back to indexContracts of Love & Money That Make or Break Relationships | James Sexton

Chapters
0:0 James Sexton
2:19 Divorce & Breakups, Men vs Women, Perception; Infidelity
12:4 Sponsors: Wealthfront & BetterHelp
14:41 Contracts, Business, Marriage Celebration, Prenups
26:24 Nesting; Prenups, Creating Rulesets
33:56 Prenups & Strengthening Marriage
38:19 Marriage Traditions; Divorce Rates, Religion
44:44 First vs Second Marriages, Love & Impermanence
50:9 Sponsors: AG1 & Our Place
53:53 Contracts, Relationships & Hard Conversations
62:37 Marriage & Underlying Problems, Love, Successful Marriages
76:27 Ideals, Social Media & Advertising, Simplicity, Dogs
87:33 Sponsor: Function
89:26 Intimacy, Tool: Early Framework for Hard Discussions
97:6 Prenup Consultation, Legal Defaults, Reasons for Marriage
107:37 Alimony, Prenups & Creating Rulesets, Yours, Mine & Ours, Adultery, Pets
122:30 Fond Memories & Ending Relationship, Pain, Divorce
132:49 Social Media, Movies & Ideals, Pornography vs Real Sexual Relationships
142:43 Revealing Flaws, Bravery, Prenups & Expectations, Money
157:49 Bravery, Vulnerability, Relationship Changes, Men vs Women, Marriage
167:11 Relationship Sacrifices, Men & Women; Prenups, Government
174:45 Life Milestones, Early vs Late Marriage, Navigating Challenges
181:38 Courtship Period & Marital Outcomes
190:12 Knowing Self & Partner, Vulnerability
196:58 "Postnup", Rekindling or Ending Relationships, Tool: Leave a Note
206:41 Heartbreak & Love, Divorce; Acknowledgements
214:45 Zero-Cost Support, YouTube, Spotify & Apple Follow & Reviews, Sponsors, YouTube Feedback, Protocols Book, Social Media, Neural Network Newsletter
00:00:00.000 |
Welcome to the Huberman Lab podcast, where we discuss science and science-based tools for everyday life. 00:00:05.720 |
I'm Andrew Huberman, and I'm a professor of neurobiology and ophthalmology at Stanford School of Medicine. 00:00:17.020 |
James Sexton is a renowned attorney with over 25 years of experience in family law, specializing in prenuptial agreements and divorces. 00:00:25.020 |
He is known as what many call the voice of reason between love and legal. 00:00:29.260 |
Today, we discuss something that might seem counterintuitive, which is how the legal frameworks and contracts surrounding relationships, particularly prenuptial agreements, can actually deepen emotional connection and build trust between partners. 00:00:41.720 |
As James points out, intimacy and trust are fundamentally about the ability to be your true self with your partner and them with you. 00:00:48.220 |
It's about allowing ourselves to be vulnerable. 00:00:50.300 |
It's also about having a same team spirit, of course, respect for one another and admiration for each other's unique qualities. 00:00:56.680 |
Today, we explore how prenuptial agreements, which most often are viewed as being unromantic or pessimistic, can actually serve as ways to establish a sense of safety for both people and prevent many common conflicts and misunderstandings. 00:01:12.260 |
You either have one that was created by the state legislature, or you can tailor one to you and your partner's unique needs. 00:01:17.580 |
He also points out something that many people will find surprising, which is that the vast majority of people who do prenups stay married, and yet most people opt not to do them. 00:01:27.440 |
We also discuss love itself and the key questions that we all need to ask to find the right partner, and if you have one, to build the strongest possible bonds with them. 00:01:35.040 |
The information in today's episode is going to be extremely important for anyone looking for or currently in a relationship. 00:01:41.400 |
Whether you're single, dating, engaged, or married, understanding how the legal and emotional frameworks that support lasting relationships intersect can help you navigate one of life's most rewarding but challenging journeys with much greater awareness and intention and probability of success. 00:01:57.180 |
Before we begin, I'd like to emphasize that this podcast is separate from my teaching and research roles at Stanford. 00:02:01.960 |
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. 00:02:09.380 |
In keeping with that theme, this episode does include sponsors. 00:02:22.220 |
I think if two guys sit down, one of them a lawyer, who's known as a divorce lawyer, 00:02:26.940 |
and they're talking about divorce and love and money and contracts and the ending of things, 00:02:33.040 |
I think there's a understandable default mindset where the female half of our audience are probably going to think, 00:02:41.220 |
like, here are a couple guys talking about relationships and divorce through the lens of their Y chromosomes. 00:02:45.800 |
Which, of course, it's impossible to avoid completely because I haven't done the karyotyping, 00:02:51.900 |
but you have a Y chromosome and I do as well. 00:02:56.700 |
I would like to know, in your experience working with male clients and female clients, 00:03:01.040 |
is there something unique to the female experience of divorce or the female experience of realizing, 00:03:09.220 |
wow, this contract that I thought was for life may not or is it not for life that sort of drives a kind of female-specific set of psychological responses? 00:03:22.520 |
Here, I'm basically asking for a generalization, and I want to be clear, I'm not asking this for politically correct reasons. 00:03:29.360 |
I'm asking this because, like I said, two guys sitting down to talk about relationships, love, and divorce, it's kind of where the mind goes. 00:03:35.960 |
Yeah, and I mean, before I would get, you know, before I would get canceled in the comments for being misandrist or misogynist, 00:03:44.900 |
I always try to say that, you know, the things I'm observing are a function of having divorced thousands of people, you know, men and women. 00:03:55.740 |
Like, for 25 years, I've done nothing but divorce law on a full-time basis, and I mean it on a truly full-time basis. 00:04:01.440 |
So I wake up in the morning thinking about this stuff. 00:04:11.260 |
And so all the things I'm saying are really just my observations. 00:04:15.800 |
So, you know, in response to that question, I think the world relates to divorced men and divorced women differently, 00:04:24.380 |
and I think people's self-conception, right, is very different. 00:04:30.020 |
So I often tell my male clients when we're dealing with, you know, a custody case, for example, 00:04:35.380 |
which is, you know, arguments over when a child's going to live with whom and when they're going to spend time with whom. 00:04:40.360 |
And there was this concept called the maternal presumption, which was around legally for years, 00:04:44.600 |
or something called the tender years doctrine. 00:04:46.680 |
It's called different things in different states. 00:04:48.880 |
But it was around until probably the 1980s, and that was that a child was assumed to stay in the custody of the mother 00:04:55.100 |
unless you could prove she was an unfit mother. 00:04:57.520 |
So men were automatically second class when it came to being a parent. 00:05:03.300 |
Now, of course, in the 80s, there was a different makeup of the workforce. 00:05:06.520 |
There was a different gender roles, obviously, in terms of assignment of child care responsibilities. 00:05:15.540 |
And the bench, even, the judges have changed dramatically. 00:05:18.180 |
When I started practicing 25 years ago, 90% of the judges I appeared in front of were old white men, period. 00:05:25.440 |
And so I got in the habit of, like, have a short haircut, hide the tattoos, like, look like you're coming out of the set of Inherit the Wind. 00:05:33.520 |
Like, look like you are what – you know, because you've got a conservative old man as your judge. 00:05:41.000 |
The bench now is as diverse as the people that it serves. 00:05:44.240 |
So one of the things, though, that I tell my male clients is even though that maternal presumption is gone, women fight harder for custody than men do. 00:05:54.940 |
I'd love to say to you that it's because the maternal instinct and bond is so strong that women just care about their kids and they want custody. 00:06:12.480 |
And I sit up at night and you say, so, Jim, tell me about yourself. 00:06:19.040 |
I see them every other weekend and once a week for dinner. 00:06:34.500 |
Is she on substance use issues, mental health issues? 00:06:41.060 |
So there is an element of how motherhood is perceived as an identity, even for a working woman, 00:06:50.600 |
that it's like if you don't have your kids on a full-time or close-to-full-time basis, there's this – 00:06:56.500 |
so that infuses, that changes the way that women are in custody litigation. 00:07:04.020 |
On the other side of things, you know, the gender stuff in divorce and in breakups is really interesting 00:07:13.400 |
and complicated in the sense that, for example, if a man cheats on his wife, he's a piece of shit. 00:07:29.280 |
She couldn't get – he wasn't meeting her needs. 00:07:37.700 |
When the man cheats, it's like he's a lecherous guy. 00:07:40.800 |
The woman cheats, it's like, oh, this poor woman. 00:07:45.780 |
She needed, like, her eat, pray, love moment. 00:07:47.900 |
And so that's – again, like, the way the world interacts with people in breakups and in the clay that builds to the breakup is very different. 00:08:02.380 |
Men, in my experience as clients, there's a lot of anger that, you know, manifests in very honest ways. 00:08:13.780 |
Like, very – kind of, you know, because men are – you know, men are – 00:08:16.120 |
Bill Burr recently in one of his recent specials has this thing about men are allowed to be two things, angry or fine. 00:08:24.300 |
And that's – and I used to always say that growing up, you know, I'm 52. 00:08:31.400 |
You're either Clint Eastwood or Richard Simmons. 00:08:35.740 |
You were either, like, stoic, you know, stony, no emotion, or gay. 00:08:46.000 |
Of course, the reality is, is men have a different – you know, we have an emotional vocabulary. 00:08:51.640 |
But anger is something men are allowed to have. 00:08:57.800 |
Women – my experience of women in divorce is they're much more forgiving in unhappy marriages. 00:09:05.840 |
They're much more willing to stay in relatively unhappy marriages and sort of torture their partner. 00:09:13.560 |
And then when they've decided, okay, I'm out, there is a level of, like, yeah, whatever we got to do, we got to do. 00:09:21.340 |
Like, that sometimes to me, as someone who does this for a living, is like, oh, oh, okay. 00:09:27.100 |
Like, you're just willing to – you're just willing to go there, you know. 00:09:31.920 |
Just there's – you know, like, when – and you look at the history of the marriage and you go, wow, when they were together, like, there's nothing she wouldn't do for him. 00:09:40.080 |
And now it's ending and, man, there's nothing she won't do to him. 00:09:45.560 |
And it's kind of – it used to be surprising to me. 00:09:52.160 |
I think – I have a friend who was a criminal lawyer for many years, criminal defense attorney, really good one in the city. 00:09:58.040 |
And we used to laugh because he used to say, as a criminal lawyer, he sees bad people at their best. 00:10:03.500 |
And as a divorce lawyer, I see good people at their worst. 00:10:07.360 |
And it's always astounding to me because I've reached a level in my career, thankfully, where I represent elite athletes. 00:10:15.800 |
I represent, you know, people in the financial markets who literally move markets with their trades, people in the entertainment industry. 00:10:33.220 |
So, you know, there were differences in the gender piece. 00:10:37.160 |
There are differences in the socioeconomic piece. 00:10:42.200 |
But at the end of the day, it's like it's hurt people hurting people. 00:10:49.760 |
I want to return to this sort of divergent response to men cheating versus women cheating a little bit later. 00:10:59.260 |
I feel like I have a PhD in infidelity because it's just – it's part of, like, 90-plus percent of divorces. 00:11:09.220 |
Well, it's why people, I think, you know, mistake correlation for causation. 00:11:13.920 |
I mean, people all the time are like, you know, why are you getting divorced? 00:11:17.580 |
And it's like, oh, that's a pretty good reason to get divorced. 00:11:19.620 |
But, you know, then when you scratch the surface, you're like, okay, but why is he sleeping with his secretary? 00:11:25.020 |
And there's almost always this very deep back story of, like, well, we stopped sleeping together. 00:11:32.640 |
Well, because you're totally indifferent to me. 00:11:34.160 |
And you start to go, okay, the truth's at the bottom of a bottomless pit, and we're never going to get there. 00:11:39.040 |
Like, and all of those facts come with a point of view. 00:11:42.000 |
So when you do what I do for a living, which is, you know, full contact storytelling, basically, in a courtroom against someone who's trying to tell the opposite story, you find a lot of what you're doing is just figuring out how to present the most persuasive version of this person's subjective experience of their own life. 00:12:04.220 |
I would like to take a quick break and acknowledge one of our sponsors, Wealthfront. 00:12:08.560 |
I've been using Wealthfront for my savings and for my investing for nearly a decade, and I absolutely love it. 00:12:15.920 |
And one of my goals for 2025 is to focus on saving money. 00:12:19.480 |
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There are already a million people using Wealthfront to save more, earn more, and build long-term wealth. 00:13:13.280 |
If you'd like to try Wealthfront, go to wealthfront.com slash Huberman to receive a free $50 bonus with a $500 deposit into your first cash account. 00:13:22.200 |
That's wealthfront.com slash Huberman to get started now. 00:13:26.060 |
This has been a paid testimonial of Wealthfront. 00:13:32.100 |
For more information, see the episode description. 00:13:35.200 |
Today's episode is also brought to us by BetterHelp. 00:13:37.860 |
BetterHelp offers professional therapy with a licensed therapist carried out entirely online. 00:13:43.120 |
I've been doing weekly therapy for well over 30 years. 00:13:46.200 |
There are essentially three things that great therapy provides. 00:13:49.140 |
First of all, it provides good rapport with somebody that you can really trust and talk to about any issues you want. 00:13:55.000 |
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And third, expert therapy provides useful insights. 00:14:03.700 |
Insights that allow you to better not just your emotional life and your relationships, but of course, also the relationship to yourself and to your professional life and to all sorts of life and career goals. 00:14:12.740 |
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We're talking about breaking one contract, the contract of marriage, and creating a new contract, the contract of divorce. 00:14:52.760 |
In the world of business, my business partner and I that started this podcast, I insisted that we take an even split. 00:15:03.100 |
It's absolutely critical because this podcast wouldn't be what it is without him and his incredible expertise. 00:15:13.000 |
Our initial contract was on a piece of paper in a little coffee shop in Manhattan where I said, how about this? 00:15:23.360 |
People like you give lawyers, like we get hives. 00:15:25.680 |
Like you say that and I instantly start like, you know. 00:15:28.400 |
Six months later or so, a lawyer told us we had to get a real contract. 00:15:35.060 |
And I have to say it was fine and I'm glad we have contracts. 00:15:39.680 |
But to me, all contracts, whether or not it's a scribble on a piece of paper or it's a formal contract, contracts make me feel safe. 00:15:55.200 |
You like to think you can control outcomes, but you can't and you acknowledge that and you go into the unknown. 00:16:03.460 |
I want to talk about the contract of marriage first. 00:16:07.080 |
And what you think is going through people's mind when they decide to get married. 00:16:21.260 |
There's a lot of emotional and biological stuff happening. 00:16:29.080 |
There's the bachelor party, the bachelorette party, the shower, the wedding. 00:16:33.720 |
I mean, there's so many things reinforcing this bond. 00:16:37.000 |
And every one of the things you just named are awesome. 00:16:43.500 |
Like, from the cake to the bachelor party, bachelorette party, to the dress, to the way we're going to have photos taken to commemorate the moment and sort of have this snapshot in time of who we were and who our families were. 00:17:01.400 |
It's like, you know, like, oh, I like this ice cream. 00:17:08.160 |
You know, it's very different than the birth of a child, but it's this. 00:17:10.560 |
Each one of those is a celebration of the life spirit. 00:17:14.600 |
Yeah, and your place in the timeline and the history and the merging of families, the merging of clans, like the, and sort of this, we're going to merge now and maybe new life comes of that. 00:17:25.700 |
And then that life merges with more life and we become part of this chain. 00:17:32.120 |
And this is the fundamental building blocks of human civilizations. 00:17:35.600 |
So, it is perfectly understandable that we get absolutely intoxicated by the thought of it and that we get so hopped up. 00:17:45.060 |
The term contract never gets into that discussion. 00:17:49.220 |
I'm telling you right now, right now, someone's getting married somewhere and they've never, the word contracts never come out of there. 00:17:56.600 |
The two things that I, as a divorce lawyer, I'm constantly thinking about is marriage as an economy and marriage as a contract. 00:18:05.400 |
And those are two, the minute you say that, people assume you don't believe in or experience emotionally any of those other beautiful things you just said. 00:18:15.500 |
And I think 90% of the appeal of my media work in this chapter of my life has been that people go, oh, a divorce lawyer, this is just going to be a guy talking about how, like, marriage is the worst thing ever. 00:18:30.740 |
And in reality, I think what I'm saying is, look, this is amazing. 00:18:41.920 |
Why wouldn't you consider locking in with another person and say, but my God, be honest with yourself about the risks involved. 00:18:49.460 |
Be honest with yourself about the ways you can hedge that risk. 00:18:52.740 |
And be honest with yourself about the contract and the economy, because those are two things that I do not think that there is anything unromantic. 00:19:03.080 |
I don't think it takes away from the romance or the beauty of a thing. 00:19:06.460 |
You know, I often say my favorite poem is a poem by Joseph Brodsky called The Song, and he wrote it when his wife passed away. 00:19:14.940 |
And it's a beautiful poem about love and loss. 00:19:17.680 |
And the sort of refrain of the poem is, I wish you were here, dear. 00:19:27.100 |
And one of the lines is, I wish you were here, dear. 00:19:30.460 |
I wish I knew no astronomy when stars appear. 00:19:33.000 |
And I remember the first time I read that line thinking, like, oh, that's so beautiful. 00:19:38.180 |
Because once you know astronomy, like, there's something less magical about the stars. 00:19:47.620 |
The great Richard Feynman, Nobel Prize-winning physicist of, surely you're joking, Mr. Feynman fame, 00:19:53.440 |
said that understanding things at a reductionist level added to his sense of beauty with the physical world. 00:20:01.560 |
I mean, that's my sense of biology and physiology and what I know of psychology. 00:20:05.840 |
Understanding the deeper layers adds to my sense of wonder. 00:20:08.840 |
But I acknowledge and agree with you completely that for most people, when we think about all those things around marriage, the engagement, the wedding, the party, they all imply a ton of trust. 00:20:26.940 |
The word contract implies somewhere in there a lack of trust. 00:20:33.160 |
I gave this little anecdote about something very different than marriage, right? 00:20:36.160 |
A business contract with my business partner, where when they said, oh, you need to have a formal contract. 00:20:41.820 |
There is something about that that implies that things could go wrong or that there will be unforeseen circumstances that our verbal contract can't anticipate and won't allow us to navigate as business partners. 00:20:55.480 |
And there's, again, far and away different, arguably lesser example than a marriage contract, which is a much bigger life milestone. 00:21:01.960 |
But I think what you're, a point you're making that I think I would slightly reframe is the following. 00:21:09.280 |
There is a contract that binds you and your business partner. 00:21:15.240 |
It was written by the legislature of the state in which you reside. 00:21:20.060 |
So do you want your relationship with this person governed by a contract you didn't write, you had no input in, and the government can change without your consent or knowledge? 00:21:34.000 |
And by the way, once they've changed it, you can't say, oh, I don't like the new rules, so I don't want those to apply. 00:21:48.640 |
It was either written by the government or written by the two people who allegedly love each other more than the other 8 billion other options in the world. 00:21:56.760 |
Now, if you ask me, who is going to write a better contract? 00:22:01.000 |
Unnamed politicians who are subject to being elected and unelected or two people who have an abundance of optimism towards each other? 00:22:12.100 |
And if you're signing up for a rule set you wrote or co-authored with your partner, I think you're in a better place than saying, let's trust it to the government. 00:22:21.780 |
I've never walked into the DMV and thought, these people should be in charge of everything. 00:22:28.480 |
Like, this is, they should be in charge of my marriage. 00:22:30.920 |
They should be in charge of everything, my business dealings. 00:22:33.540 |
They should be the ones who make the rules because they're clearly so together in their thinking. 00:22:39.580 |
I feel like there is tremendous value in the level of trust and optimism that two people at the beginning of a venture, whether that venture is a marriage or whether that venture is a business venture. 00:22:51.980 |
While we're in this heavy space of optimism, excitement, trust in each other, that's the time to say, hey, we're going to disagree about something at some point. 00:23:05.340 |
So I'll probably say something that's going to upset you. 00:23:07.340 |
So why would you learn how to fight while you're in a fight? 00:23:10.520 |
Like, learn how to fight before you get in a fight. 00:23:14.140 |
Have a discussion about, hey, if we disagree, what's the best way? 00:23:19.320 |
Do you need some time to yourself to, like, kind of cool off? 00:23:22.100 |
Or are you the kind of person that's like, no, we got to sort this out right now. 00:23:27.360 |
So that, to me, the right mindset is not faith and trust or contracts. 00:23:34.560 |
I think that's the totally wrong way to frame it. 00:23:37.160 |
I think the right way to frame it is there's a contract. 00:23:40.780 |
Whether you want to call it a contract or not, just like there's an economy. 00:23:46.240 |
You know, this many bananas is worth this many coconuts. 00:23:49.340 |
Because if it was, how many bananas will you trade me for bananas? 00:23:53.620 |
Like, we're not bringing the same thing to the table. 00:23:57.400 |
Why is it a dirty word to say, hey, I'm marrying you. 00:24:09.940 |
You know, so I know, like, when that slips to start talking to you about it. 00:24:15.300 |
And by the way, you can tell me and remind me when, hey, this thing I loved about you has changed. 00:24:20.880 |
So, like, you talked about all these good things about your business partner. 00:24:23.860 |
Like, oh, he has this vision or he has this patience or he has this work. 00:24:27.300 |
He has this organizational skill and he makes up for some things that I don't have. 00:24:30.420 |
Like, if he just said, oh, yeah, he has the exact same characteristics as me. 00:24:36.700 |
But ideally, you have the Steve Jobs and the Steve Wozniak, you know. 00:24:40.500 |
Either of whom without the other would have been kind of, eh. 00:24:43.420 |
But together, it's like lightning in a bottle. 00:24:45.640 |
So I just genuinely think framing this slightly differently and saying there's going to be a rule set. 00:24:52.300 |
So we are the best people to write that rule set. 00:24:57.620 |
The way you are framing the contract of marriage and prenups, I love it. 00:25:04.920 |
Because you're putting a positive emotional lens on it, right? 00:25:09.680 |
Therefore, let's discuss the contract of love and marriage. 00:25:13.280 |
Two people that are committed to creating perhaps children together and a whole life together, 00:25:18.440 |
Let's get a contract to really solidify this. 00:25:27.260 |
You know, what is the problem we seek to solve? 00:25:29.720 |
Or what is the value we add to each other's lives? 00:25:33.600 |
Like, and by the way, it's an invitation to such an intimate discussion. 00:25:37.240 |
