Chanel Miller Promises: We are Never Stuck
May 3, 2022
Abby Wambach:
Hello, everybody.
Glennon Doyle:
Okay, everybody. Welcome to We Can Do Hard Things.
Abby Wambach:
Welcome to We Can Do Hard Things.
Glennon Doyle:
I already said that.
Abby Wambach:
I already said that.
Glennon Doyle:
Okay. So, sometimes, well, we always say we’re excited about episodes and we always are. We love doing this.
Abby Wambach:
We love our jobs.
Glennon Doyle:
But the person we’re interviewing today, when we started this pod, which feels like about six years ago, I had a top five people list of, “Please, just these five people.” And this person is my top five persons/people. And I’ll just tell you, her name is Chanel Miller. Okay? And so, I met Chanel, how I meet people, which is through their books. I don’t actually meet people in real life. I prefer books because you can meet people without people. You can close them and put them away, come back to them when you’re ready for more people in.
Glennon Doyle:
So, I met Chanel when I read her book, Know My Name. Okay. And I read the book, which is about Chanel’s assault at Stanford University. I read that book because I wanted to be a witness to that story. And I got about two chapters in and I remember, I think, it was probably Liz Gilbert, because that’s who I always call with book situations. But I just remember calling and being like, “Holy shit.” I thought I was reading this book to witness a story and what happened was that I was introduced to one of the great thinkers of our time.
Glennon Doyle:
Her writing, her artistry, the way she with such precision analyzed and viewed the exterior world and explained it to us. And then analyzed and discussed her interior life in a way that I figured out, “Oh, this person is going to help us heal.” Not from just this thing, all the things. This person is a person who has figured out how to heal herself and in doing so, because she’s sharing, is going to help all of us. So, Chanel, I don’t want you to feel any pressure, I just, you’ve got 47 minutes to heal us. Do you think you can do that?
Chanel Miller:
Yeah. It’s easy peasy lemon squeezy.
Glennon Doyle:
Chanel Miller is a writer and artist who received her BA in Literature from the University of California, Santa Barbara. Her critically acclaimed memoir, Know My Name, my top five books of all time. Everyone who’s listening to this podcast must buy and read this book.
Abby Wambach:
Absolutely.
Glennon Doyle:
Was a New York Times bestseller, a New York Times Book Review Notable Book, and a National Book Critics Circle Award winner, as well as a best book of 2019 in Time, the Washington Post, the Chicago Tribune, NPR, and People, among others. She’s a 2019 Time Next 100 honoree and a 2016 Glamour Woman of the Year honoree under her pseudonym, “Emily Doe.” Chanel, thank you for doing this.
Chanel Miller:
Are you kidding me? Thanks so much for having me. It’s so nice to be looking at both of you.
Abby Wambach:
Oh, let me tell you when Glennon was reading your book, there aren’t many times when Glennon comes into wherever I am and is like, “Can I read this to you? Honey, please, can I read this passage to you?” And so, I downloaded it and I listened to it because I was training for a marathon then. And I feel like I have your voice in my ears, in my brain, in my heart. So, thank you for doing that. And also you are a true artist, true.
Glennon Doyle:
I know. And I’m so excited to talk about your art. Because the last time we had a conversation Chanel, we talked about writing and healing. And so, I want to talk about art and healing this time around. When you were writing, Know My Name, your therapist told you to focus on pursuing pleasure as part of your healing.
Glennon Doyle:
So, first of all, that’s awesome. I love that so much because it feels like we don’t focus on that with healing a lot that we keep going back, we dig backwards towards the trauma. And we were recently doing an interview with Esther Perel, where she talked about sometimes it’s not returning to the trauma over and over again, but adding joy and connectedness with others that actually heals us. So, tell us about that time when your therapist, she asked you to start going to an art class, right?
Chanel Miller:
Yeah. Well, she literally suggested I go to one of those gymnasiums full of trampolines. And I was like, “Oh, you really need me to loosen up if you want me bouncing off the walls.” So, I thought maybe I’ll do a dial down version of that. And instead I signed up for a narrative illustration class in San Francisco, right by the Harbor, which is basically comic making. And so, after writing, I would take my little Prius over there at night and make comics in this class of seven people. And we would just translate what happened in our days into these daily drawings. And that’s when I started noticing things that were happening in my present life, outside of the story that I was telling at my desk. And that’s what taught me to pay attention to the fact that life was still moving forward.
Chanel Miller:
And one of the comics I made, we were fostering senior dogs at that time, and since we were in San Francisco, we lived on a really slanted hill and a lot of our senior dogs couldn’t control their bladders. And so, every night, they would pee on one side of the house and I’d wake up and it had trickled under the table legs through our router, under the couch. And every morning, before writing, I’d have to move all the furniture, clean the floors, but then I’d do that first then I’d sit down to write and then I’d go and I’d get lost in my court world and dark world.
