Episode Transcript
Hi, Hi Catherine.
Speaker 2Oh hello Chelsea.
Speaker 3Fresh off of Canada.
I went to Tafina for the weekend.
It was so beautiful there.
Speaker 2It's so nice, and it didn't look like a man in sight there was.
Speaker 4I didn't see a lot of men there.
It was mostly women.
Speaker 3I went with some girlfriends and we saw some other girlfriends while we were there, and I was so gloomy and rainy, which I love, and on the beach and there was a surfing competition Peak something and I ran around in my rain boots and bathing sued and we just had such a nice time.
And Canada is so peaceful.
Yeah, Canada is very, very peaceful.
I just came from my obgyn and apparently the estrogen pack that I've been taking is empty.
Speaker 1I have no estrogen and I have no testosterone.
Speaker 3Oh great, So there is a reason that my words are not making any sense these days.
I am overwhelmed with stress from my stupid fucking house, and I am not on the right hormones, and I am in menopause.
Speaker 1So I have to get my shit.
Speaker 5Together at least, you know now, so you can get it all regulated.
Yes, yes, But people have been also asking about the implements you use for mental acuity, and well another's ironic considering.
Speaker 3Okay, So I do take NMN pills everybody.
Those are good for your like you know NAD.
I was injecting AD, but my doctor told me not to inject NAD, that there was all these studies that came out that NAD causes cancer or there's like some correlation TONAD and cancer.
So I'm not doing that anymore.
I'm taking the NMN pills.
The peptides I take are tessamorlin.
I take GHK cu copper, and I take turzeppatide, which has a little NAD so it's not an overwhelming amount of NAD.
Speaker 1So that's what I do.
And that's the like GLP one like that's for weight sure weight management.
Really, I know I'm not overweight, but I.
Speaker 3Just take it to take the edge off of food, so I don't go into my hotel room and eat out the mini bar.
And not that I eat out many bars, but I eat out of many.
Speaker 2I like that phrasing.
Speaker 3But something that's really good to take is prodrome neuro That's something I take for a mental acuity.
Speaker 1I take iron every day.
Speaker 3I take vitamin D every day, I take co q ten, which is really important.
And if you're taking any sort of statin, which I also take because I have genetically bad cholesterol.
Speaker 2It's good for heart health.
Speaker 3Yeah it is.
It's good for heart health, and it's good for brain health.
And then I take creatine, which is you can get that anywhere, Like I take that from air one.
I think mine is from my brain juice is it's just called brain juice.
It's because I don't really drink coffee, so I just take a shot of that when I wake up and throughout the day when I need a little pick me up.
And then DHA is important for its protein.
Speaker 2To taking that, Yeah, and it can raise your testosterone level.
Speaker 3Oh ken it okay, good, okay, because I haven't really been taking that.
And for the Gratitude journal, I only use the Gratitude journal in my I know people are asking what I'm using.
Speaker 1Yeah, I use the one in my phone so that it's.
Speaker 5Called what is this called it just as journal?
But you know what, I think this is something you can really just do on your own.
You can put it even in your notes app, you can write it into a into a journal.
I'll find a couple that are highly recommended and put links to them in the description.
But yeah, it's really just about writing out what you're thankful for, what's bringing I heard this recently too, which is what's bringing joy into your life?
Speaker 2What brought joy into your life today?
Speaker 1Doug.
Speaker 3Doug had a handkerchief on when I came home from Tofino, So my belle did that for me special, and he was really ready to get down with it when I got home last night, and I was not ready to get down with it.
I was ready to go to fucking sleep, and I got into bed at seven o'clock.
I took a Xanax and went straight to bed.
So I'm trying to take less xanax, but it doesn't seem.
Speaker 1To be working.
So I don't know.
Speaker 3You can follow my habits or not.
I mean, you're on your own, everybody.
Speaker 2And obviously everybody talked to your doctor before you take any of these.
Speaker 3You know, Yes, I'm not a doctor, everybody, even though I say I am, I'm not.
I just announced all my tour dates.
They just went on sale this week.
It's called a High and Mighty Tour.
I will be starting debuting my new material.
Well I've already started debuting my new material, but in an organized tour form in February of next year.
So 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.
Those are the cities that I'm in.
Pre sale started last week, so tickets are flying.
I haven't added second shows yet, but we probably will be to some of these, 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 Okay.
Our guest today is in two brand new movies.
She's in, well, you know her from every movie she's in, so Ma Things, Stephen King's The Long Walk and Dead of Winter with Emma Thompson.
Speaker 1Please welcome Judy Greer.
Speaker 3I'm wearing my sunglasses because I forgot my regular glasses and.
Speaker 1Their prescription that all day yesterday.
I mean, I were just we're fifty, you're fifty two, yeah, fifty, And I had to do it yesterday and I was like, we're oh no.
It said he was getting a massage.
So I'm like sitting in the massage room in sunglasses.
Like I know.
Speaker 3Sometimes I'm at a restaurant at night and all i have are my prescription sunglasses and I'm just like, I'm such a loser.
Speaker 1But we're just fifty years old, and that's the way our lives are.
Speaker 6Now.
Speaker 3I'm talking to Judy Greer, who has graced us with our presence today because she Hello, hello, Judy, how are.
Speaker 1You taking a zip of some diet coke?
I'm really good.
Good for you, good for you.
Oh I want to do that again.
Speaker 3I just want to go through a list of your credits, just because you're in so many things that I had to say.
So, okay, you've seen her in Jawbreaker, What Women Want, The Wedding Planner adaptation, Just shoot Me, The Village Elizabethtown, My name is Earl, twenty seven Dresses, R thirteen going on, thirty, House Archer, Modern Family, The Big Bank, The Marmaduke, Love and Other Drugs, Arrested Development, and.
Speaker 1It goes on and on and on and on.
She has a total of one hundred.
Speaker 3And fifty TV and movie credits to her name, and now she is here to promote two projects.
One is called The Long Walk, which is a Stephen King movie based on the book, and the other one is called The Dead of Winter.
Speaker 1I watched The Long Walk last night.
You did, Yes, I did.
I'm proud of you.
It was dystopian.
I know that's good.
How would you, first of all, congratulations on your career.
Oh thanks.
I mean you've been in so many things.
I've known you since, I say, from when I just started watching TV.
You were always around.
I mean, I've just known your face forever.
And you're like, I mean you talk, I mean you talk about being kind of a character actor.
But are you a character actor?
I don't know.
Speaker 4What I mean, Yeah, what does that mean anymore?
Speaker 1I don't know.
I don't know.
I don't understand like that, aren't we all character actors are, right, characters like I think that's a funny description.
It just means like you're not the star.
That's all.
That's all I ever.
Whenever someone's like, oh, supporting, oh character, I'm like, okay, sure, I'll take it.
But yes, I've been around for a long time.
We both have been around.
We've been like we we made it.
We did.
I mean we can say that that's true.
Yeah, we're fifty.
We're fifty.
Speaker 4We were alive and we're still working.
Speaker 1We're still alive, We're still working.
I know that's incredible.
I'm still single.
But you got married.
Speaker 2I did it?
Speaker 1Yeah?
Speaker 3Were you dating somebody that I worked with for so?
Were you ever in a show called Girls Behavior?
Speaker 1Yes?
Yes, yes, So.
One of the producers of that show or writers of that show was a man it still is named.
I had so many comments, but I decided not to say any of them.
Dumb comments.
Okay, Nicholas Thomas, and he was one of I can't remember.
Speaker 4If he was a producer.
Yeah, girls Behaving Badly?
Speaker 1Yeah, and he wrote sketches for you has to do, and I remember, I mean nothing against the rest of the cast, but he would come from work and talk about you.
Oh I like that.