Like, these are the things that you make me feel. 00:25:41.240 |
Like, these are the things you do that make me feel that way. 00:25:48.860 |
When you remember that tea that I like and you make sure that it's here, you know? 00:25:55.480 |
Or, oh, when you, you know, remembered it was my sister's birthday and sent her a text 00:26:00.860 |
Like, these are these dumb little things that make us feel so loved and seen. 00:26:05.640 |
So why wouldn't we embrace an opportunity to say to this person, by the way, like, do you 00:26:12.660 |
Do you know what you do that makes me feel so loved and makes me feel so in love with you? 00:26:19.400 |
The way you're framing this, I think, is entirely different than how most people would envision 00:26:26.740 |
Which I really appreciate, and I know the audience appreciates too, because you're putting 00:26:31.180 |
I'm going to just put on my hat as a neuroscientist and biologist for a moment. 00:26:35.620 |
I think there are certain words that people, for whatever reason, consider kind of a buzzkill. 00:26:43.520 |
Like, we're talking about pheromones and love and children and romance and sex and vacations 00:26:53.140 |
And somebody says, you know, finances, which, you know, maybe that turns certain people on. 00:27:00.200 |
I guess people in the finance world probably turns them on. 00:27:04.980 |
I have to assume it's a different brain circuit. 00:27:09.180 |
Whereas what you're doing is you're coming at this from a different perspective, which 00:27:11.960 |
is part of the reason why you're here, is that you're saying this discussion around a 00:27:17.320 |
prenup contract can potentially shed more light into the nature of the bond and maybe even 00:27:27.080 |
And I will tell you, I've been doing prenuptial agreements for 25 years for clients. 00:27:33.240 |
And I usually end up having a very good relationship with a person I do a prenup with. 00:27:36.800 |
Because you're talking a lot about their fears, their hopes. 00:27:43.940 |
You cannot, as a lawyer, represent both people because they have what's called potentially 00:27:48.620 |
And what if one person has substantially more income to hire a better lawyer, assuming that 00:27:54.180 |
more money gets you a better lawyer, I have to assume on average it does, than the other? 00:28:01.160 |
I mean, one of the projects I've been involved in in the last couple of months is a website, 00:28:07.300 |
I worked with a couple of tech people to put together something that's going to democratize 00:28:11.940 |
Because up until now, prenups have been something that, you know, you spend $5,000, $10,000, $15,000 00:28:16.300 |
for a traditional lawyer to draft for you, and then your fiancee brings it to an attorney 00:28:22.100 |
to review, and then they want to make revisions. 00:28:24.000 |
And it sort of walks into this adversarial process, as opposed to sort of democratizing 00:28:29.460 |
So what we are trying to do is sort of leverage technological innovation, AI. 00:28:35.340 |
My hundreds of prenups I've drafted, we sort of fed into this to create the ability for 00:28:42.060 |
you to go online and to create a prenup for like in the realm of $600, $700. 00:28:49.780 |
But the purpose of it, as far as I'm concerned, is not just to democratize prenups, which I think 00:28:55.260 |
we have to do, but to really reframe the way we look at it. 00:28:59.000 |
Because people come in all the time, and they're like, well, I don't know if I need a prenup 00:29:03.140 |
And you say, well, you're still going to have a rule set applied to your marriage. 00:29:06.960 |
And actually, if you're super wealthy, like most of my clients, they can afford to buy 00:29:12.480 |
Like, you keep the house, I'll buy another house down the street, and then we'll buy another 00:29:16.120 |
house for the kids, and then we'll visit with them in that house. 00:29:22.320 |
When I was coming up, nesting meant something very different. 00:29:24.420 |
Nesting now is when you each have your own home, and then one home is just where the 00:29:29.040 |
And instead of doing a custodial rotation where the kids go back and forth between homes, 00:29:32.720 |
the kids have a home, and the parent who has parenting access during that time is in the 00:29:39.200 |
When I was in college, nesting was when you got a tablecloth. 00:29:43.620 |
Yeah, it's a very—it's a very—you know, the rich divorce in different ways than the 00:29:51.420 |
And so that's why we're trying to say, look, bring this—democratize this. 00:29:55.740 |
Bring this to be—let people develop a rule set. 00:29:57.880 |
Because especially, too, when you have scarcity. 00:30:00.220 |
Like, most people can't afford to give away one half of everything they have and still have 00:30:07.200 |
Most people are a couple of paychecks off from being in bankruptcy if things don't go 00:30:13.320 |
So when they divorce, and now we have two electric bills and two internet bills and two—that's 00:30:20.160 |
So all the more reason for people to have a rule set that the two of them created, again, 00:30:25.520 |
when they were feeling positive and benevolent and optimistic towards each other, and they 00:30:31.300 |
Because to me, personally, I don't know how you can feel loved if you don't feel safe. 00:30:38.720 |
Like, I think you have to feel safe, emotionally safe, physically safe. 00:30:43.560 |
Like, if you're afraid of your partner emotionally, physically, how can you really feel loved? 00:30:50.800 |
So to me, the prenup is an invitation to, A, can we talk about hard things? 00:30:56.940 |
Because I'll tell you right now, when somebody says to me, well, I would do a prenup, I know 00:31:00.760 |
it would be—but, you know, that's just going to be a hard conversation. 00:31:04.280 |
If you can't have hard conversations with a person, you have absolutely no business marrying 00:31:09.700 |
I mean, it's good for me as a future income stream. 00:31:11.560 |
But I'm telling you, I don't think it's a good idea. 00:31:14.100 |
Like, you're going to have to talk about hard things. 00:31:16.500 |
You know, and you're going to have to have uncomfortable truths instead of comfortable 00:31:22.140 |
You know, so I'm a big fan of early on in the process having those conversations. 00:31:28.220 |
And again, it doesn't all have to be, like, you know, the conversation—like, when you 00:31:32.320 |
talk about your will, that's a hard conversation. 00:31:35.600 |
Like, there's no upside to being dead, you know, like, other than being off social media. 00:31:41.820 |
So I understand why people are like, it's really hard to think about, like, if I die and 00:31:45.560 |
if both of us die, what do we do with the kids? 00:31:48.900 |
But, look, if we break up, what would you need to feel safe? 00:31:53.280 |
Like, would you—you know, there's a line from a Prince song, If I Was Your Girlfriend, 00:31:57.280 |
and it is, would you run to me if somebody hurt you, even if that somebody was me? 00:32:01.560 |
And I think there's something really sweet about saying to someone, like, hey, if I hurt 00:32:06.260 |
you, like, how can I still have you feel safe? 00:32:12.060 |
Like, I don't think that, you know, when I meet someone and their exes are like, they just 00:32:20.280 |
have painted them as a villain, like, with no redeeming qualities whatsoever. 00:32:29.000 |
And to me, that says a lot about, like, the core values of both of these people. 00:32:33.800 |
You know, I think there's real value in saying to someone early on, like, hey, if I hurt you, 00:32:43.840 |
How can we both feel safe in this relationship? 00:32:49.020 |
Like, throwing the words contracts, throwing the words economy in there, I understand. 00:32:58.040 |
I don't think, like, I don't think you have to CGI everything for it to be perfect. 00:33:05.600 |
There's something very perfect about how imperfect and flawed and frightened we are. 00:33:10.940 |
And I think there's something really beautiful about finding someone that you can be that with. 00:33:16.860 |
And I don't think I can learn everything I need to know about myself from myself. 00:33:20.840 |
Like, I think I need someone there, ideally someone who really loves me and is cheering for me and sees my blind spots. 00:33:27.840 |
And I think the conversation about a prenup, that's what that conversation should be. 00:33:33.240 |
I love the way you lean into life in all its light and shadows and say, okay, let's accept all of that right off the bat 00:33:42.780 |
and figure out what's going to give this the highest probability of working. 00:33:48.280 |
I've never thought about prenups as a way to bolster the probability of the marriage working. 00:33:55.520 |
Well, I'm telling you, and I got sidetracked, as I tend to do, but I've done probably hundreds, if not thousands, of prenups over 25 years. 00:34:04.920 |
I think there are maybe five people that I did their divorce after they had a prenup. 00:34:13.060 |
So I've done hundreds, if not at least a thousand prenups in 25 years. 00:34:29.420 |
But, you know, usually when you do a prenup, you have a good relationship with the person by the time it's finished. 00:34:35.440 |
Sometimes you finish a divorce and the person's like, oh, my God, I never want to see you again because you remind me of this really dark chapter. 00:34:40.700 |
But prenups, it's usually a very friendly transaction. 00:34:50.580 |
I think many people will be very surprised to hear that. 00:34:55.080 |
I think the kind of people who can have a conversation that you need to have in order to discuss and negotiate. 00:35:03.460 |
I don't think it's the right term, negotiate a prenup. 00:35:05.620 |
Negotiate gives the impression it's like you're buying a car, you know. 00:35:08.280 |
Like the kind of people who can have the conversations you need to have in order to have a prenuptial agreement I think are the kind of people that are going to be successfully married. 00:35:19.040 |
I'm not going to talk about a prenup because I don't want to talk about the possibility that anything could ever go wrong with this thing. 00:35:30.360 |
Listen, falling feels like flying for a little while, you know, and then you hit the ground and it is waiting for you. 00:35:38.740 |
And if the first time you ever think about what legal rights and obligations do I have is when you're in my office, like, you're already screwed. 00:35:53.720 |
You did nothing to prepare emotionally, financially, you know, nothing. 00:35:59.420 |
So there's something about the imagination, right, that people – if you're just the kind of person who's like, I don't even want to talk. 00:36:07.360 |
I actually met – I had a – they'll remain nameless, but it was a neighbor. 00:36:11.380 |
And I tried to – every once in a while I get it in my head that I'm going to, like, try to be a more social person. 00:36:16.760 |
So I'm like, oh, I should, like, invite the neighbor over for a drink, you know, a couple. 00:36:21.300 |
And they don't live near me anymore, so I can get away with it now. 00:36:27.920 |
But at some point she said, oh, you know, I don't know how you do what you do. 00:36:31.580 |
Like, we don't allow the D word in our house. 00:36:37.160 |
She's like, no, no, we just – you're not allowed to say the word divorce in our house. 00:36:40.540 |
And she said it, like, divorce, like she was saying Voldemort. 00:36:42.520 |
You know, she was like, we don't say the D word. 00:36:44.580 |
And I was like – and I thought to myself, if only it was that easy. 00:36:49.220 |
You know, by the way, got divorced, like, three years later. 00:36:55.900 |
Both of them tried to call me and hire me, you know. 00:36:59.080 |
And I will not represent people that I know in any capacity. 00:37:02.120 |
And I just remember thinking, like, that is such a – what a delusion. 00:37:08.440 |
Like, that I'm never going to say the word – like, what are you, my great-grandmother? 00:37:14.620 |
Because if you say cancer at, like, a speaking volume suddenly, like, tumors will develop. 00:37:21.320 |
Like, do you believe – you know, do you believe in Chewbacca, too? 00:37:31.100 |
But I think it's – you know, I say all the time that I think most of our attitudes about marriage have been just handed down. 00:37:39.800 |
Like, it's just – this is something that – like, marriage, you could be the most, like, modern, Bella Abzug feminist person. 00:37:47.500 |
And a lot of women are like, oh, yeah, I still want my dad to walk me down the aisle and give me a – give you away? 00:37:54.640 |
Like, you're a C-suite executive at a software company and he's going to trade you for, what, goats? 00:38:01.700 |
Like, this is going to be – because you are your father's property and now you will be the property and he will give you away to your husband and you'll now be his property. 00:38:09.040 |
That's where that tradition comes from, gang. 00:38:11.260 |
What do you think the psychological underpinnings of what you're describing are about? 00:38:16.420 |
Is it some sort of internal validation of worth, external validation of worth? 00:38:21.340 |
I mean, none of it computes for me when I look at – you know, like you said, like, let's say – these are extreme examples, but C-suite female executive. 00:38:33.260 |
And typically they will take their soon-to-be husband's last name. 00:38:41.960 |
That's far more common than men taking their wife's last name. 00:38:46.640 |
Actually, I can't even think of a single instance. 00:38:52.500 |
It used to be that all the evolutionary biologists did that. 00:38:58.740 |
And again, I don't know if that's a male thing. 00:39:03.880 |
But yeah, a lot of the feminism gets thrown out the window. 00:39:06.700 |
Another one is that in divorces – I've observed this. 00:39:11.620 |
But women will keep their ex-husband's last name because what I was told is they want to have the same last name as their kids. 00:39:23.120 |
But of course, the kids could switch last names. 00:39:24.700 |
It eliminates a certain level of confusion because at school, like, to say, you know, like, this is my name. 00:39:33.920 |
But I also – and by the way, I have clients – because you don't have to change your name back, but you have the right to. 00:39:41.560 |
And I have male clients who, like, want their name back. 00:39:44.940 |
Like, I want her to no longer be allowed to use that name. 00:39:54.200 |
And I'm like, you understand, I can change – as long as you're not doing it for the intent of defrauding creditors, anyone can – I can change my name to Andrew Huberman tomorrow if I want to. 00:40:02.120 |
As long as I'm not doing it to defraud my creditors. 00:40:03.940 |
You'll get a lot more problems than it is worth. 00:40:10.980 |
No, you'd be Andrew Huberman, and that comes with a certain number of live – 00:40:20.240 |
In all seriousness, wow, people have asked for their name back. 00:40:25.620 |
Yeah, they want her prohibited from having her name. 00:40:31.840 |
Like, that's just a pure expression of anger. 00:40:35.260 |
You know, a lot of what I do is sort of helping people get to the core of, like, 00:40:43.720 |
Like, my undergraduate degree was in psychology. 00:40:45.840 |
My master's was in cultural anthropology, and specifically in the study of death and dying. 00:40:51.500 |
And then my law degree, I wanted to be a divorce lawyer as soon as I started law school. 00:40:56.280 |
And I think I use the psych degree as much as I use the law degree because it's so much of what I do is just dealing with people when they're in this very heightened emotional state. 00:41:10.800 |
If the fairy tales inspire something in you, that's incredible. 00:41:14.380 |
Like, if you say to me, you know, Jim, I love Star Wars. 00:41:19.860 |
Like, the struggle of the Jedi against the empire, like, it inspires me to want to be a disciplined person and to fight for good and to, you know, not be afraid of evil and to know. 00:41:31.860 |
If you try to tell me Wookiees are real, though, like, we've got a problem, man. 00:42:00.260 |
There are, the United States does not have, you can actually look this up online. 00:42:05.020 |
There's a great, there's like a running tally that's kept. 00:42:07.360 |
But the highest divorce rates are in, I believe, Italy is currently winning that race. 00:42:13.760 |
Ireland was at the bottom because basically divorce was not possible in Ireland for an extended period of time. 00:42:18.980 |
Countries that have a very strong underlying religious narrative, like Sharia law and things like that, obviously have a very low divorce rate. 00:42:27.860 |
But it varies in terms of, but countries that are, I don't want to say, you know, like very modern, you know, where there's been a proliferation of social media, where there is a open information environment so people can compare themselves to other people constantly. 00:42:49.700 |
That there is a sense of, because actually even North Korea like has an underlying religious narrative. 00:42:57.440 |
It's just that they've decided that they're, or they've been told their leader is a god, you know. 00:43:01.460 |
So I think when you don't have a core foundational religious narrative that prohibits divorce as part of its structure, then you're left to people's desires to some degree. 00:43:15.460 |
And the cultural foundations of it and tradition, right? 00:43:18.180 |
And tradition, for many, many years, tradition was you stay married even if you're unhappy. 00:43:22.840 |
And then tradition in the 1970s and 1980s started turning into your happiness is more important than the institution of marriage. 00:43:30.680 |
So if you're unhappy, you might need to leave your marriage and get divorced. 00:43:34.440 |
And that's when the divorce rate started to spike, right? 00:43:39.520 |
Like I, you know, tradition is in some ways like the wisdom of the people before us and they saw things we might not see. 00:43:47.520 |
And to some degree, tradition is peer pressure exerted by dead people. 00:43:50.940 |
So I think our fascination with marriage as this, I found my soulmate and now we're not even going to think about the possibility of us ending, even though fully 56% of the time the thing's going to end. 00:44:04.940 |
Like, that's the part I can't wrap my head around is, and again, look at the numbers there. 00:44:11.260 |
Like, let's assume conservatively that another 10% stay together for the kids. 00:44:19.020 |
Because the 56 is just the ones who actually said, this is so bad, we're getting lawyers and we're ending this thing. 00:44:24.320 |
Like, how many people stay together for the kids or religious reasons or because they don't want to give away half their shit? 00:44:32.100 |
I mean, conservative 10%, I think it's more than that, 20%. 00:44:37.980 |
The statistics for each subsequent marriage, the divorce rate gets much higher. 00:44:44.760 |
Second marriage is higher than first marriage, third marriage is much higher. 00:44:49.000 |
And then once you get past three, it's like you're, you know. 00:44:51.380 |
All the divorced people in my family remarried and have been in those second marriages very long periods of time. 00:44:58.460 |
I know a lot of very happy second married people. 00:45:01.220 |
Yes, because I think there's value to that because I do think as a divorced person, you learn a lot about yourself through the process of divorce. 00:45:09.580 |
You learn a lot about what you don't want to do again in a relationship and what didn't work for you. 00:45:15.680 |
So I don't do anything perfectly the first time I do it. 00:45:19.920 |
So I think that there's value in sort of giving something a try. 00:45:23.780 |
Like you don't learn how to swim by reading books about swimming. 00:45:27.400 |
So that's why I'm a fan of marriage, even though the divorce rate is very high. 00:45:37.360 |
You know, I mean, the legal definition of negligence is a failure to perceive a substantial and unjustifiable risk of serious harm. 00:45:47.880 |
Recklessness legally is a conscious disregard for a substantial and unjustifiable risk of serious harm, okay? 00:45:56.240 |
So if you know something ends in heartbreak and division of assets and fighting that requires attorneys 56% of the time, and you don't make any plan for that in advance, I would argue that's reckless. 00:46:14.580 |
You're consciously disregarding a substantial risk of harm, period. 00:46:19.040 |
Yeah, and if there's kids, it brings them into the bond loss, too. 00:46:21.220 |
It's a different kind of, yeah, an even higher level, yeah. 00:46:23.420 |
Do you happen to know the numbers or the rough numbers on percentage of first marriages with kids that last, whether or not they're happy or not? 00:46:35.120 |
I mean, I know that these statistics are fairly closely tracked, so you can find them out online pretty easily because they're tracked by the government. 00:46:42.840 |
Every time we do a divorce, we have to file what's called a Certificate of the Solution of Marriage. 00:46:48.460 |
And that certificate includes the grade level, the highest grade level each person completed, whether there are children, how many children, the ages of the children. 00:46:57.620 |
And the whole purpose of that document is to compile demographic information. 00:47:02.460 |
So the government for many, many years has been monitoring this and looking at, you know, okay, what are those numbers? 00:47:12.120 |
I think partly because the wedding industrial complex does not want people getting involved in that conversation. 00:47:18.100 |
Like, you don't want people to really look at the truth of things because it takes away from the fantasy of things. 00:47:25.080 |
But see, again, I think that's a framing issue because to me, I think, you know, the stars are still beautiful even if you know astronomy. 00:47:33.180 |
Like, I think, if anything, I actually think, and maybe this is just the way that I look at things, 00:47:39.240 |
the fact that love is loaned and not permanently gifted makes it more beautiful. 00:47:46.740 |
Like, the fact that I'm going to die for sure makes my life more beautiful. 00:47:53.040 |
There's a finite number of sunsets I'm going to see. 00:48:03.420 |
And so when you're with someone, that marriage is going to end. 00:48:12.180 |
It's one of the only things in the world that you go, I hope this ends in death. 00:48:14.940 |
Like, if you said to someone at their wedding, like, man, I really hope your marriage ends in death, 00:48:19.160 |
they would be like, what is wrong with that guy? 00:48:20.820 |
But it's the truth because all marriages end, they end in death or divorce. 00:48:24.720 |
But I don't think that makes it less beautiful. 00:48:28.860 |
I think it makes it more beautiful that every day this person wakes up and decides to continue to be your spouse 00:48:34.920 |
and to continue to be your partner and ideally your cheerleader and your, you know, your fan, you know? 00:48:40.680 |
And to me, the fact that you don't own this person, that they have free will, they have autonomy and agency, 00:48:49.260 |
and they choose you, not just on one day where you put on nice clothes and played good music and everybody got drunk, 00:48:57.000 |
which is there's value in that and the memory of that and the photos of that and a reminder, 00:49:01.580 |
but like the fact that they every day get up and continue to choose to be with you like that. 00:49:06.900 |
And if you said to me that the reason why they stay with you is they don't want to get divorced, 00:49:19.040 |
You know, people used to say like, oh, you got to quit smoking. 00:49:21.600 |
You know, it's going to take 10 years off your life. 00:49:25.360 |
Like the adult diaper wearing years, I don't want them anyway. 00:49:32.560 |
Once I made the connection between I feel better, I taste food better, I can run further and faster, 00:49:39.760 |
then it made sense to me because now there's something real and tangible in the present. 00:49:48.940 |
It's the same thing with prenups, which is let's not talk about what is this going to give us on the back end 00:49:53.560 |
or what are we going to lose if we don't have this on the back end. 00:49:56.400 |
Let's talk about what can this do for us in the present? 00:50:00.160 |
What can this conversation do for us in the present about understanding what we mean to each other 00:50:07.860 |
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I'm beginning to adopt a mindset around contracts that they are a tool to embrace reality, 00:53:54.600 |
both potential negatives, but also to enrich the positives. 00:54:02.380 |
I think that marriage is about an imagined future, right? 00:54:07.820 |
Like, it's about we're going to build this thing. 00:54:10.760 |
Like, when you and your business partner sat down together, 00:54:14.400 |
Like, you weren't just like, okay, what are we going to do today? 00:54:20.120 |
And by the way, it never ends up being what you thought it would be. 00:54:22.900 |
It turns into something completely different. 00:54:26.420 |
I mean, that's a very different scenario, but no premonition. 00:54:30.900 |
I think that, you know, if you want to make God laugh, tell him your plans. 00:54:34.220 |
