Noticing: A Podcast About Nothing & Everything At The Same Time
In this episode, we honor the wild ride of being human. Human beings are emotional creatures, yet we hide our true feelings so often. We discuss how emotion is designed to move through the body. Becky candidly shares the difference between now and then, when she used to habitually ignore a big feeling because she wasn’t aware of it in her body, and how now she is able to recognize her emotions and let them flow as they need to. Christina’s twins have taught her how to flow with the breadth of her humanity, sometimes needing to resort to screaming into pillows in a safe room away from crying babies. We discuss the grief that comes with transitions and how when we open the aperture on what we are willing to feel, everything washes through. Joy is felt, rage is felt, difficulty and lightness. Everything in life is in relationship. You cannot have light without dark. We navigate the difference between big and small ideas, and how we both sense a change in the current of universal flow of life right now. It’s asking each of us to connect with and honor the unique gifts and perspectives we are gifted from somewhere else and to trust that and boldly offer it to this world. Episode Transcript Christina: Yes. This is what it’s all about. I love hearing you describe, like, how it is to be, how it feels to be so fully alive. Because, uh, like, like even in the, in the podcast episode that I just recorded with Pat, he asked some specifics about, like, how to get to a place of noticing and if it was just something I came here with or what, and I was like, “Ah.” Like I’m actually... I don’t know if I’m the person. I would need help trying to figure out, like, how to get somewhere. I’m not someone who can be like, “Here are the three ways you get to learn how to notice,” you know? Ugh, but having things reflected back to me, like, I never noticed the bird song before, or I never noticed that I could, like, decide to have a conversation with someone before. These are what all of our conversations on noticing help me realize is, like, things that I would’ve found so obvious are really not obvious to, to many people. So it’s really helpful. Okay. I’ll tell Ashley you said hi. Bye. Becky: Welcome to Noticing, a podcast about nothing and everything same time. In this week’s episode, we honor the wild ride being human in all of our big emotions, our uncomfortable emotions, how we allow them to flow through us, how we scream them out, shake them out. We also talk about the grief that comes with transitions and how when we can open the aperture on what we’re willing to feel, everything washes through. Joy is felt, rage is felt, difficulty and lightness, because you can’t have light without the dark. So I hope you enjoy Christina: Um, I had a thought. Instead of you having to hold the grounding, do you want me to sing for us? Becky: Ah, yes. I do. Yeah. That’s beautiful. Yeah. Thank you for that Christina: Um, you ready? Okay Be nice Becky: Thank you Christina: It’s nice for me too. Becky: Mm. Yeah. I’m really, inspired by and excited to witness you, the speed at which you’re trusting yourself and just saying, “Thought? Yes.” Like, this just occurred to me, and here it comes. Christina: Mm-hmm. Becky: There’s no delay, and I love it. Christina: It’s, yeah, it’s very freeing because I was, literally as we just got on, I was like, “Huh, this probably makes sense. I’m gonna say it.” Becky: Yeah. Yeah. It just speaks to such a deep trust and an honoring of Whew. My emotions are like right on the surface today, so, uh, who knows where this is gonna go. But it just speaks to such a trust and an honoring of what’s gifted to you. It feels like a different relationship to thoughts and, and emotions and, and inspirations that feels very reverent of like this is a gift that just came to me. Um, and honoring it by letting it, letting it live. Letting it live, letting it come into life Christina: Yeah, I mean, I think these conversations have helped me, um, have helped me just trust things even more deeply. Yeah. I was trusting things pretty deeply already. Becky: Yeah. Christina: And, um, yeah, these conversations in addition to facilitating these, these energy sessions, it’s like I just hear myself more clearly. Yeah. In, in a collaborative way with like whatever wants to come through. It’s like I hear myself- Mm ... and it’s, it’s myself and it’s also not myself. Becky: Yeah. Christina: You know, like a knock. Knock, knock. Becky: Yeah. Christina: Yeah. Becky: I, I think what what strikes me is I recognize how- How many times in my life I have looked at th- the thoughts that come into my mind as a problem to be solved. And even in the world of, um, in the world of mindfulness and healing, you know, it can be like you have these intrusive thoughts or, you know, you have a busy mind, and it’s just such a reframe to look at even the in- intrusive thoughts as a gift, as something to, you know, be looked at. And sure, there might be work to change your relationship with it. Not every single thought is going to be like, um... Yeah, you have to be in a relationship with the thoughts to, to kinda discern where they’re coming from. Mm-hmm. But just that shift from like I’m broken with this busy mind to every thought that comes into your h- to your mind is a gift from something, and how can you work with them? And I recognize a lot of intrusive thoughts do not feel like gifts. So, um, I don’t know. It’s just kind of making me I feel like witnessing you say yes and honor the thought so quickly is making me kind of sit with my relationship to my own thoughts in a different way Christina: Yeah. I