Jen Hatmaker: What Are You Pretending Not to Know?
Join us for a raw conversation with Jen Hatmaker on:
the cost of ignoring the trouble in her 25-year marriage;
the night she heard her husband on the phone with his girlfriend; and
the freedom she found when she finally embraced the truth.
About Jen:
Jen Hatmaker is a bestselling author, award-winning podcaster, and fierce advocate for women living in freedom and agency. With 14 books—including four New York Times bestsellers—she reaches millions with her signature mix of humor, vulnerability, and wisdom. Her newest book, AWAKE: A Memoir, is out now, and chronicles her raw, real-time journey through the shocking end of her 26-year marriage and surprising reinvention. She lives in a creaky old farmhouse, loves 90s country, and drinks Almond Joy creamer like it’s a personality trait.
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Transcript
Welcome to We Can Do Hard Things.
We have a beautiful doozy of an episode for you today.
Today our episode is with Jen Hatmaker.
She's talking to us about the moment she found out that her husband of 25 years was having an affair and about how
she may have always known in her bones that she needed to leave her marriage.
If you have ever been afraid of admitting out loud what you know in your bones, watch this episode today or listen where you get your podcasts because you're going to want to hear
the cost of not admitting that you know and the magic that can come when you do admit what you know in your bones about your life.
The only person who could walk us through this is Jen Hatmaker.
She is a best-selling author.
She is an award-winning podcaster.
She is a fierce advocate for all of us to live in freedom and agency.
Her new book, Awake, is out now.
It chronicles her raw, real-time journey through the shocking end of her 26-year marriage and her surprising reinvention that I like to call the Genesis.
Let's go.
First of all, before we start this,
oh, the trouble we've seen.
Oh, the trials and tribulations you have seen.
We're not even to your story yet.
No, no, we're not even awake yet for this first part.
Yeah.
You're just getting out of the bathtub.
Pod Squad, I'm going to tell you this story in full another time.
What you need to know right now is you know that my
deep struggle with menopause.
Yeah.
So what happened was.
So we are going to get into it.
Just real quick.
But the short version is.
The short version is we had all these very beautiful, important conversations.
One of the most important being with Jen Hatmaker.
And I did go to my doctor the morning before and say, I don't know what you need to do, but I'm not waiting one more fucking minute.
And you better give me something to make me presentable for consumption publicly because I'm a nightmare and I can't talk to people like this.
And so I was prescribed something.
Yeah.
And Jen.
What was it?
I have to tell you offline.
Oh, good.
Because I'll get in trouble with whoever is believing this thing.
It was cocaine, Jen.
It was cocaine.
Because I knew it.
Like, I knew it.
I'd heard the bad things about it.
Yes.
So I was so debilitated, in bed, couldn't move that Abby and Amanda had to call Jen.
She was in an airplane.
Am I right?
Yeah.
I was left again on the plane, like headphones in.
I'm like, all right, flying to L.A.
And then what happened?
And then Amanda and I, because we had basically just woken up and found you immovable in bed.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And so Amanda and I were looking at each other, trying to figure out what the fuck we were going to do.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And I'm like, I have to text Jen.
I have to just call her.
And maybe she hasn't boarded the flight yet.
Oh my God.
And so the three of us were basically,
we had you on speakerphone, Jen, and Amanda and I were like, Amanda had not had her coffee yet.
I can't
see anything.
There is no neurons firing until the coffee hits the street.
So Abby walks in.
I thought I was being punked.
Abby puts a speakerphone with Jen and it's like, she has 90 seconds in my face.
And I'm like, I haven't had coffee.
I don't even know the words you're making.
You are not awake.
I can confirm that this is the level of chaos that we all experienced.
I can't
real time processing with you, Jen.
Like if we go
this way, what I want you to envision is Jen in her seat, you know, in my seat, like 5A.
And
I, we're at the gate.
Damn it.
The whole plane is, we're about, and here's Abby.
And I'm like, it can't be good.
It can't be good.
Good morning, sunshine.
Because it's the crack of dawn for me.
So for you guys, it's the middle of the night.
And I'm like, oh, geez.
So I am, I'm like, what do I do?
And these two without the coffee are like, what?
I don't, I'm like, girls.
Yeah.
Uh-huh.
Girls, I have 60 seconds.
I can get off this plane or not.
They're going to shut the door.
So in 60 seconds, I need you to make the decision.
And then it was like five seconds of silence of like, we are unable.
We are unable to know about what we should say to you.
And i was like i feel like i'm gonna get off so i come up to the door they shut it and i was like
is there i had a problem see what had happened is i have a problem with my friends and
can you just let me off the plate
god bless
i realized that i might only be in enneagram three once i've had coffee Because I was like, oh,
no, let me chase right now.
Jen, you were not in charge.
You were such a trooper during that moment because Amanda and I couldn't make a decision.
And you were like, okay, here's what I'm going to do.
I'm going to get off the plane.
That's what Jen does.
And I just love that so much because we, oh,
well, we need Glennon.
We need her in this conversation.
And I'm like, I would rather us do this conversation on satellite from the moon
than in person and have one of us not be in it.
That's stupid.
That's the way we felt.
Yeah.
So.
Well, you also said, Jen,
and you've said this to me before,
just
the person that you all watching think that Jen is, is actually the person that Jen is in real life, which is this person who just sort of
sees all the flakes.
You know, there's the snow globe.
She sees all the flakes.
And then real quick, without even letting things settle, she just settles the shit.
It's just like, it's settled.
And so she, and you just don't even know.
You were waiting for the gentle settle, but it's just settled.
And she says,
She said this to me before, and she said it again this time.
She said, Glenn and Doyle, there is no such thing as a podcast emergency.
I stand by it.
Come on, what are we doing?
Are we curing cancer?
What are we doing?
Which is a nice segue.
Yeah.
Into your story, where there is such thing as an emergency.
Ready?
Oh, my job, Amanda.
Wow.
Good thank you, sister.
Wow.
This is impressive.
Anyway, hello.
And I'm so happy to see all three of your faces.
And I'm so happy that you feel better, Glennon, that whatever disastrous thing that they prescribed to you, you stop taking or whatever.
You can tell me offline so I don't take it.
I'm going to, and I just need to talk to you a lot about the menopause things.
That'll be next.
Okay?
Great.
But now, let's just all take a deep breath.
That stress is over.
That's not happening anymore.
We handled that.
Well, Jen handled it.
Jesus.
Nope.
That was helpful.
That's in a rearview mirror.
Today we're calm.
Look at us.
We're delightful.
Our hair is curled or whatever.
So,
by the way, your hair is looking fire.
Oh, well, you know, I just cut it all.
I was just like, enough.