Like, I think the best thing is this vague idea of like, what do we want to do? 00:54:41.120 |
I don't know what exactly what it's going to look like. 00:54:42.980 |
Like, I think this is the loose structure, but I don't know exactly what it is. 00:54:47.600 |
Like, we didn't talk about what we're going to talk about today. 00:54:50.320 |
You know, we talked a dozen times, but we didn't go, well, say, so what should we talk about? 00:54:54.200 |
Because I think if we did, it wouldn't be authentic. 00:54:56.680 |
Like, there's something so much better about like, yeah, we want to have a good conversation, 00:55:00.940 |
something of value, something we'll both enjoy. 00:55:03.500 |
And then maybe the people watching would enjoy, you know? 00:55:07.960 |
And I think that's what you're doing with a prenup or with a marriage is you're imagining 00:55:19.800 |
Like, I think about, you know, certain guidelines, like in the octagon, it's, you know, no groin 00:55:28.260 |
So there's all the, this is not going to happen type stuff. 00:55:33.760 |
Like, no matter what X, Y, and Z are off the table. 00:55:38.240 |
Because you want to know that certain very dangerous things are off the table. 00:55:41.940 |
But what you're talking about are a number of opt-ins through contracts and prenups. 00:55:47.580 |
And also markers, like markers of, look, you spend so much time. 00:55:52.820 |
One of the reasons I consume so much of what you put out there is I like to know the markers 00:56:00.720 |
Like, I like to know, like, what are the things, what are the, you know, measure what matters. 00:56:05.020 |
Like, I want to look at what, what has changed and then what can I do to adjust at that point. 00:56:10.600 |
And I think relationships, it's the same thing. 00:56:13.080 |
Like, by the time you're in my office, it's too late. 00:56:15.900 |
Like, it is so much harder to take a broken relationship and try to make it good again than 00:56:22.520 |
it is to take a good relationship and keep it good and keep it strong. 00:56:26.940 |
Like, it's so much harder to get, you know, gain a bunch of weight and then try to lose 00:56:30.620 |
all of it than it is to maintain a healthy body mass. 00:56:34.420 |
So I think the same concept applies, which is be honest with yourself about what it is we're 00:56:42.680 |
moving towards and what it is we're building and how do we stay at this place. 00:56:46.740 |
I don't like to just have, it's not just about the opt-outs. 00:56:50.440 |
Like, okay, if we're split up, we're not going to have to hire lawyers and we're not going 00:56:57.980 |
But there's also tremendous value to the conversation about what do we owe each other? 00:57:05.160 |
Because that's where the economy piece of it comes in, which is, you know, and this 00:57:09.240 |
is the part, it's so laden with gender stuff and it's laden that no one wants to talk about 00:57:13.880 |
it or it doesn't feel safe to talk about or to talk about it honestly. 00:57:20.280 |
I think we are poorer for that dishonesty because I think, I understand it's an uncomfortable 00:57:26.680 |
I understand that it's difficult to say like, yeah, I don't know. 00:57:32.060 |
There's something in me that wants it this way. 00:57:38.080 |
I don't know what, like, this is important to me. 00:57:40.680 |
Like, yeah, I want to have a fulfilling sexual relationship with you, but we want different 00:57:49.940 |
Like, the male sex drive, the female sex drive, like, they're not the same. 00:57:55.560 |
So, is it okay to have a conversation about, hey, if we're marrying each other, we have a 00:58:05.780 |
And so, where it's at right now is good, I'd imagine. 00:58:10.420 |
So, how do we know when we're slipping off baseline? 00:58:13.300 |
And how do we know where, and by the way, how do we know where, when we slip off baseline, 00:58:20.140 |
Like, if I'm eight years old and my eyesight starts to get really bad, it's probably more 00:58:25.640 |
alarming than if I'm 52 and now I need reading glasses. 00:58:31.440 |
So, why not say, like, hey, I'm not saying the amount of sex we're having when we're dating 00:58:38.840 |
And if we ever slip off of that, it means that the relationship's in trouble. 00:58:43.480 |
So, do prenups include discussions or agreements about sex, money, et cetera? 00:58:50.020 |
And I think the overall conversation that should surround prenups, and the reason why I think 00:58:57.300 |
people who get prenups, in my observation, are less likely to get divorced, is at the front 00:59:03.620 |
of this thing, you are having conversations about what do we owe each other, what do we 00:59:09.860 |
expect from each other, what is meaningful to us about each other, what value do you bring 00:59:16.680 |
Like, why can we do that in any other relationship? 00:59:19.640 |
Like, if right now, you as my friend, someone said, why do you like Andrew Huberman as a friend? 00:59:33.360 |
He eats the same way that I do, like, kind of boring. 00:59:35.480 |
He doesn't drink just like me, so we can hang out. 00:59:37.360 |
I don't feel weird because I'm not drinking because he's not either. 00:59:39.280 |
Like, there's a whole list of stuff I could say. 00:59:43.600 |
Except you know a bunch of stuff I don't know in addition to that. 00:59:49.460 |
So, why—and by the way, isn't it lovely to hear what someone likes about you? 00:59:55.580 |
Like, I think it's one of the nicest things in the world when somebody says, you know what 01:00:01.040 |
Or if someone who I love and trust and know—like, I know you're my friend. 01:00:05.220 |
So, if you called me and you said, you know, Jim, can I give you some constructive feedback? 01:00:09.400 |
Like, something I think you're doing that's getting in your own way? 01:00:16.080 |
You've made that call to me a couple of times. 01:00:19.360 |
But, yeah, I mean, I think there's something—that's an event in a couple's life, right? 01:00:24.560 |
So, why in this romantic context would you squander the opportunity to have that conversation? 01:00:41.420 |
I think it's because when people hear the word prenup, they're thinking ending. 01:00:48.400 |
It's what you—it's the contract that is going to divide the resources so we don't have to give a certain amount to the lawyers. 01:00:55.560 |
You don't have to worry that you're going to end up with whatever, less than or more than this month. 01:01:01.280 |
I don't think—I could be wrong, but I don't think most people associate the word prenup with anything about the success of the marriage, 01:01:09.380 |
which is probably why so few people get them. 01:01:11.360 |
Is there any idea roughly what percentage of marriages— 01:01:13.900 |
No, because what's amazing about a prenup is a prenup is not filed anywhere. 01:01:25.440 |
Because we know nowadays things like NDAs are kind of fluid. 01:01:27.860 |
No, NDAs are fluid because NDAs are a relatively new construct, and they haven't really been tested. 01:01:32.760 |
Just like non-competes, there was a period of time where non-competes were like they were overly broad, 01:01:37.900 |
and they weren't worth the paper they were printed on, and then people tried to tailor them. 01:01:40.820 |
And now, you know, non-competes that are specific as to geography and duration, like, you know, 01:01:45.580 |
the court system, the living law figures out, okay, here's how we have to tweak it. 01:01:51.880 |
There was a lot of prenups back in the day used to get tossed out. 01:01:54.360 |
But for the 25 years I've been practicing, trust me, I've had a couple of prenups I've tried to set aside, 01:02:00.200 |
and I've been unsuccessful, and I'm a good lawyer. 01:02:02.500 |
But it's very hard to set aside a properly drafted prenup, you know. 01:02:06.420 |
And I think that that's a good thing because, again, the framing needs to change, which is everyone has a prenup. 01:02:14.200 |
It's either written by the government and subject to change by the government without notice to you, 01:02:19.080 |
and then you can't opt out of the new rule set, or it's one that you and your partner draft together. 01:02:24.520 |
I want to return to prenups and, unfortunately, to divorce. 01:02:29.620 |
But I'd like to talk about love and the contracts, both emotional and practical, around love a bit more. 01:02:36.200 |
Do you think people are completely honest with themselves and with the other person when they decide to get married 01:02:45.540 |
or simply to become, quote-unquote, life partners or to just become partners? 01:02:50.420 |
I mean, do you think that part of the allure of the dopamine, oxytocin, pheromone, social cloud, excuse me, 01:03:00.580 |
and all that goes with it, I mean, what's more fun than leaving the bedroom with someone you're totally crazy about, 01:03:08.780 |
showering up and heading out, and going to see friends, and you're happy, they're happy, 01:03:18.880 |
Like, there are very few things that are as, from the other side of the fence, 01:03:24.400 |
to see a couple that's really happy and in love, and you don't need to know or care about what they do in private. 01:03:30.900 |
You just, you can feel how much they adore one of them. 01:03:34.280 |
Yeah, I mean, I think there's a pheromone effect of that. 01:03:36.340 |
I mean, there's really serious primate biology that supports all that that we don't even have to discuss. 01:03:41.780 |
We can just kind of, like, put that one on the shelf and everyone knows what we're talking about. 01:03:44.700 |
But, you know, underneath there is, like you said, our needs. 01:03:49.340 |
Needs that, in the future, somebody might not feel are being met. 01:03:56.680 |
Especially if it's a first relationship, you have a third relationship. 01:04:00.980 |
And sometimes, you know, you meet the right person at 18. 01:04:05.100 |
So, to what extent do you think people understand how to understand their own needs and let alone express them? 01:04:13.820 |
I think I've always said that the most dangerous lives are the lies we tell ourselves. 01:04:18.620 |
And I say in my book that all marriage problems stem from two underlying problems. 01:04:26.840 |
We don't know what we want and we don't know how to express what we want, even if we know what we want. 01:04:33.000 |
We don't know how to express it to our partner. 01:04:34.460 |
And I think those are two really different but deeply correlated problems. 01:04:40.420 |
I think one of the great mistakes we make is I think we fall in love very fast in what we call love, right? 01:04:54.640 |
I'm fuzzy on the whole love concept because a lot of what's described as love is like something that, you know, 01:05:05.300 |
Like, I don't, I don't, this idea of like, you meet this one person and then that person, you're going to be your soulmate. 01:05:12.440 |
Like, whoever created the term soulmate, I owe them a tremendous amount of money. 01:05:16.160 |
Well, in some religions, there's actually a word for the God, the God-designated choice. 01:05:22.300 |
The God-given choice, a singular person that is going to meet that need. 01:05:26.640 |
But even if you were to say, okay, this person's been selected by an omnipotent creator deity, that's at least more reasonable. 01:05:32.760 |
Than saying, I've met this one person and they are now going to be the best friend, best co-parent, best roommate, best travel partner, best sexual partner, best confidant, best financial partner. 01:05:50.380 |
And they happen to live three miles from you? 01:05:53.400 |
Like, and go to the same coffee shop in a world of eight billion people? 01:05:58.260 |
Like, I would definitely believe in God if that's the reality. 01:06:01.020 |
But the truth is, I don't think it's like that. 01:06:03.160 |
I think it's a combination of pheromones and it's a combination of dopamine. 01:06:10.960 |
But why do we have to look at it like those early days of a relationship where you, look, we've both been in love. 01:06:19.880 |
We've both been in a romantic relationship where just the person brushes up next to you or the scent of them hits you. 01:06:32.260 |
And you just, but if that stayed forever, you would never get anything done. 01:06:39.560 |
Like, civilization would perish because we would all just want to sit there smelling someone's hair all day. 01:06:45.700 |
Like, we would just want to be around each other all day. 01:06:48.300 |
And by the way, not just how we feel about them, how they make us feel about ourselves. 01:06:54.500 |
Like, why do you think affairs are so intoxicating? 01:06:57.320 |
Because you've been in this relationship with this person and they don't even see you anymore and you don't even see them anymore. 01:07:02.040 |
And then you meet this other person and they're like, you're fascinating. 01:07:07.400 |
And all of a sudden you start to feel brilliant and handsome again. 01:07:14.500 |
Like, you're seeing yourself through the lens of this person's gaze, you know? 01:07:19.060 |
Yeah, Esther Perel, when she was sitting in the same seat you're sitting in now, said that 90% of affairs people describe as, 01:07:26.280 |
they did them, they had those affairs because they made them feel, quote unquote, alive. 01:07:30.700 |
There was an aliveness that was in stark contrast to the deadness or lack of aliveness in the relationship. 01:07:38.940 |
She was, we were discussing the, you know, so what is the underlying thing that they're seeking? 01:07:46.920 |
Well, her book, you know, Redefining Infidelity, like all of her writing, she and I were on a panel together some years ago. 01:07:52.560 |
And, I mean, I think she's a brilliant, brilliant mind. 01:07:55.460 |
And she has an insight into the nature of infidelity and human relationships, romantic relationships. 01:08:02.460 |
But, again, she's saying the quiet part out loud. 01:08:05.720 |
And, again, I don't think she's not a romantic. 01:08:07.960 |
I don't think that she doesn't believe in love. 01:08:10.280 |
Like when someone says to me, well, do you believe in love? 01:08:17.900 |
I guess the question is, do you believe in the potential permanence of romance and love? 01:08:25.540 |
Yes, because I've seen it just like you have. 01:08:31.260 |
You know, one of the things I've said before, and I get pilloried for it every time I say it because people want to misinterpret it intentionally, 01:08:42.380 |
But if you win, what you win is so good that you might as well buy a ticket. 01:08:50.420 |
Again, with a prenup, then your downside is controlled to some degree. 01:08:55.540 |
Now, people take that quote and go, oh, well, so you're saying that it's random? 01:09:00.360 |
Like you can't do anything to increase your chances of winning the lottery other than buying more tickets. 01:09:07.100 |
And when people say to me, like, well, marriage is hard work. 01:09:15.380 |
Like there's so much that we put on love, romantic love, that just doesn't make sense as far as I'm concerned. 01:09:23.180 |
By observable experience, if you watch people who are happily married, they're cheering for each other. 01:09:29.580 |
But again, are they dealing with those early days intoxication to the point where if the other person starts speaking, they lose their train of thought? 01:09:37.620 |
No, because they're building a life and a family and an ecosystem in the home together. 01:09:42.240 |
And, you know, they have to divide responsibilities. 01:09:44.580 |
But those two things do not have to be incompatible with each other. 01:09:49.400 |
But you cannot throw into that equation ignorance and willful blindness to the reality of the impermanence of love and the fragility of love. 01:10:01.540 |
Like my career is about the fragility of love. 01:10:06.860 |
Why can't we talk about this fragile thing and treat it like you treat a fragile thing? 01:10:17.840 |
It's something that's so amazing, powerful, and beautiful that it takes – sucks the reason right out of our heads. 01:10:24.620 |
And all you want to do is be with this person and talk in and just – what do you want to do tonight? 01:10:29.960 |
Do you want to go to the greatest concert in the greatest venue and sit in the front row or just sit with this person and like watch something on Netflix and eat some popcorn? 01:10:40.720 |
Well, the friendship piece is something that I've heard you talk about before and, you know, with all the discussion that we're having here about, you know, pheromone clouds and dopamine and romance and sex, I think that, you know, I'll put in a strong vote for saying all that's wonderful, but the mellow times just hanging out on the couch are different, you know, starkly different. 01:11:02.820 |
But are as bonding in many ways, especially on a backdrop of a world that, especially now, is, you know, chaotic, uncertain, threatening to many people. 01:11:14.620 |
Even if you're successful in the world, like the world's a lot. 01:11:18.960 |
There's a lot coming at us all the time through devices and through things. 01:11:22.860 |
You know, there's a lot of uncertainty about our whole species at some level. 01:11:26.740 |
I mean, there's so much criticism from the outside world, so much self-criticism and comparison that there's something about having someone who sees the beauty in you and is cheering for you. 01:11:42.020 |
And that when you fall down, their response is, okay, you fell down. 01:11:52.580 |
Something about that to me is that's the best thing. 01:11:57.720 |
Like, that's when I see successful married couples, they're not taking the piss out of each other. 01:12:03.760 |
Like, all the tropes now of, like, you know, like, women just being like, oh, yeah, he's just such an idiot. 01:12:09.960 |
Like, you know, that it's, like, cute somehow to, like, talk crap about your husband or your wife. 01:12:16.220 |
Men as children and women as the most loathsome harpies ever to castrate a man. 01:12:20.220 |
You know, like, oh, yeah, well, please, you know, and she's this one, you know, there's nothing. 01:12:29.440 |
You know, I've noticed, like, half my family is in South America, completely different picture. 01:12:34.980 |
Now, one could argue their problem is with the picture there. 01:12:39.280 |
But it's not the same, you know, men are children. 01:12:47.580 |
Yeah, and I guess for me, especially in this increasingly performative and curated age that we live in where, you know, we're watching on, you know, Instagram and all these other social media. 01:12:58.860 |
We're watching everyone's greatest hits while we live our gag reel. 01:13:01.420 |
And we're sort of comparing ourselves to, like, this curated version of other people's relationships and lives. 01:13:08.260 |
And so a lot of the time, we're just not feeling good about what we're doing or where we're at. 01:13:13.920 |
Our bodies, you know, like, our minds, our success, our accomplishments. 01:13:18.600 |
Like, we're looking at everybody else's curated greatest hits. 01:13:22.680 |
And I think there's something really valuable about having another human being next to you who's not criticizing you. 01:13:31.740 |
Like, even constructive criticism is criticism. 01:13:33.720 |
Like, there's something about having another person. 01:13:36.880 |
I'm not saying, by the way, that part of being in a good relationship is not criticism, you know, or the ability to, like, give feedback to a person. 01:13:44.600 |
But it's like I said earlier about our friendship. 01:13:45.820 |
Like, if you know it's coming from a place of love, of like, hey, man, I know you're great, and I feel like this is dampening your greatness or this is shining light in the wrong place. 01:14:00.660 |
But, again, it requires these two people to have, you know, a conversation early on, I think, about what do we expect? 01:14:11.500 |
And, again, you know, to look at that as a – I mean, marriage is a contract. 01:14:18.820 |
Like, we're living in this world of contracts whether we want to admit it or not. 01:14:27.220 |
It's not – I promise it is not going to take away the beauty and the romance of this thing. 01:14:45.760 |
If you ever want to just feel the most affirmed you'll ever feel in your life, because these are people who are struggling with tremendous difficulties and challenges in life, challenges you and I don't have. 01:14:58.360 |
And all they want is connection with another person. 01:15:03.920 |
And there's something about, like, how they both are, like, oh, my God, I want this, like, oh, do you like ice cream? 01:15:16.380 |
Like, and you're just watching it on the edge of your seat going, oh, my God, yeah, yeah, yeah, good, good, good, okay, good. 01:15:26.940 |
Like, I imagine some people watch the Super Bowl. 01:15:31.120 |
Like, you'd think I had money on what happens to Tanner, you know? 01:15:35.520 |
And because there's something so pure about I just want to find love, like, I just want to find another person that I'm going to feel loved by and safe with and who likes me and who the way they look at me makes me look at myself in a more positive way. 01:15:53.960 |
Like, there's something so beautiful about that. 01:15:56.000 |
And maybe you have to strip away a lot of this intellectual crap to, like, be able to really see that that's what this comes down to and to make it its purest distilled version. 01:16:08.120 |
But, again, I think that's something that's easiest and best to do when you're at the beginning of that journey, not midway through, not definitely not where it's gone off the rails. 01:16:23.980 |
And obviously, social media plays an important role in that. 01:16:28.600 |
You mentioned that people showing their best lives, best selves, best everything. 01:16:33.000 |
I have a friend who is very high up in one of the social media platforms. 01:16:41.440 |
Who told me social media is 99% about women and female biology and psychology communicating to one another and to men and getting men to communicate to the world things that support kind of an ideal. 01:17:04.520 |
Some people are going to hear that and get upset, and then I'm going to tell you that the person that told me that is a woman, which kind of bends people's brains around it. 01:17:16.900 |
Men will, you know, just show their half-court shot prowess, et cetera. 01:17:24.160 |
But the argument is that this idea of ideals being presented as something to keep striving toward is very much the modern version of the Disney movie. 01:17:44.620 |
The bride and groom and everything's perfect, that there's a subconscious text there. 01:17:50.460 |
We're all kind of aiming for and hoping for, and so we see the top veneer. 01:17:56.860 |
I don't think I've seen a movie or an Instagram account, for that matter, of a couple resolving a really hard challenge that wasn't like cancer or something. 01:18:06.900 |
Like a discussion, a hard discussion, a real one in real time. 01:18:12.340 |
I've seen some staged ones that are just ridiculous where somebody listens, I hear you, I hear you. 01:18:17.380 |
Okay, but that doesn't get to the underlying emotions at all. 01:18:20.140 |
And so I think what's happening is people are getting more and more entranced by this ideal and losing track of what you just described, which may be the real ideal. 01:18:32.480 |
This one from this show, Love on the Spectrum, right, that you're trying to find connection along the lines of simple, everyday things that you can bask in over and over without the fear of them disappearing. 01:18:44.360 |
Because they're not that hard to attain and they're not dependent on some transient dopamine wave that you just can't get back. 01:18:50.460 |
But I think what you're saying is spot on, but so I've always interpreted social media as a form of advertising. 01:19:02.160 |
And there's two things about advertising that I think should be said out loud. 01:19:06.180 |
One is that advertising is the dream life of a culture. 01:19:15.020 |
It's this idea of like this is what a Bud Light drinker looks like. 01:19:23.260 |
This is what a guy who drinks this beer looks like. 01:19:27.520 |
This is what a BMW driver looks like versus this is what a Hyundai or a Subaru or a Jeep driver looks like. 01:19:35.220 |
And I think there's tremendous value to that. 01:19:36.860 |
Tremendous value to like what do we imagine ourselves to be? 01:19:40.840 |
Like, because whenever I'm talking to someone in a negotiation, as someone who negotiates for a living and litigates for a living, like, I'm not just interested in who you are. 01:19:50.400 |
I'm interested in who you want me to think you are and who you think you are and who you want to be, right? 01:19:56.720 |
So advertising, social media, it's the dream life of a culture. 01:20:01.060 |
But here's the thing we don't like to talk about. 01:20:03.260 |
Advertising at its core is the opposite of therapy. 01:20:07.520 |
If the goal of therapy is to create a sense of wellness and wholeness in a person, okay, advertising is the opposite. 01:20:22.140 |
If you had, you would have, then you would be better. 01:20:29.280 |
But if you, you know, the purpose of advertising is essentially to say you're not okay. 01:20:45.800 |
Maybe if you did contrast therapy, saunas, cold plunges, you'd be better. 01:20:49.280 |
You know, maybe if you took more creatine, you'd be better. 01:20:52.520 |
Like you're good now, but you could be better. 01:20:54.680 |
