Fun: What the hell is it and why do we need it?
June 1, 2021
Glennon Doyle:
Hi, everybody. Thank you for coming back to We Can Do Hard Things. I am really thrilled about this episode because it’s about fun. Okay. So last night I sat down in preparation for this introduction, and I wrote down every single thing I know about fun. And in front of me, I now have a blank sheet of paper. I know nothing about fun. I am no fun. And so for today’s episode, we have brought in our resident fun expert. She is my wife. Her name is Abby Wambach. She has found a way to make a living playing games. One in particular is called soccer. And so she is here today to talk to us all about fun and challenge us to have some of it in our lives.
GD:
All right. So this is already my favorite episode of We Can Do Hard Things because my two favorite people are here, not just my one favorite sister, but my other favorite person who is my wife, Abby Wambach us joining us today. Hi, babe.
Abby Wambach:
Hi, love. How are you?
GD:
Hi, I’m so good. It’s good. I’m just really excited. You’re here. And actually I feel a little bit nervous right now.
AW:
Why?
GD:
Just like seeing you and hearing your voice right there. That’s weird. I don’t know. Anyway, you’re so cute.
AW:
Well, the people can’t see the cute.
GD:
I know. I feel sad for them. I’ll describe her. She’s just so she’s just got a Sporty Spice tank top on and she’s got her little headphones on and she’s just a beautiful human being.
Amanda Doyle:
I’d also like the record to show that I, Sister, also look very cute today.
GD:
You do. You do. You’re wearing royal blue today, which is so strange because you and I always only ever wear black. So it feels very special today.
AD:
Yeah. Well, laundry.
GD:
Yeah, you did some laundry. Okay. So before we get into our hard thing …
AW: She loves loves me more than you, babe. She just loves me.
GD:
Well, that’s a good, that’s a good transition into what we’re about to talk about right now. Thank you for that segue because before we get into our hard thing, I think we need to just talk to you about the relationship between the three of us, because I think it’s unique maybe. And so, how would you describe the little triangle that we have here? This relationship between the three of us, where all we do all day ever is just talk to each other.
AW:
Okay. So here’s the thing when I stepped into your family and I do feel like it was a stepping into. The very first correspondence I had with Sister was this, Don’t ever lie to Glennon. Now that taught me a lot about you, Glennon, but it also taught me a lot about Sister because she inadvertently I think was telling me also don’t lie to me, right? Because this family revolves around integrity. Like that’s like the core value, but I don’t think that I’ve met people who are more integrated with what’s going on in their insides and what goes on in their outsides. Now I’ve also never met more hardworking people. In fact, it’s one of our five fights that sometimes I like to lay down in the middle of the day and Glennon, and that’s not something that you understand. And so probably would think that Amanda doesn’t understand this either.
GD:
Amanda doesn’t lay down. She’s like one of those people who just goes to sleep and hangs herself on the wall with computer attached to her face. So she can go through some emails in the middle of the night.
AW:
Yes. But here’s the thing I I’m fascinated by the two of you, because first of all, I love you so much and I have never felt so trusted and taken care of in the same breath. It’s like, because you guys operate with this integrity so intact it is at the core of everything that we participate ourselves in. Whether it’s a card game, although Glennon, you do cheat sometimes.
GD:
I do cheat. I just want it to be over. I hate games of all kinds. I don’t care about that. Babe, tell Sister what you told me on a walk yesterday about the one thing that you feel jealous about with Sister, because it was an interesting, it was a fascinating thing coming together the three of us, because when I married a man, it’s not like it was a threat to our sisterhood. It was like, so what, but like when I brought another girl to us …
AW:
Woman, we got to stop saying that.
GD:
Sorry, sorry. When I brought a woman to our sisterhood sister, it was like, wait, what, like, did you feel any threat to our sisterhood when Abby arrived on the scene?
AD:
Shockingly, I didn’t, I really didn’t. And understanding myself, I would think that I would have. But I didn’t. I feel like it very quickly became, and I think that’s a testament to Abby actually completely the way that she showed up in our world with this appreciation for what we had and wanting to be there for you and wanting to respect our relationship. And so that was completely her, but very quickly, very quickly we three became one of those, you know, those examples in nature of the, of symbiosis, like the hippo and the ox pecker, or like the shrimp and the goya fish where it’s like these odd pairings of species. But they go through their whole lives together because like the shrimp can’t see, and the fish needs someone to build a shelter. And that’s what they do. It’s just like, we’re three totally different species, but each of us has something that the other two can offer. And now we’re just like in this state of mutual reliance for life.
GD:
Okay, what are, what are our gifts and challenges? Like if one of us is the shrimp. We have talked about, what if we had a home flipping show? Remember we talked about that.
AD:
Yes. Okay. Here’s the home flipping show. The home flipping show is, Abby’s like, I will, we will source the the Gucci countertop granite from Sardonia or something
GD:
She’s so fancy.
AD:
I would be like I’m going to get us some cabinets from Goodwill because we can repaint those in a jiffy and Glennon, would be like, I just need all of it to be outsourced. And I need soft, just soft things.
