back to indexHow to Find & Be a Great Romantic Partner | Lori Gottlieb

Chapters
0:0 Dr. Lori Gottlieb
2:1 Patient & First Question; Talked Out of Feelings
6:15 Self-Regulation vs Co-Regulation, Tool: Pause & Perspective
10:4 Sponsors: Helix Sleep & BetterHelp
12:36 Relationships, Childhood & Unfinished Business
17:13 Unconscious Mind, Hurtful Parent & Familiarity, Role of Therapy
26:35 Excitement & Chaos, Cherophobia; Storytelling, First Date & Sparks?
36:27 Tool: Awareness of Death & Living Fully; Vitality; Fear vs Acceptance
47:27 Sponsors: AG1 & David Protein
50:35 Activate vs Energize; Tool: Technology, Numbness & Overwhelm
54:50 Numb or Calm?, Gender Stereotypes, Tool: Mentalizing
60:51 Feelings, Projective Identification, Tool: Owning Your Feelings
63:25 React vs Respond; Space, Tool: Face-to-Face Conversation vs Text
70:16 Behavioral Change, 5 Steps of Change, Tool: Self-Compassion & Accountability
75:38 Sponsor: LMNT
76:54 Deadlines & Rules; Idiot vs Wise Compassion, No Drama & Assumptions
86:27 Silent Treatment, Crying & Manipulation, Shame vs Guilt, Self-Preservation
93:1 Self-Reflection, Individual & Couples Therapy, Transference; Agency
98:56 Texting, Conflicts, Breakups, Pain Hierarchy, Tool: Move Forward
106:42 Relationship Breakups, Daily World & Loss
113:30 Bank of Goodwill; Talking About Partner, Focus, Comparison
121:13 Infidelity, What If vs What Is, Attention & Appreciation
124:56 Gut Instinct, Change Behavior, Danger, Productive vs Unproductive Anxiety
135:27 Knowing Oneself, Relationships, Flexibility, Shared History
140:30 Romantic Relationships & Teens, Social Media, Privacy
147:9 Online Apps & Choices, Maximizers vs Satisficers, Tool: Identify Your Weakness
153:9 Fixing Issues Early, Tool: Self vs Partner Lists & Character Qualities
161:51 Feeling Toward Partner, Calm, Content; Tool: Operating Instructions
166:48 Help-Rejecting Complainers; Relationships, Love & Core Wounds
171:22 Stories & Unreliable Narrators, Editing, Tool: 5 Senses
179:4 Young Men, Masculinity, Confusion
187:3 Grief, Making Sense of Loss
189:54 Maybe You Should Talk to Someone Workbook; Ask The Therapist, Choosing a Bigger Life
200:26 Zero-Cost Support, YouTube, Spotify & Apple Follow & Reviews, YouTube Feedback, Protocols Book, Social Media, Neural Network Newsletter
00:00:00.400 |
Welcome to the Huberman Lab Podcast, where we discuss science and science-based tools 00:00:09.320 |
I'm Andrew Huberman, and I'm a professor of neurobiology and ophthalmology at Stanford 00:00:17.560 |
Laurie Gottlieb is a psychotherapist and bestselling author, and is considered one of the world's 00:00:22.000 |
leading experts on relationships, how to find relationships, how to be in relationships 00:00:26.880 |
effectively, how to leave relationships if necessary, how to grieve them after they're 00:00:31.200 |
gone, and how to renew them, all from the perspective of looking inward at ourselves and the stories 00:00:37.200 |
about ourselves and others that we tell ourselves that can lead us to what we want and what's 00:00:41.280 |
best for us, or that lead us away from those things. 00:00:44.600 |
During today's episode, we discuss how the feelings we experience when we're with certain 00:00:48.240 |
people are the absolute best guide of how poorly or how well those people are suited for us 00:00:53.460 |
as partners, and the ways in which we miss key signals, both good and bad in relationships, 00:01:01.280 |
Laurie explains how to better our communication skills, how to determine if somebody's critique 00:01:09.580 |
And how texting and technology has changed relationships, and how to navigate all of that by leaning into 00:01:14.980 |
our own sense of agency, the things that we can control. 00:01:18.460 |
And last but not least, Laurie explains how we can all access more vitality and enjoyment of life, and how so many people don't allow themselves to do that, because the familiarity of their present circumstances overrides their willingness to move forward. 00:01:32.400 |
This was a really eye-opening episode, and one that I'm certain will help you better understand yourself, and what your needs really are, and how you can be happier in or out of a relationship. 00:01:42.040 |
Before we begin, I'd like to emphasize that this podcast is separate from my teaching and research roles at Stanford. 00:01:47.140 |
It is, however, part of my desire and effort to bring zero-cost-to-consumer information about science and science-related tools to the general public. 00:01:54.580 |
In keeping with that theme, this episode does include sponsors. 00:01:57.940 |
And now for my discussion with Laurie Gottlieb. 00:02:04.300 |
What's the first thing you ask a patient when you're meeting them for the first time? 00:02:10.220 |
Usually it's something like, tell me what's going on. 00:02:17.640 |
And are you listening both to the content of their words and their tone, their physicality? 00:02:25.820 |
I think it's so interesting, because sometimes people will say, I'm here because of, and they'll talk about something very difficult, but they're smiling through it. 00:02:33.640 |
You know, I think it's very nerve-wracking to come in and see a therapist, and you don't know this person, and you're about to share some very personal information that maybe you haven't told anyone in this way. 00:02:46.200 |
And so you want to make somebody comfortable. 00:02:48.580 |
You want to make sure that, you know, you feel like they are not being rushed to share something that they're not ready to share. 00:03:02.380 |
You know, therapy to me is not like expert and this other person, and then it feels very asymmetrical. 00:03:09.200 |
Of course, we're using our training, and that's why they're coming to us. 00:03:12.540 |
But I feel like it's very much a human-to-human interchange. 00:03:17.540 |
Do you think, because I've heard, but I don't know if it's true, do you think that some people tend to create a lot of internal and perhaps external narrative about what happened, who they are, how people are in the world, how they're not in the world? 00:03:35.680 |
You know, a lot of words to their experience, either spoken or internally, versus people who maybe experience life a little bit differently. 00:03:47.300 |
Once somebody said in a comment on Instagram, and I still think about this, they said, I don't think in words, I think in feels. 00:03:56.920 |
And my first reaction was like, yeah, I'm from Northern California, and people talk that way sometimes. 00:04:03.360 |
Maybe there are a lot of people who, for whom language isn't the primary mode of understanding what's going on around them. 00:04:11.740 |
I think that as humans, we try to make sense of our feelings through stories, that we tell ourself a story about why we're feeling a certain way. 00:04:20.740 |
And sometimes we aren't that skilled, because nobody taught us this, to access our feelings. 00:04:27.120 |
And that happens because kids are often talked out of their feelings. 00:04:31.040 |
So when you're young, for example, and say you say to your parent, I'm really worried about this, and your parent will say, oh, don't worry about that. 00:04:45.260 |
Or because parents are really uncomfortable when their kids are feeling sad because they feel like it's my responsibility to make sure they're not sad, which is not your responsibility as a parent. 00:04:54.820 |
You're there to sit with your child and be present for them. 00:04:58.840 |
So if your child says, I'm really sad that so-and-so sat with so-and-so at lunch today, and, you know, the parent will say, well, here's what you can do, or that's terrible, or, right? 00:05:12.600 |
And I think that as a parent or even as a partner, when your partner comes to you or your friend comes to you or a family member comes to you and tells you something, often what we do is we try to talk them out of the feeling that they're having or help them get rid of the feeling because we think it's a negative feeling. 00:05:29.180 |
When feelings are all positive because they're like a compass, they tell us what direction to go in if we can access them. 00:05:37.260 |
So when you say to someone, tell me more, then the kid might say, well, yeah, it was really hard. 00:05:43.360 |
And then they'll talk about maybe like why the person might have sat at a different table or what might have happened. 00:05:48.460 |
And we really do have a lot of answers inside if we listen to the feelings, but we're talked out of the feelings, and then we grow up thinking, if I'm feeling sad or angry or anxious, then, you know, I need to get rid of the feeling as opposed to I need to use that feeling. 00:06:05.500 |
And so instead what we do is we come up with all these stories like the problem is out there as opposed to, oh, I have some really good information in here. 00:06:15.140 |
I had a now ex-girlfriend, and we're still on great terms, who we had an agreement that served us super well and that I try and apply going forward, which is nobody tries to shift anyone else. 00:06:28.460 |
In my mind, I was the one that came up with that, but I think in reality she was the one that came up with it because now I'm like, there's no way I would have come up with that. 00:06:38.240 |
But I think it came about through a couple different interactions where I would get off work and sometimes like the initial 20 minutes of interacting was much more difficult than it needed to be. 00:06:49.760 |
And then I remember we just came up with this plan where we just decide no one's going to shift the other person unless they're like, shift me, please, you know, like help me relax or help me get excited about this, which we would never do, right? 00:07:01.600 |
So a policy of not trying to shift anybody or somebody trying to shift our emotions I think felt really liberating. 00:07:10.640 |
I think what you're talking about is self-regulation versus co-regulation. 00:07:14.600 |
So self-regulation is when you're having some kind of internal experience, you have choices like I'm really angry about this. 00:07:23.540 |
How do I self-regulate not to ignore the anger because the anger is telling me that maybe a boundary was broken or maybe somebody is treating me in a way that I don't want to be treated or maybe I'm upset with myself for the way that I acted. 00:07:37.200 |
So it's good information, but then what do you do with it? 00:07:41.380 |
Can you find ways to look at the anger without screaming, yelling, self-sabotaging, whatever people do that's not a productive use of their anger or your anxiety or your sadness? 00:07:56.160 |
And that's something that you see, again, you can see it with parent-child where if the parent can stay calm when the child is not calm, that helps the child to learn to self-regulate. 00:08:06.860 |
And with a partner, like say you had a really hard day at work and you come home and you're just not in a good mood, it's not your partner's responsibility to help you through that. 00:08:18.660 |
But it sure helps if your partner is regulated and they can help co-regulate you just because they happen to be regulated. 00:08:25.020 |
You want two adults in the room or at least one adult in the room. 00:08:28.300 |
If you have two children in the room, like grown children, adults, then everybody gets dysregulated. 00:08:35.320 |
So it's really important that at least one person is being the adult in the room and one person is regulated. 00:08:41.160 |
If both people, like you're in an argument, both people are dysregulated, nothing good is going to come from that. 00:08:46.260 |
In which case is the best option to just pause it until somebody returns to adulthood. 00:08:53.540 |
It's such an easy fix for couples because sometimes they think we have to deal with this right now and it feels urgent to deal with it right now because I feel hurt right now or I can't believe you said that or we need to, you know, resolve this right now. 00:09:10.860 |
It's I'm going to go take a walk or I'm going to go to the gym or I'm going to go, you know, read for a few minutes or I'm going to go relax, whatever that is. 00:09:19.820 |
And then let's talk in an hour about it or let's talk tonight. 00:09:26.980 |
So what are you going to do in the intervening time if you're just making up stories about the other person? 00:09:38.000 |
But in that intervening time, if you can say, if I were telling this story from the other person's perspective, what would their version of this story be? 00:09:50.060 |
And is there a nugget of something that feels really genuine to me that I can understand and even have compassion for? 00:09:57.640 |
And that's going to help you come back when you have the conversation. 00:10:02.700 |
I'd like to take a quick break and acknowledge our sponsor, Helix Sleep. 00:10:08.140 |
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Today's episode is also brought to us by BetterHelp. 00:11:24.660 |
BetterHelp offers professional therapy with a licensed therapist carried out entirely online. 00:11:30.040 |
Now, I personally have been doing therapy weekly for well over 30 years. 00:11:35.280 |
It was a condition of being allowed to stay in school. 00:11:37.200 |
But pretty soon, I realized that therapy is an extremely important component to one's overall health. 00:11:42.080 |
There are essentially three things that great therapy provides. 00:11:44.580 |
First of all, it provides a good rapport with somebody that you can trust and talk to about pretty much any issue with. 00:11:50.320 |
Second of all, it can provide support in the form of emotional support and directed guidance. 00:11:55.240 |
And third, expert therapy can provide useful insights. 00:11:58.420 |
Insights that allow you to better not just your emotional life and your relationship life, 00:12:02.420 |
but of course, also the relationship to yourself and your professional life and to all sorts of goals. 00:12:07.620 |
BetterHelp makes it very easy to find an expert therapist with whom you resonate with 00:12:11.520 |
and that can provide you those three benefits that come from effective therapy. 00:12:15.040 |
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it's super time efficient and easy to fit into a busy schedule. 00:12:21.800 |
If you'd like to try BetterHelp, you can go to betterhelp.com slash Huberman to get 10% off your first month. 00:12:31.520 |
One thing that I've observed, I don't have any formal data on this, is that some of the happiest couples I know 00:12:37.000 |
are couples where I would refer to one person in the relationship as more emotive and expressive 00:12:44.700 |
and the other person as a little bit on the spectrum. 00:12:49.560 |
And my observation is that part of the reason those couples seem so harmonious is that the little things don't seem to bother the person on the spectrum 00:13:00.880 |
They don't get entangled in the other person's downs or ups, which I guess could be problematic in theory. 00:13:09.840 |
But it just seems like they get along really well because, and I won't, you know, kind of stereotype the labels, 00:13:18.120 |
but these couples that I know, it does happen to be the male who is a little bit on the spectrum 00:13:28.100 |
And it just seems like there's so much harmony there. 00:13:32.860 |
And when I talk to him, I'm generally closer to the man in the relationship, although not always. 00:13:39.400 |
They say like, yeah, like, you know, it doesn't bother me. 00:13:44.040 |
There's, I just like, we'll listen or if there's something to request, I'll respond to the request. 00:13:48.440 |
There isn't this entanglement of she's upset, so I like have to respond or this is really painful to listen to. 00:13:59.040 |
And I just think it's an interesting dynamic. 00:14:02.980 |
It's obviously not one that people can pre-program themselves for. 00:14:07.680 |
But I do think it's an interesting dynamic as opposed to what you're describing where emotions can kind of ratchet together like gears. 00:14:15.280 |
And that can be wonderful when people are in, you know, ecstatic states or happy or there's like the banter of certain couples 00:14:22.980 |
that seem pretty emotive is something I'm also familiar with observing. 00:14:26.060 |
But those couples also seem like more volatile, like when somebody is upset, the other person gets upset. 00:14:32.380 |
And it just starts to deteriorate pretty quickly. 00:14:36.860 |
You don't want two highly reactive people to be together. 00:14:39.940 |
You also, I think, need to think about there's a saying we marry our unfinished business, right? 00:14:46.900 |
So let's say that there's somebody who had a parent who was very kind of avoidant or withdrawn. 00:14:52.900 |
That person, if they haven't processed that, will be drawn to the partner who is more avoidant, but not because it feels good, but because it's familiar. 00:15:04.520 |
And so sometimes in the kind of couple that you're describing, and I don't know the experience of your friends, 00:15:10.020 |
but I've seen a lot of couples where it looks like that would be a good match because one person is, you know, sort of more in the emotional sphere and one person is less so. 00:15:21.400 |
But sometimes what that is is one person gets very lonely because they're not really getting that kind of emotional interaction that they want. 00:15:30.080 |
So it can be a solution for some people because they don't know how to be with a different kind of person. 00:15:35.500 |
But I also feel like you want to make sure that you have figured out your unfinished business, 00:15:41.100 |
that you're not just – you don't just have radar for the kind of person who hurt you. 00:15:45.440 |
So what often happens is people haven't processed whatever it was that they wanted more of or less of when they were growing up. 00:15:52.920 |
And then they go out into the world and they're looking for a partner. 00:15:55.680 |
And they literally have radar for a person who is exactly like the person who hurt them but doesn't look like that. 00:16:03.980 |
So it's like I'm going to choose someone who is the opposite of the parent who hurt me. 00:16:08.860 |
And then you find this person and after you get to know them a little bit, you're like, wow, that person drinks a lot too. 00:16:24.500 |
And you're like, how did I get into this exact situation that hurt me as a child? 00:16:30.320 |
And that's because your unconscious is saying, you look familiar. 00:16:36.320 |
Because what we're trying to do is we're trying to win. 00:16:38.680 |
We're trying to master a situation where we felt helpless as a child. 00:16:42.340 |
We couldn't control the situation with our parents when we were growing up. 00:16:45.620 |
And now we think, again, this is completely outside of our awareness. 00:16:51.660 |
I'm going to get love from that kind of person. 00:16:55.600 |
So I think that you really want to make sure that you are choosing someone for healthy reasons and not because there's some unfinished business that you're trying to work out with this person who is not going to meet your needs. 00:17:07.620 |
To go a little bit further into this idea, which, by the way, I fully subscribe to based on your explanation of this and my belief that our unconscious mind is driving a lot of our choices. 00:17:21.380 |
My understanding is that what you just described doesn't adhere to mom, dad, male, female compartmentalization. 00:17:31.160 |
What I mean by that is that I think a lot of people will hear what you just said and assume, okay, if my dad hurt me in the following ways, then let's say it's a woman. 00:17:44.980 |
And she said, you know, my dad hurt me in the following ways. 00:17:46.920 |
Maybe he was a drinker, withdrawn, or he was violent or whatever. 00:17:49.300 |
Then that woman will seek out men that mimic that. 00:17:57.900 |
But if her mother was the one that was the drinker, violent, and or withdrawn, and she's heterosexual, my understanding is based on the dynamics that you describe, if she will find those traits in a man. 00:18:13.620 |
Because she's heterosexual, she's seeking men for romantic partners. 00:18:18.820 |
And I think that sometimes we put the mom-dad labels on top of the attraction to, again, staying in the heterosexual framework here, the opposite sex framework. 00:18:33.180 |
And then people say, well, why is it that this woman always seeks out these, like, what ended up being really terrible guys? 00:18:38.740 |
Like, she had such a great dad, but she had a dreadful mom. 00:18:43.040 |
And I think it's so interesting because I think that people think that having one parent that gave you what you needed is protective. 00:18:51.960 |
But the thing that hurts is the thing that gets the most attention inside of our bodies. 00:18:56.980 |
So we don't necessarily think it, but we felt it. 00:19:04.540 |
And so, yes, having a good parent, one of the two, if you have two parents, one of the two is important. 00:19:10.780 |
But it's interesting that it's not like we seek out the person that's like the good parent always. 00:19:17.180 |
Sometimes, again, because we're trying to work something out, we seek out someone like the parent who really hurt us. 00:19:26.160 |
Well, I mean, I think that's where therapy is really helpful. 00:19:29.500 |
I think that's where, you know, people are like, well, what is therapy really for? 00:19:33.600 |
And I think it's really about what are the things that are outside of your awareness but that are sort of driving the car? 00:19:39.100 |
So it's like we think we're the driver of our own car. 00:19:41.980 |
But often, like, someone else is driving the car and we don't realize it. 00:19:48.280 |
Or, you know, what is happening in my life that I'm not getting what I want in, you know, whatever dimension it is, whether it's professionally or personally? 00:19:56.820 |
And so often it's because there's some force that you are acting out that you don't even realize. 00:20:02.320 |
And I think the role of therapy is to kind of hold up a mirror to people and help them to see something about themselves that they haven't been willing or able to see. 00:20:12.620 |
You said that people will pick the person who's exactly wrong for them, who feels exactly right, at least at first, that it has this kind of come here, this summoning aspect to it. 00:20:28.520 |
Like, we feel drawn to it, it feels drawn to us. 00:20:30.720 |
I mean, that's how relationships start after all, one would hope. 00:20:33.940 |
But in this case, you said that people come to find that that person is exact, harbors some of the exact same traits. 00:20:44.740 |
I'm calling them that, behaviors, traits, you know, whatever it is that hurt them in the context of their child-parent relationship. 00:20:54.700 |
Why do you think initially it presents as the opposite? 00:20:59.340 |
I think it's about the familiarity, that there's something so visceral about this feels like childhood. 00:21:08.300 |
And even if childhood was not optimal or even miserable, it still feels familiar. 00:21:14.080 |
And humans in general are very afraid of uncertainty. 00:21:20.440 |
I remember when I was in therapy, my therapist said to me, you know, you remind me of this cartoon, and it's of a prisoner shaking the bars, desperately trying to get out. 00:21:29.700 |
But on the right and the left, it's open, no bars, right? 00:21:40.200 |
And it's because with freedom comes responsibility and uncertainty. 00:21:45.060 |
We don't know what's – we know what it's like to be in prison. 00:21:50.280 |
So that feels comfortable even though we say we desperately want to get out. 00:21:54.180 |
And then if we choose the uncertain path, we're responsible for our lives now. 00:21:59.780 |
We can't blame it on mom or dad or this situation or that situation. 00:22:03.340 |
I'm not saying those situations weren't impactful. 00:22:08.740 |
We have freedom as an adult that we didn't have as a child. 00:22:12.020 |
And sometimes it's really hard for us to say I'm going to have to be responsible for my life. 00:22:16.980 |
That's terrifying because we feel like we don't have the tools to do that. 00:22:22.340 |
