Why Elizabeth Gilbert Disappeared & What She Came Back to Say
May 12, 2022
Glennon Doyle:
Welcome back to We Can Do Hard Things. We are delighted that we have one of our dearest friends in all the land, Liz Gilbert, back with us today. If you have not listened to the last episode, just please go back and listen. We’re going to pick up right where we left off.
Abby Wambach:
Let’s do it.
Glennon Doyle:
Liz was talking to us about the coming back together: the separation from Rayya, when she went back to her addiction before she died, and then the coming back. And so, I want to ask you… Rayya did die. I remember my mom wrote me an email to check up on you, during that time when Rayya was dying, and she would say, “How is Liz? How is Liz? How is Liz?” The question, “How is Liz,” I never knew how to answer. And I said, “I think Mom, the question is not how is Liz, but who is Liz?” Who is Liz going to be after this? There’s no how anymore? How she is, is everything, but I think that who she is changing completely because of this experience. So number one, how did that actual walking Rayya home at the end go, and then who is Liz in the wake of that experience?
Liz Gilbert:
Her actual death was very humbling because, again, it wasn’t what I planned. I don’t know if you know anything about wanting to control stuff.
Glennon Doyle:
No. I’m easy, breezy.
Amanda Doyle:
Probably could read a book about that, but don’t really have any personal experience.
Glennon Doyle:
I just gave Codependent No More to Abby, and she said, “I’ll read it if you read it.” That’s who we are.
Liz Gilbert:
I just told a friend that she needed to come to a Codependence Anonymous meeting with me, which is, I’m going to say, the second most codependent thing you could possibly say beyond, “I will read this book if you read it with me.”
Liz Gilbert:
Rayya was very willful and she didn’t surrender. That’s also why she went on that bender, I think, before she died. She didn’t surrender. I kept wanting to bring to her spiritual concepts and things about letting go, and Rayya was never one to let go. She would literally rather die than let go, and that is what happened. She didn’t let go. And I said to our friends, the people who were in the room… There are four of us in the room: her sister, and her ex-wife Gigi, and her ex-girlfriend, Stacy, which is another incredible story, just about how these three women who had loved Rayya the most. A hot blonde from every decade of her life was around her the day that she died. That was her version of hospice. Yeah, she was such a mack daddy.
Glennon Doyle:
There’s worst ways to go out, Liz. Worse ways.
Liz Gilbert:
I’m telling you, and for the last day of her life, she was unconscious and we kept doing the shit they tell you to do in hospice: petting her hair and saying, “Let go, let go.” And finally, I took everybody outside and I was like, “They say that the last thing to go is hearing. She can hear us. This is enraging her.” I know Rayya well enough to know, she will not let go because somebody is telling her to, and she’s also giving us the middle finger saying, “You fucking let go. If it’s so fun and so easy to die…” I could tell. I know her energy. Even in unconsciousness, I was like, here’s what she needs.
Liz Gilbert:
She needs us to put David Bowie on, and she needs us to stop talking. And she really needs to do this herself, her own way. That is how Rayya does things. And that is what ended up happening, was we just went silent, and she needs us here. She needs us here, but not interfering in any way. And so we just went silent, and we were all sort of holding a different part of her body. And then I watched death come for a fist fight, and death eventually won, because it always does, but it was a fist fight, which is how Rayya would die. I wanted the kind of death for her that I would like, which is just gently soft music and spiritual. And Rayya just went out swinging because that’s how she was, so even right to the end. But I will say this: it was brutal to watch, but it was also accurate to her.
Liz Gilbert:
But then the last breath she took… After she took her last breath, this look came over her face of… What are the words I can use to describe it? Whatever she saw, she loved, because the look that she had on her face was like, holy shit. Her eyebrows flew up. Her face lit up. Something was incredible. That expression stayed on her face for hours afterward of like, joy. I don’t know what it was, but something was amazing. And I stayed with her for hours because she’d asked me to because she was scared. She said, “I’m scared of being of my body being alone and me still somehow being there,” so I stayed with her for hours. And then her cremation was incredible and beautiful.
Liz Gilbert:
And then, I want to say about the aftermath that there’s a lot of instruction on grieving, and I think there’s sometimes a lot of shaming around people grieving wrong. And a lot of judgment that people have about how we process the deaths of the most important people in our lives, as if there is some sort of agreed upon strategy, that this is the healthy way to do this impossible thing. So the way I did it, is the way I needed to do it. And the way I did it was that I threw myself back into life, full on, because that felt right to me at the time. And I say, to this day, it still was the right thing to do, because I needed to be living very vibrantly. And I was very surprised by what grief felt like.
Liz Gilbert:
I thought that it would feel like depression, but it was a very vibrant time for me. I was keenly alive and I was also in a lot of emotion, but the emotion was very hot and fiery. It wasn’t like a dampness, like the way that I’ve experienced depression. So when I wept, I wept hard and big and ugly and riotous tears. When I was angry at people, and at her, and at me, and at God, that anger was hot and fiery. It was very vivid. It didn’t feel like depression. And there was also lots of times feelings of rejoicing and celebration. I’ve heard it said that all true grief has a weird element of rejoicing underneath it, because you’re rejoicing at how much you loved that person and how impactful they were. There’s something huge about it. I really thought that it was going to be a much quieter thing. And of course it was grief for Rayya. Nothing about Rayya was small or quiet or damp, so it made sense that the scale felt like that.
