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Lucy Hale Opens Up For The First Time About Eating Disorders, Relationships & Addiction | E224

February 23, 202301:30:43
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you have to go to a dark place sometimes
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to like get to that point
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who
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[Music]
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we are so excited to have Lucy Hale
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she's been in the spotlight since she
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was just a kid stars on the hit show
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Pretty Little Liars and now I'm a movie
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star not what you were expecting you
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might be the first real deep
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conversation I've had it's dark
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disgusting and scary I wish I could go
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back and tell my 16 year old self buckle
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up girl we're gonna go through some
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foreign
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[Applause]
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assumption that it'll fix a bunch of
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stuff what didn't it fix I struggled
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with the eating disorder because society
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makes it really freaking hard to like
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the way you look I hated myself so much
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that I couldn't even give it basic needs
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like food I did not feel worthy of the
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success or the career or the people in
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my life and then the coping mechanisms
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were like incredibly self-destructive
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I've been working on getting sober since
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I was 20. I just like held on to that
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belief that real Lucy came out when she
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was drinking I tried to change for my
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mom I tried to change for my career one
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of my best friends died of alcoholism
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and that still didn't make me want to
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get sober none of that Works alcohol
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isn't the problem the problem is this
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feeling inside of me I have to try it a
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different way was there a Darkest Day
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[Music]
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I just want to start this episode with a
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message of thanks a thank you to
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everybody that Tunes in to listen to
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this podcast by doing so you've enabled
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me to live out my dream but also for
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many members of our team to live out
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their dreams too it's one of the
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greatest privileges I could never have
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dreamed of or imagined in my life to get
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to do this to get to learn from these
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people to get to have these
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conversations to get to interrogate them
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from a very selfish perspective trying
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to solve problems I have in my life so I
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feel like I owe you a huge thank you for
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being here and for listening to these
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episodes and for making this platform
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what it is can I ask you a favor I can't
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tell you how much you can change the
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course of this podcast the the course of
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the guests were able to invite to the
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show and to the course of everything
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that we do here just by doing one simple
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thing and that simple thing is hitting
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that subscribe button helps this channel
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more than I could ever explain the
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guests on this platform are incredible
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because so many of you have hit that
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button and I know when we think about
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what we want to do together over the
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next year on this show a lot of it is
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going to be fueled by the amount of you
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that are subscribed in that tune into
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this show every week so thank you let's
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keep doing this and I can't wait to see
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what this year brings for this show for
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us as a community and for this platform
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[Music]
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I tend to start these podcasts in a very
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similar way and I think in your case
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it's never been more pertinent to start
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in that way which is
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to understand your context I've got to
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be honest I I read a lot about you
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online but I couldn't really get to the
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very Crux of like who you are and why
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you are that way and it was really
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really surprising to me because it
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almost appeared that you hadn't done a
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proper
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slightly deeper interview before no I
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think it's so interesting you word it
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that way because I actually didn't know
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who I was until very recently and I
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think that's because and yes you might
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be the first
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um
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real deep conversation I've had publicly
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and that's part of the reason why I
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wanted to do this because I'll start off
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with saying I just think you're so
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amazing you're obviously very
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intelligent but like you lead with your
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heart and I was like oh I feel like this
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would be a good match for us to kind of
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talk but
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yeah I I think because
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I I moved to LA when I was 15 and
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started working pretty young that my
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identity became
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what I did for a living and my
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accomplishments and my successes or
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failures within my career space so it
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took me a long time to figure out
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who I was or who I wanted to be like to
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people would ask me what kind of person
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are you and I actually couldn't answer
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it I had no idea and through a series of
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um
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I guess we'll call it speed bumps just
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we all have our own personal journey I
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have
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I'm slowly like peeling away that onion
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of
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of who I am and it turns out like that
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person's always been here I just
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forgot she was there or like kind of put
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her in the basement if you will but
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um
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but yeah it's been an interest it's been
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a really powerful
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last year for me
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um
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I will give you a heads up I cry all the
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time so just I'm I'm getting you ready I
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also have big eyes and they get really
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glassy but I I get emotional when I
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speak about these things because
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I just love
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where I've landed in my life and it's
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been a really
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um
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Jesus I didn't know I'd get like
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emotional this early on
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um it's just been a really
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powerful and painful insightful joyous
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horrible journey and I um
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love that I can sit across from you now
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and be my most authentic self so that's
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a long way of saying I'm glad to be here
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and it's not is it it makes you
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emotional because you're happy where you
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are now
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I I mean I I've always kind of felt like
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an open wound if if that makes sense
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like even as a kid I just felt like I
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felt things in a really deep way
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um you could call that maybe
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codependency or
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um taking on problems that weren't mine
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but now I get emotional because
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of the perspective and just
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having pride and in the choices I've
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made and
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um and it's not it's not an emotional
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tears in a sad way it's more just Joy
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whereas I've been happy at different
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points in my life but I hadn't ever
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experienced joy and to me the difference
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in happiness and being joyous joyous is
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long-term and sustainable and it doesn't
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come from anything external
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comes from here and
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um
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and I had always heard people say that
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that like true happiness comes from
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yourself and I was like I don't what
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what are you doing like okay shut up
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like I don't know what you're talking
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about but but it really does and it's
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been
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um
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a slow grind
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so let's start from the beginning then
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um your context before the age of
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10 years old growing up in Memphis bring
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me into that world like what do I what
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do I need to know about that that
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chapter in your life to understand
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the journey and the direction that
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Journey took
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um yeah so from Memphis
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uh families all still in Tennessee I
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have an older sister who I adore and
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admire so so much
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um I
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mainly lived with my mom growing up my
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dad's still in the picture but they were
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divorced really young
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and I was just what was I like as a
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child I was
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I think as long as I can remember I've
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always felt kind of like
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and I don't mean this in a sad way like
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in a victim way I've always felt like I
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was on the outside looking in like I
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never had a lot of friends I never felt
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the need to
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make friends or be social like after
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school I wouldn't
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want to go to a friend's house I would I
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would rush to get home to go be alone
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with myself so I've kind of always
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craved this feeling of needing Solitude
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because that's when I could sort of
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be myself and I felt that as early as
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you know 10 years old
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but um
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I guess my love of entertaining
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uh came from
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my mom was married to this man who heard
