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cover of episode Who Are You, Really? with journalist Maria Shriver

Who Are You, Really? with journalist Maria Shriver

2025/4/8
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A Bit of Optimism

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Simon: 我与Maria的友谊并非偶然,而是源于一次意外的相遇,并发展成为深厚的情感连接。她的新书探讨了自我认同的课题,这对于我们每个人寻找真实的自我和自我接纳都具有重要的意义。我们之间的对话,也触及到了人际关系、家庭以及人生目标等重要议题,引发了对成功和幸福的深刻思考。 Maria Shriver: 我在成长过程中,目睹了家族的辉煌与阴影,这让我对自我认同有了更深刻的理解。我努力教育我的孩子们,让他们感受到被优先对待、被爱,并理解特权的同时也要承担社会责任。我并不希望他们被家族的遗产所束缚,而是希望他们能够独立自主地去创造属于自己的人生。 我从事新闻工作和搬到加州,都是为了探索自我认同,并最终理解我在家族和世界中的位置。在经历了婚姻的变故和母亲的离世后,我更加重视自我疗愈和身份重建的过程。我意识到,真正的成功并非仅仅体现在事业上,更在于拥有有意义的人际关系和内心平和。 我写书《我即玛丽亚》是为了宣示自我认同,摆脱外界对我的刻板印象。这本书的核心是宣示自我,并探索“我是谁”这个问题。我对自己身份的描述,包括我的年龄、性格特征以及我扮演的不同社会角色。我经历了离婚等重大事件后,开始重视自我疗愈和身份重建的过程。自我探索是一个在社群中进行的过程,虽然我独自进行了一些疗愈活动,但我并非完全独自一人。 真正的友谊是生命中最重要的财富,它能陪伴我们走到最后。我见证了Maria在开放性和脆弱性方面的成长,以及她对情感和人际关系的关注。我们需要重新思考成功的定义,关注有意义的生活,而不是仅仅追求工作上的成功。我目前关注的是如何创造一个让家人和朋友感到平和、有归属感的环境。这本书的核心是关于疗愈、重建自我以及找到归属感。我们需要摆脱社会对成功的刻板印象,关注人际关系和内心平和。这本书探讨了内心的归属感,以及与朋友和家人建立的家的重要性。我提出的问题旨在引导人们进行自我反思,帮助他们找到人生方向。

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This chapter recounts the unlikely friendship between Maria Shriver and Simon Sinek, starting with an accidental meeting and evolving into a deep connection over years of conversations and walks. Their bond extends to Maria's family, highlighting Simon's unique ability to connect with individuals.
  • Unexpected friendship between Maria Shriver and Simon Sinek.
  • Started with a meeting about Simon's son.
  • Evolved through long walks and deep conversations.
  • Simon's ability to connect with Maria's family members individually.

Shownotes Transcript

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中文

Hi, Devon here, and I'm a producer at A Bit of Optimism. If you've ever listened to Simon asking our guests thought-provoking questions and wish you could turn the tables, well, we've heard you, and now here's your chance. For the first time ever on April 22nd, Simon is hosting a live Q&A exclusively for subscribers of the Optimism Library. You'll get to ask him the questions and be a part of the conversation.

If you'd like to join, head over to simonsenic.com and sign up for the Optimism Library. On top of live Q&As, your subscription gives you access to everything we offer, which includes more than 200 lessons that will help you grow at work. It's all in one place for one price. Get it all in the Optimism Library on simonsenic.com. We hope to see you there soon.

You and I actually don't talk on the phone that much. No, we text. But you don't ever pick up the phone. That cat picture comes up and I call and there's the cat. It's not personal. It's because my phone's always on do not disturb. But when I see you call it, always call you back. Then you call me back.

We all know people with big personalities, but we would rarely call them kind. We also know people with small personalities, and they are usually the kindest. But every now and then, there's a big personality, a huge personality that shows up that just exudes kindness and warmth. And one of those people is Maria Shriver.

I had the opportunity to sit down with Maria to talk about her new book, I Am Maria. Maria is my best friend and to hear her talk about the journey she is on to reclaim her own identity is nothing short of inspiring. And that little question, I am and what it yields, turns out has great value to all of us to find out who we really are and why we love ourselves.