Yeah, he always talked about you, and he talked about how great you were and how special you were, and how you were like really different and really special and really funny.
But also like, I don't know, I really hate when people say, like you get it, she gets it.
But he wouldn't have said it back then because now they say it, but like that you kind of were different in a good way and so and so I feel like you've always been on my radar.
Oh, I know we have.
We never met before.
I can't remember because.
Speaker 3I'm fifth, I know, but you know what, neither can I.
I can never remember whether or not have met.
So let's just assume that we have.
Speaker 1Probably I'm sure we did.
I'm sure I interviewed you on one of my talk shows at some point.
Yes, I'm sure of it.
Speaker 3But I like what you say about I mean, I don't know when you said it, but you were talking about character acting, and that's saying that there are no small roles, which is.
Speaker 1Which I came up with that I invented that phrase.
Speaker 3But you did say if you do enough small roles well enough, yeah, that you are going to have a career.
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 1And because the original line is there are no small roles, there are only small actors, which is also, you know, very old saying to ruin everything.
Not at all?
Are you happy?
First of all, let's talk lower to the ground, Yes, a little bit, of course.
I get as low to the ground as you want.
You tell me, how do you describe the Long Walk?
Uh, it's not a comedy.
Sometimes if you don't know what you want, you can try like to figure out what you don't want.
That's what I told my steps on the other day.
I'm like, honey, sometimes if you don't know exactly what you want, you just like figure out what you don't want.
And that's a good way in So it's not a comedy.
The Long Walk is how would I describe it?
I mean, it's I feel like maybe it's a psychological horror movie.
There both a little bit psychologically horror movie, both of them.
Yes they are, yes, and they're and I play really different roles in both of them.
But the Long Walk, I mean, I think it's really beautiful.
Actually, I don't know what your experience was.
I don't know what it's like to watch it at home, because I'm assuming you watched it.
Oh yeah, yeah, Yeah.
I think like you can kind of lose yourself in a theater, and I think it would be a little bit I don't know, maybe it.
Speaker 4Would be on humanity, on friendship.
Speaker 1Yeah.
I mean what I felt like was beautiful about it was the connection that they made these boys and sort of the grace with which they allowed each other to go, and the fear of the future.
And you know, like you could kind of like throw anything on top of that movie and get you know, like whatever you're feeling.
You could probably pull that theme out of it.
Right.
Speaker 3Are you attracted to movies like this because they're both kind of in the same not the same kind of movie, same genre.
Speaker 1Yeah, I think so.
Well, I think I am.
I mean, I'm excited to do like different stuff.
Yeah, and these were both really different for me.
Have you ever been bored as an actor when you were doing something?
I mean you don't have to name the movie or a show, Yes, I don't have to name it.
Speaker 3Yeah, what do you do when you don't feel like revved up for the part.
Speaker 1How do you get yourself up?
How do you get it up?
So to speak.
There's so many pills for that that I think, Well, I think like I always have fun.
I'm really not just saying that, Like, I always have fun at work, and I always enjoy at least one person I'm at work with, Like there's someone on a set that I'm going to connect with that's going to be fun.
Usually there's a lot of people on a set that I like, but sometimes you know, you just have to like pick your person and then I make it fun for that.
If the role's not fun, if the roles hard, if some of the people are hard, if the job is hard, like I can find something to be excited about.
Have you ever walked off a job?
No?
I mean like I think I would drop dead.
I can't even imagine.
I really yes, multiple times.
I once was hosting this show Steven Spielberg had created it.
It was like a.
Speaker 3Reality show, but it was created by Steven Spielberg, and it was about finding the next big like filmmaker or director or something along those lines.
Like it was a cerebral version of a reality show.
And they offered me like they just kept throwing things at me to make me host it.
I'm like, I'm not a host of reality shows, like I'm a talk show host.
It's not the same thing.
I'm taking the piss out of everything.
I'm not here to be.
Speaker 1Like, go Jeremy, tell me how.
Speaker 3Exactly, Like I don't have that Ryan Seacrest kind of vibe.
You know he has that and he does it well.
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 3And then I did it and it was a disaster, Like I mean, it was like I had couldn't read a prompter and be like genuine.
Speaker 1Right, you know what I mean.
I have to like ad lib and I have to be myself.
Speaker 3And then there was these big producers that worked for Spielberg.
And then like two weeks in, I was like I have to stop this.
I go, you guys have to replace me.
I go, this is uncomfortable for all of us.
I'm not good at this.
Speaker 1Yeah.
I don't want to do it.
Speaker 3Yeah, And they're like, you can't say no to Steven Spielberg.
My reps were like you can't, Diada.
I'm like, Steven Spielberg is going to thank me for getting one for me?
Yes, yes, yes, yes, for giving him an out so he doesn't have to fire me.
Yeah, so that, Yeah, I walked away from that job.
But that would have been a humiliation if I had followed through with it.
Speaker 1And did they reshoot everything with you that you'd already shot.
Speaker 3I think they reshot it, or maybe they used some of it.
I think they used some of it.
And then I don't know.
I wasn't really following it closely after our left and.
Speaker 1Nobody knows what it is, so I don't even remember what it's called.
I did ones get fired from something that I felt I was a miscast, Like when I auditioned for like the female lead of the movie and I didn't get it, but then they were like, oh, but we love you and we want you to play this smaller role.
And I was really young and I was starting out, so I was like, oh, my god, of course, and I just knew, like I knew without knowing because I was young, Like now I would know, but I knew without knowing that I was wrong when I got to set, Like the words were really hard for me to memorize, Like the scene was really hard, Like no one was happy on set, like we were all trying to sort of like figure it out, like why isn't this working, and I knew it was me.
And then I got home that night and I got a call from my agent that I was fired.
And I was like I had my ego ten minutes of like, oh, you're right.
But I was like, thank fucking God, because like, you don't want to be bad in something, right, Like no, like it wasn't meant to be.
No, No, it wasn't meant to be.
Yeah, And there's a scene because I shot two scenes that day, like my big big scene and then this like scene where I was just in a limousine with the main character, and and so I'm still in the limousine.
They didn't reshoot that, they didn't cut me out of that, so it just looks like the main character had as a silent friend, like like like if you watch an extra, Yeah, I was an extra.
It was like, it's Tony Kolett.
She's in the limousine, she plays this movie star.
I'm like, I was supposed to be I think like her agent or the movie producer.
I don't even remember.
But now I'm just like one of Tony Kollett's sort of passes.
It's like a part of her coterie.
Yes, right right in the back of the Limusae.
Speaker 3Well, I want to say congrats on turning fifty because I turned fifty this year.
Speaker 1When's your birthday?
Speaker 4July twentieth, okay, July twenty, so you're gonna be fifty one this year.
Speaker 1No, I just turned fifty because you're in September.
Speaker 6Thank you.
Speaker 1Sorry, I keep asking what unth it is.
It's so confusing right now.
It's really hard and it's not your sung lesson.
It's so hard to keep track of time.
I know, time is it just changed during the pandemic, like it'll never be the same.
Speaker 4Did you quit drinking after the pandemic?
Speaker 1I've read that somewhere during well twenty twenty two, So during.
Speaker 3During the pandemic, because I mean, everyone drank too much during the pan and then they quit drinking.
Speaker 1I know, but everyone I know went back to it.
I did not.
Yeah, you know, I did the reverse.
Speaker 3I didn't drink very much in the beginning of the pandemic because I was like, well, that's kindly, I mean I did about things.
Speaker 1Yeah, it's about drink because I was alone.
Speaker 3And then when my family moved in, that's when I started.
That's when I hit the bottle.
Speaker 1Yeah, hard.
Speaker 3Yeah when they started when they worphed with me, But so many people have gotten sober since the pandemic.
Speaker 1Yeah, are you sober or you just like sober?