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me singing in my room when I was
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probably like six or seven
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I loved Aladdin I loved Disney movies
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and I I vividly remember like pretending
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to be Jasmine on the Magic Carpet and I
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would just sing with my little tapes and
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and he told my mom like Lucy's got a
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good voice
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and up until that point I had never you
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know I was too young to even know what
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being a singer meant but
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that led to taking singing lessons which
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led to performing around Memphis and
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mind you I hated performing live like I
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felt for someone who's an introvert
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and someone who loves Solitude being on
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stage and I'm sure we'll talk about this
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later like I ended up doing music as an
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adult and I still had that same feeling
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I just felt so exposed and it was really
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scary and I ran a little anxious
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um
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but anyway so I I grew up performing in
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that way and then I found out what it
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meant to be an actor this is probably
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around age 13 or 14. and we found this
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small agent who
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was like Lucy should audition for this
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show that Disney's doing called Hannah
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Montana this was years before they cast
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Miley Cyrus and it was then it was that
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moment in that audition where I was
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thinking oh I can act and sing at the
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same time like this is my dream this is
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my way out you know and um way out
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I'll get yeah I'll
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you're so smart yes so I I now as an
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adult I'll Circle back around to it
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um because you know how I said it was
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hard for me to say what kind of person
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am I
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it was also hard for me up until
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recently to to know why I wanted to be
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an actor I didn't know why until
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recently and I'll Circle back around to
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it but um
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so it was this Hannah Montana audition
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which led to
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knowing what a pilot season was and
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pilot season for anyone listening is
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when they don't really have a pilot
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season anymore because of streaming and
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and everything but it's when a network
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pays money for one episode to see if
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they want to invest in doing a series
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you know what a pilot season is but um I
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talked to my mom into moving out to
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California and when I mean taught I
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didn't talk her into it I think it was
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perfect timing for her
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and for me
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and we packed up our Prius and all of
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our stuff which wasn't a lot I come from
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a very simple upbringing
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and my mom was a travel nurse she cashed
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in her retirement
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for us to move out here and I always ask
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her now I'm like how did you
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how did you do that like that's kind of
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insane
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and she and I'm sure she has her
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personal reasons too but
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she was like I kind of just had this
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feeling it was gonna work out for you
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that also makes me cry and I also think
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it's really funny because if it hadn't
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worked out I'd be screwed because I
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didn't graduate high school I
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wouldn't know where I belonged like
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I think my lucky stars that it did work
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out because
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um
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life would would look a lot different
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I'm sure
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um and then so we moved to LA planning
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to stay for three months at 15 and I
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never left and I've been here almost 20
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years
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and now I guess it's a good segue into
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what I meant by a way out
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and I guess what I mean by that is
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I never felt
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I knew that life
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there was not I didn't feel like home I
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never knew where I fit in
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um I felt I love my family so much but I
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always felt like the black sheep of the
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family I just felt different even as a
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little kid
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and um
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and it's no wonder that I got into
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acting because that was I was always in
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my imagination like my coping mechanism
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was like Dreamland in my head and like
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fantasizing about what my future would
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look like well if you believe in the
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power of manifestation my future looked
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like this
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like little lucy kind of created this
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this whole life for myself and I just
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knew I wanted
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something different you know you use the
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word coping mechanism yes I'm really I'm
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really compelled by that okay because I
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sat with Maisie Williams
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um that
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was another reason why I really wanted
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to do this because I thought that
00:13:05
episode in particular was so powerful
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really moving
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um
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yeah that yeah I I've got chills then
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just thinking about it because
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and as you were speaking there was a lot
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of like through lines and similarities
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as to what you were saying like Maisie
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really kind of lost her identity in
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because she was a very young actress and
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she became but also she was
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in her own words using acting as a way
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to escape which is almost what I heard
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from from you there yes I didn't realize
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it I realized now that my job completely
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was and has been at times a huge
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Band-Aid for a lot of issues in my life
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because I have like very addictive
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Tendencies and a very addictive
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personality and work like a lot of
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people can be such an amazing
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distraction and we get away with it
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because you're productive you make money
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people like you it's not like a negative
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addictive behavior but
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it's so easy to not heal or not focus on
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what's going on when you're constantly
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busy and that's why after an experience
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like Pretty Little Liars why everything
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kind of just like you know
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because for we did that show for we did
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170 something episodes I was like eight
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years of my life in between 20 and 28
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years old
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I I don't feel like I emotionally
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developed in I don't know what normal is
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but I feel like I missed out on
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some normal experiences and
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so it wasn't until that period of my
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life afterwards where I realized
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how I was contributing to my own
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suffering and I didn't even realize the
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magnitude of it until I was outside of
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something like that show
00:14:56
in hindsight when you look back on your
00:14:58
younger years you talked about your
00:15:00
parents separating how what impact did
00:15:03
that have on you in hindsight any of you
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you know I often think about this
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because
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I think it was 100 the best decision for
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everyone and I
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um you know you hear about so many
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people staying together for the kids oh
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my [ __ ] no if my I'm so glad that my
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parents separated because it was the
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best thing for everyone
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and why
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um it wasn't a happy marriage I don't
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think
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you know and I I wanna
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respect both of my parents and not
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speak up really on that but but I do
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think that
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it may have been a little toxic at times
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and you know I was four my sister was
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six and it uh it allowed for a little
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more peace and calmness and and both of
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my parents are now remarried to
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wonderful people and and it all worked
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out but I think
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um
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I was
00:16:04
raised by a single mom for a lot of my
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childhood she was
00:16:09
remarried for a little bit but my my dad
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is now back in my life and he's given me
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so many lessons I mean I think that
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anything that's traumatic or painful
00:16:23
like I sort of just use that as
00:16:25
ammunition to move forward I'm like what
00:16:27
is this trying to teach me what has this
00:16:29
given me because we can look at any
00:16:30
experience and say and play victim
00:16:34
and you can I think it's okay to be the
00:16:36
victim when you're younger like your
00:16:38
teenager your 20s you it's kind of okay
00:16:41
to do that and part of life but I think
00:16:44
at some point you have to take ownership
00:16:45
of your life
00:16:47
that's why I feel like so many people
00:16:49
are miserable because it's you're in
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victim mode
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I don't ever want to be a victim of my
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life or my circumstances ever
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I want to be the happiest I can be and
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learn the most I can possibly learn
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about myself and sometimes that means
00:17:15
you have to go to a dark place sometimes
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to like get to that point
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whoo
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um
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[Music]
00:17:31
thank you I'm a crybaby
00:17:35
yeah that's fine
00:17:37
I don't even remember
00:17:39
thanks
00:17:41
these remind me of like McDonald's
00:17:42
napkins which makes me happy I love
00:17:45
McDonald's
00:17:47
um
00:17:48
expensive building they said we've run
00:17:49
up I love it I love it um I don't even
00:17:51
know what I was saying but sometimes you
00:17:53
have to go to a dark place
00:17:56
what was I saying before sometimes I go
00:17:58
in a trance and I just talk and only
00:17:59
remember what I was talking about
00:18:01
um oh just talking about my parents
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divorce yeah I think it's so easy to
00:18:05
look at these experiences and
00:18:08
feel sorry for yourself but life is so
00:18:11
much more interesting and freeing and
00:18:13
liberating when you look at something
00:18:16
when you look at things that have