Liz Gilbert:
I wrote a novel. I wrote a really fun, lighthearted novel that I started working on a month after she died, because it was due. I hadn’t written for the whole time that she was sick, and I somehow got this clue that that would be the right thing to do, that I needed to remember what I am and who I am and what I can do. And that gave me things to do with my mind. I traveled a lot. I spent time with friends. I had a big year, and grief is a bill that has to be paid eventually. And I was a little bit putting that bill off, but I also don’t want to judge myself for that because that’s what I needed to do. I couldn’t pay that bill right away. It was too big. And so what I did was other things, a lot of other things.
Liz Gilbert:
And it wasn’t like I wasn’t crying or feeling. It’s just, I feel like I sort of thought I might get away with it. I felt like maybe, if I just am vibrant enough and vivid enough and Rayya is present enough, because I could also still feel her in such incredible presence, and I spoke to her all the time and she was so with me. I was like, maybe we did this right. We did our love story so right that we get to keep it and I don’t have to really lose. I don’t have to really lose. And then what I did, was I threw myself into somebody else because that has always been the way, that when there’s stuff too big for me to feel, the way that I handle not feeling it is to look for somebody else to fall in love with.
Liz Gilbert:
And I looked for somebody else to fall in love with. And of course it was an old friend of hers, somebody who connected me to her and I felt was an extension of her in a way. And of course he was not, because nobody is an extension of another human being nor can anybody replace another human being. And that’s when I lost my mind. And I think that part of grieving is losing your mind, because when grief is so huge, it’s like having a huge head injury. It does something to you, and it didn’t happen until then. The real sense of like, “Oh, I am not okay. I am not okay, and I am not going to be okay, and I cannot bear what I’ve lost,” I didn’t feel until I had impaled myself on another human being, expecting them to step in and just pick up everything that Rayya had been. And then very quickly realizing that not only could he not do that, nobody on earth ever again will be able to do that.
Amanda Doyle:
And that is another layer.
Liz Gilbert:
That is another layer, and that’s when I fell apart completely, and that was a year later, so there was a delay. And I remember recently somebody was telling me that they were upset at their father because their mother had died and he was acting normal. And I was like, “Leave him alone.” Here’s my advice for people who are in your life who are grieving: let them do it. In the same way that I had to let Rayya die the way that she had to die, let people grieve the way they have to grieve. And if that means they shut themselves in their house for 10 years and don’t come out, that’s how they had to do that. If that means they throw themselves into workaholism, like I did, then that’s how they had to do that. If that means they have to marry someone next week because they can’t bear it, whatever. We’re not here to judge the way that other people process the most unbearable losses of their lives.
Glennon Doyle:
When you lost your mind, when you threw yourself in, how did you find yourself? What happened? Is this corresponds with the time that you sort of left the public sphere, and what did you do to get yourself back?
Liz Gilbert:
It led to that. What happened is that… Well, first of all, it’s not the first time I’ve impaled myself on somebody, at all. This is a thing I do. This is my drug, right? This is my drug. And just as Rayya, when she was facing what she could not bear in death, reached for her drug, this is, I reached for mine. Mine is, you will fill me, and I will fill you. And you will take care of all of my emotional needs, and I will take care of all of your emotional needs, and nobody has to suffer. And I’ve been doing that my whole life, in a way that is rife with self abandonment because you can’t do that without self abandonment.
Liz Gilbert:
And I thought I was done with that. And I thought I had that thing done, in the same way Rayya probably thought, after 18 years of sobriety, that she was done with that behavior. I didn’t think I did stuff anymore like what I did with this person. I met you, I barely know you, a week later, we’re living together. I didn’t think I was that person anymore, and I still was because that’s what I needed to try to get well. And then when it just didn’t work in any way, whatsoever, and then my mind losing went to stuff I didn’t think I did anymore. On my knees, literally sobbing, begging someone to look at me, to love me, to touch me, to need me, things I haven’t done in decades, but that I used to do on the reg.
Glennon Doyle:
Sounds like the beginning of Eat, Pray, Love, or one of those…
Liz Gilbert:
Precisely. It was exactly that. And by the way, that wasn’t the only time that happened.
Glennon Doyle:
Right.
Liz Gilbert:
So what I did was I did the thing again. I was like, “Wow, I thought I didn’t do this thing anymore,” and I did the thing again, and so there was a split. Part of the madness was like a split, where I’m watching myself do this thing that I didn’t think I did anymore. And it’s like watching yourself drive over a cliff, and you’re driving the car, but you’re also on the cliff watching you do that. And you’re like, “Wow. I thought that was over,” and there’s not anything I can do to stop that. I’m watching it happen, and I know that it’s not good, and I know that it’s not healthy, and there she goes.
Glennon Doyle:
There she goes.
Amanda Doyle:
Bye.
Liz Gilbert:
There’s Thelma without Louise going over a cliff by herself and pulling another person down into that golf with her, using someone as a drug, as a sedative, as a stimulant. And what happened was that there was a night where I was doing that thing of begging, pleading, trying to get more than I was getting, drinking out of an empty well, going to the hardware store for milk, all the things that they… All the expressions that they say. There was a pause and the person who was with got up and left the room to do something. And I felt something in my heart and it was a little voice. And I put my hand on my heart and I heard this voice inside me, say, “Please get me out of here.”
Liz Gilbert:
And I said to her, “I’m going to get you right out of here. And I am so sorry.” And by the time my partner came back into the room, I was dressed and sitting on the edge of the bed. And I said, “I am so sorry.” I said it to him. I said it to myself. And I said, “I am not well, and I have actually really never been well in this area. And I need help, and I need to go find help, and I’m going to go get help. And I need to provide for myself right now.” And I took myself to a 12 step meeting for sex and love addiction and started my 12 step journey. And within a couple weeks after that, I put drinking down. I had never been a huge drinker, but I drank every day.
