The Diary Of A CEO with Steven Bartlett XX
[0] If there's anything to know, it is that my world has burned a few times and that I have risen every time.
[1] Bozema St. John, Forbes's number one most influential marketing chief.
[2] It's an international phenomenon.
[3] Has led marketing and branding at some of the biggest companies in the world.
[4] Who have you worked for?
[5] Apple, Netflix, Pepsi, Spike Lee.
[6] He was walking by with a script under his arm, and I took a red pen to it.
[7] I was a receptionist.
[8] I really did think I was getting fire that day.
[9] intuition and creativity and following your gut made me be successful oftentimes we're in these situations that aren't serving us and we're thinking about how the other person's going to feel you are going to be unsatisfied with your life that is the scariest thing be selfish in your life in your career i didn't want anything to stop me but i was about five months pregnant when very quickly things descended into hell i had a condition where the pregnancy is like attacking you then the doctor says to my husband peter you save her or you saved the baby Which one is it?
[10] She didn't survive.
[11] It was the beginning of the big fractures in our relationship.
[12] We were no longer a team.
[13] A few years later, he gets diagnosed with cancer after you've separated.
[14] We had to make a choice to have the conversations, which were about forgiveness.
[15] Anger and misunderstanding really did not matter.
[16] We're going to be together to the last heartbeat.
[17] You've overcome so much.
[18] You refer to yourself often as a phoenix.
[19] I've heard you describe yourself as that.
[20] So take me back, because there's a certain, there's a certain distinctive brilliance and character to you that I know isn't, I know isn't common.
[21] And that uniqueness is what makes you brilliant.
[22] So take me right back to the beginning.
[23] What do I need to know about you to understand the person sat in front of me?
[24] Going right back to the start.
[25] Oh, gosh.
[26] Well, as a phoenix, there isn't just one rising, you know, for me. So if there's anything to know, it is that my world has burned a few times and that I have risen every time.
[27] Now, I wouldn't say that, like, I rise right away.
[28] It's not that kind of miracle.
[29] It's the dusting off.
[30] It's the letting the feathers grow back.
[31] It is the, can I fly again?
[32] Let me try.
[33] Ooh, this really hurts.
[34] Let me sit down.
[35] Try one more time.
[36] and then I'm off.
[37] You know, so that means that it's everything from being, you know, five years old and living in Ghana and my father being in politics and the government being overthrown in political coup and having to uproot ourselves out of Ghana.
[38] I mean, my whole world burned at that point.
[39] Or it is when I was 12 and we had least.
[40] lived in numerous places in Africa and then moved to Colorado Springs, Colorado.
[41] And again, the world shifted and burned and I'd have to recreate myself.
[42] Those first 12 years, when you look back on the most significant fingerprints they left on you and your character, what are those?
[43] Probably my ability to survive.
[44] like get to know people quickly understand who is a friend and who's a foe quickly like being able to read people i would say almost immediately i don't need a lot of proof you know i can tell on like the first question whether or not you have good intentions for me do i have good intentions for you yes okay good your desire to um be able to relate to the person in front of you.
[45] Is that also linked to...
[46] Because it was clear when I was reading about your story that you had a very early love of culture and just like what's going on in the world.
[47] Yeah.
[48] Like, you know?
[49] Yeah, but that was survival.
[50] It wasn't, that wasn't...
[51] You know, this battle of, like, nature versus nurture?
[52] Mm -hmm.
[53] I think I have some of it naturally, my curiosity about people and the things that surround me in pop culture.
[54] Um, but it was certainly nurtured, you know, this idea of like, Like, well, I have to understand everything that's happening in the society so I can talk to you.
[55] So I can seem normal to you.
[56] You know, so that meant that like, okay, I have to understand American football inside and out.
[57] Friday night lights were a big deal in Colorado.
[58] So I need to understand what's happening in the field so I don't annoy people with cheering at the wrong time.
[59] Or music.
[60] Understanding what was happening at the time and being able to.
[61] sing along to lyrics or argue with somebody in the hallway about my favorite pop star, you know, or fashion, make sure that the crease on my jeans was perfect or the way I folded it over and doubled it up was right.
[62] You know, all of those things are nurtured.
[63] And so it created a lifelong student of pop culture.
[64] So it means that every time that something new would happen, oh, I'd be the first on it.
[65] I'd be the one who'd be like, oh, let me figure out what that is.
[66] I need to understand all of it.
[67] Because should I be in a situation where I'm in front of somebody who really likes that thing?
[68] I want to be able to talk to them.
[69] I want to be able for them to understand that I understand what they're talking about.
[70] I'm not so strange.
[71] And that explains in large part why you pursued creativity and marketing, or at least why you ended up there.
[72] But do you think it's hard to be yourself when you're trying to survive?
[73] Hmm.
[74] Yeah, I think so.
[75] Were you being yourself as you reflect on that chapter of your life, the pre -18?
[76] Left to my own devices, I probably wouldn't have.
[77] I probably would have turned out to be too much of a people pleaser.
[78] But thankfully, I had a mother who was, well, both my parents, but my mother in particular was very focused on making sure that all of us girls, I have three younger sisters.
[79] understood our worth and the way that we contribute.
[80] So in the process, so imagine I'm 12 and I'm here trying to understand all the American things.
[81] And I come home and I've finally broken through the inner circle of the cool girls.
[82] And they've now said they want to come over to my house.
[83] And here I am in front of my mother, my very Ghanaian, very proud mother.
[84] And I'm saying, I'm going to need you to buy some pizza, get some fanta up in here, okay?
[85] Like French fries, I don't know what it is.
[86] Get all the American foods, chicken nuggets, the things they like.
[87] And she's like, absolutely not.
[88] They're going to eat foo.
[89] They're going to have some pepper soup.
[90] They're going to eat with their hands because that's what we do in this house.
[91] And I'm sitting there like, oh, you've got to be kidding.
[92] my whole like are you like you want to destroy me like I'm just learning how to get along with these people you know and the lesson there and by the way she didn't she wasn't like cryptic about it she was very direct very straightforward and she was like when you go to their house you do the things they want to do when they come to your house they do the things you want to do she was did not mince words and at 12 she said that maybe I couldn't have articulated it then but I certainly understand it very clearly now, which is that I had to understand my own worth, like what am I bringing to the table?
[93] Not just about what they have and what they're trying to do and they're trying to communicate, but what is it that I'm bringing so that the pride I have in my own culture, in my own skin, in my own uniqueness, is as important as the things that they like.
[94] Regardless of apparent consequence.
[95] Oh, yeah, yeah.
[96] Because throughout whether it's the corporate world or our professional lives, there's always an apparent consequence, which holds us back.
[97] Oh, absolutely.
[98] Do you think being the oldest of four sisters, right?
[99] Yeah.
[100] So do you think being the oldest of four sisters shaped your personality?
[101] Oh, absolutely.
[102] Yes, I'm the boss.
[103] No question about it.
[104] But also, that was how our household ran.
[105] You know, it's like my dad made no small, no small beings of saying, like, you know, reminding me constantly that you're the oldest.
[106] You have to set the tone.
[107] You lead the example.
[108] You know, your sisters will follow you.
[109] He says that today.
[110] I think he said that to me last week.
[111] What's he lying?
[112] Oh, my dad.
[113] Oh, my God.
[114] He is the type of person who absorbs information and holds it and then can spit it back at you.
[115] He doesn't need a lot of time to understand concepts or things.
[116] I mean, he's a self -taught musician.
[117] He didn't go to high school.
[118] He didn't go to middle school or high school, but has two PhDs.
[119] and my dad has very, very high standards.
[120] So that is the person that I grew up with.
[121] What impression did he give you about what success was and looked like?
[122] And also in doing so, what failure was?
[123] Success meant financial independence and financial success.
[124] You know, you needed to make a certain amount of money in order to have the nice things, you know, the nice house, the nice car, the vacations, all the things.
[125] Success also meant big titles.
[126] So early on in my career, I remember wanting to take a job that had a lesser title than the one I was leaving.
[127] And my dad hated that.
[128] You know, he was just like, but you're taking steps backwards.
[129] And my thought was like, well, it's not really.
[130] because the responsibilities are different and better, and they're going to get me closer to the place I want to go.
[131] You don't understand that, but I understand that.
[132] But to him, that was failure.
[133] And so that certainly changed the way that I think about, you know, my own upward mobility, that for some time I did chase titles, you know, but the truth of matters that a title isn't going to give you power.
[134] You know, a title doesn't actually give you anything.
[135] And it's like what I've learned about leadership is that you have to convince the people who are around you that you are right, that you have a good idea and that they should input into that thing and then they will follow you.
[136] You think just because you have a chief title that somebody is going to follow you or not think you're stupid, there are plenty of people out there who have, you know, that title and teams who don't respect them.
[137] And so for me, I think those early last.
