
·S6 E41
Swimming Naked with Elizabeth Olsen
Episode Transcript
I just announced all my tour dates.
It's called the High and Mighty Tour.
I'm coming to Washington, d c Norfolk, Virginia, Madison, Wisconsin, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, Detroit, Michigan, Cleveland, Columbus, and Cincinnati, Ohio, Denver, Colorado, Portland, Maine, Providence, Rhode Island, Springfield, Massachusetts, Chicago, of Course, Indianapolis, Indiana, Louisville, Kentucky, Albuquerque, Masa, Arizona, Kansas City, Missouri, Saint Louis, Missouri, Minneapolis, Minnesota, Nashville, Tennessee, Charlotte, North Carolina, Durham, North of Carolina, Saratoga, California, Monterey, California, Modeesto, California, and port Chester, New York, Boston, Massachusetts, Portland, Oregon, and Seattle, Washington.
I will be touring from February through June, So go get your tickets now.
If you want to come see me perform, I will be on the High and Mighty Tour.
Speaker 2Okay, dookey, Hi, Chelsea, how are you well?
I am fresh.
You know what I've done since we last spoke.
Speaker 1I went to Antarctica, then I went to Vegas, and now I'm in New York.
Speaker 2I am a globetrotter.
You're all over the place.
I mean, like more so than normal.
I'm all over the shop.
How was Antarctica?
It was ridonculous.
Speaker 1It was absolute mayhem.
I have never been on a trip that was so ridiculous.
Speaker 2And it was like a conference.
Speaker 1On psychedelics, so half the people were like researching psychedelics and the other half of the people were doing psychedelics.
Speaker 2Let me guess which category you fell into.
Yeah, well I was somewhere in the middle.
Speaker 3I had a blast.
Speaker 1I met so many fun people.
I had an incredible time.
Antarctica was majestic and gorgeous, and I just.
Speaker 2Was blown away.
It really was one of the best trips of my life.
Oh my gosh, that's amazing.
Now did you see penguins?
Speaker 1Actually, yeah, we were close up to the penguins.
We went kayaking next to whale humpback whales.
They breached in front of us.
There was a polar prunge.
But I was a little bit sick that day because I had a tricky night the night before we crossed Drake's Passage.
Speaker 2How was it all going through Drake's Passage?
Speaker 1Crossing Drake's Passage was crazy?
I brought my friend Christine.
I made some really cute friends.
Speaker 2I had a blast.
Speaker 1We had every element of an incredible It was like adult camp.
Speaker 2We would just run from one floor to the next floor and then go knock on each other's cabins.
There was a lot of a lot of shenanigans, like a very cold summer camp.
Speaker 1Yeah.
Speaker 2I loved it.
Excellent.
Oh and also I'll be on the Today Show.
I'm co hosting the Today Show tomorrow with Jenna Bush, So anybody fantastic can watch us.
Yeah, I co host with her for an hour tomorrow.
Speaker 4Well, we were a really exciting week this week because we actually have two episodes coming out.
Today and tomorrow will have new episodes coming out.
So our guest today, if you want to tell everybody about that is very exciting.
Speaker 2Well, we have two from the same movie.
Elizabeth Olsen is today and tomorrow is Davine Joy Roundolph.
Speaker 1We're releasing two episodes this week to promote their movie, which is called is Arnity.
Okay, we're sitting here with Elizabeth.
ALSOID, I'm so excited to talk to you.
I watched Love and Death.
I don't know how many times I thought your performance you and Lily Ravee together.
That was Lily rave yea your performance in that, because they did that show before with some other kiddy.
Yeah, I think Jessica Biale, right, your performance in that was earth shattering.
You were so fucking good.
I couldn't stop watching your performance.
And I'm not some big ardent acting fan or something.
I don't even like.
I just thought you were so every nuance and the subtleties of like the way that you I was like, I just couldn't wait to see you in more stuffs.
Speaker 2So it's so nice for you.
Whenever I see your name and something, I know it's going to be good.
Speaker 5That is so nice of you.
I loved getting to do that so much.
I had so much the time of my life playing that part.
So it's really nice when other people.
I think you can tell if someone's having fun with something.
Baby, but she was just a great character, and I felt like I could do no wrong in her shoes and I and I just love humor and drama, Like I just think there always needs to be humor no matter how dramatic something is.
And I had so much fun with her, So it's good.
Speaker 2That's based on a true story.
A woman who murdered her husband.
Speaker 1For those of you haven't seen Love and Death, you need to see it.
Speaker 2It's on HBO Max.
Oh thank you.
Speaker 1Yeah, I forgot about that part.
But it's based on a true story.
But it is the unraveling.
It is just the unraveling of a woman.
And I mean, how do you even like?
Speaker 3What?
Did you?
Speaker 2Are you a serious I mean you're a serious actress.
Obviously, you remember you memorized your lines and go to work.
Yes, yes I do out of preparation.
But would you consider yourself a serious actress?
Do you like?
Are you very serious when you are working?
Yeah?
Speaker 5I'm very serious, but I'm very playful.
I feel like every year I've doubled down how much I love doing my job.
And I come from so many different types of training that I went to and so many different types of conservatories.
And the fun part to me is the preparation and the discoveries.
Speaker 2That you have during that time.
Speaker 5But I don't take myself seriously, but I do take everyone else showing up to work.
I have to show up also prepared, and that's a form of respect to everyone else who's showing up to work, in my opinion, and so I like setting a standard of you know, hopefully people aren't like learning their lines on the day, but you get to set a standard sometimes right that way without like verbalizing it.
And I think that's just a form of respect for like everyone who shows up to work.
Speaker 2Yeah, I think that's nice.
Speaker 5Yeah, So I guess I take myself seriously a little bit.
But I also don't take the job of being like an actor very serious, right, like the other elements that come with it, like what like like speaking as myself, Like I don't want to be a spokesperson for anyone or anything.
No, I don't know how to do that.
I don't know how to do it well.
I yet nervous doing podcasts because they're long.
Yeah, and I get anxious that I'm going to say something that will then I think is like great in the moment, and then afterwards you're like, why why does everyone care that.
Speaker 2I think people should go to the movie theaters like I should, like I would.
Why was I don't I read that quote?
Why was that?
What was the issue with that?
Speaker 5I don't know.
It's just like how I conduct my own business.
It is like that I want to be in movies that.
Speaker 2Are in theater.
I'm not telling.
Speaker 5Anyone they have to go to the theater or I think about.
Speaker 1A problem with that in the first place, Like you said go and go the people should go to the theater.
Speaker 5I didn't even say that.
I said I only want to do movies that are in theaters.
Speaker 2That are not just for streaming.
Speaker 5Yeah, but extreamers are very important, are great, but they then release it in another way, like that's an important part of it because we don't have video I mean, I go to video stories, but like most people don't, so I'm not.
Speaker 2I don't know.
Speaker 5It's just I always feel like I'm gonna say something that I just I'm not even aware is going to offend people.
Speaker 2But also who gives a shit?
