1 00:00:00,080 --> 00:00:02,240 Speaker 1: Do you think the idea that love is enough can 2 00:00:02,279 --> 00:00:03,680 Speaker 1: hold together a relationship. 3 00:00:03,720 --> 00:00:06,720 Speaker 2: Relationships actually rarely end because of lack of love. They 4 00:00:06,760 --> 00:00:11,039 Speaker 2: more commonly end because people don't feel seen, they feel misunderstood. 5 00:00:11,240 --> 00:00:14,240 Speaker 2: They go into a state of learned helplessness where they 6 00:00:14,280 --> 00:00:15,080 Speaker 2: don't see. 7 00:00:14,840 --> 00:00:15,480 Speaker 3: Your way out. 8 00:00:15,600 --> 00:00:19,680 Speaker 1: Today, everyone, we have Gillian Tareki on the podcast Gillian, 9 00:00:19,760 --> 00:00:22,919 Speaker 1: you are a relationship coach, a teacher, a podcaster, a 10 00:00:23,040 --> 00:00:27,000 Speaker 1: riisa and a speaker. Why do people accept abuse in relationships? 11 00:00:27,080 --> 00:00:28,000 Speaker 3: Over and over again? 12 00:00:28,120 --> 00:00:30,440 Speaker 2: I've never known a person who has been in a 13 00:00:30,560 --> 00:00:34,400 Speaker 2: very unhealthy relationship and or an abusive relationship who also 14 00:00:34,479 --> 00:00:36,960 Speaker 2: did not struggle to accept who they are and loved 15 00:00:37,000 --> 00:00:41,080 Speaker 2: and loved themselves. Sometimes people stay in these relationships because 16 00:00:41,120 --> 00:00:44,440 Speaker 2: they don't know the way out, but most times it 17 00:00:44,520 --> 00:00:47,519 Speaker 2: means something needs to be looked at within. Why you 18 00:00:47,600 --> 00:00:48,239 Speaker 2: tolerate that? 19 00:00:48,720 --> 00:00:51,120 Speaker 1: And for a woman who wants to stop rebuilding her 20 00:00:51,159 --> 00:00:54,840 Speaker 1: relationship with herself, do you have any specific practices on 21 00:00:55,000 --> 00:00:57,480 Speaker 1: how they can start changing their perception of what they deserve? 22 00:00:57,640 --> 00:01:01,200 Speaker 2: One of the hardest questions to answer for everyone is 23 00:01:01,880 --> 00:01:04,880 Speaker 2: what do I want? What would make me feel more fulfilled? 24 00:01:05,160 --> 00:01:07,039 Speaker 2: And by doing that you start to learn how to 25 00:01:07,080 --> 00:01:08,760 Speaker 2: meet your own needs. 26 00:01:09,959 --> 00:01:13,080 Speaker 1: I'm Radi Wkia and on my podcast A Really Good Cry, 27 00:01:13,240 --> 00:01:17,000 Speaker 1: we embrace the messy and the beautiful, providing a space 28 00:01:17,040 --> 00:01:21,119 Speaker 1: for raw, unfiltered conversations that celebrate vulnerability and allow you 29 00:01:21,200 --> 00:01:24,200 Speaker 1: to tune in to learn, connect and find comfort. 30 00:01:24,240 --> 00:01:24,600 Speaker 3: Together. 31 00:01:25,040 --> 00:01:29,399 Speaker 1: Today, everyone, we have Jillian Tareki on the podcast. Gillian, 32 00:01:29,480 --> 00:01:33,080 Speaker 1: you are a relationship coach, a teacher, a podcaster, a writer, 33 00:01:33,319 --> 00:01:35,479 Speaker 1: and a speaker. And you've just told me that you're 34 00:01:35,480 --> 00:01:37,240 Speaker 1: also a yoga teacher for the past what was it 35 00:01:37,240 --> 00:01:38,040 Speaker 1: twenty five years? 36 00:01:38,160 --> 00:01:40,640 Speaker 2: Well, I've been practicing yoga for the past twenty five 37 00:01:40,720 --> 00:01:43,040 Speaker 2: years and I tard it for about eighteen years. 38 00:01:43,160 --> 00:01:43,959 Speaker 3: Yeah, incredible. 39 00:01:44,000 --> 00:01:46,399 Speaker 1: And you've been helping people for over twenty years to 40 00:01:46,440 --> 00:01:49,920 Speaker 1: love themselves and others better through your experience in research 41 00:01:49,960 --> 00:01:52,360 Speaker 1: and your new book It begins with you, The Nine 42 00:01:52,400 --> 00:01:54,960 Speaker 1: Hard Truths about Love that will Change your life. It 43 00:01:55,040 --> 00:01:58,200 Speaker 1: is so beautiful and it shares such a practical approach 44 00:01:58,240 --> 00:02:01,520 Speaker 1: to achieving lasting self love and relationships. So thank you 45 00:02:01,600 --> 00:02:03,520 Speaker 1: so much for being here, and I'm so excited to 46 00:02:03,560 --> 00:02:04,040 Speaker 1: learn from you. 47 00:02:04,240 --> 00:02:07,000 Speaker 2: Oh, thank you so much for having me. I been 48 00:02:07,040 --> 00:02:08,520 Speaker 2: so looking forward to this conversation. 