GD:
And good energy. Good energy.
AD:
The light needs to, I need to know that the neighbors are like really kind to their children.
GD:
It’s about how it feels. Tell Sister what you were jealous of
AW:
Well, I just have to give her credit for nailing that description of us. Three different species that when you combined us all together, it’s like we make the perfect pairs or triple, I wouldn’t know how to say that. Well, what I was telling you on the walk, because you like to talk about everything that you’re going to do, right. And you were about to do an episode on something or other. So we were having this conversation about jealousy and it came up, you said, you know, you’re not really jealous. You don’t really have jealousy in you. And I was like, well, I do. I just like deal with it differently. And I was talking about how I feel sometimes jealous of Sister, because she can’t not be your sister. Like she’s tied to you by blood forever. And you have to choose to be with me forever. It’s like a choice, you know? And I know that we’re tied energetically and legally, but you can always break that. Like you can’t break up with your sister. And that gives me so much jealousy.
AD:
That’s amazing. Well, I will have you know that I do know people who have broken up with their sister.
GD:
You can. You can break up with your sister. Some people have to break up with their sisters.
AW:
Yes, it’s true. However, you’re not the kind of sister that people break up with Sissy.
GD:
Nope. She’s not. I’m the luckiest in the entire world.
AW:
And for the people out there listening, Amanda Doyle, Glennon’s sister is the taker carer of our family. And not just Glennon and I, but like of our children, she’s always holding everybody in place somehow. Like she is the strength. She is the person who makes everything less confusing because she’s smarter than all of us. No offense Glennon, but she legally takes care of us cause she’s smart with the law organizationally and then contractually. And then emotionally, she’s always there. Like the other day I said, you know, I want to get sister a sister somehow.
GD:
Literally, Abby says to me, this is what she says to me, Sister, you were going through something and Abby goes, do you know what Sister needs? She needs a sister. And she’s looking at me saying these words. I’m like, what the hell do you think I am?
AW:
You need an Amanda kind of sister.
GD:
Exactly. She meant she needs like a bulldog. Like someone who shows up no matter what, who always knows what to do. Right. I mean, I don’t always know what to do. I just, it’s a beautiful thing. This symbiosis between the three of us.
GD:
Babe. Now we need to bring your hard thing. What is your hard thing that you’re bringing to us today?
AW:
Okay. I’m going to throw a little curve ball and my apologies. What we in the sports world say curve ball or audible.
GD:
Okay.
AW:
Do you know what those mean? You do. Your dad was a football guy.
GD:
It’s when you change plans at the last minute, which by the way, I’m really, really open to an easy breezy about. So I’m not freaking out at all right now.
AD:
Glennon’s like, We talked for six hours about what we’re supposed to say. Abby already told me what we’re talking about. So there you go.
AW:
Yeah. So here is the deal. I’m having an intervention with you two because I’m not bringing my hard thing. I’m bringing something that I notice is both y’all’s hard thing. And we talk about it. We have talked about it. We have different opinions about the subject and what I’m here to intervene with you two about is fun.
GD:
Oh God.
AW:
Having fun, defining fun. Deciding what you each individually feel like is fun. I mean, this is an intervention and I’m not standing up from the seat until we figure it out.
GD:
Is this because of the freaking garage this weekend?
AW:
Yes. Yes. Because tell the story, honey.
GD:
Well, on Sunday morning we had some time, which is weird, right? We just had some free time and Abby was about to go do something, play golf or something. And she said, okay, I want you to tell me, what do you want to do for fun today? And I thought about it for a while. And then what did I suggest?
AW:
She said, well, let’s go clean out the garage. Do you want to do that with me? That sounds like fun. And I said that that is not fun.
GD:
You got really upset actually.
AW:
I was like, what are you talking about? Like, no, that’s a chore with like an outcome that’ll make you feel good, but surely it’s not fun.
GD:
What is fun? I really don’t understand. Like I truly have not. I don’t understand what fun is. I understand what rest is. I understand what work is. I kind of understand what self-care is, but this idea of fun of which you speak is not something I’ve grasped. So can you define for me what fun is to you?
AW:
Okay. So I know that everybody’s going to have their own opinions and definitions, but for me personally, fun is the experience of joy. And sometimes that means you don’t know what the outcome is. I grew up competitive. I’m a competitor by nature. And so anytime I can weave in some sort of competition, which is why I like walking with you into the grocery store and beating you by one step. That’s fun.
GD:
Pause. I will be getting out of my car to go into the grocery store. And the next thing I know Abby’s gone. Why is she gone? Because she’s running ahead of me. So she can beat me into the grocery store as if I give a crap. That’s the thing I don’t understand caring who wins things, but don’t understand caring.
AW:
Would you agree that nobody really wants to go to the grocery store?
GD:
Yeah.
AW:
Okay. So sometimes when I have to do a chore of some sort, I weave in some semblance of fun, some sort of competition so that I can talk myself or fool myself into believing that this could be fun on some level.
AD:
Okay. Sister, do you understand what fun is? What’s your definition?