mean, I’m coming at this too as, as like a, as a, as someone who’s expresses thoughts creatively as a teacher. Like, my creative impulses have taught me how to listen to the rest of my thoughts more honestly. And so when I think about what you’re saying, I don’t really have intrusive thoughts, so I can’t really speak to that. But yeah, letting things through. It’s like at this point in my life at 40, there are things that I can remember thinking at 20 that I did not allow out. And they’re still around, so, like, clearly they wanna come through. Um, in fact, I was, I was, um, talking with... You know how when you’re in high school and you, you get asked to, like, interview somebody who is doing something that you might want to be doing in your future? Mm-hmm. And it’s a project. I had a, a really good friend of mine, her daughter interviewed me as an artist. She’s thinking maybe she wants to be an artist, and one of the questions that she asked me, was, um, “What advice would you give to someone who maybe wants to become an installation artist of some sort?” And I said, uh, “Don’t be afraid of your biggest ideas. Don’t be afraid of your ideas because the chances are they are in you because they want to come out of you.” ... I was just... It was just a quick answer in these, in this conversation with her, but then her mom, my good friend, came, um, and told me that that was the thing that landed the most for her. And she said, “You know, ‘cause I really do have these big ideas, Mom, and sometimes I wonder, like, are they too big? Are they too-” Mm ... whatever. So what a great thing, what a great permission slip for her to just not be afraid of those things. Yeah. Because that’s what I’m hearing loud and clear right now for myself, is just, like, those thoughts, they are... They’re coming from somewhere. Becky: They are. That, that’s what I believe. You know, where are they coming from? We d- I don’t have to know where, but I know it’s not from me. And as you’re speaking, I’m thinking of these times that we’re living in and the challenges we face. We don’t need small ideas. We need people’s biggest, most audacious ideas. So what a beautiful permission slip to give everyone. If you have a big idea coming through you, can you trust that that’s what the world needs? Christina: Yeah. Um, yes, and by being someone who actively shows that trust all the time, uh, I wanna be that type of person. I wanna be someone who shows people what it looks like to get an idea and trust it. Um- Yeah. It’s, it’s making me think of the fact, you know, we have this little group that we’re a part of that meets in my studio once a month, and we’re all sort of, we’re all thinking, we’re all playing around similar themes in what- we’re here to bring into the world. And the beautiful thing that I have been noticing is that the same, arguably the same big idea, if you think of it like hovering over all of us, will filter through each of us very differently. Becky: Yes. Christina: And that’s the point. Becky: Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, like Ashley, who’s in our group and who’s been on, on this podcast before said we’re all swimming in the same water, and that’s how it feels. But yeah, the way we swim is going to look very different. But you can feel it. You can feel this like we’re all kind of getting at the same thing. And I don’t even know if I could name what that same thing is. It just feels... Yeah, I th- I like the water metaphor ‘cause it does feel like, um... It makes me think of flow, and like we’re kind of all in the same flow, and that flow feels tied to a universal f- flow that I just feel deep in every fiber of my being is what wants to... what this time is all about. And I would never be so bold as to put words to what it is, ‘cause I think it’s a little bit beyond words, but I just feel it. There’s an awakening. There’s a change in the current of the flow of life right now. And, and what I know it’s asking of us, all of us, is for our big ideas, to trust our big ideas, to connect with and honor the very unique gifts and perspectives that we’re gifted from somewhere else, and to trust that and to boldly put it out into this world. Mm. Especially the people who are in bodies that have been on the margins. Christina: Yeah, and as I talk to different people about this exact thing, ‘cause a lot of my conversations revolve kind of around this topic, um, big, the word big doesn’t necessarily mean life-changing ideas. I think sometimes a- acting on something small- ... can feel massive because of how brave it feels, because those things are, those, those things that are the truest. When I think of, like, release your biggest ideas, like, let us know your biggest ideas, those... When I say big, big equals true. Big equals, like, authentic to you, which feels scary because- Scary it’s incredibly vulnerable. Um, so big doesn’t mean, you know, you start the next social media platform or, um, you know- Mm ... Target or The Home Depot or, like, some big thing that exists- ... or something that equals a lot of money. It’s just, like- Say what’s in you Becky: Mm-hmm. What makes you quiver a little bit when you think about doing it? Christina: Yeah. And typically for me, I can sense... You know, I call it a directional feeling, but, like, I can sense when something is true if it makes me feel equally as terrified as it does excited. Becky: Mm, yes. Yeah. Christina: And a lot of times I think the terrified aspect of that feeling is a deterrent for people. Becky: Yeah. It’s because it’s uncomfortable. It’s, y- you know, it’s a very alive feeling, and whether you name it terrified or you name it excited depends on your