Glennon Update: Lessons from Therapy
February 21, 2023
Abby Wambach:
Welcome back to We Can Do Hard Things. We’re just always amazed that you come back, and I think Glennon’s probably going to talk a lot in this episode, and we’re going to be here with you. And that’s why I wanted to start this podcast so I could get a word in edgewise.
Glennon Doyle:
So are you done now talking?
Abby Wambach:
That’s all. All I had.
Glennon Doyle:
Okay. So I decided that it might be good to, every once in a while, come on and talk about what is going on with my recovery and my process in recovery. And here’s why I’m planning to do this is, I have been through different sorts of recoveries in my life, and it is amazing. It is very hard and uncomfortable, but it is just like how to be a human. And with all of our adulting in the world, we forget, I think, just the basics of how to be a tender, vulnerable human on the planet. And it is a magical, wonderful thing to start over with beginner’s mind, which is what recovery is, and it just feels like becoming a little bit more human. I don’t know. And there are many things that I’m doing in recovery that are just personal to me, but as always, there’s also a lot that is about everyone.
Glennon Doyle:
So that’s what I try to always do in my work, whether it’s on the page or the podcast, is like, “Okay. How is this thing about me about all of us? And what kind of freedom can I get talking about it and service can I provide talking about it?” So that’s what I’m going to try to do with these few update episodes. Just what am I learning and what parts of it am I desperate to tell all of you about? Because I think that it might serve all of us. And then you all are just going to have to tell me when it gets really boring because I have no concept of… I’m in it. Okay. I’m in it. This is what I’m living, breathing, sleeping, and so you’ll just have to tell me when and if it goes off the rails.
Abby Wambach:
Can I ask you a question?
Glennon Doyle:
Yes, ma’am.
Abby Wambach:
What is it serving you by telling the people?
Glennon Doyle:
That’s a great question. So number one, it helps me organize it a little bit. It can feel like a bunch of fleeting ideas that I’m learning each day and I’m thinking about, and then they’re gone, and I can’t get them back, and I’m grasping for them again. I’m a teacher. I’m a third-grade teacher at heart. That’s how I know things is I figure out, “How would I teach this?” That’s how I learned about the solar system and continents is like, “How do I teach this to my babies?” They always say, “You don’t really know something until you can explain it until you teach can it.”
Abby Wambach:
Teach what you wish to know.
Glennon Doyle:
Yeah. Exactly.
Abby Wambach:
Somebody said that, not me.
Glennon Doyle:
When I’m figuring out how to share, it feels like I really can learn it and know it.
Abby Wambach:
Mm-hmm. That’s makes a lot of sense.
Glennon Doyle:
It’s reporting from the front lines. It’s like you’re a war correspondent.
Abby Wambach:
Yeah, exactly.
Amanda Doyle:
From the continent of recovery and everything you report back intersects with our humanity because you’re just up closer to it. We can all feel it, but we’re just maybe a little farther away when we’re not in that stage.
Glennon Doyle:
Yeah. And y’all have real jobs, you have other jobs. This is my job. Let me do this for us. You carry on with your lives and do all the things you need to do with adulting. I’ll do this part and report back to you, and just so all of you know, I’m trying to do these not where I am right now, which is interesting. This is me, what I was thinking about three weeks ago, because that’s another thing I have to do is… I don’t know. I don’t know how to explain that but-
Amanda Doyle:
Well, yeah. You have to figure out what it means and process through it enough to be able to explain it. That makes sense.
Glennon Doyle:
Yeah. When I’m in the middle of recovery, every single day, I have no idea what the fuck’s going on. I’m like, “Wait, what is happening? Nothing’s working. I’m sad and scared.” I don’t see any theme or growth until it’s a little bit in the back window. In retrospect, I’m like, “Oh, that’s what last week was about.”
Abby Wambach:
Also a trigger warning. I just want to say it.
Amanda Doyle:
If speaking about eating disorders and recovery is something that makes your recovery harder, then check back in on next episode. If it’s something that makes your life easier and feel more human with other humans, then keep listening.