AW:
No, she doesn’t either.
AD:
Well, I like to put the fun in function and so, I find a lot of fun in things that are connected to some utility, some productivity, some outcome from which I will derive joy. But so, and actually the process, the process of something, you know, like I like to go treasure hunting and find things that is fun for me,
GD:
Like at thrift stop shops you’re talking about?
AD:
Yeah. Yes, yes. That’s right. So, but unfortunately Abby told me last night, we were going to be talking about this today. And apparently that those things don’t count because play and fun by nature has to be like purposeless, it has to be done for its own sake. Not connected well to an outcome that you already know.
GD:
What?
AD:
So yeah. Finding a $10 midcentury dresser at Goodwill is not the definition of fun, which is highly unfortunate. So I don’t know actually, but I do derive joy from things like I’m not a joyless person.
GD:
Right. Exactly.
AD:
But the idea of doing something that is by definition purposeless is to me like hilarious. Although I think I’m just like, why would one, one can’t know why one would do that? But I did think about it for a very long time and try to identify any single thing that I could connect with there. And I know what it is. Riding roller rollercoaster.
GD:
Oh, wow.
AD:
Like being an amusement park for any reason like that, it’s an actual, I find it delightful.
GD:
I’m stunned.
AD:
Yeah. That is, I mean, I’ve done it once in the past twenty years. But when I think of like that, I get that, that is a fun thing.
GD:
But what about the rest of the amusement park experience?
AD:
No no no. The people. The lines. No.
GD:
Okay. Okay. Okay. Can we just get deep for a second? Because I was talking about this with a few friends recently and it made me feel better. Babe, you were there. We were talking to Karen and Jessica and none of them also understood what fun was. And so I thought, wait, why do women not understand fun? Right. So we talking about, is it because we’re mothers? Is it because we’re caretakers? Is it because we have so much to do that We always feel like something has to be productive? And then we decided no, that it’s earlier than that. It’s part of it. I’m not saying all of it. But part of it is being raised as girls in this culture where first of all, a lot of people find sports. You’re talking about competitiveness and sports. People find fun in that, but girls are kind of teased early out of losing themselves in sport. Right. We’re kind of, you run like a girl you’re, you know, you’re teased and you start to feel self-conscious right. That girls are trained to care about how we appear to other people or whether we’re looking desirable or looking attractive, or are we fitting in? And I think does fun require some kind of being unselfconscious, does fun require losing yourself and like not worrying about how you appear. And that is what has trained out of girls so early. And babe, I feel like you, for some reason, that conditioning did not sink in for you, which makes me feel like this is a difference between the two of us. So can you talk about that? Like, do you feel that you just didn’t get, you’re not a person who worries a lot about how you look. You’re not self-conscious.
AW:
I don’t care. Like my thought process of what the world out there thinks of me is so little, like, I don’t think about what other people think of me. I mean, I care about what you think of me, honey, and what Sister thinks of me on some level. But the reality is growing up the way that I did, I was challenging from the very beginning, the way that I was feeling on the inside. I didn’t know that it was about my gayness. I didn’t know that it was about being an inherent and born feminist. Like, I didn’t know any of those things when I was young. All I knew is just that when I went out into the recess and got on the playground that I wanted to play as rough and hard and have as much fun as I saw the boys having. Right. And it’s like, even though you may not have participated in the monkey bars or whatever it was on the playground, I wanted to have the ability to do that. And I knew that I could do it at the same level that they could. And so I think because I was also naturally gifted as an athlete that gave me some leveling of social dynamics as a really young kid, which probably affected the way that I view the world. You know, it’s like, right now, the thing that I have the most fun doing is playing golf. And like, I think both of you would want to like stab your eyes with forks out, having to go play a round of golf.
GD:
We did it once we did it once together, golf the game that is so incredibly boring, but don’t worry because it’s also really stressful at the same time.
AD:
And only like six hours long.
GD:
Six freaking hours long.
AW:
Not the way I play it, but thank you for bashing so much on my fun, honey.
GD:
Okay. I’m so sorry. I’m sorry. But yeah, but it’s fun for you. Can you describe what’s happening in your body? Cause I’m really trying to, like, I understand that for me, like getting a massage is fun. Does that count?
AW:
Yes. It does. Because if something sparks joy, it’s like the Marie Kondo thing, right? Like if you hold something, if you’re experiencing something, the thing is, I don’t know if you and Sister really truly have experienced pure joy without like some sort of conclusion or a required outcome, you know, it’s like going on the boat and for you, Glennon, and I know like being with the kids and having like a day that is full of complete life, like I know that that fills you up. So, and everybody’s different. Like you’re not going to have the same kind of fun as I am, but at the end of the day, you have to figure out what fun is to you. So that when you do walk away from work life, you don’t have to totally reform and transition into a complete unknown. You have set up some foundational building blocks, that will give you a little bit of confidence heading into that next part of your life.
GD:
Hmm.