relationship to the sensations that are running through your body. And how you relate to that depends on your personal history, your orientation within society, so how safe you feel, um, how firmly you are rooted in your own belonging. Like, these are the things that are going to determine whether or not that it feels safe enough to name it excitement and do it anyway, or name it terrified and make you shy away. So that’s why I’m so passionate about resourcing as many people as possible with knowledge and practices so that they have the inner resiliency to tolerate that discomfort and say, “Yeah, this feeling feels big. It feels excited, but it also feels terrified depending on...” Like, they’re waves, right? Mm-hmm. Like, you know, I’m deep in these waves of, um, fear and excitement right now, and what I’m noticing is it’s all down to how I relate to the sensations coming through my body. So one moment I’m sobbing because I’m leaving this place that I love, where I’m comfortable, where I know people, where it’s known. And if I wasn’t able to tolerate those sensations, I would quickly go to, “I’ve made a mistake. I- what am I doing?” You know? And that would, like, f- it feels like a retraction. But because I’m able to tolerate the discomfort of the grief, you know, um, I’m able to ride the wave and let it move through me and let myself sob, and then come out the other side and say, “Okay, back to packing.” You know? Back to doing the thing that feels big for me, ‘cause you’re right. Like, I’m not creating the next Google right now. I’m just moving. But for me, that feels big because it did feel like it did make me quiver for a long time. But it feels like I’m being called to this Christina: Yeah. Do you wanna talk a little bit about how this feels different? ‘Cause you’ve ta- talked to me outside of this, our conversations on here, about how you’re noticing a difference in yourself with this- Mm ... discomfort and this, like, contraction. Feels like a contraction. Becky: Yeah. Christina: Birth contraction- ... and expansion or something. Ooh. Yeah. Becky: That’s actually a... Yeah, it is a birth. I’m birthing a new version of my life, and there are times when there’s contraction, and it’s painful, you know? Um, yeah. So I’ve been reflecting a lot on, on my journey and times in my life when... I’ve kind of identified that there’s been times in my life where I felt the contraction, and I didn’t move forward, so it stopped me from, uh, doing the thing I wanted to do. And the thing that comes to mind is when I left grad school. It got really hard, and I wasn’t able to hold it, and so I ran. I left, you know? And I have no regrets, ‘cause it, it led me to where I am, so I have absolutely no regrets. But I’m just reflecting on, okay, that was a time when I didn’t have the resources to hold the discomfort and the contraction, so I left something that I really wanted, that was a yes for me, that was a calling. And then there were big moments where I did the thing anyway, the scary thing, but I didn’t have the resources to feel the feelings. And what came to mind is, uh, the year after Tarra and I got married, we left New York City. We, bought a travel trailer and traveled around the country for a year, so it was a big thing. But because I didn’t have the tools and resources to actually feel that, the bigness of what we were doing and the fear of it and the, the grief of leaving New York City, I didn’t have the tools to process any of it, so it just got buried. And it, um, it came out in really toxic ways. ‘Cause it always comes out, right? The idea that you can bury your feelings is not true. It al- it’s like water, right? It wants to m- it wants to move through us, and if you try to dam up water, eventually it will find a way. It will come out the sides. It will come over the top, whatever. It will come out in all the ways that are unnatural, and you’ll feel that. And I felt it. There were repercussions for years of bottling up those, those very understandable emotions. Um, and this time- I have the resources, so I’m able to do the hard thing, the yes, you know, the big thing that’s calling me, and feel the feelings. So yes, it feels hard, but I feel So correct. It feels like I’m in flow. It feels like, yes, I’m doing this hard thing. It feels alive. It feels like I’m just following what life is asking of me, and I feel such an inner strength because I know I can handle it. Moment by moment, when I’m laying on the couch watching tennis, and all of a sudden this wave of sadness comes over, I can sob, and I can be witness in my grief, and, um, I can say, “This is natural. Of course I’m feeling this. Of course. This is the most natural thing in the world.” Yeah. And then a few minutes later, it passes, and then I’m back to watching tennis Mm-hmm ... or packing or whatever it is, taking the next step. Um- Yeah. It’s, it’s really clarified for me why I am so passionate about teaching the tools that have got me here. Because the, the inner strength that I feel, the freedom that I feel, the power f- that I feel is, um Yeah, it’s kind of indescribable Christina: So okay, I have, um, I have some thoughts. When, when, so when you say in this road trip that you took that was really tricky, and you might notice something come up and you would not express it, like you would push it down, and then it would come out sideways later, do you mean... Like, what did that look like? Would that look like, for example, you being in a tiny room ... shared a moving trailer with your wife- Yeah ... for a year, um, and feeling like, like did you feel like you just had to pretend? Would you just pretend that things weren’t wrong, and you would