Chanel Miller:
And then I’d go to this comic book class and sit down and be like, “What comes to mind first?” What comes to mind is that my dog peed all over my floor this morning and that cannot be lost. And I’d spend the evening, coloring the pee in with highlighter. And that’s me putting myself back inside my day. And now, that little year in, that trickle of year in bringing that to the front of my mind is what’s going to keep me moving. And that’s, it doesn’t seem like it’s pleasure. That seems like a nuisance. But that’s the stuff that’s grounding me while I’m getting swept away in these really big themes like sexual violence. It’s like, “No, bring it back.”
Glennon Doyle:
To yourself, so that’s what you’re saying. It’s like all these things were happening you were such a… because the, what you were spending your day was writing, Know My Name, which was about trauma. So, going to that art class, was that your way of insisting that you were still there?
Chanel Miller:
Insisting that I’m still there and that things are changing. Because when you’re in your past, you feel like you are stuck. And you have to look at the small changes and even, it’s helpful to go on a walk. If you walk the same loop of your neighborhood every day, I would challenge you to look for the certain factors that are different each time you walk. You have to know that life is in motion and that it’s impossible to get stuck, even if you feel that you are.
Glennon Doyle:
Wow, it’s impossible to get stuck even if you feel that you are. And so, that art does for you that. It convinces you that change is still happening, right?
Chanel Miller:
Yes.
Glennon Doyle:
The world is still spinning. What else does it do for you?
Chanel Miller:
Well, yeah, so art is what forces me to pay attention to these smaller changes. Art also helps me because when I create these creatures or people, I create really whimsical odd landscapes and beings. And I think about how if I am to put my pencil down and mute myself and not do anything at all, if I am to give up on myself, I would also be giving up on all of them. And I will never do that to them. I will always ensure that they have a place to play and that they’re let out, that they’re not cooped up inside of me eternally. And so, protecting them, the things that I make is non-negotiable and that helps me respect myself and my work.
Abby Wambach:
Wow. Oh, my gosh. To have an interior world. I mean, I think the beautiful metaphor here is all of us have an interior world. Some of us don’t know how to draw. Some of us don’t know how to even create beings or this whimsical world you talk of. But we do have an internalized space that if we don’t get out of ourselves, then we are only actually living in our past. We are not able to create a day or create something that could save us or heal us. That is so fucking amazing.
Glennon Doyle:
What do you feel like your art does for other people? Because there, it’s just so interesting. It feels like to me you’re the artist who would create no matter what, even if no one else saw it. Right?
Chanel Miller:
Thank you.
Glennon Doyle:
That feels very clear to me. And you also say that there’s this byproduct of your art of any of all art, which is that art is what creates empathy. That I think you said art requires imagination and imagination is the key ingredient to empathy. Can you talk to us about that?
Chanel Miller:
Yeah. I’ll say this. When I wrote my victim impact statement that I read in court, it was meant to be for about 30 people in a tiny courtroom in Palo Alto, that’s it. And then when it was released, it went out and millions of people picked it up and changed the course of my life. And after that, I realized for a long time, I’d asked myself, does it matter what I say or what I make or what I do? And after the statement went out, I learned I had to put that question “does it matter” to rest because the answer is always yes. And it’s yes, to a degree that is so much bigger than I’m capable of comprehending.
Chanel Miller:
And still today, I don’t think we will ever, ever fully realize what we mean to other people. And so, we’re not allowed to knock ourselves fully or declare our significance or insignificance because all the time, I still get in my head, but then I’ll be walking through a parking lot. In Target, this happened to me. And a woman will come up to me and say that she’s proud of me or that I changed her trajectory. I just learned that it’s what we do and the way we move people is not for us to define or fully know, but that it’s just like vast and incredible. All I can trust is continuing to make this work and put it out there and not worry about, so much about where it lands. Because I trust, especially by now that it’s being received somewhere.
Glennon Doyle:
It sure is. You said a while back that one of the scariest parts of your post life after the assault, that now you were going to be given this identity, that this is what people were going to talk about. Do you feel that the world has seen who you are in the way that you want them to or do you still feel too tied to what happened to you instead of who you are?
Chanel Miller:
I think, yeah, with identity, you think it’s going to be a bad thing that you’re tied to. And I realized over time, there were so many good qualities that I’d built inside the realm of the assault that I was proud to be tied to. And so, I wanted to say, “That’s me.” And I felt so proud that I had finally come to a place in my life where it wasn’t like, “Please nobody find out that my name belongs in that news article.” It’s like, “No, that’s me. I did that. And I’m still here.” And I feel so honored that I’ve been able to claim that identity. But yes, I do still struggle with fully fleshing myself out.