AD:
I feel like that’s, I feel like there’s two kind of tracks of what we’re talking about and both are so important. Like what you’re talking about Abby is play like play when you were growing up and the need to be connected inside your body. But unselfconscious of how other people are viewing your body is all about play. It’s physical, you’re getting lost in it. And I feel like for many, many girls we’ve become so aware that our value is connected to how our bodies are perceived. That we very early lose the ability to become unselfconscious of our bodies. So that’s like play. So, there’s a whole gendered space there, but then there’s this whole idea of fun too, which I think also we, at least I feel, Glennon I’m interested to hear from you. I don’t feel like we have great models for that either. Like the, even the idea of fun as separate from play. So maybe it’s not physical. Maybe you’re not totally losing yourself in it, but just like your preference of what you desire to be doing with your time is a whole another thing. So we grew up sailing on our little sailboat all the time and my every weekend, all weekend, did mom like sailing sailboat?
GD:
No.
AD:
Or did she ever consider whether it’s relevant if she liked it? Like, did she like our house being decorated with civil war memorabilia and duck decoys and paintings of ships? Or did she never think whether I prefer this is relevant to the conversation? And I think that’s how I, that’s how I got to a place when I was, you know, 26 and divorced and trying to figure out what is fun to me that I literally had no idea.
GD:
Oh, that’s so true. All we do is decide whatever the person we’re trying to have a relationship with thinks is fun. And then we decide that that thing is fun.
AD:
I spent my honeymoon on a fishing charter. Okay.
GD:
Oh dear god.
AD:
It never occurred to me to be like, is this my preferred way of spending, on a tiny sun burning boat for eight hours with a stranger, it never occurred to me because, but that’s deeper than that. It’s like, it’s the decision to try to acclimate to what is fun to your person, because what you do the outcome of that, you like, you like this happy arrangement with this person where they’re happy and that makes you happy, but it never, like that’s acclimating to that set of fun is so much easier and more palatable than, and natural to me, frankly, than determining what my phone would look like and then asking for accommodation to what that looks like.
GD:
Well, exactly, because it’s more acceptable culturally too. I mean, I remember I’m having a flash right now of sitting on a couch in college. I used to spend a good amount of time watching my boyfriend play video games. Okay. Watching him. That was what I would have told you I was having fun doing like, and it wasn’t weird. It wasn’t weird for girls to sit and watch their boyfriends play video games.
AW:
Yes, it is.
GD:
It’s so weird. But I’m just saying like, it wasn’t perceived as weird. But if that were flipped, right? Like would my boyfriend have like watched me do yoga or that would have been less normal. Right. And also we’re always saying like, what you just said, babe, you know, when we’re together with the family, I would probably tell you that what’s fun for me is to do whatever my kids think is fun, but that’s also not fun.
AW:
That’s right. Yeah. It’s cause it’s basing somebody else’s opinion about what they want to be doing and taking it on as your own. So I think that you guys have a fun stunted growth because of the way that you were raised on a sailboat truly. And I think that because the way that maybe you’ve perceived the modeling of what being a good wife is, it’s like, you have to ask the people around you. Like, what is fun? I mean, honey, you actually asked me that all the time. Like, what do I want to do today? Like what, what do I think is fun?
GD:
What do I want? What do I like? What is fun? I don’t know.
AW:
And what I want to actually say is, have you ever thought about why watching our women’s national soccer team is so interesting for women?
GD:
Oh God, it makes, you know how emotional it makes me, it makes me so emotional.
AW:
Why?
GD:
I’m so glad you brought that up. Watching women use their bodies to compete instead of perform to the way they just try so hard and don’t give a shit what it looks like. They’re not trying to be pretty. They’re trying to be fierce, they’re sweating and, they’re doing it for themselves and for each other. And it could, they could give shit a what anybody else is seeing. They’re completely lost that they’re using their bodies in a way that I have never seen modeled for me. I mean, you’re right. That’s a beautiful, it affects me deeply. It moves me deeply. Even watching my girls watch or my son watch that moves me.
AW:
Both men and women. Right. A lot of times I’ve been told, you know, I don’t know why I love watching you so much. And a lot of times it’s covered up with this whole winning thing, which helps. I do understand that, but I think it’s way deeper than that. I think for women it’s like this, this awareness like this, a great deep learning about what could be, and then for men too, because they also are conditioned to believe that like women don’t know how to have fun because we never have been given the chance or taken the opportunity to have fun. I think that, that’s why I confused both of you so much. All I’m looking for in life is to have fun. It’s why I turned into an alcoholic. It’s the reason why it’s the reason why it took me so long to get sober because I, quite frankly, I thought that all of my fun would be zapped. Like just gone instantly as soon as I stopped drinking. But the reality is you have to create new ways of having fun without drinking, obviously. But I don’t know. I just feel, we all have to do a little bit of digging on you individually on me individually. What do I experience as joy? And what I do now is different than 10 years ago will be different what I do in 10 years. But the experience of it, like I enjoy doing something new for the first time just to see if it’s going to be fun.