And so that constant barrage of our dream life, our imagination, I mean, again, it's inspiring. 01:21:05.240 |
But to be inundated on a daily basis with you're not okay, you're not over and over again, this is not a normal condition for humans to be in. 01:21:17.100 |
And that is why, I think, I think, to some degree, we find that, like, romantic relationships so appealing because you're closing the door and this person, you're okay, you're good, you're good. 01:21:34.600 |
Yeah, and what a warm, wonderful place to be. 01:21:38.380 |
Particularly, like, it's really nice to be in a warm house when it's cold outside. 01:21:42.400 |
It's really nice to be in a dry house when it's raining outside. 01:21:46.140 |
Well, when you're living in an ecosystem where information has become a form of garbage that comes at you from every possible angle all the time, devoid of context, and everything is an advertisement telling you there's something wrong with you, why wouldn't you want to slam the door, close the windows, and be with someone, and ideally a couple of dogs, where you guys can just be warm and happy and love each other? 01:22:16.020 |
You don't have to, like, you don't need that much. 01:22:19.520 |
If you have love and you have each other, you don't need, but that's why I think our society, I think capitalism likes love insofar as it sells Hyundais, and it'll get people to buy, like, the wedding industrial complex. 01:22:32.740 |
Like, it'll get you to go out and do all the stuff you do. 01:22:35.620 |
But, like, the idea that, hey, if we just find another person, that we might realize that this is all the matrix. 01:22:41.760 |
Like, that I don't need all of that to be loved, and I don't need all of that to feel love. 01:22:48.000 |
Like, the fullness you feel when you love someone and are loved by them. 01:22:53.540 |
Like, again, it doesn't even have to be a human. 01:22:56.140 |
Why do people are always like, man, we don't deserve dogs? 01:22:59.340 |
Because your dog doesn't give a shit what car you drive or what you do or how, if you got six-pack abs. 01:23:07.360 |
Like, they just love you, and you love them in a way that is, like, mind-blowing in that, again, do you ever look at, like, people are always like, oh, well, you know, this person I'm in a romantic relationship with, like, they're aging, their body's not as jacked as it was, or they're not as, do you ever look at your dog and go, like, I gotta get a puppy, man. 01:23:33.500 |
It's like the pair of jeans that you're like, oh, my God, it gets more comfortable every year. 01:23:37.060 |
And, like, that's how love can be and should be. 01:23:41.380 |
But, again, it requires to some degree that that noise of that ecosystem, that constant you're not okay, you're not okay, that we can figure out a way to turn the volume down on that and turn up the volume on what are we feeding here together. 01:24:05.080 |
Like, that's the wholeness, that sense of wholeness. 01:24:07.880 |
Like, that depth of connection, to me, like, that makes all the sense in the world. 01:24:14.940 |
And when you said, you know, two people together in the cocoon, maybe some dogs as well, if one were just to inject a smartphone in there, completely different picture. 01:24:28.800 |
And, you know, and I'm not trying to be a buzzkill here, but what you describe is so beautiful. 01:24:32.320 |
And, you know, if I look back on the best moments in romantic relationships that I've had, it was, well, in recent years, driving a segment of the California coast where there was no phone reception. 01:24:44.480 |
Like, you know, like, the kind of peace that comes from that. 01:24:53.200 |
Almost anybody, if you ask them, you know, genuinely ask them, like, what was a moment where you felt the most loved? 01:25:05.680 |
It rarely, you know, I was on, you and I both done Diary of the CEO, you know, Steve Bartlett, and we both have a friendship with Steve. 01:25:13.300 |
And one of the questions he asked me was, when did you feel in your life the most loved? 01:25:22.740 |
And it was the silliest answer and yet the most honest. 01:25:26.180 |
And I told a story about how my, when I was a kid, we used to get pizza every once in a while. 01:25:31.760 |
And, you know, pizza's cut in a certain number of slices. 01:25:33.940 |
And I remember my friend Tommy and I were having pizza and my dad, like, there was an odd number of slices. 01:25:43.000 |
And my dad had one slice and we, like two young boys, just devoured, you know, like three, four slices a piece. 01:25:50.680 |
And, of course, he and I are both looking at it, even though we'd had, like, three or four slices of pizza and my dad had only had one. 01:25:55.540 |
And my dad went, like, yeah, you guys can have it. 01:25:57.920 |
And we split that last piece, my friend and I. 01:26:00.920 |
And a couple of weeks later, I was at his house and ordered pizza. 01:26:04.180 |
And his father just, like, ate the last slice of pizza. 01:26:10.780 |
And I remember looking at him and thinking, my dad would never do that. 01:26:17.400 |
Like, I just felt it to my core that, like, he loves me so much. 01:26:21.680 |
Like, I know he wanted that other piece of pizza. 01:26:23.460 |
But the joy he felt in watching me eat another piece of pizza was bigger than the hunger he had for another piece of pizza. 01:26:32.880 |
And, like, most people, if you say to them, like, what was a moment in your romantic relationship where you felt loved? 01:26:42.320 |
Like, God, I'd rather be here than anywhere in the world. 01:26:44.660 |
The answer is not going to be we were at the most expensive restaurant or we were having the most mind-blowing sex. 01:26:52.420 |
Like, listen, you'll have fond memories of all those things. 01:26:54.920 |
But it's some little moment of just connection or just the feeling of, like, holding this person's hand or, like, the way that the light hit them at the particular sunset when you were sitting outside together. 01:27:09.080 |
Like, and to me, like, of course, modern consumer culture doesn't shove that down your throat because you don't need anything. 01:27:18.340 |
You don't need to buy anything to experience that. 01:27:20.640 |
You don't need to do anything to experience that other than find another person and love them, you know, and let them love you. 01:27:28.480 |
And that's not – doesn't require a lot of purchases. 01:27:31.600 |
I'd like to take a quick break and acknowledge one of our sponsors, Function. 01:27:37.040 |
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You've got my mind going to a number of pleasant memories and examples. 01:29:31.380 |
We're still on very good terms, and we still laugh and delight in this one moment. 01:29:36.480 |
There's a diner here in Los Angeles that we had come to that it's closed now, but it's still there. 01:29:41.860 |
Every time I drive past it, I think about this. 01:29:47.420 |
It was early days of dating, and I remember she asked for cream for her coffee and put a little bit more cream 01:29:59.560 |
And I was like, a little cream with your coffee? 01:30:01.620 |
She's like, well, actually, I want to put the whole thing in here, but I'm trying to be polite. 01:30:06.900 |
Without hesitating, she just went, and put the entire beaker of cream in there. 01:30:12.920 |
And I remember that moment being so freeing for me because it was this moment where I knew she was relaxed enough to do it. 01:30:19.960 |
It was hilarious for reasons that were only clear to us, and people are probably bewildered about why it would be so meaningful now. 01:30:27.500 |
And to me, it was a moment where I was like, I don't want to reveal who this person is. 01:30:33.560 |
People in my life will know, but she has such a lust for life. 01:30:36.640 |
Like, full blast, all gas pedal on everything. 01:30:45.620 |
And it was this permission that she gave herself. 01:30:50.580 |
And I think as you were describing the pizza example or my example, what's clear to me is that the memory of, say, like, the incredible early stage of a relationship or some big vacation or event, which is wonderful. 01:31:05.940 |
That stuff can set a kind of yearning as much as an appreciation. 01:31:12.180 |
Whereas, for me, this probably silly-sounding thing about the cream in the coffee or the pizza thing, you still have that. 01:31:26.160 |
And I think there's something very deeply biological and psychological about those kinds of things because I think they drive really deep pillars into our memory. 01:31:36.900 |
I mean, look at the way you describe it or the way that I feel it. 01:31:39.000 |
Well, first of all, there's nothing silly about that example. 01:31:41.360 |
Just the fact that you say, like, well, that silly example I gave, like, there's absolutely nothing silly about that. 01:31:50.060 |
I completely was smiling while you were telling that story because it's lovely because what is it? 01:31:57.440 |
Like, the definition of intimacy has nothing to do with sex. 01:32:00.400 |
Intimacy is defined as the ability to be completely yourself with another person. 01:32:08.460 |
Those first few days, those early days, we have spanks on our personality. 01:32:11.900 |
You know, everything is like, okay, I'm going to – and again, is it lying? 01:32:17.420 |
It accentuates the positive, dissentuates the negative. 01:32:20.520 |
If someone was wearing makeup and then they take their makeup off, I don't go, your eyelashes don't look like that. 01:32:28.040 |
Like, you're trying to be the – but eventually you're going to see this person without makeup. 01:32:31.040 |
Like, eventually you're going to find out she puts an insane amount of cream into her coffee. 01:32:34.600 |
But these are the things we love about people. 01:32:38.040 |
It's what makes them human is that you're just – she puts so much cream in her coffee. 01:32:46.740 |
You still think of her when you drive – you think of that moment. 01:32:50.420 |
Like, that was an investment that paid dividends forever. 01:32:56.460 |
And by the way, it's not a betrayal to future relationships that you fondly recall this moment of intimacy where this person felt loved enough and comfortable enough with you to go, yeah, I'm going to take that mask off. 01:33:08.680 |
I'm going to show you I like an insane amount of cream. 01:33:22.440 |
Like, that's the feeling we all want is that feeling of, like, yeah, you're not crazy. 01:33:34.980 |
And that, to me, like, that's the whole thing. 01:33:39.840 |
And so, if you say, well, this is where we were in early days and that's the baseline and if we don't continue to feel that intoxicated by each other that we're doing it wrong, okay, then it's – you've set an impossible – that's like saying I'm not in the shape I was in when I was 25, so I must be doing something wrong. 01:33:59.460 |
No, like, the organism doesn't change – it doesn't evolve that way. 01:34:04.460 |
Like, this is the nature of things, is that it's supposed to be what it is. 01:34:09.660 |
Like, it's supposed to merge or evolve into something different. 01:34:13.240 |
But, again, having conversations about what that is and what it looks like, that's the best possible way to preserve what's best in it. 01:34:23.340 |
And I think starting a marriage with we're not going to talk about any of that. 01:34:35.760 |
Let's just talk about any of this other stuff. 01:34:37.040 |
Like, that's not – that, to me, you're doing yourself a disservice. 01:34:41.800 |
Start early by creating the pattern of we're just going to say it. 01:34:48.280 |
We're just going to say what we're doing right, what we're doing that hit the wrong way. 01:34:56.080 |
If you hurt my feelings, if we had a conversation and you said something and it just hurt my feelings, I know you didn't mean to. 01:35:09.640 |
But I'm going to probably say something sometime that hurts you and I didn't mean to, you know? 01:35:17.040 |
Just don't say it out loud because it's uncomfortable to say that to Jimmy. 01:35:20.580 |
He's going to feel badly that he said that to me and that it upset me. 01:35:24.540 |
That's how, if you've been in a long-term romantic relationship, which we both have in our lives, that's how you're having some very banal sort of argument about, like, what's the best way to get from here to Calabasas or whatever. 01:35:39.920 |
And five minutes later, it's like, you know, I never liked your mother. 01:35:47.400 |
Like, how long have you had that in the chamber? 01:35:49.000 |
Like, how long have you been holding on to that? 01:35:54.720 |
So, why not create a framework early where if we, something blips the wrong way, like, I'm not saying dwell on it. 01:36:05.400 |
I'm not saying put a person in a defensive situation by immediately calling it out. 01:36:08.760 |
But, like, if you, if I said, I'm telling you right now as my friend, if I say something to you at some point that hurts you, I know I didn't mean to. 01:36:20.660 |
I'm sorry because I know I didn't mean to hurt you. 01:36:30.940 |
And so, if you're my friend and I love you, I didn't mean to hurt you. 01:36:34.520 |
So, why can't we from the beginning, and that's why I like prenups because from the beginning, let's talk about this. 01:36:48.460 |
Like, what are the exchanges of value between us? 01:36:52.580 |
And as we grow and change, how will we hold on to the part that's most meaningful to both of us? 01:37:01.040 |
Can you give some examples of what a prenup, kind of the scaffold of a prenup might look like? 01:37:06.800 |
Barring the extremes of, like, billionaires and, you know, and they have 19 chihuahuas or whatever it is. 01:37:17.020 |
Actually, one of my jiu-jitsu teachers, Paul Schreiner, he's got a remarkable number of chihuahuas. 01:37:23.760 |
I think Stephen Kotler, who is involved in a lot of the literature and popular writing around flow, has a lot of chihuahuas. 01:37:31.440 |
And he told me that in some country other than the United States where they translate books, someone played a joke or something where on the title of the book it translates as chihuahua man. 01:37:42.400 |
I mean, if you think about chihuahuas, it's fair because if you glued, like, 20 of them together, it's still not a great thing. 01:37:53.600 |
For the record, I'm not being politically correct. 01:38:02.060 |
Because, like, I can imagine that if we break up, you'll get X amount of blah, blah, blah, blah. 01:38:08.240 |
Yeah, maybe list off some, like, core tenets. 01:38:10.720 |
So, to do that, you know, what you're doing is we're going to do a consultation for a prenuptial agreement right here. 01:38:18.420 |
So, the first thing that, yeah, you're getting it for free. 01:38:24.920 |
To understand what a contract does, the first thing you have to understand is what are your rights in the absence of that contract, right? 01:38:36.560 |
I know in the absence of that car lease, they have the car and I have the money, right? 01:38:43.380 |
So, that's a really easy contract because whatever the contract is, we both want the same thing. 01:38:51.540 |
So, now we're just trying to figure out what are the terms and how do we codify them? 01:38:55.420 |
And then we'll come up with what are some things that could go wrong? 01:38:59.280 |
What if I drive the car off the lot and the wheels fall off? 01:39:02.360 |
Like, okay, now we have to start using some imagination about what do we do in these contingencies. 01:39:06.460 |
But at its core, simple contract, which is I want the car. 01:39:14.840 |
And if we can, somebody else will get the car and somebody else will take my money. 01:39:26.140 |
So, if we don't marry, we both know that's easy, right? 01:39:43.360 |
So, again, first order of business is why are we getting married? 01:39:50.380 |
Like, what is the problem to which marriage is a solution? 01:39:52.580 |
Like, why is it so strange to say to another human being, if I said to you, Andrew, great 01:40:02.280 |
Like, why would that be like, what kind of jerk is Andrew today? 01:40:07.580 |
Well, my parents, it's really important to them that I get married. 01:40:10.480 |
You know, we're having a great time, she and I, but like, you know, her parents are 01:40:13.680 |
very religious and they say, oh, that's a good reason. 01:40:17.380 |
Like, we do things to make our parents happy or our partner's parents happy. 01:40:22.780 |
I genuinely think that there's a valid thing there, which is, this is the reason why we're 01:40:28.900 |
Or I want the tax break that comes with getting married. 01:40:35.060 |
On federal and state, you get your different dependency exemptions. 01:40:38.040 |
You get different schedules of how much you have to make to pay at a different time. 01:40:41.940 |
Yeah, there's, there's a whole bunch of purely financial reasons to get married. 01:40:46.840 |
Like, again, with a prenup, you can take away the risk, but still have all those benefits. 01:40:53.060 |
You have all kinds of inheritance rights if you want them. 01:40:55.620 |
Like, there's all kinds of potential perks to getting married, right? 01:41:01.220 |
Like, again, another good reason for people to say they're getting married is, hey. 01:41:06.060 |
I want to make sure we flag that because things are changing, but I, I agree. 01:41:10.100 |
There's always the, have they ever been married? 01:41:14.500 |
If you say, this is my girlfriend, that could mean a week. 01:41:17.620 |
We've been together a week, or it could mean we've been together 10 years and we have kids 01:41:25.800 |
Just, just because we went and did like, we, 20 bucks, Elvis will marry you in Vegas. 01:41:30.240 |
And you're telling me that that gives more legitimacy than someone who's got two children 01:41:34.100 |
with someone has lived with them for 10 years, but just didn't get the government involved. 01:41:37.220 |
Like, that doesn't make any sense to me, but we've decided it's like, presto change. 01:41:43.240 |
That means now you're a totally legitimate relationship. 01:41:45.400 |
A family member told me that years ago, I won't tell you what the course of their relationship 01:41:50.580 |
was, um, said the reason to get married is because it's an additional buffer against, 01:42:02.380 |
And I, you know, what if we, what if we closed emergency rooms from 10 PM until like 5 AM? 01:42:10.780 |
Do you think people would do less risky shit? 01:42:12.920 |
Do you think people would go like, Hey, you know what? 01:42:15.760 |
If I break my leg skateboarding, sorry to pick on skateboarding. 01:42:20.000 |
If the ER is closed, I won't be like, that's insane to think that people in this dopamine 01:42:26.260 |
state, you know, intoxicated by pheromones that they're going to say like, Oh, you know, 01:42:34.540 |
It's like, it's, it's just the numbers don't bear it out. 01:42:37.000 |
Like with, with the divorce rate, what it is, it doesn't work. 01:42:39.700 |
You want to create barriers, create barriers to entry. 01:42:45.840 |
You have to, there's a waiting period or you have to take a test or you have to, whatever, 01:42:50.700 |
something, some barrier to entry, you have to pay some amount of money to get married. 01:42:55.780 |
If you believe in the barrier concept, barriers to exit makes no sense. 01:43:03.100 |
Again, still don't think it would make that much sense, but to tie it back to the prenup 01:43:07.600 |
So the first question is, why are you getting married? 01:43:12.680 |
What is the problem to which marriage is a solution? 01:43:14.620 |
The next question is, okay, if we marry without a prenup, what will govern our relationship 01:43:27.540 |
So if it ends by some other reason, either I divorce you, you divorce me. 01:43:34.160 |
We come to the joint decision that this isn't working. 01:43:37.080 |
Some intervening circumstance occurs that changes the dynamic between us in a way that we couldn't 01:43:44.260 |
possibly have anticipated, whatever that might be, a medical issue, something with a child. 01:43:49.260 |
Like I've had cases where, and these are tragic cases, but I've had maybe in a 25-year career, 01:43:56.260 |
I've maybe had a dozen cases where people lost a child by usually some kind of tragic accident. 01:44:02.420 |
So kid falls in the pool, drowns, and they cannot be together anymore. 01:44:10.200 |
Like they are a reminder to the other person of this immeasurable loss that they can't wrap their brains around. 01:44:22.740 |
Like it's not either of their fault that this horrible tragedy occurred. 01:44:29.080 |
Like they just remind each other of this loss. 01:44:33.180 |
They can't ever, you know, they can't ever extricate that from their feelings. 01:44:38.800 |
Now, I don't look at that person and go, well, you should never get divorced. 01:44:43.160 |
Divorce is, dude, who am I to say to that person? 01:44:50.900 |
Or, oh, go to therapy and that'll get rid of that. 01:44:55.420 |
So if that person has been through that exquisite, unique kind of torture, that person says, yeah, we just can't do that. 01:45:04.960 |
Like we have to start over and reboot our lives separately so that we have no memory of that anymore or as few reminders as possible. 01:45:12.240 |
I have nothing I can say to that except that's not a choice I could tell you is wrong. 01:45:17.720 |
So there are circumstances that can end a marriage that were not anticipated by or caused by either person's malfeasance, right? 01:45:29.640 |
So if we know in the absence of a rule set, in the absence of a prenup, what happens if we divorce? 01:45:36.760 |
Well, most people never even get to that step. 01:45:39.000 |
Like most people never, when they get married, they never sit down with anyone and go, what's legally going to happen to me right now? 01:45:47.400 |
You know, like what, like you buy a house, you get a HUD one that tells you the nature of the loan and how much you're paying in interest so that nobody can like claim they didn't know that. 01:46:00.400 |
You just did the most legally significant thing you're ever going to do other than dying and no one told you anything about what just happened. 01:46:08.820 |
So like right now, if you and I buy a house together, right, title controls, whose name is it saying? 01:46:17.460 |
If it's in our joint names, we own it 50-50 unless there's a contract that says otherwise, right? 01:46:21.500 |
So there are defaults in the absence of a contract. 01:46:27.160 |
Again, lawyers make a ton of money over people's aversion to contracts. 01:46:34.740 |
When I got involved in Trusted Prenup and I told people, oh, I'm doing this thing. 01:46:41.300 |
Like, hey, prenups are the easiest thing we do. 01:46:47.800 |
We can charge $5,000, $10,000 for basically a document that you go into Word and change the names. 01:46:55.260 |
Or we've done so many of them that we just go, oh, this is just like that one. 01:47:02.280 |
And if it's successful, I'm taking hundreds of thousands of dollars in counsel fees out of my pocket because now you're not going to have a litigated divorce. 01:47:10.880 |
It's not going to be a knockdown drag out with whatever the government's current way of handling things happens to be. 01:47:17.320 |
Which, by the way, is going to be different five years from now than it was five years ago. 01:47:20.740 |
I know that because I've been doing this 25 years. 01:47:22.580 |
And the law is completely different than it was 25 years ago, 10 years ago, 15 years ago. 01:47:27.420 |
It changes constantly because politicians change constantly. 01:47:30.580 |
So fundamentally, what happens with a prenup is simple. 01:47:37.100 |
We're creating a rule set together, whatever that might be. 01:47:40.360 |
And it can be as detailed as you want it to be. 01:47:42.560 |
So I've seen ones that have very specific things about how often we're going to have sex. 01:47:51.000 |
Well, what they are is either aspirational guidelines or it is tied in some way to some incentive or disincentive, like some penalty. 01:48:05.040 |
But, I mean, this story I tell pretty frequently is I did a prenup defense where—I didn't write the prenup, so don't blame me. 01:48:15.460 |
But I defended the prenup successfully, where for every 10 pounds the bride gained, she would lose $10,000 a month in alimony when they split up. 01:48:26.740 |
The court in its decision actually said, this is boorish. 01:48:32.500 |
I don't know why you married this person who insisted on this being in the contract, but it's a contract. 01:48:39.680 |
You were both represented by counsel, and it's enforceable. 01:48:47.320 |
Yeah, they divorced, and she lost $20,000 a month in alimony. 01:48:51.800 |
She gained around 20 pounds during the marriage. 01:48:57.900 |
I mean, you know, and he got richer, and she got less gorgeous. 01:49:02.560 |
But there are a lot of rich, gorgeous matchups. 01:49:06.640 |
And that's, by the way, it's gender blind, too. 01:49:08.480 |
Like, the C-suite executive founder that you're talking about, like, female founder, they very often don't marry. 01:49:15.620 |
I know, like, some people in the red pill community want to say, like, hypergamy and stuff like that, that, like, C-suite women only marry, like, even more successful men than that. 01:49:23.600 |
I have a lot of female clients who I have to tell them they owe alimony. 01:49:27.560 |