We'd rather have the certainty of like I know what it's like in prison. 00:22:25.580 |
At least I know what that's like and I know, you know, the devil you know. 00:22:29.020 |
And that's not – again, that's outside of our awareness. 00:22:31.700 |
I think what you're describing is a pervasive feature of being human. 00:22:43.400 |
But I've watched grow up from a very young age who got into college. 00:22:52.580 |
The relationship ended and I was talking to him recently. 00:22:56.080 |
And he's kind of in this kind of dizzying spin of like thinking about how great things were, how he blew it. 00:23:07.060 |
He can go back and, you know, he'll find another relationship. 00:23:12.740 |
But I passed something along to him that was actually discussed on a – by a former guest on this podcast, Josh Waitzkin, who was a former child chess prodigy. 00:23:22.020 |
He's gone on to do a number of things and he said exactly what you're saying, which is in a different context. 00:23:26.400 |
He said we get so attached to our current identity and our past identity and trying to resolve those that we're more willing to stay in that state of discomfort than we are to step into a path of potential success. 00:23:51.700 |
Yes, it's kind of like the misery of uncertainty. 00:23:55.680 |
The certainty of misery is sometimes more palatable to people than the misery of uncertainty. 00:24:03.660 |
So you can be certain that you're going to stay miserable if you stay in jail. 00:24:11.980 |
So it's really interesting that people will make that tradeoff. 00:24:15.760 |
And the other thing about this attraction question that you're asking about, it's like I had this therapy client and she would pick people who were exactly like one or both of her parents and she would be so attracted to those guys. 00:24:28.580 |
She would always go for them and she's like, men are terrible. 00:24:36.500 |
But then you go out on dates with these like great guys and she's like, yeah, no chemistry. 00:24:43.640 |
What is the flip side of this, the lack of interest in somebody that doesn't overtly or covertly harbor the painful thing that you're so used to? 00:24:56.440 |
She was working out this way of she hadn't separated yet from her childhood. 00:25:01.600 |
So she was trying to kind of reenact her childhood, reenact her childhood with these men. 00:25:09.360 |
She'd just be like, oh, I'm so attracted to this person or things like, you know, I just I like this guy so much. 00:25:14.760 |
I don't know why he doesn't call when he says he will. 00:25:22.920 |
Like, I never know where I stand with this parent, with this boyfriend. 00:25:27.400 |
And then the people who are really reliable, who, by the way, it wasn't about their physical traits. 00:25:33.040 |
Like these men were all physically attractive. 00:25:35.240 |
It was she felt no sort of, again, that word chemistry, because there's something very threatening about like, oh, there's no friction. 00:25:43.140 |
It's a frictionless, you know, thing where he says he's going to call and he does. 00:25:52.580 |
It just it doesn't like light her up in that way because she's not having that big emotional reaction to it because it doesn't feel like the thing that would give her a big emotional reaction. 00:26:04.140 |
And so once she sort of works that through, by the end of the therapy, she became very attracted to the kinds of guys who would treat her the way she wanted to be treated. 00:26:14.540 |
And she was no longer attracted to the guys that she so she'd get that initial kind of like, oh, I feel something when I'm in the presence of a guy like that. 00:26:22.880 |
But I'm not really interested in a relationship with that kind of guy. 00:26:26.660 |
So that's, I think, what therapy can do for people. 00:26:30.500 |
You know, one of the things that I've noticed in my own life is that as I've gotten older, I'll be 50 later this year. 00:26:42.640 |
But some of the things that I assumed for so many years, like slow is low. 00:26:49.840 |
Like when things are really slow, like for many years, it felt kind of depressive. 00:26:54.860 |
Now I love slow, mellow, like peace is the thing that I'm just I savor so much. 00:27:03.640 |
But for so many years, I think what you're describing, that sort of activation state of excitement, that was a pretty wild youth. 00:27:10.160 |
And then, you know, I mean, I like adventure and I've taken on at times dangerous adventures that I shouldn't have lived. 00:27:21.340 |
But even in like my scientific career or podcasting, things that feel at times like a bit of a tightrope walk, just given the number of variables that I can't control just by virtue of what they are and the challenge of like long cycles of trying to publish. 00:27:38.160 |
But I did the same thing in a lot of my relationships. 00:27:44.800 |
But in most cases, fortunately for me, lovely people. 00:27:48.020 |
But there was this sense that like if something felt like a little bit of an upstate, kind of like a bit more of autonomic arousal or a lot more autonomic arousal, that it had this kind of magnetic quality to it. 00:28:01.860 |
Whereas I think, and I'm not joking or lying here, I think owning a bulldog taught me how to really savor relaxing. 00:28:11.860 |
I'm not saying this just to highlight Costello again. 00:28:14.820 |
And I mean, I observed his relationship to the world and the bulldog's contract with its owner is an amazing one that I think I learned a lot from. 00:28:25.780 |
I will literally give up my life to protect you, Andrew. 00:28:29.060 |
But if that's not on the line, I'm not going to do anything. 00:28:34.040 |
We're just going to sit here and enjoy the sunshine. 00:28:37.580 |
We're just going to breathe and we're going to eat food. 00:28:40.340 |
Friends are coming over and I'll get excited. 00:28:42.220 |
And, you know, and I'm not, I'm not trying to make too much of this. 00:28:46.000 |
I really noticed, I was like, wow, he needs so little to be blissful. 00:28:50.220 |
And yet I know that if like push came to shove, like he's on my side, we've got each other's backs. 00:28:57.340 |
As opposed to, let's talk about a more human contract of like this picture or story of, of a couple that they have about themselves. 00:29:05.720 |
Ride or die is something people say a lot nowadays. 00:29:15.260 |
And then there's like ride or die, like, like we'll take on anything. 00:29:31.940 |
People want the exciting thing, the big build. 00:29:34.440 |
And then they're like, it's the chaos of like, oh, this founder left and this person. 00:29:38.200 |
It's like, well, of course it started in drama. 00:29:45.020 |
One is that there's this concept of chairophobia, which is kind of fear of joy. 00:29:50.000 |
And so, so many people, because they grew up in a way where whenever, let's say the parent 00:29:58.660 |
Like at certain times and then they were unreliable or they were really calm, but then they would 00:30:02.200 |
blow up and you never knew what was going to happen. 00:30:04.780 |
It was like you were walking on eggshells the whole time, right? 00:30:07.220 |
So you're very afraid of anything that goes well. 00:30:13.900 |
So you're, you're, you don't want to pick something that, and again, again, outside of 00:30:19.400 |
your awareness, like you don't pick the calm partner because it feels too good. 00:30:24.260 |
So I'll pick the volatile partner because I'm, I'm prepared. 00:30:31.900 |
And so people sabotage all the time, whether it's about a job or a partner or, you know, 00:30:37.840 |
They think, I am not going to go there because it's not safe to feel joy because something 00:30:47.020 |
And it will be harder to have the experience of joy and to have it crushed than to never 00:30:54.180 |
So there was a woman that I wrote about in my book who she just, she wouldn't let herself 00:30:59.780 |
feel any joy or get excited about a partner or excited about, she wanted to be an artist 00:31:04.560 |
and doing her art and things were going really well. 00:31:13.140 |
It's like, I'm going to create the bad thing to happen to myself because if it happens from 00:31:20.900 |
So I think we need to kind of really be aware. 00:31:23.720 |
There are lots of people out there who are terrified of good things happening, even though 00:31:27.880 |
they say they desperately want good things to happen. 00:31:29.980 |
And so they make bad things happen or they make sure good things don't happen to them because 00:31:34.860 |
it feels so uncomfortable to sit in that space of the other shoe is going to drop at any moment 00:31:40.200 |
But the other thing I want to say about this, this slow burn type of thing is there was a 00:31:45.140 |
study that was done that I wrote about in one of my books where they did a longitudinal study 00:31:48.840 |
and they looked at people over 20 years and they followed up with them every five years from 00:31:55.820 |
And they had them instead of like historically saying, you know, when you ask people in relationships 00:32:00.760 |
and you say, what was it like when you first met? 00:32:02.840 |
And they'll tell you some story, but it's retrospective. 00:32:08.440 |
You're sort of telling it through the lens of where you are now. 00:32:10.900 |
What was great about this study was people wrote down at the time, here's what, here's 00:32:15.740 |
So people who were, let's say, got married and were happy would say almost unilaterally, 00:32:28.740 |
Whereas at the time they might've said like, yeah, it was okay. 00:32:36.560 |
But that's not the story they're telling themselves about it. 00:32:39.380 |
Now, people who either are unhappily together or no longer together would say, yeah, there was 00:32:49.080 |
But at the time they might've said like, wow, I'm really interested in this person. 00:32:54.500 |
So we change our stories based on our present experience. 00:32:58.740 |
And we think we're telling an accurate version of what actually happened. 00:33:02.560 |
And the reason I bring this up is because since people who are sort of happy couples tell these 00:33:08.840 |
stories to other people, we think in our culture that if you go on a first date and you don't 00:33:14.640 |
have that immediate spark, that it's not worth it. 00:33:19.680 |
And what happens is sometimes a lot of the time when you have that immediate spark, it 00:33:27.580 |
It means that you really need to see what it means. 00:33:33.380 |
If you go on a date and you feel like I, it was like nice conversation. 00:33:43.180 |
Just go on another date with them and see what happens. 00:33:47.040 |
But we don't do that because we have this illusion that you can just go back on an app or there's 00:33:52.740 |
And so we try to optimize as opposed to saying, what would it be like? 00:33:57.660 |
I had a, I had, I felt good when I was with this person. 00:34:00.260 |
I didn't feel that rush, but I felt pretty good. 00:34:04.320 |
So I think I'll go see what that's like again. 00:34:19.000 |
One certainly wouldn't want to be bored in somebody else's presence. 00:34:28.640 |
To look for as opposed to this activation state. 00:34:31.460 |
You know, maybe it's the neurobiologist in me and I'm guilty of also working on this autonomic 00:34:38.940 |
The seesaw in us of being like up states that can either be stress or bliss and down states, 00:34:43.920 |
which can either be depression and fatigue or can just be like pleasant relaxation. 00:34:50.360 |
Alert and stressed versus alert and elated is very different level of alertness, two very 00:34:56.900 |
different things, same, you know, depressed versus peaceful when relaxed, you know, and 00:35:02.620 |
looking for or trying to figure out what sorts of interactions bring about that kind of even 00:35:09.580 |
seesaw might be best, not one or the other, maybe a little airing even a little bit more 00:35:15.740 |
And when I see couples who come in and they've been married for a long time now and they say, 00:35:21.440 |
you know, well, I'll say, what is the origin story? 00:35:26.380 |
What were you attracted to in the other person? 00:35:28.820 |
And so often I'll hear words like it was so exciting. 00:35:33.780 |
And it's like that's the very thing that what you thought was excitement was actually 00:35:40.780 |
volatility or was actually sort of anxiety as opposed to that sense of you can be calm and 00:35:51.900 |
So we're talking about a neurological state, right? 00:35:56.260 |
And then we're talking about your interpretation of what that means. 00:36:07.780 |
And so you have to be able to tell the difference between the two. 00:36:10.260 |
I'll just say yes and yes to both those statements. 00:36:13.160 |
I think peace is, it's not everything, but it's necessary but not sufficient as we say. 00:36:21.720 |
If I may, I'd like to get kind of a little deep and abstract along this dimension of why people are so much more willing to stay in a state that doesn't feel good versus risk the unknown and the opportunity to win in relationship, in life, in career, et cetera. 00:36:49.160 |
I happen to be reading, it's a hard book, a genuinely difficult book, but I'm really enjoying it. 00:36:54.880 |
I'm reading Ernst Becker's The Denial of Death. 00:37:03.460 |
And, you know, I mean, the central thesis of the book, right, is that we're a weird species because we understand that we're going to die at some point. 00:37:13.020 |
And that humans go through these very complicated gymnastics related to ego and symbols and we create notions of meaning and story to try and distract us basically from this really scary reality. 00:37:26.600 |
Nobody really understands or knows what happens next. 00:37:30.140 |
And I have this idea in mind as you're telling me that indeed people are willing to stay in a set of circumstances that don't work for them. 00:37:40.740 |
Even ruminating on the mistakes that got them there for a very long time, willingly, when all they need to do is make some new choices that they're fully capable of making. 00:37:49.280 |
And I wonder whether or not it's because they're alive now. 00:37:58.380 |
I mean, the number of people I know who stayed in circumstances that didn't work for them for so long, professionally, relationally, it's like, how do they do that? 00:38:08.500 |
And I understand sometimes there's kids, sometimes there's financial issues, but there's, it's always the case that they've eventually gotten out, thank goodness. 00:38:16.960 |
And they always say, I wish I had done it so much earlier. 00:38:20.420 |
And I wonder whether or not as a biological and psychological being, we do this because we're thinking, well, I'm alive now. 00:38:31.680 |
But I don't know what's going to happen if I make this other choice. 00:38:34.500 |
Like, it defies logic, but at the same time, if one just assumes that our, like, our biggest fear deep down in our unconscious is fear of death, we'll pretty much stay anywhere where we're continuing to be alive and not, like, in the moment of fearing death. 00:38:50.620 |
Sorry to get a little philosophical here, but I think this unconscious thing, a lot has been made of it. 00:38:56.640 |
The word means, okay, well, we don't, it's happening, but we don't know what's happening. 00:39:01.700 |
And I do think, ultimately, we're all just really afraid of death. 00:39:08.180 |
So, what I mean by that is I think we deny death. 00:39:12.100 |
Like, we know it's out there somewhere, but we don't know when or how it's going to happen. 00:39:16.920 |
And so, we just pretend, because there's no real, no pun intended, but deadline, right? 00:39:22.800 |
And so, we just think, sort of, we know, intellectually, we don't have forever, but we kind of think we do. 00:39:28.860 |
And so, when you think about, sort of, the stages of psychosocial development, you know, you start with, you know, these conflicts that you have to work through at every stage of life. 00:39:38.720 |
And sort of the one where you're sort of the last stage is integrity versus despair. 00:39:43.500 |
So, integrity is if you have lived a life where you don't have a lot of regret, you feel like you lived the kind of life that you wanted, you accomplished the things that you wanted to accomplish for the most part, whether that's relationally, professionally, some combination there, you have a sense of integrity at the end of your life. 00:40:02.640 |
If you didn't, you have this sense of despair. 00:40:06.420 |
People who work through that and have integrity are not afraid of death. 00:40:11.680 |
The people who are in despair are very afraid of death because they have so many regrets and they can't go back. 00:40:19.960 |
And so, I like to, in psychotherapy, really remind people that they need to keep death awareness sitting on one shoulder, not to be morbid, but to actually make you live more fully. 00:40:32.500 |
If you are aware of death, if you really look death right in the eye, you have more intentionality when you wake up every day. 00:40:41.480 |
So, it's not like sometime in the future I might die. 00:40:50.260 |
And I think, you know, when I say I write about this in my book where I was seeing this woman who was in her early 30s and she was diagnosed with cancer and everyone thought she was going to be fine and then there was a sort of rare recurrence. 00:41:03.000 |
And when she was newly married and her whole life was, like, turned upside down and she really made me, as the therapist, look death in the eye in that way. 00:41:14.420 |
You know how, like, you want to say something like, you know, she was talking about the things that people would say to her because we all have this death denial. 00:41:22.340 |
And they would say, did you get a second opinion? 00:41:24.740 |
As if, no, she's not going to get a second opinion about whether she's going to die, right? 00:41:28.760 |
You know, they'll say things like, well, these experimental treatments might work. 00:41:32.320 |
You know, anything to deny the reality that she was going to die and very soon. 00:41:43.480 |
Even her husband had trouble sort of sitting with her in that in the beginning, right? 00:41:49.400 |
And there was this one moment, this beautiful moment between them that she came in and told me. 00:41:54.640 |
About where he was, like, you know, doing something and trying to relax. 00:41:59.340 |
And he was a great, like, incredibly supportive of her. 00:42:02.820 |
And she came in and said, hey, there's this thing. 00:42:08.800 |
And he said, like, can't we just have one night off from cancer? 00:42:15.020 |
And she said, I don't get any nights off from cancer. 00:42:24.120 |
But it brought up this beautiful conversation between them that really helped them to think about how much do we let death in? 00:42:32.000 |
And how much do we let sort of life or whatever is left in? 00:42:36.460 |
And how do we let death inform the aliveness that we still have? 00:42:41.940 |
So I think it's really important that, you know, why do people stay in relationships too long? 00:42:48.280 |
Why do they make choices that are not serving them and that they will later regret? 00:42:53.020 |
It's because they are in full-blown death denial. 00:42:58.000 |
And I think when people really acknowledge their mortality, it's one of the most healthy, invigorating things that they can bring into their lives. 00:43:09.500 |
When people say, what is the opposite of depression? 00:43:13.720 |
And where do we get vitality from knowing that we have a limited time here? 00:43:24.060 |
This is something I think about constantly, although I've never looked at it through the lens that you just presented it. 00:43:31.160 |
And I love what I just learned from you, which is that vitality is the state, the state of being, of vitality is so key. 00:43:44.320 |
I think about death probably more than I should because for a kid who wasn't from the inner city or in the military, I've just had a lot of friends die. 00:43:54.620 |
A lot of suicides, a lot of drug stuff, unfortunately. 00:43:57.620 |
And all three of my scientific advisors, suicide, cancer, cancer, I was very close with all of them. 00:44:07.640 |
Anyone that's ever had a conversation with somebody where it's a goodbye conversation. 00:44:14.380 |
And it was brutal, but, you know, I don't want to well up. 00:44:21.880 |
I don't have a problem crying from time to time on camera. 00:44:25.280 |
But I don't want the plot line here to shift too much. 00:44:29.340 |
But I started after that conversation to adopt a practice. 00:44:32.980 |
I do this yoga nidra, non-sleep, deep rest thing every day for about 10 to 30 minutes. 00:44:38.480 |
And there's this moment right at the beginning where you're supposed to take a deep breath and then a long exhale to relax your body. 00:44:44.880 |
And then you go into listening to the script. 00:44:46.420 |
And ever since that conversation, I've insisted on doing that. 00:44:54.080 |
And as I do it, I remind myself, this is, if I'm awake or if it's not an accident that happens very fast, this is probably what it's going to feel like to, like, die. 00:45:03.480 |
And so just trying to, like, I'm – so I like this idea of readying myself for death every day as a means to access what you're talking about, which is trying to live better. 00:45:14.260 |
Again, not to be morbid, just try to, like, yes, I'm, like, a biological vessel at some point. 00:45:18.840 |
My body, my brain, or both will just give out. 00:45:21.120 |
Or I'll get – bullet buster cancer is kind of what I always say. 00:45:24.620 |
Something will take me out, and there'll be this final – and that's it. 00:45:29.300 |
And the closer that I feel like that we can get to that understanding and be like, okay, super scary, and I'm not there now. 00:45:37.620 |
So I'm going to go back into the world and do the best I can. 00:45:43.600 |
It sounds like you're aiming toward an acceptance of death, which is, I think, the way that we get motivated to live. 00:45:57.340 |
I think we should say we get this precious time however long we get. 00:46:01.480 |
Everybody gets their own amount of time on – you know, in this life. 00:46:08.780 |
And I think about how when people are afraid of death, they do things that are counterproductive. 00:46:13.940 |
Like a lot of affairs happen in the wake of a death. 00:46:17.540 |
So a parent dies, and somebody then feels like, oh, I don't have a lot of time left. 00:46:27.420 |
And then they go and do something like have an affair because they want that sense of vitality because they're doing it out of fear, not out of, oh, I accept that death is a part of our existence. 00:46:40.800 |
And if I'm not feeling alive, is it because of my relationship or my marriage or is it because I am not actively doing things in my life to create that sense of vitality? 00:46:52.600 |
So very often in the wake of some kind of brush with death, like some kind of closeness, like maybe you had a brush with death or maybe a parent died or someone close to you died or a friend or a sibling. 00:47:06.420 |
So often people act out and they do these things to create the sense of I'm alive as opposed to saying, wait, what do I need to look at in my life that will make me feel more alive that is not self-sabotaging? 00:47:22.160 |
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I was talking about how, gosh, there's like these certain interactions in life that are like, I feel like they like pull me in. 00:50:46.620 |
And then it just like really takes away from what I know I should be doing. 00:50:50.520 |
And he said, you know, you have to do things that energize you. 00:50:59.740 |
And immediately I thought, yes, and be very careful about the things that activate us. 00:51:05.980 |
Like there's this difference between activation and being activated versus being energized. 00:51:12.360 |
But I feel like something that energizes me is like I love cephalopods. 00:51:19.280 |
And by the way, it's octopuses is the plural, folks. 00:51:25.820 |
And, you know, looking at one of those guys or gals solving a puzzle, like just energizes me in a way. 00:51:36.120 |
It's, you know, it's like an inspiration for me. 00:51:38.100 |
And there are many other things that do that. 00:51:41.300 |
