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Identity

Finding Belonging With Turning Red

May 7, 2024 · Discuss on the GT Forum

https://media.blubrry.com/happypod/media.transistor.fm/c7719f59/f77d917f.mp3

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41: Join Ariel, Stef, and their distinguished guests, Soo Jin and Linda—authors and mental health professionals—as they bond over Pixar’s Turning Red. This episode covers the film’s profound themes of family, identity, mental health, and cultural nuances. Our discussion celebrates the movie and the real-life reflections it inspires, especially during AANHPI Heritage Month and Mental Health Awareness Month. Just in time to celebrate Pixar Fest, this conversation promises to bridge the gap between popular culture and professional insights.

Disney/Pixar Turning Red: Mei’s Little Box of Big Feelings Storybooks

Free Downloadable Turning Red Activity Sheets Developed and Provided by Disney/PixarDownload
Summary

Summary of HPOE41

  • 00:00 Introduction: Introduction to the episode with Ariel and Stef welcoming guests Soo Jin and Linda, setting up the discussion about Pixar’s Turning Red as it relates to AANHPI Heritage Month, Mental Health Awareness Month, and Pixar Fest.
  • 01:02 Turning Red Discussion Kickoff: Discussion on the significance of Turning Red, how it relates to the personal experiences of the hosts and guests, especially during Asian American, Pacific Islander, and Native Hawaiian Heritage Month.
  • 02:35 Watch Party Experience: Guests share their unique experiences of watching Turning Red through a virtual watch party, emphasizing community and shared experiences in appreciating the film.
  • 07:01 Cultural and Emotional Impact: Delving into how Turning Red reflects personal and cultural narratives, exploring themes of adolescence, identity, and the Asian diaspora experience.
  • 19:34 Deep Dive into Themes: Analysis of the major themes in Turning Red such as identity, family pressure, and the intersection of culture and personal growth, including the challenges faced by second-generation immigrants.
  • 34:18 Professional Insights and Book Discussion: Guests discuss how the film’s themes are relevant in their professional practice as mental health professionals and talk about their book, Where I Belong: Healing Trauma and Embracing Asian American Identity, offering insights into therapy and cultural humility.
  • 40:45 Engagement and Representation: Strategies discussed for engaging communities and readers through the themes of the movie, and the importance of representation in media.
  • 47:30 Conclusion and Further Resources: Conclusion of the discussion, reflections on the impact of Turning Red, and information on where listeners can find related resources or engage further with the themes discussed
Transcription

Ariel Landrum (00:00)
Hello everyone, welcome to Happiest Pod on Earth. I’m Ariel, a licensed therapist who uses clients’ passions and fandoms to help them grow and heal from trauma and mental unwellness.

Stefanie Bautista (00:10)
And I’m Stef. I’m an educator who uses my passions and fandoms to help my students grow and learn about themselves and the world around them.

Soo Jin Lee (00:16)
Hello everyone, my name is Soo Jin Lee. I’m a licensed therapist passionate about supporting Asian Americans address mental health challenges surrounding identity and intergenerational healing.

Linda (00:26)
Hi, my name is Linda Yoon. I’m a licensed psychotherapist, social worker who is passionate about helping people heal from trauma and recovery.

Ariel Landrum (00:35)
And here at Happiest Pod, we dissect Disney mediums with a critical lens. Why? Because we are more than just fans and we expect more from the mediums we consume.

Stefanie Bautista (00:34)
Mm-hmm.

That’s right. And so on this episode, everybody, what are we going to discuss

Ariel Landrum (00:47)
Yeah, so everyone heard we have some very special, awesome guests, Soo Jin and Linda, and we thought this would be the most opportune time to talk about a film that came out essentially during the pandemic that we have revisited a few times, but never got to have on the show. And that is the iconic Pixar movie, Turning Red. And right now it’s Pixar Fest, so I’m hoping that at Disneyland we will be able to see Mei Mei and her mom.

Stefanie Bautista (01:10)
Yes, and not only is it Pixar Fest, it is also AAPI Heritage Month, which is Asian American, Pacific Islander and Native Hawaiian Heritage Month. So we would love to celebrate this amazing movie that spoke so dearly to my heart and to a lot of people who I know’s hearts, because growing up as an Asian American was a very unique experience. And it is so amazing to see that on the big screen.

Unfortunately, the little screen at first, because like as Ariel mentioned, it did come out during COVID. And I’m actually curious to know how did you all watch it? Did you watch it right when it came out? Did you watch it a little later? I know when you have the ability to just watch things on your own, not everybody flocks to the theater. So I’m curious to know how did you all watch it the first time?

Linda (01:53)
Actually our staff, Soo Jin and I, who run a group practice, we have around that time we had about 20 staff, mostly Asian American therapists, and we were very excited about this film coming out. And we used to do, since everybody’s working in the remote right, we used to do Happy Hour Friday. We didn’t really drink, we just watched movie together and had boba. That’s what we did.

Ariel Landrum (02:09)
Mm-hmm.

No, beautiful, beautiful.

Soo Jin Lee (02:17)
That’s the drink, the boba.

Linda (02:19)
The boba. And there used to be a lot of platforms that you can share screen and watch movies together during this time, right? So we actually watched like about seven of us gathered together. And that was my first time watching Turning Red.

Stefanie Bautista (02:19)
Yes.

Ariel Landrum (02:24)
Mm-hmm.

Soo Jin Lee (02:30)
Me too, yeah. So essentially we had a watch party at our work, which was really amazing. And this was, Turning Red was the one that everyone wanted to watch and we were so excited to watch it together. And so we definitely watched it on the mini screen for me because I had a laptop at the time. But even so, you know, in the mini screen of my laptop, I was just so zoned into the movie.

Ariel Landrum (02:34)
Mm-hmm.

Hahaha!

Stefanie Bautista (02:45)
Right, yeah, yeah.

Ariel Landrum (02:52)
Yeah, yeah, so I did watch it at home. My TV is 78 inches, so I don’t think it feels many to me. And I watched it with at the time my roommate because my partner was working at the ski resort and it was nice having a conversation with my roommate because they are

a non-binary white person, and they got to ask questions about my experience and if I understood like some of the themes happening in the movie. And I was presenting the themes that like stuck out to me. And it was really interesting how they had noted a part of the movie that I hadn’t considered because I was so engrossed in how it like solidified my experience as diaspora, which was the part of the movie where there was like a potential hint towards like a period.

Soo Jin Lee (03:34)
Mm-hmm. Yeah.

Ariel Landrum (03:34)
that never gets discussed anywhere. And I had so bypassed that. And they had highlighted how that was really so pivotal for them to see and how sad it was that we weren’t seeing it in theaters because of COVID, because of the fact that you don’t hear anybody talking about that part of a woman or a non-binary person with ovaries experiences.

Stefanie Bautista (03:34)
Mm-hmm. Yeah.

Linda (03:37)
Yes.

Stefanie Bautista (03:39)
Mm-hmm.

Soo Jin Lee (03:55)
Mm, yeah.

Stefanie Bautista (03:55)
Yeah, it’s so interesting to know that we can experience gruesome deaths on the screen, but oh my gosh, don’t even think about talking about it, period. We are not gonna talk about that. That’s too much for us. I don’t know if kids can handle that, period. Well, I just had my son right after this came out. And so I watched it in pieces because I like had a newborn and I was trying to figure out like, when am I gonna sit down? They always say like,

Ariel Landrum (04:02)
Hahahaha

Period.

Soo Jin Lee (04:06)
I’m…glurgeoning.

home.

Linda (04:15)
Mm.

Stefanie Bautista (04:19)
Oh, nap when the baby naps. Do laundry when the baby does laundry. Just kidding. Like, so I’m like, well, am I going to watch a movie when the baby watches a movie too? So I remember watching it in pieces, but having such big reactions. And he at the time loved the music. And it was, it’s so like 90s pop throughout the whole thing. Just the soundtrack itself is like not very symphonic like normal, but it was so upbeat that he would just be so entranced with the visuals and Mei Mei Mei Mei and

Ariel Landrum (04:22)
I’m sorry.

Linda (04:23)
Thank you.

Stefanie Bautista (04:45)
Is she so animated that he really liked it. But I did have to watch it another time because watching it in pieces I would have to like stop at like pivotal moments and I was like, oh no, what’s gonna happen next? so it was almost like an like a series for me because I would have to stop and then do something and then watch it again and didn’t do something But I loved it so much

Linda (04:47)
Mm-hmm.

Ariel Landrum (04:57)
Hehehe

Soo Jin Lee (05:02)
Oh, I love that. After my showing the watch party on the small screen, after it came out on Disney+, I was telling my husband about it because he doesn’t really watch Disney shows as much or animated shows as much, but I had to convince him. I was like, we’re gonna sit down and you’re gonna watch this with me. And he ended up loving it too. Like it’s so corny, but I don’t know why I like it.

Linda (05:20)
It was really…

Stefanie Bautista (05:20)
I think that’s the best part, because it was so corny.

Soo Jin Lee (05:22)
Exactly.

Ariel Landrum (05:23)
Yeah.

Linda (05:23)
That was the best part. We watched with our staff, right? So we had some range of like who are young, like Gen-Zs and you’re a little bit more older, millennials. And I thought there were some references, right? Like the boy band, right? It was a Four Town and it was not four people. Was it five people? And I was so confused. And then one of my Gen Z K-Pop stan, you know.

Ariel Landrum (05:30)
Mm-hmm.

Stefanie Bautista (05:32)
Mm-hmm.

Ariel Landrum (05:36)
Yeah. Yes.

Stefanie Bautista (05:37)
Mm-hmm.

Soo Jin Lee (05:39)
Yeah, yeah, it was.

Stefanie Bautista (05:40)
Yeah.

Ariel Landrum (05:40)
Yeah.

Stefanie Bautista (05:44)
Yeah.

Linda (05:44)
staff was like that’s you know making fun of 17 which is a boy band in a Korean boy band do not have 17 people

Stefanie Bautista (05:50)
Mm-hmm. They don’t have 17 people.

Ariel Landrum (05:51)
I’m sorry.

Soo Jin Lee (05:52)
Mei Mei Mei Mei his mom also makes that comment, right, in the movie as well. Being the mom is like, I don’t even understand the name. There’s five of them. Why are they calling it Four Town?

Stefanie Bautista (05:55)
Mm-hmm.

Ariel Landrum (05:56)
Yes, yes

..

Stefanie Bautista (06:01)
No.

Ariel Landrum (06:02)
Yes, the boy band era of my life. Where nothing makes sense and it was they were all the same and yet very different. And you had to choose one. I am this.

Soo Jin Lee (06:07)
Uh huh.

Stefanie Bautista (06:12)
You had to stan one, yeah. Yeah, and I think I was reading, yes, you have to have enemies, exactly. You have to have the rival boy band. And I was gonna ask this question later on, but I guess this is a good time to ask it. Who was your favorite boy band growing up? Did you have a loyal allegiance to one and then not like another?

Soo Jin Lee (06:14)
You have to, yeah? And then you have to have enemies.

Yes.

Ariel Landrum (06:33)
Okay, so this is, we’re redoing parts of the house because we’re gonna move in some roommates. So we have to like move everything out of what was my office and the guest room. And we were putting all of these bookshelves together in the living room. And I found a binder like so thick of CDs. And I had, I had Nsync and Backstreet Boys next to each other. And I had Christina Aguilera and Britney Spears next to each other.

Soo Jin Lee (06:49)
Oh my goodness!

Stefanie Bautista (06:54)
Oh.

Ariel Landrum (06:57)
I think I’ve always been a yes and girl. Yeah.

Stefanie Bautista (07:00)
Ah, okay, okay.

Soo Jin Lee (07:02)
Very rare for that time.

Ariel Landrum (07:04)
Mm-hmm.

Stefanie Bautista (07:04)
Yeah, yeah. Soo Jin, Linda, did you have a preference or doesn’t have to be the big ones, but it can be.