00:18:17
happened to you when you're a child and
00:18:19
say what beautiful lesson did I get out
00:18:22
of that and if we're just taking
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my parents divorce as an example
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the biggest lesson I learned from that
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is what kind of love do I want in my
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life what am I going to stand for or not
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stand for and
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and something I always stand by in my
00:18:40
life is like I'm not settling I'm not
00:18:43
settling and that can mean that just
00:18:45
means people got to meet me where I'm at
00:18:47
I've worked too hard to feel how I feel
00:18:50
today
00:18:51
for a jobs experiences people
00:18:53
relationships lovers friends whatever it
00:18:55
is like
00:18:57
gotta meet me here and it doesn't mean
00:18:58
you can't compromise with people that's
00:19:00
different
00:19:01
but I just allow a certain kind of thing
00:19:03
in my life and
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um
00:19:08
yeah
00:19:09
your grandmother
00:19:12
got a tattoo on your left wrist oh wow
00:19:16
yes I I didn't I saw you pulling out
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your left wrist so I just went with it
00:19:20
yeah I love you yes so
00:19:24
what role did she play
00:19:26
so she her name was Karen and she was my
00:19:31
dad's mom and my grandmother rest in
00:19:34
peace you amazing Soul she was the
00:19:38
coolest badass woman I've ever met
00:19:43
she taught me about things that maybe I
00:19:46
shouldn't have learned at such a young
00:19:47
age she would put on Oprah when Oprah
00:19:50
would be talking about
00:19:52
really heavy topics she put on the movie
00:19:55
Grease when I was a kid and that was a
00:19:57
movie where I'm like
00:19:59
I want to do that
00:20:02
um and I I don't know where you land
00:20:04
within the
00:20:06
medium psychic space but I've talked to
00:20:09
I do um I practice Reiki with
00:20:13
um this woman named Katie who always
00:20:17
senses my grandmother's energy and and
00:20:19
every kind of experience like that my
00:20:21
grandmother's energy has showed up so I
00:20:24
truly believe that she
00:20:26
is here with me but she was just
00:20:28
smart and she thought
00:20:31
differently than anyone in my family and
00:20:34
as an adult I can look back and think
00:20:37
I'm so much like her like I just I miss
00:20:41
her she died really young
00:20:43
she died of emphysema and it's shocking
00:20:46
I never picked up smoking because I I
00:20:49
told you I'm like an extremist but I've
00:20:51
never been a smoker because of her and
00:20:54
um
00:20:55
yeah she died in her mid-60s
00:20:59
she was so funny like she
00:21:01
she had breathing tubes on and she
00:21:03
smoked until the day she died still but
00:21:05
that just like showed you who she was
00:21:06
she just
00:21:07
was a Powerhouse and so funny
00:21:11
um
00:21:12
and I miss her I miss her all the time I
00:21:15
and it and it's kind of sad because
00:21:20
I don't have that many pictures of her
00:21:21
because it was before
00:21:24
I had a cell phone and she died when I
00:21:25
was 15 so
00:21:27
I maybe had just gotten one of those
00:21:29
Sidekicks or Nokia phones and I just
00:21:32
don't have that much tangible memories
00:21:34
of her you named after they right yeah
00:21:36
yeah Karen Lucille and uh so she
00:21:39
definitely lives on in me in that way
00:21:42
and
00:21:44
um
00:21:46
yeah that's nice to chat about her thank
00:21:49
you for bringing her up I was really
00:21:51
inspired by
00:21:54
um the love your mother must have had it
00:21:56
for you but also really the belief she
00:21:58
must have had in you to move to LA with
00:22:01
you when you were 15 I'm assuming purely
00:22:03
so you could pursue a career in
00:22:04
Hollywood at 15 years old yeah it's
00:22:07
totally bizarre and when I tell people
00:22:09
that I just have to set the tone my mom
00:22:12
was not a stage mom at all and by that I
00:22:14
mean she wasn't it was never forced upon
00:22:18
me I she just always
00:22:21
encouraged me to follow this dream which
00:22:24
is so incredible because you hear of so
00:22:26
many people where it's the opposite
00:22:28
where the parents are forcing a dream
00:22:29
you don't really want onto you and she
00:22:33
just instilled a lot of willpower my mom
00:22:36
is such a hard worker I do believe I
00:22:38
have my I get my drive and work ethic
00:22:40
from her and she's so selfless like she
00:22:43
would give her last penny to anyone
00:22:47
and just loves with her entire heart
00:22:52
um and my my mom and I have definitely
00:22:53
had our
00:22:55
uh
00:22:56
rough moments in
00:22:59
over the course of
00:23:01
our lives but we're in such a beautiful
00:23:04
place now where we really can show up
00:23:06
exactly how we are without getting
00:23:10
um triggered or defensive because we're
00:23:13
really similar in the way we approach
00:23:15
our emotions I guess and so we've kind
00:23:18
of
00:23:19
have butted heads at times but she's
00:23:21
always been my
00:23:24
just biggest fan and
00:23:27
um I have no idea how because because I
00:23:30
often think if I had a daughter who
00:23:32
wanted to do what I want to do would I
00:23:34
do that I don't know how do you know
00:23:36
it's kind of insane isn't it thanks Mom
00:23:39
for being insane I love you for it like
00:23:41
thank God
00:23:42
uh but
00:23:45
it was a risk for sure and she came and
00:23:47
worked as a nurse
00:23:49
yeah so she the only way we could afford
00:23:52
to live out here because as you know
00:23:54
cost of living is insane
00:23:58
um she was a travel nurse which is kind
00:24:00
of an agency for nurses that live across
00:24:02
the world and they could place her at a
00:24:05
hospital and they would pay for our rent
00:24:06
and she would make a little extra money
00:24:09
but I mean we were kind of Barely
00:24:11
getting by
00:24:12
barely getting by and
00:24:16
yeah I feel like there's always kind of
00:24:18
financial
00:24:19
worry there but we we always she always
00:24:22
made it work we always figured it out
00:24:24
and by 216 you start working in TV shows
00:24:27
and stuff out here in L.A yeah so the
00:24:29
first so this is a really cool story to
00:24:31
tell you because I just got back from
00:24:33
Vancouver but the first show I ever did
00:24:36
the first series was called Bionic Woman
00:24:37
it was a remake of a show a really
00:24:40
popular show from the 70s 80s on NBC and
00:24:43
I got cast as the little sister and we
00:24:45
lived in Vancouver
00:24:47
um in this building right by the Sea
00:24:51
line and then I now 19 years later just
00:24:56
was working up there again and I look
00:24:59
out the window of the building I was
00:25:00
living in it's the exact same building
00:25:01
my mom lived in and I'm like that is
00:25:04
just
00:25:05
the universe full circle it was the
00:25:09
coolest full circle moment of being 16
00:25:11
there with my mom on my first job to
00:25:14
everything that's transpired to me being
00:25:16
33 working there now it was just like
00:25:19
this really incredible moment but but
00:25:22
yeah I uh
00:25:24
started kind of working
00:25:27
supporting myself since 17 and then I
00:25:30
think my mom saw that I
00:25:31
somewhat had a good head on my shoulders
00:25:34
by 18 and then she moved back to
00:25:37
Tennessee that period between
00:25:39
you being 16 and 19 when you
00:25:42
living out in L.A predominantly
00:25:44
um before you know you get cast for
00:25:46
Pretty Little Liars how do you feel
00:25:49
about that chapter of your life
00:25:51
when you reflect on that that chapter
00:25:53
that 16 to 19 year old chapter
00:25:56
what do you think so interesting because
00:25:59
I actually haven't
00:26:01
seeing this building in Vancouver was
00:26:03
the first time I had thought about that
00:26:04
time in my life in
00:26:07
10 years I actually haven't sat and
00:26:09
thought about
00:26:12
I know I also feel like so much of my
00:26:14
memories are kind of blurry from that
00:26:16
time
00:26:17
I
00:26:23
it's so weird like I can't even answer
00:26:25
that question I think
00:26:27
I think I was very grateful to be in LA
00:26:30
and pursuing this dream but that was
00:26:33
kind of the beginning of it all of of
00:26:35
what was to come
00:26:37
um like I wish I could go back and tell
00:26:39
my 16 year old self like buckle up girl
00:26:42
we're gonna get through this but we're
00:26:44
gonna go through some [ __ ] you know
00:26:47
um I and I've been open about this
00:26:49
before like I struggled with the eating
00:26:51
disorder uh most of my teen years up
00:26:54
until like mid-20s and it it was around
00:26:57
that time that it had kind of that was
00:27:01
like turned up to a 10 and I and it I
00:27:04
mean it's all in direct correlation with
00:27:06
moving to a new city
00:27:08
throwing myself into the world of acting
00:27:12
like I think my life kind of fell out of
00:27:14
control in a way and my emotions fell
00:27:16
out of control and
00:27:19
body stuff food stuff is all needing
00:27:22
needing to control
00:27:24
and um
00:27:26
uh so yeah I mean I guess I look back on
00:27:29
that time and
00:27:31
I have compassion now like I don't want
00:27:33
to say I feel sorry for myself but
00:27:39
I do believe in like
00:27:41
I mean I was a teenager but all the
00:27:43
inner child work where you just kind of
00:27:45
see that image of you young you and
00:27:48
really hold space for that and really
00:27:51
speak kindly to yourself
00:27:54
um
00:27:55
but honestly I don't really remember a
00:27:57
lot more and I don't know if that's
00:28:00
weird but it I I also feel that
00:28:02
similarly about my childhood I have
00:28:04
certain memories but
00:28:07
I don't know maybe I was disassociating
00:28:09
a lot I told you I lived in my head a
00:28:10
ton so
00:28:13
I don't know it seems like so much has
00:28:15
happened since then
00:28:17
Eating Disorders yeah how do I how do I
00:28:20
understand that as someone that's never
00:28:22
experienced um eating disorder how do I
00:28:24
how do I understand that is there a
00:28:26
moment where you've realized that
00:28:27
there's a there's a problem or you you
00:28:29
notice Behavior patterns that you think
00:28:30
are
00:28:32
um
00:28:33
unhealthy to say the least I think from
00:28:36
anything that disrupts your life or your
00:28:40
happiness or your relationships or your
00:28:42
career like
00:28:43
that can be described as a problem and I
00:28:47
think for me it was
00:28:49
all I thought about from the moment I
00:28:51
woke up until I went to bed at night how
00:28:53
much did I eat how much did I work out I
00:28:56
would step on a scale 30 times a day I
00:29:00
was eating so little that it was
00:29:03
shocking
00:29:04
um and it wasn't really ever about
00:29:08
that's a lie it was about the way I
00:29:09
looked at one point because I thought if
00:29:12
I could just be this number or this goal
00:29:14
weight then I'll be enough because it
00:29:16
all rooted back to I don't feel enough I
00:29:19
don't feel like enough why
00:29:22
um
00:29:23
and that's still a question I'm figuring
00:29:25
out because it it
00:29:27
um self-worth and knowing I'm enough
00:29:30
like where did the thought of I'm not
00:29:32
enough come from did I hear it when I
00:29:34
was a kid I don't know did I hear
00:29:36
something that resonated is you're not
00:29:38
enough maybe
00:29:40
um do you know who that is he he came on
00:29:43
my podcast he's maybe maybe the leading
00:29:47
therapist psychologist in the world on
00:29:49
like childhood trauma and and much of
00:29:52
the Crux of what he talks about is where
00:29:53
we learn this idea that we're not enough
00:29:55
as kids one of the things he said to me
00:29:57
which is still sat with me is he said to
00:29:59
me he goes children are narcissists he
00:30:00
goes when the parents arguing the child
00:30:03
thinks it's about them yeah and when he
00:30:05
said that to me I go oh my God it
00:30:07
explains so much sponges yeah so but we
00:30:09
interpret that situation like that home
00:30:12
life situation or whatever as like this
00:30:14
is about me yeah and and so now I can
00:30:17
look back and say maybe as a kid I
00:30:19
thought my parents got divorced because
00:30:21
of Me Maybe I you know there's a million
00:30:24
different scenarios so I'm certain I
00:30:26
learned it at a young age and
00:30:29
and as kids none of us come out
00:30:30
unscathed right like we all take on some
00:30:33
sort of pain and Trauma from somewhere
00:30:36
or someone
00:30:37
but mine manifested as an eating
00:30:40
disorder initially which then led to
00:30:43
other issues but it but it all started
00:30:45
because I always try to think when
00:30:49
when did it begin when did this
00:30:51
Obsession begin
00:30:54
and I want to say it was maybe around
00:30:55
like 13 or 14 when I had um no no like
00:31:00
1415 was starting homeschooling and I
00:31:02
had to start logging my exercise hours
00:31:05
and why it was for PE and you had to say
00:31:09
I'm do I did PE today for
00:31:12
x amount of time
00:31:14
and that's the only thing I can think of
00:31:17
that started this obsession with
00:31:20
movement and then I saw my body kind of
00:31:22
change and then I started restricting
00:31:24
eating and then it became like I said
00:31:27
just it slowly just grew and grew to
00:31:30
something that it I could not enjoy life
00:31:32
I could not have a conversation I could
00:31:34
not focus on anything it's a it's a
00:31:36
miracle that I even started working and
00:31:38
could focus on acting because it was
00:31:40
when I mean it was a constant loop I
00:31:43
don't know how I got out of it
00:31:45
and I I mean the thing with eating
00:31:47
disorders is
00:31:49
it can
00:31:51
always creep back up on you and there
00:31:53
are days when I don't feel like my best
00:31:56
self but I love myself enough now to
00:32:00
nourish my body and it's so sad to think
00:32:03
that I hated myself so much that I
00:32:05
couldn't even give it basic needs like
00:32:07
food
00:32:08
are you kidding me like that is so
00:32:10
tragic and so many people don't
00:32:12
understand
00:32:15
the space of an eating disorder because
00:32:16
there's a spectrum and I can only speak
00:32:18
from my point of view which
00:32:22
I mean I don't I really don't know any
00:32:24
woman that has a normal relationship to
00:32:27
their body or to food you know because
00:32:29
society makes it really freaking hard to
00:32:32
like the way you look social media is
00:32:34
can be a really beautiful place and
00:32:37
you're doing such an amazing thing with
00:32:38
the work you do and like changing lives
00:32:40
but like the social social media can be
00:32:44
poison I have to really limit what who I
00:32:48
look at what I look at and I'm a grown
00:32:50
adult and it feels silly but you have to
00:32:53
like curate your life
00:32:55
keep your mind and soul and spirit
00:32:57
feeling good
00:33:00
um
00:33:01
I always feel a little uncomfortable
00:33:02
talking about an eating disorder because
00:33:04
I'm
00:33:05
I'm sensitive and I know that it can be
00:33:08
triggering and hard for people to talk
00:33:10
about
00:33:11
food and bodies and people don't
00:33:14
understand how someone who objectively
00:33:18
as thin could think they were overweight
00:33:22
but and I can't explain it but that's
00:33:23
just what I saw and what I felt and it
00:33:26
and now I can look back and see photos
00:33:28
and think oh my God I was so I I wasn't
00:33:32
seeing reality
00:33:34
you just create this narrative in your
00:33:35
head that's scary and dark and
00:33:39
and It ultimately wasn't about the way I
00:33:41
looked it was about
00:33:44
so much more which is which is
00:33:46
self-worth
00:33:48
incredibly low self-worth and
00:33:53
and I really owe it to like getting out
00:33:56
of that
00:33:57
I dated a guy
00:33:59
for a long time who was Italian I mean
00:34:02
it sounds so silly it's like how did you
00:34:03
get help it wasn't through therapy I
00:34:05
didn't start doing therapy until my
00:34:07
early 20s for a different reason but
00:34:10
people always ask how did you
00:34:12
survive those horrible years of your
00:34:14
eating disorder
00:34:16
it was my Italian boyfriend who loved
00:34:19
and appreciated food and he would make
00:34:21
us go to dinner and I learned to enjoy
00:34:23
food again and it was like
00:34:26
each year that went by I started to feel
00:34:28
better and better and then I booked
00:34:30
Pretty Little Liars and it got a little
00:34:31
dodgy again and scary but I learned
00:34:33
other coping mechanisms that worked for
00:34:35
a while until they didn't
00:34:38
um but
00:34:39
but now my relationship
00:34:41
I never thought I could call myself a
00:34:44
foodie because today like I love food
00:34:46
that's how I experience a new city or a
00:34:48
culture like I just appreciate it and I
00:34:51
know that we need food to survive and
00:34:56
and I like I like and love and respect
00:34:58
my body too if I'm tired I rest
00:35:02
if I want to work out I work out I I can
00:35:05
just sort of navigate feeling
00:35:07
uncomfortable so much better these days
00:35:10
well you haven't given given a diagnosis
00:35:13
for that disorder was there ever medical
00:35:15
intervention yeah I did my mom
00:35:18
um
00:35:19
shortly before she moved to Tennessee
00:35:20
you know she recognized it was a problem
00:35:23
and she helped in the best way she knew
00:35:24
how but I'm sure as a parent she felt
00:35:26
helpless and felt like it was her fault
00:35:28
maybe
00:35:29
I went to a therapist only a handful of
00:35:31
times where
00:35:33
that was the first time I had heard your
00:35:35
anorexic
00:35:36
and that word just sounds so daunting
00:35:39
and scary but I mean I I've never been
00:35:42
in denial though like I've always had
00:35:45
I always knew it wasn't normal behavior
00:35:47
like I knew that my hair shouldn't be
00:35:50
falling out and then I knew that I
00:35:51
shouldn't be able to see every bone in
00:35:53
my body but
00:35:55
you get like addicted to this feeling of
00:35:58
controlling your own body
00:36:00
and um
00:36:02
so I kind of knew it was a problem but I
00:36:05
didn't know what anorexia meant until
00:36:07
this therapist had told me that that was
00:36:09
probably like age
00:36:12
17.