Liz Gilbert:
And then I put drugs down. I had discovered psychedelic drugs a few years earlier, and loved them so much and loved everything about it, and felt like this is the shortcut to God I’ve always wanted. And a lot of people in recovery do those drugs know… This is no shade on anybody. People call it plant medicine. For a lot of people, it is. It’s saving lives. For me, it is a drug because here’s how I know: when I do it, I never want it to end. And when it ends, I start sobbing because I don’t want to come back here. I want to be there always, so that’s how I know that’s not medicine for me.
Abby Wambach:
Good. That’s very good.
Liz Gilbert:
Right? Anything that I am like, “No, I don’t want to come back. I don’t want to be in this world. I want to be in that world,” that’s not probably good medicine for me. So I put that down, and then I put social media down because I realized that, oh, this is how I’m feeding validation to myself. This is me checking every day to see if I am loved, to see how loved I am, and to see who loves me, not just how many likes, but who? Who? Do the right people love me? Am I okay? Am I okay for this next hour? Am I still okay? What am I going to do tomorrow to make sure that I am still okay, that I am still loved, that I’m still approved of, not just by millions, but by the right people in the millions? And all of those things.
Liz Gilbert:
I have to say that the decision to go into the room for love addiction felt like it was mine. But also, I felt the divine hand in that moment where I could hear that part of me that said, “Please get me out of here. I really need help.” But then the subsequent things that I’ve dropped since then, and it’s been three years, I felt like, it’s not so much that I put them down, it’s that they were taken away. It’s like once I dealt with the main addiction, the other things were like, “Oh, this isn’t doing me any good either.”
Liz Gilbert:
And I wanted to give myself that voice, that little one in me, who I heard say, “Please get me out of here,” the stewardship that I feel toward her and the love and the care and the tenderness that I feel toward her made me make a promise to her, that, “I will do my very best for you and drinking and drugs and seeking validation on social media, probably isn’t helping either. So let me just get that stuff out of the way so that I can have the clearest possible mind to give you the care that you have always needed, to make sure that you are never abandoned again, where I never have to hear you cry out to me in the dark, ‘please get me out of here.’ To make you my priority, so that we’re okay.” So that takes us up to now.
Glennon Doyle:
And now, how are you now? How are you today?
Liz Gilbert:
I am so good. This is what we call a feelings check.
Glennon Doyle:
Yes.
Liz Gilbert:
I am so good. Today, I am so good. And I’ve been clean and sober for three years, three years on Easter. Easter was my three-year-
Amanda Doyle:
Oh, how perfect.
Liz Gilbert:
Sobriety day. Resurrection. So my world went from very big to very intimate. So I don’t have a big world right now. And I don’t know that I really, really, really want one. I have a really intimate world. I have a book that I’m working on, that I love, and another one too. And I’m healthy, and my eating has changed. All of that stuff has also happened. I’ve never been on my own this long. I’ve always been attached to somebody and I was in nonstop, overlapping relationships from the time I was 14, until I came into those rooms, with the tiny exception of nine months of the Eat, Pray, Love journey. That was the longest I’d ever been single. But the second someone gave me attention, I had to go to the source of that and get that, a steady supply.
Liz Gilbert:
So for me, three years of not living by my… I live with myself, not by myself. That’s how I’ve defined it. So three years of living with myself has been so extraordinary. All of my relationships have changed. I have to share an anecdote because I think you’ll love it. But a lot of people in my recovery room don’t know me. Recovery rooms, I find so fascinating because they are the truest, most democratic cross section of humanity that I have ever seen and in any… And I go to all of the rooms because I actually think that addiction, if you got addiction, you got all of it. I got the alcohol stuff. I love the drugs. I love the codependence. I love the food stuff, the spending. If you’re hurt in that way, you’re hurt in all the ways that have to do with that.
Liz Gilbert:
And so I have loved Zoom because I’ve been able to go to so many meetings all over the world, and I have so many friends. I have a sponsee now. I’m part of that lineage now. But one of my most beloved sisters in fellowship called me last year. And she said, “Liz, I’m reading this book by somebody named Glennon Doyle.” She left me a message. She’s like, “This is such a weird… I hope… This is going to sound crazy, but she keeps talking about this friend of hers named Liz, and the things that this Liz person says sounds kind of like the things you say. You don’t, by any chance, know her, do you?” And she had no idea who I was. And she not only didn’t know who I was, she’d never heard of Eat, Pray, Love.
Glennon Doyle:
Oh my God.
Liz Gilbert:
So I was like, “Yeah, she’s a friend of mine, and I’m also an author.” Because in the rooms, you don’t really talk about what your career is, and what your job is.
Glennon Doyle:
No. That’s why it’s so wonderful.
Liz Gilbert:
Isn’t that amazing? Isn’t that wonderful, though? But how beautifully did you depict our friendship, that I was recognizable to somebody who knew me only in this sense, right? I was so incredibly moved by that. I thought that was so sweet.
Amanda Doyle:
How integrated are you as a person, that you’re recognizable on a couple pages of a book as you are in a meeting.
Glennon Doyle:
Oh, that’s true.
Amanda Doyle:
That speaks to you.
Glennon Doyle:
That’s really true. Oh my gosh. So gorgeous.
Amanda Doyle:
What is it like being… If you have that many years of consecutive relationship, always someone with you, living with you in relationship with, to have a three year span is a big deal. What kind of transitions did you have to make? What kind of itchiness did you have? How did you learn to be with you?
Liz Gilbert:
Well, for one thing… So I think anybody who has any kind of experience with addiction knows what it’s like to always feel like you are a divided self. And especially in regard to whatever the main thing is that you’re using, where you feel… I’ve had a split self for my entire life, from very early childhood, when I figured out that there was a very narrow thing that I was allowed to be, that was okay. And that, that had to be presented. And then behind that, was a bunch of stuff that was not ever allowed to be seen. I remember telling my first lie probably when I was three. I remember needing to understand how to lie because these parts of myself were not acceptable. And so you get really used to living a double life and having a presented self.