Linda (07:05)
Okay.

Soo Jin Lee (07:08)
Yeah.

Yeah, for sure. So for me, I actually grew up in Korea and then my family immigrated here when I was 10 years old. And so like K-Pop during like the 90s, K-Pop was what was really in my culture and identity as an immigrant. And there was this group called G.O.D. like they’re supposed to be like, and we would call them like, they’re our God. But that was the K-Pop group that

Ariel Landrum (07:17)
Mm-hmm.

Stefanie Bautista (07:19)
Mm-hmm.

Mm-hmm.

Uh-huh. The what?

Ariel Landrum (07:30)
Yeah.

Soo Jin Lee (07:33)
Like my friend group was like really hanging on to.

Stefanie Bautista (07:35)
Mm-hmm.

Linda (07:36)
Yeah, I also grew up, some of my childhood in Korea and then listened to a lot of 90s K-Pop. G.O.D. was a big popular one. There’s also SHINHWA. There’s also, there’s many boy bands. It was kind of like a first generation of K-Pop, I have to say. I never really had like one band that I was like really…

Ariel Landrum (07:50)
Mm-hmm.

Stefanie Bautista (07:51)
Mm-hmm.

obsessed with.

Linda (07:56)
devoted to, yeah, devoted I’m a late bloomer perhaps, because when I was like, like in my twenties, right? I graduated college and I was like so into One Direction for a while, but I was also ashamed because, you know, that, you know, something, that’s something that you should be doing when you’re a teenager, not when you’re graduating and working in a professional.

Ariel Landrum (07:57)
Yeah.

Stefanie Bautista (08:06)
Mm-hmm.

Ariel Landrum (08:06)
Yeah.

Stefanie Bautista (08:15)
Oh, oh my gosh, that’s such a great segue because it never left me. I was as a teenager, a young, like really early teens. I picked the Backstreet Boys side because I was like, oh, they have better harmonies. They do acapella better. Like, I know they’re not the best dancers, but they were the ones who came first and all this stuff. But I mean, low key, I really loved Nsync too, because they were like on Disney Channel and they had like really major hits.

Soo Jin Lee (08:36)
I’m going to go ahead and turn it off.

Stefanie Bautista (08:40)
I couldn’t deny it. And in the back of my mind, I’m like, I know they’re all friends in like behind the scenes and they are, they’re all friends behind the scenes. I listened to a lot of their podcasts and they’re all just friends and they raise their kids now together. But when I was going to college and grad school, I had like a resurgence because it was like 2010s K-Pop like came about and I got hooked on Super Junior and

Ariel Landrum (09:00)
Mm-hmm.

Soo Jin Lee (09:04)
Mmm.

Stefanie Bautista (09:05)
and all of those people who came out around like the early 2000s. And then I also went to Japan and was obsessed with J-Pop boy bands because I was so over American music at the time. I was like, oh, this is not doing it for me. I just need something like Upbeat to help me get through college and get through all of these hardships and stuff. And K-Pop and J-Pop were just there for me. And…

Soo Jin Lee (09:12)
I’m sorry.

Ariel Landrum (09:22)
Yeah.

Stefanie Bautista (09:26)
you know, with the internet kind of like giving me the opportunity to like research these things. And, you know, even though it was like you had to join a live journal or like you had to be part of a community. I did all of that stuff because I was on the computer anyway. So I was like, oh, even though I’m like 20 something deep down inside, I’m still a big, big fangirl.

Soo Jin Lee (09:44)
Yeah, yeah. There’s something about not just the beat itself, but I think the repeated lyrics of positivity that just continues on. Yeah, we just all need that at whatever stage we’re in our lives, right?

Ariel Landrum (09:50)
Mm-hmm.

Stefanie Bautista (09:51)
Mm-hmm. Yes.

Yeah, absolutely.

Ariel Landrum (09:57)
Well, I think when I, I lived in Korea for three years cause my dad was in the Navy and he was stationed there. And it was interesting because the music that I was hearing at that time had like British influence. So there was Craig David, like I had his whole album and then there was like S Club 7 and there was always like a British influence. So when I think of like my experience in Korea, I think of British singer.

Which is so odd, and I don’t know if that’s because we were on the military base or what, but that I also that so it was from the ages of 11 to 13. I was almost 14. And the other things that I remember being obsessed with at those ages, which is sort of like Mei Mei Mei Mei ages, was a popcorn chicken, KFC popcorn chicken everywhere.

Stefanie Bautista (10:25)
Ha ha ha.

Ariel Landrum (10:40)
and taking photos in the photo booth with the background, very like 90s, but it was something I was doing in the 2000s where you’re staring off into, maybe that’s why I stare off into distance, so you’re staring off into distance, or you have your arm around your friend and all these awkward poses. Yes.

Stefanie Bautista (10:46)
Yeah.

Soo Jin Lee (10:47)
Yeah.

Hahaha

Stefanie Bautista (10:56)
Oh yeah, like the photo makers, like pictures with like the, the very, not blurry, but they’re just like hazy backgrounds of like stars and things like that. And then you would like trade. Mm hmm. Yeah.

Ariel Landrum (11:04)
Mm-hmm. And there’s like a pedestal where you put your arm on. Yes. And then sometimes they would put like a furry white thing. It’s like, this is a cloud.

Soo Jin Lee (11:04)
Yeah.

Yes, yes, yeah.

Ha ha!

Yes, yeah. And then the, what is it, photo stickers came after that. And that became like the thing. Yeah, and I had it everywhere, right? Like all my journals, all my agenda books, like every single one of my binders and wallets had to have these photo stickers.

Stefanie Bautista (11:18)
Yes, I was gonna say photo stickers.

Ariel Landrum (11:19)
Yess

Stefanie Bautista (11:29)
Yeah. And like all of my binders had like pictures of my friends. And of course, like the people that I, you know, that I loved, like, and were fans of, and I remember my dad always telling me, why do you have pictures of people you don’t even know? Why don’t you put our pictures on there? Put your family pictures. Like that’s not how it works.

Ariel Landrum (11:42)
Hahaha!

Soo Jin Lee (11:46)
You don’t know them, but I know them.

Ariel Landrum (11:46)
trading them. Like trading cards, right? Like, no, I want that one or I want that one. Okay, but only if I can have this one.

Stefanie Bautista (11:48)
I know. Oh yeah.

Soo Jin Lee (11:53)
I love it. I think like I love how we’re starting to talk about the bond that Mei Mei Mei Mei has, you know, in the friendship that Mei Mei Mei Mei has in the, in the movie. And I was relating so hard to it. Um, how like it almost felt like that boy band was necessary for the friendship because we have something to like root forward to be passionate about together, like put out our, our puberty energy into somewhere. And the boy band was perfect for that.

Stefanie Bautista (11:59)
Mm-hmm.

Ariel Landrum (11:59)
Mm-hmm.

Stefanie Bautista (12:10)
Right.

Ariel Landrum (12:11)
Mm-hmm.

Stefanie Bautista (12:15)
Mm-hmm.

Ariel Landrum (12:18)
Uh huh.

Soo Jin Lee (12:20)
And so I was relating so hard on the movie for that.

Stefanie Bautista (12:24)
And I think one of the really like outstanding parts of the movie is just the juxtaposition between her loving the band and the fandom, but also loving her family, who is a very real thing for her and essentially being a fan of her family. Because as they say, when they’re doing the temple tour, they say, oh, we don’t worship a god, we pray to our ancestors. And those are people who had existed in the past. And her

Ariel Landrum (12:35)
Mm-hmm.

Mm-hmm.

Mm-hmm.

Stefanie Bautista (12:48)
loving that and loving the band. I feel like there were parallels but also in such different ways. So I’m wondering, you know, for you all, like, were there elements of the movie that spoke to you that were kind of parallels like that?

Ariel Landrum (12:53)
Yes.

Soo Jin Lee (12:59)
I think one of the things that, well, for me, that part was actually very distant because I was so separated from my family. When I immigrated here, my parents, my dad specifically didn’t have a very good relationship with his family and my mom didn’t have as much of a connection and communication as much as she wanted to with her family back home either. And so it was just me, my brother, my mom and dad here in the States. And…

Stefanie Bautista (13:07)
Mmm.

Soo Jin Lee (13:24)
all of our relatives were back home. And so one of the things that I felt like I was always missing in my life was that connection and that family, like sense of family. Every single holiday, it was just the four of us and I just hated it because every time I would come back to school and all the kids would talk about these like extravagant like Thanksgiving meals that they would have with like relatives and friends and all of that, right? And Christmas even.

Stefanie Bautista (13:26)
Mm-hmm.

Soo Jin Lee (13:50)
But for me, it was just the four of us. And I wanted to have like a party, right? I wanted to have these extravagant parties. And I also missed it from like back home too, because like Lunar New Year is such a big, big celebration back in Korea for us. And I would have all of my relatives get together at my grandma’s house. And we would make these little dumpling-like.

Ariel Landrum (14:00)
Mm-hmm.

Soo Jin Lee (14:10)
rice cakes and they would have all these sweet stuff in it and it was my favorite thing to make, of course, because it’s a sweet treat, but also because it’s a huge gathering for us. Right? And so when Mei Mei in the movie was just having these like moments of like connection with the family, I almost felt like the inner child in me was like, Oh, I missed that. I missed my opportunity to feel connected with my relatives, ancestors.

Ariel Landrum (14:16)
Mm-hmm.

Yes.

Stefanie Bautista (14:30)
Mm-hmm.

Soo Jin Lee (14:35)
the way that I could have been brought up if I lived back home. And so there was a little bit of a sense of grief that I was feeling when I was watching the movie.

Ariel Landrum (14:41)
Yes.

Okay, okay. No, I really resonate with that. My mother and father divorced when I was really young and my mom is the one who is Filipina. And so I remember only like a very little bit of my heritage and then we would move around a lot. And there were a lot of places that we lived that, I was the only.

Asian person, let alone person of color at one point in the town. I’ve talked about this a few times on the podcast, but what it meant was that my, you know, white dad who was not used to cooking was the one who learned how to make a turkey for Thanksgiving. And he had to go to the like the public library and like print out a recipe book and read how to make a turkey. And it also meant that we had like mashed potatoes.

Stefanie Bautista (15:20)
Hmm. Aww.

Ariel Landrum (15:24)
But he burnt the gravy never again. So we’ve never had Thanksgiving with gravy and mashed potatoes. And we also had no diverse foods until we moved to Guam. And I made friends with different Chamorro families, different Filipino families. And they would bring us plates.

And so that’s how I’ve stayed connected with those friends, like even till now, because they created family for me that I know I was craving at the time, but wasn’t really having, and really appreciate my dad’s efforts and as much as he was willing to like try. But I know that was like not easy being a single dad raising two kids.

Stefanie Bautista (15:48)
Yeah.

Ariel Landrum (15:58)
And I resonate with not having that connection with the film and wanting that connection. Now, in my relationship with Stef, I’ve learned to be appreciative of my ancestors. I’ve learned more about my culture. And so I think that has really helped me being able to reclaim what I didn’t get to in childhood.

Stefanie Bautista (16:15)
I love that. It seems like a lot of this movie was therapeutic for all of us. Linda, did you have any like initial reactions to like the relationship she has with her family and like how that parallels with you?

Soo Jin Lee (16:19)
for sure.

Linda (16:26)
Yeah, I mean, unfortunately, I feel like I’m kind of echoing too. Like I’m also an immigrant. We’re a nuclear family and back home in Korea. I mean, home is here too for me now. Been here more than I’ve been in America longer than I have been in Korea now. But like my family had a very tight relationship. We celebrate all the holidays. We saw them at least every other week.

Stefanie Bautista (16:34)
Mmm.

Linda (16:49)
So being separated, just being us, like we stopped celebrating a lot of holidays, right? The traditions that we used to do with a bigger family. So looking at Mei Mei really having the connection definitely like made me feel grief as well. But also kind of looking at her and her mother’s relationship, I think I resonated a lot. It’s…

Ariel Landrum (17:09)
Mm-hmm.