I am Simon, and this is a bit of optimism. Yours and my friendship, I think most people, including me, would not have predicted. We met kind of by accident. Right. You reached out to me many years ago. Right. To this day, I've never asked you how you got my email, but you reached out to me out of the blue and said, my son Patrick is a young entrepreneur. If you're ever in LA, would you like to meet him? And I said, of course.

And I came to LA and I met Patrick. Right. And he and I had a lovely time. Right. When I got back to New York, you sent me a lovely email saying thank you. And I wrote back and saying, if who Patrick is, is any statement about what kind of mother you are, you must be an amazing human being because he's an amazing kid. Thank you. I said, I would love to meet you next time in LA. I'll come out and see you.

And I come back to LA for work and you said, come for dinner on Sunday. Yes. And I thought it would be you, me and Patrick having dinner at your house. That's what I thought. I walk into the house, there's some folks getting dinner ready and you're not around. Yeah, that's kind of normal. That's kind of normal. And so I'm a stranger in a strange land and I said...

is Maria here? Right. And they said, she's downstairs. And I said, where's downstairs? I went down and sitting on the couch was Chris Pratt. And I had no idea he was your son-in-law at the time. Uh-huh.

So I'm like, okay. Hi. He's like, hi, I'm Chris. You know, hi, I'm Simon. Where's Maria? Anyway, long story short, it was the start of what became now an amazing friendship. And you're my best friend. If I say one of my best friends, I get in trouble. You're my best friend. And it is a joy to have you here talking to you very formally. Yeah.

It's weird. This whole thing is weird. I tell the story. Well, I actually don't tell the story. I just say like, you're my bestie. And that's exactly how it happened. And you walked into a family dinner on Sunday night, which was packed. And overwhelming. It was? I mean, no, no. Meaning the personalities. Yeah.

They are. I mean, there's a lot of big personalities. Yeah, there's a lot of big personalities at the table. But you held your own and you got into a like a big discussion with my brother Bobby and then Chris and everybody was talking. And then you stood in the door like that was fun. And I'm like, he's fine. He's smart. He's fine. I'm going to pursue him. And and then we started walking. We walked and we talked our way, you know, through years together.

We covered years. We covered years in weeks. We pioneered the long distance walk. Right. It was very early in COVID where we said, I think we can go outside. I think we stay very far apart from each other. Right. And we just started walking and we did it every single week. Yeah. For really long periods. And we talked about everything. We talked about everything. And it was so...

intimate and deep and meaningful and bonding. And it was so rewarding for me because those are the kinds of conversations I like to have. These are the kinds of relationships I like to have. So that wasn't unexpected to me to...

fall in love with you and to have this relationship with you. But what was so beautiful, or what is so beautiful, is that you developed that with each of my kids, and my brothers, and my son-in-law. And you took the time to figure out who each person was.

And you have a different relationship with each of them, which is so beautiful. And so few people do that, I think. And my kids often say that to me. They'll meet somebody 10 times and they'll go, oh, hey, your name is. And you know what their interests are, what makes them laugh. They know you. You talk to them individually. You make an effort. And so you have this relationship.

with my whole family, with my brothers. And so I think that's such a gift in my life and it's a gift in their life. So you're in it. You're being very kind and thank you very much. No, that's true. It's a good transition. It's a good segue, which is,

You grew up in an insane... For you, it was normal as a little kid. You didn't know any different. Right, right. But visiting Uncle Jack at the White House as, what, an eight-year-old, nine-year-old, this sort of larger-than-life, the Kennedy-Schreiber family. Right. As you became older and you started to realize that your life is not like everybody else's life, how did you learn to manage that? And more importantly, kids growing up now in the Kennedy-Schreiber clan, and now you add a Schwarzenegger to it. How did you keep them grounded? I'm so curious because...

I've met a lot of kids of people who've grown up in different ways, and maybe they get lucky with one of the kids staying grounded, but not all the kids. I'd probably take it from kind of my own creation of my own kids and go backwards. So what I wanted to do when I started a family was to make sure that the kids that Arnold and I had felt like they were a priority.

felt that they were loved for who they were, not for what they did, and that they had a sense of home, a sense of calm, a sense of peace, that they understood that they were coming into a privileged home, but that part of that was also that I and their dad expected them to be of service somehow in the world. Those were my goals, and that they have manners and they be kind.

being a priority and feeling loved was the most important thing to me because I had felt like I was part of this group of like 27 first cousins. And I felt like I was always a couple rows back. It wasn't really clear. I knew my uncles were in the front row and everything was geared around them and we were all part of a larger story. But I didn't feel like

a priority. And I felt like, oh, the love was attached to what you do. This is not a complaint to my parents. I adore my parents. I love my parents. But it's the way they were raised. And it was the way I was raised. And I wanted to break that pattern.