And they're like, wait, why do I have to pay? 01:49:33.320 |
I'm, like, because you are a C-suite executive who makes millions, and you married the, like, super hot, unsuccessful musician who has the, like, oops, I didn't know I was sexy stubble because he looks really good. 01:49:46.980 |
Like, and that's—you married the equivalent of me marrying, like, the hot yoga teacher. 01:49:56.800 |
If you marry someone who earns significantly less money than you do and they have a diminished lifetime earning capacity, then you owe them alimony most likely. 01:50:08.560 |
There's a presumption that equitable distribution, equitable meaning fair, is really the law. 01:50:17.280 |
There are some reasons and some circumstances where equitable does not mean equal. 01:50:22.860 |
There can be things called wasteful dissipation of marital assets where a person has squandered money that should have stayed in the marital estate, gambling, having a paramour, a girlfriend, or a boyfriend. 01:50:32.300 |
So there's—but again, like, to tie it back to prenups, what you're doing with a prenup as a fundamental is just saying, okay, there's yours, there's mine, and there's ours, right? 01:50:45.000 |
Like, in terms of assets and liabilities, which, by the way, I think is an excellent analog to the nature of relationships themselves, right? 01:50:54.020 |
There's you, there's me, and there's we, right? 01:50:58.540 |
And a healthy relationship, there's still you, there's still me, and then there's this Venn diagram of we, right? 01:51:08.220 |
And, of course, you don't want you and me to be subsumed by the we because I fell in love with you. 01:51:17.160 |
Why would we want those to go away completely? 01:51:19.400 |
But, of course, the we is like, you know, it's intoxicating, and you want to become the we more. 01:51:26.260 |
But there's value in staying you and me and having a healthy we, having a healthy, you know, intersection there. 01:51:32.840 |
So why not, in your structure of the marriage, have, okay, yours, mine, and ours? 01:51:40.360 |
So at a fundamental level, if you're going to have a basic prenuptial agreement, it's just going to say, hey, we're staying in that system. 01:51:53.260 |
If it's yours, you keep it, asset or liability. 01:51:55.820 |
If it's in mine, I keep it, asset or liability. 01:52:00.740 |
And now we're going into this relationship with knowing the rule set. 01:52:06.820 |
If I put it in my account and my sole name, I've protected it. 01:52:12.540 |
Hey, babe, you just got that big bonus at work, and you didn't put any of it in the joint account? 01:52:17.560 |
Something going on that we need to talk about? 01:52:19.000 |
Like, and again, I understand people don't want to have uncomfortable conversations. 01:52:24.440 |
Well, you can have, like, a series of mildly uncomfortable conversations throughout the course of a relationship, or you can duck that and then have some really difficult conversations in divorce court. 01:52:40.040 |
And to me, that's pretty easy, like, which of those two things I'd choose. 01:52:43.780 |
So at its core, a prenuptial agreement can cover as many, like, people put in infidelity clauses, where there are financial penalties if someone cheats. 01:52:56.020 |
Liquidated damages, whether it's a lump sum or a waiver of alimony if you're caught cheating. 01:53:01.060 |
I mean, it used to be the law of the land that if you could prove adultery, a person, at that point typically women, because the workforce was predominantly male at that time. 01:53:11.660 |
If you could catch, that's why, like, the picture of a divorce lawyer with a private investigator with a telephoto lens taking pictures of someone coming out of the hotel. 01:53:21.040 |
Because, and by the way, people still come in to my office and they're like, I've got him. 01:53:25.980 |
I've got photos of him coming out of this hotel with his girlfriend. 01:53:31.380 |
Like, you know there's no, like, good spouse bonus and bad spouse penalty, right? 01:53:36.960 |
Like, you don't get, like, extra stuff because you were a super good spouse who never cheated. 01:53:42.560 |
And you don't lose stuff because you cheated. 01:53:45.440 |
Like, other than maybe the marriage, you don't lose. 01:53:49.020 |
It's not like you don't get—it used to be if you could prove adultery, you waived alimony. 01:53:55.340 |
So if this person cheated, they weren't allowed to ask for alimony. 01:54:05.840 |
Assets are split according to the prenup or according to the laws of the state. 01:54:08.200 |
Again, according to the law as it stands, which has changed dramatically over 25 years, it varies state to state. 01:54:14.500 |
Whereas with a prenuptial agreement, you're agreeing on a rule set. 01:54:17.600 |
You're agreeing—and again, if people want to agree to weird clauses, like infidelity penalties and things, you can do that. 01:54:29.200 |
Who gets the—listen, pet clauses, the level of—it was very funny because when the team at Trusted Prenup, you know, I was the legal advisor piece of it, obviously. 01:54:40.180 |
And so I was really feeding them so they could feed to this AI kind of all of these prenups I had done. 01:54:46.500 |
And Ben, who's our tech guy, lives in Australia, he called me up and he was like, 01:54:54.820 |
you do know, like, the pet clauses are actually the most complicated and diverse out of all of the things. 01:55:04.160 |
I said, because I'll tell you right now, because there are people that go so hard in the paint on pet stuff, like that it's like they have custody rotation schedules for the pets. 01:55:13.820 |
They have clauses about what to do if there's a conflict about veterinary decisions. 01:55:17.440 |
And unlike children, you are most likely going to outlive your pet. 01:55:24.600 |
And so you have to have clauses in for if this pet has to be euthanized, can we both be there? 01:55:29.920 |
What do we do with the cremated remains of this pet? 01:55:33.180 |
You know, if we can't agree on a park or whatever that it's going to be sprinkled at, should we each get half and then we can do what we want with it? 01:55:39.120 |
Like, these are things that, again, have that conversation. 01:55:43.060 |
If we have that conversation when we are now angry at each other and breaking up, right? 01:55:49.720 |
When hell hath no fury like a woman or a man scorned, do you think the answer is going to be a compassionate and thoughtful one that honors the relationship we both had with this companion animal? 01:56:05.800 |
Like, I've had people explicitly say, I had a case a couple weeks ago where we went in and had, like, it was supposed to be a four-way discussion, but I was doing, like, shuttle stuff. 01:56:15.420 |
So I'm talking to the wife and her counsel, and I've got my client in another conference room. 01:56:19.600 |
And these people own, like, 12 properties, like, really high net worth case. 01:56:24.680 |
And I said, look, which of these properties do you want to keep? 01:56:28.740 |
And she was like, well, which ones does he want? 01:56:34.700 |
And she's like, well, because I want to know which ones he wants. 01:56:39.800 |
And she's like, because whichever one he wants, I want those. 01:56:44.060 |
And I said, well, that feels like you're just trying to be contrarian. 01:56:49.940 |
And she goes, well, no, like, he's actually a pretty shrewd investor. 01:56:52.780 |
So whichever ones he wants are probably the best ones. 01:56:58.000 |
Now, look, whether that's true, which seems like a fair logic, or whether it was because 01:57:03.620 |
Like, the time to have that conversation was not that moment where we're at odds and we 01:57:11.000 |
The conversation should have been had back in the day, you know, back when there was still 01:57:15.040 |
an abundance of optimism and affection between these people. 01:57:21.100 |
Like, I think there's tremendous value in putting that stuff in there. 01:57:31.860 |
You live with someone and now you're not cohabitating anymore? 01:57:41.360 |
And like, even if I keep a thing, like, I don't want that anymore. 01:57:50.000 |
Like, and I don't want to throw it out because it's like it was special. 01:57:55.260 |
So I'm going to print a box somewhere and hope that someday I'm going to open that box and 01:58:01.380 |
And no one else opens that box and goes, oh, where'd you get it? 01:58:05.040 |
Like, and that's, you know, like, this is the challenge of this. 01:58:08.520 |
But that's why having that conversation earlier, that's the way it is. 01:58:12.740 |
So for me, what prenups combined is a long list of things you can bind with prenups. 01:58:20.260 |
What's important is what's the prenup that's right for this couple? 01:58:32.120 |
We each keep our own, whether that's the stuff we had before the marriage or what. 01:58:35.380 |
But because even like states like California that have community property, okay, community 01:58:39.340 |
property, just to give you like a cliff notes on it. 01:58:41.400 |
And there's a couple of community property states. 01:58:45.180 |
So when you marry, what you own at the time of marriage is your separate property, okay? 01:58:50.540 |
And then everything you acquire from the date of marriage forward is presumed to be marital 01:58:58.860 |
So if you buy your wife a Rolex watch, you bought yourself one half of a Rolex watch, okay? 01:59:05.560 |
If you win the lottery, she won half the lottery, okay? 01:59:08.700 |
So that's how it works in the absence of a prenuptial agreement. 01:59:11.540 |
Community property is after a certain period of time, and that period of time varies from 01:59:18.820 |
Once you hit that benchmark, all the separate property is now marital property. 01:59:30.240 |
So the you and the me both becomes part of the we. 01:59:33.460 |
Now, in theory, the legislative intent, okay, was, yeah, after a certain number of years, 01:59:42.500 |
you're like the tree that's grown in the way that now it's inextricably, there's no more 01:59:57.000 |
It spiked the divorce rate at six and a half years. 02:00:01.420 |
Because six and a half years, honeymoon's over. 02:00:06.600 |
You know, that early days intoxication's passed. 02:00:09.100 |
The creamer is no longer like, look at which creamer she uses. 02:00:13.080 |
It's like, Jesus Christ, you need that much creamer. 02:00:21.960 |
She'll listen to this and she'll be like, wait a second. 02:00:28.900 |
If I don't bring a little black cloud to the conversation. 02:00:31.060 |
There's nothing you can do to puncture that memory for me. 02:00:36.580 |
And by the way, all the more reason why it's not silly or stupid. 02:00:43.080 |
And we all have those things, if we're being honest, in every relationship we've ever had. 02:00:49.520 |
Nina, my girlfriend in high school, loved Skid Row. 02:00:55.000 |
She was madly in love with Sebastian Bach from Skid Row. 02:00:57.200 |
And I was so jealous because I looked absolutely nothing like him. 02:01:00.560 |
And I just remember that about her, that she had a poster of Skid Row on her wall. 02:01:10.300 |
But I still remember very fondly, like, sort of, like, being so insecure about Sebastian Bach from Skid Row. 02:01:16.200 |
And her, like, kind of reassuring me, like, oh, that's okay. 02:01:23.780 |
But, like, we all have those memories of every single, no matter how short the relationship was, we have a memory like that. 02:01:30.060 |
And many of them, it's been eclipsed by the shit that happened at the end. 02:01:36.680 |
And by the way, that's another good reason to control that downside. 02:01:41.600 |
Because you can destroy 20 years of amazing, beautiful memories with six months of litigation. 02:01:50.820 |
All you're going to remember is that last six months. 02:01:54.420 |
Like, whoever said that money can't buy love, you know, they didn't know. 02:02:02.100 |
Like, that's when you got to pay the bill is at the end, right? 02:02:07.040 |
Which is, we're just going to submit ourselves to a game that we don't know the rules set up. 02:02:11.120 |
And then when it's ending, we're going to let lawyers just go at each other. 02:02:14.460 |
Or we're going to rely on the hope that we won't use the adversarial system and we'll be able to sit across each other from a table with a mediator and hold hands and sing kumbaya. 02:02:23.660 |
What you're saying is really important, forgive me for interrupting, but because I think that nowadays there's kind of a growing, I hear more often, like, yeah, we were, these are colleagues of mine typically. 02:02:37.520 |
Like, oh, yeah, you know, we were married, we got divorced, but, you know, we had 15 really great years. 02:02:44.500 |
And they're still friends or at least friendly. 02:02:47.200 |
And they look on those years or at least speak about them, I believe them, with a ton of fondness and without the major injury of what you're talking about, which is this rough litigation at the end. 02:03:00.080 |
Another great reason to have a prenup, because, look, I have an ex-wife. 02:03:11.180 |
She will always be, there's a lot of people I love I wouldn't want to be married to. 02:03:19.280 |
I'm a much better ex-husband than I am husband. 02:03:26.020 |
I do not have the patience to be a good husband, but I have the patience to be a good ex-husband. 02:03:32.760 |
You know, you don't have to be a great husband to be a great father. 02:03:37.460 |
Like, just because you cook doesn't mean you can farm. 02:03:40.180 |
You know, like, those are two different things. 02:03:42.020 |
Yes, they both deal with food, but they're two totally different skill sets. 02:03:45.880 |
So, fundamentally, I think how things end very often impacts your perception and memory of the entire thing. 02:03:53.540 |
And you, as the brain scientist, would be able to tell me why that works in terms of what actually imprints on us. 02:03:59.120 |
But I believe, and I'm sure there's some chemical reason for it, pain. 02:04:06.940 |
Well, you know all this stuff about 28 days to form a habit or adult neuroplasticity. 02:04:10.840 |
There's something called one trial learning, and it comes fast, and it sticks around forever unless you do something to reverse it. 02:04:19.220 |
Bad, hard, painful stuff is etched into our nervous system in one trial. 02:04:29.620 |
And it changes your memory of everything that precedes it. 02:04:32.400 |
But the truth is, divorce of the ugly kind is trauma. 02:04:39.960 |
Like, I am involved in a tremendous amount of trauma. 02:04:56.040 |
No one comes into my office and sits down in front of me and says, I want this to be complicated and expensive and awful. 02:05:11.720 |
I want to put your kids through college instead of mine. 02:05:13.620 |
And I just, I want it to just be just miserable. 02:05:25.120 |
Problem is, their definition of fair and their spouse's definition of fair are completely different. 02:05:32.220 |
And what they think they owe each other is completely different. 02:05:40.040 |
And I've argued both sides of every single issue you could argue in a divorce. 02:05:45.520 |
I have argued both sides, probably in front of the same judges. 02:05:48.260 |
I've had days where in front of the same judge, I argue complete opposite positions on different cases. 02:05:56.580 |
And a weapon in the hands of a virtuous person protects. 02:06:02.240 |
And a weapon in the hands of the villain causes tremendous harm. 02:06:12.000 |
And we get paid whether we win or lose, by the way. 02:06:13.860 |
Like, personal injury lawyers, everything is no fee unless we recover for you. 02:06:18.740 |
Yeah, your 56% statistic reminded me of, like, Marines. 02:06:22.960 |
Sometimes you'll see them with the tattoo, like, killing is my business. 02:06:25.760 |
And on the other arm, it's, and business is good. 02:06:33.780 |
And the truth is, like, I don't need to make it rain just because I sell umbrellas. 02:06:40.940 |
Like, I'm not at a bar saying to people, like, hey, man, you could do better than her. 02:06:44.440 |
Like, I don't need to, like, people are doing a fine job of fucking their relationships up all by themselves. 02:06:52.140 |
But even my colleagues, like, we're not cheering for divorce any more than an oncologist is cheering for cancer. 02:06:57.700 |
And, like, when people say to me, like, oh, you make her, how could you, this guy, he makes his living in people's ruined lives and heartbreak. 02:07:07.560 |
Like, I didn't look at the oncologist and go, well, I bet you feel good about yourselves. 02:07:12.420 |
Like, no, I understand what, they're not, they're there because this exists. 02:07:16.060 |
And they're there to try to do what they can to help. 02:07:19.240 |
And by the way, like, there were so many people that divorced the way that you described your friend's divorce and the way that I described mine. 02:07:33.320 |
Like, if you invited me to a party and somebody said, oh, what do you do for a living? 02:07:38.960 |
And they said, oh, my God, you must have some stories. 02:07:46.360 |
And then gradually, like, they just wanted different things. 02:07:50.860 |
And they sort of lost the plot of what they were together. 02:07:54.020 |
And the Venn diagram of their overlapping interests and joys kind of got smaller and smaller. 02:07:59.380 |
So they decided amicably that, you know, they should end the relationship. 02:08:02.240 |
But they wanted to continue to co-parent really well. 02:08:04.280 |
Dude, you'd be like, that is the worst story. 02:08:06.400 |
Whereas if I go, like, and then he took a chainsaw and he cut the car in half and he was like, pick which half you want, bitch. 02:08:11.440 |
Like, that's one that you're going to be like, oh, my God, Jim, you got to tell the story to this guy. 02:08:19.140 |
And by the way, people who have an ugly divorce, it's so traumatic that it becomes part of who they are. 02:08:27.100 |
Like, it becomes a lens that they see the whole world through. 02:08:36.400 |
Yeah, and they almost don't know what to do with themselves when it's over. 02:08:41.480 |
Yeah, and by the way, like, most human beings, you and I both know, when they tell you the story of their life, 02:08:51.460 |
Like, one of the things I like about our friendship is that, like, you and I are very aware of our own flaws and cognitive biases. 02:08:58.360 |
And so when we talk to each other, you know, like, all of the people I like best are people that like reality, you know, 02:09:04.720 |
and that see themselves with a certain level of reality, you know? 02:09:08.000 |
And so I don't have to be afraid to, like, talk to them candidly and blunt. 02:09:11.980 |
And I think that in marriage, like, and in divorce, if you tell the story and you're like, 02:09:21.140 |
And, you know, she's being unfair when it comes to that. 02:09:23.120 |
Like, when you tell the story and you're not the hero of the story, it's much more credible as far as I'm concerned. 02:09:27.720 |
And I say that as someone who tells stories for a living, you know, in a courtroom, to try to be as persuasive as possible. 02:09:32.720 |
I always tell my clients, I'm like, if you make yourself the hero or you make the other person the villain, like, you lose credibility tremendously. 02:09:38.360 |
Everybody has to be like a flawed hero, a villain that has some traits of positive to them. 02:09:43.180 |
Like, it's a much more believable real story. 02:09:46.480 |
That's why little kids' TV shows, there's, like, the villain and the music gets dark when the villain comes on. 02:09:52.120 |
And then the hero is all good and all – but as adults, that's not what we want. 02:09:59.460 |
We want villains that we kind of feel a little bad for, like the Joker. 02:10:07.480 |
And by the way, that's what our partners are. 02:10:09.840 |
So this idea that let's just put a tux on him and a white dress on her and then everybody's heroes, like, that's kind of silly, you know? 02:10:18.840 |
And that's where I think that anger that becomes toxic and definitional to a person, it doesn't have to be that way if early in the discourse about love, we just normalize this idea of you're a human being, I'm a human being, we're flawed, we have hopes, we have fears, we have things we got right, things we get wrong, we're going to change. 02:10:45.800 |
We're going to change in good and bad ways if you want to parse it that way. 02:10:53.100 |
Like, how do we keep this thing healthy and vibrant? 02:11:01.400 |
You have some system whereby there's feedback about what you're doing right and doing wrong or there's a bonus structure so that there's skin in the game. 02:11:08.600 |
Like, why does it make it less romantic to look at our relationship that way? 02:11:14.080 |
To say, like, hey, it's important to check in on this stuff. 02:11:17.480 |
It's important to have, like, routine preventative maintenance on this thing. 02:11:21.080 |
Like, if you said to me, like, oh, I'm taking my car for an oil change, you'd be like, what, you don't have faith in your car? 02:11:28.240 |
Like, of course, preventative maintenance makes sense. 02:11:30.440 |
It's a whole lot better than waiting for there to be a problem and trying to fix the problem. 02:11:34.540 |
Well, I think it's this business of egos, right? 02:11:37.760 |
There's something in the, quote, unquote, traditional courtship dance that is about, you know, sort of before people are critiquing one another, before people are commenting on the things that aren't working, where, you know, it's a false reality, right? 02:11:57.840 |
That you're only seeing the good, they're only seeing the good, and it feels good. 02:12:01.800 |
Well, sure, what wouldn't feel good about only seeing the good? 02:12:05.640 |
Like, the previews is the best part of the movie. 02:12:08.340 |
If you watch the previews, and you go, oh, my God, that preview was good. 02:12:11.600 |
Haven't you ever seen a preview and gone, oh, my God, I can't wait to see that movie? 02:12:14.700 |
And then you see the movie, and you're like, that sucked. 02:12:16.400 |
Like, the only good scenes were the things that were in the preview, in that two-minute preview. 02:12:19.960 |
Like, okay, well, what do you think courtship is? 02:12:23.980 |
By the way, and if the preview sucks, the movie's really going to suck. 02:12:27.500 |
Yeah, relationships are more like the deer hunter or something. 02:12:30.560 |
It's really, they're long, and they're complicated. 02:12:32.660 |
And there's moments in it that you kind of go, like, I don't know what the point of this is, but I'm in for the ride, so let's do it, right? 02:12:38.280 |
Yeah, hats off to anyone that got through the deer hunter. 02:12:41.600 |
But, yeah, it takes some time to get through it. 02:12:43.000 |
Let's talk about movies, and as a serious thing. 02:12:47.080 |
A couple years ago, I saw you on a podcast, and you were talking about the movie True Romance. 02:12:54.880 |
Anyone that was a teen or in their 20s and the 90s will remember that movie. 02:12:58.860 |
Everyone should see that movie who's old enough and mature enough to see it. 02:13:01.600 |
I get so excited when anybody knows that movie. 02:13:03.220 |
It's just such an awesome movie, and the cast is amazing. 02:13:19.560 |
Anyway, incredible movie, and Patricia Arquette, who's just awesome. 02:13:27.440 |
And you made the excellent point, which doesn't give away the plot, so no spoiler necessary, 02:13:34.720 |
which is that, you know, the essence of the movie is really about someone seeing something or a collection of things in somebody and just thinking that they're awesome. 02:13:48.340 |
I don't want to give away any more than that. 02:13:50.460 |
And just that kind of appreciation for quirkiness and uniqueness. 02:13:56.120 |
The two protagonists of the film, without giving anything away, are deeply flawed. 02:14:03.080 |
By any traditional definition, they are not something that you would go, oh, this is the perfect romantic partner. 02:14:10.720 |
Yeah, their histories alone are a reason to walk away. 02:14:12.660 |
Right, on paper, there's a lot of reasons to just walk away from this person, and they meet, and there is this instant true romance. 02:14:21.420 |
There is this sense of, like, I see you for what you actually are, and all that negative stuff on paper, that means nothing, because that's not who you are. 02:14:33.480 |
I see who you are, and I'm cheering for you, and you are so cool. 02:14:42.380 |
And that, to me, movie still stands up for that reason, because it's this sense of being seen with all your warts and all, and just being, I see you, and you see me, and it's you and me. 02:15:00.040 |
Like, you know, let's hold hands and walk this thing together, and it's a game you cannot win, and we're going to play it to the utmost. 02:15:14.260 |
I feel that, in contrast to how you described, I think very aptly, social media as an advertisement of a life to aspire to, even if it's not possible to have, 02:15:28.280 |
I felt for a long while that movies and television and books and music were advertisements for exactly what you just described. 02:15:41.800 |
The uniqueness and the quirkiness of relationships that are not typical, there's nothing generic about them, even if the decision to, the bond, the legal bond, the marriage, you know, marriage is marriage is marriage is marriage. 02:15:58.200 |