Linda (17:09)
Mei Mei had so much responsibility, right? That she took on and like she had pride in it too, right? Pride in it, but also it becomes a little burden sometimes and try to navigate balance those responsibility, who she is, when she’s home, when she’s at school, right? Like I definitely resonated watching that.

Stefanie Bautista (17:30)
Yeah, I think that makes me think of the one line where she goes, Oh, I can’t go karaoke because today is cleaning day. And her friends like every day is cleaning day. So what’s the difference?

Ariel Landrum (17:38)
Mm-hmm.

Linda (17:39)
Hahaha

Soo Jin Lee (17:39)
You

That’s right, that’s right.

Stefanie Bautista (17:42)
And it’s so true. I mean, like, I feel like in Asian households, like we take cleanliness to another level, but then, you know, having to translate that to our friends now, you know, in American, or friends that, you know, aren’t familiar with our cultures and practices, just having them understand that is kind of like a language in itself. Because I know for myself, when I hear my students talk amongst each other and like they talk about their home life, it’s really interesting to see how they

Soo Jin Lee (17:47)
This one.

Yeah.

Stefanie Bautista (18:08)
like say it and how they project that out loud. Because for them, it’s a lived experience, but in order to explain it to somebody, especially like for little, little kids, it’s so cute for them to be happy and be so proud of what they do at home. So, as therapists, I know that you guys talk to a lot of different types of people. Have you noticed any sort of code switching that happens when you’re talking to your clients, kind of like,

the type of code switching that Mei Mei was doing.

Soo Jin Lee (18:36)
I think initially as a beginner therapist, there was a lot more of the code switching that happens. But as the time goes, I see myself being more and more integrative. And maybe that’s kind of the essentially what Mei Mei comes to terms with as well, right? It’s like, I can’t do this anymore. Like the separation of the two lives that she had to live was just too much burdensome. And it bursts into like this monster anyways, right?

Ariel Landrum (18:53)
Mm-hmm.

Mm-hmm.

Yeah.

Soo Jin Lee (19:03)
that is unrecognizable, but then she ends up embracing it all. And so I think we also learned to embrace ourselves more and more in the therapeutic setting as therapists too. And I think I’ve learned to do that more because I started to work a lot more with the Asian and Asian American folks. So before I was serving a lot more of people that were of all sorts of culture, all colors, all different backgrounds, and then more and more as the anti-Asian.

Stefanie Bautista (19:27)
Mm-hmm.

Soo Jin Lee (19:30)
hate crime was on the rise in the pandemic. The people that were finding me were finding me and Linda and our practice specifically because they wanted to work with identity issues pertaining to Asian or Asian American identity. So that made me reflect a lot more than I had ever before, right, with my clients. So it was kind of this parallel journey of integration, I feel like of.

of not exactly separating myself, but more of how can I bring more of myself into the table? Because at the end of the day, what we were experiencing, I can’t say that I have come through with it. We were experiencing it at the same time, right? In the same place. And no one had figured it out how to heal from it yet. And we’re still trying to figure out how to heal from it together as a community. And so I’ve really embraced how to be a therapist, but also how to

Ariel Landrum (20:08)
Hmm?

Stefanie Bautista (20:08)
Mm-hmm.

Ariel Landrum (20:19)
Okay.

Soo Jin Lee (20:20)
all the different elements of what my community has to offer to me too.

Linda (20:25)
Yeah, I think also the world of how we see mental health, how we think about therapy has evolved as well. When we were in school, there was not much of a… There was not much focus on cultural consideration as much, right? There were, but not a lot. And now we’re looking at more different lenses that how can we…

Ariel Landrum (20:41)
Yes.

Stefanie Bautista (20:43)
Hmm

Linda (20:49)
honor, like not just the client, I used to be more client focused. And it should be still, but like that we cannot deny us as a therapist is also influencing the room, you know, who we are, our identity, our background, like how does it play out? And like how that relationship can work because that play factor in everything in the relationship. So

Ariel Landrum (21:03)
Mm-hmm.

Linda (21:09)
I think that got us more comfortable. Like, hey, like we are not a blank state. That’s just impossible. We need to recognize who we are, our background and how does that show up? And then how does it show up with the client and then how does that play? I think that really, that evolve-ness of how we see therapy and mental health helped, right? So we don’t have to feel like we have to hide ourselves when we are in therapy room as well. Like I remember,

Ariel Landrum (21:14)
Mm-hmm.

Stefanie Bautista (21:15)
Mm-hmm.

Linda (21:33)
I think it’s a funny story because it’s me in high school and when someone asked me out, hey, you know, hang out, you know, like, we’re gonna grab dinner on Thursday night and I’ll be like, no, it’s school night. And then they will have no idea what I’m talking about. Like what do you mean school night? I can’t go out. Like I’m not allowed to. And some of the things I…

Stefanie Bautista (21:45)
Mm-hmm.

Linda (21:56)
Definitely when you’re younger, you have family, right? Like, Mei Mei, like, you have to go back to your parents. You have to play, settle rules, right? It’s harder now as an adult, married, you know, like, separate life, have a separate family. Like, I have more room, right? Of course, when I see my parents, I do see myself a little bit like, oh yeah, there’s a little bit of switching. Like, I have to be certain way, say certain things, and not as much as I used to, because I’m not under their roof, and I’m not…

Stefanie Bautista (22:02)
Mm-hmm.

Ariel Landrum (22:03)
Mm-hmm.

Linda (22:22)
Like they don’t have my life as much anymore, but those things. So, you know, I’m sure we tell our teens sometimes too, like, hey, like it gets easier, you know, when you are becoming more independent and that’s kind of what we often help our teens, you know, helping them achieve that independent, also educating parents, like, hey, like it’s a development and then how do we integrate that? So, yeah.

Stefanie Bautista (22:24)
Hehehe

Yes.

Ariel Landrum (22:42)
Now, I think it’s really interesting. We’ve already sort of intersected the fact that we’re talking about mental health. And of course, that is part of the themes of the podcast. But also, May is Mental Health Awareness Month, as it is also AANHPI Heritage Month. I’m curious with that intersection, did you see that in the movie in Mei Mei? Because I saw a lot of anxiety, and I did see a lot of perfectionism. Did that resonate with any of you?

Linda (23:06)
Mm-hmm.

Soo Jin Lee (23:07)
Mm-hmm.

Stefanie Bautista (23:08)
Mm-hmm.

Soo Jin Lee (23:09)
for sure, that perfectionism and the pressure, especially with the relationship that she has with her mom and the way that she wants to live up to that standard, is something that I was relating so hard to. And I think a lot of people that are coming into therapy for are relating to as well. We have this need, and I think especially speaking for myself, like being an immigrant and

having that experience of actually knowing and experiencing and witnessing the exact things that my parents have given up, because I know what my life looked like before we came here. I have vivid memories of them. And then to know what they have given up to be here, right? That sacrifice and to need to make up for that sacrifice somehow, right? That lingering pressure that I was living with all the time. I felt that anxiety.

Ariel Landrum (23:44)
Mm-hmm.

Soo Jin Lee (23:58)
and to also have to hide a part of myself, right? That’s a huge, huge theme in Mei Mei’s life, right? Like I became this thing that I’m trying to adapt to, and yet I still have to hide myself. And it seems unavoidable that people are gonna see me, but I’m trying my best to hide myself anyways, right? And so…

So that juxtaposition, I feel like, is something that was very relatable in the movie too.

Linda (24:23)
Yeah, perfectionism, a lot of anxiety. Definitely felt like I’m looking at all my childhood growing up. Like as Soo Jin said, like layer of being a child immigrants and being immigrant yourself.

in a lot of pressure. They will remind us, like we moved, my dad chose to take the job in the US instead of Korea because he knew there will be a lot more opportunity for us. This American dream that our family bought in. So there was a lot of pressure to perform well, be perfect, be obedient, get good grades.

Stefanie Bautista (24:50)
Mm-hmm.

Linda (24:58)
but also follow rules in the home, right? Not let go of that tradition, like not let go of the cultural aspects of it. Like do well in American school that is completely different in our culture from us. So that puts a lot of anxiety and a lot of perfectionism for sure.

Stefanie Bautista (25:05)
Mm-hmm.

Yeah, definitely. And, you know, like she loves her things so hard. She loves Fourtown so hard. She loves her friends so hard. She loves, you know, everything that she is so hard. But like, I think when you’re dealing with being second generation and not having to sacrifice those things, that translates differently to our parents. Right. Because like you said, Linda, they sacrificed a lot to make a whole nother living for their family.

Whereas as a teenager, we’re just trying to understand who we are as people and who we are as women and Asian American women and how do we fit into society and how do we become like the best part of ourselves. And I think the visual of a red panda was so fitting because she’s not threatening even though she has big emotions.

Ariel Landrum (26:01)
Mm-hmm.

Stefanie Bautista (26:01)
but she’s large in size and you cannot avoid it because she is just, you know, her personality is everywhere. Like who we are and who we kind of craft ourselves to be, especially during this age, I feel like it’s so amplified because the emotions are so intense. I look at some of the middle schoolers, even though they try to hide behind dark clothes, putting their hoods up.

Ariel Landrum (26:05)
Mm-hmm.

Mm-hmm.

Stefanie Bautista (26:25)
like trying to blend in with everybody, you can’t hide the fact that they have big emotions too. So that eventually comes out and I think we definitely see that in Mei Mei’s story because she is grappling with that dual identity and like saying, who do I go with? Do I have to choose a side or can I just be everything all at once? Which is also a really great Asian American film.

Linda (26:29)
Mm-hmm.

Soo Jin Lee (26:44)
Yeah, but outside of just like the cultural piece too, just like going through puberty, right? And during that time, everything feels so big anyways. And the expression of those big emotions and all the bodily changes that are happening, it seems like what you said Stefanie of that big red panda, like it feels so

Ariel Landrum (26:44)
I’m sorry.

Stefanie Bautista (26:51)
Yes.

Ariel Landrum (26:52)
Hmm.

Stefanie Bautista (26:56)
Hmm?

Ariel Landrum (27:03)
Mm-hmm.

Mm-hmm.

Soo Jin Lee (27:08)
so much more apparent to us. And it feels like it’s so grand to us visually, right? And that we can’t contain it.

Stefanie Bautista (27:13)
Mm-hmm.

Hehehe

Ariel Landrum (27:16)
I’m curious, how would you use that metaphor of a red panda in session or in the classroom setting? Because the theory that I use is narrative therapy. We love metaphor, like that is the best. So the red panda for like weeks I was using with clients and it became the template for every metaphor that ever was and ever will be. Curious, was that the same for any of you or did you come up with ideas later?

Stefanie Bautista (27:34)
Hehehe

Soo Jin Lee (27:41)
I think it was for me mostly the clients themselves bringing it in. So the clients relating to it, especially the younger clients, or even older folks too of our age group, to be able to say, you know what, I watched the movie. And when they bring it up for us to be able to talk about it and utilize that. And all the symbolism that we just talked about were things that they would bring up, right? That the

the emotions that even they currently are feeling and dealing with, that they feel like it’s the red panda. And we can just name that now, right? Like, okay, we just named this huge emotion that feels ambiguous, but we don’t know how to pinpoint into exactly a word, that’s the red panda, here it is. And we can embrace it, because that’s the whole story, is that we wanna embrace it, and we don’t wanna neglect it.

Stefanie Bautista (28:13)
Mm-hmm.

Ariel Landrum (28:19)
Mm-hmm.

Stefanie Bautista (28:23)
Mm-hmm.

Soo Jin Lee (28:26)
And because of the movie’s narrative, I think people were able to capture that and being able to say, okay, I’m gonna embrace it.

Stefanie Bautista (28:33)
Linda how about you.