GD:
I know it’s so wild. I think it’s an interesting thought and challenge for us all to think about a little bit, because when you even look at what’s modeled women as fun in the world, it’s always like, let’s go get a manicure or like something that’s based the way the world perceives us instead of the experience we’re having. Right. Or the idea of the wine culture, right. Let’s just all just get drunk, which doesn’t really teach us anything more about ourselves either. Right. So, all right. Let’s sign off here. We’re going to have to take a break and we’ll get into some hard questions. Can you think of anything fun that you want to try in the next month? And I want to ask you a question, babe, is reading and thinking about the book. Does that count as fun? Because I feel like that’s great fun to me. That is one source of fun I’ve always had since I was little. Does that count?
AW:
I think so. I absolutely think so. I think that seeing how you devour books, like you don’t just sit, you’re not just doing it to pass the time you’re actually interested in what’s happening and what what you’re reading. And, and then when you go on your walks, you’re thinking about the thing that you just read like that to you, I think is actual joy.
GD:
Yes. And also I thought of another one. How about going to an art museum or concert, but not with a ton of people, just like a few people at the concert. And I thought of another one. What if in the future we have some kind of social situation because I’m always about to be social. Like I’m about to figure the social thing out. It’s probably going to happen next year. I’m about to have friends so I can picture a scenario that would be fun where we are in our living room. And there’s a few other people there and we know these people well. Okay. And they might be all women, or there might be a couple men, but the men that are there have no toxic energy. Okay. They might be gay or they might just be these unicorn men that have no toxic energy. And they’re there. And we are all talking about like funny, but cool, but serious things. We’re not just talking about bullshit and people who drink or drinking and people who don’t drink are not drinking, but the people who are drinking are not getting wasted and being annoying, they’re just drinking. And then everyone leaves at 8:45.
AW:
Okay.
GD:
Can that happen? Cause that sounds fun.
AW:
I think it could happen.
GD:
I don’t want to worry that they’re not going to leave. I want it to be understood.
AW:
Okay, stop. Stop. What you need to understand is that this can’t just be a thought, like, the way that fun is had is you actually have to experience it, right? So we are going to spend the next six months talking about this futuristic social gathering, that we will then find any kind of possible problem, which will lead us to never pick a specific person or a couple.
GD:
Okay. All right. So, okay. So we’ll try it.
AW:
Because here’s the thing, Like one of the most important elements of fun is that you don’t know what the outcome is going to be. So the act of life, of like experience, you might have fun and you also might not, but that gives you some information of what you should do next time or what you should do next.
GD:
All right. That sounds like great fun.
AD:
I do think it’s, we need to address the fact though, that there is some of this disparity has to do with privilege and the ability to have time and this disparity between like levels of needs, right? So a lot of women in their roles are the caretakers. They’re making sure that all the immediate needs get met. And so if they have any amount of time left, that they need to rest.
GD:
Yes.
AD:
Right. And so rest is at a higher need level. Then the next level, which is this idea of play and fun. And I actually always thought that if, I read this thing recently from this doctor, and he said that the opposite of play isn’t work, it’s depression.
AW:
Ooh.
AD:
Which was so interesting to me because I always thought that like, the absence of work rest is enough. Like as long as you get enough rest, then from your work, then you can avoid this kind of malaise that you get, where you’re just putting one foot in front of the other, but you’re never like really driving joy out of your days. That my problem was a deficiency of rest, but that isn’t, it apparently, apparently like rest is to work what play is to gloom.
GD:
Wow.
AD:
So you can’t rise out of your melancholy just based on rest. Like you actually have to actively add in the antidote to that, which is fascinating to me. So I just think from a perspective of women who are kind of always only getting to the urgent things that this sense of melancholy that I go through a lot that I think a lot of us go through that you actually should be prescribing yourself. Some of this fun, whatever small doses you can get, because apparently, and this was news to me that resting is not the same as that.
AW:
Yeah. Yes, that’s really good.
GD:
Wow.
AW:
And I think that, you know, Glennon, and there’s times where I’m like, Hey, have you run into Glennon today? And you’re like, yes. And sometimes that happens earlier in days than the normal. And maybe this is it. Maybe the antidote or the prescription is that you need to have a little bit more play in your life so that you can stay having enough Glennon for the whole day.
GD:
All right. Sounds like a challenge. All thank you, babe. It was really fun having you here.
AW:
Love you. Thanks for having me.
GD:
Thank you so much. I love you, Sissy.
AD:
Love you.
GD:
We’ll get you on a rollercoaster soon, and we’re going to take a break and we’ll be back with some hard questions.
AD:
Okay, Sister, our first question today is from Sarah.
Sarah (caller):
Hi Glennon. My name is Sarah. I’m a wife, sister, daughter, mother, and healthcare worker. When I think about my life, it strikes me that I’ve never known how to have fun. When I think about my family, it strikes me that none of us, none of the women, my mother, my grandmother, cousins, sisters, aunts, have fun. The closest we get to having fun and drinking wine together. I keep asking myself, what do you want to do for fun? But I have no answer to silence. I’m worried that I was born without a fun self or that my fun self is dead. What do you think? Thanks for the show.