I mean, there's some subtleties depending on state and conditions, but each one of those is unique. 02:16:05.740 |
So there's something really quite beautiful and special about that picture, right? 02:16:10.920 |
As seeing the quirkiness, the everyday things, and as you said, a teammate perspective, right? 02:16:21.240 |
That's in very stark contrast to what I think many people experience now, where they have their relationship, but then they also have visual and movie access to all these other relationships in the form of social media. 02:16:36.880 |
They're always being presented with other options of at least how things exist for other people. 02:16:42.700 |
And so I believe, again, the biologist in me, thinks this sets a kind of a yearning for something that one doesn't have. 02:16:50.260 |
Because ultimately, all the good stuff we've talked about, whether or not it's dogs or a person. 02:16:53.820 |
Or the pizza story, the creamer story, whatever, is about basking in the completeness of what one already has. 02:17:02.960 |
So would you say that social media, not to, I mean, I teach on social media, you're on social media, but let's be honest, that it in some way may be poisonous to things like appreciation, fidelity, not just because you can meet people there, but because of the yearning that it creates. 02:17:19.120 |
Look, you know, while you were saying that, all I could reflect on was a prior conversation you had on a podcast about pornography and the effect that it has on us and our perception of sex, our dopamine, all these other things. 02:17:34.580 |
Yeah, because young guys are writing to me about this all the time. 02:17:38.480 |
Listen, I'm not saying that there's not a purpose in having an ideal, a romanticized ideal, but most romantic comedies are not true romance, a story about two flawed characters who, you know, like, most rom-coms are like an ideal, right? 02:17:55.700 |
They're a romanticized ideal that, by the way, ends before reality can kick in. 02:18:01.640 |
So, like, if you think Jack, I forget what her character, Kate Winslet's character was on Titanic, but, like, if you think he'd lived at the end of Titanic, that a few years later she wouldn't be like, all right, enough painting the French girls, like, you've got to get a job, buddy. 02:18:15.000 |
Like, you're telling me, like, most of these movies, you know, these rom-coms, they end at, like, the high, I love you, I've always loved you, I love you too, and then it ends. 02:18:23.380 |
They don't ever have to live together, they don't ever have to, you don't have to ever see, like, the actual reality of them at Trader Joe's waiting on the line, like, arguing over, 02:18:33.360 |
He doesn't find somebody else, he's not sitting on the couch scrolling when she's trying to talk to him. 02:18:38.640 |
Right, absolutely, it's like Minuto, he's like, you turn 20, you're out, sorry. 02:18:44.300 |
So I think at the end of the day, what's really core here is, look, I'm not saying let's get rid of pornography. 02:18:52.520 |
Like, I have two sons, they're adults now, but when they were young, they got to a certain age, they had phones, they had iPads, we had the internet. 02:19:00.960 |
And I was like, they're going to encounter pornography, because it's coming at them in a way that it did not come at me when I was that age. 02:19:06.220 |
Like, as I was that age, you had to, like, trade, like, a bunch of things you had to get someone's dad's porn magazine for, like, a day so that you could look at it. 02:19:13.240 |
You couldn't just log on to any device and be inundated with any kind of kink you wanted to see. 02:19:22.760 |
And I don't know what effect, I mean, you know better than I do, and you've spoken eloquently about it, about the effect that has on the organism. 02:19:29.640 |
It definitely creates in people a, if sex, if your sex education is pornography, you're going to have a really hard time navigating an actual sexual relationship. 02:19:39.800 |
And by the way, like, I've seen pornography, and I've had sex. 02:19:45.860 |
Sex is not like it is in pornography, but it's great. 02:19:56.600 |
So, I don't know why, like, anybody would be like, oh, we've got to make it better. 02:20:08.240 |
Like, you want to, it's just like what they do to french fries at a fast food restaurant. 02:20:12.140 |
They figure out ways to make them more addictive. 02:20:17.100 |
Like, rom-coms is an idealized, stylized version of the best part of all of it. 02:20:24.880 |
So, like, if you make your relationship, like, your sexual relationship based on pornography 02:20:30.180 |
or what looks good in movies, you're setting yourself up for heartbreak. 02:20:35.840 |
Same thing with, like, I've met my soulmate, and that's my soulmate, and then it's perfect, 02:20:41.520 |
And if it's not perfect, then they mustn't have been my soulmate. 02:20:46.020 |
All that is is taking the dream life, the stylized, perfect parts, showing just that, 02:20:51.660 |
and then convincing people that's what it's supposed to look like. 02:20:54.760 |
And if it doesn't look like that, you're not having a satisfying time. 02:20:57.280 |
Like, the reality is, is that people are flawed, but we want the same thing. 02:21:03.180 |
I don't believe that the path of, like, I'm going to own 50 cars. 02:21:08.220 |
Like, you and I both know men who own every car you could ever want and could sleep with 02:21:14.220 |
any number of gorgeous women three, four at a time if they want to. 02:21:22.980 |
Like, I represent people who have a net worth of you and I combined times 100, and they're 02:21:33.940 |
They don't have this basic connection with another person. 02:21:37.660 |
They don't have the sense of who they are as an object of someone's love and the worth that comes 02:21:49.280 |
Like, look at a baby and look at how they look at their mother. 02:21:53.680 |
Like, mom is the name of God on the lips of children. 02:21:56.800 |
Like, there's something about, like, this thing loves me and wants what's best for me. 02:22:04.280 |
And there's this person that just loves us, right? 02:22:08.120 |
Like, and so, of course, we're always looking to find that again, that kind of love and that 02:22:16.560 |
But the way they find it is not through fairy tales. 02:22:20.140 |
It's not through the romanticized version of pornography. 02:22:24.920 |
I think one of the reasons why, you know, I hear from so many young men about their challenges 02:22:30.440 |
with pornography, which tells me that they've defaulted to pornography or that there are elements 02:22:34.980 |
of it that have gotten them, quote-unquote, addicted or at least in a compulsive way with 02:22:38.400 |
And I also, frankly, hear from a lot of women that are frustrated with men dating apps. 02:22:46.540 |
And this kind of thing is that people are very afraid, I think, in large part because of 02:22:53.300 |
what you're describing with social media and other forms of media, but also just by virtue 02:22:58.520 |
of the way that everything is shared so much now that people are afraid to reveal any kind 02:23:05.560 |
of flaws or authenticity in themselves, unless it's the kind that they can leverage to make 02:23:10.540 |
themselves seem more attractive or something. 02:23:12.780 |
Because, you know, if they go out on a date or let's say they share a first kiss or something 02:23:18.540 |
that if they're not a great kisser that, you know, she's going to tell all her friends 02:23:22.140 |
or worse, put it on an app or something that, you know, where his name is named or he's going 02:23:28.160 |
to sleep with her and then might even share photos of it with people covertly. 02:23:33.540 |
I mean, things that are illegal slash just breaches of trust. 02:23:38.400 |
Like the contract of trust that is purely, I don't know, for lack of a better word, it's 02:23:47.160 |
kind of a spiritual contract where you say, hey, listen, like, I don't know if this is going 02:23:53.220 |
I'm willing to wager in a healthy way some of my own safety by revealing some things that 02:23:57.780 |
aren't, aren't like super great about myself and maybe you'll do the same or maybe you 02:24:02.140 |
won't and I'll just feel okay just with the way it lands. 02:24:18.500 |
Like I, my heroes growing up were from Last of the Mohicans, right? 02:24:24.920 |
La Lone Carabine, you know, the, the, like they were samurai, like in, in the films, like 02:24:31.060 |
the Moshashi films, you know, all those kinds of films. 02:24:37.680 |
Like it's only brave if you're scared and you do it anyway. 02:24:44.540 |
Like, and that's the thing where we're not teaching young men anymore is it's like, yeah, 02:24:49.220 |
It's so much easier to just be like, yeah, women don't mean anything. 02:24:59.380 |
Like Andrew Tate's brave because he fights Muay Thai. 02:25:03.300 |
Like even ground with another man, bare hands. 02:25:07.260 |
But having a bunch of women and sort of not committing to any of them, not having, being 02:25:15.740 |
Like what's brave is I'm going to give you the ammo to hurt me. 02:25:19.640 |
Like I'm going to give you the ability to hurt me. 02:25:22.500 |
Like, and I'm, and I'm going to do it anyway. 02:25:24.860 |
Like, and I'm, I'm scared, but, but I'm going to do it anyway. 02:25:29.880 |
And I think that that's the thing we've just lost in this culture is this. 02:25:34.040 |
And, and that's where I think it's so backwards. 02:25:36.440 |
Like that we go, well, a prenup, a prenup's antithet, like it goes to the opposite direction. 02:25:41.260 |
Like, because a prenup is you're saying, well, I don't believe in this thing. 02:25:46.180 |
That's insane to say that, you know, if you don't, if you take any precautions at all or 02:25:53.720 |
give any, or by the way, more accurately, that if you don't trust it to the legislature 02:25:58.620 |
of your state, that you're not being brave, like that's insane. 02:26:02.460 |
It's brave to merge your destiny with that of another person. 02:26:05.680 |
It's brave to let someone see what you're afraid of, what you hope for and aspire to. 02:26:11.400 |
Those are all like divorce is intimacy weaponized. 02:26:16.440 |
Like it's, it's, it's, and I say it as someone who's been in the room with thousands of people 02:26:23.800 |
And I mean, the pain and terror of this person who in hushed tones, you whispered to them 02:26:32.540 |
all the things you're most afraid of when you trusted them more than anyone. 02:26:37.040 |
And now they're going to use that against you in a public forum, in a courtroom. 02:26:46.340 |
I have no idea what that feels like to have done to me. 02:26:52.200 |
But, but again, like it's, is it worth it to try? 02:26:59.860 |
But I think having conversations from the beginning about, listen, we've got to figure out, like, 02:27:07.200 |
is this the kind of person who's going to hurt? 02:27:09.960 |
If you're mad at me, if I tell you something you don't want to hear, are you going to throw 02:27:15.380 |
at me these intimate things I shared with you? 02:27:18.440 |
Because if you are, pull the ripcord now and get out. 02:27:22.240 |
Like, if you tell, I've had guys come to me, successful people come to me and say, yeah, 02:27:29.500 |
And she was like, you know, well, if you have a, if we have a prenup, now I'm leaving. 02:27:34.780 |
Like, because if, if that's all, if you're saying, I love you, I love you more than anyone 02:27:47.860 |
Because like a minute ago, you loved me more than anything in the world and you would never 02:27:53.080 |
let me go under any circumstances and you never hurt me. 02:27:55.340 |
And now I just told you that there's a financial concern I have about letting the legislature make 02:28:01.220 |
And you've now decided you don't even like me anymore and we're out. 02:28:07.060 |
But, but I mean, that, how do you reconcile that? 02:28:10.160 |
Like if they say, wow, why are you, why do you want that? 02:28:16.900 |
No, of course, of course I have faith in our relationship. 02:28:22.200 |
Are you afraid that the contract will be lopsided? 02:28:27.100 |
Like, I want to know what you're, like, you know, I, I was having a conversation with, with 02:28:32.580 |
the trusted prenup guys and we were talking about marketing prenups. 02:28:37.420 |
And they were saying like, you know, like, yeah, when you talk about it, deepens the relationship 02:28:46.220 |
Like that's a good way to sell prenups to women, right? 02:28:48.740 |
Is to say it's going to, the conversations are going to deepen the connection. 02:28:51.900 |
And there's going to be this sense of like, hey, we're talking about what we expect of 02:28:57.220 |
And I was saying, well, for, for me, I think a great entry point for men in heterosexual 02:29:02.340 |
relationships is to say, hey, you want your woman to feel safe, right? 02:29:14.840 |
So there's one of the best things about being a man, right? 02:29:26.260 |
Like, you know, we're thrilled for that opportunity. 02:29:32.260 |
Why do we not turn the conversation about prenups into how can she feel loved if she doesn't 02:29:40.160 |
In that situation where he has more resources than her and she says, you know, I'd like 02:29:44.760 |
to be a mom someday, or there's a good chance I'd be a mom someday. 02:29:48.400 |
So if I'm going to be the primary caretaker of our children and your career is going to 02:29:55.920 |
Then you're going to get way ahead of me in the race in terms of economics. 02:30:00.960 |
So we need to figure out like how we would deal with that imbalance. 02:30:05.460 |
Who would say that's not a fair conversation? 02:30:08.720 |
Who would say, now look, if you bring it up when we've decided we hate each other and the 02:30:13.760 |
relationship is over and I've been sleeping with my secretary, okay, yeah, now I get why 02:30:17.780 |
you don't want to have a fair conversation about that. 02:30:19.320 |
But at the beginning, when we're still abundance of optimism, we're still feeling positive about 02:30:24.600 |
this, would any man say, well, you're being greedy, you're being a gold tigger? 02:30:30.900 |
Like, you're going to make certain sacrifices and focus on certain things. 02:30:33.740 |
And, you know, I rarely have ever met a couple, a happy couple, that they go, we brought 02:30:41.740 |
She's a great provider and I'm a great provider. 02:30:49.920 |
Maybe you don't want to announce it to everybody and put it on your social media, but you can 02:30:53.260 |
talk to each other privately about, hey, what do we owe each other? 02:31:01.480 |
And you can talk about that in very practical ways. 02:31:04.040 |
And I don't think that that, I think that's actually quite romantic because what you're 02:31:10.180 |
I want you to feel safe that even if, because I don't, I'll tell you, for me, even just selfishly, 02:31:16.580 |
I don't want you here because you don't know what you're going to do economically if we split 02:31:23.720 |
I want you to want me next to you because you like me. 02:31:29.160 |
Your life is better for my presence in it on a day-to-day basis. 02:31:40.640 |
Because if someone says, if I say, hey, if I paid you, like somebody said to me the other 02:31:45.280 |
day, if somebody gave you a hundred million dollars, would you still do your job? 02:31:51.200 |
Would I do it at the level I'm doing it currently? 02:31:53.220 |
Would I be as stressed about it as I currently am? 02:31:55.840 |
But I would still do the job because I love the job, you know? 02:31:58.800 |
And the answer is, if you had a hundred million dollars tomorrow, would you still do the 02:32:06.800 |
If you offered me a billion dollars to quit the podcast, no effing way. 02:32:15.700 |
And so, and by the way, let's take that further, right? 02:32:21.720 |
And the people who are participating in it, audience and the co-producers of it, all get 02:32:34.840 |
It's like win, win, win for everybody involved, right? 02:32:38.560 |
So in the relationship between a man and a woman or a man and a man and a woman and a woman 02:32:42.880 |
because of marriage equality, in a romantic relationship, in a marriage, if you said to your 02:32:49.660 |
partner, I'll give you $10 million to give up this person, if the answer is see ya, then 02:32:58.720 |
So, so I would rather have that conversation early on. 02:33:04.080 |
Like if you want to talk about barriers to exit, by the way, you can put anything you want 02:33:08.900 |
So you can put in financial terms in a prenup that will give this person a financial windfall. 02:33:14.200 |
I had a client who was a young man in his thirties. 02:33:19.900 |
And he was worth like 30, 40 million bucks at the age of 30. 02:33:28.520 |
And he was marrying a yoga teacher who made like no money at all. 02:33:33.780 |
Stunningly beautiful, funny, brilliant, like just insightful, spiritual. 02:33:43.020 |
And she just lightened him up and was adventurous and fun. 02:33:48.680 |
It was very like, he kind of reeled her in a little and she pulled him out of his comfort 02:33:57.380 |
And of course, they both lawyered up with good lawyers, right? 02:34:00.220 |
So he hired me and she hired a colleague of mine at a great firm in the city who I have a lot 02:34:10.500 |
And so I put in a waiver of any alimony, spousal support. 02:34:13.700 |
And the other side came back and said, no, no, if they're married this many years, it's this 02:34:17.620 |
And if it's this many years, it's that percent. 02:34:19.260 |
So I go to my client because this is kind of a negotiation, but it's with a person who he's 02:34:23.980 |
been going home to every night because they're cohabitating already, you know? 02:34:27.720 |
And I say to him, like, listen, they want this structure and this amount for it. 02:34:30.960 |
And he goes, yeah, just like put like 5 million bucks. 02:34:35.900 |
And he goes, yeah, like if we get divorced, she gets 5 million bucks. 02:34:38.640 |
I was like, wait, if you get divorced in a month because she's sleeping with her tennis 02:34:49.880 |
Like just, you know, like, yeah, just like, you know, I'll know that if she's staying, 02:34:54.460 |
I'll know she likes me more than 5 million bucks. 02:35:04.460 |
Like, and that was probably 10 years ago, you know? 02:35:10.260 |
Like, and I, in that moment, I remember thinking, yeah, they're going to be fine probably these 02:35:16.100 |
It never hurts and it often helps to be generous. 02:35:18.860 |
I mean, sometimes generosity, people will look back on their generosity and actually, no, 02:35:25.140 |
I can't think of a single instance where, you know, I was, maybe even pushed myself to be 02:35:29.960 |
a bit more generous than I, my impulse at the time would have had me be and didn't think 02:35:35.500 |
like, in retrospect, that was the right thing to do. 02:35:38.340 |
I mean, I, you know, haven't dealt with circumstances of A, having that much money or B, doing a prenup. 02:35:44.900 |
Well, if you have that much money, it doesn't really mean anything anymore. 02:35:48.140 |
Like I represent, I have a couple of billionaire clients. 02:35:52.760 |
You know, it's like Stalin said, the death of one is a tragedy. 02:35:58.200 |
Like, I think if I said to you, Andrew, great news, you've won $150 million. 02:36:08.740 |
Like, the numbers on a page are numbers on a page. 02:36:13.000 |
There's just no, you couldn't possibly spend that amount of money. 02:36:17.300 |
The amount of money that money makes on an annual basis, just in interest alone, is insane. 02:36:23.660 |
Well, the joy in being generous is the opportunity, at least in this instance, or something parallel to it, is the opportunity to do something that for someone else would be quite meaningful. 02:36:35.600 |
You know, one would hope that he didn't say, give her five, because five didn't feel like anything. 02:36:43.640 |
This is not a man who did not take money seriously. 02:36:47.180 |
But I think what he was saying is, well, there's no way that $5 million isn't enough for her to be okay. 02:36:59.460 |
And he was saying, you know, because, look, when you marry someone the right way, or even cohabitate with someone, or even get in a relationship with someone, 02:37:10.340 |
you're kind of handing them a dagger, and saying, okay, here you go. 02:37:19.580 |
Like, if you want to stab me with that, you got, here it is. 02:37:26.520 |
And again, I think that's the bravest thing in the world. 02:37:29.540 |
And I think it's the coolest thing in the world. 02:37:36.800 |
And by the way, with enough time, both of those, there's something really, like, beautiful about them. 02:37:43.080 |
I mean, look, I've been reflecting on this a lot lately, and I don't want to pivot to my unique circumstances. 02:37:48.280 |
But, you know, since I was, probably since I was an embryo, but since I was old enough to remember, I'm interested and on the adventure of life. 02:38:00.600 |
I mean, that's a function of our, like, our friendship is born of the fact that I think you're a romantic at heart. 02:38:06.180 |
And I think you're, I think the people who have had their ass kicked by love and still go, yeah, I'm going to do it again. 02:38:17.240 |
And by the way, that's the statistic that everybody forgets, which is 56% of marriages end in divorce, and 85% of people who get divorced are remarried within five years. 02:38:30.320 |
And I, and I, and I usually, I do their prenup. 02:38:32.660 |
I tell all of my clients, by the way, that if I did your litigated divorce, I will do any prenup for you for any subsequent marriage for free. 02:38:40.600 |
And I've only had three clients take me up on it. 02:38:48.060 |
I think, look, I think discretion is the better part of all valor. 02:38:53.520 |
So I think I'm a fan of bravery, but I'm also a pragmatic human being. 02:39:00.400 |
And I think there is value in saying, okay, let's dive into this thing. 02:39:08.860 |
But see, again, I think bravery on the front end, which is bravely having a conversation about what does this look like if we hurt each other? 02:39:17.680 |
What if we end up like the majority of people? 02:39:26.080 |
Any heterosexual man is going to tell you they've been in a conversation with the woman in their life where she goes, if I was missing a leg, would you still love me? 02:39:36.600 |
Like, you know, like, because what's the person saying? 02:39:39.240 |
They're saying, hey, you know, like, if I wasn't exactly who I am, like, what parts of me would you have to lose for me to do not love me anymore? 02:39:48.980 |
Like, I understand that question for what it is. 02:39:51.640 |
I mean, to some degree, it's a thought exercise. 02:39:55.660 |
And my response to it is always like a whole leg. 02:40:07.540 |
No, I just, the idea is, I mean, I think the question is such a beautiful one because it's a question of vulnerability, right? 02:40:15.300 |
It's saying if I were, because generally people aren't asking, hey, if I, you know, gained 50 pounds, would you still love me? 02:40:24.440 |
You know, a missing leg is more dramatic, but at the same time, it's, so it preserves certain things while it removes a certain thing. 02:40:34.840 |
But I also think that there's another way to look at it. 02:40:36.760 |
You know, there was a, so I grew up watching L.A. Law. 02:40:39.300 |
I think it's part of the reason why I became a lawyer is I loved that show. 02:40:44.020 |
It's up on one of the streaming services and it didn't age well, but I grew up watching. 02:40:49.600 |
Because of a lack of political correctness by today's standards. 02:40:52.360 |
There's also, like, some of the plots, like, there's gender stuff in there that you're like, oh, my God, you know? 02:40:56.420 |
And it's also, as a lawyer, it's very hard as a lawyer to watch lawyer shows because you're like, that would never happen. 02:41:02.240 |
Like, you find yourself going like, this is not. 02:41:04.060 |
None of my friends that were in special operations can watch a movie. 02:41:11.820 |
But I grew up watching it and I wanted to be, Jimmy Smits played this really cool criminal defense attorney called Victor Cifuentes and he had an earring and I was like, I'm going to be him. 02:41:19.700 |
Instead, I ended up becoming Arnie Becker, which was the divorce lawyer on the show that, you know, like, Corbin Bernson played him. 02:41:24.980 |
And I'd never imagined that's who I would grow up to be. 02:41:27.820 |
But it definitely created in me this love of the law. 02:41:30.520 |
But there was a character on the show named Benny and he was developmentally disabled and he worked in, like, the copy room. 02:41:40.380 |
And she says something to him about, well, I'm trying, like, she's eating a salad and he says, why are you eating that for lunch? 02:41:54.000 |
And she says, well, because if, you know, if I lost 20 pounds, you know, I'd be prettier. 02:42:00.580 |
And there's a simplicity to that that's completely honest. 02:42:07.200 |
You know, like when someone says, if I gained 50 pounds, would you still love me? 02:42:12.060 |
I hear that as both, A, a thought experiment, B, you're looking for me to reassure you how much I love you. 02:42:19.600 |