maybe make it sort of light when it actually you were feeling really frustrated? Or like how did it look in the moment as opposed to just recognizing feelings as they come up and letting them be expressed and letting them go through? Becky: Hmm. I think it l- it probably looks different for everyone, um, ... This is my hypothesis. If you’re not feeling the feelings that are alive, you don’t feel safe in some way. There’s something in your history, whether that’s your individual history or s- your orientation to society, there is something that makes it feel unsafe to feel those feelings. So when you feel unsafe, you’re acting from a place of survival, right? If ... When you feel safe, you’re relaxed. When you don’t feel safe, your, your body feels like it’s in danger. So you resort to any survival techniques that you learned when you were little. So for me, it’s control. That, that is the coping mechanism that I learned as, as a young person. Um, so it would manifest in me of control. So it was like, um, like I feel out of control because this feels scary. How can I reassert some sort of control? Which the control is always a f- you know, it’s false. It’s like grasping at control, but it’s not real. So it would manifest in, like, trying to ch- keep the trailer really clean, and, like, then turning on Tarra for, um, anything she was doing. So ... Like, trying to control the entire environment around me, which included trying to control my wife that I love, you know? Mm. Um, and that comes from my personal history of, like, you know, the way my biological father was and, you know, things that I, I learned as a youngster. So I don’t know that that is universal. But I would say whatever coping mechanisms you learned as a child, that’s what will come up if you don’t feel safe enough to just let the emotions move through you. Christina: ... I’m, I’m really interested in, in, like, parsing this out. Mm-hmm. So what would it look like to you if you, Becky now- Mm-hmm ... were in that situation? How would you ... How would it look different? Becky: It looks different because I have a deeper connection with my body ‘Cause the emotions come through our bodies, and for most of my life, I felt disconnected from my body. So I wouldn’t even recognize the physiological sensations that happen with emotion. So I wouldn’t even be able to tell you what I was feeling. It was that far pushed down- Oh ... that I couldn’t identify... I, it’s not like I was saying, “Oh, hi, fear. Goodbye, fear.” It wasn’t like that. It was like I didn’t even have an awareness that I was feeling fear, ‘cause I was that disconnected. So now it starts with I’m just in my body more. I’ve learned how to be in my body, and it was a practice, and it was a slow practice over time. Um, and what I really know now is, and what I hope everyone can hear, is that was intelligent. That was an intelligent response of my being to be disassociated from my body. Mm. It was a survival tactic. I don’t... It’s not wrong. I’m not broken. This process of coming back into my body, back into home in my body, it’s not because I was wrong. It’s, it’s an evolution of my journey. Um, yeah. Yeah. And, and also, there were plenty of moments along my journey where I had to get really angry. Christina: Yeah. Uh, Becky: Angry about the things that caused me to disassociate. Both things are true. Christina: Yeah. So, like, if you were stuck in a trailer... I know I keep bringing it back to this exact thing, but you’re really helping- Yeah me understand this. ... if you were back in a trailer with Tarra, and you were feeling frustrated, and instead of disassociating and- Mm-hmm ... reaching for control, what would it look like now? Would you pause, recognize- Yes ... the feeling, take a deep breath, say, “I am feeling this thing. I need to take a walk. Can we stop?” Like, what would, what would your literal steps be instead of shutting it down? Becky: You just named it. It’s- Okay ... it’s noticing, “Whoo, I’m feeling activated.” And activation can feel different in everyone’s body. For me, it’s like my heart’s racing a little bit. I’m feeling uncomfortable. Like, if I’m in a conversation, and I’m just like, “I want it to stop now,” that’s a sign that I’ve learned that I need to pause. I need to pause for a second. I need to take a breath, and a lot of times I do need to step away. I need to, like, step away for a second and have the- allow the emotion to come out fully, because I think sometimes for me, if I’m being witnessed in it, it- there’s a little bit of a, at least at this point in my journey, just a little bit of a censoring. So it’s helpful for me to step away, especially if it’s anger. Anger is really... I think for a lot of people, anger is really hard to fully express because we don’t have examples of what it looks like to safely express anger. - in my personal history, I had a, um, I had an example of expressing anger in a very unhealthy, unsafe way. So that’s in my personal history, but even in our societal culture, there aren’t good examples of what does it look like to express rage, to express anger. So I notice I, I still need a little bit of space. I need to, like, be alone so I can express it in whatever way it needs to come out in that moment and not worry about how this will f- affect someone else. And then I come back, and then it passes. Honestly, it passes so fast. That, that is what has been really profound to recognize, is that they don’t stick around. That’s what we’re so afraid of, is that we’ll get stuck in this feeling forever. And it passes so fast, and then I come back, and it’s like, “Okay, let’s deal with the thing. I’m, I’m, I’m back,” you know? Um, so