Enough's enough.
It's dangerous.
Enough's enough.
It's just as our children would say, you're eating, or it's eight,
or she's serving.
Six, seven?
No, no one can say that.
Six, seven, forty-one.
God, I have this language in my house, too.
Yeah.
Yeah, it's hard because there's a lot of kitchen words, but they mean really different things.
Like
cooking is good, but cooked is bad.
Oh my gosh.
I know.
That's true.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's hard.
I know.
Speaking of hard hard things,
Sekio.
Good, good, good.
Secundate you.
Jen Hatmaker.
We're just going to jump in here, okay?
Yeah, yeah.
So what happened was,
you're going to take us back to this moment.
You have been married to your husband for 26 years.
You've raised five children together.
You both pastor a church together.
You're laying next to him in bed as you have done for Lo, so many years.
It's 2 a.m.
He thinks you're asleep.
What happens?
Jim Hamako.
Oh my gosh.
Well,
I decided to just start the book out by going for the jugular.
I'm like, let's just get into it.
Like, let's just start.
I'll start from the ER.
And that was my ER moment.
I had many, many, many after that, but that was the one.
And
I hear him voice texting his girlfriend.
So first of all, oh the fuck.
Second of all, I just sat straight up in bed.
And
I understand that I deal in hyperbole, but like, The truth is that was, that was the line.
Like there was a before that moment and an after that moment like everything was that was it that was the end of my life as i knew it and
so we start there
and then kind of parse out
the the next
two years
and what that looked like for me and you guys have been around my writing for a while so
This is like a different way of telling a story that I've ever told it, which is not prescriptive.
That's my preference.
And my preference as a writer, apparently, all this time has been like, What I will do is I will take this idea.
Don't worry, everybody, I'm going to work it out for us.
I'm going to think all the thoughts that we want to think about it.
I'm going to research.
I'm going to read everybody else's stuff on this.
I will condense it.
I will write it down for you.
And I will hand it to you.
Here's, this is what we think of this.
So just plug it into the outlet.
Work here is done.
So I've written in this prescriptive way for so long.
And I just knew that was not it.
That was not it.
What am I going to do?
What?
How to keep a marriage?
Like,
what do I know how to prescribe?
Apparently nothing.
And so I knew that this was going to be different and that I was going to write it in just vignettes, in little moments and memories.
And some of them were linear in that two-year span, but they span 45 years of life.
And so I'm kind of in and out of time zones and memories when I was like, all right, well, what built this house of cards?
Let's have a look at that.
Let's have a look at the systems that I, that I was plugged into.
Let's have a look at patriarchy.
Let's have a look at purity culture.
What about religious sort of shame?
What about gender limitations?
What about like body image?
Let's maybe this isn't so surprising that none of this held up after all.
So what,
so you hear him texting his girlfriend?
There's just so much.
What the fuck are you voice texting in a bed next to somebody else, you idiot.
You fucking idiot.
Sorry.
So we're just going to go there.
Well,
we can count on Abby always to just come in
with the stupid people.
I mean, for many reasons, not just the voice texting, the cheating, obviously, but still.
This is what I want to know, Jen.
When you because this is, you know, the shock that comes that that reorders your whole life and makes you re-examine everything you've ever done or said or learned or built happens for a lot of people in many different ways.
That's right.
When you are in that moment and the shocking thing happens where you hear your husband of 25 years texting his girlfriend,
was every single part of you shocked?
Or was there a part of you,
like an underground part of you that was like
yeah
that's right
if you'd asked me that question that day
i would have said 100 shock
um 100
that was absolutely never going to happen to us how could it we did all the things we we did the template you know we we did the rules um
I had said a zillion times in our marriage, a lot of shit can go sideways for us, but it will not be infidelity.
That's not going to be our deal.
Like we are, we are impervious to that because we just, I don't know why, I guess we just are.
And so at the time, I think I would have said that.
I got far enough away from the
center of the storm.
And I was able to go, hmm.
I had to figure out how to tap back into my body.
That was my healing agent.
I couldn't use my mind.
My mind was an absolute poisonous loop of trauma.
And so I had to use my body, which I'm not well versed at.
And I've never treated my body with any respect or care.
I've never considered her a true source of wisdom or leadership in my life.
So when I learned how to get inside my bones and listen to the wisdom of my own body, I had to finally say, oh, shit.
She'd been.
She'd been hitting the alarm bell for ages.
In fact, Glennon, I don't know if you remember this.
How could you?
We can't remember everything that happens to us.
Our lives are busy.
But that year, 2020,
and Untamed was coming out
in
March or whatever it was.
I had an advance copy.
And so I read it in like January before it came out.
And I do not know if you remember this, but I sent you a tech.
I got to a certain paragraph in the book about
lies that we are telling ourselves.
I read it.
I very quietly closed the book and I set it down and I picked up my phone and I texted you and I said, We're in trouble.
We're in trouble.
I'm confused.
I'm scared.
Nobody knows this.
I don't, because I don't understand it.
I don't know what's going wrong.
I don't know what's happening, but something is happening and I'm freaking out.
And so I did know, turns out.
I did know, but I didn't want to know.
I didn't want to know.
I wanted the story of our marriage.
I did not want our actual marriage.
So that's a tricky place to live.
We're in trouble.
That's such a beautiful,
honest,
universal
admission
for
so many people in so many different places.
Just to say out loud we're in trouble is a big thing.
What did it feel like?
And I'm asking this, you know, as a person who spends much of her life pretending not to know something until it becomes impossible not to know.
So I'm really not asking.
I don't know what you mean.
I'm with you.
I can't relate that that feels hard.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Can you possibly try to explain for everyone listening or watching what that might feel like to have those little bubbles come up of knowing and then to push them down?
Like, how did that play out in your everyday life with your family, in your marriage?
Such torment.
It's so torturous to live like that, to live misaligned.
And
also, our bodies are telling us something because it's it's for our protection, for our good, for the highest iteration of who we can be or should be or deserve to be.
So, that is a trustworthy voice.
And having to tell my own
wisdom over and over and over,
you are wrong.
There's no way that you are right.
You don't know what you know.
You're not experiencing what you're experiencing.
You're not seeing what you're seeing.
The amount of self-erasure and
self-denial that that takes on repeat is so painful.
It's so corrosive.
I just, I felt my own soul eroding.
And so then I'm having to live inside this world that I have co-created in which there is this version out here that you see.
that I want.
I want this version, by the way.
I'm, I'm not even making it up to be fancy.
I want it.
I want that marriage to work.
I want us to go the distance.
I, I want to rock our grandbabies on the porch.
I, I want to be reconnected.
I want us to be having sex again.