So I wanted the house not to be a place where there were fundraisers and political things. I wanted it to be a place of home. I wanted them to understand that their names and who they were was more important than the Kennedys, the Schwarzeneggers, the Shrivers and all of that. And I wanted to talk to them at length about that, about what those...

legacies were, they were not theirs to uphold for the rest of their life if they didn't want to, that there was good things and bad things about all of them, that they were free to depart from them in whatever way they wanted. I also did not feel that.

I think it's also different when someone is making a legacy versus inheriting a legacy. Is this a conversation that you and Arnold had when you first got pregnant with Catherine? Well, I think Arnold was creating his legacy. He had not ever grown up in a legacy, right?

And so that was something that I came to the union with. I came with like, look at these kids are going to be dealing with me, the Kennedys and you. He didn't have an experience with that. So he was like, okay, well, you deal with that, you know, kind of thing.

But you were very prescriptive from the moment you got pregnant. Yes. I was very, like, I wanted these things for them. You know, I wanted them to feel like they were their own people. I didn't want them to feel weighed down by it. I didn't want them to walk out the door and think every person was a vote. Like, I'd walk with my grandmother and she would be like, every person's a vote. Everybody we walk by, we stop, we say hello, we smile, we keep walking. We stop, we say hello, we smile, like, oi.

But I didn't want... So family was being, having that Kennedy Stryver name, that was a job. Oh, it was like a lot. Yeah. I mean, it was a lot of joy, a lot of advantages. But a lot of work. But it was, you know, I definitely felt like, okay, we were on a stage, we had a job to do. I was a player in some larger show. I wasn't quite sure what the show was.

And I think for much of my life, I was trying to get out of that show. I think that's why I went into journalism. That's why I moved to California, trying to kind of figure out, well, who was I in all of this? And then, you know, be able to go back home and understand who I was in the larger world.

storyline. And I think this is something that every kid probably deals with, right? You know, every person is trying to figure out who they are, no matter what their family is, and where is home for them. And, you know, what role are they playing? And I think it's

emphasized when you're dealing with a legacy. Well, I think what you're touching on is every single one of us at some point in our lives, and sometimes multiple times, will struggle with our identities. Correct. And it's not unique to somebody who's grown up like you have. People will confuse their identities with their job title. Correct. I am a CEO, or their career. I am a lawyer. That's who I am. No, no, it's what you do. Right.

Or it's the position you have. And I've seen it. You've seen it many times, which is very successful people, when they move on or they change jobs, they literally will suffer an identity crisis because for 20 years, 30 years, 40 years, their whole identity has entwined with a job or a position that when that job or position no longer exists...

depression or collapse or strange things start to happen. But even beyond, I am a mother, I hear people say that, tell me who you are. Well, I'm a mother or I'm a father, but even that's not an identity. I think society puts a lot of pressure on you to respond in that way. People ask you, like I went to a party the other night with my daughter and her first question to her

Every single time it was a, tell me what you do. Tell me what you do. What is your interest? What do you do? And not who you are and not even like what your name is. Tell me what you do. I think, you know, this book, I called it, I am Maria because I grew up being asked all the time, which Kennedy are you?

That was just, you know, the question I got more than any single other question, which Kennedy are you? And I still get it today. Like if I'm walking through the airport or, you know, somebody say you're a Kennedy, right? And I used to just be like, no, I'm not. I'm Maria. And they would be like, but you're a Kennedy, even as an adult. And now I just go, yeah, I'm a Kennedy. Yeah. It's like.

I'm in my 60s, right? So, but I think it's, so I understand. So I often find people come up to me and say, I'm just...

this, that, or the other. And I always try to say, well, what's your name? Who are you? Tell me about yourself. So that's why I wanted to call this I Am. It's very spiritual to me. It kind of has a religious feeling to it. But it's owning your name. Your parents give you your name. And it's claiming this is...