I know I wish I but I feel like that's how you've lived.
Speaker 1But that's but I think that just goes to show you how silly it is.
Speaker 2You know what I mean.
You didn't say anything wrong.
Speaker 1There's nothing wrong with saying you wanted to be in movies that are in theaters.
Speaker 2What's wrong with that?
That's what an actor wants.
Speaker 1But that's good practice to remind yourself that when there is backlash, it's usually it's so nothing.
Speaker 2It means nothing.
Speaker 1Yeah, you know, so you should be less worried about what you're not saying anything wrong in the first place, you know, I get it.
Speaker 2I mean you're pretty You're a private person.
Speaker 1You're pretty private, right, you don't have like a big public profile in terms of your personal life or at all.
No, No, and I want to respect that for you during this interview.
Also because you're in a you don't have to talk about anything you don't want to talk about.
Speaker 2But I love this conversation because.
Speaker 1So many people call in and we are women, so this is how women deal with stuff.
But it's like we all have to say this over and over to ourselves.
Speaker 2Who gives a shit?
Speaker 1Yeah, until it breaks through and it is inside of us.
Yeah you know, yeah, because it doesn't matter.
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 5I think that's why I've always been drawn to everything you do is because it is because it really feels like you don't give a shit, and you're also very intelligent and very thing and you're also like you go to the ends of things, like you have an interest in something that small, and then you go to the very ends of it and then you get to.
Speaker 2Let let us watch you explore it.
Speaker 5And I find that to be so satisfying as someone who is a fearful person and like kind of scared of everything.
Speaker 1Generally speaking, I am I'm one of six children, and I know you're one of six children.
Speaker 2What number are you?
Speaker 1I'm four four, I'm number six out of six and same parents, same parents.
Speaker 2I know your parents.
Speaker 1You have parents, six kids from just the first four oh okay, okay, then different mother for the for the second two okay.
Speaker 2Yeah, And so do.
Speaker 1You think being number four out of six?
So you're a middle child but kind of a baby also a baby, So a middle child and a baby.
Speaker 2Yeah, I really feel like the baby.
Speaker 5You feel like the baby because I have like ten years okay, and yeah, of being because usually the babies are rebellious, and yeah, that's fearful.
Yeah, well I didn't get that.
Gee, I definitely I watched.
I watched, I observed, I decided what I wanted to do, what I didn't want to do.
I was very clever with my parents about how they set precedence before me, and I held them to those precedents.
As an example, write your boyfriend's house in high school?
Speaker 2How old were you when you were allowed to do that.
Speaker 5They well I wasn't, and I was.
I was like, well, I'm either going to lie to you and tell you that I'm not, or you're gonna know where I am and I'm going to tell you that I'm doing that, and you're framing it's it's how I spoke to them about underach drinking as well, Well, that's good.
It's like there's vodka in my room because when I go to parties, I want to bring my own.
Speaker 2That's nice.
I'm smart.
Speaker 5Yeah, I didn't want to drink other things, and I yeah, it first starts off as a fight, but then I think I'm being really rational.
Speaker 1Well you are being rational, that's I mean, if you frame it that way, as a child to the parent, what is a parent?
It's so responsibility forward, right, So you were rebellious though I was very rebellious.
I'm still very rebellious.
Speaker 2I have a problem with anyone telling me what to do, right.
Speaker 1I don't like that, which is why I wouldn't be great on a movie set.
Because of all the things that you mentioned about being prepared.
I fly by the seat of my pants.
So if someone tells me to memorize something, I'm like, you mean like, I'll spit it back out in my own verbiage is what I think, And they're like, no, no.
Speaker 2These are the in the script.
Speaker 5And I'm like the most people pleaser of a person.
Speaker 1When you go to acting school, because that's serious, you know that could produce serious actors.
Speaker 2Yeah, sure when.
Speaker 1You go to like what are what is something that you've learned or what are the things that you learn in acting?
Speaker 2Because you know so many people go to.
Speaker 1School and then they're in a profession that they went to school for and they're like, I didn't need to be sure, Like I didn't even need to get that training.
So what are some of the tools that you have acquired from acting class that you could share with us that you still use.
Speaker 2Today so much?
Speaker 5Actually, tell me, I'm interested voice work where you place where you place your voice depending on the character, depending on the character's disposition, depending on like for Candy for instance, and Love and Death, she it comes up in a time where she's a very performative woman, So I use like way more vocalizing of different registers and my voice that were more feminine than what I naturally rest in.
And there's also like more of a sing song quality because it's more pleasing as a woman in that time.
So those are the kinds of things that you would start with.
Then dialects you play around with script analysis so that you're not repetitive in an arc like those kinds of things.
Speaker 2I guess, wow.
Speaker 1And so do you use a coach each time you go on to a different project or you just do this work on your own.
Speaker 2It's a bit of both.
Speaker 5There's a dialect coach named Sarah Shepherd who I've been working with for fifteen years, and she's also a great script analysis partner, and so she and I sometimes have discoveries together.
It's amazing how much if you think about you were just kind of joking about getting more in touch with what did you say, not the natural world, but you were talking about just getting in touch with like the spirit the universe.
Speaker 2Align yourself with the universe.
Yeah.
Speaker 5So I feel that way about when you're trying to figure out how the character you're about to play, where they hold their breath, how they breathe, how deep are those breaths, where do they like hold their body tension.
I feel like there's so many realizations that you have about people just in that kind of discovery that like make you feel aligned with like their universe in some like spiritual way.
And I feel so much more comfortable kind of exploring as these other people interacting in the world, almost more so than myself at times.
Speaker 2Let's talk about your movie Eternity.
Speaker 1Do you want to tell us how to because I don't want to ruin anything by describing it myself.
Speaker 2Sure, try anything, I'll try something, Okay, you try.
Speaker 5Eternity is about an eighty nine year old woman who dies and ends up in the afterlife.
Eighty nine was kind of a number I just chose.
I don't actually remember how old she is.
But she dies, ends up in the afterlife, and her husband, who died two weeks before her, who's her husband for sixty five years, is there waiting for her, along with her first husband who died in the Korean War, and she has to choose which husband she would like to spend eternity with.
And it's a struggle, and it's a very big struggle, because do you choose the easy comfort that you know of sixty five years or do you choose the path that you never got to take, or do you choose something that's neither.
And the thing that I loved is imagining this woman who I think when by the time you're about ninety, I'm sure, like there aren't too many really big decisions you have to make, Like you've kind of made a lot of big decisions in the first half of your life and not the second half of your life, And how shocking it would be to have to and how overwhelming it would be to have to make such a big decision that's not menial tasks about like errands and taxes or something, and yeah, yeah, this is like the biggest, Like it would kill her all over again.
Speaker 2Does it makes you think?
Speaker 1It's a very thought provoking movie because it really makes you consider what you yourself would do in.
Speaker 2That kind of situation.
Speaker 3Yeah.
Speaker 1Do First of all, do you believe in the afterlife?
Do you believe that there is one?
Speaker 2Don't?