yeah, you named the process exactly as it is. It starts with actually noticing there’s something. It starts in the body. It always starts in the body. What am I feeling? What’s my heart doing? What, you know, do I feel... What do I feel, you know? And those s- sensations, it could be heat in your hands, it could be, like, just something has changed from moment to moment in my body. I need to pause and suss out what’s happening. Not with my mind, but just, like, be with it, and, like, let it move through Christina: Thank you. Becky: Thank you for asking. Christina: Yeah, that was helpful because I’ve, I’ve heard you talk about this and how the trailer in particular was a, was a tricky time where you would maybe bottle things up more. Um, and I’m thinking about, as a parent with three young kids who ... I think children do an incredible job of letting their feelings through. I don’t think they have, um, awareness of them necessarily at the ages that m- my youngest are, I guess. But, um, I’m thinking, like, one of the things that my kids have taught me is that It is not my job to fix their feelings. Mm-hmm. Um, it is my job to allow them to express them even though it makes me frustrated. So, uh, you know, I have... Like, my twins, the t- my two girls are, like, really, really, really expressive feelers, and still sometimes. It just, it has to come out of them, and I think you were visiting recently and you even asked, like, “What happens if Sunny has a tantrum at six years old or whatever?” Which is totally normal. And, um, I learned a long time ago, ‘cause it was like they came so fast and so often, and were so intense with both girls, that, fixing them actually, like, it felt like a tornado. They were spinning out, and if I tried to fix them, I would just get, like, sucked into it, and then I would spin around with them, and then everyone was out of control, and it felt really bad. And if I just stayed as steady as I possibly could, which was very hard- ... um, I would be like the stone on top of which the tornado could spin. And I use the ima- the metaphor of a stone because that’s not... That’s something that’s so grounded that it can’t be spun up in this thing. And they would... It would be done. Like, 90 seconds. So fast. Yeah. Mm-hmm. But it’s so intense when it’s happening. And then they would just be like, “Can I have a snack?” Like it would- Yeah. It would go, it would go from this incredible, intense thing, and I might say, like, “Wow, this is a big feeling.” And what I would do to calm myself is hum or sing. That helps me, um, in, like, a scary basement or a very scary tantrum. I... It helps me ground, is to sing. And, um, yeah, and then it would be over. And there have even been times afterwards where I would ask them, “Hey, when you’re having a big feeling like that, is there something I can do to help you?” And they would just be like, “I don’t know.” I don’t know. Um, ‘cause it’s not... Like, there’s no path, at least right now, where those don’t exist. Yeah. Like, there’s no possible way that I could try to make a life so that there are no tantrums in my children. Um, and honestly, sometimes what they probably wanted was me to hold them with as much love as possible, but that was not in me at the time. I couldn’t. It was taking all that I could just to not scream, like primal scream, ‘cause I didn’t wanna be there. Becky: - so many things popped up. The two things I do wanna mention that, that tickles me so is how it’s kind of like a perfect example of, uh, how we come at these things from such different places. Yes. Even the fact that you are like, “It’s like 90 seconds.” The research actually indicates that that’s how long it takes- ... the physiological sensations to move through your body and dissipate, is 90 seconds. That’s the average. So I love that you like called out that it’s 90 seconds. It really is. It really is. And the other thing that you mentioned about the humming and the singing, humming activates the vagus nerve- Mm ... which brings on calm. So you’re like intuitively doing these things that other people can, can pick up and practice, you know? So one of the key teachings I tell people when they’re trying to get used to discomfort is set a timer for 90 seconds. You know, do- Yeah ... intentional discomfort training for 90 seconds, and that w- and, and you can start with 10. You know, find something uncomfortable. This is why I love cold water immersion, but it could be whatever you want. Set the timer for 30 seconds and build up to 90 seconds ‘cause if you can train your body to sit in that discomfort for 90 seconds, then when the tantrum comes or the big emotion comes, you’ve done the reps, you’ve done the work so that you can tolerate it. ‘Cause that’s all it is, is like tolerating that discomfort of those 90 seconds so that they can move through, you know? Um, the other thing, uh, the other thing that I wanted to share is, uh, so when I was just there recently, Sunny did have a little tantrum. That’s why I asked. And it was like so sweet. She... Like, I was the only adult outside, so she like looked to me. I’m sure if you were there she would’ve gone to you. But she came over to me and like, to tell me what was happening. She was in tears. And I w- it was uncomfortable for me because I don’t know what to do, right? And I was like, “You know, I’m just gonna rub her back. I’m just... I, I have no words. I don’t know what to say. I’m just gonna s- sit here and rub her back.” And we just sat there. And I did feel like a rock, like a rock just like being with her. Um, and it was... I mean, personally, it was a very sweet moment, but it was also a reminder, ‘cause I could watch her