Like, I want all that, but I'm not having it.
I'm over here.
I'm back here living what is actual.
And this gap,
I never want to live in it again.
Never.
Never, never, never, never, never, never, never.
Never, never, never, never, never.
I just, uh, that cost is too high.
And so it's almost like I had to get on the other side of that because, again, you can choose your own truth, or sometimes it will choose itself for you, and that's how it was for me.
And so, when this was chosen for me, because I didn't have the courage to face it, I didn't have the, I did not have the wisdom to face it,
I had to get on the other side of it and go, oh my gosh, wow.
It is, this sounds crazy, it is actually better
to live
with this level of a busted up, broken marriage, family, vision for my future, all of it.
Everything just shattered into it.
It was scorched earth.
It is better to live over here,
true
and honest, than it was to still have possession of it and know that it was broken.
It's crazy, but it is.
It's better.
That's right.
It is better to be alone and true than married and suffering.
Yes.
Period.
So
couldn't have told me that five years ago, but it's true.
I have a question about that.
Do you think,
is it only possible to count that cost in retrospect?
Because I think we all have something that we're pretending not to know or that we won't let ourselves know.
I don't even think we're pretending.
We just won't let it come into our heads, whether it's the marriage was over a long time ago, or the kid is actually, there's something wrong, or I am queer, or just whatever the hell it is.
We won't let ourselves know it because the cost is so high of knowing it.
Like you're busted up, family, you're what you can see those costs, and like the spreadsheet is like very bad.
But on the spreadsheet of
the cost to us of not letting ourselves know,
do we ever know it in the moment that it's happening?
Or is it only in retrospect that you can look back and be like, that
was the pain, that was the cost?
That was like, how,
because I'm trying to figure out how we quantify, how do we make that real, that cost, so that we can actually do a fair analysis of costs.
Because it's just, we're only looking at the one side.
That's right.
It's not free.
There is a cost and you're paying it.
So
you're paying the entry fee to keeping the peace, whatever that means.
Because I was wanting to keep peace.
I wanted, I wanted this the way I wanted it.
And so it was me that was going to have to shape shift to make that keep working.
But to your point, it's like an invisible light item on the spreadsheet.
I just was willing to pretend that that was not so costly.
I look often at women who make this choice for themselves, who somehow have the fortitude and the courage to look at their life as it is, not as they want it to be, as it is, and to admit,
I'm going to admit that this is exactly what it is without me trying to polish it up or shine it up or prop it up or fix it or whatever the hell.
And then they choose the right path before the scorched earth.
I didn't.
didn't.
I didn't.
I've seen people do it.
And somebody asked me recently, do you think that you have to go through in general, any given person, this level of like loss and disruption and suffering to get to this place?
And I'm like, I don't think you have to.
I've seen people choose it.
But
most of us have to go through some flames to get there.
That's just my experience.
So I tip my hat to all the people who face their life as it is and decide to move accordingly, no matter what change that requires, no matter what loss is on the spreadsheet, because they put their chips on them and they go, I know that this cost is more than that one.
Yeah, some people move before they get the eviction notice.
Yeah.
Some of us have to wait for the eviction notice.
And people do ask me all the time, like, well, that's so great that you, you know, left your marriage that was a different version of what you're describing.
Yeah.
But do you think you would have if Abby had never walked into your life?
I don't know.
Don't know.
Like, I think so.
I think that moment would have come, whatever that Anias Nin thing is.
There's just a moment where not blooming becomes more painful than, you know, that.
famous it
i think that probably would have come but who knows And
I feel like this is,
okay, here's the truth of what happened
when you, what we were just describing in the beginning of this episode on the plane.
Jen, I had created this version of my life and this podcast and what was next
that was so out of line with the way that I want to live, that had to do with a fancy studio and had to do with people flying in and had to do with big celebrities coming to the thing and this shiny shiny shiny shiny thing and it got out of control and I actually went to the doctor's office because I could not handle looking at it unmedicated.
Oh wow.
And I, every bone in my body, I was like, oh, this isn't right.
This isn't right until my body was just like, oh, you're not fucking moving.
Like, I knew,
I just think this is so interesting because it can be about relationship or it can be about your life.
But like, what are you creating or inside of that your body is saying, no, no, no, but you're saying to it, but other people can do this, but I can make this work.
I think that one of the things that we're also not talking about that I think is really important is the mother element
to this equation.
So many people find themselves in kind of marriages that are going through tough times, suffering,
and children are such a big reason why so many of us stick around
on on behalf of or for the sake of of these children and not wanting the complications of you know split time and different households and their experience and their trauma etc etc and so I just want to make that I just want to say that I don't know
I don't know what the right thing to do is because there's we we we prop up and prioritize our motherhood so much that we lose ourselves in the process.
What do you think about that, Jude?
Yeah.
God, so true.
It's just not tidy.
None of it is.
Yeah.
And
any given marriage, I don't really care who you are.
It's not just you and your spouse.
You know, divorce breaks a million hearts.
Like, that was my parents' son-in-law.
That was my sibling's brother, brother-in-law.
That was my kid's dad.
Like, in our friend group, that was my best friend's best friend.
Like, it is the shrapnel is massive.
And anyone who does not consider that, I don't think is telling the truth or they're that self-deluded.
And so it's very, it's a very real deterrent to go, what about everybody else?
And I know shit, we have been told to say that question to ourselves since we were born.
What about everybody else?
I mean, that was, that was basically my childhood mantra.
What about everybody else?
How can you behave so that everybody else can be happy?
You know, I mean, I recognize the pitfall,
but also in a real human life,
everybody else factors into your life.
And these decisions matter to them too.
And so with the idolization, frankly, of marriage in my subculture for sure,
it is a very real
temptation to stay for the kids.
But I mean, I can tell you, this is not interesting or innovative or new.
I can only tell you that it's new to me because I am now the person who has lived this story, which is that it, again, in the same way that I just said earlier, it is better to be single and free than married and miserable.
Turns out it's also better for the kids to have
divorced parents who are healthy.
and whole and no longer like in a toxic spiral than married parents who are creating a living nightmare inside the home.
That's worse.
And they, they are, kids are resilient, you know, they really are.
And I hate that.
I mean, I wanted to protect all of them from everything ever, you know, that they would be that the first pack of children who get all the way through life without pain.
I had a plan.
I did.
So close, Hatmaker.
You were so close.
So close, you guys.
I almost got it.
We almost got it.
But then they also have to live a story, and that's stupid, but they do.
And they have to alchemize their own pain, and they do.
And they have to go through their own disappointments and their own losses, just like we did.
And I hate that so bad, but here we are.
I mean, however, I mean, they do recover.