Speaker 5I I'm always wanting to hear about other people's experiences with spirits, with aliens, with afterlife, with religions, I because I find them to be so comforting and I would love to be comforted myself.
But I am not comforted.
I don't there's nothing that feels exactly like that I can connect to.
I guess, but I'm really happy for other people having these thoughts and dreams, and.
Speaker 2I'm happy that other people are delusions.
It's I think there's an afterlife.
It's really nice and cozy to think about.
I love exactly.
Speaker 1It's a comfort to talk about it when people talk about it, because obviously we're never going to fucking know until we die, and we'll probably won't find out then either.
Speaker 2No, but.
Speaker 1It is comforting to think that something does happen after But where I lose it is like I believe an energy, and I believe.
Speaker 2That energy doesn't die.
Speaker 1Right, So if you've met someone there in your heart forever, whether they're here they're not, I believe in that.
Speaker 2That's science, right.
Speaker 1And we have a Psycha coming on the show in a few weeks, so I would just read her book, and she talks about all these people who have, you know, near life or past death experiences, or people who talk to you from sure from like if I asked my mom to show me an orange out of place, my mom's dead.
If I ask her to show me an orange out of place, I'll see it within twenty four hours, an oversized orange that's not in a grocery store, right, like, so I get that every time, but you could.
Speaker 2It's when people start.
Speaker 1Talking about reincarnation that I they lose me because I'm like that that involves magic, that involves that.
Speaker 2Then we're putting a little potion.
You dying and then.
Speaker 1Okay, and then you're gonna come back as this dog or this other person.
Like when people talk about past lives.
Speaker 5Did you ever see Glazer's film Birth with Nicole Kidman where her dead husband comes back as this little boy.
Speaker 2I remember it because of her hand cut in it.
Yeah, she had a pixie.
What's it?
What's it called birth of birth?
Right now?
Is it called birth?
That's called birth?
Speaker 3Yeah?
Speaker 2How did I miss that?
Speaker 5It's from I don't know, Yeah, two thousand or night.
Yeah, two thousand's early two thousands.
Speaker 2Maybe, And so her husband's reincarnated and then the little.
Speaker 5Boy and it's very I mean it's she falls in for this little boy.
Nicole Kidman a grown woman, Yeah, debating whether or no that's not the first time for her.
She's always with little boys.
Now remember last year that was two years ago.
Speaker 2It's like a seven year old.
Speaker 1In one of those books and many many lives, many masters, is that the book have you ever read that book?
Okay, Many Lives, Many Masters opens with this story about correct me if I'm saying the wrong book I think I'm saying.
Oh is a story about it opens with a story about this boy who speaks a foreign language that his parents have never spoken to him.
He's like three or four years old, and he talks about having a wife and children in another country and I think it's Italy or Spain.
He speaks fluent in Italian or Spanish, whichever the country is.
And he talks about his wife, and he talks about the village he lives in.
And finally the parents, after a certain amount of time, go and research it and they find this woman who has two small children and lost her husband.
And he's like, I'm her husband.
So like do you hear stuff like that?
And you're like, oh, yeah, that is inexplicable.
It is inexplicable, but also involves a lot of fairy dustin magic, like the magic part and the reincarnation.
Speaker 2I just find that to be Do you believe in that?
I like the idea, I know you don't.
Speaker 1I mean I also like the idea of her going to heaven and you know, and there's elevators and people are working, you know what I mean in this movie like.
Speaker 5But it's also our movies that kind of nihilistic in the sense that it's like just like cell cell sell after it's just like a capitalist afterlife that has like belief in nothing.
Speaker 1It's and there are different versions of heaven, right, yeah, describe you can say that partly.
Speaker 5Yeah, there's a Yeah, there's a lot of different eternities that you can choose, and some of them are like the workout world, or there's the there's the attorney where you can be infantilized for the rest of your life and pretend to be a baby and have a mommy, And there's that kind of world.
There is queer World, there's World, then World.
There was a studio Studio fifty four.
Is that what it was called World where people could just do cocaine and not die.
Smoke smokes smoke and you'll never die again.
Speaker 2I got it.
Speaker 1Yeah, And that sounds like they would have a casino also, you can get along well there.
Speaker 2Yeah, do you love casinos?
I hate casino?
Okay, No, I have a residency in Vegas.
Speaker 1I perform once a month because that's about as much as I like to work and not excluding present company excluded obviously, but I I don't like the vibe.
Speaker 2It makes me uneasy.
I had to say, I spent the day in.
Speaker 1Vegas this last time I was there because we went to see a Lotus the next night.
Yeah, and spending the day in Vegas makes me uneasy.
Speaker 5Yeah.
Speaker 1I don't like to be there when the lights are like when it's light out.
Speaker 5I've only been one.
I don't remember sleeping.
How have you avoided Vegas this your entire life?
I mean one's asked me to do like a one woman show there.
But don't you have to do like press ever in Vegas?
Like what about you've never done cinema con or anything or a bout?
Speaker 2No?
No, luckily no.
Speaker 5I have very few married friends really, and if they're married, I met them married.
Speaker 2Yeah.
What about astrology?
What do you think?
What are your thoughts on a ology?
Speaker 5So a few of them, So I think a lot of them sound all of the signs sound like I could have a piece of myself align with each of them.
Yet someone Patty who is with me today, who does makeup.
She had a friend of hers who reads charts from Iceland.
Just I sent her all the information where you're born, what time of day, your birthday.
Speaker 2I think that's kind of all you need for richart.
Speaker 5And she had said something to me that brought me to tears.
It was so spooky, and she had made this like thirteen minute voice message.
And I journal every morning for the most part, and I've been doing that for a few years, and it's kind of where I have my own realizations about where I am in my psyche and my mental health.
And I was having this realization a week before listening to this, where I realized, I just need to travel more.
I am so fulfilled by traveling, and being in one place has never made me comfortable.
I always want to be on the go.
And I had that realization, and then she took like two minutes to tell me how important travel is for my birth sign.
Speaker 2Just days later, when is your birthday?
February sixteenth?
Okay, I'm February twenty fifth.
Oh interesting, you're pissy, but you're curious.
Curious.
Speaker 5Yeah, yeah, So that moved me, Like, so I do believe there's something to it.
Speaker 1I think there's definitely something about that when you were born, what was going on with the planets when you were born like that kind of Estereian astrology is when they I think it's probably what you did, because I've done something similar to that.
Speaker 2I think that's pretty like.
Speaker 1I don't like it when it's a predictor of the future, like I find I don't want to be nonsense.
I also don't want to know, and yeah, of course, but what you're yeah right, I don't want to know either, really because then I'm going to make decisions that are affected by you just saying that sentence to me, and.
Speaker 2I can't inher it now.
Speaker 4It's like a friend of mine, she I think went to the same mysterious astrologer.
Speaker 2That you use.
J.
Yes, but she Jade the woman in the valley.
It's a guy Ja.
Speaker 4But she was told by him at some point in your life, you're gonna break both of your ankles.