kind of calm down. She still wanted her mom. She still came into you afterwards, but- Yeah ... um, but you could feel the, the actual sensations kind of leaving her body, and it was really cool to witness. Um and what’s also striking me is- we grow up and we learn how to be in relationship with those big feelings that we have as a kid. But what makes us think that the big feelings don’t happen in adults when they happen in children? You know? That just makes no sense to me. It’s like we are conditioned through our life to Turn down those emotions. But I’m interested in a world where we don’t turn down those emotions, because once you start turning down emotions, there’s no dial for rage- Yeah and that’s separate from the dial for joy and aliveness. There is one dial for emotions. You either turn it way up and let it all in, or you turn it way down and you let- you restrict all of them. Yeah. So, like, yeah, let’s all feel... Like, sure, have your tantrum in a safe space by yourself and be your own parent. Don’t take it out on people around you when you’re an adult, but can you find a safe space where you can have a tantrum? If you really need, need to let out rage, can, can you find... They even have rage rooms. Like, is there a rage room in your... Although the research is kind of, eh. Yeah. Do your own discernment on this because sometimes they say it’s practicing, uh, rageful behavior, so I’m not an... I will say this, I’m not an expert on that, but, you know, find a way that you can safely, uh, release those feelings instead of turning the dial down. Christina: Yeah, really. I think this is a misconception actually that, like, that you can choose. Yeah. But you really, you really can’t. I, I mean, as an example, I consider myself a very buoyant and light person, and still, throughout the day, all of these feelings are coming through as they’re coming through. So, like, when my grandmother passed away, when Mimi passed away, it was a very beautiful letting go, but I still had to come in here and lay down and have fits and sobs and full body heaves in order to let that grief out, and then it wasn’t with me. And it comes in waves sometimes too. Um, but even to use the twins as an example, I mean, I got two kids who are so far from me. Life does not come easily to them. .. It comes in fits and storms and really deep, dark depths, and my job is to be with that, which is very hard because I am not that way and I never had to learn how to do that until I had twins at the same time in COVID with a firefighter husband. And it was just like, “Oh, excuse me while I scream into a pillow.” Yeah. So I literally would have to do that sometimes because- Becky: Yeah ... Christina: they would be raging so hard at me, and I couldn’t... It was, like, overflowing. Mm-hmm. And I would say, “I’m- Mom’s just gonna go take a deep breath.” And then they would be like, “You can’t!” And they would race and, like, hit my body, which just made me feel even worse. And so then I would have to close the door of a room and keep it closed while they were shaking it open, and I would have to just, “Ah!” ah, just like scream into this pillow until it was out. And it would work until I filled up with the rage again. But it’s like very much a bucket metaphor. Becky: Mm-hmm. Yeah. Christina: Um, yeah. It was like, man. And now, like when- Mm ... the feeling comes... I mean, I wasn’t really bottling it up then either, but it’s just, it’s this, like you fill up with joy, you release joy through laughter, you fill up with rage, you release it into a pillow or whatever- ... it is that you do. Cold plunging helped too. Yeah. Um, but isn’t it fascinating, even with cold, with cold water, I always tell people if you can get past that 90-second thing. Mm-hmm. Becky: 90 seconds. Christina: Mm-hmm. It’s incredible. Becky: It’s all it takes. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. But if you don’t know that, you think you’re, it’ll last forever. Mm-hmm. It, it’s amazing to me that we, we h- have these bodies, we have these brains, and we’re not given a manual. Christina: Yeah. Becky: You know? But that is the... You know, there’s plenty I rage against the moment that we live in now and the society we live in now, and there’s plenty that I rage against technology and social media and the internet. And still, we’re as close to having a manual for the human body as we ever have been. The information’s out there, you know, to learn how to work with the mechanisms of this shell that we inhabit. It’s out there. You can find that out, and then you can take that information and practice u- practice utilizing it in your life, you know? When you know, now anyone who’s listening knows, that the sensations of emotions, which are just sensations in our nervous system in our body, will only last for 90 seconds. Any person can play with that in their life and set a timer, Why is this not taught in school? Like, why is this not... I mean, we could go to all the whys and that would be a very different podcast, but, but maybe asking the question, if we all start asking that question collectively, why am I not taught this in school? Why are my kids... Your kids are being taught this in school, which gives me hope for the future. Um, or maybe the, the why question isn’t as helpful. Maybe it’s just an acknowledgement of I wasn’t taught this- Yeah ... growing up. It’s not a deficiency. It’s n- it’s just a... We’ve got, you know, 10,000-year-old brains that no one told us how to use Christina: I think people are understanding that, um Yeah. I mean, even, even Daniel Tiger, which is a kids show, and they have songs about all sorts of things, like going to the bathroom