Sydney, as y'all know, Sydney, my oldest daughter.
She's the best.
She's the best.
Right.
Just when I think, well, this is going to shatter them.
They're ruined.
They're doomed.
Obviously, they have no futures.
I remember her coming to me like maybe a year after the fact, and she was like, Mom, listen, hear me out.
Please consider becoming a lesbian.
You can, mom.
You can.
Just try it.
She's like, mom, just try it.
You'd never have to put up with another man's bullshit the rest of your life.
I'm like, honey,
I wish that I was.
And I am so sorry, but I was born straight and I hate that for me.
Born this this way, Sydney.
I'm sorry.
God, you have to love me this way.
This is how God made me.
Jen, God does not make mistakes, and it's okay for you to live your truth.
Thank you.
It was an oversight.
I wouldn't, maybe not a mistake, but a little oversight.
Maker, I'm right there with you, girl.
Right there with you.
And now it's time to thank the companies who allow you to listen to We Can Do Hard Things for free.
This segment is brought to you by Bumble, the app committed to bringing people closer closer to love.
We talk so much on We Can Do Hard Things about the courage it takes to be who you really are.
Being messy and complicated and showing up anyway is the bravest thing we can do in our families, in our jobs, in the world, and in our relationships.
It's so hard to show up as you are when you know how complicated and weird you really are.
Trust me, I know.
We're not supposed to be complicated.
We're supposed to be small and agreeable and never ever too much.
But when we don't just allow ourselves to be as too much as we really are, we end up accepting too little.
I did that for a long time in so many aspects of my life because I thought that was the way to get connection, hiding myself.
It didn't, of course.
When I met Abby and started showing up as my real self, the messy, real too much me,
I started to be known.
And the trick is, you can't really be loved if you are not really known.
Bumble is doing connection right because they've built this whole philosophy around the idea that the bravest, most magnetic thing we can do is to show up as ourselves.
Quirks, weirdness, humanness, all of it.
They have thoughtful photo prompts and show interests, passions, relationship goals on the profiles that lead you to actually show yourself what you really love, what you really enjoy, what you really are looking for.
So, folks out there can see the real you and you can see the real them.
Because when we pretend, the only thing we guarantee is that we'll end up unseen.
But when we're brave enough to show up as our true selves, even if it's scary, that's the first step to true connection.
When you talk about shape-shifting,
tell me what
that looked like in your everyday life.
Like when you're talking about,
because I think, and to Abby's point, like we just want to make things okay.
And so like we see the things that are not okay and we say, no problem, no problem.
My capacity is endless.
I will make it okay with my magical womanly powers.
What was your shape-shifting?
What was your efforts to make things okay?
What would it actually look like?
Yeah.
Yeah, I had a very locked and loaded, magical wand, and inside its interior was just a limitless supply of codependency.
It just kept renewing.
It kept renewing.
It never ran out, the wand.
And I practiced it for so many years that it was just like,
it's amazing.
Okay, tell the people about codependency because I, like you, was like, that's some horseshit for people who aren't independent.
Okay, and then also, Jen,
tell us what it like actual behaviors are.
Like, if you might be a human Zamboni, so many of my friends are human Zambonis where their husband says some shit or does some shit or isn't just douche, and then they real quick just say things to like, there's like the nervous giggle and the cleaning up after him and the distracting.
Like the Zamboni of every man moment is a very, you might be in trouble if.
That was my preferred approach for codependency because I also thought that codependency meant neediness and that's not something I ever identified with.
So I didn't understand the definition.
But when I learned about it and realized that really
it's any consistent effort to control somebody else's behavior, choices,
actions, the way that they're living their life,
and also the way anybody else is perceiving that person
and then letting their actions completely affect me, completely take me.
I'm like, oh,
oh, like I have a PhD in codependency.
I did not know that.
And so for me, practically,
this started essentially
probably on our second date.
Like, it goes way back.
So I, it was.
I, um, you know, how I like to be in the world, I like to be like
a little, whatever this is, you know, a little shiny, shiny, sparkly, like
I'm a glitter bug, as they say.
And I started dating a person that was difficult, just a difficult person.
Not saying it was a bad person, just saying difficult,
contentious,
not necessarily concerned with social cues or skills,
very
could be considered rude and biting.
And I didn't like that, but I was 18.
I was a baby.
I was a child baby.
And
so I learned very, very early
to go behind.
and do the cleanup work like after the fact like
he was just tired you know, the amount of people that I told over the course of 26 years, oh, you know, he likes you.
You know, he does, is a million.
Like,
no, he does like you.
And that was my labor, my voluntary labor.
And then I had a second layer of my labor, which was then to go to him privately and just be a real bitch.
Like,
scold him.
And
adult men love to be scolded.
They do.
I've heard that.
That is great for connectivity, for intimacy.
That is a real grease in the machine of marriage.
It's also a turn on to be a woman, a turn on for you to be treating your husband as a child.
I always wanted to parent a spouse.
That is my dream.
I would like to be your mother and your sexual partner.
Isn't that just
will this work or no?
You know?
So that, as you can well imagine, created so much resentment in our marriage.
And I get to own that, by the way.
I get to raise my little hand and go, that was my pattern.
And I would have hated being on the receiving end of that.
Not, not once, not twice, but for two decades.
So that, me trying to micromanage his behavior
and then
everybody else's experience of him.
And I did a real razzle dazzle for that.
You know, I'm good at it.
So I could come behind and razzle dazzle it so I could talk people into
not experiencing what they were experiencing with him.
But it didn't work.
It turns out people experience what they experience.
And so
that was a real painful part of my recovery process because I took that right into therapy.
And as you know, what I wanted, what I paid my therapist to do was tell me, he's terrible.
He ruined your life.
He broke up your family.
And that's sad for you.
And let's talk about it more.
But instead, she was like, let's examine your deal.
Like, let's examine your patterns.
Let's let's talk about your codependent behaviors.
Let's talk about your avoidant attachment style.
And I just, first of all, that is so, I didn't pay her to be that mean to me, but that is.
I already had enough people being mean to you.
I'm like, what do you think we're doing here, lady?
Like,
I am paying for one hour for me for you to feel sorry for me.
That is what we are doing here.
Um, so then I was like, oh my gosh, guess what?
I'm codependent with my kids.
Guess what?
I'm also codependent with some of my adult friendships.
It just, that was my problem.
That was mine.
So I could either address it or I could walk that into every future relationship I'm ever going to have.
Is codependent with kids?
Because basically I'm reading your version of codependency right now as codependency is I pretend that this thing is not what it is and I pretend this person is not who he is
because you are constantly trying to change him.
The scolding is changing him
and the Zamboniing is changing other people's experience of him.