Really?
Yeah?
Oh wow, I just decided to start saying that actually really yeah, that seems to be going around and I'm not saying I'm saying it.
No, I'm not saying that it's trendy.
I'm just saying that it's fine to be trendy.
Speaker 3A lot of people are sober in LA, and a lot of people are sober from the pandemic.
Speaker 1Some people someone who is I talking to someone I was talking to owns a pizza Rea pizza place in LA and said that, like so much of the business was drinks in a pizza place, and now that nobody's drinking, it's like restaurants are kind of getting fucked because they made so much of their money.
Like, yeah, heard this before when you charge like fifteen twenty dollars for a cocktail, but it's like fifteen dollars for a pizza.
But is it just La or is it all over?
I don't go places anymore.
I don't know.
I don't know, but I mean, there is a definite younger generation that are not drinking.
Yeah, they're they're just like not drinking.
Speaker 3Yeah, yeah, they don't drink, so that that's definitely having an impact too, maybe because our generation were heavy drinkers and then everyone is getting sober at a certain age.
Speaker 1That's my experience.
Speaker 3In my experience, I'm not sober though, yeah, and I have no intention of becoming, so don't do it.
Speaker 1So nobody wants you sober.
That's right.
Thank you for saying that.
Speaker 4Thank you for saying that so I didn't have to.
Speaker 3I want to talk about you being a stepmom because I feel like that's the clutch role.
It's like, if you're got a real character, if you're going to be yeah, seriously, if you're going to be in a relationship with children, it's great to be once removed.
Speaker 1I had a therapist at the time when I met them, who was She told me, oh, it's so hard, it's so hard.
And I was like, okay, well easy, just like yeah, she said she just because you have all the responsibility and none of the authority.
And I was like yeah, and I don't feel that now my kids are old, but like when they were young, you are like you're like a babysitter extra sometimes like I can't make them do shit.
But but there was a lot of conversations at night in bed where I'm like, you need to do this, you know, because I didn't really want to be the bad guy.
It's not fair to make me the bad guy.
Your husband that he tries to do so, like I had to force him to be the bad guy sometimes.
Speaker 3And what was your situation when you guys were gonna you guys met and then you did you got married, and we didn't live together.
Speaker 1We had two houses and we we should keep y.
Speaker 4I mean everyone should have two houses.
Speaker 1It was so great, but now we just have the one we lived.
I mean we rent out.
So we had his house which was in Thousand Oaks in my house, which was instill Is in Hollywood, and so we kind of went back and forth or there were nights where I just like stayed at my house.
That was so great.
But also I traveled so much for work that I am already gone a lot, you know what I mean, Like I wasn't like moving in and like, okay, everyone like family time.
Like I was in and out so much that I think it would have been shitty if I was like, these are the new rules people, and I'm gonna go for two months.
So we would have his kids every other week, and so we would stay at his house and Thousand Oaks the week we had the kids, and then we would go to my house most of the time when we didn't.
But in the very beginning, when we were just dating, I would be like excited for our weekend without the kids, and he would be like, not because of anything with the kids, just like it's a new relationship.
So then he I would say like, what are we going to do this weekend and he'd be like, oh, Lucas has a baseball game, and I'm like yeah, but it's not your weekend.
He's like yeah, but I'm still his dad.
And so I realized like, oh man, I'm like dating the good dad.
Like I'm not even dating right, I've like chosen a really like genuinely good persons, which is sexy until you have them.
You're like, I want to get it, you know, I want to make but he's a really good father.
Speaker 4And then you meet them and they're not your kids, and you're like.
Speaker 1Who WHOA, this isn't how I imagine You're like so hungover at the soccer field, like eating McDonald's out of the bag and then throwing up in that just kidding.
I never barbed, of course, not at the game, but yeah, it was crazy.
Like then the weekends we didn't have the kids, we were like, we're still in We're still going to those games, but we are definitely in dark sunglasses and definitely like whoa here we are.
Yeah, but it was It was good.
It taught me a lot about relationships and obviously parenting, and and his kids are so great.
They still are so great.
It influenced my decision to not have one of my own.
It did influence.
Yeah, I was I was never like I've got to have a baby.
I need a baby, like this life is a baby.
But I was always like, well, like I mean, isn't that why you do?
Don't you get married and have a baby.
I'm like, really pretty basic.
And so when I met him and his kids were great and everything was going really well, and I was working a lot, and it was like shit, my guy in a cologist was like, what's the plan?
Dude, Like you're not you know.
So then I thought a lot about it, like for two years, and then I was talking to this girlfriend on the phone and she said, I was like, Oh, I have to decide.
I really need to figure this out.
I need to freeze my eggs or whatever.
And she was like, dude, you don't want a baby.
And I was like, how do you know?
You barely know me?
Speaker 6She did.
Speaker 1She was like, women who want their babies get their babies.
Man, Yeah, exactly, they just do.
She's like, you're married, you love him, you're crazy about him, you'd have two babies right now if you wanted a baby.
Exactly.
She's like, you don't want a baby.
Speaker 3And it's so funny that, no matter how not present, that thought is at the foot of your mind.
We always have it in the back of our minds because of like society and because a lot something that we're basically arguing with just a rule that was made, you know, someone.
Speaker 1Else made it for other people that aren't us.
It was hard for me to reprogram my brain into that.
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 3I was reading some stuff about you and your mom and that you have all these kind of weird things in common, right, Like your mom was shot in the chest and you have a scar where she was shot.
Speaker 1Whose mom has been shot in the chest, Well, she is from Ohio.
What happened?
Maybe a lot of people's moms and no, no, it was a big old accident.
But isn't it so well?
Yeah, and she survived and she's survived bit when she was eleven and her brother was like, that's a terrible thing.
Is it's funny?
And that then you have the scar on your chest.
Speaker 6I knew.
Speaker 1I showed her once and she was so freaked out.
She wasn't like, oh my god, she was like, oh, but is it like a birthmark or did you have a little It's like she was shot like right next to her heart.
You know, there's always this story like if it would have been won D a millimeter closer anyway, YadA, YadA.
But mine is like a tiny, little little tiny just like hers, like little bump, like a little round bump like the bullet went in.
I have this same.
Do you believe in anything related to that like that?
That's yes, I do, But I don't know what I believe, but I believe it's special.
Yeah, but I don't really have like a well it's because of this or like can I lay my stones out on the table like I'm not that, But I do think like I have to and I want to choose to believe that there's something bigger than us and that maybe it is special.
I mean, it doesn't mean that she and I like don't fight a lot.
Like we got in an argument this morning on the phone because she's annoying because she needs help and she want to ask for it.
And I wouldn't say this because she doesn't really know how to listen to a podcast, I don't think.
So that's too bad.
Speaker 3This is an advice podcast.
We're about to take callers, and she could have called in.
Speaker 1Yeah.
So part of the fun thing about getting older is that your parents are also getting older and they also require things from us too.
So so we were talking about that.
Is she in Ohio still?
Yeah, she's in Ohio.
There was like, she's from Ohio.
She and my dad got married, they had me.
This all happened in Michigan, and then when they retired, they moved back to Ohio and they live in this small town called Carry, Ohio Go Blue Demons.
And most of her family's still there.
So I have like loads of cousins and second cousins and aunts and uncles, well not as many and uncles anymore, but they're all still there, and so it sucks that she's so far away, that my parents are both so far away, But it's great because there's family there.
Yeah, and you're an only child?
Yeah yeah, yeah, So how did you like that experience?
I mean, it's fucking awesome.
Compared to growing up with a bunch of brothers.
All I saw was my friends getting the shit beat out of them all the time, and I was like how.
But now at this age, I'm like, oh, it would be nice to have some siblings.
Yeah.