[138] lessons were they have their good things and their bad things, you know, and the good things were that me understanding that my dad's understanding of what success looked like in terms of titles was not necessarily the only way.
[139] What does give you power then?
[140] So if the title doesn't give you power, what does give you power?
[141] Influence.
[142] Influence.
[143] You know, being, well, there's a couple of things.
[144] So that's a really complicated question.
[145] It's like talent alone doesn't do it.
[146] Again, many talented people who couldn't lead anybody, you know, and you have many leaders who have no talent.
[147] So it's like, it's an interesting combination of those two things.
[148] Like, you have to be able to be on the ground and do the work.
[149] You also have to convince other people, so that's where the influence comes in, that the idea that you have or the way that you're saying we should go is the right thing, and then get them to follow you.
[150] And then you must execute.
[151] you actually have to be right.
[152] Yeah.
[153] And then if you do that enough times, oh, then it becomes unquestionable.
[154] You know, that's when the reputation precedes you.
[155] That's when, you know, at least for me, it's like I get into a new job and people expect a certain thing.
[156] It's like, oh, I've seen you do that over there.
[157] Or I had a friend who worked for you at this place.
[158] And they said you did.
[159] Yeah.
[160] Your first sort of real significant career move seemed to be this encounter with Spike Cleese agency.
[161] Yeah.
[162] So for people that don't know, who is Spike Lee?
[163] Okay.
[164] And how did that happen?
[165] Spike Lee is blackety, blackety black.
[166] First of all.
[167] All the blackness.
[168] No, but he is a film director, really, at his core, filmmaker.
[169] Let's call it that.
[170] Because he certainly produces and does other things and writes.
[171] But he has an advertising agency in New York.
[172] When I was there, it was on Madison Avenue.
[173] So Masson Avenue is like the place for advertising in the world, right?
[174] It's the place where the show Mad Men was made from.
[175] So DDB is one of the biggest agencies, and Spike had a JV with them.
[176] What brought you to New York in the first place?
[177] Curiosity.
[178] I graduated from Wesley University, which was in Middown, Connecticut.
[179] And it was just time to apply to med school, and I really didn't want to.
[180] and New York was right there.
[181] It was like an hour and a half from school.
[182] And I really didn't have a plan.
[183] I just went, trying to escape what I thought was my destiny.
[184] And like many people say, I think sometimes in this business, I kind of fell into this.
[185] But I think my destiny actually came to find me. That's what it was.
[186] I opened up and allowed for something greater that I didn't even know was possible to find me instead.
[187] So many people are in that chapter of their life where they're trying to find their destiny or trying to help, trying to figure out a way to let their destiny find them.
[188] Yeah.
[189] When you look back and connect the dots as to how your career came to be and you think about that first moment where you, you know, you went to New York and then you're on Madison Avenue.
[190] You're working for Spike Lee and you find, you find your destiny or it finds you, if your daughter comes to you and says, mom, what advice have you got for me on finding my destiny?
[191] Like what have I got to do to actively bring it about?
[192] Have you ever heard that statement like let go and let God?
[193] Have you heard that before?
[194] No. It's a very Christian thing.
[195] I feel like in the like black church there's a lot of that.
[196] Let go and let God.
[197] You know, as if God is just going to just sprinkle magic dust over you, you know?
[198] And I'm like, no, I don't necessarily believe that just as a plain statement.
[199] I think the letting go is an action.
[200] you know it's not surrender it's like you just lay down and it's going to find you you're not going to find your destiny sitting on the couch you know the letting go for me is like the letting go of preconceived ideas about what it is that you are going to do letting go of sometimes you're like trying to do something and keep hitting a wall you're just like oh if i just hit it one more time it's going to break sometimes it's like you know that's a cement wall right if you just move five feet to the right it's actually plaster and you're going to go right through it you know it's like sometimes it's the letting go of this thought that you had which is like oh I'm going to do this thing right here is the magic and I'll tell you this look it didn't just happen at that stage of my life it's happening right now where you know I'm like okay well I think I am done with my corporate CMO work.
[201] I believe I'm finished.
[202] So I'm going to look over it.
[203] I'm not going to be actively looking for the next CMO job.
[204] I want whatever is coming for me going to allow space for it.
[205] Now, it doesn't mean I'm just sitting around.
[206] I'm also trying to polish other skills.
[207] I'm trying to create.
[208] No, because perhaps the next thing that's coming is somewhere more in that space.
[209] I can feel it, like in my spirit.
[210] And that understanding of like your intuition, and if you're listening to it, it's like a magnet.
[211] It's going to just draw you closer to the thing that you're supposed to do.
[212] And it has happened every single time, like every time without fail.
[213] Like every job, every move I've made hasn't been because somebody said, oh, you know what, this makes logical sense.
[214] One plus, one equals two.
[215] Sometimes I'm just like, but it's not math, though.
[216] You know, it's physics.
[217] It's not, it's not the addition and the subtraction.
[218] I'm just going to sit here, and I'm going to get up, and I'm going to go talk to this person, and I'm going to talk to that person.
[219] I'm going to sit back down again.
[220] And I'm going to write this thing out.
[221] And then, like magic, because I don't know how else to describe it, it's like, the destiny appears.
[222] I'm telling you, every time it has happen every single time even when people were like oh that is never going to happen like you're wasting your time i don't know why you'd go over there and do that i'm like i don't know something something inside i'm telling you telling me that this is the way to go i'm going to go over there every time it's worked but but do you believe so there's a lot there for me there's a lot that i'm interested in there do you because i want to be clear are you because some people hear that and go ha ha ha love that everything happens for a reason.
[223] I'm going to chill and my fate is pre -written and it's coming for me. Bose said all I've got to do is wait because everything happens for reason it's pre -written so I just got to pay these tarot cards and I'm going to...
[224] This is when I start banging on the table.
[225] No, no, no, no, no. If I just chill here.
[226] No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no. No, no, no, no, no. Don't chill in here.
[227] Okay?
[228] I think you're probably tough for my energy.
[229] I'm not one of those chilling here type people anyway, you know?
[230] And I don't believe things are pre -written, actually.
[231] Like, for me, the idea of destiny isn't that something is already predetermined for you.
[232] I think you create your destiny also.
[233] You know, meaning that, like, look, there was a movie in the late 90s called Sliding Dors, starred Gwyneth Paltrow.
[234] The concept is basically like, you know, if you're running for the train and you catch it, you know, you jump inside, you have one destiny.
[235] If the door is close, you still stand on platform, then you have to catch the next train, it takes you to a different destiny.
[236] That's the concept, right?
[237] It is what I also believe, which is that, like, my destiny is not pre -written, but the movements that I make are what lead me to the thing that's actually for me. You know, and so it's a constant evolution.
[238] So I don't believe that you have to sit and wait for it.
[239] I think your constant movement, your constant discovery is actually what then brings the destiny to you.
[240] So this isn't about predetermined anything or just like, let me just chill out on, like I said, you can't sit on the couch and expect your destiny to come for you.
[241] So it's not reading my horoscope with the tarot cards and.
[242] No disrespect to the tarot card readers.
[243] But I do believe that we are constantly creating our destiny.
[244] You know, that this life that we're living, these experiences, the people were meeting.
[245] people in your relationships with, who it happens because there's a certain action that you take that leads you to that thing.
[246] Now it's your choice, whether or not you take it.
[247] And then that's when the whole intuition thing comes up for me, right?
[248] Because I'm like, now you may have caused a lot of action and then you have a couple of choices in front of you.
[249] Where are you going?
[250] Which one is calling you?
[251] And you know what people like to do.
[252] They want to write pro and calmless.
[253] They want to ask people for advice.
[254] Do you think I should do this or should I do that?
[255] Both of these are good.
[256] Why are you asking other people?
[257] They don't know.
[258] They're not living your life.
[259] They don't have the whole desk.
[260] They have their own thing.
[261] Like, why are you asking them?
[262] And if you got quiet for a second and heard your intuition, but then again, sometimes people are scared, right?
[263] Because it's telling you do something that you probably don't want to do.
[264] You're a little scared of it.
[265] And then you're going to choose the wrong thing.
[266] It's hard to hear your intuition when George is very loudly telling you.
[267] Yes.
[268] George being your father.
[269] Yes.
[270] And everyone can relate.
[271] There's always an external voice, which is very loud, whether it's social expectation or Instagram or George.
[272] Yeah.
[273] Yeah.
[274] Yeah.
[275] Saying that this is the right thing to do.
[276] So how do you tune into your intuition and out of George?
[277] It's like any muscle.
[278] You know, it's like, look, we all have biceps.
[279] But some people's biceps are enormous.
[280] Thank you.
[281] That was good.
[282] That was super smooth.
[283] That was really nice.
[284] Nicely done.
[285] But it is like any muscle.
[286] You know, you've got to work it.
[287] You've got to listen to it.
[288] You have to make it brave to talk to you.
[289] You know, I kind of feel like it's like that, friend.
