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modern love podcast
The New York Liberty point guard spent years figuring out her identity. Embracing it was a game changer, for both her career and her love life.
Natasha Cloud of the New York Liberty.Credit…Ishika Samant/Getty Images
Natasha Cloud is a powerhouse. The New York Liberty point guard seems to have it all: a successful W.N.B.A. career, fierce confidence and a loving relationship with her girlfriend and teammate, Isabelle Harrison. On and off the court, Cloud radiates self-assurance and seems to know exactly who she is, but that sense of self was hard-won.
In a conversation with āModern Loveā podcast host Anna Martin, Cloud talked about growing up as the only mixed-race child in a white family, and how one conversation with her mother shifted everything she thought she knew about herself. She discussed finding her identity in college, her familyās love and acceptance for the ānew Tash,ā and why professional pressure led her to publicly identify as bisexual even though she knew the label didnāt feel right.
This is a transcript of an episode of āModern Love,ā edited for length and clarity. You can listen below, or by following or subscribing to the show on the NYT App, Apple, Spotify, Amazon Music, YouTube, iHeartRadio or wherever you get your podcasts.
Listen to the Conversation With Natasha Cloud

āEverything that I do is rooted in love, because everything that I have ever known has been rooted in love,ā the W.N.B.A. star told us.
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Listen to the Conversation With Natasha Cloud
āEverything that I do is rooted in love, because everything that I have ever known has been rooted in love,ā the W.N.B.A. star told us.
This transcript was created using speech recognition software. While it has been reviewed by human transcribers, it may contain errors. Please review the episode audio before quoting from this transcript and email [email protected] with any questions.anna martin
Hey, everyone. Itās Anna. Before we start the show, I want to ask you a question. And please, donāt be offended if it sounds a little direct, OK? Here goes. Are money issues affecting your relationship? Money can be awkward and sensitive to talk about ā how much to save, how much to spend, who makes the decisions about what. But if youāre not talking about money, it can cause even bigger problems.
We have an episode coming up soon where Iāll be talking to Ramit Sethi. He hosted the Netflix show āHow to Get Rich.ā Heās written books on personal finance. And heās especially good at helping couples resolve their differences around money and start to actually enjoy talking about it.
If this sounds like something you want to be a part of, please send us a short voice memo. Tell us about a moment you and someone you loved had tension around money. It could be your partner. It could be a family member. Tell us what happened to set it off, what you said to each other or didnāt say, and how you felt about all of it.
We might play your voice on the show. And hear Ramitās advice on what you can do differently. Please email your voice memo to [email protected] by November 3. Thereās instructions in our show notes. Please check those out. All right. Hereās todayās episode.
[MUSIC PLAYING]archived recording 1
Love now and always.archived recording 2
Did you fall in love last night?archived recording 3
Just tell her I love her.archived recording 4
Love is stronger than anything you can feel.archived recording 5
[SIGHS]: For the love.archived recording 6
Love.archived recording 7
And I love you more thanarchived recording 8
(SINGING) What is love?archived recording 9
Hereās to love.archived recording 10
Love.
[MUSIC PLAYING]anna martin
From āThe New York Times,ā Iām Anna Martin. This is āModern Love.ā WNBA finals just ended, and a lot of my friends are really jealous of me, because today Iām talking to one of the breakout stars of the 2025 season, Natasha Cloud. Natasha is one of New York Libertyās powerhouses. Sheās outspoken, sheās got immense amounts of swag, and sheās really freaking good at basketball.
When I watch her play, I see someone who is strong and confident, self-assured. But she wasnāt always that way. Today, I talked to Natasha Cloud about how a conversation with her mother changed everything she thought she knew about who she was and all the work sheās done in the years since to figure out who she really is.