Glennon Doyle:
Right. Yeah. And I’m just so grateful for this space. I can’t even tell you all. Sister, when I talked about the diagnosis on the podcast, all of these people, all these magazines are like, “Come talk to us about it.” And it’s so wonderful to be like, “No, thank you. I have my family meeting where I talk about these things.” It’s just wonderful. So I decided early on in my recovery that I needed to get back to walks. Okay. Now going for a couple of walks a day sounds very, very simple, but it is, I think, one of the most important times in spiritual practices of my life is walking. I don’t put anything in my ears. I don’t listen to anything. I just-
Abby Wambach:
I don’t know how you do that.
Glennon Doyle:
I actually live fairly close to the ocean now. So I walk down to the ocean and it’s been freezing cold. So I get on my scarf and my hat and my big puffy coat, and I’m the only one on the beach, and the sun’s not even risen yet. And I just walk, walk, walk, walk, walk. Okay. So in my visions of this walk of what it would be in my early recovery, I thought that I would have amazing spiritual revelations on these walks. I thought that my mind would be thinking very highfalutin thoughts.
Abby Wambach:
Falutin.
Glennon Doyle:
Yes. Now one of the things that’s interesting about focus time where you’re not allowing yourself any other distractions is that you can notice what your mind does.
Amanda Doyle:
That’s precisely why we have so many distractions.
Glennon Doyle:
That’s why we don’t do it.
Amanda Doyle:
It’s terrifying.
Glennon Doyle:
Right. So the way that I want to explain that is suddenly you aren’t your thoughts. All day, you’re walking around and you just think you are that thing, and then when you’re in a quiet space and you’re walking, and you’re like watching your mind go, and it’s like being on a walk with your most annoying, ridiculous friend who won’t shut the fuck up, but it’s you.
Abby Wambach:
That’s why I don’t walk.
Glennon Doyle:
You’re like, “I’m out here for a spiritual experience and this woman will not shut the fuck up.” That’s, okay, ruining my beach walk. And here’s what I started realizing is what my mind is thinking about is humiliating. At this time that I’m talking about right now, this window of my recovery, I had a little bit stopped obsessing about food in my body. And so what my mind did was to now start obsessing about something else, which was the next thing I needed to buy. All I thought about while I was out there trying to think about my recovery, trying to think about my childhood, trying to think about together rising, “Nope, let’s think about that scarf that just came through your Instagram feed that if you bought you would be so amazing.” This scarf I obsessed about. Then Abby, do you remember the hat?
Abby Wambach:
Oh my gosh.
Glennon Doyle:
I obsessed about this hat that I saw in a store. Am I a hat person? No, but I just needed this hat for a week. I needed this scarf for a week. I needed this new sweater. It was just like one thing after another a thing. It was driving me utterly crazy. I couldn’t stop the obsession. And so that is a really important interesting thing to notice about yourself.
Amanda Doyle:
Did you buy the hat, and the scarf, and that sweater? Or did you just obsess?
Glennon Doyle:
Actually, did not.
Amanda Doyle:
No? Interesting.
Glennon Doyle:
No, I did not. Because I started to think about, okay, this is the hamster wheel that I could be on my entire life and have been at periods of time. This is not something that’s unique to me. This is something that is how capitalism runs, how consumer culture runs. It’s just whenever I get the scarf, I will be pleased for four minutes and then there will be something else that jumps in the space of scarf, and then I will obsess about that until I get that thing. And then when that’s done, it’s just a forever… Because we can’t ever get enough of what we don’t really need. So I just kept thinking, “Oh, I’m so happy to be seeing this.” I don’t want to spend my life doing this. I do not want my entire life to just be one thing after another that I am trying to consume.
Glennon Doyle:
So then I started thinking about, okay, we’ve talked about this before, “What is the want beneath the want?” Okay. Clearly, it’s not just a freaking scarf or a sweater. I think this is an interesting exercise to do. It’s like what marketers do is they just identify a human need, a human longing, and then they just attach a product to it so that when we look at something, we’re like, “Oh, that candle, oh my God, I want quiet time. I want peace. I want a minute to breathe. I want people to leave me alone.” But the closest I can get is that $38 candle. So I started thinking about the things that I was obsessing about sweaters, scarves, things to wrap around myself. I was like, “Am I freaking cold? Am I just freezing?” But then I started thinking about covering. Covering the neck, scarves cover the most vulnerable place.
Abby Wambach:
Warmth.
Glennon Doyle:
Warmth, what does that signify? I don’t know.
Abby Wambach:
I know. It’s going from your past to your future like you’ve talked about, and your body is like you wanted to become steel, steel’s cold.