Chanel Miller:
I was going to ask you all because I’m on the cusp of 30. And I know that’s so hecka youthful, but I am still so nervous. I don’t know why. I think my 20s were so fragmented. I was forced to grow at a really exponential rate. Everything felt so raw and I’m ooh. And then when you’re 30, it seems like you just have to make even bigger decisions than you did before that have even longer term implications. So, I’m wondering where you all were at, at 29? What ideas you had about your life, what you got wrong? Misconceptions, because thus far I’ve pretty much had been figuring it out. Right now, I’m on this thing, I really don’t know. I came here to ask you.
Abby Wambach:
That’s so funny. For me, I think that the beginning of a new decade always forces us to analyze and evaluate how the previous decade went. And also like, “Oh, sit. I’ve got a whole another decade ahead of me, hopefully.” And so, it’s daunting to go from one to the next. I can tell you that I was doing abnormal things at 29, going into my 30s.
Glennon Doyle:
She was winning gold medals.
Abby Wambach:
Playing soccer. But also, what people saw on the outside was not what I was going through on the inside, because I think that I had this notion that I was supposed to have it more figured out than I did. I was pretending to have it more figured out than I did and that caused a lot of suffering inside. And so, I was drinking way too much. I developed alcoholism, probably had it through my whole life, if I were to be truly honest. And so, I didn’t know anything. I thought I was building this life. I thought that I was doing it correct. And then when I hit 35, I surrendered. I got sober and realized actually, I don’t know shit.
Glennon Doyle:
And we still don’t. So, I have these days last week, Thursday was my best day because my Thursday was think about Chanel Day.
Chanel Miller:
Wow.
Glennon Doyle:
So, because this is such an exciting, different thing for me, interviewing people and I find it such a ridiculous honor. And so, I just get sometimes when I’m really, really just excited or honored about someone coming, I just have a full day where I’m just like, “Think about this person.” Read them. Think about them. I went for a walk on my beach here. I went for a Chanel thinking walk.
Abby Wambach:
Literally. She was so excited.
Glennon Doyle:
And here’s what happened during my little walk. Okay. There was this little girl and she was digging into the sand and I got a little close, so I could see. And she wrote, “Melody is here.” Okay. Melody is here. I think she meant, “Melody was here.” But it was so beautiful. She, Melody. And I thought, “Oh, there’s this little girl.” And she needs to see herself. She needs to, “I was here. Melody is here.”
Glennon Doyle:
And that reminded me so much of you, just like the inner stuff, putting it on the outside and how beautiful it is. And then, a couple of feet later there was this woman and she was carrying around a plastic bag and I’ve seen her many times and she just walks this little thing and picks up trash. So, because that reminded me of you, I stopped her. I said, “What are you doing?” And she said, “Well, this is just my little block. I just keep my block beautiful.”
Glennon Doyle:
And it reminded me of you because you always say, “When I get overwhelmed, I just remember my little corner. What can I do to make my little corner of the world beautiful?” And then Chanel, five feet later, I got stung by a fucking bee. Do you remember when I called you, I was like?
Abby Wambach:
Oh, yeah.
Glennon Doyle:
I was having this beautiful like…
Abby Wambach:
Chanel moment.
Glennon Doyle:
… spiritual Chanel metaphor and then I got stung by a fucking bee and I couldn’t… I was limping. I was so dramatic. And that’s all I can tell you, Chanel, about life is say I am here in one way or another, reveal yourself, clean up your little block and know you’re always going to get stung by a fucking bee anyway.
Chanel Miller:
That’s so funny.
Abby Wambach:
What you said was really interesting to me that you that Melody wrote, “Melody is here.” And oftentimes, we are so focused, especially as we get older to have some sort of legacy. And so, when we get older, we write or we think, “Abby was here.” And the idea of having a child’s mind about our lives is I think so important that we are here now in this moment. So, Abby is here, Chanel is here, Glennon is here. I think that that is so beautiful.
Glennon Doyle:
How are you saying, “Is here now?” How are you that little girl now? How are you each day saying, “Chanel is here?”
Chanel Miller:
Okay. Well, I wish I had a beach, but I don’t. Manhattan. That’s something that I’m still figuring out. And ah, okay. Well, “here” is a loaded word because I take pride in being here in any way, even showing up to court. One of the best things I did for myself was lower my standard of success to presence. Presence was success. And it didn’t matter what it looked. It didn’t matter if I flubbed up my words, which I did a million times. What mattered is that when each time I was summoned, I drove to the courtroom, I had a semi-wrinkled sweater on and I would go in and speak the truest thing I knew.
Chanel Miller:
And I kept doing that and I did it imperfectly, but I never went away. And I realized so much of what court was, was it wasn’t even about getting it right. It was so much more about endurance. And I realized that so many of the oppressive forces in the world are just waiting for us to give up. And if I just keep showing up, even when I have a hoarse voice, I’m still always going to be here and you can’t make me feel shamed in any form that I appear. So, that should be pretty intimidating because I just feel deeply comfortable with myself.