And then there are things that activate us, like where we – it's like a stress response. 00:51:50.740 |
It's like pulling and it's taking from these things that energize us. 00:51:54.400 |
And I feel like it's – being able to notice those subtleties is hard in real time. 00:51:59.120 |
And – but I feel like vitality is about the things that energize us. 00:52:05.720 |
And so when you talk about that draining kind of activation, sometimes what we do when that happens is we go numb. 00:52:14.200 |
So, you know, there's this great expression that the – like scrolling through the internet when people mindlessly do that. 00:52:19.140 |
It's – a colleague of mine said it's the most effective non-prescription painkiller out there. 00:52:26.780 |
So it's the most effective non-prescription painkiller out there. 00:52:31.320 |
And so it's interesting when you think about numbness because people think that numbness is the absence of feelings. 00:52:38.940 |
But actually numbness is the sense of being overwhelmed by too many feelings. 00:52:54.720 |
And so we need to figure out what are you feeling. 00:52:58.160 |
So it's actually a state of arousal that you can't handle. 00:53:06.100 |
But it's not that you're not having feelings. 00:53:07.780 |
You're having so many feelings that you can't tolerate it. 00:53:10.900 |
And that is not, you know, that is not the, you know, people say, oh, I'm feeling numb. 00:53:16.860 |
We need to figure out what is so overwhelming to your nervous system right now. 00:53:23.100 |
I hope people will listen to that 100 times because, you know, we've heard so much about dopamine hits that I think people have lost sight of the fact that when you're online and you're just awash in all this information and videos, you're not getting those hits. 00:53:41.020 |
And we've been there for a long period of time unless we, you know, unless we're judicious about our use of social media, an hour or three minutes or 15 minutes, whatever it is. 00:53:49.660 |
But hours upon hours, there's no dopamine hit anymore. 00:53:54.780 |
And that's why it feels kind of like, how did all that time go by? 00:53:57.560 |
The importance of this really can't be overstated. 00:54:00.600 |
I think that we hear so much about fight or flight and the stress response that I think people forget that another component of the stress response of drama, of, you know, being awash in all this information and, like, movies and politics and violence and sex and all that stuff coming at us at once as we just scroll our thumbs is this thing of brachycardia. 00:54:27.000 |
You know, there's this phenomenon where when we're stressed, our heart rate actually slows down. 00:54:31.240 |
And that's the kind of the kind of numbing and you just kind of you're just kind of blanking out. 00:54:36.020 |
And I think that's a lot of what people are starting to experience with a lot of high drama input. 00:54:43.980 |
Yeah, I see that in couples a lot where they come in and one person is saying, you know, like, I feel nothing. 00:54:51.200 |
I don't know what this other person's so upset about. 00:54:55.120 |
And then when you really get into it, it's like this person's feeling all kinds of things. 00:54:59.180 |
And it's really important that we understand, you know, when we are shut down versus when we are calm. 00:55:13.900 |
So a couple comes in, let's say it's a heterosexual couple, but it could be any couple. 00:55:17.980 |
Often it is the woman in the couple who will say something to her partner like, I just feel like I can't reach you. 00:55:30.300 |
And because of our cultural stigma around men showing emotion, he has told himself like, yeah, this bothers me or that bothers me or I'm unhappy in this way, but I don't feel anything. 00:55:44.000 |
So he doesn't even understand why he's there. 00:55:46.400 |
And he thinks he's there for her because she insisted on it. 00:55:51.340 |
And so when we finally get to maybe something that he's feeling and he finally does open up, it's so interesting because maybe he's sharing something very vulnerable or maybe he tears up a little bit. 00:56:02.820 |
So you can tell, like your body will tell you what you're feeling even if you aren't aware of it. 00:56:07.000 |
You see, okay, there's some moisture there in his eyes or maybe a tear falls or maybe he actually starts crying. 00:56:12.980 |
And her reaction and her whole reason for bringing him in was, you know, I need you to open up to me. 00:56:23.920 |
And she then looks at me like a deer in headlights, like, oh, wow, I don't feel safe when he doesn't open up to me, but I also don't feel safe when he's being vulnerable in this way. 00:56:36.580 |
And these are sort of gender stereotypes that we think we might not fall prey to, but we do. 00:56:43.040 |
And so it's so interesting that often men are the ones who seem sort of numb or calm, right, which are two, again, very different things in the relationship. 00:56:54.140 |
It's that there's no room for him to express anything. 00:56:58.960 |
So he has to kind of push everything down, probably, again, outside of his awareness. 00:57:03.040 |
And then the couple feels disconnected and both of them are unhappy. 00:57:07.700 |
This idea that more words means more emotional, I don't buy it. 00:57:15.180 |
You know, it's interesting because men will come in if I'm seeing them alone and they'll often say something like, I've never told anyone this before. 00:57:25.040 |
And they literally mean, I've never told anyone this before. 00:57:28.120 |
Because when men hang out, they're not, it's not the same sort of level of let's talk, talk, talk, talk, talk, talk, talk, right? 00:57:36.440 |
Women will come in and say something like, I've never told anyone this before except for my mother, my sister, my best friend, right? 00:57:45.240 |
So they've told maybe one, two or three people, but they feel like they haven't told anyone because for women, that's kind of not telling anyone. 00:57:54.460 |
So if somebody, if a woman says to me, I didn't tell anyone, that means she only told four people. 00:58:02.200 |
I mean like something about themselves where they feel maybe hesitant to share that or they feel ashamed about that or they're not sure about something. 00:58:19.920 |
But it's interesting because when I didn't notice this till I was raising a boy, and I grew up with a brother, but I didn't notice it, that when he, let's say, he would like fall on the playground, right? 00:58:32.040 |
And like at like two or three years old, everybody would say to him or the boys around him like, oh, it's fine. 00:58:41.800 |
Even if he was like in pain and if a girl falls and she's in pain at that age, they're like, oh, honey, come here. 00:58:51.460 |
So very early on, they get these messages like girls can talk about it. 00:58:58.840 |
I remember when my son was, he was a basketball player in high school and he had, or this was in actually middle school. 00:59:07.120 |
And in a practice, he got, you know, pushed down and his arm was kind of like not right. 00:59:11.680 |
And, you know, everyone was like, get back up. 00:59:15.440 |
Well, his arm is like kind of hanging off, right? 00:59:18.460 |
And so, you know, I was like, no, I think he needs to go to the ER. 00:59:21.760 |
And, of course, he was mortified that I said that. 00:59:28.680 |
If a girl had fallen down and her arm was like that, people would say like, oh, why don't you get it checked out? 00:59:33.240 |
So what happens when these people get into adult relationships and this was what they were told about words and talking about things? 00:59:45.820 |
But the other thing I want to say about words is women are brought up to think that whenever you have a feeling, you should share it. 00:59:55.700 |
So, and people say, what do you mean you're a therapist? 01:00:00.380 |
You don't need to share every thought or feeling that crosses your mind unfiltered with your partner. 01:00:12.880 |
And we get to think about, and we call it mentalizing, how will what I'm about to say land on the other person? 01:00:20.540 |
It's not like you're regurgitating all of your thoughts onto the other person. 01:00:26.280 |
It's about relationally thinking, how will this person respond to that? 01:00:32.180 |
Not like you have to take care of their feelings, but is it kind? 01:00:47.800 |
But I'll wager a theory that I think that some people, when they feel something, 01:00:56.860 |
the kind of relief that comes from evacuating that feeling or trying to evacuate it with words 01:01:07.500 |
feels reflexively better to them than sitting with it internally. 01:01:15.080 |
So I think people, when they feel an emotion, I think sometimes they feel like if they just talk 01:01:19.460 |
about it or evacuate it, then it's like they get rid of it, but they forget that it has an impact. 01:01:26.760 |
And what you're talking about is projective identification. 01:01:29.920 |
So projection, right, is when you're feeling angry about something. 01:01:35.960 |
Say you had like your boss did something to you at work and, you know, they upset you in some way 01:01:41.380 |
or they were, you know, unkind and you're angry about or they're going to make you work all night 01:01:49.300 |
So you come home and you end up, you know, yelling at your partner, right? 01:01:55.500 |
So you're projecting, you're really mad at your boss, but all of a sudden you're like yelling 01:02:00.580 |
at your partner, you're angry at your partner. 01:02:02.620 |
You're projecting one feeling about someone onto a different person that had nothing to do with 01:02:09.200 |
Projective identification is a psychological process where you actually insert your feeling 01:02:16.140 |
So you're angry about something that happened at work. 01:02:18.860 |
It's not that you are now angry at your partner. 01:02:25.220 |
Like you take your feelings and you toss them to someone else because you can't tolerate 01:02:34.220 |
So I'm going to say something to you that's going to make you angry, right? 01:02:40.460 |
You're fine because you're not holding the anger anymore. 01:02:46.380 |
They're the ones who have to deal with what you couldn't tolerate. 01:02:49.480 |
So, again, we have to think about, you know, do we need to, like, why are we saying what 01:02:55.620 |
Can we be more intentional about how we communicate? 01:02:58.280 |
Which doesn't mean you have to walk through a minefield. 01:03:01.120 |
It just means that you have to be more aware of your feeling state and owning your feeling 01:03:07.100 |
state and making sure that you aren't using other people in your environment to release 01:03:12.580 |
your feeling state to something else, that you need to learn how you can shift your own 01:03:17.340 |
feeling state to one that feels better for you. 01:03:21.640 |
I realized recently that thinking is something that we can practice. 01:03:30.580 |
I, for all the tools and protocols that, you know, I've talked about on this podcast and 01:03:36.440 |
elsewhere, you know, like physiological size and morning sunlight and working out and zone 01:03:42.940 |
two cardio and cold and, you know, all the things I, I realized, um, recently, like spending 01:03:49.620 |
five minutes just thinking about something and really trying to work through it linearly, um, 01:03:56.120 |
like a, like a challenge, like a life challenge is so valuable. 01:03:59.600 |
Um, and I didn't come up with this on my own. 01:04:03.140 |
I now have a practice of, of like when something feels irritating or activating, I'll just like 01:04:08.300 |
stop, put everything away and just sit and think like, what's going on here? 01:04:11.660 |
And, um, inevitably there's some, like some growth in understanding at the end of that, 01:04:25.340 |
Am I, you know, like having to sort all that, you might think, well, who has the time for 01:04:29.580 |
But actually I would argue you don't have the time to not do it. 01:04:32.240 |
I think that's the difference between reacting and responding. 01:04:35.100 |
So often what we do is we react to something and that's not processed, not thought through. 01:04:41.100 |
And again, it doesn't have to take, like you're saying, it doesn't have to take a long time 01:04:44.720 |
to just even count to five and breathe and see, you know, cause reacting, reacting means 01:04:53.580 |
So you are normally when you're reacting and it's like that zero to 60, you're acting on 01:04:59.120 |
something that happened in the past and you're layering it on to whatever's happening in the 01:05:04.380 |
So you're having a big reaction to something. 01:05:06.860 |
We like to say if it's historical, it's, if it's hysterical, it's historical, meaning 01:05:12.060 |
if you're, and by hysterical, I mean, if you're having a big reaction, there's probably something 01:05:16.940 |
from your past, some reaction that is visceral to you that you're having, that is getting 01:05:22.020 |
layered on to this current situation, experience, problem, and you don't realize it. 01:05:29.640 |
You're acting on something that happened in the past. 01:05:38.400 |
I'm going to sit for a minute, again, regulating your nervous system. 01:05:42.680 |
And now I can kind of think about this differently. 01:05:45.400 |
So we need space between, you know, there's that famous Viktor Frankl quote of, you know, between 01:05:52.260 |
stimulus and response, there is a space and in that space lies our choice and our freedom. 01:05:57.900 |
But you need that space between the stimulus, whatever the thing is that activated you and 01:06:05.120 |
So that's the difference between reacting and responding. 01:06:11.380 |
I mean, parents with kids, they got to pick them up and they're working and there's stuff 01:06:16.840 |
My question is, do you think nowadays there's too much communication bombardment through text, 01:06:24.580 |
social media, phone, and real life that we've eliminated all the space? 01:06:33.140 |
I think what we've eliminated is there's so much more space in a face-to-face conversation. 01:06:38.200 |
So when I have young therapy clients who are, you know, maybe in their early 20s and I had 01:06:45.940 |
one client who was telling me the story in therapy a while ago. 01:06:50.220 |
And now I understand what this means, but this was several years ago. 01:06:54.900 |
She had her thumbs in the air and she said, and then I said, and then he said, and then 01:07:00.920 |
And then I realized, I said, wait, you had this conversation on text? 01:07:08.660 |
And I said, I was trying to explain to her why they were missing certain cues. 01:07:13.100 |
They were missing what it feels like to be in the space together. 01:07:15.700 |
They were missing the experience of looking in each other's eyes, of seeing facial expressions 01:07:22.100 |
And she said, oh no, but we also used emojis. 01:07:25.080 |
And I had to explain to her why an emoji does not replace face-to-face interaction. 01:07:32.280 |
Face-to-face interaction slows you down, right? 01:07:35.580 |
You can just text anything and you don't realize there's another person at the other 01:07:41.080 |
side of this on their phone who is reacting to your reaction. 01:07:45.020 |
And I think that, you know, this is when we go back to comment sections. 01:07:48.300 |
We don't realize like there's another person out there. 01:07:51.800 |
But when there are so many times that we would have a very different kind of conversation 01:07:56.200 |
conversation with our partner, with family members, with friends, in our workplace, in 01:08:02.880 |
comment sections, if we could remember that there's a human there. 01:08:07.940 |
And the easiest way to do that is to see someone like this looking across the table at you. 01:08:15.480 |
But I think when you're having important conversations that we should remember, wait, this probably 01:08:21.200 |
isn't appropriate to talk about on text, even though people think that, well, of course, 01:08:26.960 |
Actually, it's not because now you're going to have conflict. 01:08:30.840 |
And now you're going to spend all this time trying to repair the rupture that just happened 01:08:41.860 |
And I'll say to people, you know, because, like, I have a client and he's always sort 01:08:46.560 |
of, he says, well, I just get pulled into it with my girlfriend. 01:08:54.300 |
And this is where I think change, you know, we talk about what we want to accomplish in 01:09:00.060 |
It's not just coming in and downloading the problem of the week and leaving and downloading 01:09:05.900 |
I like to say that insight is the booby prize of therapy, that you can have all the insight 01:09:10.880 |
in the world, but if you don't make change out in the world, the insight is useless. 01:09:14.000 |
So someone will say, oh, I got into that argument with my, you know, whoever, my partner over 01:09:19.900 |
And I'll say, well, did you do something different? 01:09:22.500 |
And they'll say, well, no, but I understand why. 01:09:25.520 |
That's good that you understand why, but you need to do something different because we're 01:09:30.440 |
all doing this dance with someone else, right? 01:09:33.540 |
And if you change your dance steps, so people say, I want the other person to change. 01:09:38.580 |
And I say, well, you can't change the other person, but you can influence the other person 01:09:45.360 |
So if you change your dance steps, the other person will either have to change their dance 01:09:50.400 |
steps too because you're not doing that old dance with them anymore, or they'll leave the 01:09:55.120 |
And people are so afraid the person will leave the dance floor. 01:09:57.960 |
And it's like, well, if they're not going to dance with you in a way that is the kind 01:10:02.920 |
of relationship that you want, it's okay that they leave the dance floor. 01:10:06.740 |
Go find someone who will dance with you in the way you want to dance. 01:10:10.620 |
When it comes to behavioral change, are you a fan of small one degree turns? 01:10:19.020 |
Or I'll propose an alternative, not as a counter, but just to explore next. 01:10:25.260 |
But do you encourage your clients, do you call them patients or clients, by the way? 01:10:33.020 |
I think it's so interesting because I think that we're just humans. 01:10:37.120 |
And I don't mean to sound all woo-woo about this, but I really feel like the relationship 01:10:44.840 |
And I have not figured out a way to describe it. 01:10:47.880 |
And I don't think client or patient quite does it. 01:10:55.020 |
Do you recommend that your clients make specific subtle changes, behavioral changes, 01:11:03.600 |
when they're, after they have an insight, or maybe even before they have an insight? 01:11:07.580 |
I think the reason that people have so much trouble changing is because the step that they've 01:11:13.360 |
chosen is too big of a step to take at once, that you need small, manageable steps. 01:11:19.480 |
And I think people also forget, this is why New Year's resolutions tend not to last very 01:11:26.000 |
And there's a chapter in my book called How Humans Change. 01:11:28.900 |
And I think it's so important for people to understand that there are stages of change. 01:11:32.940 |
And it starts with pre-contemplation, where you don't even realize that you're thinking 01:11:39.200 |
You think, like, something's not right, but I don't really need to change. 01:11:42.680 |
Like, something's just not right in the world. 01:11:49.720 |
There's, then there's contemplation, which is, oh, maybe I could make a change, but I'm 01:11:58.040 |
And that's when people usually, they come to therapy somewhere around pre-contemplation. 01:12:02.920 |
They're kind of between pre-contemplation and contemplation. 01:12:06.060 |
Like, something's not right, they come to therapy, we get them to contemplation, which 01:12:09.780 |
is like, oh, maybe I'm contemplating making some changes. 01:12:12.640 |
And then there's preparation, which is you're taking some steps to prepare for the change. 01:12:18.800 |
So it's not like, I'm going to dive into the deep end of the pool. 01:12:21.300 |
It's like, oh, maybe I need to take some swimming lessons, or maybe I need to get a swimsuit, 01:12:25.080 |
or maybe I need, you know, whatever it is, like, I need to prepare to make this change. 01:12:29.680 |
And then there's action, where you actually make the change. 01:12:33.560 |
And people think that's the last step, that's action. 01:12:38.460 |
And maintenance is, how do you maintain the change? 01:12:41.980 |
And maintenance does not mean that you are perfectly maintaining the change. 01:12:46.840 |
It's more like chutes and ladders, if you remember that game, where, like, kind of you go up, 01:12:50.020 |
and then you go down, if you, you can make mistakes during this time. 01:12:53.500 |
Because you're forming a new habit, you're forming a new way of being. 01:12:56.660 |
And until it becomes familiar, going back to our discussion about how the familiar feels 01:13:01.180 |
really good to us, and the unfamiliar feels really scary, the new thing will take a while 01:13:06.640 |
So let's say that you say, like, I'm going to eat healthy. 01:13:09.720 |
And that means that I'm not going to, you know, like, eat an entire Haagen-Dazs or something 01:13:18.040 |
Well, sometimes when you're sad, you might do that again. 01:13:23.180 |
So it's not like, oh, it failed, so forget it. 01:13:25.420 |
I'm not going to, like, I failed, and I'm not able to make this change. 01:13:28.860 |
Or you don't say, like, oh, I'm so terrible, and that was awful, and I'm so weak. 01:13:35.620 |
Imagine if your kid came to you and they said, like, I did really poorly on this test. 01:13:44.920 |
You're going to say, well, let's talk about what happened. 01:13:47.460 |
And they might say, I needed help, and I was embarrassed to ask, or I didn't understand 01:13:57.120 |
Okay, well, what are you going to do differently next time? 01:14:00.980 |
So you need to have, just like you'd have some compassion for your child and hold them 01:14:07.200 |
It's hard to hold yourself accountable when you self-flagellate. 01:14:10.960 |
In the short term, you can, but it doesn't last because it feels so unpleasant. 01:14:16.180 |
What you need is self-compassion, and actually, if you have more compassion for yourself, you're 01:14:28.000 |
I had this whole pint of Haagen-Dazs, but it's okay that I was sad, and there's another way 01:14:34.960 |
So next time when I'm sad, I didn't have enough support, so I'm going to call a friend next 01:14:39.400 |
Oh, self-compassion with accountability, or I'm not going to keep the Haagen-Dazs in the house 01:14:45.000 |
because I know that when I'm sad, I'm susceptible to that. 01:14:47.520 |
Maybe one day I'll be able to do it, but right now, I'm not going to keep that. 01:14:51.120 |
But there's something else I can do, which is I really feel like I want, for me, self-compassion 01:14:55.720 |
is related to I'm going to give myself a treat. 01:14:57.980 |
So maybe my treat is I'm going to have a healthy snack that I like, or maybe my treat is I'm 01:15:08.840 |
But you have to figure out what works for you, and what works for other people might not work 01:15:15.460 |
So maintenance is this kind of experimentation, but having self-compassion with accountability 01:15:21.340 |
until you find a system that works for you, and the new thing becomes a habit, it becomes 01:15:27.180 |
familiar, and the thing that you used to do becomes unfamiliar and doesn't feel good anymore. 01:15:33.380 |
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Yeah, for so many years, the field of popular psychology was obsessed with, you know, how long 01:16:59.440 |
As somebody who studies neuroplasticity, I can tell you that there's one trial learning, 01:17:05.900 |
you'll never go back, and there's stuff that takes years. 01:17:09.400 |
It just depends on the intensity and the consequences, right? 01:17:12.680 |
And even with consequences, I mean, anyone that's seen somebody relapse from drugs so many times 01:17:17.680 |
over, it's clearly they're working with more complicated dynamics there. 01:17:22.260 |