[290] Now, this's not about multiple personalities, but you know, it's like that friend who's talking to you inside your head, you know, and like, if you keep dissing it and keep being like, shut up, no, it's a bad idea.
[291] If you keep doing that, that voice can't get quieter and quieter.
[292] What makes you think is going to ever be like, listen, Bose, I told you.
[293] No. Look, my intuition is so loud.
[294] Oh, there's no way.
[295] Oh, I meet people and will be like, that person's not for me. And no. By the way, somebody else will be like, oh, that is a very powerful person.
[296] You know, they'll introduce you to this other person or, oh, they're so smart.
[297] They've done this and that and that and that and that.
[298] Not for me. So I'm not even going to engage.
[299] Like my intuition is that strong.
[300] I trust it, 100%.
[301] Because you've had to train it, right?
[302] Yes, yes.
[303] I've had to allow it to lead me. Is that because of what you said earlier about?
[304] the survival and the pattern recognition is developed now where you can kind of you see a couple of cues your intuition goes oh we met this person a couple of times yes yes yes yes yes yes that's part of it for sure like throughout my life i've had to listen to my intuition allow it to lead me even when other people were like no whether was my dad or a friend or a mentor a boss you know when they've been like no that's not the thing you want to do you should do this this is this would be more successful for you and then my intuition was like actually i don't think so i think you need to go this way it is so hard i'm not pretending as if like this is the easy thing where it's like oh just listen to your intuition will be fine the thing is dumb hard you know it's like look because sometimes the logic makes a lot more sense than your intuition and so i'm not saying that it's easy but it is the only choice if you want to be successful.
[305] And successful to me these days means that I am happy and at peace and enjoying the thing I'm doing.
[306] It's no longer about the title or the house or the thing.
[307] Like, do I have freedom?
[308] Oh, man. And freedom isn't just like, I can do whatever the hell I want.
[309] Freedom is that like I can be working on a campaign and not sleep for three days because I'm so excited about it.
[310] That's the kind of freedom talking about like really enjoying the things that I'm doing and if I am listening to my intuition it's going to lead me to those opportunities that allow me to have that kind of experience with people or with jobs or whoever it's such an important question I don't think people ask themselves there which is what is your definition of success and I know it's kind of it's kind of like a fluffy question or whatever else but once you have that as your North Star it completely changes your you're like direction of travel right so like that central question I I think, and everyone listening to this now, like, what is your, what is your truly your definition of success?
[311] Because if you don't, if you're not clear on it, someone else is going to write that definition for you.
[312] Yes.
[313] And it might be George.
[314] You know what I mean?
[315] Or anybody.
[316] Yes.
[317] Or someone else.
[318] Or Instagram might write it for you.
[319] Or your partner.
[320] And you're going to, you're going to go down that path and find yourself lost.
[321] Oh my God.
[322] And it would just be a feeling inside your chest that says, oh, we made a wrong turning.
[323] Every time.
[324] You know, sometimes that shows up in the Sunday scaries.
[325] Oh my God.
[326] Yeah.
[327] It shows up there.
[328] We're having a conversation about It's just, oh, yes, it wasn't, on Sunday.
[329] We're like, isn't it strange that it's Monday tomorrow?
[330] None of us have, it's not crossed any of our minds.
[331] Exactly.
[332] Or freaked out about it.
[333] God.
[334] It's like, man, when I, when I started recognizing that Sunday scares were tied to my wrong turns.
[335] Guess who jumped into the driver's seat real quick.
[336] Me. It's like, look, and again, we're not saying, we're not making light of it being like, oh, this is so easy, just change direction.
[337] you know but it's so helpful when you recognize it and then you're like oh okay now I can do something about this it's like right isn't that the first step of like any problem solving is to recognize the problem do you think life like Sunday scurries is a signal oh man tell and it's a signal and it's a very important signal and it's screaming at you so loud so loud.
[338] And the thing is that, the thing about Sunday Scaries in relationship to anything in your life, when you are in a relationship, let's say romantic, and you have to go hang out with that person and you're not feeling so cute about it.
[339] Might be time for you to reevaluate whether or not this relationship is good for you.
[340] It's like, you should be feeling that like, oh, I really want to go do this thing with this person, you know?
[341] And for me, it's not even about length of because, you know, marriage is not something where it's like people tell you all the time.
[342] It's so hard and it's like, you know, you'll fall out of love with this person and then fall back in love with them and da -da -da -da.
[343] It's like, I'm not talking about like the fickleness of your everyday feelings.
[344] I'm talking about like the consistency of a mood that you are in when you are in the presence of that person.
[345] Like, do you feel great?
[346] Do you have ickiness when you're with them?
[347] like that, ooh, that's a Sunday scary that you need to watch out for it.
[348] So it's not just about like, am I going to wake up and go to work tomorrow at a job I hate?
[349] I applied that to everything in my life.
[350] And that's the kind of freedom that I want in my life, that like I don't engage with people that I feel the ickiness with.
[351] There's so many throughout your experience of arriving in New York and then working with Spike Lee and there's so many really interesting moments that sort of categorize and provide clues as to how you got here today.
[352] One of those early moments was when you're in New York and Spikeley puts the script on your desk.
[353] Yes.
[354] Because that is for me, that is for me a really clear, it was like a fork in the road.
[355] You could have done one thing or another thing.
[356] And the choice you made in that seems to be quite pivotal.
[357] Can you tell me about that?
[358] Yes.
[359] So interesting, it wasn't just that he put the script.
[360] on a desk, he was walking by with a script under his arm.
[361] And as I shared, I'm, you know, I love to read.
[362] And I know that Spike writes with a very black point of view about the African -American experience.
[363] And I was fascinated by that.
[364] And so as soon as I saw it, I was like, I mean, this must be something interesting that he's either writing or reading.
[365] I don't know.
[366] I want to, I want to be part of it.
[367] What was your job there at the time?
[368] I was the assistant.
[369] Actually, not even the assistant.
[370] I was answering the phone.
[371] And I was a reception.
[372] receptionist at his agency, a temporary receptionist.
[373] I didn't even have the job yet.
[374] I was only filling in.
[375] But it felt there was a little bit of naivete in it, you know, and that like, I don't know 15 years ago even, if I saw Spike walking past my desk, I would have been like, hey, what are you reading?
[376] Could I read that?
[377] Because I would have used all my logic to say, oh, he's so important, whatever he's holding there he needs he's not going to give it to you so why even ask i probably would have explained it to myself that way but at the time there was a little bit of that naivetee brashness arrogance even you know where i was just like oh whatever he's reading i want to read and so that's what i asked him just said what do you have you know and he said he's his script for bamboozled and i was like okay well can i read it and he looked at me incredulously and he was like sure here you Oh, have it back to me in three days and let me know what you think.
[378] And of course, he had a smirk on his face, and so did the office, everybody who overheard the conversation.
[379] And I really didn't understand what that meant.
[380] But of course, in hindsight, I understood that it was such a complicated piece of writing that he probably didn't think I would finish it, one, or have anything to add.
[381] And I took a red pen to it, a literal red pen.
[382] He likes to tell the story now that, like, you know, he gave this receptionist his script.
[383] came back three days later with markups and notes in the margins said you know i think that this dialogue here could be flushed out a little bit i didn't understand what happened between these two characters you know and he was just like what you marked up my script and i was just like oh god i didn't i didn't know man i really did think i was getting fired that day and uh he went into his office slammed the door i sat there man i'm telling you i had my purse with me and i was just sitting there waiting for him to open up the office so that he could tell me I was fired.
[384] And meanwhile, I'm thinking in the back of my head, my dad's going to kill me because I'm not even supposed to be in this job.
[385] I have a college degree.
[386] Why am I a receptionist at this office anyway?
[387] And then he opened the door after what felt like 17 hours.
[388] It was probably just, you know, 30 minutes.
[389] And that's when I got the job.
[390] He was like, you made some good notes.
[391] You should stay.
[392] How old are you?
[393] 22.
[394] So you're 22, and you take a red pen to.
[395] one of the most famous film directors work.
[396] Yeah.
[397] And that gets you the job.
[398] Yes.
[399] What's the lesson there?
[400] Oh, it changed my entire life.
[401] Oh, that changed my entire life.
[402] I've had a few inflection points in my life.
[403] That is absolutely one of them.
[404] Without that moment, I don't know.
[405] And maybe at some other point, I would have learned it.
[406] Maybe it would have come to me anyway.
[407] But I'm so glad it came to me then that that there is no one who knows more about anything than you do.
[408] It just doesn't exist.
[409] Like, look, I'm not saying you should go ahead and try to do like open heart surgery.
[410] Maybe don't do that, you know?
[411] But if you are the patient getting counseled by your doctor and they say, you know what, I think we're going to have to do open heart surgery, but you feel like, hey, look, I don't know that you understand all the symptoms that I'm trying to discuss with you.