00:36:14
um
00:36:16
yeah I haven't thought about all that in
00:36:18
a long time too because I'm so on the
00:36:19
other side of it
00:36:21
and it's
00:36:23
nice
00:36:24
it's so nice to not have that
00:36:27
hamster wheel in your head about that
00:36:30
all the time
00:36:34
being in um
00:36:35
being in LA
00:36:37
being in the entertainment industry is a
00:36:41
I imagine a tricky place to be when
00:36:43
you're contending with issues of you
00:36:45
know eating disorders and because
00:36:47
because of the influence of you know
00:36:48
advertising and movies especially back
00:36:52
then
00:36:53
um social media Etc
00:36:56
I yeah I just can't yeah I can't having
00:37:00
never experienced an eating disorder
00:37:01
before but then thinking about being in
00:37:03
this environment
00:37:04
yeah
00:37:05
well what was interesting is that it
00:37:07
started before I even moved to LA the
00:37:10
eating disorder was for when I was like
00:37:12
13 before I'd even thought about you
00:37:15
know
00:37:16
before I had found success so
00:37:20
so I'm certain the things I've dealt
00:37:22
with in my life
00:37:23
I would have dealt with anyway it just
00:37:26
might be on the opposite end of the
00:37:28
spectrum because I think that the
00:37:30
reasonings behind all of these things
00:37:32
are those are old feelings that's old
00:37:34
stuff that has been ruminating
00:37:37
for a while
00:37:39
but yeah I mean this industry is at a
00:37:42
different point now where so many people
00:37:44
are accepted different types of people
00:37:46
different bodies everything and it's
00:37:49
such a beautiful
00:37:50
place I think the industry is heading
00:37:52
especially for a woman but when I was
00:37:56
starting out it wasn't really that way
00:37:57
and then I like book a show that's
00:37:59
called Pretty Little Liars what
00:38:03
it's so I'm like okay well we gotta be
00:38:05
pretty we gotta be little
00:38:06
okay well we got this and and you're
00:38:09
also 20 years old where everyone wants
00:38:11
to look a certain way like that age you
00:38:13
all want to look the same and you wanna
00:38:16
you know it just all flared up again
00:38:19
and it was all I thought about again you
00:38:21
know because I I thought I had overcome
00:38:23
it and then
00:38:25
but then it became a thing of control it
00:38:27
wasn't and then It ultimately it wasn't
00:38:29
about wanting to be pretty or little it
00:38:31
was about this is scary my life has
00:38:34
completely
00:38:35
shifted overnight
00:38:37
millions of people are seeing my face
00:38:39
Instagram had just started you know it
00:38:42
was just sort of beginning my first post
00:38:44
ever on Instagram was me and of season
00:38:47
one of Pretty Little Liars
00:38:49
um and it was like my life was now under
00:38:52
a magnifying glass
00:38:54
I felt out of control
00:38:56
uh oh I guess we gotta control the way I
00:38:58
look again and then I'll be enough and
00:39:00
then people will like me
00:39:01
how do my Mo for so much of my life was
00:39:04
how can I get people to like me
00:39:07
even though I hated myself
00:39:10
and like real confidence is
00:39:13
not I read my whole Instagram now is
00:39:16
just like silly affirmations but it
00:39:19
helped but I read something the other
00:39:20
day that's true confidence is not I hope
00:39:24
they like me it's some I'm paraphrasing
00:39:26
but not I hope they like me it's
00:39:29
I'm okay and know who I am even if they
00:39:31
don't and yeah
00:39:33
exactly what it is and that confidence
00:39:35
is what I've been searching for my whole
00:39:37
life and to know that and to show up
00:39:40
anywhere I go with anyone with new
00:39:43
people and say I'm accepted because I
00:39:46
accept myself I have value because I
00:39:49
value myself
00:39:50
you can put me in any situation anything
00:39:53
I truly mean this and I have the
00:39:55
confidence that I'll get through it
00:39:57
sober and happy
00:39:59
and it's
00:40:01
been one hell of a journey and I like
00:40:03
truly am not going to cry again
00:40:05
I wouldn't have changed anything I
00:40:07
literally would not have changed any
00:40:09
dark moment situation
00:40:11
because the perspective and empathy I've
00:40:14
gained from that I would not have
00:40:16
otherwise
00:40:18
so
00:40:19
you said I hated myself I know it's such
00:40:22
a strong word and it makes me sad that I
00:40:23
felt that way
00:40:26
maybe he hates a strong word I do this
00:40:28
sometimes too I'll say something then
00:40:29
I'll backtrack and try to like paint it
00:40:31
prettier but things are ugly sometimes
00:40:33
right
00:40:34
yeah I maybe it's more that I
00:40:40
didn't feel worthy of the things I had
00:40:42
in my life I didn't feel deserving
00:40:44
because a lot of my life
00:40:47
post success I did not feel worthy of
00:40:50
the success or the career or the people
00:40:53
in my life it was like this limiting
00:40:56
belief that
00:40:57
you're a fraud If people really knew who
00:41:00
you were they wouldn't like you
00:41:03
like you're worthless you don't deserve
00:41:06
this and even though
00:41:07
I wasn't actually saying those things
00:41:09
like subconsciously
00:41:11
that's what was happening I think
00:41:12
because I would keep making the same
00:41:14
mistakes and be like why is this
00:41:16
happening it's because I had this belief
00:41:18
that I
00:41:20
didn't deserve any of it
00:41:23
when you live with that sort of lack of
00:41:26
self-worth it manifests itself in a
00:41:28
variety of ways one of them you talked
00:41:29
about already which is trying to gain
00:41:31
control over something because then if I
00:41:32
can control this maybe I'll
00:41:34
gone are a bit of sort of self
00:41:36
self-worth from from the scales or the
00:41:38
mirror whatever it might be what are the
00:41:40
other ways that that manifested itself
00:41:42
in your life that like lack of
00:41:43
self-worth I've heard you talk about
00:41:45
people pleasing yeah but you you said
00:41:48
something curious a second ago you said
00:41:50
um that would the eating disorder was
00:41:52
the start of it um
00:41:54
and then you said you were going to go
00:41:55
on to say something else but yeah yeah I
00:41:57
mean it all kind of ties in together I
00:42:00
think the people pleasing is such a big
00:42:04
thing I've
00:42:06
been working through in my life because
00:42:08
what people pleasing does is you're
00:42:10
doing things that aren't authentic
00:42:12
you're doing things you don't want to do
00:42:13
what does that do well it builds anger
00:42:15
and resentment well then if you repress
00:42:17
that anger resentment then what happens
00:42:18
well it's going to come out some way and
00:42:21
for me my
00:42:23
like for such a small human I have so
00:42:26
much rage in that I've
00:42:29
have now sorted through but for so much
00:42:31
I just like bottled up that rage
00:42:33
and
00:42:35
for me
00:42:36
I
00:42:38
the coping mechanisms I discovered
00:42:42
worked for me were like incredibly
00:42:44
self-destructive and self-sabotaging and
00:42:46
I am
00:42:49
I'm not sure when this podcast comes out
00:42:51
and I had I've never talked publicly
00:42:54
until yesterday about being sober
00:42:57
I have a little over a year of sobriety
00:42:59
which you know the people in my life my
00:43:02
friends my family who are just the
00:43:06
greatest people in the world and have
00:43:07
stood by my side for you know I've been
00:43:08
working on getting sober since I was 20.
00:43:10
I'm 33. it takes time
00:43:12
it took time and it took patience with
00:43:15
myself
00:43:16
um I mean this is a topic I could talk
00:43:18
about until
00:43:20
the end of time but
00:43:23
basically what alcohol did for me
00:43:29
we did a couple of things it was like
00:43:31
it was like this feeling of oh my God
00:43:34
this is what I've been searching for my
00:43:35
whole life I'm my truest self right like
00:43:37
I'm so much funnier and cooler and
00:43:39
people like me that's all [ __ ] guess
00:43:42
what not true I was not myself not my
00:43:46
truest self but
00:43:48
it orig it started with wow I can be
00:43:51
free and funny and boys will like me
00:43:55
this is when I'm younger right
00:43:57
and I just like held on to that belief
00:43:59
that real Lucy came out when she was
00:44:02
drinking
00:44:03
guess what real Lucy did come out but it
00:44:06
was that rage and pain that I had been
00:44:08
holding on to for so long but it also
00:44:12
quieted my mind
00:44:14
um
00:44:16
I feel like
00:44:18
and I'm not the only person on the
00:44:21
planet that deals with this but like my
00:44:22
brain just goes
00:44:24
doesn't shut off it's exhausting but
00:44:27
when I drink because I I was like
00:44:29
textbook binge Drinker like
00:44:32
blackout wouldn't remember what I did
00:44:35
what I said which is
00:44:37
scary and and it's also hard to explain
00:44:39
that type of drinking to someone because
00:44:43
people who haven't experienced it or
00:44:45
dealt with it personally like you
00:44:47
addiction is such a
00:44:49
a topic that
00:44:51
Soso taboo because it's because people
00:44:54
would just tell me Well Lucy don't drink
00:44:56
oh thank you oh
00:44:58
okay
00:45:00
thank you so much I'll try that thanks
00:45:04
but now it is that now it's like okay I
00:45:07
just don't pick up the first drink and
00:45:08
I'm fine because what would happen for
00:45:09
me is I'd pick up the first drink I'd
00:45:11
like the feeling I'd have another drink
00:45:12
I'd really like the feeling and then it
00:45:13
was past drink too don't remember
00:45:16
I wouldn't remember the rest of the
00:45:18
night
00:45:19
um through what period of your life was
00:45:21
this sorry
00:45:23
since you were young I've had an issue I
00:45:26
from my very first experience drinking
00:45:28
which was like age 14. hmm up until a
00:45:32
year ago I have had a problem I've never
00:45:34
had a a period of my life where I was a
00:45:38
normal moderate Drinker it was always
00:45:40
let's go let's let's just
00:45:44
I was willing to just go to this crazy
00:45:47
dark place every time
00:45:50
and you know of course I tried trying to
00:45:53
be a moderate Drinker just having to my
00:45:55
I have an allergy to alcohol I cannot
00:45:58
drink I view it as an allergy to alcohol
00:46:01
my brain doesn't
00:46:03
work the same way as someone who can
00:46:06
just have a glass of wine it always
00:46:08
wants more it's like craving that that
00:46:11
feeling my best friend has just actually
00:46:13
finished a documentary on this subject
00:46:15
matter he was my best friend but also my
00:46:16
business partner for many years and the
00:46:18
the point where he realized he had a
00:46:20
problem we kind of
00:46:21
had a bit of a face to face because he
00:46:23
had done so much damage and there was
00:46:25
one particular instance where he did so
00:46:26
much damage to himself our company our
00:46:30
team members that we we met on a Sunday
00:46:32
and we we basically it was that kind of
00:46:34
ultimatum moment which is you're gonna
00:46:36
have to leave
00:46:37
yeah you know and yeah you can do a lot
00:46:39
of damage right when you're when you
00:46:41
have that relationship with alcohol and
00:46:43
you have an addiction to alcohol and it
00:46:45
brings out that side of you did you ever
00:46:48
have moments like that where people
00:46:49
close to you said
00:46:52
many times and I
00:46:55
but it's one of those things I I
00:46:57
remember the point in my life where I'm
00:46:59
like
00:47:00
I woke up
00:47:02
a morning after drinking and it was when
00:47:04
I wanted to keep drinking
00:47:06
I was like oh my reaction to alcohol is
00:47:09
different than my friends like this is
00:47:10
different and I've known I had a problem
00:47:12
this whole time I was there was never a
00:47:14
moment where
00:47:16
I thought it was normal there have been
00:47:18
moments where I didn't want to change
00:47:20
because I'm like I'm not giving this up
00:47:21
are you kidding me like who would I be
00:47:23
if I can't have fun and let loose and
00:47:24
drink
00:47:26
but I had many times my manager of 19
00:47:29
years
00:47:31
who is an angel truly an Earth Angel
00:47:35