So, you're just refusal to accept what is.
That's exactly it.
That is exactly it.
Can you imagine how that could not result in a beautiful, connected marriage?
Like, that was a real faulty brick in the wall.
And, and that, that is such a relational killer.
Um, and so, this is part of my lifelong problem because
I have
always
been overly attached to outcomes, to optics.
I very much want you to like me.
I very much want you to like my person.
I want you to like my husband.
I want you to like my kids.
I want you to like my family.
I don't want you to think shitty thoughts about one of these people that are in my crew, even if they deserve it.
Like even if they behaved in such a way to deserve it, I don't want that.
So how, how can I do that?
I've done that with my children.
Like their choices, um, I don't want.
And so, how can I fix that?
You know, I don't want that.
How can I make that different than it is?
Like,
I want you to do a different thing than what you've done.
And so,
so that has looked like lecturing.
Because now they're young adults, like, they don't live here.
So, I, my, my control mechanisms have had to shape-shift.
Um,
but I,
I am learning to release those chains.
I'm, I am learning to sort of,
it's not like I ever had control.
The whole thing's a lie.
Like it, it's a whole, it's a lie.
It's not like it worked.
It's not as if any of my complicated behind the scenes labor made a hill of beans of difference.
It is, it does, not only does it not work, it makes everything worse.
It's not neutral.
And so I am learning to let people live their lives, which is hard.
We are,
this is our work.
We're good at it.
We're good at living lives.
And I have so many ideas.
I have so many ideas for like other people and how they could do it better.
So that's hard,
but I think I'm doing better, not great.
Like I've probably got like a D plus.
That's where I feel.
This is where I think that I feel very deeply that it could be very complicated for you and somebody like Glennon who has also been working on stuff like this for a long time.
Yeah.
Because your ideas are oftentimes actually, in fact, better than the ones that the people that you live with might have.
But the problem is, is that I like that.
And this is something that I try to
talk to Glennon about is like, I need to actually know what I want and do what I want and make the mistakes that I need to make in order to become the person that I need to become, not the person that you think I should become, right?
Like it has to be mine and it has to be your children and it has to be our kids.
I, you know, and by the way, you're doing wonderful.
Well, thanks, but it's so true.
It is, it is a, it is a,
it's a defense mechanism.
It is a,
I'll never forget
when I was most recently diagnosed with a new flavor of eating disorder and I expressed it to Tish.
She says to me, oh oh, yeah, mom, well, it did, you know, it does, it is interesting to think about how interested in other people's problems a smart person must be to not notice that they're anorexic for 20 years.
Wow.
Like,
wow.
Is it possible that my other, my, all of my good ideas for other people are precluding me from having any good ideas for myself?
Damn.
For my own life.
That's good.
And it's also like a trust.
I don't love that, Jen.
I think it boils down to a tolerance of the world, right?
Because I get that like it's about perception.
At a surface level, it's about I want you to perceive me and my people as good.
I want you to see how hard I've worked at life and be like, it's good.
Look at it.
But even at a deeper level, it's I don't want what are the natural consequences of everyone's choices because I don't trust this world that it's gonna work out right.
And if you just go around letting people have the consequences of their actions, it's a free-for-all because the world is inherently untrustworthy and everything's going to go to shit.
It is so real.
I believe in that altruistic undercurrent, which is that we don't really want our people to suffer.
Yes.
But what that means is then we, I guess we don't want them to live a life.
That's true.
And so there is no middle.
There's no middle there of like
a little bit of control.
You know, I will control you a little.
And then the other part is you can live your own life.
That just isn't real.
It's like this, it's this fictional middle ground.
And the only thing that actually lives there is resentment and disconnection.
And so
it is a real gauntlet to release the people that we love into their own choices and into their own lives.
What right do we actually have?
No, I have.
Well, it's interesting for two people.
I mean, I'm thinking of you and me, Jen, and
how we really feel
like there's a God.
Like, right?
We profess to truly believe that there is a loving God.
And yet.
We just think we might be a little bit more loving
goddesses than God.
Because if for people who say they believe in God, why are we constantly not letting God do anything?
So good.
Why are we stepping in all the time?
It's just like we volunteered ourselves as their assistant, you know?
Like their earthside assistant.
And
I'd hire us.
So I
know
the trusting of the God thing
is
really,
really tricky in this world because then you have to figure out, okay, well, what does that mean?
Because I grew up in an ethos, a spiritual ethos that said,
do these certain things, put these ingredients into the soup pot and give it a good stir, and you're going to have some guaranteed outcomes.
That's going to protect you.
That is going to keep you safe.
That is going to keep you in God's good favor.
Cause that's back when I thought I had to earn God's favor.
So by the way, if you can earn it, you can lose it.
So that's a really hard way to live.
And
thus
felt like
God could
potentially dole out happiness.
Right.
If we were doing the whole thing right.
Like if we were hitting our marks and obedient and faithful and, you know, whatever all the things were then if he chose to he could give us happiness and also i guess our kids wouldn't get sick and maybe like our country wouldn't get bombed right and like
um
we our freedoms would be protected our democracy will stand you know all the things that those will be our rewards um for all of our like good godly behavior because but so
i i've had to of course like deeply like examine my theology around
what does God's in control mean?
What does that mean?
Is he only in control?
Are they only in control when I'm getting what I want?
Are they only in control when my family is spared the suffering?
Because then, because I went through seasons where we were kind of skip, skip, skipping along.
you know, and we kind of had everything that anybody could ever really want,
a sense of security and safety.
But if that is your theology, then you do have to look around the world and go,
I guess he hates everyone in Gaza.
I guess those are his enemies
because he's spared them nothing, you know.
And so, those are deep theological questions that I'm still parsing out here in the middle of life.
What, who is God?
What is good?
What is good about him?
What is good about divinity?
How does that look in a human life?
I don't have any answers.
I'm just like putting it on the pod.
Like, do you guys know?
I'm yeah, I do.
I'm not going to tell you right now, but I definitely do know.
And tell me later about the medicine and the God thing.
Yeah.
Yeah, I'll tell you about the God thing later.
I just don't want to blow anyone's mind right now with too much information.
I think, appreciate that.
I just want to take one moment to say that I just think that you're, I just love that you connect all of this to
what goes on in the world.
And
when you recently,
I mean, when you recently came out so hard and
for a free Palestine online, I just thought, I mean, that is not in your,
you've gone through so much with the evangelical reaction to your boldness and freedom.
And that was a moment where, are your kids,
my kids are always doing this really, while I'm thinking I'm controlling them.
They are pushing me past
what I can ever see or understand in a way that reminds me very much of the Khalil Gabron poem about like your children are not even your children.
