Atsuko Okatsuka: Comedy, Chaos, and Finding a Place to Belong
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Mar 29, 2025
She was searching for perfection - until she discovered what she truly needed by letting go of what didn’t fit.
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0:00
I think the key to life is knowing who you're not
0:04
That is so important because you might wake up 10 years later and be like
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I am not a farmer, but here I am with a whole farm
0:25
I'm Atsuko Katsuka and I'm a comedian. In what aspect of your life do you feel not good enough
0:39
When is the first time you remember feeling that way? I think I'm kind of finding that I'm more of a perfectionist than I thought
0:50
I used to be like, oh, I'm so chill, you know, and I am
0:55
But for me, it's always about like knowing that there's always improvement
0:59
I watch back every show that I do. I'm looking at my movements. I'm seeing if I have started doing
1:06
the joke slower or faster, or if I'm even enunciating a word weirder. I'm always thinking
1:12
there's room for improvement, especially with craft. But then feeling not good enough as a person
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in general, the first time I felt that, I think I've felt that multiple times in my life
1:27
I had a unique upbringing where I wasn't just an immigrant. Like, my mom has schizophrenia
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And then my dad, who had full custody of me, my grandma lied to, my grandma kidnapped me from him
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There were other things that made me feel like I was a bit of a freak. And that kind of just repeats itself throughout life, I feel like, in different ways
1:48
For example like when I first came to the States and I was still learning English I remember I was playing with like these two girls and there was another person that came
2:00
and like wanted to play with us. And I said, yeah, you can play with we
2:04
And then the two girls started laughing because they were like, ha ha, you mean us, you know
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I remember kind of shutting down a little bit because I was like, oh, I don't even know what the correct thing is
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I just know I'm wrong. And I don't know how to fix it. And that's kind of scary, feeling stuck
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Thinking back, maybe that's where, you know, wanting things to be perfect
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The way I present myself to people, even as a performer, I think maybe that does come from that
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Where it's like, I don't want to feel that way again. I think about this all the time with immigrant comedians
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I'm not funny in Japanese or Mandarin. I got funny in the language that I struggled at the most
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and that I desperately wanted to try to connect with people the most
2:55
Yeah, I think about it all the time, yeah. Who are you still trying to please
3:05
I am a big people pleaser. I think a lot of comedians are
3:09
but I'm a huge people pleaser. My mom was really unpredictable growing up
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so I was always like, does this make you happy? Should I go away
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Does that make you happy? Do you want me to listen to you talk? Does that make you happy
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Should I talk? Does that make you happy? Because of that, I don't ever want people to feel disappointed
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So I always say yes. And then, you know, when I can't deliver, right, it's actually a bigger disappointment to the people than if I just said no in the first place
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And so that something I had to learn You can take time Don answer anything based on emotion Feel the emotion Oh I feel bad if I say no Oh I feel guilty I feel guilty if I say no Let that feeling pass
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and then answer. Because then you've already played out the guilty part. You've already felt
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the guilty part in your body. And then after you took a few deep breaths, I don't know, took a
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little walk, it'll be easier to say no or respond after that
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Where has pain served a purpose in your life? My dad and I were separated for many years, you know, after my grandma brought me to the
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States kind of abruptly without telling us. We reconnected, but then we never really talked about what happened, right
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How it made us feel. how were you feeling at the time? What were you going through
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What was I going through? We never talked about it. And then I read Glass from This American Life
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was like, do you want to do an episode about this possible kidnapping that your grandma did on you
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And I was like, yeah, because for me, and it's a sick thing
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but sometimes it takes a project for you to go, okay, I'm going to face that pain
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I'm going to face that fear. And I'll do it for the public
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Confronting it was painful, and it was really, really sad, you know, because there were chunks of stories missing that I just had filled it in with my head
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Right now, I'm almost about to cry a little. So basically, your grandma told me in a letter that you are really missing me
5:26
And that's when I think I knew you were in America. It was very sad to hear how devastated my dad was, how lonely he was, how much he missed
5:35
me how he tried to see me again things like this that I didn know It was good because it also I think healed a hole It sad but it good And we can continue to love each other and really have a great relationship from now on
5:53
What need inside yourself have you been neglecting? When did you start neglecting it and why
5:59
You know, I constantly struggle with, like, trying to figure out if it's a need that I truly need for myself
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or if it's a need I see other people needing for them, so I try to copy them
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You hike, or maybe I'm a hiker, too. Oh, you see a therapist? Maybe I should see one
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It still goes back to trying to fit in, I think, and feeling like belonging
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Strangely, I started feeling like I finally belong or I have a community when I became more known as a comedian
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I started sharing my feelings more with the people. My family raised me on mind tricks, these mind tricks, you know, yeah
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And if you're an immigrant or children of immigrants, you might be able to relate. I had been doing comedy already, but like I never even talked about my mom's schizophrenia
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I didn't know how. I truly wish schizophrenia had a more approachable name. You know, something like Splash Mountain, you know
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You do all these things. You tiptoe around. You're afraid to be the thing that you actually are
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because if you're not accepted for who you actually are, then shoot, it's like, that's all you had
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So sometimes you arrive at that last. It's weird that I had to open myself up so much
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I found comedy. I became an entertainer to be able to finally feel like I belong
#Humor
#Self-Help & Motivational