But also what you're saying is if something changed, like, what about me can change and what about me can't? 02:42:26.040 |
Like, what would be the things about me that could change? 02:42:28.800 |
Because, by the way, sometimes things change totally beyond our control. 02:42:32.860 |
You know, the tumor is what made you gain weight. 02:42:38.600 |
Like, so if you gained weight because you were irresponsible in your eating habits versus you gained weight because of the tumor, these are two very different circumstances. 02:42:47.520 |
But if what the person is saying is what do you love about me and what about me could change and I would lose your love potentially, again, what is that conversation but the prenup conversation? 02:43:04.000 |
Where do we store value in this relationship? 02:43:07.040 |
And when it changes, not if, when it changes, what changes can we communicate, how can we communicate about what those changes feel like? 02:43:17.160 |
Because here's the thing, if we're having less sex 10 years into the relationship, I don't think that's abnormal. 02:43:25.820 |
Like, when you're first dating, the amount of sex you're having, and the amount of sex you're having 10 years later with two kids is probably going to be different and probably less. 02:43:36.980 |
Does that mean something's wrong in your relationship? 02:43:47.200 |
By the way, if you're having more sex, does it mean your relationship's healthy? 02:43:51.580 |
So the question becomes is, when things change, how will we check in about it? 02:43:58.360 |
Because I don't think, let's just pretend everything's exactly the same and it's fine. 02:44:05.500 |
I think that's what gets us a 56% divorce rate. 02:44:08.740 |
I've heard it said that men marry women thinking that they're not going to change. 02:44:24.100 |
The one I've heard before that I think is similar is that women marry the man they want to spend the rest of their life with, 02:44:32.200 |
and men marry the woman they don't want to imagine the rest of their life without. 02:44:38.540 |
Women are parsing it in the imagined future with this person, and men are thinking about the imagined future loss. 02:44:46.820 |
I've spent a lot of time in the room with people who have recently been caught or caught their spouse cheating. 02:44:55.340 |
And the most common question the man wants to know is, did you fuck him? 02:45:02.900 |
And the most common question the women want to know is, do you love her? 02:45:06.280 |
And that says something about value for those two people. 02:45:11.340 |
Because for the man, it's like, did you betray me physically, right? 02:45:19.580 |
And for the woman, it's like, do I have no value to you anymore? 02:45:23.540 |
Do you want this person more than you want me? 02:45:26.060 |
It's more about the value than the sex necessarily, right? 02:45:33.540 |
But I think there is a sense in men, a lot of the men, I say this even in my personal relationships with male friends, 02:45:42.440 |
that they're like, yeah, like once they find someone that they're like, yeah, I just can't imagine like her not being here. 02:45:47.700 |
And they marry because they're like, I got to marry her or else I'm going to lose her, you know? 02:45:52.460 |
Like I've never met a guy who's like, I can't wait for my wedding day and I've imagined my tux and I just can't wait. 02:45:57.960 |
Like it's not, it's just not something men, I don't know a lot of men that like could dreaming of their wedding day. 02:46:04.460 |
Whereas I know a lot of women, again, some of that's cultural that we've been shoving weddings down women's throats 02:46:09.100 |
and you get to be a princess for a day and wear the dress and everyone's paying attention to you 02:46:12.460 |
because the bride's the star of the show, you know, I get it. 02:46:15.000 |
But there is also something about the idea that like, you know, most of the men I know, they're like, yeah, we got married 02:46:22.340 |
because it's like, you know, like that's what you do. 02:46:24.020 |
Like you make an honest woman of her, you know? 02:46:25.840 |
Like that's her parents would have killed me if we didn't get married. 02:46:29.040 |
So it was like, you know, all of her friends, she's been a bridesmaid eight times. 02:46:33.700 |
Whereas women very often, it's like, where is this going? 02:46:38.080 |
And again, there's probably a myriad of reasons, evolutionary, biological, having to do with procreation. 02:46:45.240 |
There's lots of cultural, religious, there's all kinds of, but at the end, we are where we are in that equation. 02:46:51.420 |
And I think marriage is something most men are like, okay, if that's the price, like if I got to buy that ticket to take the ride, 02:47:04.860 |
Oh man, I'm just, I'm not, I'm not necessarily. 02:47:07.700 |
I'm not necessarily agreeing with you, but like, I can just hear the voices in people's heads about the, really, is that passive for men? 02:47:17.100 |
You know, they're sort of like, it sounds like almost like a passive response. 02:47:20.460 |
Like, yeah, I guess there's really no other path here, right? 02:47:29.960 |
Like I have had 25 years of conversations with men who are ending a marriage or starting a marriage and getting a prenup or thinking about getting a prenup, but they're too afraid to say anything to her about it. 02:47:44.640 |
I've represented roughly half, half men, half women. 02:47:48.100 |
And I'm telling you, like, you don't have to like the truth. 02:47:52.880 |
Like, you don't have to like, like, I get it, man. 02:47:59.040 |
And every time I speak about these things, because they're so tied in with gender stuff and they're so, I know I'm putting a huge target and everyone's like, oh, this guy, I don't care. 02:48:13.500 |
Well, you're an equal opportunity assassin when it comes to these conversations. 02:48:16.980 |
I mean, sure, what you just said kind of puts a target on men in the sense that it makes them sound like, well, they kind of went into it because there really wasn't another, like, trail on the mountain. 02:48:27.360 |
On the other hand, there's something kind of both romantic and actually very honorable about, yeah, look, there might be other options, but this is the one I like. 02:48:38.160 |
And she really wanted this, and I wanted her. 02:48:42.980 |
I mean, there's something pretty nice to that. 02:48:52.840 |
If she wants to go to, if that's something she enjoys, you think she enjoys Brazilian jiu-jitsu tournaments? 02:48:58.900 |
Like, trust me, that's not, but you know what? 02:49:00.960 |
I love it, and she's excited to see me be so excited. 02:49:07.400 |
The funk is like you'd never believe in your whole life. 02:49:09.980 |
The only other thing is like equestrian is maybe the only other habit that could smell as bad as that. 02:49:14.160 |
But the truth is, part of love is, you know, you want that slice of pizza more than I do. 02:49:22.140 |
Like, part of it is like the, okay, like this is important to you. 02:49:26.420 |
Right, well, because listen, if it's important to me and it's important to you, am I doing it for you or am I doing it for me? 02:49:32.580 |
Like, what's beautiful is when you're not sacrificing to give, you know? 02:49:37.260 |
When there's this feeling of, like, if this is important to you, it just became important to me. 02:49:42.020 |
Like, and that's at the core of any healthy relationship, you know? 02:49:47.540 |
If you say to me as my friend, like, Jim, this upsets me. 02:49:53.860 |
If I go, well, I'm not scared of that, you know? 02:49:56.840 |
Like, thanks, that didn't do anything for me. 02:49:59.760 |
Yeah, it sort of ceases to be a friendship at that point. 02:50:01.740 |
Right, when you say to someone, like, hey, I get that, man. 02:50:04.300 |
You know what, honestly, like, I understand that. 02:50:08.360 |
And here's how I think about it, which is why I'm not afraid of it. 02:50:13.560 |
Like, and that's what, or just hearing the person and going like, yeah, I get that, man. 02:50:20.140 |
Hey, I got some stuff I'm afraid of that you're probably not afraid of. 02:50:23.260 |
So why is it, I don't think there's something passive about a man saying, yeah, marriage was not that important to me, but it was important to her. 02:50:31.520 |
And what's important to her becomes important to me. 02:50:40.240 |
I think that some people might be surprised to learn that many men, because I agree with you, by the way, will agree to do things not out of the sheer joy and delight of the thing, 02:50:51.660 |
but the deeper delight of making the person that they care about happy. 02:51:00.520 |
And so I think marriage can be one of those things where just, look, whether you wanted it or the other person wanted it, like, there's something wonderful about you're excited about this. 02:51:19.420 |
We get in the car, I'm putting on a seatbelt. 02:51:26.100 |
You're damn right there's other drivers on the road. 02:51:28.500 |
And by the way, like, again, this is a situation where there are rules in place, whether you accept it or not. 02:51:37.140 |
Like, that's the thing about the truth, right? 02:51:39.400 |
Like, my beliefs don't require you to believe them. 02:51:41.860 |
Like, this is the—you don't have to believe the truth. 02:51:46.440 |
Like, there is a rule set governing every single marriage. 02:51:54.560 |
I want to discuss relationships that start earlier in life versus later in life. 02:52:01.700 |
When I was an undergraduate, I took a course, several courses actually, from a professor who was just phenomenal. 02:52:09.200 |
Learned neuroanatomy from him, developmental neurobiology. 02:52:12.100 |
Gave me the only B-plus after my freshman year. 02:52:14.340 |
That's not to boast about my other grades, but that's the course that I learned the most from. 02:52:21.840 |
I still remember him explaining exactly why I got it wrong. 02:52:26.880 |
Years later, I went back to visit him just for social reasons, and he had kids now. 02:52:37.420 |
I don't know why he felt compelled to tell me stuff about his personal life and give me advice, but he did. 02:52:43.240 |
Because he was known for being a pretty rigid guy. 02:52:45.640 |
Very particular, which is part of what made him such an excellent neuroanatomist. 02:52:49.880 |
And he said to me, you know, I don't know what your personal life is like, but you should get married as young as possible within reason. 02:52:59.200 |
And he said, because there's this thing that happens when you reach a certain age that you need to have the toothpaste on the right-hand side of the sink. 02:53:06.560 |
And when the toothpaste isn't on the right-hand side of the sink, then it irritates you. 02:53:11.300 |
But if you get married and merge lives with somebody early, you develop a flexibility, and you go through a lot of developmental milestones with them. 02:53:20.640 |
And I found it both amusing and interesting that he would share that. 02:53:25.240 |
I know examples of people who merged lives early and are still together. 02:53:30.700 |
I know some that merged lives early, excuse me, and diverged later, got divorced. 02:53:35.960 |
I know people that get married and have kids later in life. 02:53:39.520 |
I'm almost 50 in September, so this question isn't about me, but certainly pertains to me in some sense. 02:53:47.600 |
In your observation of successful versus unsuccessful marriages, is there a tendency for people who marry younger to, despite the fact that they, quote-unquote, might not know themselves as well, etc., for those marriages to be more successful because they go through a lot of these life milestones together, setting aside here whether the toothpaste is on the right-hand side or the left-hand side of the sink. 02:54:12.080 |
So I've given this a lot of thought because the nature of my constitution is to look at patterns and look for patterns. 02:54:24.400 |
For 25 years, I've been looking at, like, same religion, different religion. 02:54:27.400 |
Cohabitated before marriage, didn't cohabitate before marriage. 02:54:31.240 |
Female age gap, like she's older, he's younger, versus the other way. 02:54:37.260 |
And I try to – the patterns that can't be tracked by the government in a certificate of dissolution of marriage, the patterns that can only be tracked by someone who's observing this, right? 02:54:46.720 |
And I've really tried to look at that from every angle, including the angle that you just said, which is people that connect in the romantic setting or enter a monogamous relationship or make a romantic connection even if it doesn't stay monogamous throughout that whole journey. 02:55:03.960 |
So, like, they met in high school, dated in high school, or dated – and then went off to college, dated other people, and then they reconnect to each other, you know, after they played in the other fields, and then they go, okay, now we're going to be together. 02:55:16.360 |
And what I will tell you is, in my experience, in my observation, what he said is certainly true. 02:55:25.760 |
But it also ignores the negative, which is also true. 02:55:32.200 |
So, yes, there is a scenario where people meet at a relatively young age, teens, 20s, whatever it might be. 02:55:40.880 |
They marry, or they become monogamous with each other, and then they eventually marry or stay in a romantic relationship together. 02:55:46.760 |
And they grow in that, like, tree that the roots become intertwined, and they just know each other – and they build a history together that is just irreplaceable, you know, because who – like, you were there when my mom was still alive, you know? 02:56:02.200 |
Like, you were there when I, you know, got into law school, you know, like, not just when I passed the bar, not just when I built the – like, you were here for this whole trajectory, and there was this shared history. 02:56:17.080 |
There's something about someone who was with you when there was just no – like, no. 02:56:22.340 |
I have some friends that it's like, dude, there was no reason to be friends with me other than, like, I had nothing to offer you. 02:56:29.300 |
I was a C student, like, and something about you still was like, no, that's my buddy, you know? 02:56:34.840 |
So there is a tremendous beauty in that when it works. 02:56:38.580 |
There is also that people who have known each other since the beginning, as they grow and age and mature and they reach the stage in life where they start to, as we can call it, a midlife crisis, which, by the way, is not reserved for men. 02:56:57.800 |
Like, men and women both have a form of that, that they start to say, hey, like, have I really felt everything there is to feel? 02:57:07.380 |
Have I – I've only slept with this person for the last 15 years. 02:57:11.560 |
Like, there's so many other things out there. 02:57:14.300 |
There's so many other experiences out there, and I haven't had them. 02:57:17.680 |
So there's a sense – and by the way, there's also a, you know, mistaking correlation for causation in the sense of saying, you know, I'm dissatisfied with my life and you've been here for the whole thing. 02:57:32.420 |
So it must be you that I'm unhappy with as opposed to the choices I've made and where they've led me or the person who I've become rather than who you – but it's much easier to point to the other person and say, oh, you're the reason why I'm so unhappy. 02:57:52.520 |
I have not found – and if – believe me, I'd be the first to say it. 02:57:57.460 |
If I could find a pattern where I would say, okay, live together or don't live together or, like, these are ways to prevent divorce is, like, this is what you should be looking for in a partner, same religious structure, same whatever. 02:58:11.900 |
You were both raised in households with alcoholics or you were – neither of you is – whatever. 02:58:18.720 |
I think everything that's virtue can be vice. 02:58:22.660 |
I think that there's lots of ways that being together from an early age can add depth and beauty to your relationship and there are ways that it can cause people to not value each other the same way or view each other the same way. 02:58:39.640 |
I think familiarity can breed contempt and I think that, you know, no man is a hero to his butler. 02:58:48.260 |
Like, I think that when people have been together through a lot of those things, sometimes there is a familiarity that comes. 02:58:54.100 |
Whereas, again, I think the opposite is true also, which is having had someone who's in your corner for an extended period of time solidifies and deepens that relationship. 02:59:07.120 |
I think there are a lot of things people can do in the relationship to heighten the bonds created by a long shared history and keep everyone's eye on that ball than to have them distracted by novelty. 02:59:25.260 |
I also think realism becomes really important, like, looking at it and saying, like, you know, if you've been with the same partner for 15, 20 years, that the fact your eye might wander to a shiny object, like not being afraid to admit that and figure out ways to like, hey, I feel this. 02:59:51.280 |
Is it an ethical non-monogamy, which is what a lot of like younger, I don't want to say younger, but like a modern generation is certainly there are people coming up with different permutations of relationships where there's ethical non-monogamy, where there's a sense of, okay, we're going to have certain open things in our relationship. 03:00:07.640 |
Like a lot of my gay male friends have been doing that for years where they had, you know, because again, a society, like a, a culture that has been ostracized and told that what you're doing is an aberration and you're not like, which is what it was when I was growing up. 03:00:22.220 |
Like the gay community was like, had to hide to some degree because you could be literally killed for, for, for, for expressing your sexual orientation. 03:00:31.000 |
Well, there's a freedom that comes with that to some degree. 03:00:33.060 |
If you're on the outskirts of society, you're like, all right, well, we just make up our own rules, I guess. 03:00:39.680 |
They're like, listen, like we're already told we're awful, terrible people for being who we are. 03:00:44.660 |
So we might as well come up with our own ways of doing stuff. 03:00:47.720 |
So I knew lots of, of gay men from the eighties on who, you know, we're like, yeah, like we have certain rules in the relationship. 03:00:54.180 |
Like we can hook up, but the other person has to be transparent about it. 03:00:57.540 |
Or there's certain boundaries you can't cross in terms of, you know, how sexually you interact with this person. 03:01:03.240 |
Or it's something that we'll only do together in the form of a threesome. 03:01:07.020 |
Well, again, it's a permutation of relationship that is between those two people. 03:01:12.400 |
That's their, that's the conversation the two of them can have. 03:01:15.180 |
So I think there are things any couple can do to feed what's good in the relationship and dampen the negative impact of the things that are challenging in a relationship. 03:01:27.480 |
I don't think there's anything, but, but again, the solution to that problem is not just pretend we don't have a problem. 03:01:35.180 |
Cause if you say it out loud, it's going to make it real. 03:01:40.400 |
Living in the illusion is, it should really be called living in the delusion. 03:01:44.640 |
Cause I think these are precious illusions that people have and they cling to them. 03:01:49.020 |
And I understand why, like, it's, it's nice to pretend everything's fine, you know, but it's not honest. 03:01:56.340 |
And, and I think there's tremendous value in saying these things to your partner, sharing them, hearing them, which by the way, that's a two-way transaction. 03:02:08.100 |
Like if you're going to be in a relationship where you're able to say things that might be hard for your partner to hear, but are important for them to hear, you have to be prepared to let them do the same thing. 03:02:20.860 |
So again, that's why it's brave because there's this sense of, I would like an uncomfortable truth more than a comfortable lie. 03:02:29.480 |
I realize you've examined every permutation of the relationship structure and tried to correlate that with outcome, whether or not the relationship survives happily or not, you know, divorce, et cetera, amicably or not. 03:02:42.600 |
There is one question that I do think might fall into a distinct category, which is the amount of time that people know one another before they decide to get engaged. 03:02:53.880 |
We hear about, and it's been romanticized somewhat, you know, people, you know, met on vacation and you still see these in like in traditional media. 03:03:02.000 |
I don't look at traditional media too much anymore, but you'll see, you know, they met in Cabo for four days, went back, realized, and then there they are married. 03:03:10.000 |
Or, but they might've been together 50 years, you know, or, you know, people were together a very long time. 03:03:19.780 |
Here's the kind of like the Disney thing, right? 03:03:21.820 |
When you hear about a couple, like in their late seventies, having been married very long time, grandchildren, you know, they decide to get divorced. 03:03:29.680 |
And we all reflexively go, oh, like there, because we have the, and everyone romanticizes the couple sitting together is all over Instagram, right? 03:03:42.400 |
So amount of time that people have known one another prior to engagement, any correlation with outcome? 03:03:53.980 |
Like we all have anecdotal stories we can tell of people who were together for extended periods of time and then split up. 03:04:00.580 |
And we all have a couple of stories of people who, like, I have a dear friend who got a woman pregnant on the first date, like first date. 03:04:11.400 |
Like they went to movie and dinner and then they had sex and she got pregnant. 03:04:15.360 |
And she called him like a couple of weeks later and was like, I'm pregnant. 03:04:28.120 |
And he's like, nope, I'm going to do the right thing. 03:04:29.620 |
Like the right thing is to marry a stranger because you had sex with her and got her pregnant? 03:04:46.880 |
It's an anecdotal, you know, it's not proof of anything. 03:04:51.440 |
I'm not suggesting people go out and knock somebody up on the first date and then just take the chances. 03:04:58.740 |
You know, I think that, again, it depends on what, like, if I said to you, I go to the gym for an hour every day. 03:05:11.420 |
If your answer is anything other than, I don't know, what do you do there? 03:05:15.120 |
Because if what I do is I walk on the treadmill for three minutes and then I sit in the steam room for a half an hour and then the rest of the time I'm on my phone, then I might as well have stayed home probably. 03:05:28.060 |
Whereas if I say, oh, I never go to the gym, does that mean that's bad? 03:05:32.360 |
Maybe I do bodyweight workouts at home all the time and I never set foot in a gym. 03:05:38.660 |
So the truth is, is a couple that's together for an extended period of time and has the kind of relationship where they're learning about each other through that process. 03:05:51.840 |
Time is good in the sense that you're going to see some good things and some bad things. 03:05:56.320 |
You're going to see this person at their best and at their worst. 03:05:58.280 |
You're going to see them through some difficult times. 03:06:00.480 |
They're going to see you in some difficult times. 03:06:02.640 |
And hopefully, you'll know what you're, like, if you got to drive a car for six months before you decided if you were going to buy it or not, like, you know, you would know, you'd make a much more informed choice. 03:06:16.540 |
Why do you think they don't let you drive a car for six months before you buy it? 03:06:20.720 |
Like, there's a reason for that because you'd see the whole thing. 03:06:24.480 |
Like, that's, that's, again, I think it's a great idea. 03:06:33.060 |
I mean, maybe you'll see, like, oh, this is boxy. 03:06:36.200 |
Look, I've seen, again, successful and unsuccessful brief pairings. 03:06:40.880 |
What I will say is when people have had a long courtship, I'll call it courtship period or premarital period that they used to deepen their connection to each other and get to know the good and bad of each other and see each other in good circumstances and bad circumstances and with and without makeup. 03:07:01.980 |
And when you're mad and got cut off in traffic and when you're happy and blissed out, yeah, they're making an informed choice. 03:07:08.620 |
Like, they're buying something that they understand what it's like, you know? 03:07:13.260 |
Like, friends of mine say to me all the time, like, I'm thinking about getting a dog. 03:07:16.740 |
Like, sorry to make this analogy for romance and dogs. 03:07:22.660 |
Well, it's a beautiful day out and I want to go running with the dog in the park. 03:07:27.820 |
But if you're not ready to have the dog when it ate something and now has diarrhea and it's raining outside and you've got to keep taking it outside and you've got to keep washing your couch, then don't get a dog, man. 03:07:45.200 |
Because the dog's been alone for four and a half hours and I don't want the dog to be alone for that long. 03:07:49.900 |