Natasha Cloud, welcome to āModern Love.ānatasha cloud
Thank you for having me.anna martin
Do you prefer Tash? Everyone calls you Tash. I donāt know you so well yet. What do you like?natasha cloud
You can call me Tash, Tasha. Natasha is really like for my mama. And when she calls me Natasha, Iām like, oh shit, what did I do?anna martin
Youāre a new New Yorker. Whatās your go-to bodega order?natasha cloud
Ooh. Iām very basic with my food, but I love me a good bacon, egg, and cheese with the double cheese. Make that bacon extra crispy because I donāt want no fat on that.anna martin
Any sauce? Ketchup? Hot sauce? No?natasha cloud
I like a little hot sauce. But honestly, Iām a grape jelly girl. I know. I āanna martin
What? [LAUGHS]natasha cloud
I know.anna martin
On the bacon, egg, and cheese?natasha cloud
Listen, donāt knock it until you try it.anna martin
Wait I really donāt like that.natasha cloud
No. Iām telling you, you canāt knock it until you try it.anna martin
Is it salty and sweet?natasha cloud
Yeah, I tell you, it balances so well. Donāt overdo it with the jelly. Just a little bit at āanna martin
And youāre putting it in the sandwich. Youāre not dipping it in.natasha cloud
Iām not dipping it. Iām putting a little bit on, smacking that sandwich. Now Iām busting that bitch down.anna martin
I have never heard of this. This could be ānatasha cloud
Thatās crazy.anna martin
ā an innovation.natasha cloud
Let me put you on. Let me bring the Philly to New York.anna martin
This is the Tash sandwich.natasha cloud
This is the Tash sandwich.anna martin
You get it named after you.natasha cloud
This is the Cloud.anna martin
Oh, my God, thatās the Cloud.natasha cloud
Thatās the Cloud.anna martin
You are the first athlete Iāve ever interviewed ānatasha cloud
Stop.anna martin
ā on āModern Love.ānatasha cloud
Iām honored.anna martin
It is funny to me that weāve never had an athlete on because weāre a show about love and relationships. And it strikes me that relationships between teammates are incredibly close, can sometimes be complicated.natasha cloud
Yeah.anna martin
Letās situate you in your role on your team. Youāre a point guard.natasha cloud
Yes.anna martin
You know, when I think about hard things that a team goes through collectively, I think of losses. Sorry to say this, but it is true.natasha cloud
Yeah, we were sad girls.anna martin
Yeah, you were sad girls.natasha cloud
We were sad girls.anna martin
You were out of the playoffs in the first round. I wonder, how do you, as a leader on the team, how do you handle losses?natasha cloud
Whew, Iām a sore loser. So āanna martin
I feel like you donāt get to your level without being a sore loser.natasha cloud
Yeah, I truly hate losing. It could literally be an Uno game. Like, Izzy kicks my ass in Uno all the time.anna martin
Is Lizzy your girlfriend? Weāll talk about it.natasha cloud
Yes. Yāall, donāt play her in Uno. She be acting like this cute, little sweet āooh, I donāt know what Iām doing.ā And then, boom, Uno, out.anna martin
Sheās getting that ānatasha cloud
And Iām like, what the fuck you mean, out? We just started. So Iām super competitive. I will say that the accountability factor, even for myself, is like, when adversity hits, and thereās always like ebbs and flows of a season, is, I have to remain more consistent, even in my frustrations of like āanna martin
Hmm.natasha cloud
ā I donāt feel like weāre playing well. Weāre not gelling. Weāre not ā what is going ā Iāll be frustrated. And then those moments, the accountability for me for next year is to be more consistent.anna martin
Tell me what that looks like for you. And we throw around this term āembodied.ā But letās say youāre feeling really fired up. Youāre pissed about a loss, whatever. What do you do to calm yourself down specifically? Is it like you close your eyes? You take a breath? Whatās your method?natasha cloud
Iām a big ā Iām going to go throw some shit first, and probably āanna martin
Youāre like, no, I take a plate.natasha cloud
So Iām going to remove myself āanna martin
I put it at the wall, yeah.natasha cloud
So Iām going to remove myself from the actual team setting. Iām probably going to go into a weight room, and Iām going to throw a medicine ball or something to get my initial āahhā out of me.anna martin
I need to do that. Wait, can we both do that?natasha cloud
Yes.anna martin
3, 2, 1.anna and natasha
Ahh!natasha cloud
Shit!anna martin
I needed that, actually.natasha cloud
Thank you. Yeah. Sometimes itās just like āanna martin
You just got to do it.natasha cloud
You just got to get it out.anna martin
No medicine ball in the studio right now, so we canāt do that.natasha cloud
No medicine ball.anna martin
All right, keep going.natasha cloud
And the walls look really nice in here, so āanna martin
Yeah, theyāre pretty ānatasha cloud
ā we aināt trying to pay.anna martin
Theyāre pretty new.natasha cloud
Yep.anna martin
OK, so you throw the medicine ball. Then what do you do?natasha cloud
So inhale for six, hold for one, exhale for seven to regulate my body and my nervous system, like meditation. And then Iāll go back in. And if I feel like I have to get into us a little bit, I will. But it will be in a very calm demeanor. But thereās a lot of times of like, itās not just solely on me. I have a whole team behind me.