I think that this notion of reinforcing change is super key. 01:17:29.080 |
I want to ask as a, I don't know how to phrase this, as a counterpoint or as an alternative. 01:17:40.280 |
I'm somebody that always benefited from deadlines. 01:17:49.760 |
And I just, if there's a grant deadline, a paper deadline, you know, deadlines work. 01:17:55.760 |
And even if you don't meet them, it's great to see how far off you were, you know, if you 01:18:02.900 |
did your absolute best and the mistakes you made to lead to the place where you didn't 01:18:08.500 |
It's just, I love deadlines and I love rules. 01:18:10.740 |
And so I've become a pretty strict rule enforcer for myself in my life. 01:18:17.620 |
I think one of the rules that's really helped me in recent times with vis-a-vis relationships 01:18:30.160 |
I don't tolerate any drama, but that's rigid, I realize, but it's helpful, far happier than 01:18:36.740 |
I've ever been truly in large part because of that, like no drama. 01:18:41.520 |
But the thing that I had to accept with a hard rule like that is that I'm going to lose people. 01:18:47.340 |
So earlier you said, you know, that this patient client, you know, maybe he doesn't have to 01:18:53.880 |
put up, maybe there's somebody better for him. 01:18:55.240 |
There's someone else out there that you don't, that they don't have to deal with. 01:18:58.400 |
I think that one of the things that I notice in my own past and with others that I know 01:19:04.200 |
struggling with, with a dynamic with people, typically it's romantic relationships, but 01:19:09.780 |
it could be anything is you have to be willing to let go. 01:19:17.300 |
And I find that a lot of people, maybe it's this childhood thing. 01:19:20.140 |
And they feel like they have to like remain on great terms or they have to stay friends 01:19:27.320 |
And I, I so admire the people in life that are like, yeah, that didn't work done because 01:19:38.700 |
And I think that in our desire to make everything kind of okay in the end, we burn valuable life 01:19:49.560 |
And so some people might hear like no drama and think, well, you're going to lose a bunch 01:19:55.240 |
And I, I will, um, I, I certainly will, um, or they'll rise to the occasion or whatever 01:20:01.680 |
Um, but I have a full life of many people with whom I have zero drama and wonderful 01:20:11.540 |
But I'd rather, I'm, I feel so, so firm about this, um, given the peace that it's 01:20:18.880 |
And then I realized like, yeah, like I may never talk to that person again. 01:20:25.500 |
But at the first hint of drama, like I'm done. 01:20:28.240 |
And, and I think it's because, um, I forced so much suffering on myself for so long of trying 01:20:34.440 |
to resolve these things that clearly wouldn't work. 01:20:37.200 |
And, uh, I don't know, I feel immense freedom from it, but I think I hear this with other 01:20:42.420 |
people like, oh yeah, but you know, they're going to change or, you know, he's going to 01:20:49.480 |
I'm not a drinker, but there's a hard, I quit drinking. 01:20:51.860 |
Um, didn't have a problem with it, but I just was like, I'm done with alcohol. 01:20:56.420 |
Um, and they just cling to this like thing that it's got to like, they just won't let go. 01:21:07.040 |
Why, why do we hold on to the thing that doesn't work? 01:21:09.460 |
Even if we know we're not going to like stay with it. 01:21:15.520 |
So, um, I'm thinking about how, when you say no drama, um, you know, what does that actually 01:21:23.560 |
And it's really important because when you look at why people who are most satisfied with 01:21:29.260 |
their lives, um, you know, what is it about their lives? 01:21:31.980 |
They're surrounded by people that they feel good about. 01:21:37.920 |
So, you know, we talk about this concept of idiot compassion versus wise compassion. 01:21:44.400 |
I don't even know what it means and I love it already. 01:21:46.020 |
So idiot compassion is what, if you surround yourself with people who are only going to 01:21:52.640 |
When you say no drama, that's not necessarily a great thing. 01:21:56.420 |
So, like, for example, um, you know, let's say that, um, you know, someone says to our 01:22:01.800 |
friends, like, I don't understand why he broke up with me or I don't understand, you know, 01:22:07.080 |
And your friend's like, no, you go, girl, he's wrong. 01:22:12.940 |
And we, we tend to kind of feel like our job as a friend is to support the position of 01:22:20.520 |
Wise compassion is what you get in therapy where we say, you know, like what might be going 01:22:26.520 |
It's kind of like if a fight breaks out in every bar you're going to, maybe it's you. 01:22:29.920 |
We don't say that to our friends in idiot compassion. 01:22:36.020 |
So is it that you want no drama, meaning you want your friends to kind of back up everything 01:22:42.400 |
You're not going to hear what you need to hear. 01:22:44.500 |
The friends you want to surround yourself with are people who will tell you the truth in 01:22:50.260 |
a kind, respectful way and that you're willing to hear it. 01:22:53.980 |
So some people think that it would be drama if their friends kind of called them on their 01:23:01.760 |
So that's a healthy, communicative, open, honest relationship. 01:23:08.720 |
I think that my definition of drama is when challenging things are presented in a way that's 01:23:16.760 |
What I'm talking about is evacuative expression. 01:23:19.680 |
Like when things come, you know, I mean, and I'm sort of chuckling on the inside too about 01:23:25.260 |
I mean, I would say my group of friends is, they're amazing. 01:23:29.460 |
I'm blessed with incredible friends and friendships. 01:23:35.360 |
The, um, we're pretty hard on each other in terms of being very blunt. 01:23:40.860 |
Very, um, like that was dumb is maybe, maybe more male specific kind of language. 01:23:56.620 |
That that's a lot of the exchange in my friend group. 01:24:00.000 |
Um, I would say maybe it's just the culture I grew up in and academia, very, very little 01:24:07.180 |
Um, but I am also surrounded by people that are very self-critical. 01:24:11.740 |
So it's sort of inherent to the way they work in their work and their relationships and their 01:24:17.820 |
Like pretty much everyone's pretty get after it. 01:24:20.180 |
What I'm talking about is when people say no drama, what they mean is, um, don't bring 01:24:29.820 |
That maybe needs to be brought to my attention because I could be better in this relationship. 01:24:35.240 |
Um, you know, to me, I think what you're talking about is volatility, um, which is drama, right? 01:24:41.820 |
Like, can you express the thing you want to express in a way that feels, um, like an invitation 01:24:49.680 |
or like it comes from a place of curiosity as opposed to blame. 01:24:53.240 |
So often people will come at the person and say, you did this as opposed to, I was confused 01:25:02.480 |
Why, you know, why did you make that choice or why, what happened between us here? 01:25:07.980 |
So you're being curious about the other person's experience as opposed to blaming the other 01:25:13.400 |
person and assuming their intentions or why they did something or something about their 01:25:19.100 |
So drama tends to be from all the assumptions. 01:25:21.420 |
Like, I know that my truth is the right story. 01:25:29.380 |
And I think it's so interesting because people come to therapy with these faulty narratives. 01:25:33.420 |
Um, you know, we're all, we're all storytellers. 01:25:37.420 |
And we all believe that our story is the absolute accurate version of the story. 01:25:43.000 |
And it's, it's actually, it's so funny when you see couples and they experienced the same, 01:25:48.540 |
you know, they were part of the same experience and they have wildly different versions. 01:25:52.540 |
And then there's some part where the Venn diagram overlaps. 01:25:55.260 |
And then finally they can see, oh, that person's not a bad person. 01:25:59.400 |
They were coming at it because they, in their story, they believe this. 01:26:08.900 |
People characterize the other person's story as inaccurate, their own story as accurate. 01:26:13.860 |
And then there's lots of kind of, there's no space for curiosity or connection. 01:26:21.380 |
As you're saying this, I realized what I mean by drama because I brought, it's a very broad 01:26:26.800 |
Um, and I, I come from a background where my dad's from South America. 01:26:34.040 |
Like, so like emotive expression is not what I'm referring to, right? 01:26:37.380 |
Like I'm people being passionate about something or even angry about something or even having 01:26:44.360 |
I realized as you were saying it, what it is that gets me. 01:26:48.660 |
It's when, that I put under the category of drama, which for which I have zero tolerance 01:26:53.660 |
for, unless you can convince me otherwise is when people dynamite the mind on the way 01:27:06.320 |
And, um, you know, so they're not really interested in, it's this evacuative expression or projection, 01:27:11.460 |
as you said, that's what I'm defining as drama. 01:27:14.400 |
That to me is far and away different than saying, Hey, listen, like this sucked. 01:27:21.360 |
Um, Andrew, you screwed up like, okay, great. 01:27:29.020 |
But it's this, um, I'm rolling a grenade in the door and I'm out of here. 01:27:33.980 |
That to me is the one that, um, I'm like, I just, I'm too old for that shit. 01:27:39.040 |
The silent treatment is actually incredibly aggressive and hostile. 01:27:43.420 |
People think that, that the loud one is the problem in the relationship. 01:27:47.240 |
Sometimes the silent one is the one who's the problem. 01:27:51.640 |
You know, it's the person who smiles through everything and doesn't really say anything, 01:27:55.280 |
but they're being so passive aggressive or the person who then, as you said, detonates 01:28:01.080 |
And that's their punishment that they're punishing you by not talking to you for a day or two or 01:28:09.220 |
And the other way that people do that is you bring up something in a nice way to someone 01:28:14.760 |
and here's how they, they create drama and, and, but they're shutting something down. 01:28:19.480 |
They're shutting down any possibility of communication is every time you bring up something to them, 01:28:25.220 |
Now, people don't like it when I say this, they say, as a therapist, they should be able 01:28:29.860 |
to feel sad or hurt when someone brings up something and they should be able to cry. 01:28:33.400 |
And I'm saying, no, sometimes crying is a manipulation. 01:28:38.660 |
So I'll see a couple and one person will bring up something. 01:28:42.040 |
Let's say, you know, like when you do this, you know, or this hurts me, or I don't like 01:28:49.000 |
And the person cries like you're hurting my feelings. 01:28:53.020 |
This is, you know, as opposed to saying this person is trying to communicate with you, you're 01:28:59.540 |
But there's a manipulative way in which people will cry every time or many times. 01:29:06.500 |
And it shuts down any possibility of communication. 01:29:10.860 |
And so we have to say, you know, what are you doing here? 01:29:14.180 |
Every time you cry, then the other person feels like, well, I can't bring this up because I'm 01:29:19.020 |
And now we can never have communication because if I bring something up, I'm going to catch 01:29:26.140 |
If I bring it up, you're going to say, I'm hurting your feelings. 01:29:32.280 |
And I don't know, there's no way to move forward here. 01:29:38.960 |
We have to talk about the functionality of the crime. 01:29:42.500 |
You know, why is it so hard for you to hear something that your partner is saying? 01:29:50.160 |
Shame is something that we avoid at all costs, right? 01:29:54.080 |
Do you feel like this person is making a global statement when they're not, that they're saying 01:29:58.060 |
you're a bad person as opposed to what you did here was bad. 01:30:02.320 |
So there's a difference between who you are and what you did. 01:30:05.880 |
And often we paint with a big brush when we're trying to communicate with our partners, you 01:30:10.520 |
know, like you're bad as opposed to that thing that you did, that was not good. 01:30:14.900 |
That thing you did was bad, but you inherently are not a bad person. 01:30:20.920 |
And we tend to tell our partners in all kinds of ways that they're bad people when they do 01:30:28.100 |
We have to be really careful about separating what they did from who they are. 01:30:34.400 |
So often we do something and then we feel so much shame around what we did and we say, 01:30:39.720 |
As opposed to, I did something that doesn't align with who I want to be. 01:30:46.740 |
And that's good that you feel bad about it because if we didn't have guilt, right? 01:30:55.500 |
We just tend to sort of like retreat from shame. 01:31:01.980 |
Guilt is saying what I did did not align with the person that I am. 01:31:08.980 |
I did something that felt not aligned with that. 01:31:13.200 |
And so I need to be aware that it's good that I feel guilt. 01:31:15.820 |
If I didn't feel guilt, that would say something about my character. 01:31:19.020 |
But the fact that I do feel guilt means that I'm willing to look at myself and I'm willing 01:31:24.540 |
to do something different and I'm willing to make a change. 01:31:29.480 |
I wonder if the crying is pre-programmed in some people because it's what was able to 01:31:40.420 |
Like if they didn't do it, that they'd get hit. 01:31:43.080 |
Or if they didn't do it, it would like the bombardment would continue. 01:31:47.240 |
Everything we do is for self-preservation and we're just not aware of it. 01:31:57.060 |
And so even though a lot of what we do to avoid pain creates more pain, but that's not 01:32:03.320 |
So anything that, you know, when people, there's somebody that I write about in my book who comes 01:32:09.320 |
off as very unlikable at the beginning of the book and people say, why did you even take 01:32:18.300 |
And when they get to the end of the book, not to spoil everything, but he's probably the 01:32:23.760 |
And it's because I'm looking at that person's actions as they're coming from a place of 01:32:31.520 |
So he's an asshole to everybody because it doesn't let anybody in. 01:32:36.380 |
It doesn't let him have the possibility of being hurt again because he was terribly hurt. 01:32:41.400 |
And so, you know, we say hurt people hurt people. 01:32:45.860 |
They're protecting themselves from more pain because if they let themselves be vulnerable, 01:32:51.300 |
they're exposed to the possibility of pain and they don't want that. 01:32:55.040 |
Are there some people for whom therapy just ain't going to help? 01:33:06.140 |
I think a lot of people come to therapy and they say, I want something to change. 01:33:09.680 |
But what they want to change is something else or someone else. 01:33:16.460 |
Before people come to couples therapy with me, I ask them to each separately come up with 01:33:23.520 |
the one thing that they want to work on about themselves. 01:33:28.020 |
So it's not what do you want to change in your partner? 01:33:30.600 |
It's if you are going to be the best possible version of yourself in a relationship, what 01:33:37.100 |
is the one thing that you really want to work on in our couples work together? 01:33:40.340 |
Well, no, I want to work on things, but I really need the other person. 01:33:44.420 |
I won't even see them in the room until they each have a very clear sense of this is the thing 01:33:51.660 |
Now, that might change over time depending on what we uncover, but they need to come in 01:33:55.720 |
with a goal, like we all know that there's something about ourselves that we could do 01:34:05.020 |
And if the other person happens to change, great. 01:34:10.780 |
But you're not coming in because you think the other person is going to change. 01:34:16.640 |
And you're growing in the context of this relationship, but you are doing some personal growth in the 01:34:23.620 |
couples, I happen to think couples therapy moves us along faster individually than individual 01:34:29.480 |
Because in individual therapy, you're telling a story. 01:34:33.840 |
I have to, as a therapist, intuit what else might be going on out there. 01:34:37.540 |
In couples therapy, I see how this person reacts with other people. 01:34:42.740 |
Now, I can see that in the therapeutic relationship individually, like whatever, this is a microcosm 01:34:49.980 |
But I'm different from the people they interact with out there because of the nature of the 01:34:56.540 |
So there will be what we call transference, where they transfer some of their feelings about 01:35:01.380 |
other people into the relationship with the therapist. 01:35:04.340 |
And that gives me a really good idea of how they interact out there. 01:35:08.060 |
Could you give me an example of transference? 01:35:12.860 |
So let's say that I say something and it turns out that they felt criticized. 01:35:18.340 |
Well, it could be that I said something in a critical way. 01:35:24.520 |
It could be that they have kind of transferred feelings about a parent onto me if I happen to 01:35:32.640 |
be the age of their parent or similar to if there's enough of an age difference between 01:35:37.000 |
us and they heard something that was meant to be compassionate, but it was also true and 01:35:47.280 |
Sometimes you transfer, there's romantic transference. 01:35:49.760 |
People get, you know, romantically attached to their therapist and you have to be able to 01:35:56.580 |
Obviously, you know, you have very clear boundaries. 01:36:01.880 |
People think I'm not allowed to say that, you know, I have these feelings. 01:36:05.340 |
And then we deal with them and we see, you know, how we can talk through that. 01:36:09.200 |
And it's generally not that the person wants to get with you. 01:36:11.900 |
It's really more about like what it means to feel romantically loved or what it means to 01:36:20.300 |
be loved in general and that they put like a romantic veneer over that. 01:36:25.120 |
So, you know, love is so complicated and it's so multifaceted. 01:36:30.240 |
So there's that kind of transference that happens. 01:36:32.740 |
But I think with couples, when I say you need to be able to work on, you know, something that 01:36:38.140 |
would, if you were to be the best possible version of yourself in this relationship, what would 01:36:49.920 |
Of the other, I need to expect, in other words, a lot of people think that their partner needs 01:36:59.360 |
You need to intuit what I wanted to do for my birthday. 01:37:02.120 |
And if you didn't, then you don't really know me. 01:37:04.740 |
And these sound like kind of extreme, almost immature examples. 01:37:08.920 |
But these are the kinds of things that people get caught up in, you know, and I'm giving kind 01:37:14.700 |
But they can be much more nuanced and much deeper. 01:37:18.300 |
And so, you know, I think that people, yes, who cannot be helped, people who are not willing 01:37:25.940 |
I love that statement you made, which is if people are coming to therapy, they need to ask 01:37:32.640 |
about the change they want to make in themselves. 01:37:35.040 |
And what their role is and what is not going the way they want in their lives. 01:37:39.580 |
And this isn't about blaming them for the problem at all. 01:37:42.660 |
It's about saying there might be some truly difficult situations out there. 01:37:47.380 |
You might have a parent with mental health issues. 01:37:49.800 |
And, you know, what are you going to do about that? 01:37:52.360 |
You probably aren't going to change the fact that they have mental health issues. 01:38:07.620 |
You can, you know, there are different ways to make choices about that. 01:38:11.500 |
There are sort of like societal things that we can't change. 01:38:14.340 |
But like, what can you do so that you feel like you have agency in the world? 01:38:23.220 |
So where do we find that agency as opposed to going into this like helpless, I'm the victim 01:38:30.960 |
They say, what are you, what kind of therapist are you calling people victims? 01:38:34.840 |
I'm saying people have the mindset that they don't have agency and then they become victims. 01:38:40.340 |
But when you realize that you have agency, you realize, well, there are really difficult 01:38:50.760 |
Going back to this thing about texting, how many of the challenges that people present to 01:38:56.620 |
you in your office these days incorporates or starts with, yeah, so I got this text versus, 01:39:05.160 |
you know, somebody came to me or called me and we had a hard interaction or we had a conversation 01:39:12.800 |
I mean, how much of it is in the digital world nowadays? 01:39:16.660 |
So here's what's interesting about texting is so many times people will come in and they'll 01:39:23.240 |
And I'll say, can you show me the conversation? 01:39:30.120 |
Why wouldn't you want to hear the narrative from that person? 01:39:33.860 |
But I want to see what was actually said because they're like, oh, I don't really know. 01:39:41.400 |
And so, but I want to see what both parts of that were. 01:39:45.160 |
And then the person can see, oh, here's how I contributed to that. 01:39:50.460 |
Or here's a choice that I made in that moment. 01:39:52.520 |
Again, I prefer that these conversations that people have are face-to-face conversations when 01:39:58.160 |
they're kind of about something in the relationship. 01:40:02.060 |
You know, text is great for like your dailiness of, hey, look what I had for lunch. 01:40:10.360 |
But when you're having some kind of, you know, again, rupture or conflict between you, 01:40:22.860 |
So it's not just like what my client is saying to me. 01:40:25.520 |
It's like, this is how the conversation actually went down. 01:40:29.620 |
And it's really helpful for people to be able to look at that transcript. 01:40:35.400 |
At the same time, I feel like breakups are much harder than they used to be. 01:40:41.760 |
Because you can block someone on social media, but then the block itself becomes this thing. 01:40:50.040 |
You can put your phone away, but unless you block their number, they can, you know, send you things. 01:41:00.160 |
You can go back and read texts if you're an obsessive person. 01:41:04.520 |
There's just so many venues for, or avenues, excuse me, for people to access our psyche when we're trying to move on. 01:41:13.700 |
In the old days, kids, you know, you had a phone with an answering machine. 01:41:18.900 |
You looked at the photos, you put the photos in a box, or you burned them, and you put the box in a shelf. 01:41:26.140 |
And then when you got into a new relationship, you either hid the box or you destroyed the box, and you moved on. 01:41:39.920 |
I noticed that one tended to just remember more good stuff, because there wasn't other stuff coming in. 01:41:55.020 |
And, you know, because of the nature of electronic stuff, I just feel like it's like the past trying to, like, hold us back. 01:42:05.240 |
So, you know, it doesn't matter if the breakup was amicable, then you long for the person now and again, 01:42:09.620 |
or the breakup was rough, and then you, like, you relive all. 01:42:12.720 |
You know, there's so many variants on this that, I don't know. 01:42:18.000 |
It just feels like breaking up's already one of the hardest things. 01:42:21.340 |
People, I think, don't acknowledge just how hard breakups are. 01:42:25.140 |
And I think there's this hierarchy of pain that people have about certain things. 01:42:28.540 |
Like, well, you only dated for this amount of time. 01:42:32.160 |
How can it be that painful this amount of time after the breakup? 01:42:35.340 |
You know, that, like, there's this hierarchy. 01:42:37.480 |
But if it was a divorce, then, you know, people understand why a year later you're still dealing with it. 01:42:43.880 |
Or, you know, if you were only married for five years versus married for 20 years. 01:42:48.460 |
Like, there's some hierarchy of pain that we have around things. 01:42:51.880 |