[412] and that you seem to just get by a bunch of these things that I've just said, I'm going to have to go for a second opinion.
[413] That's the kind of belief I have in myself, you know, where I'm just like, I'm going to question you, even though you're the expert, and say, I don't know, because you really didn't pay attention to what I was saying.
[414] So let me just go and try and talk to somebody else.
[415] That that moment when Spike said, sure, go for it.
[416] And I went for it.
[417] And then he said I had some good ideas.
[418] Oh, come on.
[419] Like you just said, he's one of the most brilliant filmmakers of all time.
[420] He will be in the annals of history.
[421] And he thought, as a 22 -year -old, I made some good points on a script that is one of his most difficult to read.
[422] You can't tell me shit.
[423] It's hard for anything or anyone to when do that conviction and evidence, right?
[424] That he gave you in that moment.
[425] Yeah, yeah, yeah.
[426] But I feel like also I learned something as a. a leader from him in that moment, that there aren't people on my team that I dismiss for lack of tenure or understanding, you know, that there are so many people who can contribute to an idea, to a campaign, who can challenge your strategy without having more knowledge than you do of the thing.
[427] You know what I'm saying?
[428] That, like, there are junior people on the team that you should ask their opinion because they're probably going to look at it from a different perspective than you ever would and they might say something that changes the entire direction of the thing you're doing and you should listen to them sometimes it's hard for those people to speak up right because of that yes but that's why again the lesson from that moment is it like when he said sure so as a leader why would I not say sure to somebody or make the room for them to be able to speak up you know I I have been known in my teams to, I'm like a teacher, I'll call on people, you know.
[429] And not to make them feel badly, but just allow space, you know, see somebody who looks like there.
[430] And again, this comes down to like some of those lessons from when I was 12, reading people, body language, seeing somebody's itching to jump in the conversation, but they can't find a space because that knucklehead over there talks too much.
[431] We've all been in those meetings, you know?
[432] And then just being like, hey, did you, did you have?
[433] have something to say?
[434] You know, did you want to contribute to this?
[435] You ever thought about this?
[436] And then sometimes people go like, oh, no, no, no. No, they'll get shy.
[437] You know, we're like, I can start to see them like panic.
[438] And I'm like, okay, no problem.
[439] But if you do, just let me know.
[440] You know, just give them a second to be able to gather themselves.
[441] Or sometimes it, you know, they'll be like, yes, actually, I just, I just wanted to say, and they'll contribute.
[442] And, you know, sometimes the contribution is great and sometimes it's a bunch of crap.
[443] but you'll never know unless you ask the counter narrative to that is do you think I was playing around with this idea that I think in teams people end up having what I call like a contribution score and it's kind of like a credit score but it's like the historical value of when you speak whether it's valuable or not and so like your credit when you go for you want to like lease a car or you want to get a house or whatever if you've got a bad credit score you're probably going to get shut down upon you know upon application and if you've got a bad contribution score if you tend to just contribute without thinking or you're just speaking for the sake of speaking then when you speak the first word starts at a lower level of appreciation that is so true God I've never thought of it that way I love that though and you got to so this is a converse point because it means you do want to protect your contribution school you don't want to just speak for the sake of speaking you know if you're brainstorming a campaign and I go what about a billboard and you look like that was a fucking stupid if you already done no voice.
[444] You know what I mean?
[445] Yeah.
[446] But that's the thing is that, you know, it's kind of also the same way that I look at failure of ideas, you know, oh man, that can kill a, I can kill your creativity faster than anything else, you know, it's not, it's not just your contribution score, but it's like, you know, it's like, we're like, we're in the meeting, okay?
[447] And here you are.
[448] Maybe you spoke up by yourself, maybe I called on you.
[449] And you said the thing and everybody in the room's like, oh my God, that's actually, that's really smart.
[450] Yes, it is.
[451] We should do that.
[452] And then we do the thing and it bombs.
[453] Oh, man. You know, this is when, again, as a leader, it's like you've got to come in and protect the people's spirit.
[454] Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
[455] And their confidence.
[456] Yeah, yeah.
[457] You know, it's like that idea of failing fast, like that's when it really comes into play.
[458] It's like, oh, no, no, no, dust yourself off.
[459] Everybody get up.
[460] We're going to try this again.
[461] I'm going to try a different way.
[462] Thank you for contributing.
[463] Sit your ass down.
[464] Okay, who else has another idea?
[465] You know what I mean?
[466] But making sure that they're no longer a pariah also.
[467] You know, but that's your job as the leader to do that.
[468] You know, it's like, look, we each have a value and a role to play in that context, right?
[469] So as the person who came up with the bad idea or the stupid contribution, your job isn't to then dust yourself off and try to come again.
[470] You know, you can do that, but it's really hard to do if you don't have somebody on the other end who's pulling you to do that.
[471] You know?
[472] And so my job in that role is to make sure that you come back.
[473] That is my job.
[474] You know, it's not just to pick the good ideas.
[475] It's to protect the people.
[476] Protect the good ideas.
[477] Protect the bad ideas.
[478] Like, make sure they keep rising every time something bombs because it's going to bomb.
[479] Like, you're not going to get a perfect score all the time.
[480] And it's funny, because as you were saying, I was thinking, it was only a bad idea when it hit the market.
[481] Yeah.
[482] There's a good idea up until then.
[483] And that's an uncontrollable, right?
[484] No one can, so celebrate, probably should be celebrating the, the, running the experiment itself versus the outcome of the experiment.
[485] Yes, that's right, that's right, that's right.
[486] And always, you know, I love Monday morning quarterbacking.
[487] I love it.
[488] You know, some people think it's like a punishment.
[489] I really try not to make it feel like punishment where you review the thing that happened that went bad.
[490] You know, and everybody wants to pile on.
[491] Now, now all of a sudden, this person who didn't say one word in the meeting, well, I knew it was a bad idea from the start.
[492] Oh, I cannot stand those type of people.
[493] Look, in a meeting with me, you all understand that that's a wrong thing to say.
[494] If you're going to be the one who says, well, I knew it was going to be bad from the start, well, then you should have said that shit before we went and executed it.
[495] Otherwise, don't tell me now.
[496] You know?
[497] So it's like the picking a part of the thing, like, okay, what was the thing that went right?
[498] What was the thing that went wrong?
[499] What could we have done differently to get a different outcome?
[500] And sometimes it's nothing.
[501] The conditions were right, the idea was right, it was executed right, it just didn't hit.
[502] And then sometimes you're just going to be like, just chalk it up.
[503] Like that sucks.
[504] You know, or you do learn something.
[505] You're just like, it was such a great idea in the room.
[506] But then we went outside and we were all in love with it that we missed the huge red flag.
[507] Everybody missed it.
[508] Nobody saw it.
[509] Nobody saw that like actually wasn't that funny.
[510] We laughed in the room, but it wasn't that funny.
[511] it.
[512] You know?
[513] It's like, and that has happened to me so many times, so many times where it's like you just fall in love with the thing and then you go outside and nobody thinks it's good except for the people who are in the room with you.
[514] It's like putting on a really great outfit at home, you know, you just look at yourself in the mirror.
[515] You're like, I am, I am just too cute.
[516] I'm fine.
[517] I'm about to pull one a night.
[518] You go outside and ain't not one person talk to you.
[519] You see pictures later?
[520] You're like, I did not look like that.
[521] I know I did it.
[522] I swear to you, I look better when I saw myself in the mirror.
[523] Can't relate.
[524] No, I'm joking.
[525] I'm joking.
[526] I'm joking.
[527] So that time when you're working in New York, what you're working with Spike at his agency, I read you took a phone call from an ex -boyfriend at college who was in a difficult moment in his life.
[528] Yeah.
[529] What did he say on the phone?
[530] What can you share?
[531] You know, I think.
[532] this is the part about when you think about things that you would do over.
[533] Yeah.
[534] You know, the ways that you would have reacted differently and torture yourself about it, I do that now.
[535] Still, even though I've been through a lot of therapy, even though I know that the outcome probably would have been the same at a different time.
[536] You know, he suffered from a from mental illness that I obviously couldn't diagnose you know we were in a romantic relationship that now of course looking back with was toxic I didn't know how to help him and eventually he decided to end his life by suicide and I blamed myself for a long time to some degree I still do you know wishing that I had had said something different, wishing that I had known better to ask for help, wishing I'd just been a better friend or girlfriend, you know?
[537] And even now, I remember writing a post on Instagram when someone famous died by suicide.
[538] And, you know, there were all of the things that people say they're like oh you never know what somebody's dealing with or like you know or like call this line if you know you're thinking these thoughts and all i could like the only way i could react to it was just like but the people who are around that person feels like the guilt you feel the terrible burden you carry for the rest of your life like what do those people do it was like what hotline exists for them you know how do you manage that feeling it is a sort of survivor's guilt to some degree you know i feel the same about people who are survivors of a loved one's terminal illness we never talk about those people you always talk about the person who's suffering and i'm not saying we shouldn't i'm just saying that we have to to consider the entire circle of people, you know, and how do you give advice, help, relieve the guilt, the sadness, the grief, the regret, all of those things.