Chanel Miller:
In all the heres that I am, I will always just keep showing up as I am, as I figure it out. Like I said, I’m 29. I have no flipping idea what the next decade holds. I feel like I’m just figuring out the last one, but that’s all right. And I think it’s cool that now I have this timestamp. In 10 years, I can listen to this and think like, “Wow, I didn’t know so much.”
Abby Wambach:
Wow.
Glennon Doyle:
I mean, just as long as there’s no supposed to, I think the supposed-tos of the decades are what screw us. Right?
Chanel Miller:
Mm-hmm.
Glennon Doyle:
You’re like, “Oh, I’m in my 30s. Here’s what’s supposed to happen in my 30s.” I think when we make decisions from supposed-to that’s when we get all screwed up because we force it. So, when you talk about here-ness being enough, presence being enough, it makes me think of your mural. So, to those of you who are new to Chanel. Chanel had one of her art pieces, which correct me if I’m wrong, but I think it’s a 75-ft. mural titled, “I Was, I Am, I Will Be,” in the Asian art museum in San Francisco where Chanel’s mother used to take her when she was little.
Glennon Doyle:
And I love it so much because it’s such a beautiful description or illustration of the healing process. And I love so much how you talk about the healing process as something that is just absolutely cyclical and always happening. Can you tell us about those three characters and take us through them, so people listening can get the gist of what you were trying to teach us with that.
Chanel Miller:
Yeah, so there’s a few characters. There’s I was, I am, I will be. And the character begins reclined with these tears coming out and slowly sits centered and then kneels and gets up and walks away. That’s what the gallery looks like and the characters are very simple. And I want to tell you that when I was asked to fill this wall, I went off and did really intricate drawings to fill the wall because I thought, “This is my one and only chance to show you that I’m an artist.” Flesh out my identity.
Chanel Miller:
And so, I did elaborate plants and people and character design and they said, “Well, look, it’s a really big wall. It’s covered in glass, so you can see it from the street, so it needs to be really simple like a billboard.” And they showed me an example where this artist had done one stroke of black with three letters. I was like, “Oh, my gosh, I cannot. It’s so, I don’t have that yet.” It’s too simple to just say, “Yeah, this is what I did and I’m an artist.”
Chanel Miller:
I felt like I needed to show you like, “Look at all the things I can do. Look at my skillset.” And so, I want you to know that just to strip away all of those elements to get to the very simple piece that is up now took so much work and confidence and trust that this will not be my only time to exhibit my art. So, that’s a part of the piece, too, is that the simplicity of that bold black line. The fact that it’s only two colors means that Chanel also trusts that in the future she will make more work.
Abby Wambach:
Wow.
Chanel Miller:
Does that make sense?
Glennon Doyle:
It makes sense.
Abby Wambach:
It makes sense. It’s the plight of all women everywhere. It’s like, “I got to give it all.”
Glennon Doyle:
Give you one shot.
Abby Wambach:
“I got to give you everything I’ve got in order to make sure I can stay here.” But what a beautiful lesson to say, “No, I have more to give and I have to trust in that future self to be able to give more when it’s asked of me.”
Chanel Miller:
It will be there. It will be there.
Glennon Doyle:
It will be there. And in doing that, it’s such an interesting thing because it was up for the whole pandemic. So, everyone walking by got to see the process of healing of, “We are now on the ground, we are sitting in the present, we will be standing up again.” And, and it was probably the simplicity that healed so many people of it. So, it’s like there’s a form of art that’s like, “Look at me, look what I can do.” And then there’s this other form of art that is truly service because this idea we say that writers say make simple things seem complicated, but really good writers make complicated things really simple, which is that piece. It’s so beautiful.
Abby Wambach:
Oh, and by the way, Chanel is also that as a writer.
Glennon Doyle:
Yeah, the best writer in the world.
Abby Wambach:
The fact that you can do all these different mediums of art, just is mind blowing. In fact, we were reading all the things about you. And can you tell us about the time in college, you have friends, your literature friends, and you would do metaphor battles?
Glennon Doyle:
Oh, so good. It’s like eight mile, but make it nerdy.
Chanel Miller:
Yeah. So, we would be walking to and from class and we would have these metaphor battles. So, I would point to a street lamp and my friend would be like, “Oh, glowing pineapple or moon holding its breath, like sucking it in, so it’s an oval or…” I love doing that because it kept your mind super elastic and it was so fun. I mean, even writing the book. Feelings, awful feelings, aren’t fun to have, but they are fun to figure out how to describe, because then it goes from something that’s just festering in you to an actual challenge. You’re like, “Ooh, can I put this into, I have 26 letters, can I rearrange them in a way that’s going to replicate this feeling in somebody else?” That’s so cool.