Like, it was a miscarriage, but your child, you know, your eight-year-old didn't die. 01:42:56.980 |
I mean, that's just, people say that kind of thing? 01:42:59.660 |
They don't say it, but that's how they treat people. 01:43:01.580 |
It's like, you had a miscarriage, like, what they say is like, oh, it's okay, you'll get pregnant again. 01:43:06.380 |
If your child dies, they're not like, it's okay, you'll have another child, right? 01:43:10.520 |
But it feels to the person who had a miscarriage that they lost their child. 01:43:16.180 |
But listen to how we talk to people who have these experiences that we tend to think that some experiences are sort of higher on the hierarchy of pain than others are. 01:43:27.340 |
And so we think, like, a breakup is not as bad as, like, a breakup in a non-marriage or a short marriage is not as hard as a breakup with, you know, a long marriage or whatever the hierarchy is. 01:43:39.260 |
Or even someone who, you know, it's like, well, and this is the reason that people don't actually get help for things because they think, well, you know, it's just this. 01:43:49.600 |
Or I'm feeling kind of sad or I can't sleep or I'm having trouble in this relationship, but it's not that bad because I have a roof over my head and food on the table, so I don't need to go get help. 01:44:00.360 |
But let's say you fall and you clearly have, like, you know, broken your wrist. 01:44:05.700 |
You're not going to sit there and go, I don't need to do anything about that because they don't have stage four cancer. 01:44:10.520 |
You're going to be like, I'm going because I need to get my wrist repaired. 01:44:15.740 |
So we treat sort of physical health and mental health as two separate entities when, of course, the mind and the body are all intertwined. 01:44:24.240 |
And I think that with breakups, it's the same thing. 01:44:26.980 |
It's like people think, well, it's not that big of a deal after the first X amount of time. 01:44:33.180 |
And breakups can really mark you depending on how they went down. 01:44:37.880 |
Like, if it was really volatile, if it was one of these things where you got no sense of if you were cheated on, if you didn't understand why the breakup happened, like, it was very surprising to you. 01:44:56.540 |
It can really be a different kind of breakup than a breakup where a person, it might be very painful, but you understand sort of why the breakup is happening. 01:45:08.060 |
But there's something different about the quality of the breakup. 01:45:11.300 |
And so then people tell stories about the breakup because they didn't get the real story. 01:45:16.280 |
So the story now becomes, like, you don't really understand why the person is breaking up with you because they didn't communicate during the relationship that maybe they were unhappy. 01:45:26.460 |
So you're watching a story and you have this whole story in your mind of, look at them. 01:45:31.820 |
They're on this vacation or they're not even, like, with another person. 01:45:40.440 |
People are not posting on social media of, I'm so sad about my breakup, generally. 01:45:46.460 |
There's a whole, like, sort of subculture of people who do that. 01:45:52.680 |
But, I mean, in general, you're having to – you're sort of, like, you want to move forward. 01:45:56.600 |
And, by the way, about grief, it's not like moving on because we're sort of shaped by every experience that we have. 01:46:04.820 |
So people always say about grief, you need to move on. 01:46:13.380 |
It's very hard to move forward when you're watching the other person's life. 01:46:22.380 |
But why are you spending so much time watching someone else move forward? 01:46:25.960 |
Can we focus on how you might move forward, whatever that might look like? 01:46:30.580 |
But it's really hard when you have this, like, split screen of their life is happening and your life is happening. 01:46:39.120 |
Before we do that, I'd like to kind of double click into this breakup thing. 01:46:45.080 |
In my observation and experience, one of the hardest things about breakups is this idea that we want to somehow come to a common narrative. 01:46:59.100 |
And there seems to be a lot of desire to kind of understand where the other person's experience of what happened. 01:47:08.300 |
And a very – I don't think it's intentional, but I think people can be somewhat destructive in a breakup by changing the whole – this notion like it was all an illusion or something. 01:47:22.700 |
You know, where – you know, I mean, I guess I've had enough relationships and breakups to realize that, you know, there's love that continues. 01:47:30.080 |
There's things that you thought were love that weren't. 01:47:32.620 |
I mean, there's love that doesn't continue and there's all sorts of shapes and forms of this stuff. 01:47:38.600 |
But that, like, good, well-meaning people that take divergent paths, I've learned it doesn't mean anything else sometimes. 01:47:54.500 |
There isn't a need to rewrite the script like it wasn't what I thought. 01:47:57.820 |
It actually was what I thought and then it was something different or it just – circumstances changed or things changed. 01:48:06.480 |
I mean, I would argue I'm probably one of the least skilled people at breakups, although I've gotten, quote, unquote, better at it. 01:48:16.460 |
Like, I've never had a breakup that didn't really hurt. 01:48:24.220 |
And I think it's this idea of, like – and this is why I think it's an interesting, perhaps, segue to grief is that it's almost like as something ends, we look back and we evaluate the story and try and figure out was that real? 01:48:49.360 |
So, sometimes what the loss is about isn't so much about the other person. 01:48:54.320 |
It's about the loss of what it feels like to be in a primary relationship. 01:48:57.900 |
So, you're losing the primary relationship and then it happens to be with this specific person. 01:49:04.060 |
And so, there were good qualities about that specific person and qualities that maybe weren't right for you. 01:49:14.840 |
So, so much of what feels good about being in a primary relationship is, you know, you get to tell the person the minutiae of your day, the little things. 01:49:23.700 |
The shared history and the shared experiences that become the shorthand and the inside jokes and the routine of, you know, your flight landed. 01:49:34.980 |
You know, just the built-in infrastructure of being in a primary relationship and someone who knows, like, what kind of pizza you like. 01:49:42.100 |
And, you know, all those little things that come from, you know, going through daily life together and, you know, all the things about their families and, you know, all the things about the people in their lives and the people they're talking about, like this friend and this boss and whatever, their coworkers. 01:49:59.280 |
So, it's this whole world that's been co-created. 01:50:02.120 |
And then, all of a sudden, when that person isn't there anymore, that the dailiness of your life changes drastically. 01:50:16.380 |
You're not talking about what's for dinner with that person. 01:50:19.040 |
You're not saying – you're wondering how that thing with their sister worked out. 01:50:26.220 |
And you're losing the side kind of shared people too. 01:50:29.100 |
Like, you might have liked that person's family a lot. 01:50:31.240 |
Sometimes you stay in touch with the family but sometimes you don't. 01:50:34.260 |
So, like, your world changes so much in the day-to-day. 01:50:40.240 |
You're losing an entire world that you were living in. 01:50:43.720 |
And now your world looks so different and you have nothing to replace it with yet. 01:50:49.780 |
So, it doesn't mean you have to replace it with another partner. 01:50:52.440 |
You might replace it with things in your own life. 01:50:53.980 |
But you just – you know, breakups tend to happen. 01:50:57.320 |
Maybe you saw the breakup coming but you're not really imagining what it will be like after until you're in it. 01:51:05.220 |
And you can't really understand what it's like until you're in that breakup phase. 01:51:09.940 |
So, I think that makes it so hard because you're losing a lifestyle, right? 01:51:16.480 |
And, you know, it's like when you're in a relationship, you're in the present but you're also in the future. 01:51:22.640 |
So, you imagined that the present was going to be the future. 01:51:26.080 |
And now, mother of all plot twists, the future was just taken away along with the present. 01:51:31.400 |
So, it's not just you're losing the day-to-day. 01:51:34.380 |
You're losing what you imagined next year was going to be like and five years were going to be like. 01:51:41.540 |
It's so interesting because in my most recent book, it starts with my breakup and that's how I end up in therapy. 01:51:48.460 |
And my whole thing is like, you know, the idiot compassion that we were talking about with my friends. 01:51:53.140 |
He's a jerk and he's terrible and you dodged a bullet. 01:51:55.780 |
And my therapist, who I thought was going to validate this position, didn't for the better. 01:52:02.220 |
And so, by the end of the book, you know, people even write in now, they're like, oh, I can't believe I call him boyfriend in the book. 01:52:11.400 |
Like, you have to understand that I was seeing this through the lens of the breakup. 01:52:16.160 |
And then over time, I see that I was responsible for this too. 01:52:20.840 |
I chose not to see the things that I didn't want to see because I didn't want to live in that world of the breakup, right? 01:52:29.760 |
So I think it's wanting what you were saying earlier about wanting to have a shared narrative. 01:52:37.280 |
Like, we feel so wounded by the fact that the person, let's say that they broke up with us or even if you break up with them, that they don't see the relationship the way you saw it. 01:52:52.100 |
And you feel like, well, they're not seeing it in the right way. 01:52:56.040 |
They are seeing it in the right way from their perspective. 01:52:58.880 |
And I think that we have this way of wanting to heal the wound by their saying, oh, no, no, you were great in this relationship. 01:53:09.440 |
Or we were both great and it just didn't work out. 01:53:13.600 |
And we so want that and the reality is that your partner is going to see things about you that maybe you don't agree with or maybe they're true and that's why they hurt. 01:53:39.080 |
I've been able to do this since I was a kid and hear people's voices. 01:53:44.600 |
But, like, smells, I think, we come to expect them. 01:54:00.480 |
It's from the Gottmans who do this research on couples. 01:54:03.380 |
And they talk about the bank of goodwill, that you need five deposits into the bank of goodwill for every one withdrawal. 01:54:12.400 |
And so we tend to, when we're in a relationship and we don't like something about something that's happening in the relationship, we think about what's not working. 01:54:20.460 |
We're taking all these withdrawals from the bank of goodwill. 01:54:30.960 |
Do we focus on the things, like, how many deposits are we actually making so that when we do make a withdrawal, it doesn't empty the bank account? 01:54:39.960 |
And it's usually when a breakup happens that all of a sudden we think about all those things that we didn't deposit but now we miss, right, that we're sitting in our bank account and we don't have access to that account anymore. 01:54:53.640 |
But when the account was open, we didn't look at what we had in there. 01:54:59.760 |
And I think that the people who are – what I see with couples who are most successful are the people who do notice what's in the bank account even if they have to take a withdrawal every now and again. 01:55:09.660 |
I'm always struck by how people talk about their partners when their partners aren't around. 01:55:16.900 |
The other day, this kid came up to me in the gym kid. 01:55:19.500 |
He was probably in his 30s, but there I go again. 01:55:39.460 |
And then we got into some discussion about travel in South America or something. 01:55:44.940 |
And then at one point he said, oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. 01:55:48.880 |
And the way he said it, I was like, wow, that's beautiful. 01:55:57.740 |
And I said, that's amazing that you just referred to her as a flower. 01:56:00.960 |
He goes, yeah, she's like the flower in my life. 01:56:08.680 |
I also don't get into conversations like this very often. 01:56:11.820 |
But somehow he just shared that spontaneously. 01:56:18.640 |
She'll never know that he referred to her that way. 01:56:24.520 |
And there are certain people, like I heard Rogan one day talking about his wife on a podcast. 01:56:32.540 |
Like he just, the appreciation he has for her in the small details of how he refers to her. 01:56:42.400 |
And then I could give a bunch of negative examples about people. 01:56:45.840 |
Gosh, I don't want to put it on one or the other side of the male-female dynamic. 01:56:50.880 |
But like, but when people say like, oh yeah, like they're a pain in my ass. 01:56:54.060 |
Or like the, referring to people as their old lady or their old man. 01:56:58.500 |
Like that's, that's an interesting, but kind of in my mind, not the sweetest way. 01:57:06.700 |
Anyway, I'm casting a lot of shadows and light where perhaps I shouldn't. 01:57:12.800 |
And I thought, awesome for him and awesome for her. 01:57:16.180 |
That's why I often start a couple session with, how did you meet? 01:57:20.880 |
Because usually when people come to couples therapy, they think the first thing that's going to happen is you're going to say, so what's going on? 01:57:27.700 |
What's not, you know, what's, then they'll start with the problem. 01:57:31.240 |
And then they're like in that withdrawal from the bank account space. 01:57:37.520 |
And immediately, usually, there's like, oh, and they have this great story, right? 01:57:42.660 |
And they remember what they love about the other person. 01:57:47.000 |
And you can see them sort of remembering who the person is that they fell in love with. 01:57:52.340 |
Like, oh, I thought he was so cute or, you know, oh, was this really, we were friends for a year and I didn't know if he liked me. 01:58:00.560 |
And then I really admired this about him or her, right? 01:58:06.700 |
And I think about it like, and this is going to sound like a weird metaphor, but you think about, like, nonstick pans versus, like, you know, a regular pan that you have to put something in so that the stuff doesn't stick to it. 01:58:17.460 |
When I think about, like, there are people for whom the good stuff, they're like Teflon pans. 01:58:24.980 |
But the bad stuff about the other person sticks like a nonstick, like a pan that sticks, right? 01:58:31.060 |
So it's like you think about, like, what is sticking about your partner when you think about, like, what they're putting in the pan, right? 01:58:38.860 |
Like, are you in a Teflon pan for good things or are you in, you know, a different kind of pan for good things? 01:58:44.700 |
Because you have to think, like, what am I focusing on? 01:58:49.020 |
And so, you know, why are you focusing on the things that are upsetting you so much? 01:58:54.720 |
And, you know, there are certain things that you're never going to change about your partner. 01:58:58.740 |
Like, your partner – we don't get to order up our partners a la carte. 01:59:01.860 |
We don't get to say, like, I'll take these qualities of my partner, but I'll take this thing that I don't like about them on the side. 01:59:14.940 |
And so people think, well, I can change the thing that I don't like and I can, like, make that person a la carte. 01:59:22.880 |
So there are always going to be things that irritate you or that are suboptimal in a perfect world. 01:59:28.660 |
About your partner, are you going to focus on that or are you going to focus on the things that you really love about your partner? 01:59:36.760 |
There's a saying from 12-step, which is identify, don't compare, which is, like, because you'll hear people outside of 12-step talking about, for instance, you know, like, you know, well, he's this, this, and this, and ambitious, and this, and that, but he's, like, kind of emotionally unavailable. 01:59:58.080 |
And people will talk about male or female partners, right, or potential partners, like, or people that they're dating, as if you could kludge together the best of all people and get this, like, perfect tapestry of the person that's got all the features you want. 02:00:11.960 |
Because, yeah, some people are a little more easygoing, lighthearted, and sometimes, not always, less ambitious. 02:00:18.800 |
Those things, in my experience, tend to correlate, not always. 02:00:22.300 |
Some people are super hard driving, they get it done, and they have the capacity to be immense providers, but they have less time, and sometimes they're not as emotionally available. 02:00:33.900 |
But people get this idea that they're sort of, like, through the comparison, they can arrive at the perfect person, when, in fact, I think appreciation, not being Teflon about the positive stuff, comes from kind of shutting out the idea that there's an alternative. 02:00:49.220 |
But, of course, you don't want to end up in a situation where the person is, you know, not, truly not good for you, right? 02:00:59.640 |
But, yeah, with that caveat, I think that accepting that people are complicated and there is an occlusion together of people. 02:01:09.980 |
What often happens is there's a specific quality about their partner, maybe. 02:01:15.660 |
Sometimes it has nothing to do with your partner, by the way. 02:01:18.420 |
And I think this is so important to talk about when we talk about infidelity, that often it really has nothing to do with the partner, that somebody is expecting their partner, again, going back to vitality and aliveness, to provide that for them. 02:01:31.760 |
And if the partner doesn't provide that for them, but your partner shouldn't be providing that for you, they're additive. 02:01:36.600 |
They're not providing a lack or a deficit in you. 02:01:42.700 |
But other times they say, like, there's this quality about my partner that is really, you know, like, I don't like it. 02:01:49.480 |
Like, let's take, for example, I wish that my partner were more, let's say, ambitious. 02:01:55.420 |
So they go and they, like, cheat with someone who's more ambitious, but then the person isn't loving or isn't communicative or isn't, you know, whatever the other good qualities that the partner they have has. 02:02:06.980 |
So they think that by replacing this one trait that the other person is going to have all the other great traits that the existing partner already has. 02:02:15.400 |
And generally you're treating, like, one set of problems for another set of problems. 02:02:19.060 |
So it's interesting that people think, like, I can fix this problem because this person has that thing that I really want. 02:02:26.280 |
Now, if your partner doesn't have any of that, like, it's a degree, it's on a spectrum. 02:02:33.660 |
Or is your partner ambitious about different kinds of things? 02:02:36.780 |
Like, they want to be a really good parent and they're really, you know, invested in that. 02:02:41.200 |
Or they want to do something, like, philanthropic and they're really invested in that, but it doesn't pay a lot. 02:02:46.120 |
You know, so, like, what are they, like, what energizes them? 02:02:52.100 |
You know, there's different kinds of ambition. 02:02:54.380 |
I feel like placing one's attention on the good things as much as possible and really letting those fill us up as much as possible is really key. 02:03:07.140 |
I didn't say this, but I borrowed this, but, you know, that two of the most dangerous words in the English language are if only. 02:03:15.160 |
You know, this idea, like, if only this, you know, because for two reasons. 02:03:19.280 |
One is it's very unlikely that if only comes true, but the other one is it takes our attention away from seeing what's there. 02:03:28.060 |
So, I like to say it's the difference between the what if and the what is. 02:03:31.280 |
And people who focus too much on the what if, what if this, they lose sight of what is. 02:03:37.620 |
And usually there's so much good that they really don't want to give up in the what is. 02:03:44.760 |
So, if you're going to keep focusing on the what if, you blind yourself to the what is. 02:03:51.800 |
Yeah, I think this notion of attention and appreciation just seems so fundamental. 02:03:59.900 |
Well, it's kind of like, think of it, so I am sort of an amateur photographer, and I think about it like you can take a picture. 02:04:10.200 |
You can focus on one part of it, or you can just move the camera slightly, and then you're focused on something entirely different. 02:04:17.120 |
But it's the same thing that I'm taking a picture of, right? 02:04:19.740 |
So, I always say to people, like, can you – your focus is always on this. 02:04:23.760 |
Can you, like, move the camera slightly and focus – you know, find a different part to focus the camera on. 02:04:30.100 |
If you're always focusing on something that makes you unhappy, you're going to be unhappy. 02:04:34.320 |
So, why don't you just move the camera and focus on the other things? 02:04:38.640 |
People think they have no choice in the matter, right? 02:04:44.200 |
It's like, no, you get to choose what you put your attention on. 02:04:50.020 |
What I love about what's coming through here is that you emphasize the role of these unconscious processes. 02:04:56.440 |
We default to people that aren't healthy for us sometimes, not always. 02:05:00.120 |
And yet you also emphasize that we have a lot of agency. 02:05:05.180 |
These days it seems like there's a default toward looking outward. 02:05:11.300 |
You know, for all that's been said about meditation and reflection and journaling on this podcast and others, like, we all know these tools are available. 02:05:21.440 |
I mean, with meditation, you don't even need a pen and paper. 02:05:29.220 |
Do you ever give homework to your patients to just, like, think or journal? 02:05:38.600 |
You know, it's kind of like I feel like the work that we do in the room is about understanding and, you know, and understanding sort of, like, where the gap is between what we say we want and what we actually do. 02:05:54.840 |
So, usually there is – it's all about what is in that gap, what is getting in the way. 02:06:00.320 |
Because we're very clear, by the way, about what we want usually. 02:06:03.280 |
And then there's, like, some gap between our behavior that isn't moving in that direction. 02:06:08.840 |
In fact, moves us often – either keeps us stuck or moves us in the opposite direction. 02:06:13.580 |
So, it's kind of out in the world between sessions. 02:06:16.260 |
We're working on the behavior around what is getting in the way in that gap. 02:06:22.080 |
And then we're doing kind of the thinking and the feeling in the session. 02:06:25.640 |
I don't mean that people aren't thinking and feeling outside of session. 02:06:28.000 |
It means they're using their feelings and their thoughts differently. 02:06:31.940 |
They're taking different actions with the feelings and thoughts outside of the session. 02:06:36.240 |
Do you ever tell people whenever you think that, just do the opposite? 02:06:42.940 |
So, it's really funny because so many people say, like, your gut knows, right? 02:06:47.880 |
And for some people, because it's historical, right? 02:06:55.200 |
And it sounds really strange for a therapist to say to somebody, no, don't listen to your gut. 02:06:59.660 |
But sometimes you literally have to say to people, whatever your first instinct is there, do the opposite. 02:07:07.900 |
And the thing that feels comfortable, again, is the familiar. 02:07:11.100 |
And the familiar isn't necessarily the thing that is going to lead you to where you want to go. 02:07:16.100 |
So, it's not like I want people to second guess themselves or not trust themselves. 02:07:19.640 |
It's that sometimes you have to learn how to hear that very, very quiet voice inside you because your gut is the louder one, right? 02:07:28.820 |