So there will be moments where Iāll do that, and Iāll come back in the locker room and Iāll just sit. And Iāll wait for Sam to say something. And Iāll wait for Stewie or JJ. Because itās collaborative. As the point guard, I talk enough. The ball is always in my hands. Iām always directing and pointing. And so sometimes it is good for me just to sit back and shut the fuck up, too.anna martin
It sounds like these are skills you had to learn. You were maybe not this way ānatasha cloud
No.anna martin
ā when you were younger.natasha cloud
No.anna martin
Is there a story you can share of young Tash in sports or not, experiencing an adversity or a hardship and how you reacted with that fire, the younger version of you, I mean?natasha cloud
Man, I feel like Iām about to go deep with this question, but I think the very beginning for me in my story is that my mom is my real mom. My dad would technically be my stepdad, but thatās not who he is to me. That is my real father. Emil Cloud is the man that took me in and raised me and gave me everything that I needed to be successful in life. And the same with my mom, you know.anna martin
If youāre cool with it, I want to break down what youāre talking about. You were raised by who? And where?natasha cloud
Emil and Sharon Cloud in Broomall, Pennsylvania, right outside of Philadelphia, an all-white family. Iām the only one of mixed race in my family. Even just going back this weekend for a funeral, seeing my whole family, itās just like, man, I literally am the black sheep.[laughs]
But I will say, in my familyās defense, I truly never felt different in my family. And so I āanna martin
Wow.natasha cloud
I was so innocent. And people really get tickled by this when I tell them. But I was like 11 when I was like, oh, Iām blackety Black. āCause my dad, he actually tans. Iām not even playing. We would be the same color. And Iām like, oh, I just keep it for the duration.anna martin
[LAUGHS]: Youāre like, this is a year round thing for me. Yeah.natasha cloud
That shows how innocent children truly are. And we teach them what they fully believe later in life. Because I would have never known that I was any bit different because my family never treated me different.anna martin
And how did your mom or your dad or your siblings back when you were 11, before you clocked that you were different, how did they ā did they talk about you and your relationship with the famil? Or it was like not an exception at all, just something you didnāt speak about?natasha cloud
It was just like, this is our family. This is what our family looks like. And Iāve never ā me and my siblings are technically half-siblings. None of us would ever say that.anna martin
But at the time, too, you didnāt know, right?natasha cloud
I didnāt know And so it comes to the point where you, as a kid, start getting curious, and youāre intrigued. And youāre starting to see how, again, the outside world is treating you. So shout out to my mom for the relationship that we do have, that I was even comfortable to just be like, whatās going on? So I can literally tell you when I asked her, how I asked her.anna martin
Please. If you want to, I would love to know that story.natasha cloud
Yeah. We were just on the way to Blockbuster, and I was like, man, what is this? Why do I look different than our āanna martin
How old were you guys?natasha cloud
ā our family? I think I was, like, 12, for real. And my mom was just like ā I mean, she just kind of laid it out for me. Like, this is what happens. It was a tough time in our marriage. This is āanna martin
Her and your dad?natasha cloud
Yeah. This is what happened. And I made a decision that I take full responsibility of. And she was like, your dad was amazing. Because the moment I told him, yes, heās hurt as a man. Heās hurt āanna martin
And what was the decision? Did she tell you? Like, I had an affair? How did she say it?natasha cloud
Yeah.anna martin
Do you remember?natasha cloud
Yeah. She essentially said it. And what a strong woman to just be like, man, this is what it is, when her kid is asking her. And there wasnāt any secrets from my mom about the situation. The only thing that ā I not really appreciated that my mom did this in hindsight of, when youāre 18, I will tell you his name. I will tell you everything āanna martin
The man who is your biological father.natasha cloud
Yeah, my sperm donor. When youāre 18 and youāre of age, and you can make that adult decision of whether you want to go look for him or not, that will be ā I will tell you on your 18th birthday immediately. And I was like, OK, I respect that. Obviously, I was left with a lot of questions that āanna martin
Oh my God. How are you supposed to ānatasha cloud
Yeah.anna martin
ā just continue on with your life?natasha cloud
I remember going home and just being like, so he didnāt want me. Thatās essentially what it comes down to.
Oh, my ā
Right? And youāre a kid thatās like, well, at least Iām wanted in this home. So even from a young kid, I knew my dad took care of everything that I ever needed. Heās given me everything that Iāve ever needed. So thereās no need to go look for this sperm donor. I donāt have a want to. And so when I was 18 and my mom ā I remember come down for school while I was in my Catholic school outfit. And she was like, do you want to know? And I was like āanna martin
A few years later, you were 18. And it was the time, yeah, you could ask this question, right?natasha cloud
Yeah. And Iām like, yeah, I want to know. And she told me. He lived a town over. His son was super athletic, played football at a local school. And itās crazy because itās like, I know you saw my name. I know you saw my momās name in that paper. I know you saw my dadās name in that paper.anna martin
Becuase by this point, you were super successful.natasha cloud
Iām super successful. Iām playing at all the local schools. Iām in the newspaper constantly. So Iām like, I know you are seeing me.anna martin
Wow.natasha cloud
And my mom was like, what do you want to do? And I was like, I just wanted to know. Like, that, for me, was the, I think, final chapter close to me, is, like, I just wanted to know his name. I wanted to know where he was from. I wanted to know just about him.
And that was to the extent that I ever wanted to know him. I didnāt ever feel like I needed to go and be like, this is who the fuck I am. This is who you left. You donāt deserve ā you donāt deserve to know me. You donāt deserve to even sit down in front of me. You donāt deserve that ā I donāt even know what I would call it ā like, that privilege to me, to my energy, and to who Emil Cloud raised me to be. You donāt get that ā and Sharon.