Glennon Doyle:
It’s so cool. It is so cool.
Chanel Miller:
You’re able to harness that and do that. Even when I have these bad, bad feelings, at the same time, I’m sort of like, “Oh, I just unlocked a new one.” I unlocked a new challenge and I have to figure out how to describe this one now.
Glennon Doyle:
What are some feelings you’re having lately that you’re trying to figure out how to describe? What is it to be typical day? What are you feeling these days?
Chanel Miller:
Well, I will say, there’s been a lot of anti-Asian violence and that’s been really with me. And I’ve been thinking about how growing up I was only given a sliver of visibility in terms of Asian representation. And then all of a sudden you have all this visibility. You can see, I see, “Oh, that looks my grandpa on the news. That looks my mom.” But it’s a visibility paired with violence. And I’m trying to understand what it does to me to not have been given images in the media about my family or me, and then suddenly be inundated with them, but they’re paired with violence.
Chanel Miller:
It’s something that I don’t know or understand yet. And I’ve been called on many times throughout the last two years to name this feeling and to speak to what’s happening. But I can also sense that it’s still cooking in me. I swear I have a little dinger that go ding. And it will tell me when it’s like, “Okay, I’m ready to take this out of the oven and share it with people.” But until then, I just know that it’s important to stick with this feeling, I will figure it out, but I’m not going to figure it out on a news timeline. I’m going to figure it out on my timeline and then I’ll write about it. That’s been something I’ve been thinking about.
Abby Wambach:
Wow.
Glennon Doyle:
You said that in the courtroom, you felt underestimated as a Chinese woman. That the world thought you’d be easier to dismiss, that you wouldn’t cause an uproar. But then you said this, which, “It’s because of my mom that I’m not afraid to fight. She grew up under a communist regime and fought for her right to speak freely and came here because she wanted to do that. If she can fight forces much greater than her, I can fight for myself in this stale little courtroom.” So, talk to us because I hear what you’re saying that you’re not cooked about the effect of now seeing representation having it be. I can’t wait until you figure that out.
Glennon Doyle:
But can you talk to us about the harm of this model minority myth and how it has such an effect on Asian Americans? I’m having this discussion with my son, who’s Japanese. I raised him with no context. It’s shocking to me. And so, I sent him out. I just had this conversation similar to this with Ocean Vuong, who I know that you love. But he’s just starting to talk to me about this part of his life that I didn’t help him with. So, talk to us a little bit about what it’s like to be underestimated as a Chinese woman and what all of that means.
Chanel Miller:
Yeah. I think same with my mom. English is her second language, so I’ve seen people who don’t take her seriously or they’re more quick to dismiss her because her language isn’t just so neatly presented. And that always bothered me because I’m so aware of her complexity and humor and depth and aware of what they’re not seeing.
Chanel Miller:
My mom is so incredible and she would come to these meetings with me with my attorney and a lot would go over her head. I’d be the one taking notes, but my mom knows, “This part of your hand is a pressure point to alleviate headaches.” She knows that. So, while I’m taking in this information, she’s pinching this part of me. She’s regulating my body.
Glennon Doyle:
Wow.
Chanel Miller:
She’s the one who’s keeping me fed. If I’m studying transcripts in my room, she leaves a bowl of steaming noodles outside. I would open my door, bring the noodles inside, steam my face, and then be looking at my transcripts on the floor. But her ways of nurturing were so incredible during that time. I feel like when they saw my side of the courtroom, they didn’t see people who were ready to explode on the scene or people who were equipped with the language to observe and unpack everything that was happening.
Chanel Miller:
It just reminded me they have no idea, but I do. And that’s why as an artist, it’s my job to keep telling these stories about me, about my mom, about what it means to move through the world as Asian women. And yeah, my mom’s incredible. Even, one time texted me and said, “Do you have ski goggles I can borrow?” I said, “Yeah, where are you going? Are you going to snowboard? What is this? Sure.” And she was like, “I’m going to Burning Man.” I was like, “Oh, yeah.”
Abby Wambach:
No way.
Chanel Miller:
Yes, yes, yes. And she went to Burning Man. And then she said, “Now, I’m looking for my wedding dress.” I was like, “Why do you need your wedding dress.” She’s like, “Oh, I’m going to marry the desert.” I was like, “Okay.” That’s what I’m saying is she’s so, well, full of surprises. And so, are all of us. We just possess so much curiosity that again, it’s something I’m still learning to articulate. All I know is that there’s so much there that was never seen. And that it’s my job moving forward to make it known and seen.
Glennon Doyle:
So, Chanel, we talk a lot about mental health on this pod for many different reasons, mostly because it’s a huge journey in my life. And one of my favorite million things that you’ve said is you described, I think the fluctuations between depression and what normalcy, whatever that is, as running with slugs or horses.