[539] And it is still something that I deal with in terms of many different types of grief I've had in my life.
[540] mental health and mental illness has become increasingly discussed in society in the last five, ten years.
[541] When I was a kid, I didn't know what it was.
[542] I didn't know what it was a thing.
[543] Now it's very popular in conversation.
[544] Had he made any indications that he was suffering and could he, could he articulate that he had mental health challenges?
[545] Yes, I mean, he was on medication.
[546] So he knew he was, he had challenge.
[547] challenges.
[548] But, and look, I was I was clinically depressed as well.
[549] I was on medication.
[550] We were both on medication, you know?
[551] And the challenge with having any mental illness is that sometimes you know how you're diagnosed and you know that you have to take medication for it, but maybe we don't feel like you're ill. And he was an artist, a musician.
[552] And so sometimes as a creative, that gets confused, right?
[553] Because you're just like, oh, but I need my angst in order to create.
[554] You know, I pull from this deep, dark well, and that's where my artistry comes from.
[555] And he would say stuff all the time.
[556] You know, he would be impassioned about, you know, it's like, well, none of it is worth it.
[557] You know, if this doesn't work, I don't know what I'm going to do.
[558] You know, or like would be so dependent on me for his own happiness.
[559] You know, the things I did would set him off or not.
[560] You know, and so then you are tied to that person's ups and downs, even though it has nothing to do with you, right?
[561] And again, like, look, I've had a lot of therapy to talk about this, and so I can articulate it, but it doesn't change the way that you really feel about it.
[562] You know, I can academically talk about it and say, oh, well, you know, he behaved this way and therefore I behaved this way, right?
[563] We were like a tip -for -tat type situation.
[564] But when you're in it, all you want to do is to protect that person.
[565] You know, all I wanted to do was keep Ben up.
[566] That's all.
[567] By any means necessary.
[568] You know, so if it meant that I had to stay on the phone for six hours, that's what I had to do.
[569] If I had to miss my own meetings and calls and friends and dinners and all, that's what I had to do.
[570] Did he call you?
[571] Yes.
[572] Around the time.
[573] Yes, yes.
[574] He called me, well, that day he called, he was having one of his episodes, you know, and was accusing me of cheating on him or, you know, whatever the thing was.
[575] And I was just so exhausted.
[576] It had been a number of days of this constant battery.
[577] He was living in Geneva and I was in New York.
[578] And so he was, you know, we were on different time zones.
[579] he couldn't see anything I was doing but was accusing me of all kinds of things.
[580] I was just tired.
[581] And so I said, I needed to go out with my friends, going to go to dinner.
[582] Of course, you can imagine the battery of insults, you know, that he hit me with.
[583] And I hung up the phone and just went.
[584] And I could hear the phone ringing when I left my apartment.
[585] You know, but I thought like, he's just going to have to cool off and I'll get back to my get back.
[586] And when I did, he had left me a series of increasingly panicked voicemails.
[587] And the last one was the one where he said he was going to jump from a bridge.
[588] And that was it.
[589] And he jumped from a bridge.
[590] Where are you at with, because I know you said you can kind of look at it objectively, but it doesn't change how you feel about it.
[591] Yeah.
[592] Where are you at today?
[593] I mean, you're what, two decades on from that?
[594] Yeah.
[595] He was such a brilliant person.
[596] You know, a brilliant creative.
[597] I wish I could have saved him and myself, you know, meaning that I wish I had known to ask for help in that situation.
[598] I didn't know what to say.
[599] I didn't know how to, I didn't know how to articulate what he was doing or how I was reacting to it.
[600] I thought it was my fault, you know, that if I just, like, loved him harder or better, whatever better meant, you know, that he wouldn't have jumped.
[601] I think about all the time what would have happened if I had answered the phone when I heard it ringing when I was leaving.
[602] Was that the moment he decided?
[603] You know, maybe if I had picked up the phone, he wouldn't have felt desolate and alone.
[604] I think about that all the time.
[605] All the time.
[606] all the time all the time i mean i so much so that i apply that and many other things that have happened in my life um in current situations you know meaning that like if um there is a situation with a friend who's going through something or is you know telling me about some challenge that they're having and i feel powerless or i feel like i don't have the answer, I consider whether or not I am their last call.
[607] And I consider that like, okay, well, what else, who else can I pull into this to help?
[608] Because I don't know what to do.
[609] And by the way, the trauma response to that is that sometimes it's not even like that.
[610] You know what I'm saying?
[611] It's like, it's not like I'm jumping to a conclusion that they're not even anywhere near.
[612] But that's where I'm going because that's my experience.
[613] you know and so I'm always considerate that it's like if somebody's going through something tough or there's a friend you know they tell you they're checking it on your strong friends again I don't even know what that means but you know it's like if I have a friend who I haven't heard from or like I know they're going through something tough and I call them and they're not answering or they I call them they sound funny to me oh I'll be the first one drive over there and be like I just had to lay eyes on you I had to see that you're all right okay you good?
[614] Okay, okay.
[615] You just need some ice cream?
[616] All right, I got you.
[617] You know?
[618] But I'm, I'm, I'm very conscious of the fact that people are delicate.
[619] Our lives are delicate.
[620] And even when somebody looks like they got everything together, there might be something really unsettled right underneath the surface.
[621] And so how can I be more conscious as a friend?
[622] Now, the difference, what I learned in 20 years though is that although I consider like could I have changed the outcome of that night maybe I could have changed the outcome of that night but doesn't mean that he would not have decided to end his life and I have also grown in understanding that it was his choice it was his choice it really didn't have anything to do with me how a person decides to live their life or leave their life is their choice and have to respect it that's what has changed in 20 years it's really interesting because you know we spend so much of our lives fighting the choices that other people make oh yes especially people we love yes because you think you think you know better for them yeah or you can change it yeah you know better for them yes but that's why i think the same thing we've been talking about with intuition that it applies to you too it's like you think you know better how somebody else should live their life and they think they know better how you should live yours and they're going to advise you that way that's why it's like you know when we talk about like listening to your intuition or whether or not you're going to you know march to the beat of your own drum and it's like look there's going to be people in your life who love you desperately who want the best for you and are going to advise you horribly this is not their life they can't help you because they don't even know where you are.
[623] They've never been there before.
[624] It might look familiar to them.
[625] But they've never been there.
[626] They're not in your shoes.
[627] They don't have your context.
[628] So who can advise you?
[629] Yourself.
[630] That's the only person.
[631] The only one.
[632] Not your mama.
[633] Not your best friend that you've known since you were three.
[634] Not your mentor, who you admire, and who has reached the place you want to go.
[635] even they can't do it.
[636] You can't do it.
[637] They don't know.
[638] You found love in Peter at work.
[639] Yes.
[640] You weren't interested in him at first.
[641] No. What changed?
[642] Oh, what changed.
[643] Why weren't you interested in him?
[644] If I had that answer, like we could solve all of love's riddles, right?
[645] You know what's really interesting.
[646] Earlier on when you talked about let go and let God, it really struck me as a relationship metaphor as well because we go through life thinking, I want brunette with this size this and that and da -da -da.
[647] And we're not, we're too, we've got our blinkers on and we're too narrow for all the great people that might come along.
[648] Like, well, you might have met your husband or wife already, but you were just so caught up in how they were supposed to look and how much money they were supposed to have.
[649] Come on, preach.
[650] No, I can't.
[651] No, but it's true.
[652] But that is, you know, part of it is that, you know, when you say let go and let God, it's like, yes, the letting go.
[653] of these, you know, preconceptions, whether it's for job or love or friends or whatever.
[654] But it's also the action of being like, okay, let me just, all right, let's go and see what this is.
[655] You know, and for me, it's like when I met him, yeah, he was not my type.
[656] You know, this, like, white man who was a ginger, for God's sake.
[657] I mean, what the hell was I going to do with that?
[658] You know, it was like, and he was wearing this big, fat gold chain, two buttons open in his, I mean, God, Even thinking about it now, I'm just like, oh, how embarrassing.
[659] Like, really, seriously.
[660] You know, but he, um, he surprised me. We, like, basically the story is that he said he wanted to get to know me. He want to take me to dinner.
[661] And I was like, absolutely not.
[662] I'm way too fine for you.
[663] Yes, because that is what I also think.
[664] And, um, I was like, look, if you want to get to know me, Mr. White Man, you're going to read Song of Solomon.
[665] by Tony Morrison.
[666] And he was literally like, I don't even know what that.
[667] He was like, no one has ever even said that to me. And I'm like, yeah, exactly.
[668] Go read Song of Solomon by Tony Morrison.
[669] And then we can have dinner and talk about it.