So yeah, I think that was my first, I would say, adversity in life. But it literally has shaped me and molded me into who I am, why I am the way I am, and especially in my activism. Iāve had to deal with my own siblings voting for Trump. When you need to navigate and talk to fucking frustrating-ass people ā Iāve done it. Iāve done it in my own family. Iāve had people that have been like, youāre racist. Iām like, in an all-white family? You donāt know me.anna martin
Iām just thinking about ā itās so vivid in your mind. Itās clear ā on the way to Blockbuster, coming down the stairs in your [INAUDIBLE]. There are these moments in your life that are burned into your brain, these pivotal moments. And Iām so struck that your first reaction wasnāt rage, as we spoke about. It was love for your mom and love for your dad.natasha cloud
Absolutely.anna martin
And I just want to call out, I donāt think that ā Iāve heard stories about people realizing maybe their parent wasnāt who they thought they were. That is not a reaction that everyone has ā immediate compassion ānatasha cloud
Love.anna martin
ā for your parents, for your mom who made this choice.natasha cloud
Understanding of even what it means as a 33-year-old that has been in relationships and how hard relationships are to maintain and to commit to, to withstand all the trials and tribulations of it. Like, I understand my mom more so now as an adult, too, which is really cool. But yeah, even from a young time, I think Iāve always been rooted in love. Even my dad to take me in as his own, thatās rooted in love.anna martin
And you keep saying that. I mean, thatās another remarkable aspect of this story.natasha cloud
What a good fucking man.anna martin
I mean, and did she share with you, when you were young, what that conversation between them was like, if there even was a conversation?natasha cloud
I mean, she had to tell him.anna martin
Thatās true. Well, thatās also true.natasha cloud
A, sheās pregnant. And B, this baby going to come out a little bit brown, so we gotta tell him. We gotta tell him.anna martin
Youāre right.natasha cloud
But my mom āanna martin
Bad question on my part.natasha cloud
ā to be honest with him, I commend her for that, for even being able to sit down and have that conversation. But she even told me, without hesitation, he was like ā man, to see how much my dad loves my mom, even despite all that, how much he loved me and my siblings. Iām one of five. So I truly never, ever needed anything else besides him. I feel wholeheartedly rooted in that.anna martin
Can I ask you, did you ever have a conversation with your dad about what this meant to you and your relationship?natasha cloud
Honestly, no, because my dad is like such a simple man. I remember having to tell my mom that I was gay. And I was crying and sobbing. And I was like ā and she was like, why are you crying? Iām like, I donāt fucking know. This is a lot. I donāt even feel like I should have to fucking come home and tell you that Iām dating a girl. I feel like I should be able to bring my person home and that be normalized. But even with that, I never told my dad I was gay. I literally just brought my girlfriend home, and he was like, itās nice to meet you.anna martin
[LAUGHS]:natasha cloud
My dad is truly the most simple ā everyone that meets him ā he looks like the old man from āUp.āanna martin
Oh my god!natasha cloud
He is like the sweetest hearted. Everyone loves talking to him. Everyone ā random-ass strangers.anna martin
Wow.natasha cloud
So this is just who my dad is. He really wants my mom to retire. And he was just like ā Iām like, what does that mean? Like, what do you mean? Because they donāt ever ask for anything. They wonāt even let me take over the fucking phone bill.anna martin
Youāre still on the family plan?natasha cloud
Iām still on the family plan.anna martin
That is so cute!natasha cloud
And I still send my ā itās like my mom finally ā I think she kind of forgot. And I hope she donāt listen to this. And I hope it doesnāt remind her.anna martin
Donāt send her this one.natasha cloud
Donāt send her this part. And Iām like, Iām 33.anna martin
In the WBNA, yeah.natasha cloud
Iāve played in this year 10 years. I can fucking afford the ā something. And it was, like, the first time heās ever been like, I just want your mom to retire and be good. So this is what she needs. I was like, OK, I can do that. Iām like, what do you need? And he starts tearing up. Iām like, donāt fucking cry because Iām going to fucking cry. Heās like, I donāt need anything. I just want your mom taken care of.
Iām like, Iām going to cry now. Iām like, man.[crying]
You have given me a life that I couldnāt have even dreamed of. You took me in his room when you didnāt have to. And I think navigating a world full of men that arenāt of quality, it shows how rare he is.anna martin
Yeah.natasha cloud
And so I do want to take care of him, too. I do want to take care of my parents so much. And I think every kid should. I want them to have experiences that we never had as kids because we couldnāt afford to and that I can give them now. And even for my parents to still be so proud and not want to take from their kids, I think itās really rare. And especially in our profession, too, you have families that bleed people out of their contracts. You have families that just take advantage of players and use them as a cash cow.
My family has never taken anything from me. I truly have the best parents in the world. Even my siblings that vote for fucking Trump, yāall irritate my fucking ass, but I know that if I ever needed to be defended or if they needed to step in for me, they would. And I think thatās what it comes down to, is just, like, everything that I do is rooted in love because everything I have ever known has been rooted in love.