Abby Wambach:
Oh, my gosh. That’s amazing.
Glennon Doyle:
First of all, I love that Chanel decides if she’s having a depressed time, she’s just running with slugs. And if she’s not, she’s just running with horses. No. Consider the impact of this. It’s not Chanel’s problem. She’s either got a slug or horse that day. All right? She’s going to do the best she can with the animal she’s been given. Talk to us. Does depression still affect you? What does it look in your life? This is something I’m sorry to tell you that didn’t magically go away in my 30s.
Chanel Miller:
Oh, goodness. Yeah. It’s something I like that my dad says is that, “When you’re depressed your vision narrows.” And that to me was a very clean way of looking at it. And then I thought of another thing, which is like, “Oh, my vision narrows.” So, it’s like looking through a little toilet paper tube like this. And suddenly, instead of seeing the whole scope of your life in your future and in your past, you have this very narrow vision and you can only see just a little bit and your focus is just in one spot. And so, now when I’m depressed, I think my vision has narrowed. I can only see outside of a little toilet paper tube. And when I’m in this state, I’m not allowed to make any big decisions and I’m not allowed to draw any grand conclusions about who I am or who I’m going to be.
Chanel Miller:
And those are just my rules for when I’m in this state. But I also like it because if you think of the toilet paper tube, I think of it, maybe you can put a little shoe lace through it and hang it around your neck like binoculars. And then that depression is not just a state, but it’s just a different way of seeing and I know it’s always going to be around my neck. I know at times it’s the only way I’m going to be able to see things. Other times, it’s just going to be dangling and it’s fine. But I prefer seeing it as this is an altered way of seeing versus just like a state that I’m stuck in indefinitely.
Glennon Doyle:
I feel that. Do you see there’s benefits of the time where, because a narrowed vision can be negative and that you can’t see the periphery. And maybe we shouldn’t make decisions because we’re not taking the whole scope in, literally. But is there a super power in the narrowed vision time?
Chanel Miller:
Yeah, because that’s all the information. It’s not for nothing. It’s not just random punishment. There’s signals telling you something is wrong. I think the best thing we can do is equip ourselves to investigate it and not abandon it or just wait for it to be over because there’s so much there. And it makes a lot of sense. Of course, it’s almost more surprising when people aren’t depressed at this point.
Glennon Doyle:
Yeah. I find them insensitive.
Abby Wambach:
Glennon says, “These people aren’t paying attention.”
Glennon Doyle:
If I weren’t depressed, I wouldn’t go around talking about it. What do you want for your 30s, Chanel?
Chanel Miller:
Oh, my gosh. Okay. Well, so yeah, there’s the pressure to produce offspring. And the way writers pump out books, it’s like book, book, book, book, book. Oh, my goodness. Before I make a decision, I try to identify the origin feeling of what’s pushing that decision and if it’s finicky panic, then I have to wait. So, I’m in a state of finicky panic and I need to wait for more grounded times to make these big decisions. But I don’t know. I’m still so fresh to myself, truly. We’ll see.
Glennon Doyle:
Fresh to myself. I love that. We should strive for that. That’s good.
Abby Wambach:
I’m wanting to feel fresh to myself.
Glennon Doyle:
I mean, you’ve become such a model of healing whether you like it or not, sorry. What do you think is helpful for healing? Healing is just constant every day, sometimes every hour I feel like I go through all of the “I was, I am, I will be.” What do you think is most helpful for you and for people when they’re trying to get off the floor to the present or to hope for the future? What helps you?
Chanel Miller:
I think curiosity because right now, yeah, I’ve done so much healing, but I still struggle a lot with vigilance and feeling like bad things can happen all the time and trying to prevent those things. But I wonder all the time about who I would be if I didn’t have to be so vigilant all the time. And I really want to meet that person and I really want her to be able to succeed. Because right now I feel like my creative brain gets really shrunken because I spend so much time thinking about how to keep myself safe.
Chanel Miller:
And I want to know just who I’d be when I don’t have to think about safety all the time. That person could do so many things. So, that curiosity of meeting her, really knowing her keeps me going. And then I also think, yeah, I still have a really hard time with all this stuff. And it’s almost like the more I’ve learned, the more difficult it is to be optimistic, truly.
Chanel Miller:
But recently last fall, all the freshmen at Stanford were required to read my book and I was really nervous to go back. Just like we talked about, going back is really scary. I’m scared of the people I’ve been. I’m scared to be in those states again and to be hurting that badly or to be that full of self-loathing. And I worried that when I went back to Stanford, that old self was waiting for me and she’s just going to slip in and repossess this vehicle and I won’t have any control and I wouldn’t be able to go on stage and present as this confident person I am now. So, I was scared to go back, so I thought I’m just going to go do it quickly, rip off the Band-Aid and the event will be over and I’ll go back to my hotel room and unravel if I need to.