Speaker 6Yeah.
Speaker 3What's the the rap on only children is that they're supposed to be spoiled?
Speaker 1Is that it spoiled?
Or odd?
Speaker 6Right?
Speaker 1Yeah?
Speaker 4I think like odd.
Speaker 3I had a girlfriend when I grew up, Heather, and she was an only child, and I loved going to her house because it was like peaceful, was so organized, her parents were so like like straight, Yeah, yeah, my house was just a fucking hot mess of children and people running in and out, food on the table, humanity, yeah, humanity, like dirty underwear in the living room, just gross, you know.
And I remember going to our house and I think her mom was actually a librarian, and it felt like that and I just would be like God, so and then yeah, and then you know, a couple more times I went over and I'm like, this is kind of boring, but it wasn't a reflection of her.
It was just reflection of the orderliness and that I kind of exist better in chaos.
Speaker 1Yeah, I enjoyed going to the chaotic houses.
I was like totally freaked out by them, couldn't wait to go home, but like also kind of like sought it out.
I was like, wow, like you you just punched a person, like a human in the face, and you guys are like that.
Mom said, I don't I'm not.
I don't want to speak for every only child, but like I'm terrible at fighting.
I'm really bad at conflict because I didn't have to have I never had that conflict.
And then you just like have to sit around the table and laugh afterward.
Like I like, a fight means a fight and it needs to be dealt with and talked about and you have to go to therapy about it and like all the things, Like it's a big deal to me.
I think that's wrong and I think it shouldn't be that way.
But that I think is something maybe that is an only childie thing.
Speaker 4You think what you the way that you handle conflict is wrong.
Speaker 1Yeah, I think it's okay to fight.
I think we have to be allowed to, like, you know, get in fights and then get over it, yeah, and kind of recover, right and recover and move on and still like have love in your heart for that person.
Speaker 3So do you remember the moment that you decided that you wanted to marry your husband?
Speaker 1It was pretty early on, but I don't remember, like exactly the move at first sight.
Do you believe in that?
No?
I believe in lust at first sight or like a strong chemistry.
But the older I get, I feel like I feel chemistry with all kinds of different people.
And just because I feel chemistry with someone doesn't mean that we have to be lovers, be friends and one extra minute together.
Speaker 3Like, well, that's another thing that we've been fed, like this idea of chemistry, lust, love at first sight, like everything's some sort of romantic fairy tale.
Yeah, And it's not like that at all.
And it also doesn't give you a nuanced view of the world.
Whereas you can have a soulmate that's your sister or your friend in the same sense that.
Speaker 1A soulmate can be a lover or your mother or like.
Speaker 3It doesn't everything is so always seems so wrapped up and like set all me, Like yeah, I mean everything is an ends, like it means to an end to get to have yeah, to sex and love to.
Speaker 1Get that yeah, or like acceptance or something yeah yeah yeah.
Yeah.
So tell me about when you met your husband.
Well, I was gonna say it wasn't and he says the same exact thing, by the way, He's like, no, it wasn't love at first sight.
I was happy he was tall because I wanted to wear high heels on our first date and I did.
Was a blind date.
Yeah, it was like super blind for me, Like I opened the front door.
Speaker 3Your mother also met your father on a blind day.
Yeah, that's another thing.
That a party with that.
Yeah, okay, I got it.
Speaker 1I was like, well, I don't know, it works, it could work out.
And he and I were talking on the phone, so like I knew kind of who he was, and then he felt bad because he's like, well, I know what you look like, and you don't know what I look like.
Do you want me to send you a picture?
Because I didn't have like Facebook or any of that bullshit.
And I was like Noah, it's weird.
I don't if what if I look at a picture of him and like the get grossed up?
Yeah, I'd rather be grossed out right to his face when I opened the front door.
I'd rather open the front door and have like my very non poker face be like, oh you're down there right or whatever like yeah.
So I said, no, no, it's fine.
I liked him so much.
He was so nice and so funny and also like kind of dark and like enough dark and enough weird that like he's not boring, but also like nice.
And he drove a Prius, which to me felt like, oh, he cares about the environment, and I liked that too, And so we went on many fun dates and did lots of fun things.
But it was probably about a month in when I was like, oh, I love you, and I kept saying I have very strong feelings for you.
I have very strong feelings for you too.
And then this is a crazy thing.
I had drinks and told him I loved him when I'd been drinking, Like that's never happened before to anyone in the history of love.
So I was the first person to get drunk and say I love you first, and then he also was drunk, which was weird, weird, and he said it two people, especially drunk together is weird.
I know, like two drunk people anyway.
So then the next morning, when we were no longer drunk, I was like, I did mean what I said and he was like me too.
It was cute and we did.
We really did.
Like it was fast, and then even two months after that, so now we're dating for like three or four months.
We went on a vacation to Italy together and my girlfriend Janet was like, you better get a manicure and I'm like, shut up, really and she's like, get a manicure.
I'm like, so I get a manicure, and like every day we're in a romantic, beautiful place in Florence and I'm like and then it was like the last day and we're sitting on this bridge over the river, drinking like out of the bottle of Italian red wine, and I'm just like, you're not gonna ask me to marry you?
Speaker 5Are you?
Speaker 1And he was like, no, what are you talking about.
It's been four months.
I'm a father that would just be irresponsible.
Yeah, totally, Oh my god, what wasn't me?
It was Jenne.
It was Janet's fault.
He's like, have you been thinking that every time there's been like a moment, And I'm.
Speaker 3Like, yes, I wonder what guys think about when they think about that pressure.
Like I was in my worka last summer and I saw outside of my window on the beach this couple and this guy proposing to her right, and it was and they had they were prepared because there were photographers and stuff, and she He's down on his knee on this like little rock, you know, little rock thing.
Speaker 1What are the jetty?
Speaker 3And then he got up and I was about to do this interview for something, and I said, I wonder what a man feels like after he proposes and they say yes.
He's like yeah, Like I wonder what they're because women are so we're so wrapped up, yeah, with regard to a proposal and our own thoughts and feelings that were never ever thinking about what a man feels like or what the pressure that he must be under.
Yeah, he must be fucking freaking out or some men are hopefully wondering if you're going to say yes or if you're going to say no.
And then when I got on the phone with this reporter who was interviewing me, I told him, and he goes, what do you think a man thinks about?
Speaker 1I go, I've never thought what men are thinking about?
Like that really never occurred to me to think about what men are thinking about.
I have too much going on, you know, it's really busy up here.
Yeah, the same way when you were telling this story, I was like, A, we supposed to be thinking about what men think about I don't think so.
Speaker 3They're certainly not thinking about what we were we're doing.
I mean, some of them, are not all of them.
Speaker 1Some, I mean, there are some very good men out there, and if you're a straight man listening, you're one of those people, because our audience not for straight men.
But I'm glad that you found a good husband, and I'm glad that you've like I like the idea of a stepmother for the reasons we've already explained and for many reasons, various reasons I've spoken about on this show.
But the other thing that I love is having an influence, like a positive influence on a younger person.
Yeah, is a very rewarding feeling.
Speaker 3Yeah, do you feel that way, Like, do you feel like you've imprinted upon them some I.
Speaker 1Mean they tell me I have in like really lovely birthday cards and Christmas cards and Mother's Day cards.
Yeah, they definitely do.
And I feel that and I even like see it sometimes in little things here and there, Like I don't know, I'm really into tiny little dishes, and I see them around, like buy them obsessively for my stepdaughter, and I'll see them like around her apartment and like, I don't know, I'm not gonna like take credit for everything I want to, but but like I think it's in there.
Yeah, yeah, I don't know.
But like they also like their mom is great, their grandmother is fucking awesome.
Like they're they're surrounded by some really great people.