I believe has saved my life at times
00:47:37
like this woman has been there for me
00:47:38
she's had hard conversations with me
00:47:41
I've had friends who've tough loved me
00:47:42
but I've had friends who say we can't
00:47:44
until you do x y and z
00:47:48
I've always been shown love and support
00:47:50
but the thing about
00:47:52
addiction or just life in general like
00:47:55
you gotta want something for yourself
00:47:56
like I had so many
00:47:59
things happen where you would have
00:48:01
thought I would change I've had I tried
00:48:04
to change for boyfriends I tried to
00:48:06
change for my mom I tried to change for
00:48:08
my career I tried to change for vain
00:48:10
Reasons I'm like well I'll look younger
00:48:12
and be skinnier I'll stop drinking for
00:48:14
that none of that [ __ ] works I had to
00:48:18
and wanted to get sober January 2nd 2022
00:48:23
because I said I deserve more I deserve
00:48:26
more out of this life
00:48:29
I have to try it a different way and I
00:48:32
have to be willing
00:48:34
to just commit to it
00:48:37
you know because binge drinking I would
00:48:39
be sober for three months then relapse
00:48:41
be sober for a week relapse and I never
00:48:43
the really crazy thing is I never let it
00:48:45
get in the way of my job because my
00:48:48
career has always been so important
00:48:51
but
00:48:52
when I'd go home at night
00:48:54
it would just be like so dark and I'd be
00:48:56
so in my head about it but
00:48:58
I it would be so dark I was thinking
00:49:02
then because my business partner
00:49:03
described it as he there was a pain he
00:49:04
was trying to escape which we just never
00:49:06
realized he had a pain in his in his
00:49:08
life in his mind I would find him
00:49:10
downstairs through him in the morning in
00:49:11
the laundry room with the lights off
00:49:12
drinking I thought just he just loves
00:49:15
alcohol right that's what people think
00:49:17
or like oh you like to party yeah
00:49:19
exactly but but I came to learn that
00:49:21
there was a pain he was escaping that he
00:49:23
hadn't addressed yes is that the same in
00:49:25
your situation where there was an
00:49:26
unaddressed pain or issue that you think
00:49:29
you were using alcohol as a Escape
00:49:30
mechanism for yes definitely I mean
00:49:33
alcohol isn't the problem the problem is
00:49:35
this feeling inside of me alcohol was
00:49:37
the solution you know for a while it was
00:49:39
my solution I'm like oh I don't have to
00:49:41
think about being good enough or or
00:49:45
whatever the problem was like it worked
00:49:47
for a really long time until it just
00:49:49
left me feeling depressed anxious lonely
00:49:53
just worthless but there is a big
00:49:56
misconception about
00:49:58
people who
00:50:00
struggle in this way is that oh they're
00:50:03
weak they just can't not do it or they
00:50:06
like to party or
00:50:09
they just like booze it's so much more
00:50:11
than that and
00:50:13
um yeah for me it was definitely old
00:50:16
stuff old feelings pain I I do think
00:50:21
that like I said I would have struggled
00:50:23
with this no matter what I did for a
00:50:24
living but I think
00:50:26
finding success at an early age and the
00:50:29
people pleasing and and and trying to be
00:50:34
what people wanted me to be made me feel
00:50:36
like a fraud right because like now I
00:50:39
can show up exactly who I am and share
00:50:41
my story and to actually be able to talk
00:50:43
about this
00:50:44
is so freeing because it doesn't
00:50:47
it's not like I'm it's chaining me down
00:50:50
anymore like it it takes the power away
00:50:52
from it like I can be Lucy which is not
00:50:55
always cute at times you know like it's
00:50:58
dark and disgusting and scary and that's
00:51:02
what makes us all complex amazing
00:51:03
beautiful human beings is we've all got
00:51:05
this Shadow Self
00:51:07
and were you happy in that chapter
00:51:10
that's 16 to 19 chapter
00:51:12
was I'm like um I'm getting a big
00:51:14
paycheck I'm happy I'm
00:51:16
no like that's not real happiness you
00:51:19
know you
00:51:21
I had told myself the lies of
00:51:25
you're happy or I felt guilty for not
00:51:28
being happy because how could I not be
00:51:30
happy I have x y and nobody wants to
00:51:32
hear about someone in my position being
00:51:33
unhappy right like let's just be real
00:51:36
nobody wants to really hear about that
00:51:37
but
00:51:38
at the end of the day I've had to allow
00:51:41
and I believed that too I ran with that
00:51:43
Lucy you don't deserve to be unhappy how
00:51:45
dare you feel these things but now I
00:51:49
know I'm a human being
00:51:51
and
00:51:53
Everything's Relative and I
00:51:56
it's okay for me to have these very
00:51:58
human experiences
00:52:00
and I found the people in my life that I
00:52:02
can talk to about it and
00:52:06
um was I happy I had moments of being
00:52:08
very happy
00:52:10
um but not like this not like this um
00:52:16
wherever I'm at in life right now it
00:52:18
feels peaceful
00:52:20
which I used to call boredom I have
00:52:23
moments where I'm bored I'm like ooh
00:52:24
what kind of fire can I start today but
00:52:26
then I I ran that back in
00:52:28
you know I never really usually pick the
00:52:30
chocolate flavored heels my favorite are
00:52:32
the banana flavor I love The Salted
00:52:35
Caramel flavor but recently I think I in
00:52:38
part blame Jack in my team who's
00:52:40
obsessed with the chocolate flavor heals
00:52:42
I've started drinking the chocolate
00:52:44
flavor heels for the first time and I
00:52:45
absolutely love them my life means that
00:52:47
I sometimes disregard my diet and it's
00:52:49
funny that's part of the reason why I've
00:52:51
had a lot of guests on this podcast
00:52:52
recently that talk about diet and health
00:52:54
and those kinds of things because I am
00:52:55
trying to make an active effort to be
00:52:57
more healthy to lose a little bit of
00:52:59
weight as well but to be more healthy
00:53:00
and the role that he all plays in my
00:53:02
life is it means that in those moments
00:53:04
where sometimes I might reach for
00:53:07
you know junk Foods
00:53:10
having an option that is nutritionally
00:53:11
complete that is high in fiber that is
00:53:13
incredibly high in protein that has all
00:53:15
the vitamins and minerals that my body
00:53:16
needs within Arm's Reach that I can
00:53:18
consume on the go is where he always
00:53:21
been a game changer for me quick word
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doing really immersive simple but high
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quality production virtual events Pretty
00:54:19
Little Liars yeah 20 years old yeah you
00:54:23
were doing another show right called
00:54:24
privileged yes privileged yeah and they
00:54:27
canceled that show
00:54:28
and that led to you being cast for
00:54:31
pretty little lies yeah which is pretty
00:54:32
amazing because the universe is yeah
00:54:34
yeah rejection can lead to redirection
00:54:38
that is there's a really cool story
00:54:41
there so I did this show called
00:54:42
privileged they canceled it I was
00:54:45
devastated
00:54:46
and the same producers said hey we have
00:54:50
this script
00:54:52
it's based off of a book we think you'd
00:54:54
be great for it and they said it's
00:54:56
called Pretty Little Liars and I'm like
00:54:57
ah I was such a huge fan of those books
00:54:59
I read the script
00:55:02
and it was the first time I had ever
00:55:03
been offered something
00:55:04
and so we get this offer but at the same
00:55:07
time so at this point it's just a pilot
00:55:09
and no one knew
00:55:12
what the success of it would be but at
00:55:14
the same time I got that offer I got the
00:55:16
offer for something else which was like
00:55:18
a really
00:55:20
I don't remember what it was called but
00:55:21
it was a really
00:55:23
shitty TV movie that I don't even think
00:55:25
did it get made yes it did get made
00:55:28
and I at one point was thinking I want
00:55:30
to take this movie because there was a
00:55:33
really cute guy attached to it you can
00:55:34
see where that's where my head was at
00:55:35
was let's choose a part because of a
00:55:37
cute guy
00:55:39
and then it was almost overnight where I
00:55:42
just woke up the next morning and said
00:55:43
you know what no because I would have
00:55:45
had to choose between the two
00:55:48
that I think I should choose to show
00:55:50
well thank God
00:55:52
thank God but but it is such a great
00:55:55
example of how one door closes another
00:55:58
one opens nothing is by coincidence in
00:56:01
this life I firmly believe that I think
00:56:02
that everything
00:56:04
happens exactly how it should
00:56:07
and like having an open mind and seeing
00:56:10
the lesson and everything
00:56:11
[Music]
00:56:13
um makes for a happier life too but
00:56:17
yeah it's crazy to think about that time
00:56:19
and now I mean pretty little lies became
00:56:21
in your own words the biggest show in
00:56:23
the world at one point yes I mean I
00:56:25
think
00:56:26
I mean if it's one two or three I mean
00:56:28
it's still the outcome is still the same
00:56:30
that your life
00:56:31
irrevocably changes
00:56:34
from that moment onwards
00:56:36
um
00:56:37
for better and For Worse one might
00:56:39
guess
00:56:41
I think
00:56:44
if you tell me why on both ends of that
00:56:46
yeah okay
00:56:48
I mean I
00:56:50
it was a dream job like I could
00:56:54
I I now had the success I had wanted and
00:56:58
the notoriety I felt valued and
00:57:00
appreciated and uh
00:57:04
um on a super in a superficial way for
00:57:06
bits and moments there were times when I
00:57:08
thought my ACT there were times when I
00:57:10
didn't feel like I was being utilized in
00:57:11
the right way I'm like I have so much
00:57:13
more to offer please let me you know
00:57:15
there are other characters in the show
00:57:17
that I wanted I wanted to be doing the
00:57:18
things they were doing but there were
00:57:20
times when I I felt like I could really
00:57:22
show
00:57:24
off my talents I guess
00:57:28
um I mean it it was the launching pad
00:57:31
for my whole career and and it's taken a
00:57:34
while outside of that show to get people
00:57:36
to see me in a different light and I
00:57:38
knew that when you're a part of
00:57:39
something that's that big people are
00:57:42
seeing you every week like people still
00:57:43
call me Arya on the street you know I
00:57:46
knew that it was going to be strategic
00:57:47
moves for years to get people to see me
00:57:50
in a different way and I feel like I'm
00:57:51
at this point now where people are
00:57:53
giving me those opportunities but I've
00:57:55
worked really hard for that I have taken
00:57:57
a bunch of different types of roles and
00:57:59
different types of characters post that
00:58:00
to get to like show to show myself but
00:58:05
also to show everyone like I'm not a
00:58:07
one-trick pony and I want to be doing
00:58:09
this and if I'm uh lucky enough to get
00:58:12
to do I hope I can do this the rest of
00:58:13
my life but um
00:58:16
it it helps me hone my craft
00:58:19
I
00:58:21
the fact that that show went for that
00:58:23
long is almost unheard of
00:58:26
like that just doesn't happen anymore
00:58:27
and I always laughed because there was a
00:58:29
couple people on the show where it was
00:58:31
their first job ever or their first
00:58:33
audition ever and the show went for that
00:58:35
long I'm like this is not normal by the
00:58:37
way but it but
00:58:40
it also posts that show because I've had
00:58:43
some
00:58:44
I don't want to view anything as a
00:58:45
failure but I've had things that were
00:58:48
maybe
00:58:49
viewed as failures post that and it kind
00:58:51
of
00:58:52
which I'm also grateful for because it
00:58:54
it gave me perspective of
00:58:59
you know life is full of ups and downs
00:59:02
and it will always be that way no matter
00:59:03
where I'm at in my career like people
00:59:05
aren't always going to like me or like
00:59:07
my work
00:59:08
every job I do is not going to be the
00:59:10
one that changes my life
00:59:12
um and I've also realized like that's
00:59:14