They're life longing for itself.
Like you can't even go where they are, not even in your dreams.
And while we think we are protecting them and manipulating them, that is so hilarious because they are so far beyond us and all we can do is barely keep up.
And
Chase has just led me, him and his friends, in all of finally looking at the world
with any sort of clarity.
And that has affected so deeply my way of looking at Palestine.
And is Sydney, basically my question, is Sydney fucking you up?
Because Chase is really fucking me up.
It's like our children, our young adults, were born on a different planet.
Do you know what I mean?
Yes.
Like the amount of big conversations that here we are on our little podcasts talking about our big shovels that we're like digging out of these holes.
They don't even know about it.
They're like, what are you doing?
Like, Sydney comes over and she's like,
you're eating a salad.
Is that because of diet culture?
I'm like, oh,
I guess.
I mean, I guess it is, to be honest.
You know, like, they're just so different.
They are so active in the world.
They are so unafraid of systems and the patriarchy.
And they are so uninterested in what anyone has to say about their bodies, about their sexuality, about the way that they move on the earth.
I, this is me just looking at them all the time.
Yeah.
Like, look at you guys go.
Like, look at you lead.
I feel
so hopeful that they get the baton next.
Like, how quickly can we get it in their hands?
Like,
how quickly can we put these sort of thinkers and activists and just compassionate souls who are able to live a little bit more fully in their bodies than we ever were allowed?
And we can say that.
We weren't handed the freedom.
We weren't.
We weren't.
We can take our ownership for where we were complicit and the systems we willingly, you know, plugged into, how I contributed to those.
I own, own, own, own, own.
At the same time, we can also say we were not handed these keys to these locks.
We weren't.
We had to like hulk open the bars, our own selves, together, collectively, and see if we could like squeeze through the bars to freedom.
And so, our kids, they didn't get caged in the same way.
And it's a wonder to watch.
And I feel really hopeful
that they are really going to run where we just kind of had to like army crawl our way like through.
But they're a pretty kickass, these kids.
And also they're not putting up with our stuff.
No, they're not.
They're not.
And they look at you.
They see me like in a way that I'm not comfortable with.
And but every time they light me up, I think, yes, you're right.
You should light me up.
But also, please know that i gave you the match that you are using to light me up that i raised you that's a i raised that fire i raised you to be free enough to confront me the way you do that little match you have i paid for it god
light me up but i gave it to you none of us were given a match none of us they hid the fucking matchbooks they hid all the lighters they if we confronted any of our parents they would like like literally laugh in our face but that's not true y'all we're all just moving the ball down the field.
You're right.
Like you think that they can do something because you taught them, but we're here being as little free as we are in spite of.
It's all like because of, in spite of, in spite of, because of.
So I think it's like we got what we got and we did what we could do.
They got what they got and they're doing what they could do.
And it's just like marching that ball down the field little by little.
And our moms did too.
Our moms
went further than their moms.
That's right.
They didn't have bank accounts.
That's right.
My mom, you guys, my mom's high school, my mother, one generation north of me, my mom's high school was desegregated her sophomore year.
That's not that long ago.
So
they went as far as they could go, and I think we're doing the same.
I will say, I am proud of our generation.
I am, we've, we are the tip of the spear in terms of what has been possible for women for a variety of factors.
There's a lot of reasons for that.
That we got to lead in the age of the internet, which meant our
influence and ideas and the capacity for gathering was just exponentially more expansive than it was before us.
We didn't do that.
We didn't create the internet.
Al Gore did that.
right that's right but we get to live the algorithms the algorithms
see oh glennon that was so good how come nobody says that did Did you say that?
I honestly cannot believe nobody says that.
It's so funny.
Abby says it's not funny.
I think it's very funny that Al Gore invented, that Al Gore invented the internet.
He did it.
And also, that there are algorithms.
I like it.
I like it.
Jen, I have to believe
that
you have pushed
the ball further down.
What's it called?
The court.
The field.
I think we're doing a football football thing here
okay
by
showing your kids that it is better to have a broken marriage than to live as a broken woman yeah right i hope so by
i think that's got to be yeah because because staying in a broken marriage to set an example for your kids i mean it's sort of just like eating a salad because of diet culture right
it is it is
and that feels really clear to me in hindsight it's so funny because one of my sons read Awake like two weeks ago.
Oh, you know, and that's always, you just kind of shoot your fingernails off, you know, when the kids are up in your shit that you've written.
Oh,
you know, just to some degree, I just want them out of my world.
Like, just go be wherever you are in your like, the, the things that I'm not on, whatever the things are.
Like, I don't want to be in your snacks.
I don't want to, I don't want to see you being real.
So no, thank you.
But
it was so funny because he came to me and he said, Mom, it's so interesting to read your story
through the divorce and like the recovery process because he said, I forgot like all along that you were a person
in this story.
He said, You just
kept our ship so steady
And you, you were our like North Star so hard.
I forgot you were sad.
And I was like, wow, I was shocked to hear that.
I felt like I was like a disastrous, weepy, panic attack having mess in this home for a year.
But it is interesting that our kids do get to see
what I hope they see is the best possible iteration of ourselves at any given time.
And that iteration is better than the previous one in a fake environment.
Yeah.
Even if it's hard.
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Jen, what is your advice?
Let's say there's someone listening right now who the knowing is just like
now surfacing to the point where they cannot not know.
Let's say that person is in a marriage and they would not like to wait for the eviction notice.
Jen, what do you, or they just got it?
Yeah.
You had a clear, I mean, I watched you
like the algorithm.
I
also coined the genes, and I just don't get enough credit for it.
You do.
If I ever say it, I do, I do cite you.
Thank you, Jen.
You're welcome.
But it was a sight to behold.
It was beautiful beautiful and messy and strong.
What do people do first?
What does a woman do first when the whole thing is built and she knows to keep herself, she has to step outside of the thing that is built?
Like logistically, what does she do?
Thinking of her puts like a feeling in my stomach.
I know that feeling.
And
so I want to first say to the woman who has that knowing and that feeling in her body,
but has not been given an eviction notice, you don't have to wait for it.
And I wish that you wouldn't because that introduces a layer of trauma and pain and suffering that you could, to some degree, avoid.
Now, it's not that change is not disruptive and there is not loss inside of it, sad grief.
I'm not suggesting there is a clean way through change that leaves us with only good feelings.
But when you wait for someone else to decide for you, then you forfeit yet another layer of your own agency.
And it's so devastating.
And so you don't have to wait that long.
So practically,
I can only do this in hindsight because I didn't do it in real time.
So in hindsight.
I mean, I did it after somebody else chose it for me.