[MUSIC PLAYING]anna martin
Weāll be right back.
[MUSIC PLAYING]
You learn the name, letās say, of your sperm donor, as you call him, at 18 ānatasha cloud
Yes.anna martin
ā which is such an intense time because youāre going off to college.natasha cloud
Yeah.anna martin
And I wonder, once you got to college, were you like, oh, my god, I need to make Black friends. Like, how were you thinking about your identity ānatasha cloud
Like getting closer to āanna martin
ā as you moved on to that?natasha cloud
Yeah. Because I think thatās something that I didnāt touch on, is, like, as I was getting older, I think I was starting to not struggle with, but I wanted to know. I grew up in a white family. I went to all really good schools, but predominantly white schools in a predominantly white area. So I wasnāt really ā I didnāt get to experience what my Blackness meant.
And so my first college was University of Maryland. And when I tell you the thing that I love most and still to this day about UMD is the diversity that is on campus. And I, as an 18-year-old, just excited to get out of the house and move a little bit away and to really just dive into, who is Tash, like, who am I, it was the most amazing thing to me, as a young mixed girl to finally just be engulfed in such beautiful Blackness.
And it wasnāt even my teammates that I really hung out with. It was the track girls. It was the football guys. It was like the other teams around campus that really just like, man, Iām indebted to them. And they donāt even know it of how much they allowed me to find ā I knew the white side. I didnāt know that Black side yet. I think before I got to Maryland, I was like, Iām a mixed kid. Iām a mixed kid. Thatās who I am, and thatās who I identify with because I didnāt know that other side.
And so when I finally had my Blackness, it was the first time after that first year at Maryland that I was like, Iām really fucking proud to be a Black woman. I am really fucking proud to be a Black woman. And I still have to ā obviously, it doesnāt take anything away from me being proud to be mixed, because I think thatās āanna martin
Of course.natasha cloud
ā also important to who I am. And thatās why I talk so much. Because I might be biased, but I think being a mixed kid and not fitting in with any other group is one of the hardest fucking kids to be. And so I hope, in even me just talking about being mixed, that one mixed kid goes home and is like, I feel seen, and I feel validated. And whatever questions I have, whatever insecurities I have, whatever, I can start to navigate this. And if I can get one kid to do that, thatās an ultimate win for me.anna martin
I mean, you spoke about this somewhat, but as you grew more and more into this identity, into this pride, as you say, and then you go home for Christmas, for Thanksgiving, for whatever, and youāre back with your family, who you love, who is white, what was that like? How did you coming into your identity interact with your family relationships?natasha cloud
Yeah. I think it took them just a second to, like, oh, this is Tash. Like, this is new Tash that went off to college, thatās an adult, thatās figuring out and navigating her life and who she is. And I think a lot of the times, too, Iām OK with being the crashout in the family because my āanna martin
[LAUGHS]:natasha cloud
ā crashouts are all validated and backed by facts āanna martin
Thatās so funny.natasha cloud
ā and truth. And so, yeah, I think I came back a little bit radical, too. My parents are ā and this is what I love about my parents, too, and why I love them down bad. Even things that they might not necessarily understand, as two white parents, they meet me, always. So I really appreciate my parents as two older white people that have been privileged their whole entire lives. They literally will allow themselves to hear me and to move with me. It means the world to me.
And I have said that to them as of late, too, of, like, I really do appreciate That You might not understand my walk of life, but you understand that Iām yours. So it is your job to walk this life with me. And I think thatās really important. I think a lot of even kids to ā itās an underrated thing for me to go home and even tell my family, Iām gay, and not have one person say shit about it.anna martin
Weāre talking about you coming into your identity when it comes to your race.natasha cloud
Yeah.anna martin
Youāre also talking about coming out.natasha cloud
Oh, I was faking being straight for years. It was so annoying.anna martin
[LAUGHS]:natasha cloud
It was so annoying.anna martin
Can you ā I mean ānatasha cloud
Oh, I hated it.anna martin
If you want to talk about that, what does ānatasha cloud
Yeah, we could talk about it.anna martin
ā what does that mean? So itās like, when you were growing up, you were having crushes on boys, or you were saying you did?natasha cloud
So I still tell you this. As a 33-year-old, if a fine-ass man walks by this room, Iām going to be like, he fine. So I can āanna martin
Youād appreciate it, youāre saying.natasha cloud
Iād appreciate it. But all the other shit that comes with yāall, I do not ā I canāt.anna martin