Linda (28:34)
Yeah, during pandemic, our, I think, Soo Jin too, like our demographic of clientele has changed. I think before then, we were working a lot with kids and families and telehealth was really hard with kids. Not all, but you know, most kids.

Stefanie Bautista (28:52)
Yeah. I bet.

Linda (28:55)
and then we were serving a lot of ADHD so can you imagine trying to do telehealth with ADHD kids? So I feel like if I watched this movie while I was still have a lot of children in my case, I definitely would have. I mean we definitely have used other movies, animated movies, in their patients but yeah so I feel like I missed some of the opportunities if we could have used it right but I mean there were still adults bringing it up.

Stefanie Bautista (29:10)
Yeah.

Linda (29:19)
And it was such a big deal when the movie came out. Like we all loved it. It felt so validating presented in a way that more authentic way than ever. That’s why people related the movie was so popular. So yeah, a lot of clients were bringing it up. We were talking about it in our staff meeting too, like how we’re relating to Mei Mei and then what are some lessons that come from it and then how can we.

like use the metaphors or the stories in our lives.

Stefanie Bautista (29:47)
Yeah, I think I find it more when relating to my peers at work as opposed to the children we deal with. Because I work in mostly TK through fifth grade settings. We have two middle schools, but I don’t tap into those unless it’s like sports. So this wouldn’t be the movie to do it. But I was talking to a colleague yesterday about our conversation that we were going to have today about Turning Red. And he taught middle school in Arizona.

Ariel Landrum (30:02)
Mm. Heh heh heh.

Stefanie Bautista (30:12)
And he said he showed the movie after the pandemic when everybody was in school. And he actually got reprimanded for it because it addressed puberty and it addressed things that he was, they said, oh, I don’t know if parents are gonna be on board with this. I don’t know, maybe you should have asked permission first. And he was just like, what are you talking about? There’s so less that I have to say as a male and so much that me just loving this movie and me just loving Mei Mei’s story.

like would resonate with kids that I don’t even have to explain about. And so I was shocked to hear that his administration was not on board with him showing the movie. I know for myself, we talk about Fourtown and Turning Red with the kids and they love the visual if like, like we don’t really have a strict dress code at my school, so we’ll wear like a Fourtown shirt or we’ll wear like, you know, Turning Red and the kids love like identifying that with us. But.

Yeah, it was really surprising for me to hear that he was, you know, they didn’t want him showing that movie because it’s such a great case study, I feel.

Soo Jin Lee (31:11)
Yeah, that makes me feel so sad. And of all things, it’s just it’s at the end of the day, a Disney movie.

Ariel Landrum (31:12)
Yes.

Mm-hmm, mm-hmm. Yes.

Stefanie Bautista (31:17)
Yeah, it really doesn’t go there. I mean, we could talk about books like 1984 and these literary cornerstones that they say we have to, Lord of the Flies, but you won’t show up in a movie about a panda. Ha ha.

Linda (31:19)
me also.

Soo Jin Lee (31:22)
Mm-hmm.

Linda (31:22)
No.

Ariel Landrum (31:22)
laughs

Soo Jin Lee (31:27)
Right.

Linda (31:30)
We can’t, I mean, we all go through puberty. That’s the craziest thing. Like, I, like, I barely got any sex ed in my school because our school is pretty conservative and, like, I felt very uneducated when I got older. Like, we have Asian American clients coming up to us, like who…

Ariel Landrum (31:30)
Yeah.

Yes.

Stefanie Bautista (31:35)
Yeah.

Yeah.

Ariel Landrum (31:41)
Mm-hmm.

Yes.

Linda (31:52)
grew up very religiously, conservative, was a conservative parent, never had a conversation and they’re having so much trouble. And then the movie wasn’t like, it didn’t really, it touched a little bit, like that how, we don’t talk about it, right? That’s crazy.

Ariel Landrum (31:55)
Mm-hmm.

Mm-hmm.

Yes. It’s interesting, because even in talking about metaphor, the red panda comes when she has puberty, right? That’s when it’s introduced in her life. And even the parents started being shocked, like, oh, this seems sooner than we thought. I’ve definitely heard that conversation with parents and those who menstruate. And then, again, I was raised with a single dad. He didn’t know anything about periods at all.

Stefanie Bautista (32:05)
Mm-hmm.

Mm-hmm.

Ariel Landrum (32:29)
And he had to try and teach me how to like choose tampons and pads. It was uncomfortable for him. And thank goodness we had the Internet. He found this website of these like cartoon people. And there was a guy in a robot that teach you about your body. And so a viewer wrote in asking about menstruating and he’s like, Oh, I don’t know about this. And he and the robot like transition it to this girl and this, I guess, girl robot. And they talked about it. And that’s how he taught me.

Stefanie Bautista (32:52)
Oh my gosh.

Ariel Landrum (32:53)
And then he like read the instructions in the back of the cardboard box, you know, very military, like, OK, first you do this and then you do this. And then you do it was formulaic. But I mean, it made me not afraid to have this conversation with other guys. And it was definitely a red flag tester. It’s like you’re going to freak out about the fact that I menstruate. We probably don’t need to be together.

Stefanie Bautista (32:56)
I’m sorry.

Soo Jin Lee (33:12)
Yeah, for sure. That, that, um, I, kudos to your dad, like really for trying, because I just, that scene in the movie as well, where Mei Mei, Ming, like the mom refers to, are you having, you know, are you, are you having a period or are you blooming for the first time or something, right? That scene, and you see the dad just slowly disappearing into the corner.

Stefanie Bautista (33:13)
Yeah, and that’s…

Yeah.

Yes.

Ariel Landrum (33:30)
Yeah.

Stefanie Bautista (33:34)
What?

Ariel Landrum (33:34)
I’m sorry.

Such a scary concept.

Soo Jin Lee (33:36)
And I was like, yeah, the gender role and, you know, who should be talking about what?

Stefanie Bautista (33:41)
Yeah, I do like and appreciate how the dad was the cook in the family, because I know that’s not addressed in many familial situations, especially when it comes to Disney and very mainstream portrayals of family. Because a lot of Asian American families, the mom is the matriarch.

Ariel Landrum (33:49)
Yes.

Stefanie Bautista (33:57)
She holds it down. She’s the one who, you know, sets all the rules and things like that. And a lot of the times the dad is the one who’s cooking and, you know, just like providing in the background. It’s not always, you know, one or the other. So I really did appreciate that he would always have a plate of bao for her whenever she was feeling sad or, you know, he was the one to listen to her when, you know, she was at her lowest point. So I do appreciate that. And, you know, they, they mattered too.

Ariel Landrum (34:01)
Mm-hmm.

Mm-hmm.

Soo Jin Lee (34:22)
Yeah, yeah, they do. And I think it also speaks to the way that our parents tried to display love to us. Like, it looks very different. And we talk a lot about this with our clients and community members, too, of like, food is our love language. So sometimes, you know, they don’t know how to talk about how we feel or what we’re going through. But you can really depend that there will be a beautifully set up meal at the end of the day. And that just goes.

Ariel Landrum (34:29)
Mm-hmm.

Stefanie Bautista (34:30)
Mm-hmm.

Absolutely.

Soo Jin Lee (34:48)
feels very comforting to come back home to after a hard day.

Stefanie Bautista (34:52)
Yeah, it’s the constant, right?

Ariel Landrum (34:52)
Yeah, I, well, I think a part of it is even talking about it being a AANHPI Heritage Month, is that the individuals who created the film, not only is it center the story of Asian Canadian diaspora girl, but the individuals who wrote the story, they themselves are diaspora.

I believe it’s pronounced Domee Shi. She’s Chinese, born Canadian. And then Julia Cho is a Korean-American playwright. And because we’re kind of in the entertainment capital, we are in Los Angeles, what do you think that this Pixar film did correct in representation? Because I think it did a lot correct. And I think it’s because it was written from the perspective of lived experience and not from what I think it looks like.

Stefanie Bautista (35:38)
Mm-hmm.

Soo Jin Lee (35:38)
I think one of the things that I really loved, I think Stefanie, you had mentioned this, is the dynamic of the family, right? It’s rarely shown in a lot of the films how an Asian family can look really different, like how the dad is a cook in the house sometimes and not the mom, but also mom is the one that is taking care of the temple, taking care of the almost like the financial situations.

Stefanie Bautista (35:56)
Mm-hmm.

Soo Jin Lee (36:02)
And actually that tends to be very true in my own family households too, where my mom, in order for her to be a good wife, she had to learn how to book keep. And that was the job of the woman, the job of the wife. So that when the husband brings home the money, he’s the maker of the money. But at the end of the day, how that gets utilized is actually the mom. And so I think the different dynamic of what it looks like in of

a woman and a man in a household for a family in an Asian household can look really different. So that was really displayed well. And then the, of course, just that the passion that Mei Mei has and the desire that Mei Mei has to fit in is something that we all have experienced, that sense of belonging and trying to like really fit into the society, either whether that’s home or in the school place.

Stefanie Bautista (36:37)
Mm-hmm.

Soo Jin Lee (36:50)
where we’re constantly changing ourselves in order for us to fit in, right? And so that’s something that is an experience that we all have.

Stefanie Bautista (36:57)
I think for myself, what I think they nailed were the aunties, because I feel like everybody has a group of aunties that either will just breathe down your neck all the time, but they also are comprised of different sorts of women. And as for myself, not all of my aunts had children. So I knew that, you know, you didn’t have to have a bunch of kids or, you know, have a family.

Ariel Landrum (37:01)
Hahaha

Soo Jin Lee (37:01)
Mm-hmm.

Linda (37:02)
I have to go.

Soo Jin Lee (37:09)
So true.

Linda (37:12)
Thank you.

Stefanie Bautista (37:20)
to be successful and to make a living. But because they had such different dynamics, I knew that my mother wasn’t the only role model that I could go to. I can always go to my aunt who was like the same as my mom, but different. And they all had different lived experiences because they all work abroad in different countries. So I think seeing the dynamics of Mei Mei’s aunties and how they were.

all similar but different and she was able to connect with them in different ways, I felt like that was spot on because you know, the aunties they will tell you like it is. They don’t have a filter.

Ariel Landrum (37:50)
I’m sorry.

Soo Jin Lee (37:51)
Mm-hmm.

Linda (37:53)
Yeah, I really resonate with what Soo Jin and Stefanie already have pointed out. Aunties and family dynamics and something that stayed with me that felt like, you know, as a therapist too, kind of pointing out is that like that generational trauma or strength that we pass down on, right? How that gets passed on.

Ariel Landrum (38:09)
Mm-hmm.

Linda (38:13)
Oh, whether it’s good or bad or, you know, neutral, um, that exists. And then I felt like that really did point out that.

Ariel Landrum (38:20)
I think for me, I really like that part of how Mei Mei chose her red panda was sometimes she would have ears and a tail. Because that’s how I think of like my experience is like the wanting to be a half cat person. Drawing myself as like in some sort of animal or where I’m like a human animal hybrid. I don’t know why. But that to me is like the epitome of like representing.

Stefanie Bautista (38:28)
Hehehehe

Ha ha ha.

Ariel Landrum (38:44)
like Asian diaspora experience is this like integration of like what would be sort of like anime and certainly when we had the dad cooking and the food scene it was like the big kawaii eyes and the slowing down and the food sort of like magically doing things like that felt so right and was also so

Stefanie Bautista (38:51)
Mm-hmm.

Yeah.

Soo Jin Lee (39:02)
Mm.

Ariel Landrum (39:02)
easily integrated in the film. It wasn’t, it didn’t feel like an afterthought. It didn’t feel like something just thrown in there to appease a certain audience. Like again, I think because of the lived experience, it was so natural and easy to put that in there and make it feel very authentic to the film. So yeah, I resonated with that. I don’t know how many times I’ve walked a con with just like ears and a tail.

Stefanie Bautista (39:21)
I’m sorry.

Soo Jin Lee (39:24)
Yeah, I love that.