I am, this is who I am. It's claiming the identity of yourself. It's the only thing we get to define, right? Right. Because our surnames are predefined for us and we're part of that legacy, whatever that is. Our jobs are not ours, you know, but our name, as you said, like it's the only thing that really is us. Right. And it's claiming that over and over, right? It's claiming I am this person. And then it's like, well, tell me who is that person? So who is Maria? Yeah.

Without saying mother, you know, journalist, like... That's been a lifetime to figure that out. And that's what this book is really about. So who is Maria? So, well, if I were, I am Maria. I'm a woman. I'm a monastic, spiritual, loving, kind, fun, funny, artistic, deep, I think wise, broken, scared, strong, vulnerable, 69-year-old woman.

I have had the joy to be able to have been a mother, and I am a mother. I have been a wife. I have been a daughter. I am a daughter, even though my parents are deceased. I am a sister. I'm an aunt. But these are all titles that, you know, kind of society puts on you. I try to be a loving, supportive family member. That means I'm an aunt, a sister, a mom. Yeah.

I love the redirect, you know, when somebody says, so what do you do? Instead of pushing back against the question, it's an honest question to simply say, let me tell you who I am. Right. Just to simply redirect. Yeah, redirect. Exactly. And to say that list.

Yeah. That is how we feel and all of the things that go along with it. It's, I mean, I know you really well, but just to hear you say all that word, all those words together, it's arresting because we see ourselves in some of that and we find connection in some of that. Yeah. Some of these poems, reading them, which surprised me.

It's how you talk. I don't, I didn't even connect that, but you speak in, in poems. You speak like this. Like when you and I are having a conversation, even now talking to you, you know, if I were to write some of these lines down, the repetition and some of the reinforcements and tell me who you, I mean, it's, I'm, it's, I'm just like, if you read this, then you know what it's like to hang out.

That's a great compliment. It is a good compliment. Yeah, this is a very real. Christina calls it reporter poetry, you know, that I said I'm reporting from the front lines. It's kind of it's, you know, the first part of the book is reflections on life and kind of identity and trying to figure out what. But it's how you think. It's how I think.

It's how I think, and it's giving a kind of framework to how I visualize and how I visualize my way forward. And it's a revelation to me to discover my own heartbreak and to find...

connection in other people's heartbreak. It's a revelation to me to discover my own loneliness and to find connection with other people with their loneliness, to talk about what does home mean? Where is home? To talk about healing and the strength that is required to

to actually heal, to heal patterns, to heal family dramas that have gone through generations. This is not work that I thought of when I was a kid or a young woman as hard work or as successful work. And I now look at it as the most successful thing we can do. Did you have to learn to be vulnerable? Oh, yeah. Yeah.

Oh, yeah. Is it like the past five years, the past 10 years, the past 20? I mean, I know it's a journey, but there has to have been a point where something clicked.

Well, I think certainly, you know, kind of my divorce, I think, you know, landed me on the floor and I had to kind of go like, whoa, you know, what is this? And I want to get up from this, but I'm going to get up differently. And I think that has certainly set me off onto a different path. I think it really probably began way before that with my mother's death.

How old were you when she died? I was in my 50s. So she died. But that was something I had feared my whole life because she'd been sick a lot. But she was my anchor. She was my everything. And it was something that I thought, like, I'll never be able to survive my mother's death. When she died, it was a soul shifting experience.

experience for me. It was an identity shifting experience for me, and it was quickly followed by my father's death.

by the end of my marriage, by finding a new home, and then a search for a new identity. And that all happened within a short- It all happened within two years. Oh, wow. And then it's been all of these many years later. Yeah. My mother died. Two weeks later, my uncle died. Two years later, my father died. And a couple of months after that, I got separated. And I had been first lady and that ended. So it was a rapid succession of

really groundbreaking change underneath my feet. And I think, you know, for me to step back and go, okay, wait a second now.