GD:
So the gender thing is so interesting, right? I was talking to a friend about this recently and at first she was not buying the whole gendered idea on fun, right. That women don’t know how to have fun and men do, which is of course a huge generalization. And I’m just saying it because it’s always true. Okay. But then she started thinking back to her childhood, right. She knows how to have fun this friend. So that’s why she was pushing back on this idea because she is the opposite of me on the fun spectrum. She has actual hobbies. She knows what she likes to do when she has free time, she understands what to do with free time. She has passions. It’s so interesting. And so that’s why she was pushing back on this idea of it being gendered. But then she started thinking back on her childhood. Okay. And like where it was that she developed these hobbies and fun things. And she remembered that while her parents were divorced, so every week she would live during the week with her mom and her mom would do, you know, the wake up, the school and the homework and the dinner and the bedtime. Repeat, repeat, repeat all the things. Right. And then on Friday afternoon, she would get dropped off at her dad’s and then she would have fun for the weekend. So for 48 hours they’d have fun together. Her dad was an awesome dad. He would take her to do all of the things he loved to do. Right. They’d go to baseball games, they’d go to the photography store and then go take pictures. They would go to movies. They would listen to music together, buy records, go to the record store. Right. So as my friend she learned to love what her dad loved. And so as adults, they were super tight. That’s what they did together. They still went to movies. They still went to baseball games and on and on. And so her point was that she said, now that I think about it, I’ve never seen my mom have fun. Like I actually don’t even know. I know what my dad loves. I don’t know what my mom loves. I don’t know what my mom likes or dislikes. I’ve actually never invited my mom to go to a movie. And she said, the interesting thing is whenever she and her mom do have some free time together, they don’t know what to do. Often her mom will just say, well, do you want to just like, go grab the glass of wine? Right. So it’s just got me thinking. I mean, is it possible that families have historically been and still often are structured in a way that means men often have more time and energy and space to find out what they like and dislike, right? To find out what is fun to them and what brings them to life. And women often have not had that time to discover their humanity. Right. So that often means that we know our fathers as human beings, as people. And we know our mothers as devoted, selfless caretakers and servants. But anyway, she actually asked me specific questions.
AD:
Sarah, Sarah is worried that she was born without a fun self.
GD:
Oh, right. Okay. I’m with you. I’m with you, Sarah. I also was worried about that. Here’s my theory. Okay. My theory is not that our fun self is completely dead. Right. That we do have a fun self, it’s just that she’s hibernating. Like she started, she gave up on us and we gave up on her. Like she just decided to go dormant when we stopped feeding her, asking her opinion on anything. And so what Sarah said, I understand, like when I sit there and drives Abby crazy, when I sit there and ask myself, what do you want to do? What would be fun for you? It’s just radio silence. Right? Okay. But there is this magical thing that happens every once in a while, that Sister, you and I have talked about, okay, I’m going to set the scene for you. I’m taking my kids to soccer. That’s all I do all day. Every day until I die. Okay. And they’re all in the car. And usually they get to control the radio. But every once in a while, like a few weeks ago, Whitesnake came up. Okay. And something just Amma went to change the station.
AD:
Oh, hell no, no.
GD:
And I said, stop. And I cranked up Whitesnake, just so you know, there’s five kids in my car at that point. Other people’s children in the car. But for a moment, I was freaking Tawny Kitaen, in that convertible, my fun self just blossomed up and was like, hell yes, here I go again on my own. Okay. Every once in a while music. Okay. I’ll be listening. I’ll be doing the dishes. I’ll be doing the dishes. Okay. And while I’m doing the dishes and it’s quiet, I am a boring, long suffering bitter woman.
AD:
Yes.
GD:
And the right song will come on. I don’t know what it is. It could be, I don’t know. It could be the Spice Girls. It could be Beyonce. It could be Bon Jovi. It could be. And suddenly I am alive again. I’m still doing the dishes, but my fun self, it’s like she smelled a delicious aroma and she has awakened.
AD:
You got out of your head. Like, that’s what it is. We live so much inside our heads. We’re living with like the ticker that never stops in the head. And there’s something that, other people who have like hobbies and stuff, this is the way they get out of their head. But like just the music, it takes us out of the interior and enlivens some part of us. And I think that it does. I get that completely. In fact, I’m so glad you brought that up because I don’t integrate music the way you do in your life. Except that a couple of weeks ago, you posted a set of like three videos where you were on your boat, you’re driving your boat and you were singing and dancing to songs and you were just, they were amazing. I watched them like 1400 times because I felt something when I was watching them, when I was watching you sing and dance. And I realized that I don’t have that feeling in my life. And I swear to you for the past couple of weeks, since I watched that, I’ve been like, I’m going to put music on. I never put music on I’m in my car. I’m like listening to NPR. I’m doing whatever. So I was like, I’m going to put music on. And I swear to you that it’s doing something. It’s like, it’s taking me out of the trap of my head. It’s not adding something to my plate. It’s just these regular moments. Like you said, like the dishwasher or the driving, it’s just these interstitial joy moments that otherwise would have not been joy moments. And I realize it’s a real thing. Like, I feel like in the story of my life, it becomes like the daily grind. It’s like my life story reads like endless pages of footnotes. It’s like, here’s the thing we have to do. Here’s the thing I should be thinking about next. And when I have music on, when these like fun songs or that remind me of a memory or, or it’s just like it, I swear to you that it allows me to see the poetry of my life. Like it allows me to things that take me out of the footnotes. And it’s like, Oh my gosh, listening to some cheesy country song. I’m like, Oh, I love my husband.