49 00:02:08,720 --> 00:02:10,080 Speaker 1: I know I told you this as you walked in 50 00:02:10,080 --> 00:02:12,840 Speaker 1: the door, but I need to say on camera because 51 00:02:13,480 --> 00:02:16,079 Speaker 1: when I started reading your book, I read it within 52 00:02:16,320 --> 00:02:20,079 Speaker 1: forty eight hours and I could not stop. Every single 53 00:02:20,160 --> 00:02:23,639 Speaker 1: page I was highlighting. I was turning the folding the 54 00:02:23,680 --> 00:02:25,560 Speaker 1: page over to remember to come back to it. And 55 00:02:26,120 --> 00:02:28,840 Speaker 1: you know, it honestly gave me so many moments of 56 00:02:28,880 --> 00:02:32,359 Speaker 1: reflection and things that I realized I hadn't noticed I 57 00:02:32,520 --> 00:02:36,240 Speaker 1: kept with me throughout my life, and that had impacted 58 00:02:36,280 --> 00:02:38,960 Speaker 1: so many different parts of my life without me even realizing. 59 00:02:39,160 --> 00:02:40,640 Speaker 3: So thank you for that. 60 00:02:40,760 --> 00:02:42,440 Speaker 1: I really needed those moments, and I think it's going 61 00:02:42,480 --> 00:02:44,720 Speaker 1: to make me so much better as a partner and 62 00:02:44,840 --> 00:02:48,240 Speaker 1: have better relationships even outside of even outside of my 63 00:02:48,240 --> 00:02:50,919 Speaker 1: my relationship with my husband, with other people in my life. 64 00:02:50,960 --> 00:02:52,440 Speaker 3: So thank you, thank you, thank you. 65 00:02:52,360 --> 00:02:55,240 Speaker 2: Oh my god, thank you. That's like music to my ears. 66 00:02:55,240 --> 00:02:58,520 Speaker 1: Seriously, in this book, you go through nine core truths, 67 00:02:58,560 --> 00:03:00,839 Speaker 1: and honestly, I would love to walk our way through 68 00:03:00,840 --> 00:03:02,880 Speaker 1: them because I think they are so juicy each one 69 00:03:03,480 --> 00:03:05,960 Speaker 1: and I have so many questions from them. Okay, you 70 00:03:06,000 --> 00:03:09,640 Speaker 1: wrote in the first part that fulfilling relationship grounded in 71 00:03:09,720 --> 00:03:14,080 Speaker 1: connection intimacy and trust starts from within and the truth 72 00:03:14,160 --> 00:03:17,359 Speaker 1: one is it begins with you. So I would love 73 00:03:17,440 --> 00:03:19,959 Speaker 1: to get your insight on this and just expand on 74 00:03:20,000 --> 00:03:21,120 Speaker 1: it as much as you would like to do. 75 00:03:21,240 --> 00:03:24,000 Speaker 2: When we look at all our relationships past and present, 76 00:03:24,600 --> 00:03:29,200 Speaker 2: the common denominator is me and just the common denominators you. 77 00:03:29,320 --> 00:03:33,280 Speaker 2: The common denominator is us. Not People misinterpret that or 78 00:03:33,320 --> 00:03:35,760 Speaker 2: can misinterpret that as oh, well, then I guess I'm 79 00:03:35,800 --> 00:03:38,040 Speaker 2: the problem. No, no, no, It just means you're the 80 00:03:38,040 --> 00:03:42,480 Speaker 2: common denominator. It just means that all our relationships are 81 00:03:42,520 --> 00:03:46,400 Speaker 2: a product of the choices that we make and the 82 00:03:46,480 --> 00:03:48,960 Speaker 2: choices of how we show up every day. The choices 83 00:03:49,000 --> 00:03:53,120 Speaker 2: and partner just choices, and there are choices that are 84 00:03:53,320 --> 00:03:55,960 Speaker 2: very much informed by our conditioning, beliefs and whatnot, but 85 00:03:56,000 --> 00:03:58,800 Speaker 2: they really are our choices, and that if we want 86 00:03:58,880 --> 00:04:01,520 Speaker 2: to make a change in our life, and very specifically 87 00:04:01,560 --> 00:04:04,000 Speaker 2: to this book, in our love lives, we have to 88 00:04:04,040 --> 00:04:07,240 Speaker 2: be the change that we wish to see because we 89 00:04:07,280 --> 00:04:11,400 Speaker 2: cannot change another person, and there's some circumstances that we 90 00:04:11,560 --> 00:04:15,400 Speaker 2: just cannot change, but we can change something from within. 