Amanda Doyle:
That’s interesting.
Abby Wambach:
It’s like maybe this desire to want to move into a more warmth of body.
Glennon Doyle:
Yeah. Maybe, or exposure, being exposed and wanting to-
Abby Wambach:
Yeah, obviously. I don’t know for sure. That would be my guess.
Glennon Doyle:
Yeah. But then I started thinking, okay, this is all bullshit too, because this is just thinking about thinking like, “Oh no, no.” I’m like, “I think I want this other…” It’s just the same consciousness that’s causes a problem, doesn’t solve the problem. So my mind is wild and keeps wanting things, and now I’m trying to think about my thinking.
Glennon Doyle:
So here’s what I started thinking about, which is I think the problem for me is adding anything after the word, I want. I think I just want. I think that I just am a longing, wanting, needing person, and the problem comes when I attach something or anything after that word, want. It’s like that could be one definition of addiction. Like love addiction, it’s like, “I love,” and then we just attach Johnny. And it’s like we think that’s going to quell who we actually are, which is this yearning. Or like alcoholism, I need a beer. No, you just need, you’re just an open wound of longing and wanting.
Glennon Doyle:
So I started thinking maybe the problem is not the actual loving, or the needing, or the wanting, but the attaching one liquid or one person or one scarf to that wanting or longing and needing. What if that thing never eases that longing? And so I want a scarf becomes I just want. And there’s no way to solve that. So you just have to be in that wanting.
Amanda Doyle:
What does it look like to be a person who deeply wants and doesn’t attach something to it? Like doesn’t take the bait from the world, which is going to give you a lot of bait about things you should want, how does that look from a day-to-day just to be a wanting person and to come to terms with it without trying to fix it with a thousand things?
Glennon Doyle:
I think that’s the key of my recovery right now. I can tell you it’s not going swimmingly so far. It’s always trying to attach something to the thing, whether it was food, or alcohol, or shopping. This is not a problem that’s me. We are all grabbing for something to attach to because it’s easier to get that little relief, even if it’s eight minutes from the longing. It’s like when you press the button on the cart and for a second, you’re like, “Ugh.” I mean, it comes right back and then you’re out of money or whatever. The fact is that we are wanting longing people, and the world runs by attaching things to that longing and then convincing us that we will solve it with their product or their thing. So then for a week I was like, “Okay. Well, I’m a wanting yearning person.”
Glennon Doyle:
What that looks like is feeling a lot and being okay with that and making art out of it, writing poems, I don’t know what it is for everybody, but not trying to fix it. And then a friend was over. She had just come from a recovery meeting, and she said, “Well, whatever you think about the most is your highest power.” This is a saying from recovery. That is so fascinating to me. Whatever you think about the most is your higher power. So don’t give me, “I’m not a religious person. I don’t have faith, I don’t…” Whatever. Everybody has a higher power. Everybody has something they’re bowing to. One idea is that whatever you think about the most is your higher power. So if you are on your beach walk, you obsessed about your mother who never loved you well. Your broken mother is your higher power.
Glennon Doyle:
Whatever the thing is that you ruminate on over and over again is your higher power. So when I thought about that, I thought, okay, right now, and I’m not pleased about this, but my higher power would be consumerism-
Abby Wambach:
Longing.
Glennon Doyle:
… beauty, thinness, buying shit. So then if you think about what your higher power is, and you being a disciple of that thing, the idea is how do I undisciple myself from this? How do I quit this church? How do I stop allowing this thing to be my higher power? So here’s where the things get weird. What I usually decide is, “Oh, I just need a bunch of new rules for myself.”
Glennon Doyle:
The way that I stop this discipleship, the way that I stop this thing being the higher power of me is that I make a bunch of rules for myself. That is what I ding, ding, ding, fingered out on the beach. Oh my God. I am addicted to beauty culture. I’m addicted to thinness and control. I am addicted to consumer culture. So I am going to make a bunch of rules now to protect myself from those things. So I came home to, you made a big announcement. I wrote down this whole thing, “You Glennon, you are addicted to these things.” This is what I said no more dyeing your hair, no more makeup, no more Botox, no more social media, no more buying anything. I have made myself a mission statement. I told my kids, I texted my hairdresser, said, “Get behind me, Satan.” No more of this.