And has your husband ever said thank you yeah for for yes all yeah yeah all the time, he's like, you made me such a better parent.
Speaker 3Oh that's like those are the kinds of things I love to hear about it.
Speaker 1I also made him a better dog parent because he never walked his dog.
I should just like wal dog.
Well someone I can't, yo, is it different?
I mean I mean a dog door.
I'm like, are you, like, what's wrong with you?
That's like I don't know.
Yeah, That's what I like, is a big open door policy.
You go in and if you hear the coyotes shattering about, well I always get dogs that are bigger than the coyotes and just hope for the best.
You know what I mean.
We're going to take a break.
We're going to take a break with Judy Greer and we'll be right back.
And we're back with Judy.
Speaker 2We're back.
Speaker 1Are you ready to get down to business?
Like I've always fantasized about this, is it's a fan It is.
Yes, it's a true thing, and it's quite rewarding actually, And that's really like I don't own the domain Dear Judy Greer.
I'm not saying that they don't.
Were you a Dear Abby fan?
Yeah?
I loved Dear Abby.
Speaker 2I loved it.
Speaker 3And also that was only written, you know, like that was in the newspaper, so there wasn't any way to expound because you were I was always like waiting for I wanted more information.
I wanted more back and forth and dialogue.
So when we started this podcast, it was kind of in the jest and then it really actually became a serious thing.
Yeah, so now here we are giving bad advice to people all across the world.
Speaker 5Our first question comes from Erica.
She says, help, I'm accidentally dating a Trump supporter.
Speaker 2What dear Chelsea.
Speaker 5I'm a Canadian living in Los Angeles, and I'm in the music industry.
I'm fiercely feminist and, like Chelsea, have strong values and an even stronger relationship with the truth.
Needless to say, it has been difficult living in America the last few years, and especially the last few months.
I've been single for a long long time, a mix of prioritizing my career and dating and not finding the right or any eligible man.
All of that changed recently when I started dating someone and there was a lot of promise.
We have a great connection, and he was checking all of my boxes and everything was heading in the right direction.
And then on Friday we were on a date and the conversation somehow turned to politics.
He told me that he voted for Trump last year.
I was blindsided.
There had been zero indication of this.
I had a visceral reaction, but tried to engage in dialogue.
I asked him why.
He said he did it for economic and business reasons.
When I asked him if he was in favor of equal rights, pro choice, etc.
His response was an impassioned of course.
We talked about immigration, women's rights, etc.
And he said maybe he would feel differently if he was quote affected by those things.
I asked him if he regretted his vote, and his response was no.
To make matters even worse, He's Latino.
I told him that this was difficult to digest for me because my value so strongly opposed those of the current administration and the Republican Party, which I widely regard to be a cult.
I'm struggling to wrap my head around this.
Well, I'm glad this came up before we got more serious.
Speaker 2And strong feelings invested.
Speaker 5Good connections with men are few and far between, and there was something there.
I'm struggling to reconcile the person I was getting to know with the person who would vote for Trump.
So what would Chelsea do?
Is this a walking red flag?
And should I run as far as I can?
Or is there a way to move through this without abandoning my beliefs?
Speaker 3Erica, I mean, honestly, I would hate to say you can't date somebody that's for Donald Trump, because I just feel like that is just so narrow minded, but right now in the world that we're living in, it's just so ugly, this discourse, this everything that's happening is so unsettling, and it's making life less pleasant, actively making life less pleasant.
And I don't know, I don't know how you get around something like that when it's just such a value.
Speaker 1But like, what is the end game?
Is it?
Like marriage?
Kids?
Like we were talking about before, It sounds like it, Because if that's what someone's really looking for, then like you have to really like put yourself, like cut to ten years from now and you've got like two kids at home, and like, how are you going to raise your kids together?
Like how are you black values are you going to instill in them?
And that would worry me.
Speaker 3It's one thing to have an open dialogue with somebody who disagrees with you vehemently and as opposed to you when it's how divisive things have become.
It's one thing to remain open to having a conversation with them.
It's a whole other thing to be in a sexual relationship that is leading to hopefully a more serious relationship and possibly marriaging kids down the road.
Then you kind of have to be like, well, wait a second.
Speaker 1But what are your core values?
Right?
What are like your actual like deep core values?
And like is he on help podcasts?
Being like, oh my god, I'm so into this girl and then I found out she's a screaming liberal, And but like, isn't this stuff on people's social media?
Speaker 2Why isn't this the first question you asked?
Speaker 3That's another thing.
I mean, well not the first question.
Did you vote for Trump?
Is not a great open air.
Speaker 1But I think we're all learning something here about the questions.
That's that's true.
Speaker 3You should have You should at some point before things have gotten to the point they are, had to political conversation.
So that's also, you know, kind of like something to think about moving forward.
But yes, if you're looking for kids and family and a marriage, it's probably not this guy.
Speaker 1There are those.
There's a really famous political couple.
What's the guy's name?
He was on like ksetright, and like, I know who you're talking.
He's on my husband's show.
They're a different version of Republican and demo.
They're conservatives and liberal, they're not Trump and everything else.
And I think there's a difference.
I think like having like liberal versus conservative values.
I think that there's like a lot more conversation there, but like for me, it would be really hard to allow a person.
Speaker 3And your reaction is your reaction.
Your reaction is that you felt like someone punched you in the gut like that.
There you go, there's your reactions.
Speaker 1But if you're asking a question about it, then you're just like maybe looking for someone to tell you it's okay because you know that it's not for you.
Speaker 2Yeah, maybe yep, let's move on, okay, Erica.
Speaker 1I'm sorry, just like you need to move on.
Eric Yeah.
Speaker 3Sucks, but there's so many you know what, there are millions of people in this world, and you will find another one that is that shares the same values.
Speaker 2Millions of people right here in Los Angeles.
Speaker 6Yeah.
Speaker 1Yeah, it's hard to date here.
Speaker 3I know it is hard to date in Los Angeles, but it's okay.
It's hard to date and it's hard to date period for a lot of people.
Speaker 1I mean, it was very like courageous of him to be honest with her.
Speaker 5Maybe the thing for me is like, oh, I just didn't think about how it would affect other people.
Speaker 2That to me is kind of a deal breaker.
Speaker 4And it doesn't affect me, would you do it me?
Speaker 1Then turning back roe v.
Speaker 3Wade doesn't affect me because I'm fucking fifty.
It affects you were about Yeah that I you know, like I care about what happens to other women.
Speaker 1But that's even like a bigger conversation because that is even like about the whole idea of women's healthcare.
So like Roe v.
Wade, like, abortion is one issue and the big huge umbrella of women's health care that they like can start to fucking chip away at.
And that's why it is so scary.
I think it's not just about like taking away our right to an abortion.
If you look at the statistics, I know, a plan parented, it's like less than five percent of what they do is that.
But it's going to start to chip away at all the other healthcare that's provided for women who need it.
And that's when it's really scary.
And that's why it is small minded.
Yeah, small minded.
Speaker 3You're not thinking about all the other things that they're along with with that we.
Speaker 1Could, yeah, we could continue, but I'm sorry, you have your yes, I don't want to talk.
You do what you need to do.
But that's what we think yeah.
Speaker 6Well.
Speaker 2Our next question comes from Charlotte.
Speaker 1Is this a caller?
Speaker 2This is a caller?
Speaker 1Do you know how to use headphones?
I watched a YouTube video?
Speaker 5Great, she says, Dear Chelsea, I could use some honest advice.
I'm feeling like a bad wife, but I'm finding it incredibly hard to be a strong and supportive partner in my current situation.
Speaker 6Strong.
Speaker 5My wife and I have been together for eight years, married for six, and we have a one year old daughter.
Speaker 2She lost her job last year and has.