I need to emerge from this. I need to rise from this. I always talk about rising above the noise. I need to rise and I'm going to rise differently. I have to rise differently. I have to break through, as I write in the book, the denial that I had had since I was a child. I had to break through the identities that I had.

hid behind and that had given me cover, that had given me protection. And I now knew I was on my own, 100% on my own. So who was that person? She wasn't the first lady anymore. Was I still a journalist? I don't know. Who was I going to be? People always talk about the importance of doing the work. I'm doing the work. That person, they need to do the work. In relationships, I wish my partner would do the work. I'm helping him do the work. I

I'm so fascinated by the relationship of quote unquote, doing the work alone versus needing the support of others to do that. Is it possible to do the work alone of finding oneself? Well, I've been, I've done the work in, in community, I would say, because I had, as I wrote in the

book, I write about kind of having a masterclass in friendship. People held my hand. They walked with me. They talked with me. They sat with me. But I went and did alone work with a therapist, with shamans, with journeys. I went away on my own. I went to a convent on my own. But I did the work

or the silence in community. So I don't see that I did it alone. I wasn't in a relationship doing it, but I don't think anybody really quote does it alone. - Okay, I'll just say, I'll say from a personal point of view,

I know that I'm a better version of myself. I know that I'm more comfortable being vulnerable. I know that I am taking myself on in a way because I wouldn't be able to get away with not because of our friendship. That's what I mean. Yeah. And to be your friend means you sign up for all of it. There's the fun, there's the laughs, there's the family, but there's also like...

the conversations about loneliness or ADHD, they come out relatively effortlessly now. Yeah. In company. Right. Not alone. Yeah. At the end of the day, what jobs come and go. But if we work on our friendships, if we laugh with our friends, if we love our friends, if we show up for our friends, if we give them the eight minutes in those moments of like, I need you on the phone, are you there? Those are the things that are going to be with us

Till the end. That's what's important. And for those who may know that video that I made where I talked about the eight minutes, it was you and me. It was you and me. That was our experience where I asked you how you were and you said, I'm better now.

And I said, "What do you mean you're better now?" And you're like, "I've had a horrible week." I'm like, "Why didn't you call me?" And you're like, "I did." And I look at my text and says, "You there? What are you doing?" I'm like, "You were the one who read the article that said all a friend needs is eight minutes." - And so now if we need each other, I like, "Do you have eight minutes?" - "Do you have eight minutes?" - "Do you have eight minutes?" You were the OG for that experience. - You know, you were saying actually last night that you forget to call people, you forget to check in, that that happens with your parents.

And I went to bed thinking, well, that's not my experience with you, actually. You do check in. You do call. You do go like, I'm driving by. I want to, you sometimes check in and I walk in and I haven't even invited you. You're like in the pantry. And I'm like, Simon, what are you doing? He's like, I came in to get a mosh bar. I came in again. I'm like, well, what? But you, you are like. That happened once. Yeah.

You came downstairs and I was in the pantry. That isn't true. I was in the pantry, yeah. That's what my kids all the time say. Is Simon in the pantry? I was like, no, Simon's not here tonight. But I think that that's what makes my life joyful. Do you want to know the truth? That's what makes my life joyful. Yeah. You and I actually don't talk on the phone that much. No, we text. But you don't ever pick up the phone. That cat picture comes up and I call and there's the cat. It's because...

It's not personal. It's because my phone's always on do not disturb. But when I see you call it, I always call you back. Then you call it back, yeah. But the point is, when you and I are traveling, we actually don't talk that much. I think the thing is that the time when we have time together is so intense and so cherished that I don't think we realize that we actually don't talk so much in the gaps. Well, maybe I'm talking to you in my head. Yeah.

But I think, you know, it's, I've watched you. If I'm getting credit for it, then continue with that. But you know, what's amazing to me is I've watched you evolve. I've watched you. From what to what? You've become way more open and vulnerable. And you've become way more open about how you feel. You know, before you were talking a lot about business and showing up and leadership. And now you talk a lot more about emotions and friendships and family and

Things that are going on in your life deep in your soul in a different way and that to me has been a beautiful evolution To watch in you you'll talk about like I'm not really sure what I want to do now or what subject I want to speak about People all want to come up to me and talk about one thing You know your version of the Kennedy thing is that everybody wants, you know, can you help me with my why? can you help me with my why and

There's probably nobody saying, how are you? Just help me with my why. Can you fix that for me or find it for me? And I see that with people, you know, in life, that people get really well known for something or get really successful. And that, you know, we lose sight of like, well, actually, how are you?

Are you dealing with any heartbreak? Are you dealing with any loneliness? Do you have friends that can help you? And those are the conversations that I'm interested in. I'm interested in your heartbreak. This is what it means to be your friend, which is you don't care. We've never talked about, we rarely talk about work. Yeah.