[670] Why that book?
[671] It was my favorite book.
[672] It is still my favorite book.
[673] And it's just so, you know, it's like, look, Tony Morrison as an author does not come down to your level.
[674] Tony Morrison is up here.
[675] She's not going to mince words or, like, change metaphors or not let you stare at the uncomfortable realness of being black.
[676] She's going to hit you in the face with it.
[677] And I was like, oh, I want to see this very privileged, right boy, read this work, and then come talk to me about it.
[678] That was my trick.
[679] So he came back very quickly, by the way, and I was like, oh, I'm going to call his bluff.
[680] Because first of all, he didn't read it, okay?
[681] And even if he did read it, there's no way he has a great understanding of that story or that work than I do.
[682] I mean, I was like, I'm an African -American and English lit major, for God's sake, from Westland.
[683] Like, and I'm black.
[684] There's no way he knows more.
[685] And he surprised me. We went to dinner and he had such interesting insights.
[686] And, you know, I mean, like love does, I was struck by.
[687] cupid's arrow sitting there at that dinner i swear it was like first night fell in love instantly you moved quickly right oh yeah yeah oh yeah oh yeah oh yeah that was november ninth 2000 and by january i told him i loved him also because he had painted me a uh his interpretation of song of solomon oil on campus He'd never picked up a paintbrush before.
[688] The painting now hangs in our daughter's room, by the way.
[689] And he gave it to me for my birthday.
[690] And I, man, I was like, yep, he's the one.
[691] I want to marry him.
[692] That's it.
[693] And my very Ghanaian father was not into it at all.
[694] Did not approve.
[695] Especially when I said, oh, we're going to move in together.
[696] Like, we moved in together.
[697] We'd known each other for eight months.
[698] And we'd already decided we're going to get married.
[699] And at a year, he proposed.
[700] I said yes.
[701] And I was like, we're off to the racist.
[702] This is it.
[703] What did George have to say about it?
[704] Oh, he hated it.
[705] Hated it.
[706] When did he meet him?
[707] In fact, oh, gosh, it was a terrible situation.
[708] Well, my parents came to visit in, like, February.
[709] So my mom knew I was very much in love.
[710] my dad was not aware and they came to visit me just as you know coming to visit me in new york see how i'm doing and um i orchestrated for peter to come by for dinner uh and also just to set context it wasn't like i introduced my dad to boyfriends my dad had never met anyone and so for him to meet somebody was like well who is this and what does this mean you know but you know he tells it now that he just thought it was, you know, me finally coming into some, you know, early love and he just thought it would be, you know, something he could dismiss.
[711] But by August, when I called him and said, hey, I'm going to move in with my boyfriend.
[712] And he was like, absolutely not.
[713] Like, first of all, this is shameful.
[714] Okay.
[715] You're not going to marry this white person.
[716] Like, that's not going to work for us.
[717] You're the eldest.
[718] What are your sister going to think?
[719] you can't live in sin and he was on a business trip in China and without telling me he flew to New York straight away and did not come to my office to talk to me about it he went to Peters showed up in his office and Peter like calls me and his voice sounded all funny and craze and he was like your dad is here and I was like there's no way I just talked to him yesterday he's in Beijing and he's like no he's sitting in my office and I was like I'm on my way.
[720] And then I hear my dad in the background, like, you will do no such thing.
[721] This is a conversation for men.
[722] I'm like, what?
[723] It's like, okay, I'll give you 15 minutes, and then I'm there.
[724] Yeah.
[725] And to this day, I don't know what they talked about while I was not in the room.
[726] But I know that when I got there, there was some, they'd brokered some understanding between each other.
[727] And even though my father was still unhappy, with the decision made to move in with him, he did not stand in the way.
[728] And when I eventually married Peter, he walked me down the aisle.
[729] What year was it that you married Peter?
[730] Was it 2001?
[731] 2003.
[732] So you got engaged in 2001?
[733] Yeah.
[734] You met in 2000?
[735] Yes.
[736] Okay.
[737] Yeah, quickly.
[738] Very quick.
[739] Yeah.
[740] And you fall pregnant in 2008?
[741] 2008 for the first time.
[742] Eight.
[743] Mm -hmm.
[744] Were you ready, whatever that means, to be a mother at that point?
[745] No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no. I didn't even think I wanted to be a mother.
[746] Ever?
[747] No. I wasn't sure that I did.
[748] I was in, my career had just begun to, like, you know, climb in a way that was very visible to me. You're working at Pepsi at this point?
[749] Yes, I was working at Pepsi and having really good success.
[750] and I was I mean influenced by all of the societal pressures that women have in the workplace you know that's like look if you have a baby is going to slow down your career people will look at you differently you know maybe your attentions are going to shift and so you thought you were ambitious about your career but let a baby come along and now of a sudden you want the baby you don't want the career I I didn't want anything to stop me from the ambition of getting to the top you know and also I was just like I'm having a good time I just don't want to be responsible for anybody else and I found out I was pregnant and I cried you cried what kind of tears no like the fugly tears like the tears that make you vomit type tears the tears that when I called my mom to tell her she was like stop crying you know the tears that Peter didn't know how to to because he was so excited.
[751] He was elated.
[752] And, you know, I was thinking, this is awful.
[753] You know, it's like, I don't want to be pregnant.
[754] And how do you actually say that when, you know, at that point, we'd been married for almost five years.
[755] We were, like, coming up on our fifth anniversary.
[756] I had a great job.
[757] He had a great job.
[758] We had a beautiful apartment in Manhattan.
[759] It's like, why wouldn't you you know it's like everything seems perfect right it's like no one could look at me and say oh you're in a tough situation you shouldn't have a baby you know it felt selfish to say I didn't want to be pregnant to become a mother and I I went into it under duress you know I actually don't think that women especially I don't think women talk about that enough.
[760] You know, it's like the society's pressure of, like, becoming a mother at a certain stage in life.
[761] Or that if you become a mother and you don't want to be, even when things are perfect, that that can also feel like failure.
[762] In order to feel like a trap.
[763] It's like somehow you're supposed to get pregnant and then start glowing immediately.
[764] You know, start feeling.
[765] feeling like all the motherly feels.
[766] I didn't feel any of that.
[767] I didn't want it.
[768] And to be totally canon and transparent, it wasn't until I was about five months pregnant when there was the first sign that something might be wrong with my pregnancy, that all of a sudden it was like, whatever that instinct was I was supposed to kick in when I found out I was pregnant, it kicked in at that point.
[769] You know, it's like I went from being someone who was very cavalier about the pregnancy and trying to think about like, oh, I got to get my snap back.
[770] Like, how am I going to get my six back back after this is done?
[771] You know, I went from that person to the like, well, what do you mean that there's like low amniotic fluid?
[772] What does that mean exactly?
[773] Is the baby okay?
[774] Like, is this little homie growing?
[775] Or like, let me hear the heartbeat again.
[776] You know, it was really that moment that did it.
[777] and very quickly things descended into hell.
[778] I discovered that I had a condition called preeclampsia.
[779] It's essentially when your blood pressure rises in your body because your body acts like the pregnancy is like attacking you.
[780] And so every cell begins to fight against the pregnancy.
[781] I was forced to deliver the baby early.
[782] and she didn't survive.
[783] And it was, you know, for someone who had not wanted to be pregnant, it was extraordinarily devastating.
[784] I think it was a combination of things.
[785] You know, it's like I had begun to develop all the protectiveness of motherhood.
[786] You know, very much like I felt in Ben's day, death, I thought, how could I have been a better mother to this unborn person?
[787] You know, what was my failure in taking care of myself so that I could have a healthy child?
[788] And again, the similarities are parallel where it's like, look, there's nothing I could have done better.
[789] The aftermath of that, of losing Eve?
[790] Take me into that moment.
[791] What was your life like in that moment?
[792] I don't, gosh, how do I even articulate it?
[793] I don't know that there is a word to describe the combination of like grief over something or someone lost that you really never had.
[794] You know, with a combination of anger, raw.
[795] fierce anger at God for this situation at Peter, for having made the choice in the moment of crisis when I'm sitting there and in the bed and the blood pressure is going up and I'm delirious and the doctor says, you know, there's only one choice here.
[796] You save her or you save the baby?
[797] Which one is it?
[798] And Peter says, we'll save my wife.
[799] And I was pissed because, again, the, whatever that thing is, that clicked in my head that said, protect the life that is coming first.
[800] I was like, no, you should have chosen that one.
[801] I've already lived.
[802] I've already lived.
[803] You should have chosen her.
[804] You said that to me?
[805] Yes.
[806] Yes.
[807] It was the beginning of the, some of the big fractures in our relationship, that moment.
[808] you know and then also feeling like an utter failure this is like I mean women since the beginning of time have had babies apparently easily my mom had four you know it's like stolen Africans were having freaking babies in fields with no epidurals or child care and here I was living a very lavish lifestyle, having an OB -G -A -Y -N that worked out of the upper east side of Manhattan, and I couldn't even do that.