So she like, there's two ways you can go with this right the same time, we don't know.
So her reaction was, well, I can't do anything.
I can't roller blade or rollerskate, can do anything dangerous.
I just have to be careful, so I don't.
But he said you're going to so in my mind that means go ahead and do whatever you want, it's gonna happen one way or.
Speaker 2The other and get it over with.
Speaker 4And well, she hasn't done it yet, she hasn't broken her ankle, so she's just a fraid really to tell somebody.
Speaker 2It's like, why don't want you just leave that part out?
Who wants to knock about that?
Speaker 5Also, like, now she's gonna not do so many things that could create joy in her.
Speaker 1So wait, talk to me about journaling.
How did you get into the practice of journaling.
Speaker 2I don't remember where it started.
I think I like writing.
Yeah, you handwrite in your journal?
Speaker 5Yeah?
Speaker 2Is that how you do it?
Yeah?
You think that's more impactful than writing, like typing it in.
Speaker 5I think there's something that happens when you slow down your brain to write out a word slower than you could type it that I think helps you have new thoughts, Like you're not ahead of it, you have to be slower.
And so it helps me like slow down how fast my brain is moving.
And sometimes it doesn't work and it's completely scattered thoughts.
But I started doing it.
Speaker 2I don't know.
Speaker 5I just started doing it every morning three years ago, along with jumping naked into my pool and do that every morning.
Speaker 2I yeah, I do.
Oh my god, I love this.
Speaker 5It's just yeah, I don't hate it.
Sometimes it's not that hole.
But I love swimming naked so much.
And I know you love taking pictures of yourself.
Speaker 2Yes, I love to be naked.
I mean I like underwear.
I'm bra on.
Yeah, I don't like to be full.
Speaker 1I mean I don't have a problem with nudity, but I yeah, I just want to be in my.
Speaker 2Broad enderwearl all the time.
I want to be naked in water all the time.
What naked a wonder is a nice feeling.
Speaker 5Absolutely yeah, and smooving through it.
I don't want to just like sit in a cold plunch.
Speaker 2I want to move through.
So do you swim every morning or you just jump in just for like three to five minutes.
I just slowly swim.
Speaker 1So which order do these things happen?
And do you journal first or you get in the pool?
Speaker 2I get in the pool first.
Speaker 5What's the very first thing that happens when you wake up?
Did you brush your teeth first?
I brush my teeth.
I make coffee while it's being made.
I jump in the pool.
I do like a eighty year old calesthetics afterwards, I don't warm up my body and mobilize and stretching a blood flow, and then I journal with coffee.
Speaker 2Wow.
Speaker 5And I do a version of this even when I'm working.
Speaker 2That's amazing.
Speaker 5But it usually involves a baptob that I don't swim in, but sometimes I'll still do the water part.
Speaker 2Yeah, And how long will you journal for each morning?
It depends.
Speaker 5I try and get myself ten minutes minimum.
Speaker 2And what do you think that's brought to your life that you didn't have before?
Speaker 5Enough like self reflection that I think it's been helpful problem solving, It's been helpful making plans, It's been like for what I want or what I think I need.
It's been helpful creating a like trying to understand something that had happened or something that's happened to someone else and why they respond in certain ways.
Speaker 2So I think it helps.
Speaker 5It's it's to me a version of meditation and therapy without while like trusting your own instincts in some way.
But I'm so therapy as a person.
Speaker 2You seem very together.
Speaker 5I spent so much time in talk therapy, and I started doing a new therapy that I've become obsessed with what is this called somatic therapy?
Speaker 6Oh?
Speaker 2Yeah, yeah, therapist.
Speaker 5And I'm really it's I'm brand new.
It's like truly only a month of a new thing.
Yeah, so how does it work?
Can you talk about it?
Speaker 6Sure?
Speaker 5I mean I'm not going to do it well, like I'm not, I just because it's so new to me.
So maybe you can help me.
Speaker 2But I was surprised to theist, No, you do it.
Speaker 4Yeah, I mean there are certain you know, exercises, you can do, mindfulness that, yeah, these sorts of things.
But at the same time, it kind of just feels like regular therapy.
But when I started it, I found I had a real purge for like every time I talked to my therapist.
It was like like purging, weeping, like every single time for like six months.
Speaker 1Because somatic means your body, right, your somaticas.
Speaker 5Yeah, and so what's happening right now at least what I'm experiencing is they listen to whatever you want to speak about that day, maybe for like fifteen twenty minutes until something and you is changing that you're having a physical response to, and then they want to talk about that physical response and basically give you tools and exercises that help your physical response that is connected to your brain, so that you can at least help yourself have similar Like if there's something in a relationship that comes up and that makes you feel a certain way, whether it's like rage or overwhelmed, you talk about it and then you work on an exercise that helps try and rewire your your brain's response that gives you the message to your body.
Yeah, like sooth system.
Oh, it's very activated.
So it's not just talking like you're doing.
You're doing, you're interacting right with tools.
Speaker 2Yeah, do you know what EMDR is?
That's the tool?
Oh okay, because it sounds like em DR a little bit where I haven't done that yet.
Speaker 1You change your reaction to something.
It's like what you're saying, and like if you have a traumatic memory, you go back to that memory while you're holding these kind of instruments.
Speaker 2I don't really like vibration.
Speaker 1Yeah, I haven't done a frame the way that you react to that response.
So that's in the neighborhood of what you're talking about.
Yeah, yeah, that.
Yeah, you seem very together and grounded.
You seem very together.
Speaker 2Well I'm okay, I'm doing just fine.
Speaker 1Would people would all the people that are closest to you in your life describe you as together.
Speaker 2Yeah, they would.
Speaker 5I I think the thing that I'm trying really to explore now and work is like a why ildness because I think I need that, especially as I get older.
I think you become like more I do, at least become almost like more responsible, and I kind of want to have fewer responsibilities and.
Speaker 2Be a little bit wilder.
Speaker 3Wow.
Speaker 5And I can do that in in a way with work.
Yeah, and like find an edge that I that I want in my life.
Speaker 2I want to see you do that on screen.
Yeah, I like it.
I would love that.
Speaker 1Yeah, I mean you are like that as an actress, you kind of you could see that you're not you're you're acting like you know what I mean.
Speaker 2And I mean that in the best way.
I like watching people act.
Speaker 5Yeah, So it's fun to me to get to like act instead of just be a version of my just like a version of myself and like be cool or something, because I don't know how to be cool.
But some people are really good at it, you know, and are really charming just being themselves.
And I much rather like invent something else.
Speaker 1That's a sign of an actor.
We're going to take a break and we'll be right back with Elizabeth Olsen.
Elizabeth Olson, and we're back.
Speaker 2Do you go by, Lizzie?
Speaker 3I do?
Speaker 1Yeah, Okay, Lizzie Lissen Okay, okay, Catherine.
What do we have in store for us today?
Well, we're gonna start with Dustin.
Speaker 4His subject line is gunkle with mean girl nieces Wait, gunkle, gunkle, gay uncle gunkle.