Speaker 5Been actively searching and applying for any and all jobs, connecting with friends and family to see if they have any connections.
Speaker 2Recruiters are anyone in our network.
Speaker 5I've even gotten her some interviews, but for one reason or another, nothing has worked out.
Speaker 2She's always been the breadwinner in our.
Speaker 5Relationship, proudly so, and she used to cover most of our expenses, vacations, nice dinners, all of it.
Now that she's not making money, her confidence has clearly taken a toll, and I can see her losing motivation.
I've tried to love on her and lift her up, but I'm feeling frustrated and burnt out.
This isn't the first time she's lost her job or been laid off.
This is the fourth time in our relationship with large gaps of unemployment.
I'm thirty one, and I want to live.
Right now, we're living paycheck to paycheck on my income, and while I can almost cover us, I don't want this to be our new normal.
I love her deeply and don't want to leave, but I also feel like I can't keep living like this.
I've even considered moving out temporarily to give us both some space, but that also costs money, and I don't want to take her daughter away from her.
Some other good info to have.
She takes care of her art her full time, except on Mondays and Wednesdays, when I pay for daycare to give her time to job hunt.
We have a twenty one year age gap, and we aren't getting any younger, and I'm dying to have another kid.
I can't even think about that until she's working again.
Please help me, ladies, What do I do?
Speaker 2Charlotte?
Speaker 1Hi, Charlotte, Hi Charlotte.
This is our special guest, Judy Greer say hello.
Speaker 6Hi, Oh yeah, this is so exciting.
Speaker 1Your question is breaking?
Well, why's the question?
Why has she been She's been fired four times.
Yeah, what's going on there?
Speaker 6I'm not going to say fired and say like laid off.
There has been circumstance.
There's been maybe one time she's actually been fired for ridiculous reasons.
I honest feel like I don't know.
She's you know, she's at the C suite.
She's been a CEO, she's went a VP, she's been like the head of everything that she's ever done.
So I she's honestly one of the smartest women I know.
She has a master's, two bachelor's degrees.
She's very, very smart.
So I'm not understanding now here.
We're at a year where she doesn't have a job.
Why, like, why why can't she get a job?
Speaker 1Did she get laid off from her last job or fired?
Speaker 4It was a mutual agreement, Okay, mutual understanding.
Speaker 1Is there a lawsuit involved?
Speaker 6No, they signed something basically she got laid off after mattorney leave.
Speaker 2Oh okay, yeah.
Speaker 6So they basically signed something where it's like, all right, I will leave as long as you pay for maternity leave for three months, like pay for my attorney leave and then I'll leave.
Speaker 3Oh it sounds like she might be depressed.
Yeah, do you think that that's what's happening.
Speaker 6Definitely trying every single thing.
So how can I even like be like, all right, I'm going to leave, like I can't do this anymore when she's trying.
Speaker 3Yeah, yeah, but she's trying, and which in which ways is she trying?
Speaker 6She is constantly, constantly interviewing.
She's trying to do this like furniture business now or maybe she can like refurbish furniture to make some money on the side, and like she's trying to make that happen.
It's not exactly happening.
She's been thinking about buying a business.
She's like looked at businesses and possibly thinking, Okay, maybe it's this something that I can do.
Like she's trying every outlet.
Speaker 1And you're losing your patience, Yeah, I am.
Is it her attitude that is bringing you?
Like, is she she's so she's actively seeking employment and a job and a career path, But is what is bumming you out the fact that she hasn't attained one yet or that coupled with her outlook on life, like.
Speaker 6It sounds so terrible, but it's so she hasn't found a job, Like I'm just I feel like I'm sitting here and waiting for my life to start again.
Speaker 1I mean, I don't know what it's like to have you have a one year old.
Yeah, I get that you don't want to leave her, and I would never tell someone to leave their spouse, but I think you have to start your own life.
Like what, like, what do you want?
So the main thing you want to do is have another kid?
Speaker 6I mean not yeah, I want to have another kid, but I also like want to like travel, and like I'm creating this little girl's childhood and I want to do things with her.
I want to take around vacation, I want to show her the world right and we just can't do those things right now.
And it's like now I need to figure out, like how do I get in a better headspace of it is what it is until something happens.
Speaker 3Well, it's not it is what it is.
I don't know that you're ready to call it quits on your relationship.
Speaker 1I don't.
Speaker 4I'm not getting that vibe.
I'm getting the vibe that you're very frustrated and you have every right to be.
Speaker 1Like she hasn't figured out a job yet, she hasn't gotten hired.
Speaker 4That's also not her fault necessarily, Like.
Speaker 1I don't know, that's not like she's trying really.
Speaker 3I mean, it's not like she's sitting on her sofa for a year and just like I don't feel like going on interviews, like right, that's the impression I got from letter and now speaking with you, it looks like she's really actively trying to figure something out.
I do think you have to kind of figure out a different approach to this situation, how you're dealing it and possibly how she's dealing with it, you know, to give a little bit more grace to the period she's in.
She clearly wants a job and she just doesn't have one.
So it's like you're kind of with somebody for the good and the bad.
You know, if this were a three year thing, it would be different.
I understand to years a long time, But.
Speaker 1Again, you have a small child, she's actively looking for work, and you're young, and you're rare in a go and you're ready to go.
She's kind of a bit older than you, right, Yeah, she's twenty years older than me.
Right, that's a pretty big age difference.
Speaker 3Do you feel like that's going to be an issue for you in the future, Like, has that been an issue for you thus far?
Speaker 6No.
All of my friends are much older than me.
All the people have ever dated have always been older.
That's just how Li've connected with Is.
Speaker 1There a world where like you could get a better job, Like, I don't know what you do, but like, can you?
Is there a world where your career, like you could like both focus on you career and you maybe advancing and in that way and kind of like taking over more of the breadwinner role so that she I have thought.
Speaker 6About that and I have.
I do absolutely love my job so much right now, and there is a really poor growth and I have grown a lot in my company.
But like for me, it would be like a side gig, so I would be taking up the time that I would be able to send my daughter.
I'd be making money.
And then if I'm making out this money, I don't have to be supporting somebody That's just not who I am.
Like one of the reasons I like older people is because they have their shit together and they can help me, support me and help me grow.
Speaker 3I'm thinking just right off the top of my head, and I don't know how useful this is, but I just feel like there's got to be a better way for you to.
Speaker 4Support your partner during this time.
Speaker 3She's not lying around, she's not a drug addict, she's not a drunk, she's not doing any of those things right, right, right, And you share a child, Like, I think you should really try to feel like instead of looking at it in this way.
Speaker 4You have every right to be frustrated.
Speaker 3Yeah, but you still want to be supportive and you want to be a supportive partner because if the situations or the roles were reversed, you wouldn't want somebody just going, oh, you haven't gotten a job in a year.
I know we have a family together, I know we'd like and I'm leaving, Like, that's just not the way it works.
Speaker 1You have to have a little bit more room for things not to work out in the perfect way you want in the moment that you want when you're dealing.
Speaker 4With another person.
That's just the way it is.
Speaker 3So I would say that you a figure out a way and even sit down with her and go how can we how can I help you?
Like, how can I be more supportive of you?
Because I'm starting to get frustrated and all I want to do is, you know, help you get back on your feet.
So what are the tools in which we can do this and possibly even going to like couples counseling to figure out a way forward.
And I know that sounds like, oh, that's just more money, but these are really good tools to have because it's not always.
Speaker 4Going to be easy in your marriage or your relationship.
Speaker 1Do you like but like, let me ask you this, do you want to be married to her?
Speaker 6Yeah?
Speaker 1You really really do?
Speaker 6Yeah?
I love her.
She's like the best wife and even a better mom.
And I think about that too, and I'm like, all right, if I were to leave when she got back on her feet, like I want to be with her again, right, But think.