Chanel Miller:
So, I get myself up, I walk over to the campus and there’s a few other panelists that day. And when they announced my name, I come out and all the students just start clapping and then they don’t stop. And I was sitting on stage and all these students are just holding me in this noise. If there was any question, whether you are welcome here, we are dissolving it for the next few minutes. And my fellow panelists eventually put down their mics and just looked at me and started clapping, too. And I was just being held in this sound.
Chanel Miller:
It was unbelievable. And so, I knew I could relax. I knew that for the next hour I was going to be taken care of. But most importantly, it’s like without a word, the students were saying, “We got it.” Seven years ago, I went to that campus. My life was changed. I had no language for what was happening, I was so lost. I was so hungry for help and lonely. And I was walking around with a little antenna, trying to figure out a single person I could tell, who I could trust, trying to figure out where it was safe. And now, all these years later, I’m at the same campus and there’s thousands of students who have this information foundationally and will begin the next four years of their lives with it.
Chanel Miller:
And most importantly, for healing, that to me is the permission like, “You can go now.” And I think that’s also really what I needed to hear is like, “You don’t have to take care of all of us. You don’t have to fix everything. We got it. You can go now. Be who you’re meant to be.” And that for my healing was really important was not just returning to that place, but finally being released from it and being given the permission that it’s okay to redirect my focus now.
Abby Wambach:
Oh, my God.
Glennon Doyle:
How beautiful.
Abby Wambach:
You had me in tears. And just the fact that you have the humility and the honesty to be like, “I’m going back to this place. I have no idea how I’m going to be received.” And then for the place that in maybe your mind created so much of this trauma could also be the releaser and the freeing into your future.
Glennon Doyle:
I see this with religion a lot. It’s like wherever there’s a trauma, the freedom from it has to be a little bit…
Abby Wambach:
Inside of it.
Glennon Doyle:
… in the original thing that hurt you.
Abby Wambach:
Yeah, in the church that hurt me, yes.
Glennon Doyle:
The antidote is the poison in some way. It’s so interesting. So, Chanel in an earlier podcast, we did with Susan Kane, she talked to us about filling our social feeds with more art to help our mental health. Our team feels strongly that your Instagram feed is the best mental health healing place to be because the way that you see the world. The beautiful stories you tell about what you talked about in the beginning of the pod, about what you’re noticing that day just helps me notice things and just the noticing is so healing.
Glennon Doyle:
Who do you listen to, read, follow that helps your healing?
Chanel Miller:
Oh, my goodness, Glennon. Oki-dokie, I’m going to redirect my eyeballs to my bookshelf. Ruth Ozeki, Nguyen Ly, Jia Tolentino, Jenny Zhang. This is really hard because it could go on and on and on forever and ever. Give me a second.
Glennon Doyle:
This is actually a very hard question when people ask me this. Just so you know, every time someone asks me what are my favorite books, I forget that I even know what books are. All I do is read Chanel. It’s all I do. Is there anything that you can go to that you know? Maybe, it’s not art, maybe it’s the dogs. I don’t know. But is there anything that you can go to like I keep a little list of my list of things. Little healing things, so that I can grab them. Play with your dogs for 10 minutes, go for a walk outside.
Abby Wambach:
Walk.
Glennon Doyle:
Get a drink of water.
Abby Wambach:
Water, meditate.
Glennon Doyle:
Every time I think that my entire life is horrible and that I need to have a new state and a new religion and a new career, I really usually need a glass of water. When we’re big thinking, usually, solution to big thinking is small things. Are there small things?
Abby Wambach:
Yeah. What is personal thing that your mom does to you to take care of you?
Glennon Doyle:
Oh, like an aversion of getting the pressure on your hand?
Abby Wambach:
The pressure on the inside of her hand.
Glennon Doyle:
Yeah. How do you get that pressure released when your mom is not there to bring you noodles?
Abby Wambach:
Herself, yeah.
Chanel Miller:
Yeah, for real. I’m telling you, even just the subway ride or the park, I remind myself that my skull is basically… when you look at me in Manhattan, my skull is a tiny, tiny acorn and it’s full of these swirling thoughts that I think are so big and devastating, but it’s really just a little acorn in this huge landscape of ginormous silver buildings. So, I’ll go out into the city, I’ll notice things. And also, just watch other people inside their lives because it actually saved me when I realized that there are so many different types of lives unfolding. Even if you feel like you’re on one track, it can veer off in so many different directions and what a relief that is.