and like- ... you know, lots of things. But there is one that’s, um, that’s when you feel... When you feel so mad that you wanna roar, take a deep breath and count to four. And they do it. They literally, like... ‘Cause nobody wants to do it, and even Daniel Tiger is like, “Rawr.” “I’m mad.” And then they, like the whole f- 20-minute episode has this through it, like 12 times, and you just- Mm ... take a deep breath. My, um, my niece, uh, she, uh, does this all the time. My sister has taught her that all the time, and they sing the song, and it’s just, like, really annoying as a parent to have to sing this stupid song so much. But- Yeah ... um, but it really works. Becky: Yeah. Christina: Just take a deep breath, even counting to four. Yeah. Counting. Yeah, so there’s your rage room. Just count to 90. Becky: Yeah. Yeah. See what Christina: happens. Becky: I love that you scream into a pillow. I went to a meditation, a group meditation once in San Francisco, and they handed everyone a scream towel, and that was part of the meditation, was screaming into this towel. It’s incredible. If people have never tried screaming into a towel as loud as you can, it is so cathartic. It’s, it’s, like, really powerful Christina: It really is. And then it also kind of hurts a little bit. It hurts my throat. But I, I don’t know where it came from. No, I w- I didn’t read a book or see a reel or anything. I was just like, “What can I do right now? The only option left is screaming into a pillow.” ‘Cause, like, I didn’t want them to feel like it was them that I was screaming at. Becky: Exactly. Well, that’s what I meant by, like, it, it will come out in toxic ways. It will come out the side. It will... If you are a parent, and don’t take this as no parent guilt h- here. You’re doing the best you can, but it will c- your kids will feel it. It will come out in different ways, and they will pick up on it. Um, so if you think that holding it in is s- like saving anyone, it’s not. You gotta let it out. Christina: No, I tried. And then there was one time where I couldn’t take a deep breath in the room, and I literally screamed at my kid. Mm. Everybody does it. Yeah, yeah. Like, nobody’s perfect. I opened the door and was like, “I said I needed a deep breath.” And I will never forget the face that met me there, and I was just like- Mm ... “Whoop, time to scream into a pillow instead.” Becky: Yep. Christina: Yeah. Gotta do that. Becky: Yeah. Christina: Yeah. Everybody meets their maker. Um, but those, those two beautiful people helped me, um, helped me express the full breadth of my humanity. Still are- Becky: Yeah, yeah ... Christina: helping me do that. Becky: Mm. Christina: And I f- I feel glad that they’ll have an example of somebody who, who talked about anger sometimes. Becky: Yeah. Christina: Who could sing a song, but also be like, “Oh yeah, you see me go out into the ocean so that I can denoodle my brain and not feel angry sometimes.” Becky: Yeah. It’s really powerful Christina: Who knows if it’s gonna work? I don’t know. I’m just doing my best. Becky: Well, that’s the thing, you have no control. Like, you- Mm ... there’s no control what a full time of life right now Christina: But I think when you’re, when you let all of your feelings in, this is my experience anyway, when you awaken to all of them, life is kind of always full. You know? Becky: Yeah. Christina: Yeah, I mean, I guess it’s particularly full for you right now ‘cause you’re literally days away from moving your entire life from one place to another, while also, uh, you know, moving towards a dream of what you offer into this world. That feels, that feels full. And yeah, a- and I think it’ll... I think it just always feels full. I keep waiting for the day that it’s not. And I just don’t think it... I don’t think so. Becky: Yeah. Uh, for me, it’s been a reorienting to what do I mean by full or what do I... It started with flow. Like, what do I mean by this feeling of flow? Mm. And now it’s, it’s also like, what do I mean by full? Like, what is a full life? And I th- I realized that I had all these messages s- you know, swimming in my consciousness around fullness and flow to mean the more comfortable feelings, the euphoric feelings, the- Oh ... you know, the happy feelings. Um, and that’s not life. Life is cyclical. Life has seasons, you know? So now, yeah, it’s full when I’m sobbing. It’s full when I feel excited about the next thing. It feels full when I’m, hugging friends for the last time or, like, you know, living here, whatever. Yeah, it’s all full. And finding fullness in, uh... I think when I started reorienting to full and flow are all the feelings, then I do start feeling full. Like right now I’m noticing the light dancing on your table back there. Christina: Mm-hmm. Becky: It’s like, it’s full. It’s everywhere. It is, it has opened the aperture for what, what I notice and what gives me that feeling of full. Christina: Yeah, but like this light that’s dancing on my table right now could move me to tears- Yeah ... because of flowing with life. Becky: Yeah. Christina: It, it can all rush into you and fill you so fully. That’s my experience of flow, is that you can get completely filled. You can get filled up by something that simple. Becky: Mm-hmm. Yeah. Christina: And you can get filled up with grief, too. Becky: Totally. Christina: It’s the same. Becky: Mm-hmm. When, uh, when... So I was at your house recently obviously, and I was sitting on your porch, and I think it was after our session with Kate, so I was just so exhausted and just sitting there. And one of the kids’ bikes was like laying on its side on the, on the front porch, and I just watched as the sun