Speaker 1About what you're saying.
Speaker 3You're just saying like you're just saying you don't want to be with someone while they're failing.
Speaker 1Yeah, you want to, like you have to want to be with her like for better and on the ups.
Speaker 6Like okay, but I've been in this position four times with her.
Speaker 1That's the issue over what span of time?
Speaker 6Eight years?
Speaker 1So, Like, you cannot control other people, You cannot change other people.
You can only control yourself.
You can only control yourself.
Like it has to start with you.
So if you want more money, and you want a bigger lifestyle, and you want to travel, you have to shift the focus onto yourself.
If you make a good living, if you have a great job, you will be able to take time off and you'll be able to go on the trips with your daughter.
Your daughter will benefit from having one parent at home all the time, which you thought was going to be you made, it's going to be her now.
Like I think that, like, you can't change this other person no matter what, Like you marry somebody, you're like, I don't know what the future has in store for this person, but like I'm hitching my wagon too you And I think like you have to kind of start working on yourself and you have to be like, start to get really honest about what do you like, how to get how can you yourself get the things that you want out of life?
Speaker 5And to Judy's point earlier, it's not necessarily about getting a side hustle.
It's like maybe talking to your boss right now about a raise, you know, taking steps within your own career to advance your career.
And I'll also say, like she could get a new job tomorrow.
Sometimes you're going to be pulling the cart.
Sometimes she's going to be pulling the cart.
You guys are doing this together, and I don't think it's between like, well, I really want to be with her and I'm leaving.
There are other options in other ways too, and I think, like couples counseling has to be next for sure.
Speaker 1I mean, if she was sick and she had to quit her job because she was very sick, you probably wouldn't feel this way, you know what I mean.
Like the circum stances are that you I think you just like want a little bit more right now, Yeah, you want a little bit more.
Speaker 3And you're also like I think you have to really adjust your thinking and and how you do this is really just kind of You can do it with a therapist.
Speaker 1You can do it by.
Speaker 3Like journaling and writing, and you can do it by actually having an open conversation with her about your true feelings.
Speaker 1Have you done that?
Speaker 6We've had some conversations.
Yes.
I feel like a lot of the times I feel bad telling her that I'm feeling this way because she's feeling it tenfold, right, and so it just feels.
Speaker 1Like really piling kind of sure, Yeah, like you.
Speaker 6Think you're feeling bad like I am this fifty year old woman that cannot get a job, like I think you know, I can't provide to my family like I normally do.
Like what do you think I'm feeling?
So it just feels like unfair to have those feelings.
Speaker 3Yeah, I think this is a you problem.
And now the more we talk about it, I really do.
I think you have to adjust.
I mean, listen, there might be a she might have her own set of problems, but I think you really have to adjust your expectations and what a relationship really means because it's supposed to be fifty to fifty and.
Speaker 1You even said she was the breadwinner for many years.
Speaker 3I understand she's been let go four times or laid off four times or fired somewhere in the middle of that, which is slightly odd.
But you already said you love her, you want to be with her, you know what I mean.
You're together, So you really have to figure out this is like a you inside job.
You have to figure out how you're going to be more supportive towards her without talking to her about it.
Speaker 1And how can you get the life that you want?
And do you both want the same life?
You have the same long term goals together, then you need to kind of figure out like, okay, with these circumstances right now, exactly as it is, like how do we start to achieve those goals now that we have these new facts.
Maybe you might have to like move to a less expensive place, Maybe you might have to get a different job, Maybe you might have to go in and ask for a raise or something.
But I think maybe you need to take care of all three of you right now.
Speaker 6Yeah, I think I'm thinking back what you said, Chelsea is it's just like how do I change my mindset and how do I be more supportive when I'm so frustrated.
Speaker 3Well, first of all, you should start journaling.
And I don't mean journaling like writing everything down.
You just get a girl, get one of those like inner presence in or now there's all these inner ones that start with intern.
Speaker 1Journal every day.
Speaker 3It's a gratitude where you wake up every morning and write down like three things that you're grateful for.
I think it sounds corny, but if you put it into like action, you'll actually start to have a better Like you're going to be vibrating out a higher frequency and you want to be vibrating at a higher frequency because she's vibrating at such a lower frequency.
Right, right now, she's just in a rut.
She's in a place that's not permanent.
None of this is permanent.
Even your feelings right in this moment aren't permanent.
It's all temporary, and you have the power to adjust it.
So you've got to be the bigger person.
You know Mel Robbins, Right, Okay, you know Mel.
Mel's book, she talks about her husband was the breadwinner for many, many years.
They were in debt, hundreds of thousands of dollars in debt.
She was eight hundre so she was so depressed you couldn't get out of bed.
Speaker 1And then she created.
Look what she's done with herself.
Speaker 3She was upset with him and resentful of him because he wasn't earning the money.
Like yeah, wait a minute, and she's like, wait, wait, why don't I fucking get up and do something?
And she did something amazing.
But first, I understand what you're saying about your attitude and like that you want to adjust it because I could see it, and you do need to adjust it.
You need to be more loving, you need to be more compassionate.
And you also have to own it, like this is on you.
Speaker 1You know what I mean?
Speaker 3You have to change the station.
You can't expect her to change the dial if you change the station.
The best way to change people is by changing yourself.
Right, That's an expression that's also old and corny, but fucking true.
So like I would, really, I would download one of these apps.
This isn't going to solve all your problems, but it's taking a step in the right direction of positivity.
Like you want to have a more positive vibe.
You don't want to dread having conversations with her.
You want to be bright and cheerful and lift other people up, right, especially her and your daughter, And you want to just create a different vibe house and that chemistry alone by you doing that and taking those actions.
Speaker 4Then you write down like three ways you're going to make today great?
Speaker 3And what's something that could happen today that would change your day and make your day great.
Those are the questions and prompts that they ask you on these apps, and just by nature the nature of repeating those things and those sentiments you do kind of it kind of booies you and you start to understand and there starts to be more opportunity around you that you weren't seeing before, because sometimes we can get so narrow and like sunken and like victim like that we don't really see everything.
Speaker 1There's also like a shit ton of cool stuff you can do for cheap.
You can drive away for the weekend, you know what I mean, Like you can go camping for really cheap.
Like I know you want to travel and show your daughter of the world, but there's still a lot of stuff you can do on a budget right now that will teach your daughter to be creative, to like go with the flow.
Also, I think maybe I don't know how often you talk about your wife's jobs and like what she's doing for it.
Maybe you both need to say, like one day a week, we're going to talk about your job hunt unless there's real news.
Let's not talk about it every day.
Let's talk about it on Saturday mornings over coffee, and then it doesn't become like every single day this topic that is like hanging over you because you've decided unless there's really something to share, one day a week is the hour.
Speaker 6That we don't want to talk about it anymore unless all really happening.
We don't.
Speaker 1Yeah, I mean is that how's that?
Is that better?
Maybe it's better to talk about it now that you're saying that.
Speaker 6I'm thinking now that like I need to be more like yay, like you have an interview, Like let's go instead of like all right.
Speaker 1Or do you guys share a calendar?
You could share a calendar and then she could like kind of write on ac calend, like you could see what's going on.
It would be a way to like share it without necessarily like having to say, like how did the interview go?
I remember when I first started acting.
I started by telling my parents every time I had an audition, and then every time I didn't get it, I had to then go and tell my parents I didn't get the part, and it fucking sucked.
But like now I think, like, you know, they were so sweet, they cared so much, but I just ended up like cutting them out of that whole process completely because it was too hard for me.
But I think, you know, in your situation, like maybe if there's like a board where she could write down I don't know.
I think you guys should both start this.
I think you should do this as a couple.