And it's kind of the pre-programmed, the pattern, the automatic response. 02:07:33.140 |
Like, if you think when we talk about sort of, like, neurological pathways, there's this, like, freeway that's been built with this one response. 02:07:44.240 |
Like, this person did this and you're going to, like, travel down that freeway because that's been the well-paved road because you've done it a million times. 02:07:52.920 |
I want people to create kind of side roads and different roads and let's take a different path and let's kind of dig out a new, like, a new road, right? 02:08:02.480 |
That now, so your first instinct is still going to be, like, let's get on the freeway. 02:08:11.760 |
And that path will now become the new freeway because you're going to keep going down. 02:08:17.620 |
The freeway is going to not be trafficked on. 02:08:19.300 |
We're going to shut down that freeway eventually. 02:08:20.980 |
And you're going to have a new freeway that's your automatic path. 02:08:23.980 |
So right now you've got to do the opposite to build this new freeway. 02:08:29.280 |
But the point is that sometimes your gut is just taking you down a well-trodden path that is not the best path for you. 02:08:36.780 |
There's a great line in that movie High Fidelity based on the Nick Hornspeed novel, which I also highly recommend, where it's like, you know, people tell me that we should listen to our gut. 02:08:47.460 |
Well, after, whatever, 30 years, I've come to the conclusion that my gut has shit for brains. 02:08:53.580 |
You know, he's just realizing that his reflex on what to do with, you know, his relationship life is just completely off. 02:09:01.440 |
Some people will hear what we're talking about right now and will say, yeah, but my gut also tells me when I'm in danger. 02:09:11.140 |
We're obviously not talking about when you can sense danger. 02:09:14.940 |
So what feels dangerous sometimes, so your gut is trying to protect you. 02:09:18.720 |
So what feels dangerous is going into this new situation because it's uncomfortable to do something different. 02:09:26.640 |
So your gut is saying, oh, let's do the comfortable thing that we've always done, even if the comfortable thing makes you miserable. 02:09:32.360 |
Let's do the comfortable thing that we've always done because it feels very dangerous to try this new thing. 02:09:39.580 |
But sometimes doing the thing that feels dangerous is actually less dangerous. 02:09:47.420 |
So in other words, people say, a lot of times people say, I don't want to take a risk. 02:09:53.220 |
But sometimes the safest thing you can do is to take a risk. 02:09:57.180 |
Doing the safe thing is actually, you know, you say it's too risky. 02:10:02.920 |
The safest thing you can do is to take a risk because it's going to lead you closer to what you want to accomplish or the thing that you're trying to get toward. 02:10:15.000 |
I also, in my life, I've had the experience of I've taken big risks with my career multiple times, and it's always worked out. 02:10:23.220 |
A lot of my teen years and 20s and 30s were spent learning to overcome the adrenaline response. 02:10:34.920 |
And I learned to take progressively more and more risk and, you know, ended up having a air failure scuba diving, KJX diving with great white sharks. 02:10:48.360 |
I say this because it's like, what was I thinking? 02:10:52.820 |
You know, so I think learning to overcome the adrenaline response and be calm and adrenaline, I think, has its value. 02:10:58.900 |
I also took tremendous risk in my personal life getting involved with people I never should have gotten involved with. 02:11:06.260 |
So I can imagine that some people are so averse to danger that they don't put themselves into circumstances in which they could really come to thrive. 02:11:17.540 |
And some people are just wired to go into the fire to the fire, either with physical pursuits or in romantic relationships. 02:11:32.820 |
I mean, I have a friend, a dear friend who, you know, was in like an incredibly physically abusive relationship, number 12. 02:11:41.300 |
And she eventually came to the conclusion that her threat sensing threshold was just way too high. 02:11:49.180 |
Did some really good work to understand why that was and realized that her fear response didn't kick in until it was like a nine alarm fire. 02:11:57.620 |
And so, you know, she needed to listen to that, as you mentioned, that like super quiet whisper early on because anyone else who didn't have her history, which is sadly a very, very challenging history in her family, would have immediately been like, yeah, I'm out. 02:12:20.980 |
And when I was in medical school, I remember the people who wanted to work in the ER were like, like I want to do emergency medicine, were people often who grew up in environments where danger was a part of it. 02:12:36.840 |
And it doesn't really strike them as like their sense of danger, their barometer is different from maybe a different person's. 02:12:48.300 |
When you think about like, let's say you want to set your thermostat at like 72 degrees, right? 02:12:53.380 |
Some people, their thermostat is off because in their house, like they did the slightest thing and their parents treated it like it was a huge, horrible mistake and they're bad and it was an emergency, right? 02:13:05.540 |
So they don't know how to calibrate like what does 72 actually feel like or the opposite, like some big thing happened and their parents underreacted. 02:13:15.840 |
And so they don't really know kind of like what is, what does 72 feel like? 02:13:20.280 |
I don't really know what that like good temperature is like. 02:13:24.560 |
So I think that there's a lot of people who stay in situations that are like, it's like other people would say, whoa, it's like 100 degrees in here. 02:13:35.440 |
And this person's like, no, it's just feels like 72. 02:13:43.460 |
And I think when we talk about risk and danger, you have to learn how to calibrate your own thermostat. 02:13:53.860 |
We talk about the difference between productive anxiety and unproductive anxiety. 02:13:58.840 |
So unproductive anxiety is there's some kind of danger and I'm going to ruminate and ruminate and ruminate. 02:14:06.440 |
And somehow that's going to keep me safe because I'm thinking about it. 02:14:09.920 |
And then there's productive anxiety, which is, oh, it's good that I sense the danger because I'm going to do something about this. 02:14:17.320 |
Like, I have a plan for how to deal with this. 02:14:20.700 |
So it might be I'm in this relationship and it just doesn't feel right. 02:14:25.460 |
But and this person is is acting this way toward me. 02:14:28.360 |
And I know I shouldn't be treated this way, but I don't know. 02:14:35.340 |
Productive anxiety would be like something's wrong. 02:14:40.020 |
So my plan is I'm going to try to talk to my partner about this or we're going to go to therapy about this and see if it improves. 02:14:45.720 |
And if it doesn't, I'm going to leave to find a different relationship. 02:14:51.320 |
But the question is, is it productive or is it unproductive? 02:14:55.840 |
So people, when I say, like, trust your gut, somebody might say, well, my gut is that, like, when things are really unpleasant, you stick with it. 02:15:05.000 |
Because my parents stuck with my other parent when things were really unpleasant. 02:15:12.300 |
So I think that do the opposite in that case. 02:15:15.120 |
It's like, oh, you think you're supposed to stay in this case because your parents did. 02:15:19.220 |
See what happens if you do something different. 02:15:20.900 |
We hear that there's value to being able to be on one's own. 02:15:27.000 |
Like, you know, some people seem to always need to be in a relationship. 02:15:35.640 |
But do you think there's value to people really understanding themselves first? 02:15:41.600 |
I know some couples that got together in, like, their first year of college that are still together. 02:15:48.720 |
They have kids now in college, which is a trip. 02:15:54.940 |
And I know people that have had many relationships and then find somebody. 02:16:02.540 |
How important is this notion about knowing oneself, really? 02:16:07.820 |
So when you look at what are the factors that determine the success of a relationship or a marriage, emotional maturity is number one. 02:16:19.820 |
That being with someone incredibly rigid is very hard. 02:16:27.380 |
In the practical space, like toothpaste has to be on the right, not on the left kind of thing. 02:16:39.100 |
As opposed to people have different personalities. 02:16:42.740 |
And, yes, the rigidity around sort of like the household, of course, too. 02:16:48.020 |
But just a rigid personality, you know, like I can't leave it this time. 02:16:55.920 |
There's no flexibility around anything or even flexibility around plans. 02:16:59.560 |
Like when you get married, you don't know what five years, ten years down the line is going to be like. 02:17:04.480 |
Are you flexible with how you're moving in whatever direction? 02:17:07.820 |
The other person is moving in whatever direction. 02:17:09.940 |
Like if you need things to be static, that's very rigid. 02:17:17.460 |
There are things about their core personality that tend to be static. 02:17:22.360 |
And so you have to leave room for the evolution of their three entities. 02:17:26.640 |
There's you, there's the other person, and there's the relationship. 02:17:29.680 |
And all three of those entities are going to evolve over time. 02:17:33.660 |
And if you don't have flexibility and you insist that they stay exactly the same, that's going to be problematic. 02:17:39.180 |
Going back to whether somebody needs to spend time alone before they get into a relationship or how much you need to know yourself before you get into a relationship. 02:17:47.460 |
I think people have this misconception that they have to be fully formed and then before they can get into a relationship. 02:17:53.880 |
And the thing is that you grow in connection with others. 02:17:57.460 |
And so people, you're saying you're so surprised that these people met in college and, you know, they've been together all this time. 02:18:08.560 |
Because they, in a light way, because they got their first jobs in parallel. 02:18:13.820 |
They, sadly, their parents passed away in parallel. 02:18:17.880 |
They went through a number of life evolutions together. 02:18:24.660 |
You know, it reminds me of, I had a therapy client who was divorced, and she was talking about dating again, and she met someone great. 02:18:32.720 |
And she said, I love this person so much, and this person is actually a much better person for me, but there's a sadness that she said, he will never have met my parents because they had died. 02:18:43.920 |
He will not know, like, all these things about who I was when I was 25 or 35 or, you know, what it was like when I went through this particular thing in life. 02:18:57.280 |
Or, you know, again, like the, you know, wasn't there with the birth of our children. 02:19:05.140 |
So it's true that there's something very important about having a shared history. 02:19:14.840 |
But there is something to be said about people think, well, I have to wait until I'm at this point before I can seriously consider dating someone who might become my life partner. 02:19:25.840 |
And I think that you grow in connection with people. 02:19:29.500 |
Or people say, you know, like, I'm not ready to be in a relationship because I don't know enough about myself. 02:19:35.540 |
You're going to learn so much more about yourself when you are with someone because you're forced to. 02:19:42.040 |
It's like how I say that, you know, I was saying earlier that when I see couples, people grow individually so much faster because they're in relationship with someone and really having that mirror held up to them. 02:19:53.800 |
I mean, you can sit there and think, like, by yourself until, like, you know, until you turn blue in the face. 02:19:59.900 |
But the reality is no one's giving you feedback. 02:20:07.420 |
I mean, certainly most of my evolution has been in relation to other things and not just romantic relationships. 02:20:13.400 |
I mean, like jobs that didn't feel right that I eventually moved on to a different job. 02:20:18.080 |
Like, you just learn so much based also on what didn't work. 02:20:24.000 |
I definitely want to go back to grief and talk about loss, but I feel like there's a hatch that we opened earlier that I'd like to peer into for a bit, which is this male-female distinction dynamic that nowadays is very prominent, especially in, I would say, people like 40 and younger. 02:20:51.400 |
It's so different now in terms of the dynamics of what boys and men hear about boys and men generally, what girls and women hear about girls generally, and therefore how, like, we think about ourselves. 02:21:05.180 |
What do you think are some of the positive things that have evolved in this kind of landscape? 02:21:11.420 |
And then what do you think are some of the things that are creating problems for sake of romantic relationship but also just relationship to self? 02:21:19.640 |
I think romantically it's very hard for young people, like in their teens and early 20s, because they don't have kind of an infrastructure around romantic relationships. 02:21:35.020 |
There's not the typical kind of courting because it feels kind of old. 02:21:43.100 |
They do, but they don't really know how, or they do it on text, right? 02:21:48.860 |
As opposed to just, like, there's something really profound about having to call someone on the phone and ask them out on a date. 02:21:57.300 |
You grow so much as a person by doing that, and it kind of sets the stage for the relationship as well. 02:22:09.380 |
So it's easy to kind of avoid vulnerability because you can do so many things on text and, you know, pretend that it's not a vulnerable act. 02:22:19.020 |
And people, you know, don't necessarily even call it a date. 02:22:22.320 |
You know, it's like, hey, you want to hang out? 02:22:24.860 |
You know, which is just kind of the language around it. 02:22:29.180 |
So there's not sort of, like, the structure of we're going on a date. 02:22:35.080 |
Whereas in your era and my era, it was much more like you knew when you were being asked on a date. 02:22:41.480 |
And I think social media makes it really hard because, you know, any misstep, someone's going to post about it potentially. 02:22:49.900 |
Or they've got you on video or things that are really embarrassing or scary when you're first getting into a relationship with someone. 02:22:56.000 |
You know, that could become if you're with the wrong person who's emotionally immature. 02:23:01.340 |
And many young people, you know, they're learning and growing. 02:23:05.580 |
They do all kinds of things that humiliate the other person. 02:23:09.940 |
You know, like, here's a list of someone's red flags that I'm going to share with everybody. 02:23:22.740 |
You know, like, information that should remain private does not remain private. 02:23:27.640 |
I'm not talking about things that are bad that someone did that are, like, need to be reported. 02:23:31.420 |
I'm talking about, like, embarrassing things or someone was, you know, socially unskilled. 02:23:43.520 |
Like, or, you know, this is what he did on the date that was, you know, 02:23:48.820 |
embarrassing, you know, he did this weird impression or, you know, whatever it is, but also just, 02:23:55.280 |
like, sexual encounters or, you know, like, nothing feels totally private. 02:24:01.500 |
Like, you just, the level of trust that you have to have in your partner now that was just 02:24:07.340 |
Like, sure, people might have said something to their best friend, but they also had better 02:24:13.800 |
Like, you kind of knew in our society what was private and what was not. 02:24:18.160 |
And because people grow up on social media, they don't really have experience with this 02:24:22.880 |
sort of, there's a private sphere and there's a public sphere. 02:24:27.540 |
And they don't really learn, like, what is private and what is not. 02:24:31.240 |
And I think it's really nerve wracking for people. 02:24:33.600 |
So people don't take, we were talking about risk. 02:24:37.560 |
They don't, they aren't really vulnerable because they're afraid that, you know, they will be 02:24:44.680 |
So what do you think the need is to, um, to share that with the world? 02:24:48.880 |
Is it because then they don't have to acknowledge that it might've been at least in part them? 02:24:54.620 |
Like, like if you paint red flags on somebody, then it can't, then you're, the person painting 02:25:01.380 |
I think they just feel hurt and they want to feel, and so they feel like a dip in their self 02:25:09.460 |
And of course, if they make this list, their friends are going to say, yeah, you dodged a 02:25:19.400 |
Um, and then they feel better about it, but you don't grow from that. 02:25:23.620 |
So the thing is that if you can sit with that really hurts and this isn't in like, this person 02:25:31.000 |
is not the arbiter of my self worth, whoever broke up with me. 02:25:34.400 |
And for whatever reason, you know, just because someone doesn't value you doesn't mean you don't 02:25:42.000 |
And you think that's a really important lesson for people to learn. 02:25:44.760 |
So, you know, if I took like a, uh, uh, uh, some gold, right? 02:25:49.200 |
Like a brick of gold and, um, you know, and someone said like, I don't like that. 02:25:58.200 |
It doesn't mean the gold inherently lost value. 02:26:00.580 |
It means that for that person, that block of gold didn't have value, but the gold has 02:26:07.700 |
And I think that we tend to kind of consider somebody else's opinion of us to be the arbiter 02:26:15.120 |
And it's not like your worth is stable and people, some people will value it. 02:26:20.140 |
Some people won't find the people who value it because those are the people that you want 02:26:25.720 |
But it doesn't mean that you have less value because somebody doesn't value it or you have 02:26:32.020 |
You have the same amount of value either way, but I think young people are not, you know, 02:26:40.360 |
And especially when you're young and you don't have experience, but my concern is that they're 02:26:44.580 |
not getting the experience of, um, of kind of sitting with it. 02:26:49.620 |
And yes, you want, you want to, you know, have your friends support you and all of that. 02:26:53.540 |
But I think once you start posting about it, or once you start kind of vilifying the other 02:27:03.400 |
In your adult clients, um, how much of the struggle that you hear about in terms of romantic 02:27:11.480 |
relationships relates to, again, uh, online aspects like, uh, apps and things like that. 02:27:18.900 |
Do you think they facilitated things or, or made them, um, relationships more challenging? 02:27:24.080 |
Well, I think what the apps do is there's a phenomenon that Barry Schwartz talks about in 02:27:29.980 |
And it's the idea that the more choice we have, the less happy we are. 02:27:34.900 |
So you need some choice, but it's kind of like, think of like a fishbowl, an aquarium, and an 02:27:49.780 |
It's a certain amount of choice, but it's manageable. 02:27:54.220 |
So they did these experiments where like, you'd be able to test out, like, we have this 02:28:00.160 |
new jam and, um, we have, uh, 10 different flavors and which one do you like best and which 02:28:16.560 |
Um, so there are people who are what we call satisficers and people who are maximizers. 02:28:21.380 |
So satisficers, well, let me tell you about maximizers first. 02:28:25.160 |
Maximizers are people, let's say you want to buy a sweater. 02:28:28.100 |
You go into the store, you find a sweater that you like. 02:28:38.600 |
The maximizer says, but maybe I can find something better. 02:28:43.080 |
So I'm going to take that sweater and I'm going to put it on the bottom of the pile 02:28:47.180 |
I'm going to go to the store next door and I'm going to see if they have something better. 02:28:52.660 |
Maybe it's slightly higher end material, whatever it is. 02:28:56.440 |
Um, but they keep going to stores and they keep doing this and then they think, oh, well, 02:29:01.940 |
I found the greatest sweater ever and I'm going to get that one. 02:29:06.120 |
They are less satisfied with that purchase than the person who, the satisficer, who would 02:29:13.000 |
have bought that first sweater in that first store and would have been super happy with 02:29:18.800 |
Because all of the, the, the energy, the emotional and cognitive energy that went into maximizing 02:29:28.340 |
like what percent benefit, not much compared to the amount of energy that they spent trying 02:29:34.960 |
They're never satisfied because even when they get that great product, something better is 02:29:40.180 |
There's going to be a new color that comes out like two weeks later that was in none of 02:29:44.620 |
So you're always kind of looking over, if you're a maximizer, you're always kind of 02:29:48.180 |
looking over your shoulder for like, what if something better is out there in dating? 02:29:53.800 |
You go out with someone, you have a good time. 02:29:56.920 |
You think, well, no butterflies, you know, no sparks, pretty good time, but I don't know. 02:30:05.940 |
You go back on the apps, look at all the people there. 02:30:08.240 |
Maybe they're better on this dimension or that dimension. 02:30:10.440 |
And so what it does is it turns everyone into maximizers because there's an illusion of 02:30:16.940 |
Like not everybody you see is going to be better. 02:30:19.440 |
And again, we don't get the a la carte option with people. 02:30:21.840 |
So there'll be different dimensions in which people are more aligned with what you're looking 02:30:31.760 |
Why don't we look for, and by the way, the satisficers are not settling. 02:30:35.140 |
This isn't about like, eh, I'll just settle for something. 02:30:44.260 |
Will there be, if you pick a partner, will there be someone more attractive? 02:30:53.080 |
And by the way, if we treat dating like shopping, we forget that in shopping, we're the choosers, 02:31:05.600 |
So an exercise that I like to do with clients is I want you to write down all the reasons 02:31:12.080 |
So instead of making a list of all the qualities you want in a partner, like the partner has 02:31:16.140 |
to be this, they have to be that, they have to, you know, have these interests, they have 02:31:20.060 |
to have this amount of ambition, they have to look a certain way, they have to have these 02:31:26.720 |
I want you to write down everything that would make it difficult. 02:31:33.080 |
And some people, it's kind of like in a job interview when they say, what are your weaknesses? 02:31:36.420 |
And we tend to say things that sound positive. 02:31:38.560 |
You know, like my weakness is that I work too hard, that I'm too dedicated, that I can't, 02:31:46.340 |
So you have to be scrupulously honest with yourself. 02:31:53.040 |
And if you're really honest with yourself, suddenly you're less of a maximizer, right? 02:31:59.160 |
Because suddenly you're like, oh, someone is thinking about the things that, you know, they're 02:32:09.800 |
But there are things that, you know, maybe they could maximize if they really wanted to, 02:32:16.080 |
but then they're going to have to give up some other qualities that I have that the 02:32:20.520 |
So I think it's really important not to think about dating as shopping. 02:32:23.840 |
And I think that people who grew up on apps tend to treat dating like shopping and they 02:32:29.100 |
don't sit there and make the list of, oh, I can be this way. 02:32:33.020 |
And that makes it hard, you know, for someone to be with me. 02:32:37.540 |
Oh, and by the way, I tell them that for all the traits you're looking for, however, whatever 02:32:42.340 |
that number is, because they tend to have a lot, right? 02:32:44.720 |
It's not just like, I need these three things. 02:32:49.240 |