Chanel Miller:
And so, even recently I saw in the swings, there’s a little girl dressed as a mermaid. And her conundrum was like she was sitting on the baby swing and she had to fit both of her legs and her mermaid tail through one swing hole. I was like, “This is her biggest problem today.” And if I was in her life, that would be my consuming issue of the day. And so, just being able to practice stepping outside yourself, by seeing the other storylines people are living.
Chanel Miller:
In the subway, I was going to do a comic about this there’s these two friends and this guy had this smiley face patch on his sweatpants and he and his friend were just sitting, eating grapes. And his friend took a grape, pressed it to the smiley face and went, “um, um, um, um.” And his friend was laughing so hard, he couldn’t breathe. And their little game became pressing the little grape to the mouth and then the other one would just lose it. That was the whole ride. You know what I’m saying?
Chanel Miller:
And like that’s my brain is in relief. My brain is inside their game. The world is full of that stuff and it’s free and it’s happening all the time. And you just got to, if you are stuck in your little toilet paper roll of depression, redirect that little roll to those small moments. They’re not going to save you, but I swear if you string them along, you come out somewhere different.
Glennon Doyle:
Oh, my God. That’s another way of saying, “I am here.” It’s not just getting the inside out to the world. It’s getting the outside world into you.
Chanel Miller:
Yeah, because we don’t often have it. I admit I don’t have enough to keep myself afloat all the time. I can’t conjure all of that. I need different types of visual nourishment out in the world. I need to see things in motion because it is so hard to just be like, “Okay. I’m going to meditate this out or I’m going to do it on my own.” It is so hard. I have to cling onto these little things going on outside of me.
Glennon Doyle:
So, in our last three minutes, we call this podcast, We Can Do Hard Things, what’s hard for you now?
Chanel Miller:
Oh, what’s hard? What’s not? The hard thing is going to be not thinking about everything I just said for the rest of the day, that’s what’s hard. And so, I’m making the declaration right now that I did was best. I spoke whatever bubbled to the top. Maybe, I was a little rest in some places. You know why? Because I haven’t really been talking to people for two years, so I’m letting it go. And as soon as we’re done, probably going to take a bath, probably going to work on literature for younger people and just know that all that mattered is that I feel really great sitting across from both of you. I hope our listeners took something away and I’ll just continue showing up in my truest form, sailing into my 30s.
Glennon Doyle:
Oh, Chanel. Yes. Hell, yes, everything you just said. Let us skip the part. How about we skip the part where we both, because Abby doesn’t do this, but what if you and I skip the part where we worry about every single thing we said this time and we should just do it.
Chanel Miller:
Yeah. What if I just like, “Oh, that was good.”
Abby Wambach:
Guess what?
Glennon Doyle:
We’re so grateful…
Abby Wambach:
Guess what?
Chanel Miller:
What’s for lunch?
Glennon Doyle:
… for this time.
Abby Wambach:
It will be a revolution if women stopped doing that.
Glennon Doyle:
And then that worry keeps us from being present in the next moment.
Abby Wambach:
That’s right.
Glennon Doyle:
So, we’ll just go carry out and be present. You be present in your bathtub. Okay?
Chanel Miller:
Yeah, so present.
Glennon Doyle:
Chanel, we will be in your corner and your fans forever and not because of the big things you do, but because of the little things you do and the way you see the world.
Chanel Miller:
Thanks.
Glennon Doyle:
And don’t let them panic you. Don’t let them rush you. You know, you know better than anybody else does on the planet, unfortunately for you. So, you just tell them when it’s time for you. You don’t let them tell you when it’s time for them.
Abby Wambach:
And if and when that time comes that you create art and put it out into the world, this place…
Glennon Doyle:
Always.
Abby Wambach:
… will always be here for it.
Glennon Doyle:
That’s right.
Chanel Miller:
Thank you both.
Abby Wambach:
Glennon and I will always be here for it. It makes me feel emotional at what impact you have and will keep having.
Glennon Doyle:
But not in the world, our family, every post. The putty, the gray putty. The two dogs who are deciding on flowers. And oh, my God, what if she chooses the blue one or the green one? Oh, thank God, she chooses red. You help us see the world for as magical as it is. So, thank you for that. We love you forever. Go take a bath. For the rest of you, you also take a bath, pod squad.
Abby Wambach:
That’s right.
Glennon Doyle:
Okay?
Abby Wambach:
That’s a good next right thing.
Glennon Doyle:
We’ll-
Abby Wambach:
Everybody go take a bath.
Glennon Doyle:
That’s right. We’ll see you next time on We Can Do Hard Things.
Glennon Doyle:
I give you Tish Melton and Brandi Carlile.
Glennon Doyle:
We Can Do Hard Things is produced in partnership with Cadence13 Studios. Be sure to rate, review and follow the show on Apple podcasts, Odyssey, or wherever you get your podcasts. Especially be sure to rate and review the podcast if you really liked it. If you didn’t, don’t worry about it. It’s fine.