Speaker 3The journaling thing I think you should do it together as an activity.
Speaker 1You bring it up.
Speaker 3Go, hey, listen, we want to get like we're not in the right vibe right now, like I want things to be better around here.
I want to help you get a job.
I want to be as supportive as possible.
I called into dear Chelsea, this is what we Let's do this together.
Well, you do it at night before you go to bed, and you do it in the morning when you wake up, and then you guys can do that.
You have something like an activity that's kind of bonding together, and that way, when she has a job interview coming up, she can be putting positive energy towards that.
And also you can be, like, what would make today great?
The answer is my partner having a great interview, a great job interview today, my partner getting a job today, all of those things, but like in a very supportive way, you know what I mean, like an adaptive strategy rather than like a malady of one.
Speaker 1She might also benefit from you asking her to help you try to get ahead in your career, Like maybe it would make her feel good to start to like help you try to get a raise, get a promotion, get a like climb the ladder, maybe get a different job at a different company, and what you're doing that you like so much, it's like a little bit maybe she would feel really good about helping you do that.
I don't know.
Speaker 6I don't know about that book.
Speaker 3Well, she's fifty, she's not one hundred.
She's going to get another job, you know what I mean.
So just don't write her off.
But I do think start with the small steps of just creating a better vibe in the house, because however you're feeling is something that you're emoting without knowing it, you know what I mean.
If you're having negative feelings about her situation and about her not bringing in money, I'm sure she's well aware of it.
Speaker 1So just to change the channel.
Speaker 3And go, Okay, we're going to put on a nice fun show for a little you know, for the next few weeks, and we're all And then it's also another line of communication between the two of you to kind of share that experience of journaling, like, oh, this is really corny.
I don't know what to say.
What am I grateful for your daughter?
What are you grateful for your job?
The house, the roof over your head, whatever, you know.
The food that you ate that morning.
Speaker 1You can be grateful for a good TV show.
Speaker 3Just trust me to start doing that and just take little steps in the right direction.
Instead of thinking I'm not getting what I want, think about how you're going to get what you want.
Speaker 6Yeah, you can do that, That's easy.
Speaker 3Okay, check in check in with us in a few months, will you and let us know what's happening.
Speaker 2Thanks Charlotte.
Speaker 1Okay, thanks Charlotte.
Speaker 6Yeah.
Speaker 1Thanks.
Speaker 6By.
Speaker 3It's so interesting with couples not getting what like you want, but also knowing that you want to stay.
You know what I mean, like saying, Okay, this is nice.
When she said that exactly, it was like she really did.
Speaker 1And it's very easy, like like for someone who just like wants Chelsea Handler to tell them to walk away from their marriage.
Like you could tell that you were the one who was about to do that, Judy, you were.
You were because I honestly feeling like she was trying to get us to say to go.
I didn't feel that way.
I totally felt that way from her.
I felt like she just wanted permission to go.
And if that's the case, like I just feel like people just.
Speaker 5Go leaving this marriage will be just as hard as waiting out the joblessness, I feel like in this beefic situations.
Speaker 1But they also have a one year old.
Speaker 2Yeah, that's not way.
Speaker 1Hard, right, I mean, and leave that that's like a big That sounds like she would be taking that child with her because she said, I don't want to take her daughter away from her, right right.
That's so she has thought about it because she has a scenario.
Speaker 3Yeah, but I think when you're very married to this idea of what your life is going to look like, it becomes like very like.
Speaker 1In Goodfellas when he comes home from jail and he like walks into the apartment that she's been living in and they're all like in bunk beds in one room, and he's like what the fuck?
And she was just like, hey, you.
Speaker 3Don't remember that now, and she's like, hey, things have been He's like here we are.
Speaker 1And he's like what.
But like she didn't she like signed up for like fancy mob husband.
She made it work, right, and then she got rewarded for it, except for then they want to jail.
Okay, we're going to take a break.
Speaker 3We'll be right back to wrap up with Judy and we're back with Judy career.
Judy, what a pleasure it's been.
You're so entertaining.
It's been really fun.
I feel like I failed a little on the advice portion.
Speaker 1Very cerebral.
Afraid you're afraid.
I'm afraid of like telling people what to do, even though that's all I want to do with my life.
But I'm like, oh, but yeah.
Speaker 2You felt the fear and you did it anyway.
Speaker 1A real therapist, a real therapist, or a real psycho like psychologist doesn't doesn't.
A real psycho doesn't really tell you what to do.
They know, and that's why we're there for years.
Yeah, because like what if they are, like, break up with him?
Speaker 3Yeah, yeah, I would have loved for people to tell me that throughout the years, with different relationships, even like in a couple of skis I had once once a therapist, as I was leaving with my boyfriend, grabbed my arm and said get away from him as quickly as possible, and I broke up with him the next morning.
Speaker 2WHOA.
Speaker 1I was like, thank you, one more good night out of it.
I was like I had to get my things together.
We were living together.
I was like, oh shit, But I was a stranger told me that if a stranger grabbed my arm and said that someone who has no you know, has nothing at stake in the game and said that to me, I would be an idiot to not listen to her like she knows better, you know.
That's how she and she did.
She was right.
So on that.
Speaker 3Note, Judy has two movies that you can watch, well, she has about a five thousand movies that you can watch, but two new movies.
Speaker 4One is The Long Walk and then the next one.
Speaker 1Is called Dead of Winter.
Speaker 2Sorry.
Speaker 1Emma Thompson, Oh yeah, I love her.
Speaker 3Oh my god, she's I once went to a Bruce Springsteen concert with her in London, not with her.
Speaker 1But we was gonna same area.
Speaker 7Wait, she needs to be She's podcast.
She's amazing.
She's amazing.
She's like Kate Blanchette level.
Like those two.
Oh my god, I love both of those.
I'm just thinking of other British actresses that I love.
But why people, Why because there's just them?
Yeah, there's probably loads, but I mean she is.
Speaker 6Yeah.
Speaker 4Did you did you have a good time with her?
Speaker 1Yeah?
Yeah, she's so cool.
She is so cool, smart, she doesn't mince words, she's kind, to people.
Yes, forty nine.
I learned so much from her.
I felt like I grew up just being around her for two months.
What did you what do you think you learned from her?
Well, she's nice.
She's kind to people, but she has a lot of integrity, and she treats people the way that she would want to be treated.
But like, she's not afraid of being disliked.
She is patient until it's time to not be patient, and she's not a dormat.
I guess it's because so much of like my psyche is like wrapped up and like I want to be liked, you know, like that people pleasing yes, yes, yes, And like I watched how she managed people and relationships on set and it was really it was inspirational because she was kind to people without being desperate to be liked.
Yeah.
So I believe her, Yeah, I like really believed her in a way that sometimes when you're like you don't necessarily believe the person that's like so nice all the day.
Speaker 4Yeah, I agree with that, And about Emma.
Speaker 1That's our episode, guys, Dear Chelsea, we believe.
Speaker 8The word of the week is coterie.
Now a small group of people with shared interests or tastes, especially one that is exclusive of other people.
Coterie also a brand of highly absorbent diaper Coterie.
Speaker 3I just announced all my chur dates.
They just went on sale this week.
It's called the High and Mighty Tour.
I will be starting in February of next year, so I will be touring.
Speaker 1From February through June.
Speaker 3I haven't added second shows yet, but we probably will be to some of these.
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 toour.
Speaker 2Do you want advice from Chelsea?
Speaker 5Right into Dear Chelsea Podcast at gmail dot com.
Find full video episodes of Dear Chelsea on YouTube by searching at.
Speaker 2Dear Chelsea Pod.
Speaker 5Dear Chelsea is edited and engineered by Brad Dickert executive producer Catherine law And be sure to check out our merch at Chelseahandler dot com