Glennon Doyle:
And I just thought, that’s it. This is the answer. I am not going to be a disciple of that shit anymore. I pictured myself just like this gray goddess with proof of wrinkles and proof of life all over my face, and my ass and felt like other women and my girls would be able to look at me, and I would just be one version of a human being that was not fucking telling them that them in their natural state wasn’t good enough to exist just as they were. I was going to do this for me, for my kid, for all of us. Do you remember that time?
Abby Wambach:
I do.
Glennon Doyle:
Do you remember anything in particular about that time? Do you have any thoughts or feelings about it? Did I tell you, sister?
Amanda Doyle:
Mm-hmm. You did.
Glennon Doyle:
Oh, I did tell you. Okay.
Abby Wambach:
Yeah. I was just really quiet when you made me read your list. I was like, “Huh.” This has been an interesting process for me because I’ve had to remove myself from being a part of your healing in a way, and my input doesn’t matter. And I think that I’ve really tried, I’m not 100% successful with this, but I thought, “Well, she’s going to figure that out.”
Glennon Doyle:
Wow.
Abby Wambach:
“She’s going to figure this out at some point, and I can’t be the one that figures it out for her.”
Glennon Doyle:
But you did have a flash of, “Whoa, she’s doing the rules thing again.”
Abby Wambach:
Yeah, it was like, “Oh, this is old Glennon.”
Glennon Doyle:
Oh, that’s so interesting. I did not know that.
Abby Wambach:
It was like you step outside the house, and you were like, “Nope, too hot or too cold,” and you wanted to come back in where it was safe and cozy and warm. The way that I think about it is you’ve created all of these neural pathways of thinking of operating, and you’re starting to rearrange and maybe rewire some of them or even just considered to rewire some of them. And it’s hard to make those new grooves in the neuroplasticity of your brain. So to me, it just felt like, “Oh, she needs to do this for some reason.”
Amanda Doyle:
To me, it doesn’t feel like new pathways. You said before that in the first episode that anorexia was a religion, a worldview, and it feels like you just took a different religion and filled in the same pathways because in anorexia you’re like, “This is dangerous. This is scary. I have to make myself a thousand rules to make myself safe. So there are foods that are forbidden. There are things that are dangerous, and so if I just follow these rules, I’ll be okay.” But then you’re trying to get out of that, and you’re like, “This is scary. I don’t know how to navigate this. So I will make all these rules. There are procedures that are dangerous for me. There are hair colorings that are forbidden.” It’s the same exact pathway with a different religion.
Glennon Doyle:
Yeah.
Abby Wambach:
Yeah, that’s good.
Glennon Doyle:
Yeah. Yeah. So my daughter figured this out. So my 16-year-old daughter, this is where the moment where the madness is interrupted. Okay. So I make it like a couple months with this. I mean, thank God I’d just gotten Botox, so I didn’t have to deal with anything. Just the concept of one day not renewing. Okay. But my hair was getting gray. I was feeling okay about it for a while. Then I started to feel scared, but I wasn’t sharing any of my fear on the outside because I already said it. I already said the rules. Now if I go back on it-
Amanda Doyle:
Well, you’re not going to be safe. Not to make light of it, you had decided that in this brave new world that you’re entering with uncharted territory, you needed things to keep you safe. You can’t just walk out there and willy-nilly decide as you go. That’s terrifying. So it’s a map, and you made yourself a map and then… What happened?
Glennon Doyle:
I mean, Abby said later it was almost like I was trying to prove my freedom with a bunch of rules like, “Look at me, how free I am with all of my wild gray hair, and I am so free,” but I had to make a bunch of cages around myself to be free. My daughter sits down in my bathroom one night and she says, “Mom, I’m thinking about something.” And I said, “What’s up?” And she said, “Do you think that it’s a good idea to have all of these extreme new rules that you’re living by right as you’re trying to recover?”
Glennon Doyle:
And I looked at her on the bathroom floor, and this is a true thing. I had my phone next to me at the counter. I looked at her on the bathroom phone and my heart just… I felt so many things. I felt so grateful for her. I felt sad that she had to think about that in terms of her mom. I felt amazed by her wisdom. I felt like she was so brave to even be thinking about this or say it to me. And then I also felt really excited to text my hairdresser.
Amanda Doyle:
You’re like, “Dear Satan, get in front of me.”