So what I'm saying is if you are staring, if there is the this version out here, but you're back here and you know what's true, and this gap has broken your heart and you can't tolerate it anymore.
I think this is what would have had to have happened in my life.
If this is a little bit prescriptive, I don't know how to make it different.
But I think the first thing and maybe the hardest thing would have been telling myself the truth.
I just couldn't do it.
I did not want to tell my own brain what I knew to be true.
I just could not even invisibly admit that into my own thoughts.
So if you are willing to just say very quietly, very privately to yourself in the mirror, here's what's true about my life.
Here's what's not working and here's what I want.
That is such a humongous step.
I didn't really even do that.
And so
then I think the next thing, you guys, I want you to weigh in on this.
I think the next thing is you've got to tell somebody who loves you.
Is that the next thing?
I think so.
Like who loves you, who loves you, who knows you, who knows whatever it is scenario that you're in and talking about,
who cares about your future, who cares about your well-being.
Saying it out loud to somebody takes away a little bit of the fear.
and a little bit of its power.
Is that right?
Is that what comes next?
Well, there's something about speaking it.
You know it with yourself.
I've had moments like this where I actually am looking in a mirror.
Like I'm thinking of moments like that where I tell myself something.
But the speaking it to someone else, it's not just about the love that comes back.
It's that we know worlds are built on words.
It's like, let there be.
Let there be light.
Let there be freedom.
Let there be love.
When you speak a word, that becomes a brick that then shows you the like
next right thing.
When I finally say something that is true about my life to Abby or to Amanda, it's amazing what unfolds next.
I don't know, it's like magic.
Yeah, but the words do sometimes need to come first, and that you don't
die
when you do it.
Don't die.
Like, I think that's a real thing.
We think there's certain things you can never come back from, you can never say, and your life will still be the same.
When you
say something out loud that is true about your life,
the only thing that changes is that you have admitted what's true about your life.
Like it doesn't suddenly,
there's something really
so powerful about it because you notice like, I am still me.
I still have the agency to choose whether I stay in this situation or leave this situation, but I can both exist.
and name this truth,
which I don't think we think that we can exist if we name the truth.
That suddenly something's going to change.
Yeah.
I also wonder: is there something, Jen, about
because I
had sort of
not at all the same, but I was like abandoned in my marriage and it was over in seven seconds.
And it was like, well, that was his choice, clearly.
And there's something in it that is so, so traumatic and awful, and
never anything as bad as that.
And also as a woman, there's something in it that is
a
relief is the wrong word.
There is some kind of culpability
that you avoid
when someone has
fucked everything up and made it irretrievably gone,
that it is not your fault.
And and you didn't choose it and you never would.
And I seriously think that there's something about in, especially for women, the naming of the thing, the gap between the naming of the thing and the actually saying that's not good enough for me has to do with
accepting
the culpability
for the outcome of what you need.
Yeah, I used to, every time people talked to me about my divorce, I would find myself bringing up the infidelity, Craig's infidelity.
Every time they would say it, and then I would hear myself go, uh-huh, and the cheating and the cheating and the cheating.
And I, when I started to notice that, I stopped that because what I was doing was saying to the world, it's not my fault.
It's not my fault.
It's okay for you to accept that I wanted something different because I had a get out of jail-free card.
But I don't want that for women.
I want women to be able to say, I don't want this and not have a get out of jail-free card.
And just the fact that they say, I don't want this, is their get out of jail-free card.
Yes, that is it.
God, you guys should just have a podcast.
This is so good.
I'm like, look, I've got my pen.
I'm like, so true.
Don't wait for your card.
But like, is that a thing?
Like, how do I get that?
I love that.
Listen,
you are talking to somebody who got that card and i just
i handed it out to everybody for like a year like
i um am innocent right and i this was done to me
and uh the the villain victim thing was
so
so delightful for a minute and everybody was willing to agree they were like yes that's the story and we'll hand it to you and you get it you get absolution um
you know and so
I think that that is,
it's a pass.
But the other truth is, there are plenty of women sitting in the pocket of their story right now in which it is not serving them at all.
It is causing them harm, pain, loneliness, suffering.
They have outgrown the container.
There is some
life beyond it that is going to be vibrant and full of flourishing.
And they get to pick two.
They get to choose it.
And so I,
Glenn, and the same thing for me.
Somebody, an interview, an interviewer asked me recently,
would you have stayed if you hadn't found out?
I'm like,
damn it.
I think I might have.
I think I might have.
And that version of me is one I am challenging right now.
That was just five years ago, me.
That wasn't that long ago, me.
But I'm trying to be honest, and I think I would have.
I was fighting like hell for my marriage that day that I found out.
We were in, I was, I was pulling out every stop that there was, every stop that there was.
And
I don't think I would have, number one, admitted defeat, number two,
admitted how sad and lonely I was.
And so
I would love to see that narrative change,
where women have the freedom to make their own next right choice without catastrophe befalling them.
I'd love that for us.
Yes, I'd love that for us too.
What, just to wrap up,
I want to just preface this by saying I don't have an answer to this.
So if nobody else does, it's completely fine.
I mean, I do.
I just don't want to say it.
What, is there anything that anyone wants to admit on this podcast that they are currently pretending not to know?
Because to me,
and I'm not trying to overgeneralize, I'm just saying
my next life or however this life works where you're constantly kind of,
if it's a video game, you're leveling up or whatever the next frontier is,
usually comes when I admit that I know the thing I'm pretending to not to know.
That that's sort of like the jumping off point to the next thing.
And if you don't, you just kind of hover in this weird purgatory place.
Is there anything that anyone knows
or is pretending not to know that they can think of that they want to say?
If not, it's okay.
It's okay for the pod squad to just think about it.
I think if I know what my thing is, but I think by definition, if it's really the thing, you're not saying it right here
you only something come up oh for sure but you only say the thing
it's like the before and after story
like you can pretend
in a public place
if you've already decided to you've already decided to act on the thing that kind of private sharing of this is my thing
that
I am running from, that I am desperately trying to make not my thing,
is something that you share with like yourself and then a person.
And then you decide if you,
after you share it, if you can still exist.
And then if you do, you think, okay, well, if I can exist with that being said, can I exist with that being said to the person who needs to hear it the most?
And then if I can exist that way, can I actually, and I'm still breathing, can I actually act on that thing and then am I still alive now like there's so so I think
I think if it's really the thing yeah no one's saying it here I have a thing but it's silly and fun and not too deep I love it
I want to hear go for it it's um it's this it's I want to work less and play more golf okay
I don't actually think that's small I don't think that's small I really want to I really want to work a lot less.
I do not think you are saying something silly.
No.
I've somehow gotten myself into two podcasts, a speaking career,
an investor in all these companies.