So he says, Dear Chelsea, I'm a longtime fan and I was actually born on your tenth birthday.
Did you wish for more gaze?
Speaker 2He says.
Probably.
Speaker 4On your show with Sasha Mammtt, you mentioned that there is nothing worse than girls who become bullies.
Speaker 2My nibblings.
Speaker 4My brother's kids are being raised to want for nothing, whereas we came from a frugal Jewish household.
Not only does this make it impossible for me to spoil them myself, but the eldest literally dressed as a mean girl for Halloween.
She's only eleven, but she's already a stunning natural blonde.
So it's clear as vodka that she's going to be that popular girl and gonna be trouble.
Speaker 2I love these kids with all my heart.
Speaker 4And simply want them to be the beautiful human beings I know they can be as the childless by choice.
Uncle, Do I keep my mouth shut or try to push this more?
I don't get that much quality time with my family, so I try to be easygoing and conflict avoidant when I'm around them because I'm a middle child.
I know you're equally obsessed with your nieces and nephews.
What should I do best?
Dustin m about him?
Speaker 2Here?
Hid Hi?
How are you?
This is our special guest, Elizabeth Olson is here today.
Hey Elizabeth, Hi, Hi, Hi are you?
Are you?
Speaker 5You have nieces and nephews?
I do, they're very very little, though they're very little.
Yeah, but I also I don't know.
I I'm really scared of conflict of conflict myself as well.
But I also don't know how to give other people advice on parenting if they're not your kids or like, like, you can only just I don't know.
So that's kind of that's kind of the first thing that I was thinking about.
Speaker 1Yeah, it's pretty tricky even though you are at uncle, like, you know, you can only really talk to your is it your sister or your brother.
Speaker 2It's my brother, I mean, can.
Speaker 1You can't you have an honest conversation with him about because like bullies have been bullied.
Someone bullied her right like, and it's an important conversation to have with young girls.
Speaker 6And she literally went as a mean girl for Halloween because I feel like she emulates and like idolizes that.
Speaker 1Uh huh, well, I think okay, first of all, I mean, would you feel comfortable having a conversation with your brother about it?
So you should do that first.
Just be like, we can't have her grow up to be a mean girl.
So as a team, this is a team effort, you know what I mean.
You join forces and you're like, okay, listen, let's do this together.
Because I don't want you know, she dressed up as a mean girl.
That's a little bit of a red flag blah blah blah, Like we don't want her to look at that as a guide for anything.
And then the other thing that you can do is demonstrate how cool it is to be a nice girl.
Like you can be blowing those you know what I mean, You can be talking about women who are supportive of other women, and you can instill that in your time with her without being preachy about it, you know what I mean, just by talking about other women and women helping each other, and like, you know, nobody wants to be excluded, nobody wants to be left out, like all of those themes are.
I mean, that's what uncles are for, you know, That's what an aunt and uncle role is.
Speaker 2It's not like it's someone else's kid.
You are related to her.
Speaker 1They're not necessarily going to say you know, I mean, it is a little preemptive what you're talking about, But I understand what you mean, and I think you just have more conversations around it.
You know how important is to be a nice person to other people, to care about other people and putting yourselves in those situations, because sometimes when you are growing up and you are young, you are just like you're looking to the future, as like you're not even understanding the experience you're in.
You're looking forward so much to what is going to be right and actually taking the time as a kid to think about other people and how it makes, how things make people feel, and when her feelings get hurt, to also take those moments, you know what I mean.
As a teaching moment to explain to her, you know, to remind her, because nobody wants to feel excluded or left out or bullied like that.
Speaker 2So I don't know if any of that's helpful.
Speaker 1I feel like you should just start having the conversations around it.
Speaker 6I think, so, well, now I'm going to have to because they're going to hear about this podcast.
Speaker 2So yeah.
Speaker 4I also think like you're the cool uncle, so they're naturally going to gravitate towards you.
Want to know what your opinions are on things.
And what I like to do in these sorts of situations is like have one on one conversations with the kids and like what's going on, Like what's happening in the friend group, Like what's the goss right now, and like act like you're very interested in it because it is kind of interesting and it's all sort of high school or you know, junior high at that age.
But when they start telling you about specific situations, that's where you can kind of get into the nitty gritty.
Like I had a niece who was saying, like, oh, this one girl in the friend group said something means we're all ganging up on her on Snapchat and I was like, well, you know, we had a conversation about it, and I think she made some different choices because we talked about it.
But it wasn't in the sort of schooling way.
It was like, oh, tell me what's going on, Like what's the goss girl?
Speaker 5I think it's really helpful with what you said that I'm still learning with people in my own life.
Is better grown adults, like trying not to just focus on what maybe you shouldn't be doing, but highlighting the examples, like you're saying of the role like this, this is an example of something positive and showcasing that as opposed to what not to do.
Speaker 1Yes, and sometimes people need to learn like the framework matters.
Always applauding the people that are doing the way you want her to behave, like whether it's Taylor Swift and all the wonderful things she does, I mean with her money, or whether it's an actual person that you see doing something nice for another person and pointing it.
Speaker 6Out like he was obsessed with Taylor Swift and is listening after her.
Speaker 2So I think that's a great model.
And also like it's also a warning shot.
Speaker 1It's like be careful who you're you know, who you're not nice to because you never know when you're gonna run into that person again in your life, and you're never gonna know if they're going to have an opportunity to help you once or you might need something from that person.
Like some people's brains work better like with almost like a threat.
Speaker 2To you know what I mean?
Speaker 1Because what's that saying in a Hollywood like being nice to the people on your way up because you're going to need them on your way down something like that, right, Like, it's true, you you be careful.
You never know how people are going to come in and out of your life or when you're gonna need a favor from someone.
So there's also that tactic if it depending on what her personality is like.
Speaker 2So those are a couple of ideas.
Speaker 6Anyway, we're still learning what the personality is.
But she's definitely super precocious and outgoing.
Speaker 2Good for you for having your eye on it.
Speaker 1Precocious and outgoing is all fine, It's all fine, you know, Like that's good and those things that can end up as strong, strong assets and will, but definitely be active about it.
Speaker 4Yeah, okay, all right, will you follow up with us if you have a little conversation and get some podcasts about what's happening with the eleven year olds.
Speaker 6I will I'll let you all know how they respond to this.
Speaker 2Thanks Dusted, Thanks dust I was Were you bullied ever growing up at school?
Speaker 3No?
Speaker 5My husband hates me talking about my elementary school experience because I had just the loveliest high school elementary school.
Speaker 2Nice.
Speaker 5Yeah, I mean, there were definitely like we for the most part, all got along.
And there are probably a few people who don't feel that way, but out of fifty people and then one hundred and twenty people that graduate, we all cared a lot about having a cumulative high GPA, and we cared about supporting the basketball team and the basketball support of the arts, and it was a very yeah liked.
We would go to rehearsal and then we'd go to the basketball game, the basketball players would go watch all of our beallet performances or whatever it was.