Glennon Doyle:
Yeah, exactly. So I said to her, “Hold on one second,” before I responded to her. And I picked up my phone and I texted my hairdresser and I said, “I just need you to get me in as soon as possible.” And she of course said, “Of course, I’ve been waiting for this.” Okay.
Glennon Doyle:
So as I was talking to Tish about this, I remembered something that my doctor had said to me when I announced my rules to her. Now, interestingly enough, I had not thought about this until Tish said this because I am amazing at hearing what I need to hear and not hearing what doesn’t fit into my plan. Okay? So my doctor said, when I announced all of these amazing new feminist rules for myself, she looked less excited than I thought she would.
Amanda Doyle:
You thought you were going to get a sticker for that.
Glennon Doyle:
I did. I really did. And she said, “Let’s just keep an eye on that because sometimes people who do not have an internal locus of control make external rules to keep themselves safe.”
Abby Wambach:
Geez.
Glennon Doyle:
People who do not have a center, an inner self that they trust to guide them, make a bunch of structures on the outside to control, protect them because they don’t feel safe or guided in their own bodies. Suddenly, it all started to make sense about replacing. I felt like I was getting a God of rules, a set of things that had always kept me safe, taken away from me. And so it makes sense then that I would replace it with another. The old God has mean new rules. I’ll replace it with the new God who has mean new rules, but they all have to do with deprivation, they all have to do with not trusting myself, they all have… So it must be right.
Amanda Doyle:
And they’re also not tested. That’s a thing before you did anything, but you decided it was bad for you. Whereas if you just were going through your recovery and you went to your regular hair things and then it started to seem a little off and it wasn’t working for you and felt right, conflicted, then you would notice that and respond to it as opposed to proactively just somewhat arbitrarily making up all these rules that you thought would work for you.
Glennon Doyle:
Right. Someone who knows how to live in their body and pay attention to how they feel moment by moment would know how to do that.
Abby Wambach:
Trust the process, right?
Glennon Doyle:
Someone like me who has been completely divorced from their body and from their knowing forever, might not trust that that’s going to happen because I have not practiced that. So it might be much easier.
Glennon Doyle:
Now here’s where this weird micro thing that happened to me, I believe is about all of us. Where did I get this idea that whatever’s happening inside of my body, that my truest nature, that myself is not a good enough guide, will not keep me safe, that I have to have outer structures protecting me from myself, protecting other people from me. I want to talk about white lady culture for a minute. I think we don’t do that enough. We assume that white lady culture is the default. White women assume that. We don’t talk a lot about how we are a culture and how we are indoctrinated in a lot of different ways. And there are a million different socioeconomic groups in… When I say white people, I’m talking about mine in particular. There is nothing about myself that was not told to me at some point I needed an outer structure to protect me from.
Glennon Doyle:
The minute I was born, I was born into a culture that said, “You cannot trust your appetite. Here’s diet culture for you. Here’s a list of rules. Here’s a list of guidelines on every single magazine. You just don’t listen to yourself. You listen to this and that will keep you safe and desirable.” I was born into a culture that did not honor a faith, a wild faith inside of me. It gave me religion. Here is an outer structure that will guide you, control your wild faith, and this will keep you safe, get you to heaven, follow these rules. So appetite is controlled, faith is controlled, sexuality is controlled. Here’s your heteronormative, all the rules that women have about sex, stay in the rules of all of this.
Amanda Doyle:
Here’s the confines and rules around sex that is safe, and by safe, meaning acceptable. And here’s all the kinds that is not. And if you so much as want any of those other kinds, then that is further evidence that you can’t be trusted because you want this thing that we’ve all decided is a very bad thing, like any sex before marriage, like any sex with someone who isn’t the opposite sex, any of that. So that just doubles down on your like, “Well, I guess I don’t know what’s best for me.”
Glennon Doyle:
“Don’t listen to yourself. Listen to this. You’ll be safe. Match yourself to this set of rules.” Femininity, everything is a rule. “Here’s what you wear. Here’s what you don’t wear. Here’s how you be a girl. Here’s how you flirt. Here’s the million ways you can keep yourself safe at night. Don’t wear headphones at night. Don’t drink.” All of these rules about being a girl in the world that will keep us safe. I believe that me, and I’m not saying this is true for everyone, I’m saying this is true for me, that me breaking out of my fundamentalist religion was me stepping outside of spiritual anorexia. That me honoring my desire inside of myself and my sexuality and getting out of a heteronormative marriage and with you was breaking free from sexual anorexia. We even look at the way the world talks to women about money.