So I said, for every quality that you're looking for, whatever number that is, if it's 20, you 02:32:55.900 |
need to name 20 things that make it hard to be with you. 02:32:58.920 |
So it can't be like, there are two things that make it hard to be with you, but you have a 02:33:04.260 |
Do you think that after people make that list that they might take a look at that list and 02:33:09.360 |
make some effort to like reduce or eliminate some things from that list? 02:33:16.940 |
Like if somebody is super rigid about punctuality, anyone that knows me clearly, that's not me. 02:33:23.160 |
Like I know some people that are so rigid about that. 02:33:27.160 |
Let's say someone identifies that as one of the things that can be really difficult. 02:33:30.660 |
Like they get really upset if somebody is five minutes late. 02:33:36.940 |
As an academic, everything starts 10 minutes late. 02:33:41.120 |
But should they try to resolve that or reduce that feature? 02:33:47.140 |
Or should they look at the list and say, you know what? 02:33:51.880 |
I mean, this thing, well, I should probably change that. 02:33:58.740 |
So when you're first putting down, right, the cement, it's wet and it's malleable. 02:34:04.160 |
When it dries, it's very hard to then now you have to like dig it up. 02:34:09.480 |
So let's say that punctuality is really important for someone. 02:34:12.560 |
And they think, well, I don't want to rock the boat. 02:34:17.040 |
So yeah, this person comes late all the time, but I'm going to say nothing about it. 02:34:20.060 |
And I'm going to be cool with that, even though I'm not. 02:34:22.360 |
And I'm sitting there seething every time they come late. 02:34:26.420 |
And it's kind of like in the first three months of a relationship, I think it was Chris Rock who said this, in the first three months of a relationship, you're not you, you're the ambassador of you. 02:34:33.540 |
So sometimes people will, you know, who really are not punctual will be punctual and then they'll change. 02:34:41.740 |
I'm talking about someone who, you know, someone has, they're just not a punctual person like you're saying you are. 02:34:47.240 |
So if you're dating someone and that person is telling themselves like, I'm not going to bring it up. 02:34:57.980 |
So because if you don't, what happens is it's like six months down the line. 02:35:01.340 |
The person is like, I can't believe you're late. 02:35:09.100 |
It's like the person's like, I'm, this is the first I'm hearing about this. 02:35:12.720 |
Like the person has had a, no opportunity to change it if they want to, but B, no opportunity to explain. 02:35:18.820 |
So it might be that as happened with one of my therapy clients, the person was always late, but it was because he was trying to please her because she wanted to have dinner. 02:35:29.560 |
He knew that she liked to eat on the earlier side. 02:35:33.980 |
So he was trying to kind of like get his work done and get there. 02:35:37.900 |
And he was always late because he was trying to like be there when she wanted to have dinner. 02:35:41.720 |
So he said like, I'm late because I do prioritize you. 02:35:47.200 |
I'm actually leaving work early to be with you, but I should have just said I can't be here at this time. 02:35:54.800 |
And I was worried you would get mad because it would be too late for you. 02:35:58.460 |
So you see the assumption that she made was you don't care about me. 02:36:04.700 |
And he's saying, no, I actually was leaving work to be with you and I still couldn't get there on time. 02:36:10.000 |
So we need to figure out how to work this out. 02:36:13.640 |
Like, can we have dinner later because I'm just going to be late if we do it earlier. 02:36:19.020 |
So that's an example of if you just bring it up early, you don't build up all these stories about the other person. 02:36:29.140 |
Whatever the story is that you're making about that person. 02:36:31.840 |
And you have a chance to see is the person willing to do something about it? 02:36:37.460 |
Or if they're not, are you willing to be flexible and say, you know what, this person, they just run late. 02:36:45.200 |
And I'm going to adjust to the fact that this is one thing that in a perfect world I would like them to be more punctual. 02:36:51.800 |
But there's so many great things that this is one thing that I'm going to adjust to. 02:36:56.000 |
Weaving this with what we were talking about earlier about gut sense and the validity or lack of validity of gut sense, I certainly have had the experience and I know many other people have that after a relationship ends or when it's ending, they think back and they go, you know, there was that thing at the beginning and I knew it then, but I pushed it aside. 02:37:19.600 |
Like, is that just a story we tell ourselves? 02:37:23.640 |
I think that the most important question to ask yourself after you go on a first date or a second date or a third date is how do I feel when I'm with this person? 02:37:34.460 |
Because all the other stuff is just kind of like a cognitive exercise, right? 02:37:40.120 |
Like, so one of my clients, she was said to herself, like, I don't want to date any – she was in her early 30s. 02:37:48.060 |
And she said, I don't – I want to have kids with a partner. 02:37:54.880 |
I'll date someone who's divorced, but I won't date someone who has kids. 02:38:01.120 |
It didn't have the kid question in that particular app that she was using. 02:38:10.740 |
She's having such a good time and it comes up that he has a kid. 02:38:15.720 |
And she was having such a good time that she really debated, like, should I go out with him again? 02:38:27.680 |
If she had known on that dating app that he had, you know, it had asked if he had kids and he had put that, she would never have met him. 02:38:37.540 |
I mean, they've been married now for, like, 15 years. 02:38:44.180 |
So I think that when we make that list that you said, like, do you – should you take things off the list? 02:38:49.640 |
I think that you need to have flexibility about things that may not matter, but you have to be very inflexible about the things that do matter. 02:39:06.060 |
So those are things that don't be flexible on that. 02:39:10.520 |
So we're talking about two different lists here. 02:39:12.600 |
One is a list of features about the other person is what we hear as, like, the list. 02:39:17.740 |
The number of times that friends are like, you have to make a list. 02:39:22.360 |
But I like this other list that you described, which is all the things about ourselves that would make us difficult to be with. 02:39:28.200 |
Which list or both do we need to have rigidity versus flexibility on? 02:39:33.200 |
I'm saying that when we think of that list – and by the way, a lot of people don't sit there and write a list, but they have it in their head. 02:39:40.020 |
You know, there's this process of I know what I'm looking for or whatever. 02:39:42.960 |
Some people say, like, I know it when I see it, but there's really a list in there because you know what you're looking for and it matches this list in your head. 02:39:50.020 |
So on that list, I'm saying you need to put more things like character qualities. 02:39:59.200 |
Do we have the same kind of vision of the kind of life that we want to lead? 02:40:04.880 |
You know, where are we aligned on those important things? 02:40:07.600 |
Because those things are – those are sort of hard to bridge, those gaps. 02:40:11.420 |
You know, like they're just going to keep coming up and be very difficult to deal with. 02:40:17.160 |
Things like do we have to have all the same interests? 02:40:21.740 |
You know, do we – you know, does the person have kids or not? 02:40:25.680 |
Well, you may – that may not be the ideal choice, but look what happened to this other person that, you know, like you don't know. 02:40:32.100 |
I think that question that I'm going back to of how does this person make me feel if the character qualities are there? 02:40:38.480 |
Because sometimes people who don't have the character qualities that you want are very charming and they can make you feel great. 02:40:43.600 |
But if they have the character qualities, do I feel calm around this person? 02:40:51.100 |
I like this idea somebody had mentioned that I love this metaphor of being able to bring your rough drafts to the other person, 02:40:58.840 |
meaning that you don't have to be on all the time with this person, 02:41:02.360 |
that you can bring sort of the rough draft of yourself, of this idea, of, you know, your kind of imperfect draft. 02:41:20.600 |
Like you can be – what it means is you can be yourself. 02:41:22.800 |
And yourself doesn't mean I can be – I can act in any way I want. 02:41:29.340 |
But it's kind of like I am working this through. 02:41:36.760 |
And can you be comfortable enough around each other to hold yourself accountable but still feel loved by the other person? 02:41:45.640 |
I love, love, love, love the criteria, for lack of a better word, of, you know, how do I feel when I'm around this person? 02:41:54.320 |
Peace being an anchor point or a place to look for. 02:42:01.020 |
And when I say how, I mean, do you feel calm? 02:42:10.660 |
And so calmness is different from sort of the activation. 02:42:15.280 |
contentment is different from, like, out of your mind happy. 02:42:18.500 |
Of course, in the beginning and hopefully throughout the relationship, there will be times when you feel this, like, incredible energy around happiness and joy and being around the other person. 02:42:29.720 |
But most of the time what you're going to feel around your partner is a sense of safety, a safe place to land, contentment. 02:42:38.840 |
I enjoy sitting with them even through our silences. 02:42:42.240 |
I enjoy, like, sitting on the couch and watching a show with them. 02:42:45.880 |
I enjoy basically doing anything with them just because I like their presence. 02:42:56.720 |
Does it feel like you just are happier with their presence than you would be without their presence? 02:43:02.960 |
And sometimes people feel like, oh, we have such a strong relationship. 02:43:07.340 |
But what you're drawn to is when you're with each other, the presence is volatile. 02:43:11.140 |
It's either, like, the high highs and the low lows. 02:43:14.180 |
And that's not, you know, I'm talking about that sense of contentment just being in the other person's presence, the dailiness of it. 02:43:24.580 |
There's so much made of these love languages, like their acts of service. 02:43:30.120 |
And I like, you know, gifts, you know, all that kind of stuff. 02:43:33.640 |
You know, I've heard it said, you know, what's your love language? 02:43:38.700 |
And someone, you know, they would say, all of them. 02:43:49.160 |
You know, who doesn't like all of those things. 02:43:52.520 |
But I realize that some people place more value on certain gestures and expressions. 02:44:00.220 |
What I love about what you're saying, however, is that it's more of like a – now we're sounding woo. 02:44:08.340 |
But it's more of like an energetic match, this feeling of safety, you know, that the word peace to me just like holds so much value these days. 02:44:17.140 |
I feel like the two things that I've come to really value more and more are peace and self-respect. 02:44:22.580 |
Because it's hard to have peace without self-respect. 02:44:27.500 |
Certainly hard to have self-respect without peace. 02:44:30.780 |
Now, sometimes lack of peace can be from external things. 02:44:33.460 |
But then we have to ask ourselves, like, do we have any control over these external things? 02:44:36.820 |
Yeah, I'm curious what your reflections are on like energy – like an energy match. 02:44:42.520 |
So instead of love languages, I look at it as understanding each other's operating instructions. 02:44:50.320 |
Like when you get it by a car or a piece of technology, right, it comes with operating instructions. 02:45:06.220 |
So we don't know that about the other person. 02:45:11.140 |
You know, if this person is coming to me to talk about this, here's what I would want in that situation. 02:45:24.440 |
So you have to learn the other person's operating instructions. 02:45:28.000 |
So we talk about this idea of love languages. 02:45:33.220 |
Operating instructions is something so much deeper and more intimate. 02:45:37.520 |
Which is I understand that being late means this to you. 02:45:45.540 |
I understand that it helps you when you're anxious if my voice gets quieter. 02:45:51.760 |
Instead of, you know, I understand that you need a hug in this moment. 02:45:57.960 |
I understand that when we're going on a trip, you like to pack this way and I like to pack this way. 02:46:05.840 |
But – or, you know, just like I understand these things about you. 02:46:11.680 |
And so if we understand them, we know how the other person operates and we're going to operate ourselves with an eye toward that. 02:46:19.080 |
And there's something so loving about understanding somebody's operating instructions and honoring them. 02:46:25.760 |
And we don't try to figure out the other person. 02:46:28.980 |
We try to think, like, why are they acting that way? 02:46:37.980 |
And then now you know that in those situations, here's how they can go more smoothly. 02:46:42.360 |
I rarely ask guests on this podcast to editorialize about other guests. 02:46:54.420 |
And he wrote the book, I think it was like five types of people that will ruin your life. 02:46:57.760 |
And one of the cardinal features of a person that he claimed will ruin your life is somebody, one of the early warning signs, let's not say cardinal features, but is somebody who has a story about their past failures that's always about how they were wronged by somebody else. 02:47:22.680 |
People who are constantly talking about how they were a victim of somebody else. 02:47:31.120 |
So a help rejecting complainer is a person who is always telling you, you know, this went wrong and it was somebody else's fault. 02:47:38.860 |
And they're seemingly coming to you for advice or guidance. 02:47:44.420 |
And no matter what you say, like, how about this? 02:47:50.340 |
No, that won't work because no, I've tried that. 02:47:55.600 |
No, because people are like this and that won't help. 02:48:00.380 |
It serves them in some way to be to complain and be the victim and be wronged. 02:48:06.180 |
And so it's almost like, you know, that's that makes them feel better. 02:48:14.840 |
They don't want to look at their role in things. 02:48:17.020 |
So beware of help rejecting complainers because they're always going to come to you and you're going to at first feel bad for them. 02:48:24.120 |
You're going to be like, wow, they've really had a hard time. 02:48:26.300 |
You know, I wonder if I could help them this way. 02:48:28.060 |
And then you start to realize they don't want help. 02:48:31.980 |
They will reject any help that comes their way because if they get help, they can't complain anymore. 02:48:38.720 |
I'm guessing you see this sometimes in therapy. 02:48:43.260 |
We've been making a fair number of assumptions about relationship structure. 02:48:48.400 |
There are so many different permutations these days that we don't have to explore them all. 02:48:51.680 |
But do you think that some people are just not well suited for romantic relationships? 02:49:00.340 |
I've known a few people in my lifetime, a former advisor who he passed away, as I mentioned earlier, but who had tried romantic relationships and decided they weren't for him. 02:49:14.520 |
Most everyone I know in my life is either partnered or, yeah, pretty much. 02:49:24.080 |
But are there people for whom, like, they just opt out of the game for reasons that are healthy as opposed to fear of rejection or otherwise? 02:49:35.480 |
I think that we are wired to want to love and be loved, whatever that means. 02:49:45.180 |
I think that people don't know how to love and be loved if they haven't seen it. 02:49:52.320 |
So generally you learn that because you've had it modeled for you. 02:49:56.380 |
Or if you haven't had it modeled for you, you, by trial and error, start to learn these things. 02:50:01.620 |
Maybe you go to therapy and you learn more about it. 02:50:04.740 |
But I think no matter what people come to therapy for, no matter what we call the presenting problem, you know, they're coming because whatever they want to say it is. 02:50:12.700 |
Deep down, something got kind of ruptured in the love or being loved area of their life. 02:50:22.440 |
And really that's the core of it and we have to solve that problem so that the problem they came in for, you know, it's kind of like you're dealing with content, which is like here's the problem, and process, which is what's going on underneath. 02:50:36.480 |
And if we can solve the process, then you solve content in multiple areas of your life. 02:50:43.640 |
It's not just this one problem that you came in with, but generally if you learn at the core what the issue is that gets in the kind of love or be loved area, you learn how to navigate through the world differently in your professional life, in your romantic life, in your platonic friendship life, in your family life. 02:51:00.920 |
So it's not just therapy isn't just about solving like that one discrete problem. 02:51:06.120 |
Sometimes it is, but many times it's about if we can get to the deeper process issue, then you will solve so many different problems simultaneously. 02:51:15.940 |
Throughout today's conversation, I feel like what seems to be in contrast is our stories about ourselves and other people and life versus just really being present. 02:51:32.220 |
This image of the Teflon pan is really kind of looping in my head because this idea that, you know, positive thing happens, it slips right off. 02:51:43.680 |
It's like we create a story about the negative thing and that the story about the positive thing was a very brief story. 02:51:50.780 |
It was like one of those three-sentence poems or something, and then it's gone. 02:51:55.580 |
Versus presence, like the more presence we can bring to something, the more positive, meaningful experience we can extract from it. 02:52:04.860 |
I learned this in science, actually, because I had an absolutely spectacular neuroanatomy professor when I was an undergraduate. 02:52:12.780 |
And he said, when you look down the microscope, if you're looking for something, you'll find it, but you're going to miss all this context of like the inputs to that structure. 02:52:22.200 |
And you lose the pattern recognition that's going to serve you going forward. 02:52:26.560 |
So I learned I had this – I had so much time back then. 02:52:29.500 |
I would just sit at night as a graduate student after I left, you know, my undergrad and went on to a lab. 02:52:36.220 |
And you learn about it in conscious and unconscious ways. 02:52:42.480 |
And then later when you're doing an experiment, you see things like, oh, you know, there's a deficit here. 02:52:49.120 |
And you learn that through presence you're like experiencing things so much differently than if you go looking for something. 02:52:59.020 |
In science, if you go looking for something, it's actually bad science. 02:53:02.560 |
And I've tried to transport that onto relationship in some ways, like in relation to things and people and dogs and all the things in life if you're really present. 02:53:13.220 |
Like the story is writing itself, but you're not scripting it out. 02:53:19.440 |
Rick Rubens talked a little bit about this in his book, The Creative Act. 02:53:22.160 |
Like we need to be on the front end of the vehicle experiencing space and time as it's happening as opposed to sitting next to it or in it and kind of creating a narrative about what's happening around us. 02:53:33.740 |
So most of us, all of us, myself included, you, all of us, we're unreliable narrators. 02:53:39.840 |
Because we're only telling the story through our own lens. 02:53:44.400 |
And so it's really important for people to kind of be expansive about what the story might be about themselves. 02:53:51.860 |
Like someone might have a story, I'm unlovable or I can't trust anyone or nothing will ever work out for me. 02:53:57.980 |
That's their story that they're carrying around from childhood or from, you know, some experience that they had in life. 02:54:04.940 |
And they don't realize that they're carrying that story around. 02:54:07.840 |
So everything that they experience is viewed through that lens. 02:54:11.960 |
And so, of course, they're not finding, you know, they're not finding people they trust because their whole worldview is I can't trust anyone, even though the person might be trustworthy. 02:54:23.580 |
So, of course, they can't take in the love that they're getting because, again, what are they paying attention to? 02:54:34.460 |
I created this workbook that's like a step-by-step guide. 02:54:37.880 |
I'm not sort of doing this to plug the workbook. 02:54:44.280 |
And my background is that, you know, I come from a writing background. 02:54:47.940 |
So I feel like I'm almost like an editor in the therapy room when people come in and they bring this story. 02:54:54.720 |
And my job is to help them edit the story so that this faulty narrative that was never true or someone, you know, whoever told them that story, 02:55:04.940 |
whether they explicitly said you're not lovable or showed them through their actions that they then felt not lovable, 02:55:13.940 |
So that narrator was unreliable, gave you this story that now you take as gospel and you move through life with that story. 02:55:24.740 |
And can we look for examples of counterexamples of when that story is not true? 02:55:30.020 |
Because generally there are stories of you being lovable. 02:55:33.220 |
There are stories of people being trustworthy. 02:55:35.280 |
There are stories of things working out for you. 02:55:37.860 |
So we have to really rewrite those narratives and say, you know, what is true? 02:55:42.620 |
And what is an artifact of somebody else's story that we're carrying around? 02:55:47.060 |
And why are we like writing the next chapter with somebody else's narrative that we never owned anyway? 02:55:54.020 |
Yeah, it seems that like one of the challenges of being human is unless somebody is a narcissist where they basically dismiss anything 02:56:02.340 |
that doesn't make them feel good, in which case they miss out on so much of life and everyone can't stand them anyway. 02:56:11.860 |
If you're a permeable person, like if you're a permeable person, like you're paying attention to what people say, you're trying to integrate that, you're trying to do better, be better. 02:56:22.260 |
You have to know what to let in, what to reject, what to accept, what to work on. 02:56:26.220 |
I mean, it's a challenging thing, this process of being a person in relation to others, right? 02:56:32.560 |
And again, the story, think about like how much we tell stories about ourselves and other people. 02:56:38.520 |
That example I gave you earlier about the person who said, well, he doesn't prioritize me because he comes late and work is more important to him. 02:56:47.620 |
So we tell all kinds of stories and we make meaning of interactions with people. 02:56:53.180 |
And generally, we don't have enough information and we need to say, can we expand this story? 02:56:58.880 |
What would that story look like if I got curious and asked more about it? 02:57:03.560 |
Or even just things that happen in our own lives. 02:57:08.360 |
Is that the story I want to tell myself about that experience that didn't go the way I wanted? 02:57:14.340 |
Like, am I a failure or am I actually growing, right? 02:57:24.400 |
And I'm really a courageous person for trying that. 02:57:29.160 |
Totally different experiences of the same event. 02:57:33.100 |
And I think sometimes the way we get to that story in the moment is to look at our senses. 02:57:44.480 |
So can you say in a moment, right, like even about your partner, when you're upset with 02:57:49.500 |
your partner, can you say, like, with each sense, like, here's one thing I see about my 02:57:54.220 |