There's community again, yeah and so and so I just had a really positive experience.
Speaker 1That's amazing, And so let's talk about why that is important community right now in this time that we're living in with regards to America, I don't know if that's what you were talking about politics.
Speaker 2I feel this way about the political situation.
Speaker 5For me, it's about actually the things that we have in common that aren't politics, right, like a bunch of people going to their local feater to watch a bunch of kids perform, and like a Halloween show or Christmas show, like my friends and Snowma.
I live there part time.
It's like my way of having a life that feels like it's part of a community.
It's very it's very community oriented.
Being a second homeowner there was very hard to kind of slip in and be and ingratiate yourselves with the community.
So we started off like bartering and trading, like genuinely, we're like we have grapes.
Who wants them?
We don't want them, We don't want to do anything with them.
Who can, Like, we will trade with you.
You guys have it and then be our friend.
And our friends have like a movie night once a month that they carried at the Square Theater that's a private theater, and those kinds of things I just think are really important for people to get together and have something else in common, whether it's but I also feel the same way about sports.
I'm a big Dodgers fan.
I can't say I'm a big baseball fan, but I think I am because of how much I love the Dodgers.
Speaker 2Congratulations and winning the World Series.
Thanks.
I love those boys so much.
Speaker 5And some of them are men, but a lot of them are boys, and I'm so happy for them.
Speaker 2It was very surprised.
Speaker 5I just think when you you just don't know what people's political points of views are, when everyone has this other thing in common, yes, that brings them together.
Speaker 1Meaning are you referencing the Dodgers.
Yeah, I see what you're saying.
Yes, Yeah, I think it's really important too, because we're so right now.
Speaker 2It's it's really hard to not label people.
You know, you want to label people.
Speaker 5Well, so people are choosing to label themselves a lot of the time, yes, right, right.
We have like a lot of identifiers now, uh huh, and they just become more specific.
Speaker 2Yeah, so it is important for us to remember that.
Speaker 1Like, I really need to find ways, I know, personally, I need to find ways to be more open minded about about not being so preoccupied with the political landscape and more focused on the individual person.
Speaker 2Yeah, I have work to do on that.
Speaker 1Like, I love what you're saying about it's funny when you say about community, Like that's how I felt when I was in Spain, Like there's a community there.
I'm not even really part of it, but there is a community there.
It's the same guy at the coffee store every morning, it's the same guy at the bike shop.
And it's like, and so when I was reading something you were talking about before you came in, and I was like, yeah, we need a community reminder, we need like a community update, you know.
Speaker 5And we can't do it from our phones.
Yeah, Like that's creating siloed experiences, not actual interaction.
Speaker 2Right, Right.
Speaker 1You need to be in person with people doing something that is absent of politics.
Speaker 2So getting back on a more human level.
Speaker 5And I think people just have more rituals in other countries than we do around that, especially in.
Speaker 2Person in rituals.
Speaker 4Yeah, we were talking a little while back about the third space.
How we used to have, you know, the local bar you'd go to or the moose lodge or what church, and people would meet in these communal spaces that we're not work and we're not home, and we.
Speaker 2Just don't really have that anymore.
Speaker 4And suddenly it's like online is the third space, but it's not actually like it can't actually be our third space.
But it's the place where a lot of people are spending most of their social time.
Speaker 2Yeah yeah, and it's not effective, it's not healing, unhealthy.
Speaker 3Well.
Speaker 2Our next caller is Amy Dear Chelsea.
Speaker 4I'm a forty one year old single mom of two running my own business, juggling kids, pets, a mortgage, and about a thousand responsibilities.
Speaker 2I've been divorced for over a.
Speaker 4Decade, tried just about everything in the dating world, apps, speed dating, matchmakers, even if you ill advised trips back to ex's, and I've been truly single for the past two years, partly because the apps are stupid and exhausting, partly because my kids are in every sport known to humankind, and partly because I lost faith in men, especially with the current political climate.
Speaker 2Here's the thing.
I want connection.
Speaker 4I want a partner, someone to share the joy and the way of this full, messy, beautiful life with someone who makes me feel cared for, loved and special.
But dating feels daunting.
My small town is a red pocket in a blue state, the kind of place where you find guys holding a fish in their profile picks, and you only get five matches if you want someone educated as a Japanese woman with a unique name and a career that requires some privacy.
Putting myself fully out there online feels complicated and uncomfortable.
So how do I start fresh?
Do I travel to meet people?
Am I overlooking ways to connect and meet people?
Or should I just lean into the single life and adopt more dogs.
I do want to be surrounded by animals when I retire, so maybe start now.
Speaker 2Amy.
Hi, Hi, hi cutie.
This is our special guest, Elizabeth Olson's here today.
Speaker 5Hi.
Speaker 3Nice to meet you, me too.
Speaker 2Well, it sounds where do you live.
Speaker 7I live in southern Oregon, just across the kind of the border of California.
Speaker 1Yeah, I mean, listen, the world we live in.
You do kind of have to put yourself out in ways that are not normal, you know what I mean?
Put yourself out there if you are interested in meeting someone.
First of all, I would say, like, I understand your disappointment and men.
Most women are disappointed in men these days.
It's not unusual.
You're not alone Like I can't.
I can't even believe men, you know what I mean?
I am just so I'm an advocate for like remaining true to myself first and foremost.
If someone were to come along and blow my socks off, absolutely I'm down, but I'm not, you know, actively looking for it.
But I think if you really are, then you should own it, and you should put yourself on the apps and you should go outside of your comfort zone and the out of your community and just find any ways that you can, like hiking groups, biking groups, tennis groups, whatever those, you know, whatever you're into, just engage yourself and like set a period of time to actually activate yourself to go Okay, for the next six months, I'm going to focus on finding somebody that I can connect with, you know, like really put all your energy towards it, your free energy, because it sounds like you have a lot going on, but your free energy towards it, you know, and travel get out of there.
Speaker 2How are you far from Portland?
Speaker 3No, it's about like four foo and a half hour drive.
Speaker 1Yeah, go there for a weekend and sign up for things that are going to be like intersex, you know what I mean, where there's like like my friend she just got divorced, and she went on all the apps and she loved it.
Speaker 2She's like, oh my god, this is so exciting.
This is so exciting.
Speaker 1And then she just joined a bunch and she lives in Portland actually, and she joined a hiking group and the next two weeks later she was like dating this guy.
Speaker 2She's like, oh yeah, we're dating.
Speaker 1So like things like that where you are forced to meet and engage new people because you'll probably meet some really cool friends too, you know.
So I would just say to you know, I don't have anything any problem with the apps.
I just feel like I can be daunting for a single person to be on apps.
It's kind of depressing, you know.
I know what you mean about men holding fish, Like I don't know.
I don't know who told men to do that, Like why are they holding a fish in their profile?
Speaker 2How many women want to go fishing?
Not a lot of them in the bathroom.
Would you love to go fishing?
Taking prefences?
Oh my god, Oh my god?
She do you she's already married, so we can't set her up with a fishermen.