Liz Gilbert:
And it feels, in a weird way, very comfortable because it’s what you’ve always done. I’ll keep it on the I. It’s what I’ve always done. So in a way, that split and that division of, “This is what I look like, but this is the pain, and this is what I’m secretly doing that nobody knows about,” is very customary for me. But even so, during all those years where… By the time I was in high school, I knew there was something wrong with me with relationships because my friends didn’t do what I did. They didn’t have such intense relationships. They didn’t have so many of them. They didn’t cheat on people. They didn’t blow up one and go to another right away. They didn’t have the drama that I had. And then I thought it was something I would grow out of, but I didn’t.
Liz Gilbert:
But every single time I entered into a new relationship, with the exception of my relationship with Rayya, every single time I entered into a new relationship, I had a feeling and it was like this dim sound in the back of my head, that I was letting myself down, that there was something that I was not giving myself the opportunity to do. I didn’t go and do a junior year abroad in high school. I could have gone to France. I could be fluent in French right now, but I couldn’t leave my boyfriend, so I didn’t go. I didn’t go to Mexico and teach English like I wanted to after college, because I had a boyfriend who I needed and couldn’t leave. So many things in my life I didn’t do, even though I had done a lot, I always had to navigate… I also needed my drug. I needed my source. I needed to be linked to this person, so that I could get what I couldn’t live without.
Liz Gilbert:
So the three years that I’ve spent now on my own, there’s a triumphant feeling of that part of me who was always being pushed aside so that I could get my hit and get what I needed, finally is having her moment, where she’s like, “See, this is kind of what I always…” There was a part of me that was like, I’m an introvert, I always kind of wanted to live alone. I always kind of wanted to be able to devote myself to my writing and my spiritual practices without being interrupted. I kind of always wanted to focus more on my friends and my relationships with them, than with this one person. So there’s a homecoming feeling.
Liz Gilbert:
And then there’s also just been a lot of education that I’ve had to learn in recovery about how I get in situations where suddenly it’s too late and I’m in this thing, and how I can learn how to stop it 20 steps prior to that. Because the point of no return for me happens very quickly. I can’t do things, like any addict in sobriety, there’s things that other people can do that I can’t do. I have a friend who’s a severe alcoholic and she cannot hold a glass of champagne at a wedding and toast politely. She can’t be that close to champagne. Other alcoholics can do that and be like, “I’m not going to drink, and I’m just going to hold it up.” She knows herself well enough to know that she can’t have that in her hand, right?
Liz Gilbert:
So similarly, there are certain behaviors that other people can do safely, and it’s sort of within the realm of normal, that I can’t do because of where that might take us. Right? So there’s no such thing in my world anymore as healthy, normal flirting. That’s not a safe behavior for me. And I can get myself and other people into a lot of trouble with that, because I don’t have any breaks. I don’t have any breaks. So there’s stuff that I used to do that I used to be like, “But everybody does this,” and I can’t. And I find huge relief in that. It doesn’t feel like constriction to me, it just feels like, “Oh, these are the guardrails that I’ve always needed and I never knew how to have,” so I feel safer and I want to be somebody who people are safer around.
Liz Gilbert:
I feel like my true loving nature has had more room to bloom. I can now be more of what I really am, which is somebody who can care about people, instead of using them. I don’t ever want to use another person again as a drug. And I don’t ever want to be used again by another person, as a drug, as a sleeping pill, as a sedative, as a stimulant. And there’s a great liberation that I feel. And the biggest thing I feel is dignity, because there’s no dignity in using and there’s no dignity in being used. So yeah, it’s good.
Glennon Doyle:
Liz, how does that… Because I’m an alcoholic. I’m an alcoholic and a food addict, so they’re different in that alcohol, great, I can just stay away from it forever. I mean, not that it’s that easy, but there is a delineation of, “Did I drink or not?” Food? Just a quagmire of, “Am I sober from food addiction? Am I not?” If my behaviors are one thing, but my brain is still another, how… It sort of feels a little bit more like relationship or love addiction because we need love like we need food. So tell me, because I actually just don’t know any of that, those steps and how it works with relationship and love addiction. How do you work your way back in at some point?
Liz Gilbert:
Well, yeah, that’s a big question. And that analogy is often used, to food addiction because, the way I’ve heard it said is that in alcoholism, you take the tiger, put it in a cage, and you throw the key away, and you never open the cage. With food addiction, you have to open the cage three times a day, and take the tiger for a walk around the block, and then put it back in the cage”, which is really, really hard. Love addiction is somewhere in between there because we do need intimacy and we do need love, but we don’t necessarily have to have sex three times a day, no matter what I might have told you in college. You don’t have to have that. And there are people… And that’s why, for each person, you have to find what your own pathway is in that.
Liz Gilbert:
And it’s a possibility for me. I keep open the possibility. I’m doing so well and my life is so good. It may be the case that I’m somebody where I’m like, “Actually, I actually really shouldn’t mess with that at all.” Because I really don’t do well when I mess with that. It really blows my life up in a bad way, so maybe I just treat it like alcohol. And I’m like, I’m just going to have a great life and I’m going to get love, affection, and intimacy through my friends and through my relationship with my higher power and through my intimacy with myself. And there are ways to get safe touch. I can’t get a massage from a male masseuse, it’s not safe for what it does to my head, or a hot lesbian female masseuse. I have to be really careful.
Amanda Doyle:
Really just any masseuse, any masseuse at all.