Like, you've got to change your life for this thing. 03:08:00.060 |
Because one of those sunny days is worth everything. 03:08:03.020 |
And by the way, if you love it enough, even that stupid part with the, like, it's an act of love. 03:08:11.620 |
Dogs, the diarrhea, they have this, they feel bad about it. 03:08:15.640 |
They feel bad because they're out of, they're uncomfortable. 03:08:19.320 |
That all you care about is like, it's okay, buddy. 03:08:26.980 |
Man, I'd give my entire left hand to have like one more week. 03:08:35.700 |
Like, I think that, that a romantic relationship, there is no reason why you can't use the courtship 03:08:43.620 |
period to sort of test all those permutations. 03:08:47.100 |
And I don't think, by the way, that people would just stop buying cars if you had a six month 03:08:57.240 |
Like you would still find, maybe you would, when you made a choice, you would really be 03:09:02.840 |
So what I will say in response to the question, I made a long answer, is I don't think that 03:09:09.280 |
a long courtship period, if, for example, if the courtship period, the length of it is 03:09:14.020 |
a function of one of them being super reluctant to commit to the other person, that might not 03:09:18.940 |
But if, if the purpose of that courtship period, that extended engagement or that extended dating 03:09:24.640 |
period is to really get a feel of each other in a variety of conditions, you know, like 03:09:31.940 |
When it's pushed beyond its tolerances, its nature emerges. 03:09:36.040 |
So I think there's value in seeing, like, I don't want to just see you with makeup on. 03:09:41.180 |
Like, cause you're going to not be wearing makeup for a lot of this relationship. 03:09:44.880 |
I want to see what you look like coming out of the shower, you know? 03:09:47.580 |
And, and by the way, like, you should want that. 03:09:51.780 |
You want me to look at you with no makeup on and go, oh, you're beautiful. 03:09:57.520 |
But do I love it when you've got the flu and like, I can take care of you? 03:10:04.000 |
So I think that if you use the time the right way, there's tremendous value in that. 03:10:11.160 |
Much better than just throwing a dart at the board. 03:10:17.640 |
Like, I don't think that that is a good recipe. 03:10:19.920 |
I've seen a lot of divorces that come from a very brief courtship. 03:10:27.860 |
I mean, listen, you and I both know people, take it out of the romantic context, who just get rich quick. 03:10:34.420 |
Like, they make one cool decision and it just pays off. 03:10:40.120 |
And I know other people, man, they had to take the stairs. 03:10:42.880 |
Like, they had 15 versions of it and it went bankrupt three times and then one of the things hit. 03:10:50.300 |
And then everybody goes, I always knew you were going to be successful. 03:10:55.760 |
Like, it was a series of near misses until I hit. 03:10:59.940 |
I think how you use the time is what really matters. 03:11:07.040 |
Some people listening to this are in relationships. 03:11:13.740 |
Is there such a thing as a post-nup for the people who have already been married? 03:11:19.020 |
And what are the pros and cons of opening up that conversation and the contract itself? 03:11:25.820 |
And for people who are still in the, you know, looking for partner, exploring a relationship 03:11:33.060 |
or relationships, whatever their life structure happens to be, what do you think are the questions 03:11:40.280 |
that they might ask themselves and the other person that would give some insight into? 03:11:44.380 |
And two, not necessarily, like, should there be a prenup for the dating period? 03:11:50.520 |
But, you know, a lot of the things you're talking about are in the circles of, like, close intimacy. 03:11:59.520 |
That's not the kind of conversation, maybe nowadays people do, that typically people will 03:12:03.940 |
have on their, you know, fifth date or sixth date. 03:12:07.900 |
But at some point it makes sense to have real conversation with somebody to try and make 03:12:15.300 |
Yeah, those are a couple of different questions. 03:12:18.560 |
No, but those are all really important questions. 03:12:20.400 |
But for the committed and non-committed folks out there. 03:12:23.580 |
Yeah, I mean, I'm paraphrasing Jung when I say that the thing you seek most is in the place 03:12:35.080 |
So I think that, you know, a friend of mine once said to me that the most important or 03:12:42.920 |
really the only question that therapy is designed to answer is what is it that you're afraid 03:12:49.040 |
And so I think that there's tremendous value in sharing with a partner and learning about 03:12:59.060 |
a partner what it is they're afraid to feel and looking at the things about yourself that 03:13:10.200 |
I think in my own experience and I think in that of most of my clients, you know, I'm not 03:13:20.620 |
I was raised religious, so I don't really believe in the devil. 03:13:23.260 |
Like I don't think that there's like this malevolent creature that's out there trying to convince 03:13:28.560 |
But if there was a devil, I think the principal function of the devil would be to convince us 03:13:36.060 |
that we're so bestial that God couldn't possibly love us. 03:13:39.180 |
Like I think the greatest mistakes of my life I always made and the most selfish, awful decisions 03:13:50.400 |
I made, I made because I convinced myself that I wasn't good. 03:13:55.560 |
Like I convinced myself that, what does it matter? 03:14:01.920 |
And when I, when I look at whether you want to call it the presence of God in me, Buddha 03:14:08.420 |
nature, you call it anything you want to call it. 03:14:10.280 |
But when I, when I hold to the, the angels of my better nature, like the part of my heart 03:14:16.300 |
that is good and loving and compassionate, and I let that be my compass, right? 03:14:21.580 |
That's when the greatest victories, the greatest joys, like the best things happen. 03:14:26.900 |
And I'm not suggesting being like ignorant and being like, oh, the whole world's full of like 03:14:35.340 |
I live in the world of misery, but it has not robbed me of the belief in the good and the 03:14:45.520 |
And how badly I want it and how bad we all want it. 03:14:49.600 |
And so I think the most valuable thing that people can do is when you're not in a relationship 03:14:58.660 |
or whether you're in a relationship is when do you feel the most loved and when do you 03:15:07.220 |
And then when you connect to another person, find out the answer for them, because it's 03:15:14.020 |
Like it might be some things that are the same, but there might be some things that are 03:15:18.960 |
You know, there's a good possibility that if you told the creamer story, that she would 03:15:23.140 |
be like, oh my God, I don't even remember that. 03:15:26.620 |
And yet for you, it was such a, so I think there's a lot of those things. 03:15:29.580 |
Like sometimes when you ask somebody, what's your favorite memory of me? 03:15:32.800 |
Like the thing they'll tell you, you'll go, I don't even remember saying that. 03:15:37.180 |
Like I've had people say to me like, oh my God, you said this thing on this podcast. 03:15:42.960 |
I'm like, I mean, it sounds like I agree with it. 03:15:45.560 |
Like I have absolutely no recollection of saying that. 03:15:48.220 |
I mean, partly I talk so much, it's hard to remember what's important, but I really think 03:15:53.040 |
that there's tremendous value in being brave in the conversations we have with ourselves 03:16:02.240 |
I think that lying to yourself, because here's the thing. 03:16:07.200 |
If you can be authentically yourself with another person, then you're going to feel their love. 03:16:12.140 |
Like, that's what I mean about the devil is the idea that like, if I just show my partner 03:16:17.540 |
the best parts of myself and I don't admit to them or share with them the things I'm afraid 03:16:23.700 |
of, the shit I need to work on, all that kind of stuff, then I'm never going to feel their love 03:16:34.080 |
Like they love the persona that I've developed in this relationship and I'll never feel their 03:16:39.800 |
Whereas if I, if I'm brave enough to share with this person, the parts of me that I don't 03:16:45.800 |
understand, I'm afraid of, I'm unhappy with, I'm ashamed of, and they love me anyway, like 03:16:55.820 |
And that love can be a transformative kind of love. 03:17:00.920 |
So I think anything that deepens your ability to know yourself and deepens your ability to 03:17:08.140 |
know your partner and let your partner know that you want to know them, like the whole thing, 03:17:14.300 |
like, I want to know what you need to work on. 03:17:22.260 |
You know, friendship's easier than romantic love. 03:17:24.600 |
Like it's super easy to say like, hey man, I, you know, I'm cheering for you. 03:17:31.060 |
Like I don't have to be, that's part of why I like prenups. 03:17:33.520 |
Like, I don't want you here because you have to be here. 03:17:36.300 |
I want you here because you want to be here because you're in, man. 03:17:39.280 |
Like there was a time where we were in and we decided to do this thing. 03:17:43.800 |
And that to me, like, that's the whole thing. 03:17:48.860 |
In terms of a, if you're already in a relationship and you go, okay, like post-nups, there's problems 03:17:56.580 |
with post-nups because from a contractual legal standpoint, contracts fail for what's called 03:18:03.980 |
Meaning that, that in every contract, there has to be an exchange of value. 03:18:10.980 |
Like we're each exchanging, we're each giving and receiving value. 03:18:14.380 |
The consideration for a prenup is we don't have to get married, but I'm willing to marry 03:18:21.440 |
you if we amend the rule set in the following way. 03:18:25.460 |
There are some courts that have held that a post-nup, there is no consideration and it 03:18:30.120 |
fails as a contract because staying married is not consideration. 03:18:34.820 |
It's assumed that you would stay married legally. 03:18:41.020 |
Now, that being said, do I think the message that I have about connection and how to interact 03:18:50.260 |
with your partner and the things I wrote in my book, like, you know, my book, How to Stay 03:18:56.420 |
in Love, Practical Wisdom from an Unlikely Source, the idea was not to just talk about people in 03:19:03.960 |
troubled relationships or to approach people who were not yet in relationships and give 03:19:10.620 |
Like I trained Brazilian jiu-jitsu for many years and people will often say, because, you 03:19:16.640 |
know, people are 30, 40, 50, and they want to get into Brazilian jiu-jitsu. 03:19:25.640 |
I don't want to offend Hoyler or I think it was Hoyler, but I'm not sure. 03:19:29.080 |
It might've been Hickson, where someone said, what's the best age? 03:19:42.400 |
Like, so all these techniques, all these things we're talking about, what's the best time to 03:19:51.500 |
Like, I don't care if you're married 10 years, 20 years, 30 years. 03:19:56.260 |
You're telling me that right now there wouldn't be value in seeing your partner, allowing yourself 03:20:05.000 |
Like a lot of the practical wisdom, I think, that's so simple of like, in my book, there's 03:20:12.400 |
a chapter where I just talk about, it's called leave a note. 03:20:14.340 |
And it basically just says like, leave your partner a note. 03:20:17.380 |
Like when you leave for the office in the morning, leave a note. 03:20:20.580 |
Like, hey, you know, so fun on the couch with you last night watching TV. 03:20:35.480 |
That's why you won't see it on TV advertised, by the way, because it didn't cost anything. 03:20:46.820 |
I took the time in the middle of the things I'm doing to let you know you're important to me. 03:20:55.100 |
Who wouldn't want their partner, even after 20 years of marriage, especially after 20 years 03:21:04.520 |
Like, I'm just, I don't know, something about you. 03:21:09.180 |
Like, who wouldn't have their day brightened by that a little bit? 03:21:12.780 |
And again, maybe at first your partner would go, are you all right? 03:21:17.000 |
Like, I had a buddy who actually did the note thing. 03:21:19.760 |
And he said, he was like, yeah, for like the first week, she was like, what's going on? 03:21:28.580 |
And he said, but after like, and I just said, no, I, you know, I just, I want to make more 03:21:34.760 |
And he said, after like three weeks, four weeks, he was like, dude, I'm having like, we're like 03:21:43.520 |
Like, he's like, and now she's like texting me in the middle of the day. 03:21:47.140 |
Like, by the way, like, again, not to gender things, but like leaving a note or sending a 03:21:53.020 |
text in the middle of the day that just, cause I was just thinking of you. 03:21:55.760 |
Like, I just wanted you to know I was thinking of you. 03:22:03.500 |
It says, Hey, like, I know that the world's crazy and everything's kind of, but like, it's 03:22:09.640 |
And you're this special person that gets to hear these things from me or see these things 03:22:19.400 |
And what is the downside to trying to give you that? 03:22:22.940 |
Cause worst case, you spent 30 seconds of your life and you didn't get a return on your 03:22:32.160 |
So even though you may not be able to avail yourself of the rule set concept that can happen 03:22:40.080 |
when you haven't married yet and you have a prenup and you have that discussion, I think 03:22:44.720 |
you can still have that core conversation again, not about if we split up, how do we divide 03:22:57.780 |
This relationship of the two of us, this exchange of value, what, what I have a, I have a friend 03:23:04.180 |
who's been married probably about 10 years happily, really happily. 03:23:10.100 |
And he was telling me how they call it a walk and talk that every once a week, they just 03:23:17.520 |
They live in Colorado and they've made a practice of telling each other like two or three things 03:23:25.940 |
that they did that week that like were a big win, like two or three things that like made 03:23:33.240 |
And then they try to have at least one or two things that they could have done better 03:23:39.340 |
And they kind of do a praise sandwich, you know, like, so they do the good and then a few 03:23:43.560 |
And I said to him, like, is there a discernible impact? 03:23:47.880 |
And he's like, it's like the best thing we do. 03:23:50.120 |
He's like, because it, it really helps us course correct in real time. 03:23:54.960 |
But the most valuable part is actually not the, here's what you got wrong. 03:24:01.400 |
Like, here's the stuff that made me feel loved. 03:24:03.940 |
And, and cause that death spiral that people get into in relationships where it's like, well, 03:24:14.760 |
And like, well, I didn't get to go out with my friends. 03:24:16.400 |
Why should she get to go out with her friends? 03:24:20.560 |
Well, it's like, well, why is your miserable day more important than my miserable day? 03:24:23.220 |
You know, like that death spiral, you can reverse that. 03:24:25.860 |
It can, it can work the other way, which is like, just keep meeting this with an abundance 03:24:30.980 |
of love, affection, compassion, positive reinforcement. 03:24:35.180 |
It can, and again, not always like there are, believe me, I, I work in the clay of domestic 03:24:43.280 |
I know there are toxic, awful people who are just not going to be able to have a functional 03:24:47.820 |
relationship, but find that out sooner rather than later. 03:24:55.240 |
I, you, you say how, you know, you see like a couple that's 70 or 80 and they're getting 03:25:01.580 |
It is, but it also begs the question, like what would have happened if they were ill suited 03:25:08.820 |
Cause I gotta tell you, man, I'm not impressed when somebody says, oh, we were married for 03:25:13.900 |
We were miserable for 45 of them, but we did it. 03:25:19.020 |
Like, I don't, that's like that race they run in Death Valley where it's like, I ran 150 03:25:29.780 |
You did something that sounds horribly painful and in no way positive. 03:25:35.520 |
Like, that's not to me a successful marriage. 03:25:37.860 |
Successful marriage to me is we made each other's lives better. 03:25:41.360 |
We made our, our, our own lives and each other's lives better for our coupling, for the fact 03:25:47.760 |
Maybe we created life and cultivated life together by birth or adoption, or maybe we just radiated 03:25:53.460 |
joy to the people around us, you know, or maybe we had pets and we gave them a wonderful 03:25:58.340 |
existence together, or maybe some combination of all those wonderful things. 03:26:02.180 |
Like, but do I think that the solution is like longevity and say, no, because I don't 03:26:08.660 |
think that the duration of something is the success or failure of it. 03:26:12.280 |
Listen, if you make a six hour shitty movie, I'm not going to be like, well, but it was 03:26:20.640 |
Whereas if you, if you make a six hour movie that holds my attention the entire six hours, 03:26:27.380 |
That's a, that's a movie worth making, you know? 03:26:30.540 |
Like I'll watch Casino or Goodfellas every time it's on. 03:26:34.240 |
And it's like a full three hours almost, you know? 03:26:39.140 |
So I think that longevity, like endings and how relationships end, the fact that something 03:26:55.380 |
And if somebody said to me three quarters the way through it, you know, this is going to 03:27:02.880 |
I want to, and knowing that it's going to end is part of what makes it beautiful. 03:27:06.180 |
So I think that protections are really important. 03:27:12.820 |
It's ideal as early in a relationship as possible to have some of these conversations about the 03:27:19.920 |
painful things that I have to help people wrestle with every single day. 03:27:24.380 |
But I, I think the value received from that conversation is immeasurable. 03:27:30.120 |
Jim, what I love about you so much is that you're willing to, and maybe you just reflexively 03:27:41.600 |
So if it's something dark, like divorce, you look at it through the lens of that, but also 03:27:50.820 |
You look at it through the lens of a lawyer's eyes. 03:27:54.680 |
Well, I think that's part of lawyering is you have to argue both sides of everything. 03:27:57.720 |
But I would also say that, you know, if ever, you know, people had the stereotype in mind 03:28:03.740 |
that all lawyers are heartless and cutthroat and it's all just about money. 03:28:07.800 |
I mean, you clearly shatter that because, I mean, so much of what we talked about today wasn't 03:28:16.140 |
You know, really what I kept hearing over and over is that by asking what at first are 03:28:21.420 |
practical questions, you can really get to the emotional layers underneath those that really 03:28:25.720 |
speak to what people need most in order to make things work, even if the relationship doesn't 03:28:31.120 |
And I think that's such a, an important lens on, you know, the kind of overwhelming thing 03:28:37.780 |
that we call relationships and marriage and prenups and divorces. 03:28:40.640 |
And, you know, I think it's enough to make anyone terrified. 03:28:44.060 |
It's also enough, as you said, to make some people bitter. 03:28:47.360 |
And I think we didn't talk about it too much because it's such a potent word. 03:28:52.780 |
But this notion of bitterness is really the thing to avoid most, right? 03:28:57.360 |
Because it contaminates the thing that, that you embody so much, which is you just have 03:29:02.020 |
such a huge forward center of mass, full tilt, arms around all of it, love of life and people 03:29:11.420 |
And it's, it just comes through over and over in everything you do and in every way that you 03:29:29.120 |
You're an anthropologist, which reflects some of your prior, prior training. 03:29:33.140 |
And you're just a really amazing human being in the way that you're willing to just launch 03:29:40.040 |
yourself into all of it and consider all of this. 03:29:41.960 |
And like you said, you see some really unfortunate things, but it's clear that you also see a lot 03:29:48.940 |
And I think some of the awful things are really beautiful. 03:29:51.100 |
There's a line from Hemingway from A Farewell to Arms, where it says, the world breaks everyone 03:30:01.180 |
And I think divorce and heartbreak, like heartbreak is like that. 03:30:09.080 |
And sometimes we're stronger in the broken places. 03:30:12.000 |
Like I think I've learned so much through love and I've learned so much through loss. 03:30:18.160 |
But I don't want my love of love to make me forget that loss exists. 03:30:22.940 |
And I don't want the pain of loss to make me forget that love exists. 03:30:27.280 |
Well, I and everyone listening really appreciate you taking the time to come here. 03:30:32.660 |
Look, you make a living doing something else. 03:30:41.640 |
I mean, I love talking to you in general, but we've never done it on mic, which is really 03:30:47.320 |
And you've been a wonderful and trusted friend to me. 03:30:50.900 |
I also trust that if I'm going to make a dumb decision or if I've made a dumb decision that 03:31:01.480 |
I don't have your legal wisdom, but right back at you. 03:31:09.360 |
You know, my dad has this saying that, you know, some people when they speak, they just 03:31:16.020 |
But he also says, but some people when they speak, just wisdom falls out of them. 03:31:21.200 |
And that's how I feel every time I'm in your presence. 03:31:24.140 |
Or I hear you on a podcast or even a short clip. 03:31:26.880 |
I prepared a lot for today's episode by just watching as much content of yours as I could 03:31:33.260 |
I was like, wow, the density of value per unit time for your speech is unbelievably high. 03:31:41.560 |
That was the most humorous description of me. 03:31:46.140 |
I love the scientific lens through which you even look at the unscientific, although I guess 03:31:53.880 |
But no, man, I'm really glad we had a chance to do this. 03:31:57.180 |
And, you know, I love all of our conversations. 03:32:01.700 |
And I thought to myself, it's going to be interesting and odd to have one. 03:32:05.600 |
But I sort of immediately forgot that the microphone's here or the camera's here. 03:32:11.900 |
Like, that's the best thing, you know, is when, like, if you said to me, how long have we been 03:32:21.840 |
And that's that flow state, you know, that happens when we're wrestling with these ideas 03:32:34.180 |
You know, before we were friends, I listened to your program in the earlier days of it. 03:32:42.980 |
And I love how the journey of becoming fully human and exploring the depth of our full humanity has 03:32:52.600 |
become, like, because something that was always very science-based tools, and it's very easy to 03:32:58.080 |
sort of just keep yourself in that box, you've really stepped out of your comfort zone, 03:33:03.400 |
especially in recent years, and brought in these things that really are the totality of the human 03:33:09.660 |
experience, all these relationship things, the pet thing I just listened to, I loved. 03:33:13.920 |
And I think that we're coming to a time where we realize that, like, you know, what's the old 03:33:23.320 |
saying that we're, you know, we're not thinking machines that sometimes feel, we're feeling 03:33:31.320 |
I think that you're really starting to get deeply into the totality of our humanity, the physical 03:33:39.160 |
state, the emotional, spiritual, all of those things. 03:33:42.140 |
And I think that's what we need, that if there is a cure to the ailment of our time, the partisan, 03:33:49.900 |
hyper-partisan environment, the misery and anxiety that so many people are feeling, and the yearning, 03:33:56.620 |
the spiritual hunger that has people consuming opinions and podcasts, like, deeply. 03:34:03.660 |
I mean, who would have ever thought podcasts would be what it is, right? 03:34:08.140 |
Like, long-form audio conversations, like, we would go back to the radio, like, when we have, 03:34:14.660 |
when we can world-build with AI now and make anything visual for us, that we would go back 03:34:23.140 |
And the fact that, like, that hunger is being fed by people like you who are saying, hey, 03:34:44.500 |
And we need to try to wrestle with it and figure it out. 03:34:51.580 |
Like, you can, whatever car you drive, whatever profession, how much money you have in the bank, 03:34:57.700 |
So I think it's really beautiful that you're, you're, you're, the palette of things that 03:35:02.500 |
you're discussing has become so broad, but you have remained very much you and very able 03:35:10.700 |
to, like, bring it to a lens that is authentically yourself. 03:35:16.540 |
I'd like, I, I remain a friend, but I also remain a fan. 03:35:25.400 |
You have a very exciting project that we didn't get to today. 03:35:32.400 |
And, um, like everything you touch, it turns to platinum. 03:35:36.860 |
Thank you for joining me for today's discussion with James Sexton. 03:35:40.460 |
To learn more about James's work and to find links to his book and other resources, 03:35:46.060 |
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And last, but certainly not least, thank you for your interest in science.