Glennon Doyle:
It’s financial anorexia. It has nothing to do with power. It has nothing to do with using your financial energy to serve and change status quo. It’s deprivation. It’s you just don’t get a latte. You just keep saving. You just don’t buy. I think that one way, not the way, not the one way to look at the way that my particular generation, my particular culture was raised, is that we were raised with a bunch of outer rules and structures imposed upon us to keep us safe, which by the way, none of it was really to keep us safe. It was to keep white men in our lives in power and unchallenged. And that is why we are compliant, and caged, and fucking angry. And I think that that is one place where this whole Karendom comes from. I actually saw this idea discussed on Twitter by Imani Gandy, @AngryBlackLady, who was pointing to somebody on TikTok who suggested, why on earth are we calling these angry white women Karens, why don’t we just call them angry white women like we’ve been labeled?
Amanda Doyle:
Yeah, because that whole phenomenon undergirds the whole idea of white exceptionalism. That it isn’t a communal problem.
Glennon Doyle:
Exactly. It’s just a Karen.
Amanda Doyle:
This isn’t the whole lot of us. There’s a couple bad apples. Notice how we don’t do the couple bad apples for every other race. They don’t get that courtesy.
Glennon Doyle:
No. It’s angry black women. You’re an angry black woman. I think that when you look at all of these isolated incidents of white women freaking out and calling the police or calling in the troops, it’s always when women of color are showing us too much freedom. It’s when they are laughing too loudly. It’s when their children are selling lemonade. It’s when black men are bird watching. It’s when black families are being full of life and freedom. It’s when people are dancing to loudly. It’s freedom that pisses us off. And it’s also, God forbid, anybody who’s in power, any black woman who’s in power that we can’t take it. Anybody who is a woman with freedom or power makes us crazy because we want those things, and we are caged, and we don’t understand any of it because our culture is anorexia.
Abby Wambach:
Yes. All of the shit that we see that we want, the envy we have, what it brings out in us is this white angry woman that is just pissed because our whole lives, we’ve been following the appetite, the spirituality, the sexuality, the gender, and the financial fucking rules of the world.
Glennon Doyle:
Mm-hmm. Right. And we know we can’t take it out on the people who are doing it to us, or not that we can’t, we just don’t. And so we turn on everybody else. So I think that this is part of my recovery that I’m hoping people can find themselves somewhere in. And PS, stay tuned because I just keep replacing things with other things. I haven’t found the thing that will replace, that will help me find this inner locust that all these people keep talking about. But what I do know is that it’s not an outer set of rules that it’s got to be inside of me. And I will say this, I think the not wanting to dye my hair, I want to not want that. Okay.
Amanda Doyle:
Yeah. You just don’t yet want that.
Glennon Doyle:
I just don’t yet. I am onto something, when I picture my 60-year-old self, when I my 55, I am that person, but it’s not because I disciplined myself. I overrode myself. I made myself do it. It’s because one day I woke up and I was so full of life and joy that I decided, “Why the hell would I want to go sit in a chair for three hours and cover my head?” I won’t want to, it will be a gift to myself, to free myself from the thing. It won’t be a rule that I have to follow to discipline myself to do it. I want to want it, but I’m not going to make myself do it until I really do want it.
Amanda Doyle:
That makes so much sense to me. It’s the idea that deprivation is just as much of a cage as wanting. If you tell yourself, “I still want this thing, I’m not going to let myself have it.” There’s no freedom in there, just like there’s no freedom in wanting and wanting and wanting and never being able to satiate that desire that.
Glennon Doyle:
That’s right.
Amanda Doyle:
Both of them are terrible ways to live. And it made me think when you were talking about the wanting, when you were saying, “I’m just a wanting, wanting person,” I think it might go to the locust issue, to the center of you issue where you’re directing yourself. Because I’m thinking right now of this book, Woman at Point Zero, this woman Nawal El Saadawi wrote, and she has this part of it where she says, “I hope for nothing. I want for nothing. I fear nothing. I am free.” And it’s like what you said. When you get to the point where you don’t want to dye your hair, and you don’t want those 10 things in your closet that are going to satisfy you for 10 seconds, is the idea that you already have everything you need. So why would you?