And you're only interested in me as a human being, which is probably one of the reasons it's nice to come over, which is everybody can just be themselves. It's the container you create to the point where...

like your kids had no idea. Like we were out with Christina and she had no idea that like I did work anything other than I was just somebody who came over. Yeah. Christopher was like, I didn't even know that Simon like had a book or did a thing. That was so funny because no, what was really funny is when we went to special Olympics in Berlin and we went out, we were in a coffee shop with Simon, my daughter, Christina. And, um,

People started coming up asking Simon for pictures. And we were like, what's going on? Why is everybody asking Simon for his picture? And he's like, I'm famous, you guys. I didn't say that. I didn't say that. Christina was genuinely confused. She was like, why does everybody want a picture with Simon? I mean...

Yeah. But it was really cute. I said, you should just like, everybody should just walk around with Simon and then everybody stops and wants to have a picture with Simon. But, um,

That was really funny. You exaggerated, but I'll take it. Christopher was like, I didn't even know Simon did anything. But this is the thing, which is I'm invited into your home as me, not as somebody who's done something. And that's the thing, which is, this is Simon, he's my friend, is how I get introduced to your kids. Exactly. And so they set to get to know me as friend of their mom, as opposed to somebody who did something. And now they're friends. They introduced you, this is my friend, Simon. Right. And I think the thing that I'm,

walking away from here, which is this idea of creating the container, which is, I think we have fun with our friends. I love that way you put that, the container. The container. Yeah. I call it home for me. Creating a container actually requires work. And you touched upon it before, which is people prioritize work over their friends. Right. People think their relationships are sometimes more important than their friends' relationships.

What I'm learning is that you can't get through this difficult thing called work without a friend. Right. On the worst days, you better have a friend. And even your relationships, like relationships sometimes are a struggle. And the way you get through relationships and arguments with your romantic partner is if you have a friend. Exactly. Like the friend is the foundation of the success of all those other things.

And if you don't have a friend who knows how to create safe containers for you to have those very uncomfortable, difficult conversations of insecurity, fear, self-doubt, whether it's professional or personal, then the relationships, romantic relationships and work relationships are more likely to falter. There's so much talk and so much written about how to be...

productive at work and how to have a successful marriage and how to find your partner of love. And yet we don't learn how to create a container for our friends to just relax and be themselves and being your true self. I actually was thinking about this recently, the idea that we have fully authentic and fully our true selves in the outside world. And that's actually not allowed because if everybody was fully themselves all the time, sort of things wouldn't work.

Because there's been no norms or standards. Like if I go for a job interview and I'm an entry level, well, my true self is I'd like to dress like a surfer. It's how I feel. No, no, no, no. Show respect for the place you're going to. Look a little nicer. You can add flourishes for sure. And nobody's telling you to suppress yourself. But the idea of being fully realized at every moment...

There are standards and norms that make polite society work. But that's not to say you shouldn't have a safe space to let those things out. And those safe spaces are those safe containers with those friends. Just like I don't want to be professional at home, I don't want to be fully personal at work.

But I do need to do both. Does that make sense? Yeah. And I think there's so much emphasized in our culture about success at work. That is the be all end all. And I think that you're beginning to see people thinking about what actually is a successful life.

What is a, I call it a meaningful life, a life worth living, Miroslav Volf calls it, you know, a life worth living. What will I look back on if I'm 80 or 90? What will be the verticals of a life now?

well-lived. And work has a place in there, but it's not your whole life. And so how do we cultivate friendships? How do we cultivate a life of faith? For example, for me, that was super important. How do we learn to communicate with our children as they become adults? I'm doing a whole different kind of mothering

than I did when I had toddlers or teenagers or college-aged children, right? Now I'm in a different place and space. I'm creating a different container than I did when my kids were growing up. How, if I'm divorced, how do I create a container where both of my kids' parents can coexist, can exhibit love, can exhibit friendship, can make everybody feel at peace?

That's my job now. How do I live a life where I feel when I'm on my deathbed that I look back and go, I worked out what I needed to work out. I healed what I needed to heal. I had all these experiences of joy and heartbreak and success and failure. And that's what a life is.

offers to us. And I went for it in all those areas. That's what I'm interested in. That to me is success. You know, my friend, Sean, he was telling me about a test that he did with his partner, his husband. And I said, can you do it with me? Because I don't have a partner. So I want to do it. He said, well, it's the same. It's exact same thing. Just the only difference is

One relationship involves a sexual relationship, but a friendship can ask the same questions. And the questions were, you know, what do you like about this relationship? What do you want me to do better? What do you notice about how I've grown? What do you notice about, you know, how I'm living my life? Here are five things you may not know about me. Tell me five things I don't know about you. Tell me what you're afraid of.

