meta_pixel
Tapesearch Logo
Log in
Pulling The Thread with Elise Loehnen

Why Do We Expect Life to Be Any Other Way? (Nora McInerny)

Pulling The Thread with Elise Loehnen

Elise Loehnen

Society & Culture, Religion & Spirituality, Self-improvement, Education

4.8900 Ratings

🗓️ 24 August 2023

⏱️ 68 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

“Sometimes it feels like empathy, sympathy, sorrow, grief are scarce resources, because we certainly treat them like that. And if someone is feeling too much for you, they are not feeling enough for me. If somebody is comforting this person at the funeral because they are weeping the loudest, not because they were closest to this person, but because funerals bring up all kinds of feelings about ourselves, our relationships to other people. I was unhinged at a funeral for my mom's friend's husband. I was supposed to be on my second date with Aaron. This man died of brain cancer and I was choking, crying, imagining my own dad dying, not knowing that this same disease is growing in the man I'm about to go on a second date with. Not knowing that in four years I will be at my dad's funeral. And then we're always checking up on each other. Just this is a human thing, right? To check up on each other, to see how other people are doing it, to take your eyes off your own paper to see how you are doing and what kind of attention you're getting or all these things, all these comparisons, they all come down to like, does mine count? Yeah. Does mine count? The thing is they all count and they're all completely different.”  So says Nora McInerny, one of the brightest lights in my life, and a guide to many, many others, thanks to her hit podcast, “Terrible, Thanks for Asking.” Nora is quick to point out one of the deep and painful ironies in her life, which is that she wouldn’t be our guide if she hadn’t really been through it—and lost so much. In the span of a few months, Nora miscarried, her father died from cancer, and her first husband, Aaron, died from glioblastoma when he was 35. Alone with their baby, Nora began the journey back to life, using this new, deeply unwanted reality, as the ground from which to plow a path for the rest of us—a path that’s often sad, sometimes hilarious, and always wise. In the early days of her loss, she founded a Facebook group called “The Hot Young Widows Club” and started a podcast called “Terrible, Thanks for Asking” as a meeting ground for other travelers who also found themselves improbably devastated and lost. She also gave an incredible TED Talk: “We don’t ‘move on’ from grief. We move forward with it.” In the intervening years, she remarried, birthed another child, and written a roster of hilarious and moving books—It’s Okay to Laugh: (Crying is Okay, Too), No Happy Endings, Bad Vibes Only, and more. She also started a company called Feelings & Co., where she attends to all of our messy emotions: Besides the main podcast, she now produces a short, daily show—”It’s Going To Be Okay,” and “The Terrible Reading Club.” Shameless plug, but she featured On Our Best Behavior and interviewed me on her show. Nora is one of my favorite conversation partners because she’s not afraid to go there—and make jokes while doing it. Okay, let’s get to our conversation. MORE FROM NORA MCINERNY Terrible, Thanks for Asking It’s Going To Be Okay The Terrible Reading Club Bad Vibes Only No Happy Endings It’s Okay to Laugh: (Crying is Okay, Too) Feelings & Co. Nora’s Website Follow Nora on Instagram and TikTok Nora’s Substack Nora’s TED Talk To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Hi, it's Elise Lunan, host of Pulling the Thread. I'm thrilled to welcome today's guest, my dear friend

0:06.6

Nora McInerney, host of Terrible Things for Asking, the founder of the Hot Young Widows Club.

0:13.3

She's also the author of many hilarious and moving books.

0:17.7

Hi, friends, throughout this holiday season, you will find me right here per normal. We will keep

0:24.0

publishing new episodes every week and a few solos thrown in as well. So when you just need to

0:31.4

escape from the business of the holiday shuffle or take a break from mom or dad or who knows who,

0:37.2

we'll be here as we always are.

0:39.2

Hi, it's Elise Lunan, host of pulling the thread.

0:53.5

On this show, we pull apart the web in which we all live to

0:56.8

understand who we are and why we're here. Pulling the thread is about big questions, why we do what we do,

1:04.0

how we can understand our own experiences within a larger spiritual and historical context,

1:09.1

the ways in which we might begin to understand ourselves

1:11.6

and each other better, and what's required to heal ourselves in our world. I'll be joined in conversation

1:17.6

by luminaries and wise elders, those who have laid tracks in their work and lives to help us

1:22.6

bring meaning and understanding to a world that often feels chaotic and overwhelming. My hope is that these

1:28.9

conversations spark moments of resonance and plant tiny seeds of awareness so that we might all

1:34.3

collectively learn and grow. Sometimes it feels like empathy, sympathy, sorrow, grief are scarce

1:44.0

resources. Yeah. Because we certainly treat them like that.

1:48.1

And if someone is feeling too much for you, they are not feeling enough for me.

1:51.9

If somebody is comforting this person at the funeral because they are weeping the loudest,

1:56.9

not because they were closest to this person, but because funerals bring up all kinds of feelings

2:00.9

about ourselves, our relationships to other people.

...

Please login to see the full transcript.

Disclaimer: The podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from Elise Loehnen, and are the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Tapesearch.

Generated transcripts are the property of Elise Loehnen and are distributed freely under the Fair Use doctrine. Transcripts generated by Tapesearch are not guaranteed to be accurate.

Copyright © Tapesearch 2025.