Liz Gilbert:
I have to look at them and be like, “Is there an attraction here?” If there is, the benefit of the massage is not going to be worth what it does to me, you know?
Glennon Doyle:
Right.
Liz Gilbert:
I have to find a place. I have to find safety in all of these things so that I can be safe. And then, when, and if, the time comes, and I don’t feel that, and I… And for me, all recovery is the same, in that it’s about establishing a relationship of conscious contact between yourself and a higher power. And no matter what your addiction is, that’s the remedy, is taking your ego off being the highest power in the room and bringing in a higher power. And I have a really deep, rich, loving, intimate relationship with the God of my understanding. And I check in and I’m like, “Am I supposed to be with anybody right now?” And what I call God is like, “Oh girl, no. Oh no, no, no.”
Liz Gilbert:
And I feel that too, that it would be… I’m not done with what I’m doing right now. What I’m doing right now is so important. It’s like I’m living amends. I’m giving myself back those years that, starting so young, that I just gave so much of myself away. But if that answer ever changes, that’s where I’ll hear it, and I’ll take instruction from there. And then there’s like, you sit with a sponsor and you make a plan about what are your boundaries and your guidelines and to keep yourself and other people safe. Because nobody is safe from me when I’m in addiction, and that includes me, but it’s not limited to me.
Glennon Doyle:
We’ve had a conversation recently where I think I texted you and said I was back in the rooms and just pissed off all the time because of all the male language in the steps and all things. And then you told me that I was allowed to create the higher power in my own way. When you think about your higher power, what do you think of? And what are the spiritual practices? Because, well, every time we talk, you’re talking to me about how you’ve just done or you’re doing your spiritual practices. I don’t know why the hell I’ve never asked you, what are those things? What are you doing?
Liz Gilbert:
Yeah. So one of the things I loved is that my sponsor said to me one time, when we got to step two, she’s like, “Why don’t you write out what you’re looking for in a higher power, as if you were writing what you were looking for in a romantic partner, or what you’re looking for in a job? Manifest this. What are you looking for? What would work for you? What does it have to be? And what can it not be?” And it was so funny, because even as open as I’ve always been about spirituality, I was like, “You’re allowed to do that? Don’t you have to work with the God they give you?”
Glennon Doyle:
You can customer custom order a higher power?
Liz Gilbert:
You can custom order it. And she was like, “Not only can you do that, but to get well, you must. To get well, you must create your own higher power because the only higher power who you’re going to believe in, love, and trust is the one that is tailored to you.” And I found that to be really revolutionary. I think you guys all grew up Catholic with a high demand religion, so I have a different background than you. I don’t have the anger at God because I didn’t grow up assaulted in my religion. And when you grow up… A lot of people in the rooms, I’m always very conscientious about whenever I share about like saying, “The God of my understanding is not the God of your father’s nor the God of my father’s.” But my family was pretty low key about religion, so I didn’t have to erase. I didn’t have to undo a lot of trauma to naturally find my way to a God of my own understanding.
Liz Gilbert:
And what I did was I built upon a practice that I have had for years, which is, whenever I’ve been in distress for years, I’ve always written letters to love. I wrote about this in Eat, Pray, Love, where I write a letter to unconditional love herself, who I’ve always felt is very female and say… This incredibly compassionate, all-accepting mother, divine mother. And I say, “I’m in trouble and I need help.” And for years I’ve done this, and then I write… For years, I don’t know where I learned it, it just sort of intuitively happened. Unconditional love writes back to me and always with the same first line, which is: I’m right here, which I have tattooed on my chest in my own handwriting because it comes in my own handwriting. “I’m right here. I see you, and I love you. And I know you’re in a lot of pain right now, and I’m not going anywhere, and I have nowhere better to be.”
Liz Gilbert:
That’s the thing that love always tells me, “There’s nowhere else in the universe that is more important to me, to be right now than with you in this moment. And if you need to be in distress all night, I will sit here with you through this because you are my beloved and you are my child. And there’s absolutely nothing you could ever do to lose my love. And if you lose everything else in the entire world, I will be there still.” And so I sort of expanded on that to create what I call the God of my understanding, but my primary spiritual practice these days is, I’ve explained it to you before, is two-way prayer, which is actually really interesting.
Liz Gilbert:
Apparently, the history is that the very early first group of people in Alcoholics Anonymous created this thing and they, at the time, thought it was the most important part of recovery, more important than going to meetings, more important than doing the steps, more important than having a sponsor, literature, all of that. It was really creating that conscious contact with a higher power. And the way you do it, the way they teach it is that you find a quiet spot and a quiet moment, and you open up… The way I think of it is, you open up the doorway to the infinite, through reading something that, for you, opens up the doorway to your infinite. So that can be a piece of sacred writing of any… Whatever sacred writing is to you. So for me, it’s Walt Whitman, and it’s any line. I open up to any line of Song of Myself.
Liz Gilbert:
And I feel like Walt Whitman was a mystic and a great Saint, and that he was in direct communion with God, and that he left the door open behind him. And I draft in on his draft. So I read a couple lines of Walt and then I’m with God, right? And it’s like, “Thanks, uncle Walt.” And Rumi does that for me. Hafez does that for me, all of those. Mary Oliver does it for me. They left the door open behind them, out of their generosity. And you can slip in on their words and it changes something and you interiorly, and now you’re in divine space. And then you write one question, and one question only. As my sponsor said, “It’s not a deposition, Liz.” One question and that question is… My question every day is the same, and I’ve been doing it now for two years, “Dear God, what would you have me know today?”