And these things opened up a whole new area of conversation. So I try to do that sort of thing. That's so good. I love this exercise of going through these questions that are, again, we develop these systems to help romantic partners. Yeah, exactly. But we don't develop these systems to help friends. And simply to have a card where you take the time to sit down with someone and say, let's do this.

By the way, romantic couples do this. We do this in review sessions at work. We have feedback sessions at work where we learn about each other from a work context. Exactly. But we don't do this as friends. We don't do the work of friendship. Yeah, so like your love language, that's interesting to me as your friend. So why is it only that a romantic partner gets to ask what's your love language? And it's allowed to change. Yes, it's allowed. Or there's that New York Times 36 questions thing

And, but it's for people who want to fall in love with the person they're asking the question. But those questions are really cool to ask anybody. Fall in love with a friend. Yeah. Yeah. Fall in love with a friend or understand who, if you could have dinner with one person from history, who would it be? Like, why do you have to ask that to somebody you want to fall in love with? Why can't you just ask that to anybody? It goes back to that service component, right? If you want that safe container, then offer it to someone first.

Yeah.

not talk to the waiter all the time. Could you please not talk to the valet guy? Because now we're like 20 minutes later. Could you please stop talking to the barista? But I find it so interesting to talk to

to the baristas to why she has blue hair. You know, Christopher, who my youngest son, you know, he's always like, I see that the woman has blue. Please do not ask her why she has blue hair. I go, well, people have blue hair, want to be asked why they have blue hair. He goes, she does not. I was like, how do you know? You don't know.

But anyway, it's like, because he's always like, like this, you know, with me. It's so funny because each kid is different, you know. But so when I'm with him, I try not to be curious, not to be as curious, just because I can see he's as embarrassed as he could get by me sometimes. But I think this is the point, which is you have a curiosity about your friends that a lot of people have for strangers. Yeah.

For me, when I think about like what makes, you know, we talk so much about success and we talk about presenting ourselves as success and all of these things. This is success. Having time to spend with people that I love, that I adore, that make me feel home. You know, this book is really about making the way through heartbreak that is inevitable in everybody's life.

doing the work of healing that is a choice, and then finding your way back to home. Home, you know, you're home to me. I'm at home in me. Why does everybody tell us we're here to be on the cover of Forbes? Why does everybody tell us we're here to be the CEO and have no time for our family or our friends? Why does the world tell us to run around like a lunatic and

at the expense of everything that's important. Why does the world or society or our culture or the press tell us it's this when it's this? - Yeah, we're all obsessed with productivity and metrics and measuring and sleep apps and-- - And this goes like that, right? I've been fired from a job and then you're sitting there going like, "What?"

I thought that was my quote home. I remember when I was fired from the CBS Morning News, I was the anchor with Forrest Sawyer and the president of the news division fired all of us overnight. And I was like, wait, what? And he's like, the show's gone. I'm moving it to the entertainment division out of the news division. You all can go look for other jobs and you can stay here if you want and go work in another division. And I was just like, but this is my home. They're like, it's not your home. And I'm like,

It's not? They're like, no. And I was like, oh, oh, okay. Wow, I made a big mistake. I thought this job was my home. Mm-mm.

So I picked up my bags, walked out the revolving door at CBS News and said, I'm never coming home again. So there. But and then I walked down the street, went over to NBC News. Right. But I didn't make the same mistake at NBC News that I made at CBS News.

I didn't think I was going to go and get a new home. I thought I was going to get a new job. Hopefully I'd meet some people that could make me feel like I'd had. And I have, I've made relationships there outside of the building so that when they fire me or tell me like when I became first lady and they called me and said, you're out. And I'm like, wait a minute, what? They're like, you can't work here anymore. If you have a husband who's a governor, it's a conflict of interest. Bye-bye.