Linda (39:24)
Thank you.

Stefanie Bautista (39:26)
Yeah, and I like how you mentioned that you could tell it was lived experience because sometimes when I was watching a movie, it wasn’t like I was watching Toy Story or Monsters Inc or any other Pixar movie. I felt like sometimes I was watching K-drama or J-drama. Sometimes I feel like I was watching a K-Pop concert or a J-Pop concert. Sometimes I felt like I was watching anime because of the way that they were styling things and different perspectives. It definitely felt much more…

Soo Jin Lee (39:33)
Hmm.

Ariel Landrum (39:37)
Hehehe

Stefanie Bautista (39:49)
dynamic from an Asian lens and that’s why it felt very comfortable to watch it because all of these themes and visuals were so familiar with, you know, the glossy eyes and like the really big emotions. Like I was half expecting to see subtitles half the time because, you know, I mean not that I was already watching with subtitles because I always watch everything with subtitles, but you know, like I think the stylization and the animation itself was, you know, very appropriate and so different.

Ariel Landrum (40:03)
I’m sorry.

true.

Yes.

And I think even like representation, her friend group wasn’t homogenous. And I think that, at least for me, that resonates as both diaspora and being a military brat. Like you just moved around a lot and you made friends with a very diverse group of individuals. And even the scene in the bathroom where she’s like pushing that one girl into the bathroom and she has an insulin pump, right? Like this small moment of representation, I think that

Soo Jin Lee (40:21)
Yeah.

Stefanie Bautista (40:21)
Mm-hmm.

Soo Jin Lee (40:29)
Mm-hmm.

Stefanie Bautista (40:40)
Mm-hmm.

Ariel Landrum (40:42)
Again, I’ve seen insulin pumps in the community groups that I hang out with other Asian diaspora. And so I don’t know how her intentionality in the creator’s intentionality and putting those things in there, how much it was like in the forefront of like must represent. Because to me it felt like, oh, that makes sense. That’s natural. That would be there. It didn’t feel like a box being checked off.

Stefanie Bautista (41:05)
Mm-hmm.

Yeah. And I mean, with all of this, I know we touched on a lot of different things about, you know, being part of the diaspora, having all of these lived experiences. For Soo Jin and Linda, I know you co-authored the book, Where I Belong, Healing Traum and Embracing Asian American Identity. I know that you have talked to a myriad of people who identify as such. Is, you know, watching Turning Red, do you think there’s space to have now more conversations about

other kind of enclaves and other different intersectionalities now that we’ve kind of broken through and talked about, you know, what it is to be Chinese Canadian. What would you like to see from Disney, knowing that you have such a wide range of experiences now talking to different people?

Soo Jin Lee (41:46)
I can’t say if there’s one specific thing, but for sure, the people that we were interviewing and have included a bunch of stories in our book, our book consists of mostly stories and people love reading our book because of that. You get to have all of these different experiences that are represented in the book under the umbrella of whoever is identifying themselves as Asian or Asian American. Because in the book, some people are…

Stefanie Bautista (42:00)
Yep.

Soo Jin Lee (42:11)
claiming and saying, you know, I don’t really feel like I’m Asian American. I don’t like that title for myself. I’m Asian. Right. So in a lot of ways, like there are so many different experiences in the way that we even claim the term Asian American. And so I would love to see more of these intersectional identity pieces of work, because I think that’s what is more representative of us now more than ever is the intersectionality of.

Stefanie Bautista (42:16)
Mm-hmm.

Yeah.

Soo Jin Lee (42:36)
different parts of all of our identities and work.

Linda (42:39)
Just literally adding to what Soo Jin said, you know, that Asians are not monolith. And that’s something that we really want to illustrate. We don’t even, the way we include people’s stories is, you know, for us to not to tell people what Asian American experience is, but how people have opportunity to, like, illustrate, show their own Asian American story, because it’s such a diverse

group of people that we are just a seven to one big category, right? And then, you know, we can go beyond just talking about what is an Asian American, but what are other identities we have? We are different. We are diverse, you know, we get to celebrate every identities within Asian American category as well.

Stefanie Bautista (43:22)
Hmm.

Ariel Landrum (43:22)
I’ve been listening to the book on audio, which is a very different experience than reading the book. And, uh,

A part of it is like the stories really come to life for me when I’m hearing it in audio form. But at the end of each chapter, there is always sort of like a journal prompt, an exploration prompt. What for the two of you, what is that how you naturally work? Is that did that naturally unfold itself? How did you conceptualize the ways in which you broke these stories up and how you integrate it to the reader?

Linda (43:50)
We initially, how we came to have the book is based on our support groups that we used to run Asian American Experience Group. That was kind of basis of the book content. So we have added, you know, taken out, added as, you know, we got feedbacks and we have evolved with our groups. But we really want to make reading the book or I guess hearing the book.

Ariel Landrum (44:00)
Mm-hmm.

Linda (44:11)
and experience of being in a support community group. Knowing that you’re not alone, that other people’s stories can be reflected in your life or you can learn how the depth of Asian American community is. And we had a call, so we had some stories in our mind that we knew from our community members, that we have asked, or we also had kind of call out to people like, hey, we’re writing a book.

And if you like to share your story to be included, we’d love to. And then like we’ve got many, like hundreds of submissions. And initially it was a little overwhelming, but since we have themes that we have identified, right? So we, after we did interview, people submit their stories, we will try to fit in like what stories goes into different themes. I mean, sometimes there are multiple themes that are presented in the stories, which is, you know, often that’s how it is. we want to kind of…

Ariel Landrum (44:42)
Yeah.

Linda (44:59)
unfold people’s stories and have our education and unpacking and the journal prompts and then exercises surrounding the story instead of the other way around. Usually that’s, you know, that’s textbook, right? We didn’t want to be a textbook. We really wanted to be a story of the community. So that’s how we went about it.

Soo Jin Lee (45:17)
And so it’s not exactly the way that we would say do individual therapeutic work, but this is how we would love for our support group and community group to continue to look like that. There’s an element of your identity being reflected off of other people.

and other people’s experiences, you hear them, you listen, and you get to have a chance of reflecting your own identity. And oftentimes, people didn’t know how to go about doing that. And we needed to make sure that there were exercises that can support that. And because we’re talking about trauma and intergenerational trauma issues, that there were a lot of grounding exercises. That way, there are tools that people can take with them as they’re doing these journaling

if things are coming up for them that they can ground themselves.

Stefanie Bautista (45:59)
Yeah, and I think that’s what I love about the book is that it’s so interactive. And not only is it dynamic storytelling, but you are self reflecting at the same time you’re reading it. I’m curious to know, I know writing a book is a daunting task. Did the process evolve from the beginning to the middle to the end? Did you have like a roadmap? Because I can only imagine, you know.

what that roller coaster of not just emotions, but also workflow is like for, you know, co-authors.

Linda (46:26)
Maybe we will have a better idea if we were to write other books. It was our first book. We didn’t intend to write the book. It was something that one of our attendees for the group, really loved the group and then shared that with her friend who happened to be a literary agent. And the literary agent contacted us saying that, hey, what you’re doing should be a book. So we kind of went about…

Stefanie Bautista (46:31)
Mm-hmm.

Ariel Landrum (46:47)
Yeah.

Stefanie Bautista (46:48)
Yeah.

Linda (46:49)
other way around than instead of us like, Oh, we want to write a book and then let’s have it published, right? So we took on the project because we knew there was so much lack of resources. And like, we want to write a book that we needed ourselves and then for

Stefanie Bautista (46:53)
Right.

Ariel Landrum (46:55)
Mm-hmm.

Linda (47:08)
It’s not a therapist book, it’s not a clinic book, but it’s something that can be accessible for anyone who’s looking for resources, right? But then we had a lot of ideas, but I’m also diagnosed with ADHD. I had a really hard time. Soo Jin definitely was able to organize things a little bit better and then kind of like did the outline for us to know what I have to fit into where.

Stefanie Bautista (47:13)
Mm-hmm.

Linda (47:30)
But it has been such a roller coaster of like writing, deleting, rewriting. I wrote like five pages, but does it even fit anywhere? Right? Or am I rambling?

Ariel Landrum (47:40)
Yes.

Stefanie Bautista (47:41)
No.

Soo Jin Lee (47:43)
Yeah.

Linda (47:44)
we learned a lot. But it definitely could have been more structured now to think about it. I’m very chaotic.

Ariel Landrum (47:49)
I’m going to go.

Stefanie Bautista (47:51)
I’m sorry.

Soo Jin Lee (47:52)
I mean, non-writers trying to write an entire book, we’re just like, we have so much to say about this subject matter. And so we just started writing. And I think that was kind of our, maybe it worked out in our favor too, but to us, it felt like suffering because we’re just writing and writing and writing. And we’re like, wait, okay, how does this fit into the book again? And we’re like, oh, we scratch that. It doesn’t. So there were.

Ariel Landrum (47:54)
I’m going to go to bed.

Stefanie Bautista (47:55)
Ha ha ha.

Wow.

Ariel Landrum (48:07)
Ha!

Stefanie Bautista (48:09)
I’m sorry.

Linda (48:15)
Yeah, the most feedback that we got from our editor was that like, hey, this is too long. Like, this is too long. This is too long. Hahaha.

Ariel Landrum (48:20)
Yeah.

Soo Jin Lee (48:20)
I’m sorry.

Stefanie Bautista (48:23)
Yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah. I know we talked in a previous episode about the hardest part of writing is editing, especially when you’re self-editing, because in your brain, everything is important. And, you know, of course, everything is important. There’s so much information that’s valuable that somebody out there is going to benefit from. But when you’re trying to condense it into something that is digestible, that’s where…

Ariel Landrum (48:28)
Mm.

Stefanie Bautista (48:43)
the work is put in. But I mean, I think you guys did it beautifully. I enjoy reading it. I went through it nightly before, after I put my kids to bed. It was such a good grounding piece for me. And hearing other people’s stories were so beautiful. So I think the end product, you wouldn’t even have known it was chaotic. You could have just said, we meant for it to be like this, and I would have 100% believed you.

Ariel Landrum (48:47)
Yes.

I’m sorry.

Yes, 100%.

Soo Jin Lee (49:05)
Thank you.

Ariel Landrum (49:05)
Well, where can people access, purchase your book, and where can people find the two of you if they are wanting to learn more about the support groups that you offer or therapy sessions that you offer?

Linda (49:16)
The book information and any book event coming up can be found on WhereIBelongTheBook.com is the website for the book. For our work, we are co-directors of Yellow Chair Collective. That’s where we do most of our support, community groups, and therapy services. That is YellowChairCollective.com We also have a nonprofit, Entwine Community.

where we focus on training future therapists and also providing pro bono low fee services for mainly Asian American community. And that is EntwineCommunity.org

Ariel Landrum (49:47)
Okay, okay.

Stefanie Bautista (49:48)
And I know you are all in different cities at different times. Is your book tour ending at a certain time or are you gonna continuously promote the book for the rest of the year?

Linda (49:58)
Our next event is on May 11th, and we will be in National Mall of Asian Museum. We will have a book event in their AAPI Heritage Month celebration.

at the museum and we are talking to New York bookstore about our next book event. So there are certain and Chicago, we also are talking to a Chicago organization that want to invite us. So there are some certain things kind of coming up. So if somebody told us that book tours all year long thing. So it looks like it may be a all year long thing for us. Yeah.

Soo Jin Lee (50:29)
And I think we’ve also been doing more of online book engagements as well. And so if anyone wants to find us and learn more and join us in the online community too, we’ll continue to do that.

Ariel Landrum (50:34)
Mm-hmm.

Stefanie Bautista (50:36)
Nice.

Ariel Landrum (50:40)
Okay, beautiful. Well, if you want to share with us your favorite boy band moment from your cringey childhood or how you’ve embraced your red panda, please DM us @HappiestPodGT. You can find us on Instagram and X/Twitter.

Thank you everyone, and I hope you all have a wonderful May.