Liz Gilbert:
And then the answer. You start writing the answer. And that presence has never not been there. And I’ve been through some stuff in the last couple years. And the answer always surprises me. It delights me. I get a letter every morning from my higher power, giving me my instructions for my day, tailored to that God of my creation and my understanding, who loves me enough to have taken the form that I can handle in the creation that I projected onto it. That’s how loving I think God is, that God will be like, “Oh, you want me to show up as this? Okay. I’ll love you so much that I will be this, so that you can be with me and we can be together.” And that God meets me wherever I am, with whatever I need.
Liz Gilbert:
And then I have two-way prayer partners in my fellowship, and we call and we read each other our two-way prayers, because God also speaks to me through other people’s prayers. And I meditate. And I spend a lot of time in solitude. That’s a very big top line for me. I need that in order to be able to hear what I need to hear. Otherwise, I’m looking at too many other people and asking them if I’m okay. And that used to be my spiritual practice. That used to be my higher power. If you want, I can read you guys… Do you want to hear my prayer from today?
Glennon Doyle:
Yes, please.
Abby Wambach:
Yes. Also, this is a God I could follow. What she’s just explained.
Glennon Doyle:
And I love that, she just said… Because I’ve never heard you say it this way before. She doesn’t say, “I created this God,” she says… I mean, I know you’re right there and I’m just talking about you, but like-
Liz Gilbert:
I’m right here, Glennon.
Glennon Doyle:
There’s this God that loves me enough that will take whatever form I have created that I need.
Abby Wambach:
That you’ve projected.
Glennon Doyle:
That I’ve projected.
Abby Wambach:
That’s right.
Glennon Doyle:
That’s so beautiful.
Abby Wambach:
So good.
Liz Gilbert:
And why wouldn’t God, who is infinite-
Glennon Doyle:
Why wouldn’t God?
Liz Gilbert:
One, be able to do that? And why wouldn’t God who is infinitely loving, not offer itself to you as whatever you need for its child.
Glennon Doyle:
Of course, it’s like me sitting at the counter with Amma and she’s upset about her day. And me saying, “What do you need from me?” That’s all it is. I’ll be whatever you need me to be right now. Beautiful.
Abby Wambach:
That’s right. Please read your letter you wrote this morning.
Liz Gilbert:
It’s funny, I already forgot it. So I have no idea what this is going to be, but it’s good. And sometimes I actually record them. So I’ve got months of these. So it’s like my own Bible. So when I’m really stressed, I’ll go back and pick a random date and I can hear God talking to me again. And usually, whichever random one I hear, it’s like, here’s God’s custom made offering for me for this day. Dear God, what would you have me know today? Oh, and then also they suggest you begin God’s response to you with an incredible term of endearment, that opens up the heart space between you and the divine. So God always calls me, “My Love,” or, “My Child,” or, “My Favorite Baby,” often comes up.
Liz Gilbert:
My Love, I would have you know humility. When first you heard my voice, nearly 20 years ago, you were so beaten down and so love starved that I could only come to you in one form: as pure unwavering, devotional, unconditional love. You would have died without it. For many years, you could only receive me as that. We had to save your life, and this is how we saved you: by loving you back into yourself and building you up. Now that you believe genuinely that you are both lovable and loved, now that you know that I will never abandon you, that you cannot be alone, now that you believe fully in that love, I want you to learn humility. Don’t worry, this won’t be Bogue. Ray’s favorite word. This is not about beating you back down. There will be no punishing, no degradation.
Liz Gilbert:
My love, I want you to know the sweetness and the deep all-encompassing relief that humility will bring to your life. Look how much your life has improved by handing over so much of it to me already, but every single aspect of your life that you still hold back from me because you do not trust me, thinking in your ignorance and in your self importance that you need to handle it, that you need to control it, fix it, manage it, solve it, understand it, everywhere that you are still doing that, you will, and you are experiencing strain and suffering and stress.
Liz Gilbert:
Listen to what your fellow Be passed along to you yesterday, about how she came to me and asked me not just to help her with her fourth step, but to do it for her. And yes, My Love, I did. I did it for her, just like that. Ask me to do things for you. That is what humility means. Ask me to do your family for you. Just say, “You do it. I don’t know how.” Say, “Here, God, you take it,” and I will. Admit that you are powerless over everything. That’s actually humility and life will get easier. My Love, remember the exquisite sensation you used to experience in romance when you would surrender completely to another, the way that you wanted to be devoured. I say this not to stimulate ecstatic recall, but to say, My love, that was actually nothing. That was nothing compared to the sweet, tearful, grateful relief you will experience when you give everything to me.
Liz Gilbert:
Ask me to write your book for you. Try it, I’ll do it. Ask me to do this interview today with Glennon, for you. I’ll do it. Say, “God, here you do it,” and open up your mouth and I will do it. Ask me to do your yoga for you. Ask me to take walks for you, not with you, for you. Ask me to schedule your life for you. Remember what Byron Katie said to you about her life, that she has not done or said anything in years? She doesn’t do anything. Ever since her moment of awakening, she said she either just sits there or stands there, and then everything is done through her. She says, and you must believe her, for it is true, she has not made a decision in 25 years. Something decides her, for her. That is the thing that I can do for you.
Liz Gilbert:
Don’t make plans, My Little Love, let me arrange your life. Pause. Listen for me and let me do it. I don’t want you to miss this experience of letting go into love and trust. This is what I would have know, My Love: more God, less Liz is the equation for perfect peace. You’ve worked too hard your whole life, My Love stop working so hard. Stop trying. Let me do more things. Let me do everything. Trust me completely. Say, “Here, God, you do it.” See what those words that belief will create out of you. Let me dance you. Let me live you, for you. Let me show you how much I love you when you give your whole will and your whole life to me. Let me show you how beautiful humility is. Stop knowing anything except this, accept this: you are mine and I am you. And I love you.