I didn't have the same meltdown that I had when I was at CBS because I knew I wasn't being kicked out of my home. I was losing a job. And it goes back to identity again, right? Because when we lose our jobs, we think they're taking away our identity. Well, they're taking away our finances. They're taking away stability. They're taking away identity. Still traumatic. Oh, still. And they're taking away where you go every day. They're taking away everything. And so it is...

It's a lot to lose your job. When I was fired from CBS, I was stunned.

But I made a mistake thinking that, as I said, that that was my home. So when I write on the cover of this book, Finding Our Way Home, I want to have a conversation about the home within, the home that we create with our friends and our family and our loved ones. It's not a home that a job gives to us. It's a home we create. My reflections and poems on heartbreak, healing, and finding your way home. Right. Do you have a favorite poem in here?

That's a good question. No, I think for me, maybe small is a, it's in the beginning, is that I think another thing that society does to us is tells us, you're small, you're big, you're a winner, you're a loser. Do you want to read it? It puts these, okay. It's going to just sound like you speaking. Yeah.

I feel so small. I always have. So small in a house where everything was so big. So small that I got lost. Did you notice that I was small? Did you notice I couldn't reach? Did you notice I was scared? No, of course you didn't. Your door was shut. Your eyes were closed. Your heart, I couldn't find it. Couldn't touch it. Couldn't reach it. It too was lost. Deeply

buried in a dark place. I couldn't reach it. I tried all different ways to grow big. Big was what you noticed. Big was what you liked. Big was what I tried to be. I grew up, I grew out, I tried on big, but it never fit. Big was an illusion. Big enough was unattainable. I was too small to be big enough. There were so many bigs in my house. So I left.

I found another place to try on big, but I was small there too. I couldn't reach the lights. I couldn't touch what I wanted to touch. And so I gave up. I made peace with being small. I gave up trying to be big. I decided it hurt too much. I changed my mind about big. And when I did, I found your big heart in that small little room you hid in. My big heart loves your small little self. I wish you'd known how big you already were.

When I read this, I think about my mom, who was so big to me, but she didn't realize how big she was because she was surrounded by brothers whose society told her were bigger than her and who were so big. JFK, RFK. Yeah, it was just they were so big that everybody was looking up here. So she couldn't see down here, right? And she couldn't see in here. Right.

Because she was trying to reach that, compete with that. When I think of my mother now, I have so much empathy for her. And I have so much sadness, but really empathy for how hard she worked and how unseen she was. And...

that I was not able to really talk to her about her heartbreak or her healing or her way home because she had never been granted the time to have those conversations. She was in such a hurry to be big that I've had those conversations with her now in death, actually.

That she herself, you know, we all have this small little child inside of all of us. And so today I try to think about the little girl that lived in my mother, how small she was and how beautiful she was and what she was like as a little girl. And I say to her, I see you now, mommy. I see you. And you're enough. You're so big to me.

And I think I've learned in life is that people who are society say are so big, so often don't feel bad at all. I don't try to be big anymore and I don't try to be small. I just try to be I am. That book is a gift. Thank you. It's a gift to the world. It really is. Thank you.

The questions you ask are deep, not difficult, but deep. People don't have to ask the questions of themselves because you will ask them of us. Yeah, and I'm hopeful that they will, because I think so many people that I meet feel like something's quite not like it's supposed to be. I'm stuck or whatever it is. And I think by asking yourself, reporting in a way on yourself, I love this thing, your mind, this is called be miracle-minded.

And your mind wages war on your tender little heart. You know that, don't you, child? Said the voice from afar. So instead, be miracle-minded. Yes, miracle-minded. I like the sound of that. But just how does that work? How does miracle-minded feel inside the busy mind? And then just going on, thinking like, is your mind busy? Yeah.

How can you get it to be different? Have you ever thought of yourself as miracle-minded? You know, people come in, they're like, oh my God, Maria. But then they come back and go, you know, I thought about being miracle-minded. Thank you. Thank you. Joy. Delight. Delightful. Delightful. I'm delightful.

Hey, y'all. It's Devon again. Before you go, we want to give our podcast listeners a special 30% off promo code at the Optimism Library on simonsenic.com. Just use the code POD30 at checkout. That's P-O-D-3-0. Enjoy.

If you enjoyed this podcast and would like to hear more, please subscribe wherever you like to listen to podcasts. And if you'd like even more optimism, check out my website, simonsidic.com, for classes, videos, and more. Until then, take care of yourself.