Speaker 7Yes, well, and I with my kids already, so you know, I do think for my kids.
Speaker 3But do I really want to do that when I'm.
Speaker 1Not really No, but I do think, like I think it's important when you want something in your life to say it, write it down, like you want to change the energy around it, you know, like the subject matter you want to meet someone, write down exactly what you want in them, not physical necessarily, but what are you looking for in a partner?
Speaker 2What are you looking for in connection?
Speaker 1And really reminding yourself spending time with those thoughts a little bit every morning when you wake up, whether it's journaling or just writing some affirmations, or devote some area of your life to putting energy towards meeting somebody, and see what happens in about six months, because I mean, this is the first step you called in to see about this, And like, I think things change and your energy changes up when you start to take active steps towards something you know exactly.
Speaker 7Yes, yeah, And I like the you said put a timeframe on it, because it is daunting to be just out there no full the foreseeable future.
But if I say six months, I'm going to prioritize this.
That feels more doable and not like a hopeless amount of time.
Right, Because when you don't meet somebody, or when you go on horrible dates, It's like, what am I doing?
Speaker 3I could have stayed home with my dog.
Speaker 2Totally.
Speaker 1Yes, I mean I've just been learning to enjoy my company more and more and more as I get older.
I really have a good time with myself.
And I'm sure you feel the same way.
So it's great that you have that.
You know that that's an option too, because if you put some if in six months you have not met anyone worthwhile, then you can really just start focused on being by yourself, you know what I mean.
You can be like, Okay, I made an effort and that and I did, I tried, and then see what happens, you know, and.
Speaker 3Get another dog.
If I don't meet.
Speaker 2Anybody, I think that's your reward.
That's the answer really for everything, is just to get another dog.
Speaker 6You know.
Speaker 1Yes, yeah, but I'm glad you have a good attitude about it, and then you have a good attitude in general, like you know, that's fun.
Speaker 3Thank you?
Speaker 2Yeah, totally all right.
Well thanks for calling in Amy, thank.
Speaker 3You, thank you for having me.
Speaker 2Bye bye bye.
Speaker 5Guys are so good at this.
Oh god, I love watching you do this live.
Wow really yeah, oh my god, thank you.
Speaker 2Yeah, I'm so quickly and so easily.
Speaker 1Well, most people don't you think about this?
This is how I think about this podcast.
And I say it all the time.
Sorry if you're listening to me and repeating myself as usual.
But I think really all you ever need when you have a situation is you need someone who has nothing at stake in your life to give you their opinion, like objectively.
Yeah, and that's what this is, you know, you just need someone else's opinion.
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 5They don't need to know any other details.
They don't even know about your past.
They just need to know about what is this situation specific?
Right, what's the context of the situation.
But I would never think about joining groups like a biking group or a hiking group, whatever it is.
I just think that's such great advice for people to go and meet people in person instead of it feeling like so like this thing that that's so removed from them on their phone.
Speaker 3Yeah.
Speaker 2I heard this thing the other day.
With the apps.
It's like, of course, the apps are a business.
Speaker 4They're meant to keep you on the apps, not necessarily to help you find the person.
And I read recently they're they basically like siphon off the good peoples they're showing you kind of the crappy the crappy ones, so you stay on it for longer.
Speaker 5Well, and I had a friend that told me that you can pay to be put in front of people.
Speaker 2But then you're like, is she desert because she's paying to be put in front of people?
Speaker 5Yes?
She was explaining this to me, like about how it's such a business basically, and how fucked it is.
Speaker 2Yes.
Aren't you happy you don't have to deal with this?
Yeah?
Speaker 5I I don't.
I don't know if I would be.
I don't know how to do now.
I do enjoy being on other friends apps, but I do.
Sure, I find it kind of entertaining, but that's because I'm so removed from it.
Speaker 1I like to go through my sisters, you know, and just respond to her from her to other people, I love.
Speaker 2You or I love that.
Speaker 1It's so I'm so much more invested when it's someone else rather than myself.
Speaker 2Sure, are we going to take a break and come back in?
Yeah?
Speaker 1Yeah, Okay, we'll take another breakup.
We'd be right back to wrap up with a Lizzie olcind We're back with Lizzielsin.
Do we have one last question?
Speaker 2Yeah?
Speaker 4So I think this is a quick answer, even though it's a little bit of a longer email.
So Stella, her subject line is one foot in, one foot out, and I'm paying double rent.
Dear Chelsea, I'm twenty seven years old and in my first year of practice as a lawyer.
I met my boyfriend in law school.
From the moment we started seeing one another, he was very casual.
He made it clear to me that he was not looking for a girlfriend, did not see himself having kids, and was very very career oriented.
At the time, I was okay with taking things slow and being casual since we were both in law school.
This made sense, and I was also not desperate to get into a relationship, had not given kids much thought, and was focusing on my career.
After six or seven months of casual dating, he officially asked me to be his girlfriend, and we've been going strong ever since.
Now we've been together for three years, and I'm starting to wonder whether casual for him is a permanent state of mind rather than something temporary while he was going through law school and figuring out life.
Speaker 3What I thought was a.
Speaker 4Slow, intentional foundation for a deeper relationship is starting to feel more like a bad omen one where I'm getting strung along until I finally reached my limit and walk away.
Everyone around us is moving in together, getting engaged, having kids.
Meanwhile, we hardly ever talk about the future.
When I bring it up, he brushes it off by saying every relationship is different.
When both of our leases were ending last year, I suggested moving in together.
At the time, I was living alone and he was with a roommate.
He told me he wanted at least one year of being on his own before he could be comfortable settling down.
I respected his wishes, although it was a bit frustrating to realize we're spending most nights together anyway, it feels like we live together, just with twice the rent.
Speaker 2Since this is annoying, I know.
Speaker 4Since then, there has not been a follow up from him, no renewed conversation about eventually moving in.
Speaker 2I'm trying to give him grace.
Speaker 4I'm trying to be patient, but with every passing month and still I will know real conversations about where we're headed.
I keep asking myself what he's doing, and more importantly, what the hell I am doing here?
Speaker 2What are you doing?
Speaker 4My best friend's older sister was in a relationship with a man from the time she was twenty two years old when they broke up just shy of her thirtieth birthday.
She told me, never waste your twenties on a man who does not see a future with you.
It does not take anyone a decade to decide whether they want to be with you.
Considering I've been with my partner for the greater part of my twenties, I cannot help but wonder if I'm failing to take her advice and I am doomed to make the same mistake.
Speaker 2So, Chelsea, what do you think?
Am I ignoring the writing on the wall?
Am I just being impatient?
Yes?
Speaker 5Stella, I if you can't have that conversation, I don't.
I don't think it's worth your time if he isn't there to show up just to have the conversation about it.
Speaker 2Yeah, agreed, it's over.
It's three years.
Speaker 1Like, if you love someone, there should be no problem talking around anything.
Speaker 2You should be able to talk.
Speaker 1Around marriage or you know about marriage, a round marriage, around moving in.
Speaker 2All of those.