Glennon Doyle:
Maybe or it’s the dependence upon the trust that when my inner self needs something, she’ll let me know. I think that not wanting, not needing, not longing, that’s very Buddhist. And I mean, listen, I was on the beach going, “The Lord’s my shepherd. I shall not want. He makes me lie down in green pastures.” I was trying not to want. Maybe that’s part of this. It’s also why I want to track this recovery because my hope and dream is that a year from now, I will look back on a transcript from the beginning and be like, “Oh, we’re not… We figured that part out.” Right?
Amanda Doyle:
Yeah. Exactly. And I think there’s a difference between responding to yourself when you are learning to hear your voice about a want versus living in the state of want. Those are two very different things. If you’re living in a state of deprivation, very different than deciding that what your body needs is to pass on something right now. Living in a state of want is very different than sitting with yourself and hearing yourself enough to say, “Actually, I don’t want this job and I want that one.” That’s a very different way of doing life.
Glennon Doyle:
Very different. Very different. Yeah. No, it is.
Abby Wambach:
Well, it’s coming from more of a grounded place in the early recovery days. It’s like, “Okay. I’m not obsessing about food, so I’m just going to find something else to curb this desire.” And I think over time, you’ll become more grounded in it. So it’s like, “Oh, do I actually want that? Maybe, maybe not.”
Glennon Doyle:
Yeah. It’s just really interesting because what I don’t think is that that is what most people do. I think that most people just live in a state of attaching something and then hamster wheeling their whole life. What I’m saying is-
Abby Wambach:
Yeah, of course.
Glennon Doyle:
… I think that that recovery is a gift that leaves people in a better spiritual place than most of the world who thinks that they never had a mental problem to start with. Because when I’m doing this work, I’m not thinking, “I’m so fucking weird.” I’m thinking we are all so fucking weird. How am I going to use this time to not do what everybody does? To not waste my life, to not be on my deathbed and be like, “Well, I sure did collect a hell of a lot of scarves.”
Amanda Doyle:
Yeah. And listen, we’re all weird and we’re all a collection of chemicals. We think we’re motivated by all this shit. We are motivated by dopamine and all the other chemicals in our brain that give us positive responses when we do certain things. So when we are getting those, as long as that pathway is going, it’s going to continue. And it’s almost like you have to live into something before you believe it because you have to make that pathway work. You have to be like, “Whoa, I just got a shot of something joyful in my head when I listened to myself and gave it to myself.” What are you going to do next time? That’s the thing you’re going to want instead of the scarf.
Glennon Doyle:
Yeah. That’s what I think. I’ve casted a vision for who I will be, but that’s not where I am now. So I have to live in to becoming that thing, and it’s not going to be through deprivation. So thanks for listening to that.
Amanda Doyle:
It was beautiful.
Abby Wambach:
It’s been really something.
Amanda Doyle:
That’s a lot to think about.
Abby Wambach:
Yeah. It’s been really something, watching you go through this process. A lot for me has definitely come up. So I think that this is not only important for anybody who sits in your seat having some of the stuff that you’re going through, but for me, to be your partner, it’s been really interesting. It’s like confronted my own self with my own worthiness and how we operate and you getting more embodied and me not needing to take care of some of the things, the physical things that I normally would. It’s been really good for everybody and because it’s pushing us, it’s like-
Glennon Doyle:
It changes the dance between us when I’m changing the dance inside my head.
Abby Wambach:
Yeah. And you are just doing the work, and you’re doing it in a way that I feel like you deserve, like already gold medals.
Glennon Doyle:
Aw, babe.
Abby Wambach:
No, it’s really something. You really are beautiful, and it’s not peaches and cream every day.
Glennon Doyle:
No, it’s not. I want to stop now because I just feel like that’s enough, but I did keep one of the rules. It’s not a rule. It’s like one of the things that has felt like a gift, and I am keeping that one, but I’ll talk about that on a different hour. Pod Squad, thank you for taking this journey with me and for listening when I’m weird and for just being there because it’s really helpful for me while I’m processing all of this to even be thinking about how I’d describe it, it’s making it less lonely, so thank you.
Abby Wambach:
You’re not weird.
Glennon Doyle:
We Can Do Hard Things, and we’ll catch you next time. Bye.
Abby Wambach:
Bye.
Glennon Doyle:
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