I sit on two boards and like, I don't want to
all of it.
I hear that.
I actually really honor that.
I mean, to me, that goes back to something Glennon said earlier about staring down this new shiny version of the show and then collapsing, her body being like, We don't want this.
So, you either listen or not, but we're going down in flames if you choose not to.
I think the work thing
who thought it was a good idea to be this visible to the world?
Do you know what I mean?
Like, I don't think we're built for this.
I don't think this is a way that people ever will flourish.
This is too much attention.
It is like that's too many people listening to us.
What do we know?
And also
when they like us
so much, but they also hate us that much.
And that is a lot to hold.
And then we look at the like the calendar and how much we've just like given our days and minutes and hours to it all.
I don't think what you're saying is silly at all, Abby.
And
I
I feel like that is something in my knowing too.
Me too.
Is it changing?
Because I'm thinking about you.
I was thinking about you this morning and you're
awake is so beautiful and it's going to help so many people and it's such a gift.
And you are putting awake out into the world in this moment and touring and
opening up a lot of your
life that is.
has happened to you at a moment in which a lot of your new life
is happening in your real life, like you're about to become a grand mother.
First of all, we need to know what your grandmother's name is because we know you picked one.
Second of all,
how does that
feel in this moment?
And if your gift is like coming back into your body, your gift of this disassociation and having to reassemble yourself,
how are you dealing with that in your body in this moment?
I'm anxious.
And
when I look at my calendar for more than the day that I am in,
I have a little internal meltdown.
And it's so strange because I have like a like you guys, a pretty public
life, but most of that public life I can do from my house.
And so when my public life requires me to be on all these airplanes and in all these places and all these,
and they're back to back and back to back to back.
I feel anxious, and that's just a fact.
Everybody around me knows it.
They're all just like,
do you think you can get through two months?
And also, not just the pace of it and the exposure and the socialization of it all, which is just so many people, so many words, so much,
so many bodies around me.
But this is a tender story.
Like, it's a lot to talk about.
And so I feel absolutely nervous about that.
I feel like I might have overexposed myself just to hair, but it's too late.
So the time for that was last year.
Last year was the time for that.
Because I just don't know.
Like I've said things in here in the book that I just have never said.
And so I just don't know about that.
Anyway, I'm doing great.
So
grandma name, back to your other question, is I just don't know.
And the problem is, is that I told my son, I'm going to have, like, I want to, I'm not going to be called grandma.
You know, I want to name that's for old people.
Excuse me.
And he's like,
you're not going to name yourself.
We're going to let our son name you.
And I was like, son, listen, I love you.
I do.
This is not about you.
You have no part in this.
Like, bring me this grandson.
this is but this is not about you at all you are not even in the equation so just go live your life um anyway i don't know and i'm still workshopping it and i just would love your input so if you come up with one i i i would like to hear it everything sounds crazy to me because how could i be a grandma i was just born you know yes so
how could you a former baby a former baby be a grandmother thank you for understanding wow yeah i do understand gima well we're gonna think of names
nina nana nana okay she's doing it now
we're gonna think of names and then text them to you okay good good um a couple things the book is so beautiful and what i would like for you to remember as you are concerned with overexposure is that the way that you handled
the story, not just the story, but every character in the story who are real people in your real life,
you did with such okay
um you did with such
grace and honoring of each of their stories because we know
that
your husband was who he was on your second date when you noticed he was difficult
I know that Craig was who he was
when he told me he didn't want to get married.
And I was like, that sounds like a personal problem that maybe you want to get over quick since the church is booked.
So
you honored that in your book.
You honored his part, your part, the world's part, the beauty of the family.
I feel like the family that's depicted in this book is so beautiful.
Yes.
Thank you.
So beautiful, Jen.
And personally,
I love you.
You are a person who maybe I don't talk to for five years.
And then when the shit hits the fan for me, you're one of the first person who shows up in my text with three paragraphs that
settle the snow globe so quickly.
And I believe in you and I love you and you're going to make it through these two months.
And this book was meant to be in the world and it's going to help somebody.
Thank you.
Jen Hatmecker is the snow globe, the French press for the snow globe.
Well, now we're combining metaphors, which we do like to do.
Also, you don't owe people shit, Jen.
You wrote what you wrote.
I did.
It's a beautiful book.
You did.
People can read your book, and also they want to ask you some stuff that you don't want to talk about.
You don't owe them shit.
Say whatever you want to say.
You already wrote it.
You're right.
I did.
And I thank you so much for that
kindness.
If anything, kept me awake the last two nights or the the last two years over the process of writing the
two nights and then also the two years prior to those two nights.
It was,
I kept asking myself a question
because in a story like this, there's a lot
I left out.
Restraint.
Juicy.
Juicy.
Could have sold.
Could have been splashy.
Left all that out, of course.
um i kept asking myself the whole time
am i going to be proud of this in five years
am i going to be proud of this book am i going to be proud of this paragraph am i going to be proud of this sentence
in five years and i kept checking in with five year ahead of me me
like what what will you be thinking of this
and that helped
Because this is the family that I live in.
Like, this is my actual life.
This is my real life.
The one with the real kids and the real ex-husband.
We've got real grandbabies coming.
We have graduations, weddings.
We have a real life over here.
And so
I could not torpedo that life so completely that what I would have is a book in 2025 that'll come and go like books do
and a whole life wherein I am now left living in the rubble that I created.
And so I didn't want that.
I didn't didn't want that.
And so, you saying that, Glennon, you can never know that you put your finger on the exact bruise that I have, that I'm, that I, my biggest anxiety about this is not what will you think of me?
What I told you, we didn't have sex for two years.
What are people going to freak out about that?
Like, all the things, all the stuff that I included that was like,
um,
but it is that.
It is that thing.
Was I, was I generous?
Was I gracious?
Was I compassionate?
Did I overexpose my family?
And so anyway, just that's you could not have said one nicer thing to me than you just said.
So thank you.
And also, I should just bring Amanda with me to be like, she said what she said.
Yeah.
She's not answering that question.
Jen will be taking no further questions while the news is.
Read it yourself.
That's right.
Just close your eyes.
Just close your eyes.
The signal will be Jen is awake or Jen is asleep and taking no further questions.
I like both energies.
Yes.
We love you.
Love you.
I'm here on text, Jen Hatmaker.
When you're on tour, whenever you need me, I am right here.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Except if you have an airplane issue, don't text her.
Right?
I won't.
That would go to Abby, I assume.
Yeah, exactly.
Yes.
Yeah, yeah.
I know which one of you to pick for what.
So we do.
All right, girls.
We love you, Jen.
Thank you so much.
Thanks, Chris.
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