Speaker 1Things are shouldn't be You shouldn't be scared to bring something up and you shouldn't be campaigning to be someone's choice.
No, it's your roommate or it's like you're trying to figure out what he's like.
You decide how you're treated by people in this world, and you're devaluing yourself by being remaining in this relationship when you're not getting what you want.
If these are all the things that you want, that you've stated that you want a partner that you're going to live with, and you want a family, and you want and you're like, I don't like the compare game.
I don't care that your friends are getting married.
Who gives a shit what your friends are doing.
You have to figure out what you want and then get that, but also don't lower your level of respect for yourself.
Those are the things you want and you're not getting them, you must walk out the door and go find somebody who's gonna give them to you, because somebody will happily be there for that.
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 5I also think that when you're in these relationships, the thing that you keep going back for is the crumb that you really what you want is just the full fucking meal, and all they're doing is giving you a crumb to keep you along for a certain amount of time later until they realize need to give you another crumb to keep you along.
And it just sounds like you get stuck in that cycle that you can't really see the bigger picture.
Yeah, and then you're just addicted to.
Speaker 2Yeah, you kind of.
Speaker 1It's even the way she framed, like he said I was his girlfriend, he started calling me his girlfriend.
Speaker 2It's like that's also your decision.
You.
Speaker 1Why does he have to decide when your girlfriend or boyfriend?
You're my boyfriend?
Speaker 3You know.
Speaker 1Like the whole framing of this letter makes me think that you what's her name, uh, Stella, Stella, You need to like actually spend some time alone and build up your self worth, like because I want you to like respect yourself in a way that you aren't going to tolerate this behavior from anybody.
Speaker 2Yeah, any man, you don't need that at all period.
Speaker 4You want somebody who's obsessed with you, who's like excited to be with that account.
Speaker 2Healthy, healthy, obsessed.
Speaker 1Do you have a if you don't want to talk about this, you don't have to do you have a cute engagement story about how you got how you got engaged?
Speaker 2Was it romantic?
Speaker 5Yeah?
I think it I mean, it was romantic in the sense that one of the reasons I loved Eternity reading that script is because I really think of my husband as a Larry who will die in his nineties choking on pretzels.
Like my husband is incredibly neurotic, very uncomfortable all the time, always has something wrong with anything, like his cocsis, his like his pinky like and he actually has things wrong with him, but they're always like this like one percent odd thing and they have real diagnoses.
But so he then like tells himself all the stories.
And so when we got engaged, we went to this place in northern California and in Verness, and he was acting just and he.
Speaker 2Was just so annoyed.
There wasn't like a cheeseboard.
Speaker 5He asked for a cheeseboard and we got there and I was like, you've never cared this much about a cheeseboard before, and he was freaking out.
This place had a had a wood burning fireplace.
It was massive, and he couldn't start a fire, and he was like, what kind of man doesn't know how to start a fire?
Like he was just so mean to himself trying to figure out how to get this fire going.
Speaker 2It was like, it's embarrassing if I had asked someone to get a.
Speaker 5Fire and then and then it was like thirty minutes later he proposed when we were outside, but like he needed there to be a cheeseboard going in order for it to feel romantic or something.
Speaker 2But the way and then.
Speaker 5Also he like tried to go down on his knee, but we were on as I hate me saying this, it's fine because he's charming, but we're on this wood dock, so we like goes down on his knee and he's like, oh sorry.
Speaker 2This really hurts.
Speaker 5So it's just and it was just the two of us, like there's not a single photo, Like it was just so lovely.
I loved it so much just because it was him and all of his.
Speaker 2Like did you know you were going to marry him?
Yeah?
Speaker 5We talked about it, Like I think it's crazy to not know if you're about to get engaged.
Speaker 2No, I mean how soon.
Speaker 5It is?
Speaker 2You know?
Speaker 1Like what yeah, whatexpected so unexpected that I had to leave.
Speaker 2But how long after you started dating him?
Did you know?
Did you know for sure you we were going to marry?
Like was it quick?
Speaker 4Yeah?
Speaker 2We moved.
Speaker 5Yeah, and I didn't know i'd even want to get married or have kids or anything like that.
Speaker 2But after a year of being together.
Speaker 5I was actually renovating a house when first started dating, and I sort of realized six months in that we'll probably move into this house together and wanted him to be a part of making choices.
So it didn't feel like my space and it felt like our space.
And I think after living with each other very for a very short period of time, it was.
I mean, he's truly the most comfortable person to be around and the greatest support in my life.
And he's so sweet and funny and clever and smart.
It's very funny, and yeah, his goal every day is to make me laugh, which is also annoying when I'm mad at him, but he does it very quickly and early in the morning, and it's really annoying often.
Speaker 2Well, that's really sweet.
Speaker 5Yeah, he's great.
So I knew pretty early and we talked about it.
Speaker 1Well, this is a nice way to end the podcast talking about a nice, healthy relationship and a nice straight man in the world.
Speaker 3He is.
Speaker 2He's a really good person that's.
Speaker 1Good for our listeners to hear about and I'm glad, thank you for sharing that with us.
That's sweet, and I'm happy that you have such a good man.
Speaker 5Yeah, he's a sensitive kind, very like communications everything.
Speaker 2Yeah, well that's very nice to hear.
Speaker 1I was just thinking about Miles Teller and in the movie and Callum callum accent was good.
He did a great American accent.
I was attracted to him.
Speaker 2In that movie.
I was rooting.
Speaker 1I was rooting for Colla.
I was like, this guy's hot.
Speaker 2I don't think I've ever seen him in anything.
Speaker 1I know who he is, but I was like, yeah, okay, Nicole Kid.
Speaker 2I mean, it's funny.
Speaker 1It's nice to have two men in a movie and you'd be the center of attention.
Speaker 3Yeah.
Speaker 5Like, I mean, they really wanted to get John Early to make them like he wanted.
They wanted to make John Early laugh for the whole time.
So really didn't feel like they wanted my attention unless we were doing the scene.
Speaker 2I see.
Speaker 5They truly were just trying to entertain genreally the whole time.
Speaker 2Got it.
Yeah, John, I was really enjoying it.
Speaker 1Well, he's in the movie too, everybody.
It's called Eternity.
It's out in theaters.
Now go to the theater and see a movie.
Speaker 2Go to the movie.
Thank you, Elizabeth Elson having me.
Oh it was such a pleasure.
Yea, so great having you.
Speaker 1I just announced all my tour dates.
It's called the High and Mighty Tour.
Speaker 2I will be touring.
Speaker 1From February through June.
So go get your tickets now.
If you want good seats and you want to come see me perform, I will be on the High and Mighty Tour.
Speaker 2Do you want advice from Chelsea?
Speaker 4Right into Dear Chelsea Podcast at gmail dot com.
Find full video episodes of Dear Chelsea on YouTube by searching at Dear Chelsea Pod.
Dear Chelsea is edited and engineered by Brad Dickert executive producer Catherine law And be sure to check out our merch at Chelseahandler dot com.