was hitting it and casting these shadows. And then the sun would go away, and I’d watch the shadows disappear, and then the sun would come out blazing, and it was this profound moment of flow, of really f- witnessing and feeling how we ne- you need the shad- like, it... You, you’re not just noticing light, right? Mm-hmm. You’re noticing the interplay of light and shadow. Because without the shadow, the light loses its meaning. Mm-hmm. You know? It’s the shadow of the bike that makes it interesting, ‘cause when the sun goes away and there’s no shadows, it’s kind of dull. But without the bike there to cast the shadow blocking the light, it’s not as interesting. It’s not as moving. It’s not... Like, every brilliant piece of art, whether it’s photography or, or painting, you need the shadows to contrast the light. Christina: Yeah. Yep. Yeah, it’s all in relationship. Yeah. I think about that a lot. It’s all in relationship. And I think sometimes life can serve us these really potent, uh, moments where you can... where it all gets very amplified. Like birth and death, for example, would be- ... two experiences where that happens, and everyone can catch that magnitude of life happening, right? Um, and I think if you’re open to it, and you are open to allowing That magnitude of life to flow so fully through you in all times, in watching light and dark get cascaded across a bike that’s been left on a front porch. Um, it’s... That is, that is like, to me, that’s such a beautiful way to experience this gift of living because it’s all right in front of you all the time. Mm-hmm. Like my... So my other, my other grandmother passed away last week, so I have now had both of my grandmothers pass in a matter of, like, six months. And, um, and my mom, this was my mom’s mom who just passed away, and she... My mom lived with her the last month and took care of her, and she would talk to me. I would call her, and she’d tell me kind of what was going on. I got the wonderful chance of going to sleep over one night and just be there and be present, and it felt so similar to the first days of a baby coming home with you, where all of these... You’re, you’re noticing all of these tiny things that are happening. And she would say, “We’re just going through these peaks and valleys together, and last night was a real peak, and now I know we’re headed into a valley.” And the way that she spoke of peaks and valleys was just... I mean, she’s so alive, my mom. This is Becky: your mom? Christina: Yeah. Yeah. She’s just so alive. She’s so in touch with what is in front of her, and, and slow time. And, um, yeah, to hear her talk about peaks and valleys, that’s something that’s gonna stick with me because that really is how it all feels. Becky: Yeah. Christina: It all feels like that. And yes, that was a very, like, hot, potent time of life that was amplified. Like, it feels like life was just, like, being projected out of this megaphone, and still that can feel just as, um, full as, like, your bike moment. Becky: Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, it’s like we only have been given permission by society to have those full feelings around the beginning and the end, but what about the full life? Like, what a shame if you only open up that aperture in the beginning of lives and the ends of lives. Christina: Mm. Becky: Then what’s the point of living? Like, you have a whole lifetime in between to- To feel and to To feel That’s, that’s it. That’s, that’s what we’re here for. Whatever you believe happens before or after this life, I can guarantee you’re not gonna have feelings in a body like you do on this planet in this life. And yet that’s what we have... That’s, that’s what we’ve been told to turn down. You wanna look for something that AI cannot take away from you, it’s feeling feelings in your body. Mm-hmm. Yeah. What does it mean to be human? It’s not producing shit. It’s not even really creativity, ‘cause how do you define creativity? It’s feeling in your body. Mm-hmm. No computer, no machine will ever take that away Christina: The music was recorded live as a part of the sound service at 3S Art Space in Portsmouth, New Hampshire in January 2025, where musicians responded to the changing light in the room that reflected and refracted through Christina’s suspended artwork. Andrew Halchak, the composer of this piece, is playing bass clarinet, and Tomas Cruz and Katie Siler are singing Becky: Oh, my dear friend, I have never felt this alive in my entire life. I know that for a fact, and it’s as simple as I was at the coffee shop, and I think it started... I called Spectrum to, like, cancel my internet, and ended up having this lovely conversation with this woman, who lives in Florida, chatting about, moving to Maine. Um, and just being present and, like, recognizing her humanness and having the, like, presence and slowness to be intentional about what kind of conversations do I wanna have, even with, with everyone, you know? I think of, like, your bringing the flower to the delivery drivers, um, and how easy it is to lose that, to lose the humanity, and how grateful I am to have such full access to that right now. And then walking Jasper, it’d be easy for me to shove him in the car and go ‘cause we have plenty of stuff to do, but he really wanted a walk. And then just smelling the fresh cut grass and listening to the birds and having this interaction with this woman who thought Jasper was cute, and, like, slowing down enough to have that conversation, you know. It’s really incredible. It’s really incredible. Yeah. Life is full. I’m grateful. I love you This is a public episode. 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