Stefanie Bautista (50:57)
Yes. Thank you.

Yep. All right.

Soo Jin Lee (51:00)
Thank you!

Linda (51:02)
Thank you.

Media/Characters Mentioned
  • Pixar’s ‘Turning Red’
  • Mei Mei Lee
  • Ming Lee
  • 4*Town
  • Fourtown
  • Nsync
  • Backstreet Boys
  • Christina Aguilera
  • Britney Spears
  • One Direction
  • G.O.D. (K-Pop group)
  • SHINHWA (K-Pop group)
  • Super Junior (K-Pop group)
Topics/Themes Mentioned
  • Family and identity in Asian American contexts
  • Mental health: dealing with perfectionism and pressure
  • Impact of cultural expectations and code-switching
  • Representation and its significance in media
  • The role of community and shared experiences in personal growth
  • Intergenerational relationships and cultural transmission
  • Celebrating Asian American, Pacific Islander, and Native Hawaiian Heritage

| Website: happy.geektherapy.com |
| Instagram: @HappiestPodGT | X: @HappiestPodGT | Facebook: @HappiestPodGT |
| Stef on Twitter: @stefa_kneee | Ariel on Instagram: @airyell3000 |
| Soo Jin Lee on Instagram: @SooJinLee.MFT | Linda Yoon on Instagram: @LindaYoonTherapy |
| Yellow Chair Collective on Instagram: @YellowChairCollective |
| Website: https://yellowchaircollective.com/ | Website: https://entwinecommunity.org/ |
| Book Website: https://whereibelongthebook.com/ | Book: https://amzn.to/3UvScYf |

Geek Therapy is a 501(c)(3) non-profit that advocates for the effective and meaningful use of popular media in therapeutic, educational, and community practice.
| GT Facebook: @GeekTherapy | GT Twitter: @GeekTherapy |
| GT Forum: forum.geektherapy.com  | GT Discord: geektherapy.com/discord |

The Power of Nostalgia Activated By “X-Men 97”

April 9, 2024 · Discuss on the GT Forum

https://media.blubrry.com/happypod/media.transistor.fm/1a6948d1/21c29f9f.mp3

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38: Ariel and Stef unpack the continuation of a beloved series with X-Men 97, exploring its impact from therapy to education. They discuss nostalgia’s role in healing trauma and connecting with students, the nuances of characters like Rogue and Storm, and how X-Men’s diversity and inclusion themes resonate today. Tune in for a journey through the past, present, and future of one of the most iconic superhero teams.

Download free some hand-dany worksheets on social and emotional learning and healing that are X-Men themed:

X-Men-97-Personal-Growth-Worksheet-Fillable-PDFDownload
X-Men-97-Personal-Growth-WorksheetDownload
X-Men-97-Shadow-Self-Worksheet-Fillable-PDFDownload
X-Men-97-Shadow-Self-WorksheetDownload
The-Heros-Journey-X-Men-97-Fillable-PDFDownload
The-Heros-Journey-X-Men-97Download
X-Men-97-Coloring-SheetDownload
Summary

Summary of HPOE38:

  1. Introduction: Ariel and Stef introduce the episode by discussing the critical lens they apply to Disney mediums and their expectations from the content they consume.

  2. X-Men 97 Discussion: The hosts delve into the newly released X-Men 97 series on Disney+, exploring its continuation from the original animated series and the incorporation of nostalgia through commercial breaks and episode pacing.

  3. Therapeutic and Educational Uses of Nostalgia: Ariel shares how nostalgia in media can aid in trauma therapy, while Stef discusses its application in educational settings to connect with students.

  4. Character Analysis: The discussion covers the character dynamics in X-Men 97, including the controversial Magneto and Rogue storyline, the depiction of characters like Storm, and the evolution of Jubilee.

  5. Memory and Identity: They explore how the series addresses themes of memory, identity, and perspective taking, particularly through the neurodivergent experience and the fresh perspective of children.

  6. Closing Thoughts: The episode concludes with reflections on using X-Men in after-school activities and classrooms, highlighting the series’ potential to discuss diversity, equity, inclusion, and belonging (DEIB).

Transcription

Hello everyone, welcome to Happiest Pod on Earth. I’m Ariel, a licensed therapist who uses clients’ passions and fandoms to help them grow and heal from trauma and mental unwellness. And I’m Stef. I’m an educator who uses passions and fandoms to help connect with my students and help them grow and learn about themselves. Here at Happiest Pod, we dissect Disney mediums with a critical lens. Why? Because we are more than just fans and we expect more out of the mediums we consume. So Stef, what are we talking about today? Well, it’s a hot topic.

Hot and old at the same time. And then it goes into Whitney Houston’s whatever you want from me. Just kidding. We are not talking about Whitney Houston, even though she is an icon and a goddess. RIP. We are talking about X -Men 97. Those are fireworks. Why are we talking about this? Well, obviously the new series has come out on Disney +.

if you’ve been living under a rock, which is okay. X -Men 97 is essentially starting where the old animated X -Men left off. So it is taking place in 1997. I do have some questions about that. However, it is even bringing back the nostalgic experience of commercial breaks and having to wait for the next film.

Yeah, and also the pacing, I think, of it. Just short 30 -minute episodes, things that we would watch after school every single day, or maybe even before school, if they did a rerun before you headed out to the bus or the car, however you got to school, walked. I think it really transports not only millennials like us who experienced it back, but also kids now who are viewing it on a streaming site.

but also being limited in how much they can consume each episode. So it’s very interesting to play on nostalgia. And I know we both talk about nostalgia in our practices. So what do you use nostalgia with connecting to your clients or maybe helping them through something that’s difficult? Well, so as you know, I work with a lot of clients who’ve experienced trauma and oftentimes that trauma occurred when they were a child or in childhood.

So reclaiming memories, reclaiming experiences from childhood in their adulthood with the experience of childlike wonder is a huge healing process. Oftentimes what happens is that clients experience a loss, a lot of grief and loss around something that mattered to them, something that really brought them joy. If the trauma happened,

in childhood during those times. So I have like, even now with the X -Men, I have clients who didn’t finish watching the series because that was around the time that something severe had happened. So getting an opportunity to re -experience new stories and still activate that inner child that loves the show, that hears the music, is ready for the intro, it re -formats parts of the brain and…

creates the ability to have new memories as well as retrospective memories of that trauma through traumatic growth. Right. And I’m so happy that you said a lot of the things that IE would use, but in a different way. In the classroom, nostalgia is really another word for connecting with kids and where they’re at. So everything that they have coming into the classroom is an experience. It’s a memory. So whenever you’re introducing a math lesson, a reading lesson, you ask them, have you seen something like this before?

How can you connect this with something that you already know? So nostalgia is just a fancy way of reaching even further back. Because I mean, to them, nostalgia is maybe like four to five years back when they were like five. If I’m thinking about my fourth graders when I was in the classroom, their nostalgia doesn’t reach that far back. So I don’t think maybe the word is correct, but the concept is still the same. If you’re trying to…

connect to kids wherever they’re starting off from in order to teach them a new concept, you have to see what’s there first. And that includes trying to figure out how they react to a certain procedure, how they react to a certain thing. That’s why sometimes math is triggering because kids did not have a good introduction to math. And sometimes kids didn’t have a good introduction to reading. So maybe the setting, because they’re controlling it as the teacher, you may be able to…

I guess, for lack of better words, manipulate the situation to make it so that they’re comforted and are able to be vulnerable and learn about whatever you’re teaching them. No, that’s really beautiful because you’re right, the memory for children doesn’t reach as far back in the same as adults. So the memory is actually even fresher and might even be more accurate. One of the struggles my adult clients have is trauma gets stored in a part of the brain where it is only

accessible through feelings, which is why when traumatic memories come up, it’s hard to verbalize them. It’s actually difficult to describe it because it’s not put in the part of the brain where words are accessible. But we can sort of describe the emotional sensation if we have learned enough emotional words. Whereas with children, I think it’s not only visceral. A lot of the research is showing that they’re accessing it pretty much exactly the same as they experienced it, especially if it is

a memory of like, you know, just a week ago or two weeks ago where it might not have been coded for us as like caregivers or parents that it encoded really well. And I know you’ve talked about this with your son and like him knowing I know where my toy car is. Oh yeah. Like I asked him to find things that I’ve misplaced because I cannot remember where I put them, but yet he knows exactly where it is.

not just because he’s eye level to the floor, but because his memory is so fresh, his brain is still rapidly producing new thoughts, new ideas. But yeah, I mean, his memory is just top notch right now. So I mean, for him to be able to remember something and they can articulate things without a bias or a lens because they’ve had such a little experience in the world, they can tell you exactly like it is.

you know, a kid will tell you if they don’t like milk. A kid will tell you if they don’t like the lunch and they’ll tell you straight up, this is nasty. So because they have those fresh memories in their mind, it’s literally like it happened yesterday. Yes. Yes. And really pointing out that bias with the lens, because even with our own memories, like if we are not feeling good about ourselves, that bias of like, I was a bad person back then, or I didn’t do good enough to protect myself, or I wasn’t.

smart enough or savvy enough, especially if it’s like trauma that involved someone harming you, we have that blame. And then when we get post -traumatic growth, we might be able to have a more compassionate look back. Whereas with children, they’re still learning to understand how to interpret a memory. And it might be the younger they are, just this is what it is for me.

And I do want to mention my neurodivergent kids, they are even more expressive as to, you know, being reactive to something, whether it be negative or positive, that you’re introducing them. So for me, my neurodivergent kids are the ones that give me the raw data that I need to be able to move forward with a lesson, to see whether I can pivot or not, because they’re processing things in…

a different plane sometimes. And being able to access some of those memories, you find it in their physical movement. You’ll find it in the way that maybe they’ll make eye contact or avert eye contact. So it’s really all of those physical cues that really help you into making those split decisions on whether you should go forward with the plan at hand, or if you wanna do something a little bit different or try on a different day. I’m curious for you before we go into our reactions to this.

Reboot? Reboot? Continuation? Continuation? Yeah. I’m curious for you, how do you see yourself using X -Men in the after -school activities? Or how to maybe talk to other teachers who use it in the classroom? Yeah, I mean, there’s so many different ways you can approach it. I think my synapses are firing immediately when I saw X -Men again, because I think X -Men is such a beautiful representation of diversity and inclusion, and also the pros and cons of people

being diverse but living in a world where not everybody sees things the same way. So for myself, I work in a school that is SEL, Social Emotional Learning, and DEIB forward, which is diversity, equity, inclusion, and belonging. So we can definitely use our mindfulness blocks with little snippets of X -Men, even the snippets of conflict that you’ll see in the series where they’re faced with, let’s say the new character, Roberto.

He doesn’t even want to talk to his parents. He wants to be isolated from everyone because he’s so afraid of his powers and how they perceive it because he has such a strong bond with his family. I think that’s something that’s very relatable to a lot of people. If let’s say they’re growing up maybe thinking about what they want to do in life, but going against the status quo and maybe not doing something that their parents might not want them to do. So it’s not even about your even physical identity or the way you identify yourself.