not where my happiness comes from
00:59:15
anymore my happiness is not going to
00:59:17
come from
00:59:18
I love what I do and I find so much joy
00:59:21
in it and I love creating and I love
00:59:23
acting in a really new cool way the last
00:59:26
couple of years but
00:59:29
it's always going to be a roller coaster
00:59:31
when we have those successes in life
00:59:33
when when the dream we have is realized
00:59:35
we I think before that we have an
00:59:36
assumption that it'll fix a bunch of
00:59:37
stuff right so that's we aim for it we
00:59:40
strive for it we get there and then in
00:59:41
some way it fails it makes you feel
00:59:43
worse yeah yeah so what didn't it fixed
00:59:47
everything everything it fixed literally
00:59:50
nothing if anything like there were more
00:59:52
problems it like expedited the all of it
00:59:55
right because my life was under a
00:59:57
microscope and
01:00:00
um I mean it definitely cranked up those
01:00:03
dials to 10 when it came to my
01:00:06
body dysmorphia myself my self-worth was
01:00:10
at an all-time low
01:00:13
um
01:00:14
I just didn't have the tools to how does
01:00:17
anyone navigate that experience I don't
01:00:19
know how you navigate that in a healthy
01:00:21
way
01:00:23
um and I look back now and I'm like okay
01:00:24
I guess I handled it in the best way I
01:00:27
knew how like I don't look back and
01:00:29
shame myself over it all it's kind of
01:00:32
just like
01:00:34
I was a kid and I was struggling but I
01:00:37
was struggling publicly but no one knew
01:00:40
about it so that was almost harder
01:00:41
because I was like dealing with all
01:00:43
these big things
01:00:44
but I never wanted to talk about it
01:00:46
because I was so ashamed
01:00:48
and now I'm now I'm not ashamed of it
01:00:50
which is why I can talk about it but did
01:00:54
you talk about it to anybody behind the
01:00:55
scenes what you were struggling with no
01:00:57
it was pretty it was pretty private
01:00:59
because I didn't want to be different I
01:01:01
wanted to blend in and if I talked about
01:01:03
having issues that made me a Target
01:01:06
I think people maybe knew of struggling
01:01:08
was there a Darkest Day a Darkest Day or
01:01:12
a patch where
01:01:14
you know I'm like where do where do we
01:01:16
begin uh interesting
01:01:18
um
01:01:20
I had many many what I thought were my
01:01:23
emotional Rock bottoms dozens
01:01:27
and so that was why it was so hard is
01:01:28
because I'm like Oh I thought we went to
01:01:31
the depths of hell like how do we
01:01:33
possibly how could it be worse and and
01:01:35
from the outside that was was crazy no
01:01:38
one would have known so it was like I
01:01:40
was everything externally didn't match
01:01:43
what was happening internally so then I
01:01:45
just felt like a fraud I was like this
01:01:47
isn't adding up and it's not real and
01:01:49
it's not right
01:01:50
I want things to match up in
01:01:53
look the same I just felt like totally
01:01:55
undeserving of everything that was
01:01:56
happening
01:01:57
a Darkest Day
01:01:59
yeah I mean I had many
01:02:02
but I'd always pull myself out of it
01:02:04
like if I have one thing I'm resilient
01:02:06
like I don't really give myself a lot of
01:02:09
that's not true I do positive
01:02:10
affirmations for myself all day these
01:02:12
days but but I know that my resilience
01:02:14
is what's
01:02:17
slingshotted me the other way did you
01:02:20
ever think about quitting
01:02:21
acting but during that period of between
01:02:24
16 and 28 when you left oh yeah yeah
01:02:26
yeah yeah I seriously well not maybe not
01:02:29
seriously because I didn't know what
01:02:32
else I was good at I didn't think I was
01:02:33
interesting I didn't think I was smart I
01:02:35
didn't like all of these things
01:02:37
I actually was like what would I do
01:02:40
um and so I I at times had the thought
01:02:47
could I do something else could I go
01:02:49
home after this
01:02:51
um but I never packed my bags or made a
01:02:54
call to someone and told them but but
01:02:57
but there were times in my
01:02:59
20s where I was just thinking is this
01:03:02
what I want to do but but then it became
01:03:03
about
01:03:05
it wasn't because I disliked acting I
01:03:07
loved it and I and I always knew I was
01:03:09
good at it but it was just how do I
01:03:11
manage my emotions and do what I love I
01:03:14
was like I don't know how to do that now
01:03:16
I know how to I mean I still have bad
01:03:18
days but I know how to handle it better
01:03:21
it's hard it's hard I I don't know it's
01:03:24
it's a constant
01:03:26
you know starting a new job
01:03:29
I really have to make sure I have my
01:03:32
plan in place for what helps me feel
01:03:34
safe
01:03:36
do you have a plunder if you would have
01:03:38
been overall happier for the last 33
01:03:40
years had you not been an actress
01:03:45
I think about that all the time what do
01:03:46
you think the answer is no you think you
01:03:49
would have been happier no I I mean
01:03:51
maybe
01:03:53
I would have had longer periods of
01:03:54
happiness but I do believe that where
01:03:58
I'm at now what I've gone through to get
01:04:01
the happiness I have now like this is
01:04:04
where I'm supposed to be and this is how
01:04:05
I'm supposed to feel
01:04:07
and I don't think I would have gotten
01:04:08
through that without the job I have or
01:04:10
the things I've been through
01:04:12
I know it sounds grateful to say I'm
01:04:14
happy that I struggled with addiction or
01:04:18
whatever it is but I am I I just think
01:04:22
that
01:04:23
in order for me to
01:04:26
feel whole and survive is to be creative
01:04:28
and I I actually
01:04:32
crave creating and and and acting and I
01:04:36
and I was there have been moments in my
01:04:38
life where I was scared that oh my God
01:04:41
I'm gonna have to keep doing this and
01:04:42
not know if I love it
01:04:44
and it was I did this show and the
01:04:46
moment where it all like happened for me
01:04:49
was the show I did called Katie Keane
01:04:51
short-lived another short-lived CW
01:04:53
Series I did I've had three
01:04:56
shows on CW that only went one season
01:04:58
it's kind of a running joke no
01:05:00
anyway whatever
01:05:02
Katie Keane New York it was the show
01:05:04
that made me fall in love with acting
01:05:06
because I
01:05:08
I don't I and I don't even know what
01:05:10
happened I mean it was a great show
01:05:11
great people so much fun living in New
01:05:13
York
01:05:14
but
01:05:15
maybe I stepped into my confidence more
01:05:21
I don't know I just feel grateful that I
01:05:22
can say oh God I like what I do because
01:05:24
that would be a bummer to like do all
01:05:27
these things and then say
01:05:28
and I could and that's the reality like
01:05:30
today I could say you know what I don't
01:05:31
want to act anymore and I know that
01:05:33
that's an option and is and I know that
01:05:35
I'm lucky to know that I have options
01:05:36
like I have perspective on that too
01:05:39
but I also feel lucky that I do want to
01:05:42
wake up and say
01:05:44
I want to go I want to go act today I
01:05:46
want to go work with these people and
01:05:48
collaborate
01:05:50
um did you have a life throughout that
01:05:52
that pretty little liar was there a life
01:05:54
outside of the show was there no
01:05:56
relationships and oh yeah socializing
01:05:59
and tons of failed relationships no I uh
01:06:03
yeah I had a social life
01:06:05
uh it was a lot of work we were doing
01:06:08
that nine months out of the year for
01:06:10
eight years but but yeah I I dated and
01:06:14
and it traveled and failed relationships
01:06:18
yeah oh yeah
01:06:21
yeah
01:06:22
I uh why did they fail I think
01:06:26
well some of them we were just young and
01:06:29
they're not supposed to work out but I
01:06:31
do think
01:06:34
I you know and I'm very careful to not
01:06:37
talk poorly about
01:06:39
people ever
01:06:41
[Music]
01:06:41
um
01:06:45
and I do also realize my part of the
01:06:47
equation I'm not I've never point the
01:06:49
fingers and say this person like I fully
01:06:51
realize why some of those crash and
01:06:52
burned because it was
01:06:54
you know hurt people hurt people that's
01:06:56
like a classic thing uh I just think I
01:06:59
was maybe attracting people that were a
01:07:01
perfect storm for my
01:07:03
new self-wife low self-worth chaos like
01:07:06
I was attracting
01:07:08
uh either people that had similar issues
01:07:12
as me and so it felt comfortable or it
01:07:15
felt like oh I can focus on
01:07:17
this issue or your issue and try and fix
01:07:20
them and try and fix them because it
01:07:22
gave me a one-up or you know have you
01:07:25
I'm sure you've read about like love
01:07:27
addiction like love avoidant love
01:07:29
addiction oh yeah like attachment Stars
01:07:31
yeah and I always thought I was a love
01:07:33
addict
01:07:35
because I just wanted people to like me
01:07:37
I wanted this guy to like me and
01:07:39
everything would be fine
01:07:40
but the truth is I actually think I have
01:07:43
fallen more under love avoidant because
01:07:45
when people get too close oop they're
01:07:47
gonna see me They're Gonna Know Who I
01:07:49
Really Am they're gonna leave so I'm
01:07:50
gonna blow this thing up before they
01:07:51
leave me
01:07:52
but I can tend to fall into
01:07:57
love addiction Behavior if they like out
01:08:00
avoid me does that make sense so if
01:08:02
someone is more avoided than I am
01:08:04
anyway so yes failed relationships but
01:08:08
but we the first model of love we learn
01:08:10
is our our parents no I totally get it I
01:08:13
I grew up thinking love wasn't safe or
01:08:16
safe thing or I thought it was prison
01:08:19
yeah or if love is this I don't want
01:08:23
that are you kidding me so I never
01:08:25
really had a model of what
01:08:27
a relationship should be
01:08:31
and and I
01:08:34
maybe because my parents got divorced
01:08:36
and I spent more time with my mom that I
01:08:37
was drawing in more people who were
01:08:40
similar to my dad you know there's that
01:08:43
element where are you now with my with
01:08:45
my dad with you with my relationship
01:08:48
yeah with on that journey of like
01:08:51
understanding love and how to form an
01:08:53
attachment with someone in a healthy way
01:08:55
yeah with the right person
01:08:57
I think
01:08:58
the only if I you know I'm single now
01:09:01
but the in order for me to want to be in
01:09:05
a relationship
01:09:07
it goes back to like meeting me where
01:09:09
I'm at and what by that I mean like I oh
01:09:12
I think that the type of relationship
01:09:14
I'm seeking out is with another person
01:09:16
who is whole and doesn't need me and
01:09:19
doesn't need this relationship to give
01:09:20
them an identity
01:09:22
um and I think that that is
01:09:25
where people thrive is when people have
01:09:28
really gone Inward and know their
01:09:29
strengths and weaknesses and know what
01:09:32
they have to offer and are willing
01:09:35
to grow and heal and evolve and
01:09:39
and I've never had that like I've never
01:09:42
had a relationship that felt
01:09:45
safe or like I could really show up as
01:09:47
myself
01:09:49
um
01:09:51
I do think that you know being sober is
01:09:55
really important to me and like that's
01:09:56
my number one priority because I know
01:09:58
that when I do that everything else is
01:10:00
fine so I'd love to find someone who
01:10:04
has an understanding of that element of
01:10:07
my life too I mean I'm so open to it and
01:10:10
ready but I also am not desperate for it
01:10:13
like I'm not needing because I like many
01:10:17
people used men and relationships to
01:10:19
fill a void like it's easy to get
01:10:21
addicted to people too and that's
01:10:24
actually the easiest it's like oh I have
01:10:26
a really cool new boyfriend like I can
01:10:28
focus on this for a year and not focus
01:10:30
on what I should be focusing on
01:10:32
um and now I just
01:10:34
yeah I just feel open and
01:10:38
whatever
01:10:39
is coming my way I'm ready for it I
01:10:41
really believe that
01:10:43
um life after Pretty Little Liars yeah
01:10:46
you referenced this earlier I I can't