[LAUGHS]:natasha cloud
I canāt.anna martin
But for a while ānatasha cloud
And I tried. I did. I really did try.anna martin
I mean, itās funny, because these things are maybe ā itās like, when you were young, did you have boyfriends? I mean, what was it ānatasha cloud
Yeah.anna martin
OK, yeah.natasha cloud
Yāall, I didnāt start messing with women until I was like 23, 24. And so up until that point, no, I was only with men. I had this childhood sweetheart since sixth grade till, I would say, freshman year of college. That was my person. And he sucked. No, Iām just playing.anna martin
[LAUGHS]:natasha cloud
Weāre actually still really cool. He has a kid now and everything.anna martin
I was going to say ānatasha cloud
We were best friends when we were growing up and stuff, so it just made sense.anna martin
When did you realize you were queer or interested in ānatasha cloud
I always thought women were beautiful.anna martin
Right.natasha cloud
I always would be like, oh, sheās absolutely gorgeous or whatever. I donāt think that I was ready to navigate that space until I figured out who I was as a human being, and to feel very secure in that, to take that step. So when I got to the League ā and this is one thing that does piss me off. This League donāt turn people gay.anna martin
[LAUGHS]: I will say ānatasha cloud
You donāt turn people gay. Itās in you. Itās innately in you. It is in you. So when I got to this League, it didnāt turn me gay, but I was surrounded by strong, powerful, badass āanna martin
Youāve talked about that. Yeah.natasha cloud
ā independent, outspoken women that were so unapologetic about who they were, how they show up, what their families look like. And I was like, man, I feel empowered to just be in this locker room and not be judged.anna martin
Huh.natasha cloud
Yeah, I just ā I dived into it. I was like, oh shit, I kind of like it over here.anna martin
[LAUGHS]:natasha cloud
And I was still playing that middleman for three years.anna martin
You come out as bi publicly, at least. You were bi for ā yeah, yeah, or said you were bi.natasha cloud
And I said I was bi. And I didnāt mean that shit when I said it. But what people donāt understand is for any mask or gay person in our League or Papi, Stud, whatever terminology you want to use for yourself, anyone that was deemed different, no sponsorship dollars, no endorsement dollars, because you canāt sell to what? The male demographic.anna martin
Whoa.natasha cloud
Because they didnāt feel like we had enough sex appeal. So for years, I played the, oh, Iām bi. I still do both. I still do this, knowing damn right well that I wasnāt ever going to mess with a man again.anna martin
Now, how interesting is that? Because youāre saying that in ānatasha cloud
It still happens to me.anna martin
Really?natasha cloud
It has gotten better over the last probably year or so. Obviously, the StudBudz werenāt crazy.anna martin
I saw that.natasha cloud
I created the Papi Crops with Brittney Sykes two, three years ago. And finally, I feel like our League is slowly starting to see, and not only the League, but sponsorships, endorsements outside of that is like, thereās a huge demographic for them.anna martin
My god. Have you been to Barclays when you guys are playing?natasha cloud
Do you know how many straight women tell me they would leave their ā and this is like āanna martin
But what Iām going to say is, what youāre pointing out is so interesting because youāre saying, when you were in the process of coming out to yourself, to other people, itās like, in the locker room, with the teams, you felt completely ānatasha cloud
Seen.anna martin
ā at home, seen, cared for.natasha cloud
Exactly, yeah.anna martin
And then itās like ā so and thatās because of the experience of being in the League, youāre meeting these other gay women.natasha cloud
And weāre like, bro, mind your fucking business.anna martin
But then itās like, from the outside, itās this weird space youāre in where you canāt ā you can express yourself so fully with your teammates, but then because of the League, because of sponsorships ānatasha cloud
You canā do it.anna martin
ā and money and dollars, you canāt do it. When did it feel and how did it feel, more important, to you to be true to yourself than it did ā like, when were you ready to risk that money or that sponsorship?natasha cloud
I would say probably, like, 24.anna martin
Hmm.natasha cloud
I just felt really rooted in myself. Even when I came out, my play got better on the court.anna martin
Wow.natasha cloud
I was torching people. It was almost like, I was like the Hulk that just got his superpowers, right?anna martin
What do you think that was? I love that. What do you think that was?natasha cloud
I think just, for me, when you hide a part of yourself, or you suppress a part of yourself, youāre not fully obviously yourself. Youāre not fully you. And so you limit yourself in so many ways. And I felt like I was limiting myself for all those years, by not just being out and confident in who I am. Because if I canāt even be confident in who I am as a person, how the fuck am I confident in who I am as a player?
[MUSIC PLAYING]anna martin
Weāll be right back.
