half page
01:52:09 Speaker_02
that I send out every Friday to share the coolest things I've found or discovered or have started exploring over that week. It's kind of like my diary of cool things.
01:52:17 Speaker_02
It often includes articles I'm reading, books I'm reading, albums perhaps, gadgets, gizmos, all sorts of tech tricks and so on that get sent to me by my friends, including a lot of podcast guests.
01:52:29 Speaker_02
And these strange, esoteric things end up in my field, and then I test them, and then I share them with you. So, if that sounds fun, again, it's very short, a little tiny bite of goodness before you head off for the weekend, something to think about.
01:52:44 Speaker_02
If you'd like to try it out, just go to tim.blog slash friday, type that into your browser, tim.blog slash friday, drop in your email and you'll get the very next one. Thanks for listening.
01:52:55 Speaker_02
Way back in the day, in 2010, I published a book called The 4-Hour Body, which I probably started writing in 2008. And in that book, I recommended many, many, many things. First generation continuous glucose monitor.
01:53:11 Speaker_02
and cold exposure and all sorts of things that have been tested by people from NASA and all over the place. And one thing in that book was athletic greens. I did not get paid to include it. I was using it.
01:53:24 Speaker_02
That's how long I've been using what is now known as AG1.
01:53:29 Speaker_02
AG1 is my all-in-one nutrition insurance and I just packed up for instance to go off the grid for a while and the last thing I left out on my countertop to remember to take, I'm not making this up, I'm looking right in front of me, is travel packets of AG1.
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So rather than taking multiple pills or products to cover your mental clarity, gut health, immune health, energy and so on, you can support these areas through one daily scoop of AG1 which tastes great even with water.
01:53:57 Speaker_02
I always just have it with water. I usually take it first thing in the morning, and it takes me less than two minutes in total. Honestly, it takes me less than a minute. I just put it in a shaker bottle, shake it up, and I'm done.
01:54:07 Speaker_02
AG1 bolsters my digestion and nutrient absorption by including ingredients optimized to support a healthy gut in every scoop. AG1 in single-serve travel packs, which I mentioned earlier, also makes for the perfect travel companion.
01:54:21 Speaker_02
I'll actually be going totally off the grid, but these things are Incredibly, incredibly space-efficient. You could even put them in a book, frankly. I mean, they're kind of like bookmarks.
01:54:30 Speaker_02
After consuming this product for more than a decade, I chose to invest in AG1 in 2021 as I trust their no-compromise approach to ingredient sourcing and appreciate their focus on continuously improving one formula.
01:54:42 Speaker_02
They go above and beyond by testing for 950 or so contaminants and impurities compared to the industry standard of 10. AG1 is also tested for heavy metals and 500 various pesticides and herbicides. I've started paying a lot of attention to pesticides.
01:54:58 Speaker_02
That's a story for another time. To make sure you're consuming only the good stuff. AG1 is also NSF certified for sport. That means if you're nothing, you can take it. The certification process is exhaustive.
01:55:10 Speaker_02
and involves the testing and verification of each ingredient and every finished batch of a G1. So they take testing very seriously. There's no better time than today to start a new healthy habit. And this is an easy one.
01:55:22 Speaker_02
Wake up, water in the shaker bottle, Ag1, boom. So take advantage of this exclusive offer for you, my dear podcast listeners, a free one-year supply of liquid vitamin D plus five travel packs with your subscription.
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Simply go to drinkag1.com slash Tim, that's the number one, drinkag1.com slash Tim for a free one-year supply of liquid vitamin D plus five travel packs with your first subscription purchase. Learn more at drinkag1.com slash Tim.
01:55:54 Speaker_02
If you ever use public Wi-Fi, say at a hotel or a coffee shop, which is where I often work, I'm doing it right now, and as many of you, my listeners, do, you're likely sending data over an open network, meaning there's no encryption at all.
01:56:08 Speaker_02
A great way to ensure that all of your data are encrypted and can't be easily read by hackers or captured by websites is to use this episode's sponsor, ExpressVPN. It is so simple. It is one click. It's the easiest thing in the world. I use it overseas.
01:56:22 Speaker_02
I use it in airports, I use it everywhere. With ExpressVPN, you simply download their app onto your computer or smartphone and then use the internet just as you normally would. With just one tap, you secure 100% of your network data.
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01:56:47 Speaker_02
By the way, this is true even if you're at home. Your ISP can snoop on all sorts of stuff, and I've seen that personally. It's very, very spooky. Don't like it. So, ExpressVPN.
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ExpressVPN is the number one rated VPN by CNET, The Verge, and tons of other tech reviewers. I've been using ExpressVPN for years, and I love that it gives me that extra peace of mind.
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Knowing that no one else is looking over my shoulder, or even if they're trying to, it's going to be very, very, very hard. And as a bonus, I've also used it many times to unblock content from around the world.
01:57:19 Speaker_02
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01:57:37 Speaker_02
That's been true for stuff I've wanted to watch in Japan, it's been true for stuff I've wanted to watch in the UK, for instance, from the US that I haven't been able to access. It's super, super, super powerful as a tool. So check it out.
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