01:10:48
imagine the situation where something is
01:10:51
everything it's nine months a year
01:10:53
working when you're not working you're
01:10:54
doing interviews about the thing
01:10:55
everyone stops you everywhere you go to
01:10:57
talk about it it's it's all consuming
01:10:58
and then
01:11:00
it ends yeah it was
01:11:03
weird it was weird and bizarre and scary
01:11:10
because that level of notoriety and fame
01:11:15
success whatever you want to call it
01:11:17
that is not really sustainable and will
01:11:21
I ever reach that again in my career
01:11:23
maybe who knows I don't know but if I
01:11:25
don't it's okay but because it was here
01:11:29
for so long for most of my 20s and then
01:11:31
when the show stopped and
01:11:34
things did shift like
01:11:36
I wasn't getting certain calls like I
01:11:39
wasn't being invited to certain things
01:11:40
people move on quickly right like people
01:11:43
just love content like they will move on
01:11:45
to a new show and and it was so scary to
01:11:47
be like where where do I forget fit in
01:11:50
do will people remember me and it's like
01:11:52
chasing this
01:11:54
high of whatever that experience was and
01:12:01
then I came to realize like that's so
01:12:04
exhausting like I feel like I'm okay now
01:12:06
if I were to just do jobs under the
01:12:08
radar for the rest of my life you know I
01:12:12
like I said I mentioned earlier like
01:12:14
having a couple of failed experiences
01:12:17
post Pretty Little Liars like really
01:12:19
gave me
01:12:21
kind of grounded me in
01:12:24
in a cool way I feel like I needed that
01:12:27
um was it you described it as a dark
01:12:29
time that the post PLL pretty little
01:12:33
lies yeah um phase of your life yeah and
01:12:36
that's because you've got like
01:12:38
I guess maybe you've got a I'm assuming
01:12:40
here but you've got to re-find out who
01:12:42
you are again outside of the show
01:12:44
it was that it was like
01:12:48
am I going to work again you know I
01:12:50
think we not we are I've had some
01:12:52
conversations with people in this a
01:12:55
similar position where
01:12:58
I wanted to work but you didn't because
01:13:01
people only want to see you as that one
01:13:03
thing and I
01:13:06
I'm also grateful for that period
01:13:08
because then that was when I got to
01:13:09
discover who I am outside of that who am
01:13:12
I outside of my job who are you
01:13:14
who I can say
01:13:18
that I
01:13:22
I've always wanted to
01:13:26
lead authentically and to show up
01:13:29
however I am at any given moment
01:13:31
whatever that looks like and I have not
01:13:34
been able to do that until recently I
01:13:37
feel like I am confident in what I have
01:13:40
to offer I'm comfortable with who I am
01:13:43
I'm a good friend I'm loyal
01:13:45
I'm honest to a fault
01:13:48
if you're in my circle have your back no
01:13:51
matter the situation I talk about the
01:13:53
hard [ __ ] I lead with my heart
01:13:56
I Believe In Justice more than anything
01:13:58
even if it's like I see someone cutting
01:14:00
someone in line like that's not right
01:14:03
I'm passionate as hell
01:14:05
and I do believe my intentions with
01:14:08
people are good and at the end of the
01:14:10
day I can sleep at night really well
01:14:13
because I like who I am
01:14:15
and it's just as simple as that I like
01:14:17
my choices
01:14:18
but as you say that's been a journey
01:14:20
right
01:14:21
yeah yeah you used the word earlier use
01:14:23
the word compassion to describe
01:14:26
you know you talk about that like
01:14:28
in a child work that you've done yeah
01:14:31
um
01:14:33
how do you feel about that person that
01:14:34
you that went through that Journey what
01:14:38
would you say to that person if they
01:14:39
were sat on a chair they were on a third
01:14:41
chair on this table yeah what would you
01:14:43
try and I uh I've actually done that
01:14:45
exercise where you write a letter to
01:14:48
your younger self
01:14:50
and um
01:14:52
I feel I feel so badly now that I
01:14:58
shunned her and like didn't I'm gonna
01:15:00
talk about myself
01:15:01
as a her and me this is me younger me is
01:15:04
her
01:15:05
I didn't give her a chance to speak up
01:15:08
like whereas now I'm like what was
01:15:11
hurting you so bad that you needed to do
01:15:13
that like I kind of give her the stage
01:15:14
to talk about her feelings
01:15:17
and I really truly believe that I was
01:15:19
handling it in the best way I knew how
01:15:21
at the time now I would handle it
01:15:23
differently because I have the tools I
01:15:24
have this like spiritual emotional tool
01:15:27
belt that if I'm feeling sad or whatever
01:15:28
I'm like okay we'll do this
01:15:30
but I didn't know I didn't know any
01:15:32
better and I was doing the best I could
01:15:36
and I am proud of
01:15:40
that
01:15:42
of my younger self because we went
01:15:45
through a lot like more things than I
01:15:48
could ever possibly say in a podcast and
01:15:50
so many people don't even know about
01:15:53
that part of me but it was
01:15:56
hard and dark and maybe I shouldn't have
01:15:58
even gotten out of it and I did and
01:16:01
that's so cool and I feel Brave and
01:16:04
courageous and
01:16:06
and I know that I went through those
01:16:09
things to talk about it why else do you
01:16:11
go through [ __ ] like you're you're
01:16:12
supposed to share your experiences
01:16:14
because it will reach someone
01:16:16
and um
01:16:18
I just compassion is the perfect word
01:16:21
for my younger self
01:16:24
when we I'm talking in hindsight we
01:16:27
often create the impression that
01:16:30
and I do this a lot that everything is
01:16:32
great now and that's just like not the
01:16:35
nature of life right life continues to
01:16:37
be a roller coaster
01:16:38
um what are the things now that you're
01:16:40
still you still work on oh boy I'm so
01:16:44
emotionally impulsive and responsive
01:16:46
like because I'm so
01:16:51
I guess the word is passionate but I
01:16:55
I really sometimes it's hard for me to
01:16:58
see all sides of the coin and like see
01:17:01
someone else's perspective I and I work
01:17:04
on that a lot
01:17:05
I
01:17:09
I don't have
01:17:11
all the patients in the world
01:17:13
but I I struggle with what people think
01:17:16
of me a lot I struggle with
01:17:21
what am I doing why are you here what
01:17:24
are you talking about like those that
01:17:26
that inner critic is loud sometimes
01:17:30
um
01:17:32
it's it's really what have you done in
01:17:34
terms of you know you struggle with what
01:17:36
people think about you sometimes you've
01:17:38
got like
01:17:39
shitloads of followers
01:17:41
you know you've got a lot of people that
01:17:43
are giving their opinion on you at all
01:17:45
times
01:17:46
[Music]
01:17:47
what have you done in terms of practical
01:17:50
steps to protect yourself
01:17:52
um well I've read somewhere that you
01:17:54
went you did like a rehab like a digital
01:17:55
rehab at some point in your life I mean
01:17:58
I do my own version of digital detoxing
01:18:02
which is simply it's not the first thing
01:18:04
I look at in the morning I don't grab
01:18:06
from my phone and I turn my phone on do
01:18:09
not disturb at like seven and I don't
01:18:11
look at it until the morning unless it's
01:18:13
to text Kate over there
01:18:15
um but I were you addicted to your phone
01:18:17
I'm still addicted
01:18:19
it's nuts I'm like yeah I can go without
01:18:22
getting Wi-Fi on this two hour flight
01:18:24
cut to me putting in my credit card info
01:18:26
it's so and it's this need it's not
01:18:29
to to know what people are thinking of
01:18:31
me but I am addicted to being available
01:18:33
all the time and that and I feel we're
01:18:37
all guilty of that like just being glued
01:18:39
to this phone and
01:18:41
texting back immediately or I don't feel
01:18:44
the pressure to
01:18:47
like socially like on social media I
01:18:50
don't feel that pressure to need to
01:18:52
always be present anymore
01:18:55
um a lot of times in my career I have
01:18:56
felt like it's expected in that
01:18:59
can feel a little draining Because
01:19:01
unless something feels authentic I don't
01:19:03
want to do it like I don't want to have
01:19:05
to do it I feel like I'm at this point
01:19:08
now in my career where I don't need to
01:19:11
so I kind of just do what I want which
01:19:12
is nice and freeing
01:19:14
um but I do think it's important to
01:19:17
disconnect and that looks different for
01:19:19
everyone
01:19:21
um
01:19:22
30s I'm in my 30s as well
01:19:25
congratulations thank you yeah it's nice
01:19:27
isn't it it's nice it's really nice yeah
01:19:29
20s is always well for me it was a bit
01:19:31
of a mess uh so trying to figure
01:19:33
yourself out and you know dealing with
01:19:34
all these emotions and trying to
01:19:36
whatever but um
01:19:38
in this next chapter of your life
01:19:41
what are you manifesting for Lucy
01:19:46
I mean here's something I've been
01:19:48
working on recently because I am truly a
01:19:51
believer in creating the life you want I
01:19:53
believe our thoughts are powerful our
01:19:55
thoughts create everything but I think
01:19:58
where I've gotten stuck or in trouble or
01:20:01
where a lot of people might be stuck is
01:20:03
that we you know we manifest a person a
01:20:06
job whatever but then we hold on to
01:20:08
tightly of to the expectation of what
01:20:10
that is
01:20:12
um so it's like now I'm at this point
01:20:14
where I want to
01:20:17
manifest specific things but be okay if
01:20:20
it doesn't work out exactly how I think
01:20:22
and kind of looking at it as being kind
01:20:26
of neutral with life it's just like
01:20:28
living freely like going with the flow I
01:20:31
don't typically go with the flow I'm not
01:20:33
a go with the flow kind of gal
01:20:35
um but I you know my priorities are a
01:20:37
little different now like I do want a
01:20:39
family I think recently I'm I decided I
01:20:41
do want kids
01:20:42
I have two lovely dogs my goal now I
01:20:45
want to farm with goats and chickens and
01:20:48
so many dogs
01:20:50
and I just want to keep
01:20:52
you know I can say so many things about
01:20:54
my career and if I'm lucky enough to
01:20:56
work and create and do all the roles I
01:20:58
want to do like that's freaking amazing
01:21:00
but mainly I love
01:21:03
discovering more about myself and why I
01:21:05
am the way I am and why people are the
01:21:07
way they are like I think this whole
01:21:10
journey of self-discovery and
01:21:11
self-healing is one that's constant
01:21:12
there is no end goal
01:21:14
and I'm just going to keep it's a
01:21:17
marathon not a Sprint so I just want to
01:21:18
keep
01:21:19
on this really beautiful path
01:21:22
then I'm on
01:21:25
you proud of yourself yeah
01:21:28
yeah
01:21:29
and it's not
01:21:33
for the reasons you might think I mean
01:21:34
if I'm proud of
01:21:36
my work ethic and and the things I've
01:21:38
accomplished but I'm proud that I've
01:21:41
faced
01:21:42
what I thought were my worst fears
01:21:45
about myself I am proud
01:21:49
of how I show up every day I'm proud of
01:21:54
how we treat people I'm proud of having
01:21:58
this conversation with you I just knew I
01:22:00
was like okay well I'm not gonna have
01:22:02
any expectations about what this is
01:22:03
going to be I'm just going to follow his
01:22:05
lead and you
01:22:08
present such a safe space and I'm
01:22:10
grateful that you allowed me to
01:22:12
be myself
01:22:14
I'm going to ask you a really
01:22:15
interesting question I don't think I've
01:22:16
ever not gonna cry again what is wrong
01:22:18
with me okay go ahead
01:22:21
okay
01:22:22
why does that make you emotional
01:22:27
because I don't really I I feel like I
01:22:30
I think it's because I am proud of
01:22:32
myself I think it's because I don't
01:22:33
always have these conversations or I
01:22:35
haven't always shown up
01:22:38
how I want to show up
01:22:40
I cry because
01:22:42
this is just who I am today I'm a weepy
01:22:45
emotional version of myself and
01:22:49
you spend a lot of time acting right
01:22:50
yeah literally yeah
01:23:00
it's so I've come to learn so much from