[809] All of those feelings were so raw and combined.
[810] And then, on top of it my almost debilitating drive to be successful at it you know it's like again we just go back to some childhood things that said well look i've got to i've got to do the thing i've got to be the best at the thing right it's like so now okay this has happened to have all of these terrible scary emotions that are going on, but I'm going to be a mom.
[811] Clearly, that's what I set out to do.
[812] So now I've got to do it.
[813] And so three months after Eve died, I got pregnant.
[814] By the way, my doctor, Pete, everybody was like, absolutely not.
[815] Like, this is not a good idea.
[816] Not my therapist, everybody.
[817] I was like, I don't care.
[818] I'm going to do it.
[819] Not necessarily because this is a difficult thing to say.
[820] It's not because I necessarily want to be a mother.
[821] I wanted to do it successfully.
[822] I wanted to prove to myself, to my body, that I could do it.
[823] You know, that like, and I wanted to, like, yell at God and be like, like, did you take this away because I said I didn't want it.
[824] Well, okay, now, now I want it.
[825] So let's do it.
[826] You know, and even when I got sick again with my second pregnancy, I was like, look, I'm going to do everything.
[827] Man, I consumed so many prenatal vitamins, boy, look.
[828] I would take them by like the palm full and be like, you know?
[829] And there wasn't, I got a specialist.
[830] I had, I was taking lovenox for anybody knows it's like you know this blood thinner that I would have to inject into my belly every single day man I was the most obedient pregnant woman you ever seen in your life and I still got sick seven months into my pregnancy still with all of that and so again it's like look sometimes there are situations that you cannot control like very much like you very much like like Ben, like he would have chosen to end his life at some point with or without my love, with or without me answering the phone.
[831] I was going to get ill with or without the prenatals, with or without a specialist.
[832] Those are not controllable by me, but I was still trying my best to be successful, to do it well.
[833] And when Lael was born, she came out screaming.
[834] And I took one look at that girl and I was like, yeah, you and I were going to make it.
[835] Like you, who, you came here by any means necessary.
[836] And I am going to love you, like, fiercely, deeply, because it just took too much to get her here.
[837] A year after Leos' birth, I believe, Peter and you separated.
[838] Yeah.
[839] connected to all of that?
[840] Yes, yes, it's, yes, connected to all of that.
[841] I mean, I think there's, you know, traumas in our life, of course, and especially, I think, for a married couple, and again, for us, you know, it's like, Peter really wants to be a father.
[842] I wasn't sure I want to be a mother.
[843] We get pregnant.
[844] Terrible things happen in the pregnancy.
[845] We lose Eve.
[846] I blame him entirely.
[847] And God, you know.
[848] He becomes, obsessed with my health in my next pregnancy.
[849] He does not want me to get pregnant.
[850] I'm like, I'm going to.
[851] With or without your consent.
[852] No, I'm kidding.
[853] But it became a battlefield in our home, in our relationship.
[854] We were no longer a team.
[855] What was missing?
[856] Probably empathy.
[857] I can probably just.
[858] narrow down to that like a very shallow understanding of what the other person was going through it's remarkable to me now to think about it you know it's like how do two people who love each other so desperately go through the same event and cannot grieve together can't see the other one's grief how is that even possible you know just a few years later he gets diagnosed with cancer after you've separated.
[859] These moments in life can have a interesting influence on our perspective, how we feel about somebody in a situation.
[860] How did it influence your perspective, his diagnosis?
[861] Peter was the type of person who never got sick.
[862] You know, he'd walk around Manhattan in wintertime with like a windbreaker.
[863] You know, he didn't get cold.
[864] He just didn't get sick.
[865] And even in our separation, and we had then agreed to get divorced, he was always very, like, valiant.
[866] You know, he just was not a person who fell.
[867] I don't know how else to describe it, you know, that he just wasn't, he was just tall and big and just barreled through life.
[868] And for him to be diagnosed that way with Birkin's lymphoma, which is a cancer that is not curable, but at the time, you know, as oncologists, we're like, okay, you're going to do radiation.
[869] You're going to do chemo.
[870] You know, there's no surgery, really, because it just attacks the lymph nodes everywhere.
[871] And there's no way to get rid of all the tumors.
[872] The best thing to do is try to shrink them.
[873] And hopefully to go away.
[874] Okay.
[875] I mean, you know, we didn't know any better.
[876] But by the time his cancer was deemed terminal, all of the anger and misunderstanding and battles over the different events in our life really did not matter.
[877] It did not matter.
[878] And I realized that like, you know, that probably sounds so corny to say and maybe feels like a throwaway thing that like, oh, when you're faced with, you know, the finality of life, you just realize.
[879] said, you know, you let go.
[880] No, no, no, no, no. It's not automatic like that.
[881] You have to make a choice.
[882] We had to make a choice.
[883] He had to ask me the question for us to reconcile.
[884] I had to decide that that is what we're going to do.
[885] We had to make a choice to have the conversations, which were about forgiveness.
[886] We had to make the choice to look at every day and say, okay, well, what are we going to do today?
[887] that is going to prepare us for the end.
[888] You recount a kiss you had with him, a kiss of forgiveness.
[889] Yeah.
[890] I mean, it was unlike the first kiss.
[891] And the first kiss where it's like the butterflies and you're not sure how much pressure to apply and, you know, should I open my mouth a little bit?
[892] Should I give him a little tongue or no?
[893] You know, it wasn't that kiss.
[894] It was the kiss of knowing 13 years have gone by in a very complicated relationship full of the challenges of being an interracial couple and him understanding my experience or not, me understanding his experience and not.
[895] You know, the challenges of health and our parents getting sick.
[896] and all of the things, my ambition for my career, his, you know, lack of understanding of that.
[897] It was just all of the things, you know?
[898] And to be in that moment and then to say, okay, we're going to be together until the end because that's what we promised.
[899] You know, and to truly kiss and make up I think that's another like casual statement people say you know kiss and makeup it's like no no you like that covenant of like we are in this again to the end and I won't leave and you didn't leave no to the end to the last heartbeat how did you say goodbye to someone you know I don't know that you do I haven't you know there's um there is the physical loss of course right and grief in that is complicated also you know because no i can't pick up the phone and call him or he can't see his wide smile at something i did or his scowl if i do something wrong you know um i have multiple griefs of that i have grief that Lael will never know her dad in the way that I wish she knew him.
[900] You know, he, like, so desperately want to be a father and he loved her so deeply that I grieve for her in that not knowing.
[901] But there is also, for me, the understanding that he really is still around.
[902] This is where it's like, everybody's like, oh, oh, she sees dead people.
[903] I'm like, sort of, you know, because I do believe in like the signs and wonders of things.
[904] It's happened too many times for me not to.
[905] You know, and it's, it feels very much like my intuition, you know, where I'm just like, oh, you know, I know what he would have thought about X, Y, and Z thing.
[906] I know, I don't know.
[907] You know, and so to some degree, it's like I still feel his.
[908] presence because I am aware of how he would be if he were here.
[909] Despite all of this, despite rising over and over again, your career continued on.
[910] Mm -hmm.
[911] You worked at Endeavour, big company that owned like the UFC and WW, et cetera.
[912] Yes, yes, yes.
[913] Um, Beats, Uber, Netflix.
[914] Mm -hmm.
[915] Oh yeah.
[916] All the things.
[917] It doesn't seem like there was a huge thing.
[918] huge time for pause and for, you know, because you just seem to get right back at it all the time.
[919] I mean, that's what it appears when you look at the chronological nature of these events.
[920] Yeah.
[921] How have all of these personal tragedies fed into your career?
[922] And what role has your career continued to play in dealing with these personal tragedies?
[923] Yeah.
[924] Well, I think, especially Peter's death made me impatient.
[925] Impatience is the wrong word, but it kind of feels like impatience with life.
[926] Urgent?
[927] Yes, urgent, for sure.
[928] The urgent life.
[929] Because I just have a much better understanding of not wasting my timer and my energy.
[930] Well, I look at your story and I see someone who doesn't hang around if they don't like something.
[931] Yeah.
[932] You know.
[933] And this kind of brings on another point because there's contradictory career advice often we get.
[934] It says, you know, you should stay somewhere long enough because if you leave too quickly, then people are going to look at your resume and think, why were you only there for two years or why were you there for a little while.
[935] But then if, you know, so like where do you sit on this?
[936] Um, when to know to quit.
[937] And also there's this overarching phrase, which is like quitting is for losers.
[938] Yes.
[939] Yes.
[940] Yes.
[941] Oh, gosh.
[942] Well, look, I get criticism of that all the time where people are just like, oh, well, She can't handle adversity.
[943] And I'm like, me?
[944] Are you out of your mind?
[945] It's like, if there was a poster child, it would be me. It would be me. You know, no, it's not that I can't handle adversity.