GD:
Yes. Remember when I thought I country songs was who I was. So I moved to a town with one stoplight, and then I realized I was just a person who liked country music and not actually country person.
AD:
I do remember that. Yeah. I do remember that one of the nine moves
GD:
Sister, it’s because you, it’s this thing of you thinking in spreadsheets and me thinking in colors, it’s like, you actually don’t believe you need art in your life to be a human being. Right. And art, good books, beautiful movies, music. It’s something that wakes up the humanity in us that is separate than this capitalistic grind that wants to keep us productive over and over and over. It’s resistance, rest, art, they are these things that don’t make sense in terms of productivity. Right? And so it feels like holding onto your humanity in a culture that doesn’t want you to do that. That wants you to just keep thinking you have to produce and that your worth is based on what you contribute, as opposed to what you experience.
AD:
And I think the experience part of it is huge. Like, I don’t have experiences where I’m not just totally inside my head. And so I don’t drink anymore. Right? So like, that was the way I used to get out side of the trap of whatever was just on constant loop in my head. But the music does, it takes me out of the loop. Like it puts me in a different loop. And this is another thing that this is like a tragic reality that I have become aware of in my own life. That I think that actually the way that I feel about the people in my life and my daily life has much less to do about the people in my life and my daily life. And the way I feel about them has to do with how I feel.
GD:
Amen. If I’m happy, I love you. If I’m unhappy, you suck. Well.
AD:
And that is that to me, it seems so simple and ridiculous, but it really feels true. And so when there are these moments where I can get myself outside of the loop, I can see it better. I can see it all in a different way than when I’m trapped in it. And, and for me, music has done it and it feels doable. Like it feels for someone like me. Like, you can just add a little bit in, and also bonus ding, ding, ding, when you put music on him, when you’re with your kids, it’s like, you’re playing, but you don’t have to play.
GD:
Exactly. It’s the playing for people who hate playing like us. It’s like, you’re suddenly a fun-loving house look kinda like who we are. We’re a little band. Now continue without me please. Over there.
AD:
Oh God. Okay. Speaking of music, I’m very glad you brought that up because I wanted to ask you a question, okay. I know you don’t pay attention to any of this. And so you won’t have a clue about this. I hope this isn’t dropping something on you, but I do pay very close attention to these things. So I want to ask you about those videos that I was just talking about on the boat. So when you posted those, you’re driving your boat, the music was blasting, you’re singing and dancing and you’re so happy and free. Okay. On that day, you had the single biggest Unfollow day ever. On social media, on that day, more people unfollowed your page than ever in like 10 years. So I was watching those folks I’m following. And I kept thinking about that part of Untamed, where you said it’s easier for the world to love a suffering woman than it is for the world to love a joyful, confident woman. And I’m just wondering what you make of that, like this, like this audacious free, happy woman living unapologetically in that moment. It clearly made so many people just deeply uncomfortable. Like, what is that about?
GD:
Well, listen, okay. I’ll set the scene. Abby and I live on a little canal off the Gulf of Mexico. And when we moved here, we got this boat and it’s so wonderful. It’s a little fishing boat. We don’t fish. But it’s at an, in a, on a dock in our backyard. So we can literally get on our little boat. The first few times we were out in the Gulf of Mexico on it I realized I was happier than I had ever been in my entire life. Like with my wife out on the Gulf of Mexico, can’t see land anywhere. No one is driving this boat except for the two of us. I used to look at her in the driver’s seat and think, Oh my God, why is the world letting us do this? Like, no one is the boss of us. We are completely free. Wind. Just, it just was utter joy and this like wild thing it brought up in me. And when we were thinking about what we were going to name the boat, we decided, what, what is that wild free spirit? And we could think of only, Liz’s partner, Raya who died, but her spirit was so unbelievably free and wild. And so we named the boat Raya. So I used to let Abby drive the boat all the time. I didn’t ever want to, like, I was too scared to take control of the boat. And recently I learned how to drive the boat because I was like, this is bullshit. Like, stop it. You can do this. And I learned how to drive the boat. So I was on the boat that day. We had the kids on the boat I was driving and Abby was videoing me because music, if you think it’s good in the kitchen, it’s so good on the water. Just like she was videoing me dancing too. I think All About That Bass.
AD:
I love that song.