[MUSIC PLAYING]
At this time, where youāre publicly identifying as queer ānatasha cloud
As gay as fuck, yep.anna martin
As gay as fuck ā OK, letās just say that.natasha cloud
I got called a Liberty Lesbian last week, and I kind of loved it.anna martin
Wait, thatās kind of nice.natasha cloud
Yeah, no, I loved it.anna martin
That was great.natasha cloud
I loved that. It was in a good way.anna martin
How did you two ā your girlfriend, Izzy Harrison, letās just say.natasha cloud
We love her. Look her up. You going to see I bagged a 10 out of 10, a 100 out of 10. Clock it.anna martin
Clock it. I mean, who made the first move?natasha cloud
Isabelle. And I love telling this to everyone.anna martin
Really? I didnāt know that!natasha cloud
This is my moment. This is my moment. This is my moment. Sheās going to kill me when I get home. And I love you, Isabelle. But this is my moment to really just flex.anna martin
Thatās not what I thought.natasha cloud
Yeah, every āanna martin
I thought you DMād her.natasha cloud
So I did.anna martin
Right.natasha cloud
She denied me hard. That was like āanna martin
And you were like, whatās up?natasha cloud
Yeah. She said no to me. And what did I say? We respect a womanās no. So after that, Iām straight friendship. I might have a little flirtation in the mix āanna martin
How could you not?natasha cloud
ā but itās never going to be where I make you uncomfortable. Itās never going to be ā I really took that no as like a we can just be friends. But I think youāre my fine-ass friend. Thatās for sure.anna martin
And I would love to kiss you and do all the things.natasha cloud
I would love to kiss you and do all the things with you. But I donāt know if you want to do that shit with me.anna martin
Wait, can I ā itās like, so she was giving you these hints finally. Like, you took it. But there was also a thing ānatasha cloud
We actually went to a massage. And she was just like, hey, do you want to hang out? And I was like, yeah, I absolutely do after this. And from there, it was wraps. I was like, oh, this is what ā you want to hang āanna martin
Like a coupleās massage?natasha cloud
ā out. No, it was like, we were just working out so hard in the offseason that thatās our form of self-care. So we had gone. We each had our own separate. And then we came out in the car, and it was like, so what you doing?anna martin
Aw, my god.natasha cloud
Yeah, it was just like ā we both mustered up the courage, I guess, at that point. I just truly fell in love with the person. I could have told you three weeks in, I was like āanna martin
You knew.natasha cloud
Yeah.anna martin
How? And I always ask people this because they really ā I believe it, that people just know. How do you know? Was there a moment? Was there another moment? Like, you look at each other in the car?natasha cloud
Our first conversation, it was like us getting to know each other the first time we sat down one-on-one. And we led into an hour conversation of just our families, our foundation, our morals, our values. I was like, I really align with you as a human being. And Iāll be honest about myself. I think in that moment, I was in my hoe phase, and everyone has their hoe phase. And Iām an advocate for the hoe phase because ā and donāt hurt people throughout your hoe phase, but you got to get all that stuff out your system.anna martin
I totally agree with you.natasha cloud
You got to get it out. Whatever makes you happy in those moments, you just got to be ā sometimes you got to be selfish in life to get what you want. And so, yeah, I was definitely in one of those. But as soon as I met Izzy, it was like everything stopped. I feel fully fulfilled. Itās the first time Iāve ever been fully reciprocated, too, in my relationship of having an equal partner that doesnāt need you, but wants you. Izzy has her own shit.anna martin
How important is that?natasha cloud
She has her own money. She has her own ā sheās a Jordan athlete. Sheās had nine years in this League. She has her own ā and what I love about her most, too, is like, even when she was with men before me, didnāt pay for anything.anna martin
Because you are the first woman that sheās been with. Yeah, yeah.natasha cloud
And so I needed someone that I couldnāt play with. I needed someone that was very much like my mom. And Izzy is damn near the reflection. They say you really do look for your parents in your partner.anna martin
Absolutely.natasha cloud
Even home-cooked meals, taking care of everything that we need in order to be successful. And I bring that same to the table. But Izzy is the first woman that ever has done that for me, too.anna martin
Sometimes you talk to people, and you just realize what youāre looking for. But itās funny because you were like, I need someone I couldnāt play with. I know what you meant. But you do play with Izzy. Youāre on the same team.natasha cloud
I do. Yep. This is our first time.anna martin
This is an experience that very few people work with their partners. I would say, very few people also play on the same sort of sports team as their partners. And Iām so curious, how does your relationship at home influence your dynamic on the court? I mean, Iām sure people have asked you this, but Iām so ā I want a window into what thatās like.natasha cloud
Yeah, we never tried to play together, which is āanna martin
Yeah. You were traded.natasha cloud
ā the crazy part. I was traded. And so she had already signed to New York. And we had made it a very ā it was a priority for us not to be on the same team because you hear horror stories sometimes of previous teams that have had couples and relationships and how it can negatively affect āanna martin
It seems really hard.natasha cloud
Yeah, it can negatively affect a locker room. It can negatively affect the relationship itself because you never get any breaks from each other. So I think me and Izzy were very intentional about approaching this the right way and being extremely professional to ā no one would ever ā we donāt ever want to make people feel like our relationship is hindering our success as a team because the team is the ultimate, most important thing for us.