01:23:02
doing this this um this show about the
01:23:05
negative effect of prolonged periods of
01:23:09
living outside of yourself and what I
01:23:10
mean by that is like the authenticity
01:23:12
like the the damage that does to one of
01:23:15
escaping yourself for whatever reason
01:23:17
whether it's for success or work or
01:23:19
whether it's trying to escape some
01:23:20
trauma or some some other thing that's
01:23:23
living deep with inside of you but
01:23:25
either way the attempt to escape
01:23:26
yourself through creating an identity or
01:23:28
alcohol or whatever it always seems to
01:23:30
just be such an unsustainable it's not
01:23:33
painful process that causes more harm
01:23:35
and even more reason to escape yourself
01:23:37
paradoxically exactly
01:23:40
um
01:23:41
and that's really transparent in your
01:23:43
story because if for many reasons
01:23:44
obviously but but also because of your
01:23:46
you know
01:23:47
that's the job the job is to be
01:23:51
you know uh someone else yeah yeah quite
01:23:54
literally yeah but you know also no
01:23:56
wonder I got into my line of work
01:23:58
because oh I don't have to figure out
01:24:00
who I am I can do all these things and
01:24:02
be all these people people want me to be
01:24:03
that's why I got away with it so long
01:24:05
and then I was like oh The Jig Is up we
01:24:07
gotta discover who I am it's gonna be
01:24:09
hard and scary
01:24:10
but
01:24:12
yeah
01:24:13
we have a closing tradition on this
01:24:15
podcast where the last guest asks a
01:24:17
question for the next guest
01:24:19
do you speak to yourself
01:24:22
the way you speak to those that you love
01:24:26
that's a really beautiful question
01:24:29
um
01:24:32
I'd say about half of the time now I do
01:24:36
I really feel like I show up for my
01:24:40
friends
01:24:41
and I'm a words of affirmation gal like
01:24:44
I always let people know I'm grateful
01:24:45
for them and I'm just like a lover you
01:24:48
know like I want people in my life to
01:24:49
know I love them and I
01:24:51
but I can also have like a venomous
01:24:53
tongue sometimes like I'm not to
01:24:55
yourself to others some it's like I can
01:24:57
emotionally respond to people in an
01:24:59
unkind way but I always
01:25:02
hold myself accountable so to answer
01:25:05
that question I can be very kind and at
01:25:08
times unkind to the people I love the
01:25:11
most and it's similar to myself the the
01:25:14
cruel inner critic self-critic
01:25:18
I
01:25:19
I I only do to myself and you know I'm
01:25:22
still finding ways to quiet that voice
01:25:24
but I have made it a habit to say nice
01:25:28
things about myself and
01:25:31
and it feels silly sometimes and a
01:25:33
little like not egotistical but like
01:25:36
saying kind affirmations to yourself
01:25:38
feels really
01:25:40
bizarre at the beginning because we
01:25:43
almost think it's unhumble or does that
01:25:45
make sense like uh but I
01:25:48
yeah I take time out of my day to be say
01:25:50
cool things to myself kind things to
01:25:52
myself as well but
01:25:55
um but I'm still working on the voice
01:25:57
that's
01:25:59
not so nice
01:26:00
speaking of kind things um
01:26:03
also never asked anybody this question
01:26:05
before but um seems quite relevant in
01:26:07
your story because I was just reflecting
01:26:08
on that story you told about your mother
01:26:09
appending her life to come to LA with
01:26:12
her her teenage daughter to pursue her
01:26:14
her dreams when you when you look back
01:26:16
on the journey you've you've had so far
01:26:18
what who if there were like you know a
01:26:20
couple of people that
01:26:22
you you wanted to say thank you to even
01:26:25
though thank you would never really be
01:26:26
enough
01:26:27
to explain the Gratitude you have for
01:26:29
them who are those individuals you can
01:26:31
include yourself if that's relevant at
01:26:32
all
01:26:33
um
01:26:35
I mean
01:26:37
definitely my mom but I tell her this
01:26:39
all the time thank you uh my manager who
01:26:42
I also tell all the time
01:26:44
thank you
01:26:46
she
01:26:49
my I would not be where I am personally
01:26:51
or professionally without her and she's
01:26:53
gone well beyond being a manager she has
01:26:56
been the most humankind patient gracious
01:26:59
selfless woman to me when she didn't
01:27:02
have to be
01:27:04
um
01:27:07
it's hard for me to choose this because
01:27:09
I'm such a I tell people all the time
01:27:11
because that's how I receive love is
01:27:13
like I want to hear it so I always make
01:27:14
it a point to tell people I've I've been
01:27:17
so lucky along the way of having people
01:27:18
that have been very good to me but
01:27:21
um
01:27:22
there's one
01:27:23
woman in particular who
01:27:26
is still a friend but her name is Joanna
01:27:28
Garcia she's an actress and she was
01:27:31
number one on the call she lead of the
01:27:33
show privileged I did on the CW and I
01:27:37
remember
01:27:38
how she so num so for people that don't
01:27:42
know number one on the call sheet is
01:27:43
kind of It kind of goes in from biggest
01:27:45
role like lead to
01:27:48
there are no small parts but you know
01:27:50
what I'm saying she was the lead of the
01:27:51
show and she treated everyone with such
01:27:54
kindness and Grace and
01:27:57
and I remember and she was so good to me
01:28:01
and I was like I want to be like that
01:28:03
that's the kind of number one on a show
01:28:06
I want to be not even more than that
01:28:07
that's the kind of person I want to be
01:28:09
she knew everyone's name
01:28:11
and
01:28:13
and she had such an impact on me and I
01:28:16
don't know if I've ever
01:28:18
actually told her that
01:28:20
that she is still someone I think about
01:28:22
it's almost like what would Joanna do I
01:28:25
could still I could wear the what would
01:28:26
Jesus do bracelet what would I want to
01:28:28
do
01:28:29
uh
01:28:30
and it's people like that I've been
01:28:32
really fortunate with the people I've
01:28:34
worked with in my life that have
01:28:36
inspired me so thanks Joanna leaping
01:28:39
back to the start of this conversation
01:28:40
um it was really startling to me that
01:28:42
you hadn't had many conversations
01:28:44
like this before it like really baffled
01:28:46
me it's actually the thing I was saying
01:28:47
before you arrived because I go on
01:28:49
YouTube I go on whatever and I'm so
01:28:51
superficial I'm so tired of talking
01:28:52
about my beauty routine I could just die
01:28:54
like I can't do it anymore but it was it
01:28:58
was so like I was literally over there
01:28:59
watching a video where it was like
01:29:00
when's the first time you had a cup of
01:29:02
coffee do you remember the one and I
01:29:04
mean
01:29:05
also I just
01:29:07
yeah I mean no I don't because they all
01:29:08
kind of blend I mean it was like a
01:29:10
buzzfeed thing where they're asking you
01:29:11
these questions
01:29:13
I just found it so surprising that you'd
01:29:15
never really
01:29:17
never really got to know who who Lucy
01:29:20
was
01:29:22
and I think and I'm grateful no one's
01:29:24
asked a lot of these questions before
01:29:26
because I don't think I was ready I
01:29:28
don't think I knew how to answer them
01:29:30
so
01:29:32
I uh I feel similarly like I feel like
01:29:35
there's so much more to me that
01:29:37
people might realize or that I have to
01:29:40
talk about
01:29:41
um
01:29:43
but I do believe in the timing of life
01:29:45
and I just maybe I wasn't
01:29:47
quite ready to answer those big
01:29:49
questions Lucy thank you so much you're
01:29:52
amazing thank you so much for this thank
01:29:53
you
01:29:53
[Music]
01:30:16
you got to the end of this podcast
01:30:17
whenever someone gets to the end of this
01:30:18
podcast I feel like I owe them a greater
01:30:20
debt of gratitude because that means you
01:30:22
listen to the whole thing and hopefully
01:30:23
that suggests that you enjoyed it if you
01:30:25
are at the end and you enjoyed this
01:30:27
podcast could you do me a little bit of
01:30:29
a favor and hit that subscribe button
01:30:31
that's one of the clearest indicators we
01:30:33
have that this episode was a good
01:30:34
episode and we look at that on all of
01:30:35
the episodes to see which episodes
01:30:37
generated the most subscribers
01:30:39
thank you so much and I'll see you again
01:30:41
next time

Podspun Insights

In this episode, Lucy Hale takes listeners on an emotional rollercoaster as she opens up about her journey from child star to adult actress, revealing the darker sides of fame and personal struggles. With a candidness that feels refreshingly raw, she discusses her battles with self-worth, eating disorders, and the complexities of addiction. Lucy reflects on the pressures of the entertainment industry, sharing poignant insights about the misconceptions surrounding addiction and mental health. She emphasizes the importance of self-acceptance and the ongoing journey of self-discovery, all while maintaining a sense of humor and grace. This heartfelt conversation not only sheds light on the challenges of growing up in the spotlight but also inspires listeners to embrace their own journeys toward authenticity and healing.

Badges

This episode stands out for the following:

  • 95
    Most emotional
  • 95
    Best performance
  • 94
    Best overall
  • 93
    Most quotable

Episode Highlights

  • Lucy Hale's Journey to Self-Discovery
    Lucy reflects on her struggles with identity and self-worth, sharing her powerful journey to authenticity.
    “I didn’t know who I was until very recently.”
    @ 03m 24s
    February 23, 2023
  • The Impact of Family Dynamics
    Lucy discusses how her parents' divorce shaped her understanding of love and relationships.
    “I’m so glad that my parents separated because it was the best thing for everyone.”
    @ 15m 14s
    February 23, 2023
  • A Beautiful Relationship
    Despite rough moments, she describes her mother as her biggest fan.
    “She's always been my biggest fan.”
    @ 23m 21s
    February 23, 2023
  • Full Circle Moment
    Returning to the same building where her acting journey began at 16.
    “The universe full circle, it was the coolest moment.”
    @ 25m 09s
    February 23, 2023
  • Journey to Self-Acceptance
    She shares her struggles with eating disorders and the path to self-love.
    “I love myself enough now to nourish my body.”
    @ 32m 00s
    February 23, 2023
  • The Struggle with Alcohol
    Lucy shares her journey with alcohol addiction and the pain it masked.
    “Alcohol isn’t the problem; the problem is this feeling inside of me.”
    @ 49m 35s
    February 23, 2023
  • Finding Freedom in Honesty
    Lucy reflects on the importance of sharing her story and embracing her true self.
    “To actually be able to talk about this is so freeing.”
    @ 50m 41s
    February 23, 2023
  • The Impact of Success
    Lucy discusses how her success changed her life and the misconceptions that come with it.
    “Your life irrevocably changes from that moment onwards.”
    @ 56m 34s
    February 23, 2023
  • Finding Happiness Through Struggles
    She reflects on how her struggles with addiction have shaped her happiness today.
    “I’m happy that I struggled with addiction”
    @ 01h 04m 14s
    February 23, 2023
  • Manifesting a New Life
    She shares her journey of self-discovery and the desire to create the life she wants.
    “I believe our thoughts create everything”
    @ 01h 19m 53s
    February 23, 2023
  • The Importance of Authenticity
    She discusses the challenges of maintaining authenticity in the face of fame and expectations.
    “The attempt to escape yourself...causes more harm”
    @ 01h 23m 30s
    February 23, 2023
  • Gratitude for Mentors
    Reflecting on the importance of mentors and expressing gratitude for their impact.
    “Thank you would never really be enough.”
    @ 01h 26m 26s
    February 23, 2023

Episode Quotes

Key Moments

  • Authenticity05:36
  • Mother's Support22:36
  • Eating Disorder Struggles26:47
  • Belief in Self43:57
  • Post-Fame Reflection1:11:03
  • Self-Affirmations1:25:36
  • Gratitude1:26:29
  • Inspiration1:28:09

Words per Minute Over Time

Vibes Breakdown