It’s really the way you choose to live your life, whether it be where you go to school, what you wanna do. You can go that route for older kids. For younger kids, you could just look at all the beautiful colors and see how different everyone is. Beast is a bright blue, Jubilee is a bright pink and yellow. Whenever I’m talking to younger kids, it’s always, what’s your favorite color? Or, Miss, what’s your favorite color? And so that’s how they start forming those first…

concepts of identity and because all the X -Men are so colorful, they can immediately latch to someone if they think they’re pretty or handsome or just fun to look at. So there’s different ways on different levels depending on how you wanna approach it. And I think that’s the beauty of X -Men because it is so diverse visually and socially and so many other ways. Yeah, I think even talking about that color blocking, like we’ve talked about color blocking when it comes to Dapper Day.

but actually when you introduce the idea of looking at a character through color blocking for children, you’re teaching the ability to be abstract. You have created abstraction about a representation of a character. If you can say like think blue, Beast. And if we’ve just only focused on that one part of that character, you’ve immediately introduced that new neural pathway in that way of thinking. Yeah, yeah, I love it. I just love because they use such.

different animation than kids are used to now. Now everybody’s used to the CGI through like Cocoa Melon and like, you know, using more digital arts. This is very old school and it takes them back to the way we would perceive things if we were to even draw them on a paper. Because I remember when I was young, I would draw a Rogue, I would draw a Jubilee, I would use, you know, just colored pencils and crayons to recreate some of my favorite characters and this is very accessible in that way. Beautiful, beautiful. And…

Now in the classroom setting, I’m curious, because there’s always the go -to, you can make a worksheet, right? But I’m thinking like, would you ever highlight a very like specific character? Like in talking about the new character, well, sorta new, Roberto. He’s Portuguese. And I think living here in LA, we hear a lot of Spanish. And when I heard him speak Portuguese in this last episode,

It was like, that sounds nothing to me like, Spanish. I think this is why X -Men is so great because they globalize it. And many shows,

only stay in America or their made up land, here we actually go to far away places that exist in real life. because X -Men is so situational, I would think of the day because in after school, we have a little bit of leeway to not have.

such structure in the day. So it’s not like I’m working through like an arc where I’m like teaching kids how to make an essay or something like that. We can take situational experiences in real life, let’s say during recess or something that happened yesterday and pull a scene and say, hey, let’s look at this and see if you pull anything from something that’s happened recently. I used to use that in my SEL lessons. Let’s say if two kids or a couple kids had a conflict on the yard during like soccer or something.

I would try to show like an avatar episode or show like a little clip that I can find on YouTube and like kind of mirroring that situation of, of course I’m not gonna find the exact same situation, but something similar to where people have conflict and they resolved it in a certain way. Or look at that conflict and say, how would you resolve this? These are real life situations. I know we’re gonna talk about WonderCon later, but I think something that one of our colleagues,

Dr. Elizabeth Hahn said, she said that pop culture is just a mirror for real life. And when you’re talking about using it in therapy or if you’re using it in the classroom, pop culture is such a powerful tool to say, hey, let’s look at these things that happen and look at the way that we go about life and see, could I have made it a different way? Could I have made different decisions? And if so, how, and would that be positive or negative? So I mean, for you,

How would you use X -Men? Because it’s so fascinating. Yeah, I think as a narrative therapist, we do exactly that. We perspective taking with stories. Traditionally, it’s the story the individual is telling themselves. But a safe space to do it is looking at someone else’s story. And it immediately makes me think of Magneto when he was facing the council. Yeah. Was it the UN or? I think it was the UN, yeah. Yeah.

He’s facing the world. It was pretty serious. His crimes against humanity. Yeah. And he literally has a monologue about the fact that there has always been discrimination and oppression of people who are different, who are marginalized. And I know, perspective taking, a younger version of me could never see Magneto as someone that I had aligned values with. Right. And now as an adult, I’m like, yeah, yeah, you are.

This is human history and he’s even bringing in his own traumas and experiences losing his family because of the Holocaust and his parents dying in the gas chamber. He doesn’t say those things, but he says we were persecuted because we dared to call a God by another name. And so that perspective taking allows us to have.

more empathy. And I think for my clients, when they see themselves as the villain in their story, I would show that clip and be like, do you even like, agree with any of this? Cause I know that’s what we did with Killmonger. Like everything he said, I was like, point, valid. You can go ahead and sit there, I guess. So.

This is now another introduction of that. And we get the retrospective. If you grew up with the X -Men, you probably always thought of Magneto as the bad guy. And literally the intro scene is these two groups smashing into each other. And we always saw that other group as the bad group. Now we’re starting to see that nuance. And so through narrative therapy, I would highlight perspective taking. Take on that perspective. Be that individual of you are just fighting for your people.

is that inherently bad. Right. And in the classroom on the playground, we call that putting yourself in somebody else’s shoes. Yep. It’s exactly what it is. It’s just saying, hey, let’s just take a minute and like, think about it this way. Break it down and be like, how would you make that decision differently now? And I think this reboot of X -Men is so clever in the way that they presented Magneto this time, because you’re right, when I was younger, Magneto, bad guy, has a helmet, looks like a Sentinel.

Yes. All of that stuff like has to do with metal cold like all of those like things made me think bad guy. Yeah. They took off his helmet. Yes. So now you see more of his he’s more humanized. He’s more humanized. He’s a little buff, a little bit of a zaddy if you just a little bit. I’ve heard from friends not speak for myself, speak for other people. And his voice is like like a leader.

And when you’re looking at Cyclops and his struggle to identify himself as a leader, you immediately see it in Magneto already. And you’re not immediately thinking bad guy. You’re thinking of, oh, this person is making decisions and we should probably listen to what he has to say. Even though there is a power dynamic clash between the two, you can obviously see that there is history there and he has experience. So that’s naturally somebody who.

people are gonna gravitate to. And that’s not the Magneto that I grew up with. Well, and then even talking about perspective taking, how many times have we been in a class with a coworker and they have now been promoted and we must see them as leadership and treat them differently, right? You can also take on that perspective that Cyclops took when he thought, well, I’m the natural leader, one, because I’m one of the first and because this is what I think Xavier wanted. And we’ve always seen him as like the…

aside removing Xavier, we’ve kind of always seen him as like the de facto leader. Yeah, like the lead. So now that someone is actually identified as like, no, they are. That’s that can be there’s some relief there. That pressure is removed from me. But also it’s like now I don’t feel like I’m good enough. We can take on that that perspective, right? What it feels to be put in that position and then try and put.

all those hurt feelings aside. Cause maybe it’s like when we’re working, like that person made a snide remark, but in this case, like literally Magneto has attempted to destroy the world and everything that he’s loved multiple times. There’s a track record there. So it’s a little bit of redemption for him, but also things are happening in Cyclops’s life that does not allow him to be the leader and step up because his family’s getting torn apart. I don’t know if we did a spoiler alert, but at this point we are going to be talking about

episodes all the way up until the most recent one. So spoiler alert, if you haven’t started it, turn this off now. Turn this off now. We won’t put that in the show notes. It will be known. There will be spoilers. It will be known. But moving forward, now that you’ve done all that, you’re coming back, seeing all the episodes. Cyclops does not even know who his wife is right now. No. And he just had a baby. So I think he’s not in the right mental state to be leading a whole group, let alone a mutant revolution. Yeah.

and going against Washington and all the factions of the UN because he is just trying to pick up the pieces and trying to figure himself out. So Magneto clearly is just the natural one to, quote unquote, slide on in and lead the team whenever needed and actually make up a plan to figure out the future of the X -Men. Yes. Yes. And mutants.

So I’m curious for you, because we’re already on the topic of Magneto. Thoughts on Magneto and Rogue? I don’t know if I needed it. OK, so Rogue is one of my favorite X -Men. She was one of the earliest cosplays that I’ve done. I remember one time me and my friends, they were Halloween partying. We were all members of the X -Men. And I could not, this is back before Amazon, before you could do, you would have to go to a wig store to find a wig.

you would have to go to a costume store to find a costume. I remember buying green leggings and yellow leggings and cutting out the crotch part and figuring out how am I going to sew this together? I didn’t. I glued it and it fell apart by the end of the night. But the visual was their early days of cosplay with no sewing experience whatsoever because I thought Rogue was so cool. And I think I know I think the X -Men movies had just

come out with Anna Paquin as Rogue and I loved her and I love her as an actress and she did such a good job of bringing Rogue to life on the big screen. Your hair is a little Rogue. Yeah, a little bit, oh my God. Yeah, you’re right. Because I’ve always wanted to do that, just have like the piece of, you know, white hair because it’s cool and I can suck people’s powers. And you know how people always ask like, what your favorite superpower is or if you had a superpower, what would it be?

It’s like a classic icebreaker thing. We do it in classrooms. I’m sure you’ve done it in therapy. And ever since I knew about Rogue, I’m like, I want her powers. The ability to take other people’s powers for a short time, just so I can taste it, and then move on to another one. No, there was, did you ever watch the show Heroes? Yes. And then antagonist Sylar? Yes. Yeah, I was like, I want that. I want that. He got to keep them forever, although he murdered people. And apparently he didn’t have to, from what I remember. He could have just taken the power.

or learn how to do it or poke someone’s head, I don’t know. Yeah, I mean, Rogue was like cool. She was very like, I mean, she had a cool love interest, Gambit. And that’s why I think I’ve had that in my mind. And when I saw the first couple scenes with her and Gambit, I’m like, oh my God, they’re they all. And Gambit’s so cute. Look at him and his crop top. Cute, he’s hot. He’s hot, yeah. I was a pure simp for that. Anywho.

And then all of a sudden, Magneto comes in and I’m like, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa. Because Anna Paquin was young Rogue. I’ve always seen rogue as like somebody who may be college age, high school age. No one older than, even in the old X -Men, she didn’t seem that old to me, maybe late 20s. So I always thought of her as like a young soul because she was very playful. And then I saw that happen and I’m like, oh. And it.

It hasn’t added anything for me yet in these four episodes. I think if, I don’t know if they’re gonna expand upon it later on, their history, I know there is a history, it is in the comic books. I’m not super familiar with that storyline, but I mean, as far as I know, it is Rogan Gambit and they look so good together and I stan. I am on the ship, it is sailing. But what are your thoughts about it? Because…

So I had to look it up and I’m trying to find the reference. I’m like, how can they touch? And so a lot of people have been theorizing that Magneto’s magnetism, he’s able to make like basically like a human condom with it. Okay. Right. And so they can like a whole body suit. Yeah, a whole body suit. Yeah. And that’s how they’re able to touch. Because he can manipulate the elements. But in the comics, she absorbs the power of

Polaris, that was Polaris. Polaris’s powers in a previous timeline, which they had revisited. And it is canon in the comics that they get together. And what’s something that my roommate really highlighted, which I realized in retrospect after they had shared that was,

this is more adult, like it does feel a little more violent. So it makes sense that they are trying to really up the ante with like romance triangling, but even the physicality of it, because the whole point is that Rogue can’t touch anybody. So to see her touch someone and someone we’ve always seen as the bad guy, like that had so many emotional layers and lots of like, right? I think there were a couple of moments that you had that sort of thing because,

when Jean Grey or not Jean Grey, Madalyn Pryor was having her baby, I was like, they’re doing this. Yes. They’re doing this. And the last time I saw somebody give birth was on House of the Dragon. That did not go well. So I was like, they’re actually showing somebody who’s pregnant giving birth and somebody delivering her baby. I didn’t think that they were going to go that like visually accurate with it. But the fact that there may be.

some kids watching this or teenagers or yes, like you said, it’s more tailored towards adults. These are – Because of the nostalgia. Because of the nostalgia, but also I think so many of the elements of X -Men are transcendent in that way and they’ve always been tackling the big issues, but behind this sort of veil of superheroes. And cartoons. And cartoons, which is a very childlike concept, but in reality,

I mean, the creators of X -Men were so smart to see beyond that and use them as social commentary and, you know, human commentary too on the ways that we deal with people who are othered and how they do the same exact things that everyone else does. Absolutely. And I think you’re highlighting all of these different moments that are, are adult, not just like the violence, but…

we hear about a baby being born. We don’t really get to see it on TV too much. And I don’t think, I mean, I can’t remember a comic where there was a birth scene. It was just, if there was like people in the waiting room and you’d hear the cry and then they’d come in. And never did you see like potential pain. And again, that layer of discrimination, Rogue had to be the one.

to birth this baby. Yes. Simply because parents were mutants. That was it. Yeah. And again, that layer of discrimination does exist in the world. And how they were in the hospital and they were like, no, we will not deliver your baby. And she was just like, no, you will deliver this baby. Yeah. And given that…

when it comes to civil rights and civil rights movement, more marginalized individuals have been added, more experiences of protection. But this, you know, the show does mirror, like, there’s always someone that hasn’t been included. In this case, there’s no law that says that you can’t discriminate against mutants from what I remember from the show. So yeah, there’s a lot that…

this show is tackling that we haven’t seen in cartoons, especially one that looks the way it does. Yeah. Now, speaking of the timeline and it being 1997, there are some things that make me think that I don’t remember that being things that we talked about back then or words we use. So the first one is Jubilee when she’s explaining to Roberto who Magneto is, he’s like Xavier’s ex -bestie.

