The between series: The rescue operation I didn’t know was mine—a story about cosmic humiliation, climbing, tinder ghosts, and the surprising way humor saves us cover art

The between series: The rescue operation I didn’t know was mine—a story about cosmic humiliation, climbing, tinder ghosts, and the surprising way humor saves us

The between series: The rescue operation I didn’t know was mine—a story about cosmic humiliation, climbing, tinder ghosts, and the surprising way humor saves us

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In this episode, I answer the question: What’s the most dramatic way to ruin your own life for 24 hours?

This is the story about becoming the world's most expensive inconvenience.

Welcome to The Between Series—a series where I take you into moments from my life that shaped the themes we explore in the main episodes.

For anyone who’s ever:

  • Hit "reply all" on something you shouldn’t have.
  • Been that person in a group text.
  • Woken up in cold sweat remembering something dumb you did in 2012

In this episode, I tell the story of my top-five most mortifying life moments. It starts with a new smartwatch, a few misplaced button clicks in my backpack during an ice climb, and an SOS signal I didn't know I had sent. It ends with a full-scale search and rescue operation—while I was, completely obliviously, having the time of my life.

For a long time, I carried this story as proof that I was a burden—irresponsible, dramatic, the world’s most expensive inconvenience. But when I finally dared to tell it out loud, the shame I expected was met with something else entirely: laughter. The kind of laughter that cracks a story open and turns it into absurdity, connection, and relief.

This is the companion to our last episode with Brad Jenkins about using humor as a strategy—not just for persuasion, but for survival—and how the Obama White House used it to save the Affordable Care Act.

It’s a look at how humor isn’t just for coping—it’s one of the most powerful tools we have for connection, forgiveness, and even large-scale change.

Sometimes the only way out of our own shame is to find the punchline.

There’s more ahead. There always is.

— Molly

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🔗 View the full show notes at mollykawahata.com/podcast

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