So we have our own separate apartments. Now, Izzy stays ā our main apartment is our apartment that we have all of our dogs in. Itās a two-bedroom. Itās cool. But she has her own apartment āanna martin
Her own space.natasha cloud
ā for when she just needed Izzy time. And Iām clingy as fuck. Iām a golden retriever. I am full āanna martin
[LAUGHS]:natasha cloud
I call myself a golden retriever, but Iām really a pitbull. And for those of you that ā I have two. For those of you that have pitbulls, you know how fucking clingy they are, yeah, and attention-demanding. That is me. Izzy is polar opposite. She very much is like ā and itās something that I love about her, is like, I am still my own person. And when you talk about even why I didnāt relationships with men, that is such an important piece for our relationship, is for Izzy to still be Izzy, and to still have her own shit, to have her own stuff.anna martin
But you are saying something which is like, being on the same team, itās made having your own space ānatasha cloud
That much more important. We really were ā a priority for us was our teammates getting Tash and Izzy as individuals.anna martin
Not Tizzy.natasha cloud
Youāre always going to get your Tizzy time. Weāre going to travel as Tizzy. Weāre going to go into these spaces, and weāre going to be Tizzy while weāre in these cities and stuff like that. We have time for our relationship. We go home together every night. But when weāre in the locker room, you get Tash, you get Izzy.
So our schedules are different. Our weightlifting times are different. Our shooting times, our treatment times are different. Weāre really like ā we were adamant about just being Tash and Izzy in that locker room. And when we get home, weāll be Tizzy. And it was hard at first of āanna martin
I was going to say.natasha cloud
ā the first two weeks āanna martin
That sounds difficult. Yeah.natasha cloud
ā the first two weeks of navigating what the space looked like for us. What does it look like? How do we manage being together all the time and not having a break? Because most couples get a break when they go to work.anna martin
Thatās what Iām saying. Yeah.natasha cloud
And Iām so proud of us for how we were able to go through this season. So āanna martin
I do just wonder, is it totally hot to see your girlfriend kill it on the court? Like, what a turn-on.natasha cloud
What?anna martin
Isnāt that ā is it?natasha cloud
I tell her all the time. Iām like, I actually ā I love Izzy in some basketball gear. Like, that is, to me ā and even meeting Izzy at first, I think she had been so ā in a lot of ways, women are conditioned to always look their best, and you got to show up. And Iād be like, you donāt need none of that makeup. I love that you want it. And I love that you love makeup. I love that when you do it, you ā 100 out of 10. But man, I think youāre the most beautiful when you donāt have no makeup on, when youāre wearing my clothes in the crib. That is it. So when I see her on the court, I absolutely am ā there was one game, the whole crowd started chanting āIzzy.ā And I was like ā I was like, Iām beyond that shit. Not too much. Sheās going to kill me if I ā if I go too far with the sexual jokes, sheās going to kill my ass because she is very reserved. So Iām reeling myself back.anna martin
I understand what youāre saying.natasha cloud
But you know what Iām saying?anna martin
God.natasha cloud
Like, Iām going to yell that shit, too.
Iāll be like ā Iāll be like, you look good.anna martin
That is so hot. That is so hot. I want to figure out ā I mean, and this is ā you sit before me. I watch you play. You strike me as someone who is so ā who knows who they are, right?natasha cloud
Man, I love myself. I think Iāve said that for ā two weeks ago, for the first time out loud. And I remember just sitting down in my apartment. And thereās a little mirror that is right across. And I looked at myself, and I was like, I really fuck with who I am.anna martin
You love yourself.natasha cloud
I love myself. I love myself very thoroughly. I love my gay masculine presenting āanna martin
[LAUGHS]:natasha cloud
ā mixed Blackity Black, Black, Black. I love me.
[MUSIC PLAYING]anna martin
Thank you so much.natasha cloud
Oh, thank you [INAUDIBLE] this, too.anna martin
That was truly ā thank you. And weāre done.natasha cloud
We are done.anna martin
Wow.natasha cloud
Mic drops.anna martin
How about that? Thank you so much for going there with me.
[MUSIC PLAYING]
The āModern Loveā team is Amy Pearl, Christina Djossa, Davis Land, Elisa Gutierrez, Emily Lang, Jen Poyant, Lynn Levy, Reva Goldberg, and Sarah Curtis. This episode was produced by Amy Pearl. And it was edited by Lynn Levy. Special thanks to Christina Djossa, Janelle Anderson, and Sabreena Merchant. Original music in this episode by Elisheba Ittoop and Dan Powell. Dan also composed our theme music.
This episode was mixed by Daniel Ramirez, with studio support from Maddy Masiello and Nick Pittman. The āModern Loveā column is edited by Daniel Jones. Miya Lee is the editor of āModern Loveā projects. If youād like to submit an essay or a Tiny Love Story to āThe New York Times,ā weāve always got those instructions in our show notes. Iām Anna Martin. Thanks for listening.
[MUSIC PLAYING]
Listen Ā· 38:29 min
Anna Martin: Natasha Cloud, welcome to āModern Love.”
Natasha Cloud: Thank you for having me.
Martin: Do you prefer Tash? Everyone calls you Tash.
Cloud: You can call me Tash, Tasha. Natasha is really for my mama. And when she calls me Natasha, Iām like ā oh, what did I do?
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