partner that I really like, even though I'm upset about something they just did, right? 02:58:10.660 |
You know, I like the way you can just reach out. 02:58:15.840 |
What I have couples do sometimes when things are getting a little bit escalated in the therapy 02:58:21.340 |
room is I'll say, can you take each other's hands right now? 02:58:24.040 |
And this is the last thing I want to do in that moment. 02:58:26.420 |
I'll say, can you just take each other's hands? 02:58:32.620 |
And all of a sudden they feel, oh, yeah, I forgot what that touch feels like. 02:58:38.320 |
So can we use our other senses sometimes when we get really in our head and use it to kind 02:58:48.060 |
And whether it's connecting with yourself, sometimes, you know, with anxiety, we do that, you know, 02:58:53.000 |
something I can see, hear, taste, touch, smell. 02:58:58.700 |
I feel like the whole landscape around relationships has changed so much in the last 20, 30 years. 02:59:05.080 |
It seems like in some ways for the better, like there's a lot more discussion about the sorts 02:59:10.900 |
of things that you're explaining and better understanding of self, how to show up better, 02:59:19.940 |
I was thinking about the, at the same time, this example you mentioned before, like someone 02:59:25.980 |
in their teens or 20s will, a couple will break up, and then somebody's posting all these things 02:59:32.020 |
That kind of quote-unquote feedback, because it's not really feedback, it's more signaling 02:59:37.260 |
and posturing about what they aren't as opposed to what the other person is, has got to create 02:59:43.500 |
pretty detrimental stories in the, in the person that it's about, right? 02:59:47.440 |
Because they either, they have the choice of either believing those things, um, or disbelieving 02:59:54.500 |
Um, but it's not really an opportunity for growth in the same way that sitting down with somebody 03:00:01.400 |
and saying like, hey, these were some things that you did well, and here are some things 03:00:05.500 |
Um, and I guess how much of the story for, um, for men and women, young men and women 03:00:13.800 |
nowadays and, and older, do you think like, uh, is being, uh, written through the, like what 03:00:21.720 |
we hear about the, the, the opposite sex, right? 03:00:25.240 |
Like that, like, um, in the last, I would say 10, 15 years, there, it hasn't really been 03:00:29.880 |
a moment of really trying to prop young boys up and men of, it's like, like maleness is 03:00:35.200 |
Like, that's not something you hear very often. 03:00:37.340 |
And I certainly understand why there was a need and an effort to balance, um, opportunities, 03:00:43.880 |
But, uh, a lot of young guys grew up hearing that maleness, having a Y chromosome is a bad 03:00:49.540 |
thing, that testosterone is bad or something like that. 03:00:53.320 |
Uh, you know, and I've been asked to comment on this more and more recently in the press and, 03:00:57.520 |
you know, I only know my experience and what I observe, but, um, I mean, you take any group 03:01:04.260 |
and, and tell them that they're bad and that hasn't really worked out well for any group 03:01:10.900 |
When my son was in preschool, um, there was a shirt that girls would wear little, you know, 03:01:22.260 |
And it was supposed to be somehow girl power, empowering, but you don't empower by putting 03:01:36.900 |
I remember he was like, why, what does that mean? 03:01:40.060 |
And can you imagine if some boy showed up at preschool that said, girls are stupid, let's 03:01:47.500 |
He'd be in a different preschool pretty quick. 03:01:51.180 |
I mean, you know, it's, um, so, so I think it's, it's interesting to think about, um, 03:01:58.480 |
how it became that, um, it's very hard for young men to navigate what is masculinity in 03:02:09.020 |
And they get all kinds of messages, you know, all men are bad. 03:02:17.200 |
Men need to, um, you know, be this way or that way, but know if they are more communicative 03:02:23.060 |
than they're weak, but if they aren't communicating, you know, like there's, there's no kind of 03:02:30.800 |
And I think that, um, I think it's very confusing for young men. 03:02:34.180 |
Like if a, if a young, like a teenager or someone in college wants to kiss a girl, right? 03:02:41.440 |
Like on a date, um, and they don't do it because like, like, they don't know what to do. 03:02:51.460 |
Which feels a little bit like takes away from the moment, but at the same time, they don't 03:02:58.000 |
want to assume that she wants to be kissed, but like, it seems pretty obvious to him that 03:03:01.700 |
like they're standing out in front of their cars in front of the restaurant and like, maybe 03:03:06.040 |
she wants a good night kit, you know, it's just so confusing. 03:03:08.800 |
Um, and I think that, um, you know, there's definitely, I think a positive correction and, 03:03:15.920 |
you know, what we call toxic masculinity, um, the ways that, that men didn't really assume 03:03:22.900 |
But I also think that it's gotten to a place where it's so confusing for both young men and 03:03:31.000 |
young women to understand sort of, how do we, how can we be with each other? 03:03:38.060 |
Um, where we won't be criticized, canceled, uh, you know, we don't know what's right. 03:03:45.300 |
Like, is it, do I, do I put myself out there? 03:03:51.260 |
And so, you know, obviously it's a good thing that, that people are having conversations and 03:03:58.080 |
there's more communication around like, what is okay, what do you want? 03:04:01.980 |
But at a certain level, it becomes, people are afraid to do anything. 03:04:09.060 |
It sounds like they have to like write the story all the way to the 10 different outcomes 03:04:13.120 |
for a given action, you know, evaluating if the, then they're no longer reading the other 03:04:24.680 |
I mean, I think it's much better than having these situations where men just assumed like 03:04:29.220 |
it was okay to do certain things, whether, you know, the woman consented or not. 03:04:33.300 |
But I also feel like, um, the education that they're getting around this, which again is, 03:04:38.780 |
again, it's so complicated because it's positive that they're getting this education, but they 03:04:44.040 |
don't know what it looks like in practice because the way that, you know, even when you think 03:04:48.180 |
of like corporate training and you have to watch those videos, right. 03:04:51.600 |
And, and, you know, what is okay and what is not okay. 03:04:54.380 |
They give the most obvious examples of what is not okay. 03:04:57.180 |
But then there's just sort of like how, like say you're at work and there's someone that 03:05:03.040 |
you, you're a woman and you're at work and there's a guy that you're attracted to because 03:05:09.900 |
And where do you meet people when you're an adult? 03:05:13.740 |
You spend a lot of your days, five days a week at work. 03:05:16.000 |
So you might meet someone through work and then there's this sort of, and maybe it's 03:05:19.800 |
not someone you directly report to or reports to you. 03:05:30.660 |
In the ways that organically people used to be able to say like, hey, that guy, you know, 03:05:41.400 |
Tricky landscape, but you're offering tools for people at least, not at least, but to communicate 03:05:46.720 |
better and certainly to understand themselves better so they know what they're bringing to 03:05:51.500 |
Well, I think that it's about understanding that whatever we see in TVs and movies, you 03:05:59.780 |
You know, there's always like somebody doesn't know what to do in a certain moment or something 03:06:05.080 |
doesn't go the way that you imagine it will go or sex is, can be ridiculous at times. 03:06:10.040 |
And, you know, all these like weird things happen. 03:06:13.940 |
I'm talking about like, it's just, it doesn't look like it does in the movies all the time. 03:06:18.740 |
Well, and sometimes there's great chemistry and guess what? 03:06:22.600 |
Like this chemistry thing is a real thing and sometimes it develops over time and sometimes 03:06:26.820 |
The idea that there wouldn't be much room for healthy exploration, error and adventure 03:06:36.220 |
I guess that's what I was referring to about things, you know. 03:06:43.120 |
And they also like to throw off the kind of like rules and standards of the adult generation. 03:06:51.780 |
So I trust they'll come up with a better alternative for themselves, right? 03:06:56.040 |
I want to make sure that I ask you about grief. 03:07:00.540 |
When a client is grieving a breakup or a loss of some sort, do you tell them to feel their 03:07:09.120 |
feelings or do you tell them to compartmentalize and only feel their feelings certain times a 03:07:13.660 |
day or do you, you know, ever have to say, hey, listen, you know, it's, it's time to bury 03:07:21.960 |
I'm laughing because there's, there's no one way to grieve a loss and even the same loss. 03:07:29.920 |
Like, you know, siblings can lose a parent and they'll have very different ways of grieving 03:07:37.500 |
You know, there's just no right way or one way. 03:07:44.300 |
And I think you really have to honor that person's process. 03:07:48.400 |
And what I mean by that is it doesn't mean sort of, you know, just spend the rest of your 03:07:59.180 |
But I think people have this misconception about grief that somehow you're going to get 03:08:03.680 |
And often we carry those losses with us throughout our lives. 03:08:09.920 |
Like you lose someone important to you, you're going to feel that loss and you might feel it 03:08:18.000 |
If someone was important to you and you lost that person and you hadn't thought about them 03:08:21.960 |
in a while and then you're in an elevator and you hear this music, this song, and all of a 03:08:26.520 |
sudden it's like someone just stuck a knife in your heart, even though you were doing 03:08:31.420 |
So people, you know, I think that we are the accumulation of all the different people who 03:08:39.560 |
And everybody makes some kind of impression on us that sticks with us. 03:08:46.640 |
So I think it's really important for people to understand what the loss is about because 03:08:54.620 |
the loss can represent lots of different things. 03:08:56.580 |
You lose a parent, maybe it's the loss of your youth. 03:08:58.760 |
You're like, oh, no, I'm now the older generation. 03:09:03.480 |
Part of it is this kind of I'm closer to death. 03:09:07.580 |
You know, you lose a marriage and it could mean, oh, look, just like my parents, they got 03:09:15.820 |
divorced and I failed, even though that's not necessarily the meaning of it. 03:09:30.020 |
And then how do you, again, not move on, but move forward? 03:09:35.460 |
We integrate the things better for better or worse into us. 03:09:40.360 |
But moving forward is something I think everyone would probably want. 03:09:48.760 |
I know you're not here to promote anything, but you caught my attention with this workbook 03:09:55.060 |
because I think I and a number of people probably want to think about how to put some of this 03:10:03.280 |
And you've given us a lot of great tools to do that, a lot of different ways to think about 03:10:12.000 |
Can you tell me about the notebook and what the notebook is and who can make use of it? 03:10:18.800 |
By the way, folks, this wasn't preceded into the conversation. 03:10:22.820 |
I just want to know for people who want to understand how to do good work, it sounds like 03:10:30.180 |
So the workbook came about because I wrote this book called Maybe You Should Talk to 03:10:34.920 |
Someone, and it's the stories of – it's my story going to therapy, and then it's the 03:10:39.700 |
story of these four other patients that I had and my working with them. 03:10:45.400 |
And people said, wow, there was so much that made me think or feel or resonate with, but 03:10:52.120 |
I need some structured – like sort of a step-by-step guide to how I can make those kinds of changes 03:10:58.680 |
too, and maybe they don't have access to therapy or they don't want to go to therapy. 03:11:04.840 |
And I really wanted – I feel like therapy is this thing where certain people – you know, 03:11:10.520 |
it's sort of like one-on-one, or if you have a couple, it's like three people in the room. 03:11:14.380 |
And how do you bring that out so other people can use those tools? 03:11:17.920 |
So I created basically a workbook that's a companion to Maybe You Should Talk to Someone. 03:11:22.560 |
And it's – I really focused on stories because I feel like the narratives that we carry 03:11:27.980 |
around shape so much of how we think, feel, and act every day. 03:11:31.560 |
So it's a guide that really – it's what I would do with someone in the therapy room if 03:11:36.880 |
I were helping them to rewrite their story and to look at, is this a faulty narrative? 03:11:44.080 |
What resonates with me now at this part of my life? 03:11:53.140 |
So I think that more of us sometimes need that kind of guidance. 03:11:58.840 |
It's one thing to theoretically think about something. 03:12:01.100 |
And as a therapist, I'm just very direct and active anyway. 03:12:04.160 |
As I said, you know, the insight is the booby prize of therapy that I want people to have 03:12:10.800 |
And I want them to have small, manageable steps because I feel like if you get overwhelmed 03:12:15.260 |
and the step is too big, that's really the only reason that people don't succeed at a 03:12:21.000 |
It's that you need the steps to be manageable. 03:12:29.660 |
It's like, how can we do this this week and work on that? 03:12:34.980 |
And there's all these different exercises that take you at the pace that works for you. 03:12:40.380 |
I'm a huge fan of workbooks and online courses. 03:12:43.720 |
I'm taking an online course right now just for my own enrichment. 03:12:53.040 |
I think there's so many books about the changes we can make and in any domain of health, wellness, 03:13:03.240 |
We might incorporate one or two little snippets and then it goes on the shelf. 03:13:06.600 |
And then we're proud to have it on our shelf because it says something about how we view life. 03:13:20.120 |
Again, this came up spontaneously, but I know a number of people will want to know that. 03:13:33.500 |
Are there things thematically that are coming up more these days? 03:13:38.040 |
Like you're getting a thousand letters about blank and then two about something else? 03:13:44.120 |
I mean, where are things batching these days? 03:13:47.680 |
And there can be more than one bin, excuse me, bin to how it's batching. 03:13:57.720 |
I wrote it for six years at The Atlantic and I'm writing it at The New York Times. 03:14:01.060 |
And it's interesting because people talk about the same issues differently, but it's the same issue. 03:14:07.960 |
So someone might say, you know, a lot comes up around, should I cut off this person, whether that's a family member or a friend? 03:14:16.300 |
You know, should I, you know, this person did this and boundaries are a big thing and everyone thinks everyone's a narcissist, which they're not. 03:14:24.440 |
Everyone thinks everyone is, you know, gaslighting them, which generally they're not. 03:14:30.120 |
They're these, but I mean, like the language is different is what I'm saying. 03:14:33.720 |
But I think that what they're really struggling with and what we all struggle with are, are, you know, relating. 03:14:42.760 |
Humans are, well, in some ways they're very predictable, but I think they're hard for another person to understand in that way, going back to the operating instructions, that sometimes you think this is going to be the expected response and you get something completely different. 03:14:55.420 |
They can't understand why a friend or a family member or a coworker or whatever would do or say or think something. 03:15:05.980 |
I think at the end of the day, people really know what the answer to the question is, but they want permission. 03:15:11.780 |
So, so many times people say like, you know, what do you think about this? 03:15:16.920 |
Or I really want to do this, but the people in my family think this. 03:15:20.920 |
And so they're almost asking for permission that it's okay to want something. 03:15:27.280 |
We are so cautious about desire in our culture that sometimes we think that if I have a desire, it's indulgent. 03:15:36.700 |
As opposed to you should, you know, you have desires, live a big life. 03:15:42.560 |
I always say to people, when you're making a decision, choose the bigger life. 03:15:49.880 |
It's not mine originally, but I think it's so true that, you know, it's okay to have these desires. 03:15:55.840 |
But then we get these messages from our culture or our friend group or our families that, no, no, no, it's not okay. 03:16:04.180 |
And so a lot of people want permission that it's okay that you don't want to go to medical school. 03:16:11.300 |
You know, it's okay that you don't want to have children. 03:16:16.820 |
You know, so I think sometimes people want permission, but I think what they're really, I think most of the letters are about, I'm having trouble relating. 03:16:25.520 |
And I don't know if I'm crazy, they're crazy, what's happening. 03:16:29.480 |
And so they need sort of that person who's going to zoom out and see it from a more objective place and help them to see, again, going back to narrative, both sides of the narrative. 03:16:44.580 |
But I first say, I want you to have some context around this. 03:16:51.280 |
Here's the other side of the story that you're not really paying attention to. 03:16:56.720 |
Now that you have this wider lens, here's how I think this might be managed. 03:17:03.980 |
I love this concept of make the choice that is going to bring the bigger life. 03:17:09.320 |
Because it's, as you pointed out, so easy for people to stay stuck in what is unpleasant but hasn't killed them yet. 03:17:24.720 |
As if there are these prerequisites that need to happen because that's the conventional view of the order in which you should live your life. 03:17:33.560 |
You know, like, I won't buy a house until I'm married as opposed to, why? 03:17:38.600 |
Why can't you buy a house that you like if you have the money to do that, right? 03:17:43.120 |
You know, why do you have to wait for marriage for that? 03:17:45.940 |
Or I won't look for a partner until I have this kind of job. 03:17:49.740 |
You know, that you have to have all these little pieces in this order. 03:17:53.520 |
And there are so many different ways to live your life. 03:17:55.520 |
And sometimes, by the way, you might want to live your life in that conventional order, but it just doesn't work out that way for you. 03:18:01.400 |
So you might have to switch up the order, and that's okay. 03:18:04.040 |
I love a vote in favor of people enjoying their life more and hopefully deriving more self-respect by doing it. 03:18:10.960 |
You know, this asceticism of, like, we're going to deprive ourselves of things in order to respect ourselves. 03:18:18.100 |
You know, even though I value discipline and I think learning to enjoy life is also important. 03:18:27.300 |
Right. And I think that, you know, when we talk about, we're not talking about hedonism. 03:18:30.740 |
We're talking about reflecting on what will make a meaningful, purposeful life for you and then being very intentional about going after that goal. 03:18:45.440 |
Lori, thank you so much for the work you do with your patients slash clients slash we don't have a better word for it. 03:18:55.340 |
And also your willingness to get out and teach and literally every two weeks, you know, field questions from the general public. 03:19:05.060 |
And clearly, you're thinking about things past, present, and future. 03:19:10.820 |
And, you know, people really need these tools. 03:19:13.720 |
And not everyone will make it into your office, unfortunately, and have the experience of working one-on-one with you. 03:19:21.300 |
But I think that the workbook, I'm so glad that came up so that people have an opportunity to put these things into action. 03:19:32.880 |
We'll timestamp this episode in detail so people can go back and find them. 03:19:41.000 |
And hopefully, you'll come back again and talk with us about what's new. 03:19:47.380 |
And as the landscape of society changes, we're going to need new tools. 03:19:51.560 |
But it sounds like the fundamentals are really in there. 03:19:55.920 |
I love this thing about a list of the things that make us difficult to be with, as opposed to the list of the things we want in other people. 03:20:02.920 |
And that Teflon pan is something I'm going to think about a lot. 03:20:08.740 |
I love having these longer conversations and really exploring what it means to be human. 03:20:15.440 |
You've certainly enriched my thinking about it. 03:20:20.640 |
Thank you for joining me for today's discussion with Lori Gottlieb. 03:20:24.380 |
I hope you found it to be as interesting and as actionable as I did. 03:20:28.460 |
To learn more about Lori Gottlieb's work and to find links to her excellent book and other resources, please see the show note captions. 03:20:34.640 |
If you're learning from and or enjoying this podcast, please subscribe to our YouTube channel. 03:20:38.900 |
That's a terrific zero-cost way to support us. 03:20:41.320 |
In addition, please follow the podcast by clicking the follow button on both Spotify and Apple. 03:20:46.380 |
And on both Spotify and Apple, you can leave us up to a five-star review. 03:20:49.700 |
And you can now leave us comments at both Spotify and Apple. 03:20:53.500 |
Please also check out the sponsors mentioned at the beginning and throughout today's episode. 03:20:59.260 |
If you have questions for me or comments about the podcast or guests or topics that you'd like me to consider for the Huberman Lab podcast, 03:21:05.960 |
please put those in the comments section on YouTube. 03:21:09.920 |
For those of you that haven't heard, I have a new book coming out. 03:21:13.680 |
It's entitled Protocols, an Operating Manual for the Human Body. 03:21:17.600 |
This is a book that I've been working on for more than five years, and that's based on more than 30 years of research and experience. 03:21:23.780 |
And it covers protocols for everything from sleep to exercise to stress control, protocols related to focus and motivation. 03:21:31.620 |
And of course, I provide the scientific substantiation for the protocols that are included. 03:21:37.160 |
The book is now available by presale at protocolsbook.com. 03:21:45.240 |
Again, the book is called Protocols, an Operating Manual for the Human Body. 03:21:49.860 |
And if you're not already following me on social media, I am Huberman Lab on all social media platforms. 03:21:54.660 |
So that's Instagram, X, Threads, Facebook, and LinkedIn. 03:21:58.200 |
And on all those platforms, I discuss science and science-related tools, some of which overlaps with the content of the Huberman Lab podcast, 03:22:04.880 |
but much of which is distinct from the information on the Huberman Lab podcast. 03:22:08.420 |
Again, it's Huberman Lab on all social media platforms. 03:22:12.080 |
And if you haven't already subscribed to our Neural Network newsletter, the Neural Network newsletter is a zero-cost monthly newsletter that includes podcast summaries, 03:22:19.640 |
as well as what we call protocols in the form of one to three-page PDFs that cover everything from how to optimize your sleep, how to optimize dopamine, deliberate cold exposure. 03:22:28.340 |
We have a foundational fitness protocol that covers cardiovascular training and resistance training. 03:22:33.160 |
All of that is available completely zero cost. 03:22:35.820 |
You simply go to HubermanLab.com, go to the menu tab in the top right corner, scroll down to newsletter, and enter your email. 03:22:42.140 |
And I should emphasize that we do not share your email with anybody. 03:22:45.360 |
Thank you once again for joining me for today's discussion with Lori Gottlieb. 03:22:49.220 |
And last, but certainly not least, thank you for your interest in science.