Abby Wambach:
Wow.
Glennon Doyle:
Unbelievable.
Amanda Doyle:
That’s so beautiful.
Glennon Doyle:
All right. In our last minutes, we’re going to have a couple questions from the Pod Squad for Liz. There were about 6 million questions that were submitted for you. I want to hear what Liz has to say for Lolly.
Lolly:
My name is lolly. I had this super close friend. We were so close that we called each other’s sisters. I trusted this friend with everything and we just shared so much. And then in the beginning of this past school year, I heard from a friend that she was saying, some really hurtful things about me behind my back. And that was just not who I knew her to be. I asked her if we could talk and she just completely cut me off. I felt betrayed. I just felt devastated for losing this person that I love. Now, it’s been months since then, and I’ve done a lot of personal work and worked with my therapist to heal from this friendship loss, and even to forgive her. But almost every night, almost every night, she is still in my dream. So what do I do to release this person who I love, who’s not in my life anymore? What would you do? Even if you like hadn’t had any closure from that person, how can I move on from her? I feel desperate. Please help. Thank you both.
Liz Gilbert:
Oh, sweetheart. I’m so sorry. I’m so sorry. And I love your name. My favorite person in the world was my great aunt Lolly, and it just made me happy to hear your name. So let’s start with that. I love that your desire is to free her. It tells me everything I need to know about the quality of your heart as a human being, that you’re not saying, “Help me get rid of my rage and my anger.” It sounds as if you’re in acceptance at a certain level about this. Going back to the concept of powerlessness. I am powerless over my dreams. I have a very long list of things in the world that I am powerless over; my dreams are one of them. My thoughts are also on that list. My mind is a wild horse. It’s wild horses galloping in all directions.
Liz Gilbert:
I don’t have control over what I think. I don’t have control over what I dream. If you have mind control and dream control, I cannot wait to take your seminar to learn how to do that. And I’m a lifelong meditator, and I still don’t have control over my thinking and over my dreaming. I have control over my actions. And what I’ve learned is that, if I stay in… and I also cannot force closure, and I’ve given up on trying to make closure happen in relationships. My experience is that if I focus my attention on good orderly direction, healthy activities for myself, taking care of my inner little, going to sleep at the right times, nourishing my life in always. If I pay attention to those things, then eventually something happens behind my back and those obsessions dissolve. I can’t dissolve them. And I know a lot about obsession and I know a lot about fixating on another person.
Liz Gilbert:
And I know a lot about not wanting to think about somebody who I keep thinking about, whether it’s because I’m in love with them or I’m angry with them, or whatever. I have a lot of experience with that. I can’t manufacture the end to that story, but I can turn it over to a higher power and then do what I can to nourish myself. And one day I look up and I notice I haven’t thought about that person in a month. And so what I would do, if I were counseling you, is that I would make a list of top line behaviors: 10 things that you do that are really good for you, whatever those might be. And then every day, look at that list and try to live in those top lines. And live as much as you can in those top lines, because that’s all I am in control of. That is really all I am in control of. I’m not in control of anything else.
Liz Gilbert:
And be willing to let time do its good work and let time do it for you, rather than you trying to do it. And that requires patience and faith. And it also requires sitting in some discomfort and being like, “Wow, I don’t want to be having these thoughts. I don’t want to be having these dreams. I’m having them. I can’t do anything about that. I’m going to turn it over and I’m going to turn my attention to self care. And the more I nourish myself, the more I believe that something will lift this.” Man, there are people who I thought I was never going to stop obsessing about, who, honestly, I could probably barely pick them out of a police lineup at this point. But there was a time when my entire life was filled with… My entire head and my entire life was filled with their name, and it passes.
Liz Gilbert:
And also pray for her. Sorry to say that, but that’s not a person who’s well. When I’m thinking about obsessing about someone I don’t want to obsess about, I will just do a quick Buddhist meta prayer, which is just: may you be free from suffering. May you know peace. That’s it. Right on the spot. May that person be free from suffering. May they know peace. And then move on with your good habits.
Glennon Doyle:
I do that too, because I always think I’m tricking God. If God thinks I’m so good that I’m loving this person enough to pray for them, then God will bless me by not having me think about that person anymore.
Abby Wambach:
You’re trying to get bonus points?
Glennon Doyle:
Yes.
Amanda Doyle:
No, she’s trying to manipulate God.
Abby Wambach:
I’m trying to just [inaudible 00:51:55].
Amanda Doyle:
She’s just gaming. She’s just gaming God.
Abby Wambach:
God’s like, “Got it, Glennon. I know you, Glennon.”
Glennon Doyle:
I love to just switch to self care, switch to the… Because when you’re trying not to think about something, it’s impossible. Thank you for that. Okay. One last question. How about Judith?
Judith:
Hi Glennon, Abby, Amanda, and hopefully Liz. My name is Judith. I guess my question is around spirituality. I feel like because the conversations that you all have about life being courageous and feeling or feelings are really about getting in touch with spirit. I spent some time a few years ago, living on various ashrams. When I was in that lifestyle, I kept feeling like it wasn’t quite real. I needed to get back to reality, the reality of working and relationships. But then, when I eventually came back to so-called reality, I find myself thinking that ashram life and spiritual practice is actually reality instead. So my question for Liz really is how do you do both? Can we do both? Which one is real? And I know that’s a very binary question. Thanks again.