GD:
Okay. I actually hate, no, I hate that song. I think terrible, terrible song. I can’t stand it. I think it’s like so obnoxious and anti-feminist fine. I loved it that day. Okay. And then the Spice Girls came on and then P!nk, I Am Here came on. So when I was like, it was like the best dancing day. So Abby was videoing me. She showed me the video later. And honestly, Sister, when I watched that video, my thought was, this is my favorite version of myself driving that freaking boat. I’m dancing. I’m happy. I’m free. I have like sweat pants and a tank top and a baseball cap and a bikini top on. And I just like felt. I love myself in this. And I posted it. And, maybe so many people unfollowed because my dancing was bad, but I don’t think so. I actually think if my dancing had been bad, more people would have stayed. I think that the problem was my dancing was actually kind of good.
AD:
That’s a stretch.
GD:
It was for me. Come on. Very good for me. Very good. I think the truth is the happier, the more joyful, the more successful, the more bold a man is, the more the world likes and trusts him. And the more successful, confident, bold, and happy and free a woman is the less we like and trust her. Right. And so something when we see that it irks us. Right.
AD:
Yeah.
GD:
And, you know, that’s why so many people end up saying, I don’t know, it’s just something about her. I can’t put my finger on it. Okay. I can put my finger on it. It’s internalized misogyny. Right?
AD:
Well, is it because we don’t give ourselves permission or feel like we are able to be happy so that when someone else is doing it, it’s this audacious kind of clash that we can’t really identify, but we’re like, that feels …
GD:
Bad because I want it. Yeah. I think that’s how I used to deal with envy all the time. Every time I felt envious of something, it would hurt inside and I would shut it down. I would just decide. I didn’t, I hated that person. I just shut it down until I realized that envy is of course, a red flashing arrow pointing me towards the thing I want. And so I can either decide, well, you did it. You were like, that makes me feel something I want that. I’m going to try to incorporate that into my life. You can do that and use it. Now that’s what I try to do when someone does something awesome. That makes me feel jealous. I just try to sit with it and think like, okay, what is this telling me that I want, that I was made to do next? You know, but I mean, listen, I know people who, women who, when they feel like they’re being too happy or fulfilled or successful or whatever, they will know that because of the way the world works, that they will need to insert something, a post or whatever that shows them really weak and vulnerable and sad because the world will only tolerate happy woman for so long. Right. So, I mean, I don’t know. It makes me, it makes me, you know, I used to, I caught myself when I first was promoting Love Warrior and Untamed. I would catch myself every time someone said, so you left your husband. I would find myself making sure I brought up the infidelity right away. My ex-husband’s infidelity, whenever anyone talked about the success of my books or my speaking career, or I would find myself right away bringing up the nonprofit, bringing up Together Rising. Because I know that the world will only allow me to do what I want to do in that marriage, if I have a get out of jail free card, if I have permission because he was unfaithful. And I know that the world will only allow me to do well in the world, if I’m doing good. Right. So it’s okay that I’m successful at books because I do all this charity work and I’m an activist. And I caught myself doing that and I stopped. I do not, because I do not want women to listen to me and feel like they need a permission slip to do what they want in the world. And I don’t want them to feel like they need an excuse for doing well.
AD:
Yeah. Cause at the end of the day, it’s about worthiness, right? Like when people see that video of you, they don’t think they’re jealous of you on the boat. They think at a deep level, I do not believe that I am worthy of joy in my life. And it is offensive to me when someone is audaciously claiming their worth that way.
GD:
I mean, maybe they just freaking hate my dancing. It could be a lot of things, but you know what? It makes me actually more hell bent on showing myself in those strong moments because you know, I’ve never pretended to be stronger than I am in any given moment. And so I’m sure as hell not going to pretend to be less strong than I happen to be in a particular moment. Right. My promise has been that in every moment, I’m going to show up how I am exactly how I am inside of my moment. That’s been my promise the world. So when I’m feeling free and strong and joyful, I’m going to show up that way. And honestly, I think that we all need to show ourselves in those moments too. And I think we need to stop requiring suffering and sadness and meekness from other women, right?
AD:
Normalize joy for women.
GD:
So that eventually it becomes less shocking and audacious and annoying for women to show themselves as strong and happy.
GD:
Okay, everybody. This is our next right thing for the week. Here’s what we’re going to do. We’re going to listen to music this week. We’re not even going to add an extra thing to do. We’re just going to add this thing to what we’re already doing. Okay. We’re going to put on music during our regular day in the car, in the kitchen at work, wherever we are, we’re going to do that, to awaken this fun self inside of us and let her know that we still believe in her. Right? And we’re going to be calling on her soon. So I have made a playlist of fun songs for you. The link to that playlist is going to be in the show notes. I do not want you to notice that all of these songs are from 20 years ago. I did notice it it’s possible that that’s the last time I had fun. If it’s not your jam, make a list of jams for yourself. A fun jams. Right Sissy, is this what we’re asking them to do?
AD:
Yes. So the link to the playlist is in the notes to this podcast. And we’re also going to do a post on your social details on the playlist. And there, we want people to tell us the songs that awaken their fun self, so we can keep building this out for folks. Awesome. We’re going to save the world. They’re fun songs this week.
GD:
Love it, Sissy. Okay, everybody. Thank you for being with us today. When life gets hard this week, don’t forget, we can do hard things. We will see you back here next week.