[946] I just put myself first.
[947] Are you selfish?
[948] Yes, very much so.
[949] But that is not a bad thing.
[950] I am at the center of my life.
[951] No one is above me in my life.
[952] No one.
[953] not even my kid and she knows that and i try to instill the same in her no one should be above her in her life because the thing is that like look the life that you're living is yours and i cannot be a great contributor to society and this sounds a little like counterintuitive but i can't be a great contributor to society i can't be a good friend i can't even be a good mom if i am not living the life that I want to live.
[954] If I'm not wholly happy in it.
[955] So absolutely, I'm selfish.
[956] When you left Uber, you're quoted as saying, you don't need to be the savior.
[957] I think when referencing the state of the company, because it was going through a very tumultuous time, you can save yourself too.
[958] Yes.
[959] And save yourself first, is what I should have said.
[960] You know, it's like, it's all of the ways in which we think about it now, right?
[961] You get on a plane.
[962] They're going through the safety demonstration.
[963] They tell you to put your mask on first before you help anybody else.
[964] Yes.
[965] And in your life, too, yes save yourself first what was the career advice that you wish someone had given you you know like that young spikely receptionist be selfish in your life in your career think about yourself all of the time what does being selfish mean meaning that when you're in a situation that doesn't serve you you think of yourself first oftentimes we're in these situations that aren't serving us and we're thinking about how the other person's going to feel but that means that I have to be, it's the uncertainty that that creates that scares people, right?
[966] Like, well, I can, I've got this job and I quit it.
[967] Where am I going to go?
[968] And like, what am I going to do?
[969] If I leave this relationship, what am I going to do?
[970] Where am I going to go?
[971] Well, but you should answer that.
[972] I'm not saying that you quit without the answer.
[973] I'm saying you quit.
[974] You know, it's like, if you keep putting it off, if you keep saying, well, I don't know what I'm going to do.
[975] So I'm just going to, then you're going to waste your life away.
[976] You're going to be so unhappy.
[977] You're going to have the Sunday scaries all the time.
[978] You're going to feel the.
[979] ick when you're with that person.
[980] You are going to be unsatisfied with your life.
[981] And that is the scariest thing.
[982] I do not want to be on my deathbed being unsatisfied with the life that I lived.
[983] I could go tomorrow and I would be so satisfied with this life.
[984] Why?
[985] Oh, because I've done the things I've wanted to do.
[986] Now, look, I have goals.
[987] It doesn't mean I don't have ambition.
[988] It's not like I don't want to do the next thing.
[989] I do want to go to Antarctica at some point.
[990] I have not been yet.
[991] you know but if i went now oh i've lived this life on my own terms like there's nothing that i did where i feel like oh man i should have made a different choice what are you good at like when you when you do the diagnosis of your skill set and what brought you here because you've had these incredible incredible incredible career yeah but you know we're all bad at loads of stuff and i think typically people are good at like a couple of things yeah but that's enough yeah what are you it out.
[992] I'm good at seeing the forest, the whole picture.
[993] And sometimes in a forest, you know that like, oh, you have to clear this area in order to make space for the little village.
[994] Because then those villagers can take care of the rest of this part of the forest that is like burning.
[995] But sometimes people are only down at the trees and then they can't see the burning part and they can't see that they should clear over there so that those people can get to the fire.
[996] I can see the forest.
[997] I can see the whole thing.
[998] And I can see like, okay, this needs to move there.
[999] It's helped me so much in my career, for sure.
[1000] It's like the change maker.
[1001] And how does that make you a great marketeer?
[1002] Because I never look at a problem just as the problem.
[1003] You know, it's like when I got to Uber, the problem was that there was a huge campaign that was like delete Uber, right?
[1004] People are like, oh, they're mad at the company because of lack of diversity in the C -suite and they treat women horribly.
[1005] and they're not paying the drivers and oh, it's unsafe even to get in the car.
[1006] And I went in and it's like if I had just tried to like go after one thing, it would have been whack -a -mole.
[1007] Yeah.
[1008] You know, everywhere I do, okay, pop this one down and this one pops up.
[1009] You hit that one and that one pops up.
[1010] But I can see the forest.
[1011] I can say, ah, this is not an issue about whether or not Travis Kalanick hates women or hates black people.
[1012] This is not about whether or not your driver is going to kidnap you.
[1013] This is about trust.
[1014] Do you trust the CEO of the company?
[1015] Do you trust the driver when you get in the car?
[1016] Do you trust anything about this whole situation, self -driving cars?
[1017] You trust any of it?
[1018] If you don't trust it, nothing I do is going to make you like the company.
[1019] I could fix the issue of like, hell, make half of the C -suite people of color and women.
[1020] And you would still be like, yeah, but they're going to kidnap me. But the best people you've encountered in marketing, what do they have in common?
[1021] They're great storytellers.
[1022] They can make you believe anything.
[1023] Those are great marketers.
[1024] The ones who make you believe that you put on a pair of Nike's and somehow you're now LeBron James.
[1025] And how do they, what constitutes, what makes a great story?
[1026] It's close enough to the truth.
[1027] For you to believe it?
[1028] Yes.
[1029] Well, when I put on any pair of shoes, I'm no LeBron James.
[1030] But you probably walk more confidently.
[1031] It's true.
[1032] So maybe you weren't LeBron, but you're a better version of yourself.
[1033] If I want to be a great marketer and I'm currently not, what would you, you know, if Liel comes to you and she goes, Mom, I want to work in marketing, what's the best?
[1034] What do I need to do to become a great marketing?
[1035] What would you say to Leo?
[1036] Be more curious about people.
[1037] Ask a lot of questions about people.
[1038] Why do they do the things they do?
[1039] Why they like the things?
[1040] And keep asking the questions.
[1041] Like you've got to be really curious about people in order to be a great marketer.
[1042] because you can't just rely on what you know in your experiences, even though I do say that you should be a focus group of one.
[1043] It's like if you like the thing, maybe somebody else will like the thing.
[1044] If you makes you laugh, maybe somebody else will laugh.
[1045] If it makes you scared, somebody else is going to get scared.
[1046] If somebody is inspired, somebody else will be inspired.
[1047] I believe that.
[1048] But you also have to, like, be really curious about why people choose the things that they choose, why they like the things that they like.
[1049] If you're not curious about people, you're going to suck at this job.
[1050] What's the most important thing we've not talked about?
[1051] And I really want to focus this a little bit more.
[1052] There's going to be so many young people, not so young people that are listening to this conversation now.
[1053] They look at your career and they go, I want to walk that path.
[1054] You know, I want to get to, I want to be the CMO of the biggest companies in the world.
[1055] Yeah.
[1056] CEO of this company.
[1057] What's your parting words to those people?
[1058] Gosh, that's such a hard one.
[1059] Because the thing is that there is no, there is no path.
[1060] You know, if somebody tells you like, do these steps in order to get to where I've got, they're lying to you.
[1061] You're not going to get there based on the things I've, done.
[1062] The only way you're going to get there is by listening to yourself, is by following your intuition, is by doing the things that you're really good at.
[1063] And leave the rest of that stuff that you're not good at, that other people are trying to advise you.
[1064] Leave that alone.
[1065] So there's any advice.
[1066] Get to know yourself better.
[1067] That's it.
[1068] We often confuse aspiration with admiration.
[1069] We can admire someone without aspiring to walk their path.
[1070] And I think, I think, yeah, I remember reading a poem one day about like the only great person you can be is the greatest version of yourself it's super cliche but it's no but it's so unbelievably because i could not be steve jobs or no no no it's not it's not my greatness no exactly don't try to be me ever i'm sure people are still going to try there's a closing tradition we have on this podcast where the last guest leaves a question for the next guest not knowing who they're leaving the question for and the question left for you is what moment in your journey made you fight even harder to get to where to where you are right now.
[1071] I mean, we talked about it.
[1072] It is, it is Peter's last heartbeat.
[1073] You know, that moment, that moment.
[1074] I, I, it just changed the way I look at life.
[1075] I just don't want to get there not having lived exactly the life that I want.
[1076] It changed everything for me. And so I refuse to succumb to anything that.
[1077] is not in my destiny for my greatness and my happiness.
[1078] That's it.
[1079] Thank you.
[1080] Thank you.
[1081] Thank you so much.
[1082] Your book is incredible.
[1083] It's been an incredible journey of truth and vulnerability and humanity and so many, so many the things, you're clearly, I mean, now it makes sense as to why the writing is so good and the storytelling is so great because you clearly have a love for words and reading and storytelling and that comes through in your work.
[1084] but you've you've walked an incredible career path that is just inspiring just on the grounds that it happened but you have a remarkable ability to draw out wisdom from that career which makes it even more powerful so that's exactly what you've done today thank you so much it's been an honest to meet you and your your energy is quite infectious so thank you thank you thank you for the listeners really really appreciate it