I never used the word bestie in 1997. Never. Did that exist? I don’t think so. I don’t think so. I don’t know who was supposed… Isn’t that someone on a set that makes sure something’s historically accurate? Yes. Not a dialogue coach, but whoever’s editing this. That is clearly 2000 and… By gosh. 2020 and now? Bestie is not something like best friend. Best friend.

You would have those necklaces. Yeah, BFF. Yes. Definitely could have used BFF. Could have used BFF. There are no totalies, the amount of totalies that she could have said to mask that. Yes. I did clock her say bestie. Yes. But that like –

there are these moments where I’m watching it that I’m pulled out that it’s 1997. Cause I’m like, we didn’t talk like that. We just didn’t. I’m sorry. I mean, even, okay. So speaking of the recent episode, they did so many great things. I know when I was watching it, I recently dressed up as Jubilee at WonderCon. And I’ve always loved Jubilee because I identified with her. She’s Asian American. It was the only one that I identified with when I was younger. So naturally I wanted to dress up like her.

And I think she’s such a fun character who would not want to use fireworks as her powers. That’s just fun. That’s just fun. And I love 80s video games. So this whole entire episode, which is actually half of an episode, I think it was great the way they did it because they pulled from the actual X -Men arcade games, which I used to play a lot. And the eight bit, the 16 bit, and it gradually got newer and newer. I think that was very clever.

But yeah, the way that she said a lot of things, even when looking at the console, like, I’ve never seen this before, but it’s here in my room. I just want to celebrate my birthday. Let’s just escape. Everything about that was so teenager. It was teen angst, teen yearning, teen longing, teen romance. I think it definitely played to a lot of the things that make YA so like palpable

because these are all emotions that we’ve all been through. But yeah, I think that her little storyline really catered to a group of people that we don’t normally make content for anymore. A lot of their content is accessed through their phones on like little clips. So I think this was just like a beautiful way of.

saying, hey, tweens, we didn’t forget about you. Even though this is kind of adult, I know you may be interested in this. And this could be a gateway for you to experience X -Men in a way that speaks to you. Well, and I think even the really beautiful moment of her digital adult self, one saying, I understand. I totally understand why you would want to live in these old memories, which again brings us back to this episode and the nostalgia.

But also saying that new discovery, new memories are also good too. Yeah, and wrinkles are okay. White hair is okay. And like that, like your personality isn’t gonna go away. It’s just like, I still love video games. I’ve been playing this game like literally multiple digital worlds. On the last surviving bit. It’s very reminiscent of Ant -Man. And the way that they showed timetravel

I’m traveling that way and how you could still exist in another world but still have a part of you be there. I think that was, now that they’re playing with the multiverses, I’m so like enthusiastic to see the different ways that they’re approaching it and address things like growing with age, dealing with aging, letting go of your youth and what that means to you because I think all of us, especially all of us, you know, geeky kids, we’re all grappling with the fact of,

how do I still retain myself or what I knew about myself now that I’m growing into these different stages of my life? Yeah, just like that episode was talking to the tweens, it was also talking to adults who are struggling with literally, like we say, like adulting, right? Like I need to accept the fact that I’m grown. That doesn’t mean giving up my passions, but it also means that I can’t only live in my past. I can use those great things about my past to,

elevate myself and to evolve and be a better version of myself because she was really cool. She was so legit. She was so legit. And I’m like, great. We’re going to see a lot of this at San Diego Comic -Con now. I want to see how people dress up as her because she’s so cool. And to see her like spinning blades. That was cool. And like, oh my gosh, I can do that. Yeah. Very Tron like. And those are, and I’m thinking like fireworks when I…

Well, there are all kinds of fireworks. There are ones that spin. As Disney enthusiasts, we’ve seen lots of fireworks. Yes. So this might be a way for us to see her power start to elevate. Because the joke used to be that her power was simply sparklers. And I never thought that as a kid. I thought her power was the coolest. Yeah.

But now I think we’re also seeing that evolution, that growth and that change. Cause all of the other X -Men are adults. They’re kind of fully fledged in their powers. At least like the way we’ve been introduced to them. I mean, Jean Grey is already discovering all these other powers that she’s had. My God. There’s even been been people. She’s been a Goblin Goblin and a phoenix. Like, yeah, she has way too many powers. So now we can start to see that evolution with.

Jubilee, I think is exciting. And I think that’s very formative that it’s on her 18th birthday. Something that’s a rite of passage for many young women. I know it happens different ages and different cultures, but 18 is normally the age where you’re like, okay, this is another step into young adulthood now. Like, how do I want to celebrate? So I think all of those were very subtle, like nods to how people, how kids grow up, how young women grow up and see themselves. And you know, how they…

now are like, I’m gonna age one day. And you know, how is that gonna look like? Is it scary? And so we definitely see that through Jubilee’s episode. And as part of our closing out, we did just finish WonderCon. We did have our food panel, which was hilarious and a lot of fun. And connecting the two, I don’t know about you, but they need to give me Gambit’s beignet recipe.

I want to see how it stacks up against Tiana’s beignet recipe.

if anybody out there has a Gambit beignet recipe, I wanna know it. Like, does he put a little something else in it? That makes it delicious? Is it spicy? Is it fiery? Like, is there something about it? Because we know we can stuff them. Yeah, absolutely. And if you are gonna make them, you gotta wear the crop top, because that has been a cultural phenomenon. I know the voice actor of Gambit at WonderCon wore, I don’t think it was a crop top, I think it was just like,

a sleeveless shirt. Yeah. But it did have that like generic rock symbol on it. I think that was really cool. I’ve seen a ton of memes about it on the Internet. But yeah, I’m very curious to see what Gambit’s beignets taste like. Yes. Yes. And I would like to see them stop doing him dirty with the rogue and magneto story. You know, I’m very upset about that. I think somebody who looks statuesque. Yes.

and has such a cool haircut. Shout out to the hairstylists this time around, animators. Ororo Storm’s haircut. Beautiful. Beautiful. I think I saw one Storm at WonderCon and she was so beautiful. I love the way they did her hair. Also, they’re doing our girl dirty. She had to be the martyr. Yes. How do we feel about that? I am angry about that. And again, it’s in the comics and they’re trying to introduce more canon in.

Love that. I do not love what they have chosen to introduce Cannon in because I think I can do away with the Magneto and Rogue thing. But it exists, whatever. But I definitely could do away with Storm losing her powers. And I am really excited for when, I’m hoping, she actually reclaims them and gets them back. But I think for me, because her powers have never been presented as like a mutation, but they like literally call her a goddess on the show.

So the idea for me that she could lose something that is part of her god, like her goddessness and her being a black woman, like it just angers me that she had to be, like you said, the martyr. She is the one who got sacrificed for humans to be like, okay, so I guess we like shouldn’t have our foes, which as a child, I did not get that, but now I got it. Yeah.

jumped in front of Magneto because her heart is so big that she did not see any of that. She just wants to save a life. A life. She could have done it for a human. She could have done it for a mutant. That’s just the type of – She would have done it for an animal. Yeah, she would have done it for an animal. She would have done it for a cloud. That’s the type of person she is. And I think to bring her down, I mean, yes, it is a testament of how strong she is, but we don’t have to put her through that. Yeah, I guess for me, I only see those types of arcs necessary when we are –

trying to sort of make somebody get rehumanized. And what I mean by that is like access their humanity. Like Iron Man, for example. Yes, but she has never been haughty, high and mighty and has had a lot of humanity despite being called a goddess and pretty much is one. And even like Omega threat, right? So the fact that we have taken her down to now she is just a human, a very powerful, strong one, she’s still –

Very welcome to nature, very fit. But again, it had to be the black woman, come on. Yeah, we could have chosen somebody else. We could have chosen Magneto, he needs to be. As much as he’s changed and I have some like allyship with him and the fact that yes, discrimination exists. Yeah. Yo, yo. Yet again, we do not know how this is gonna conclude yet. So these are all thoughts midway. Maybe we’ll do an end of the series recap. I’m very excited to see.

I’ll be tuning in every single Wednesday. I think it’s so accessible for me as a parent to watch 30 minutes. Speaking of the 30 minutes, I like how they broke this episode up into two, which is very common in not only kids shows, but 90 shows. They have an A storyline and a B storyline. And then they did that very, I think they did it very perfectly. The pacing was fast, but it was enough for me to be like, okay, that began and ended and now this one is beginning. And then there’s that part.

too, which is another very nineties thing. I remember sitcoms used to do this, stay tuned for next week, cliffhanger So I really liked those little details, but I really like it so far. It was more than I ever thought it was going to be. Yes. Yes. I think this is the first time a reboot’s been like, executioned well. And then I think some other things aside from seeing how Storm gets her powers back.

I’m really interested to see if we’re gonna see some of the other well -known villains and how they are going to be introduced, especially if we’re trying to work in harmony now. Yeah, and I think it’s gotten so big to where people are breaking down the intros and the differences in like Jean Grey’s hair. First it was Madalyn Pryor, now it’s Jean Grey with the little face mask thing. People are already noticing Mystique, they’re noticing Sabretooth, they’re noticing Juggernaut.

We have yet to see all of these people. I’m not sure how many episodes we’re getting. Maybe 10? I don’t know. That’s something I’ll look up later, but hopefully we get, I mean, if it’s like a Disney plus arc, usually it’s about 10 episodes now because the original ran from 92 to 97. They had five seasons. So we’re going to see with the popularity, how long it’s going to go. I mean, they’re giving a new life into the voice actors because almost all of them have come back in one way or another. So there’s definitely, um,

There’s some praise in that too, because we’re getting real life nostalgia. Yes. Yes. So if you have been watching X -Men 97, please let us know your thoughts and feelings around apparently Zaddy Magneto. Zaddy Magneto. Or technically Zaddy Gambit. Zaddy Gambit. Go ahead and tweet at us, DM us on Instagram at happiestpodgt.

and on Twitter, xhappiestpodgt. And let us know your thoughts with these show notes. Actually, for this episode, we will have some worksheets that you can give your clients or students that are X -Men themed. So you can download those for free. Yep, definitely. And shout out to Stack Up for hosting us with this beautiful background. We also did not mean to wear.

black and white Mickey shirts by accident. Also vintage, like nostalgia. I got this from a thrift store and yours looks very vintage because it’s black and white. I got mine on Walmart. Okay, you know what? But you didn’t just get it, right? No, I’ve had it for like four years. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah, this was like a repurposed tie -dye. And now we can show it because we have video. Yay! Thank you to everybody who joined us on our panel at WonderCon. Hopefully we’ll see you soon. But yeah, we’ll see you on the next episode. Thanks everyone.

Media/Characters Mentioned
  • X-Men 97
  • Animated X-Men
  • Magneto
  • Cyclops
  • Jean Grey
  • Rogue
  • Storm
  • Jubilee
  • Roberto
Topics/Themes Mentioned
  • Nostalgia
  • Character analysis
  • Memory
  • Identity
  • DEIB
  • Storytelling
  • Human rights
  • Mutants
  • Education
  • Trauma
  • Memory
  • Perspective taking
  • Being in someone else’s shoes

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Welcome to The Happiest Pod on Earth! On the Geek Therapy Network we believe that the best way to understand each other, and ourselves, is through the media we care about. On this show, we focus exclusively on Disney!

Hosted by Stefanie Bautista and Ariel Landrum!

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