Liz Gilbert:
Judith, I am you. I had the same feelings. I’ve been in ashrams, too, as you know. One thing I hear in that question is a human ego, which is, by definition, can never be satisfied. The human ego is a dissatisfaction machine, and no sooner does it get a thing, then it wants the other thing. And then no sooner does it get the other thing, then it wants that other thing back. And then it’s like, how can I game this? So I can have both of these things. And that’s the nature of the human monkey mind. That’s not a glitch of your system, Judith. That’s how we are. That is how a human mind operates. That is what an ego does; it creates stories about lack. And so this was lacking here. I gave up that now I went over here. Now that’s lacking. How can I get both?
Liz Gilbert:
That’s what an uncovered human ego does. And I experienced, when I was at the ashram in India. I loved it there, but I remember watching somebody who had lived there for 10 years. She went home to Chicago, from India, for the first time to the states in a decade for a family funeral. And when she came back, she was so jacked and wrecked from having been in the world. And she was so shook from how horrible the world was. And she couldn’t wait to get back into the ashram. And she was like, “It’s so awful out there. It’s so awful.” And I remember it gave me pause, because I was like, “Wait, isn’t the point of the spiritual practice to make you be able to live in the world as it is? Isn’t that what we’re looking for, is that you’re training yourself to be grounded in something so that whatever comes, you can face that?”
Liz Gilbert:
So it felt to me like, oh, this feels… I mean, it was super judgey of me, but I felt like, “Oh, this person’s hiding here and not actually developing the skills for existence on this very difficult planet.” So that’s when I was like, I need a spiritual path that’s not about hiding in cloistered artificial solitude, but is about teaching me how to do the hard stuff in the world. I certainly also understand the longing to go back to the cloister once you come out into the world. I feel like I have a stronger spiritual practice now, living in reality, than I did when I was at the ashram. I feel more spiritually mature here in my own discipline. I’ve created a life that is very spiritually disciplined and nobody’s disciplining it for me. So I would say that you can take what you loved about the ashram Monastic tradition, and you can fold it into your life if you’re willing to give up other things.
Liz Gilbert:
And here I will quote Glennon, talking about how she realized that if she wanted to be a writer, all she had to do was go to bed at eight o’clock when her kids went to bed, so that she could get up at 4:00am right before her children woke up. She prioritized that. So if it was the meditation that you loved, what are you currently giving those hours to? That’s a thing that I often say is: pay attention to what you’re paying attention to. So where are the most important hours of your day currently going? My most spiritual time of the day is predawn. I love those hours. It’s, I love the deep velvety dark silence of that time. I love that the world hasn’t woken up and started calling me yet. So I sacrifice a lot of stuff later in the day so that I can go to bed early so that I can get up and have that time with God. I need those quiet mornings for myself.
Liz Gilbert:
I don’t do so well in the world if I skip that. If I skip that morning connection with myself and with my God, the rest of my day tends to be… I tend to feel very lost. So I would say maybe it’s not so much about going to a monastery as bringing into your life what you loved most about the monastery.
Glennon Doyle:
Love. Liz, we do this thing called the next right thing. What would you say to people, right now, something so simple that they can do that might bring them just a smidge more? All we want is a smidge more of peace and freedom today.
Liz Gilbert:
Say no to somebody. That’s good. Yeah. Say no to somebody. Disappoint someone. Somebody’s expecting you to do something? Don’t do it. Cancel something. Cancel something or say no to somebody. That would be the best thing that you could possibly do for yourself right now.
Glennon Doyle:
We can do that.
Abby Wambach:
Nothing better than-
Glennon Doyle:
We can do hard things. We can also do fun, easy things like cancel.
Amanda Doyle:
Love it.
Glennon Doyle:
It’s not easy though. That’s really hard. Saying to somebody is a hard-
Abby Wambach:
Yeah, it’s not easy.
Amanda Doyle:
Hard thing, but I bet… I mean, I don’t know this, but Liz, does it get easier the second time than it is the first time, to say no to somebody?
Liz Gilbert:
Yes. And I say no all the time now. And I actually realized that I’m doing that person a service because I hate it so much when people say no to me and I don’t get what I want. That is a great spiritual growth edge for me. So when I am denied what I want, it causes me to have to find growth within myself. And so if I say no to somebody else, I’m giving them the opportunity to be really upset and then figure out how to take care of themselves in that.
Glennon Doyle:
Oh my God, it’s so [inaudible 00:58:35].
Liz Gilbert:
So it’s a public service.
Amanda Doyle:
It’s a great public service. You’re giving them what we call the AFGO, right? Another growth opportunity.
Liz Gilbert:
Yes.
Glennon Doyle:
Go off, go forth and give many AFGOs today.
Liz Gilbert:
Love it.
Glennon Doyle:
Liz, thank you. You are truly one of the most important people in my life. Abby and I are both grateful for you, for the way that you mother both of us separately and the way that you helped our love story come together, because you did really help me trust myself during that time. And that’s what I needed more than anything. So I’ll be grateful to you forever.
Liz Gilbert:
There was nothing that anybody on this world, or any other world, would’ve been able to do or not do or say or not say that was going to keep you two apart.
Abby Wambach:
That’s right.
Liz Gilbert:
And I love that you credit me with helping you, but this thing was never not going to happen, because this thing is for the benefit of all of us and also for you. And I love all of you so very, very, very much. Thank you for letting me come onto your program.
Abby Wambach:
You’re the best.
Glennon Doyle:
It’s a joy. We love you.
Amanda Doyle:
Thank you, Liz Gilbert.
Glennon Doyle:
To the rest of you, when life gets hard this week, just say no.
Liz Gilbert:
Love you guys. Bye Amanda. Bye Abby.
Glennon Doyle:
We love you.
Liz Gilbert:
Bye everybody. Bye Pod Squad.
Glennon Doyle:
Bye Lizzy.
Abby Wambach:
Bye. Thank you, Liz.
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.