91 00:04:16,240 --> 00:04:20,080 Speaker 2: And so I really wanted to write this and title 92 00:04:20,200 --> 00:04:22,719 Speaker 2: the book, It begins with you, because I wanted people 93 00:04:22,760 --> 00:04:25,480 Speaker 2: to feel empowered that if they wanted to make a change, 94 00:04:25,520 --> 00:04:29,520 Speaker 2: it actually is possible. It's takes some work, there is 95 00:04:29,560 --> 00:04:34,040 Speaker 2: some emotional labor involved. But life doesn't get better blaming 96 00:04:34,080 --> 00:04:36,640 Speaker 2: mom or dad or history or anything like that. And 97 00:04:36,720 --> 00:04:39,520 Speaker 2: it doesn't get better blaming ourselves. But it does get 98 00:04:39,520 --> 00:04:43,520 Speaker 2: better saying Okay, how might I be standing in the 99 00:04:43,520 --> 00:04:45,279 Speaker 2: way of what it is that I say that I 100 00:04:45,360 --> 00:04:45,880 Speaker 2: really want. 101 00:04:46,320 --> 00:04:49,839 Speaker 1: And if someone has this realization, because I think you know, 102 00:04:49,839 --> 00:04:51,760 Speaker 1: you can go through so much of your life where 103 00:04:52,080 --> 00:04:55,360 Speaker 1: you do get used to blaming other situations or other people, 104 00:04:55,400 --> 00:04:57,679 Speaker 1: and that can become a narrative and it can become 105 00:04:57,920 --> 00:04:59,800 Speaker 1: the place that we find safety, in the place that 106 00:04:59,800 --> 00:05:02,600 Speaker 1: we find comfort because if it's not me, then I 107 00:05:03,400 --> 00:05:05,840 Speaker 1: can't control it, which means I'm not in control of 108 00:05:06,040 --> 00:05:08,000 Speaker 1: the pain that I'm feeling. It's just happening to me. 109 00:05:08,520 --> 00:05:11,280 Speaker 1: But as soon as you start realizing that, oh, actually, 110 00:05:11,520 --> 00:05:15,400 Speaker 1: if it begins with me, that means I have control 111 00:05:15,680 --> 00:05:17,800 Speaker 1: of the things that pain me and the things that 112 00:05:17,880 --> 00:05:20,440 Speaker 1: hurt me and the situations I go through. So for 113 00:05:20,520 --> 00:05:22,680 Speaker 1: someone who just comes to this realization, they hear you 114 00:05:22,720 --> 00:05:24,600 Speaker 1: just saying it. What are some of the first steps 115 00:05:24,600 --> 00:05:28,200 Speaker 1: that people can do to start that process of creating 116 00:05:28,240 --> 00:05:29,400 Speaker 1: a better life for themselves. 117 00:05:29,520 --> 00:05:32,520 Speaker 2: Yeah, well, I mean when it comes to relationships, Let's 118 00:05:32,520 --> 00:05:35,640 Speaker 2: say you're single and you're dating, you can ask yourself, Okay, 119 00:05:35,760 --> 00:05:37,799 Speaker 2: what are the type of people that I've been dating? 120 00:05:37,920 --> 00:05:41,760 Speaker 2: Is there is there a pattern? Is there a pattern 121 00:05:42,160 --> 00:05:46,080 Speaker 2: in the relationships that didn't work? Were they just randomly 122 00:05:46,200 --> 00:05:49,000 Speaker 2: just didn't work or was there a pattern? What are 123 00:05:49,040 --> 00:05:51,559 Speaker 2: my beliefs about love When I think about the world 124 00:05:51,640 --> 00:05:55,880 Speaker 2: love and relationships or marriage or partnership. What are some 125 00:05:55,920 --> 00:05:58,719 Speaker 2: of the first things that come to mind? If I 126 00:05:58,800 --> 00:06:02,560 Speaker 2: date men and I'm craving to be intimate with a 127 00:06:02,600 --> 00:06:06,320 Speaker 2: man emotionally like being a relationship with a man, is 128 00:06:06,360 --> 00:06:08,120 Speaker 2: there a part of me that also hates men? And 129 00:06:08,160 --> 00:06:11,000 Speaker 2: what is that all about? And I have to actually 130 00:06:11,120 --> 00:06:15,520 Speaker 2: investigate that. If I date women and I say I 131 00:06:15,560 --> 00:06:17,239 Speaker 2: love women, is there a part of me that doesn't 132 00:06:17,240 --> 00:06:21,039 Speaker 2: trust them? So these are the things that we need 133 00:06:21,080 --> 00:06:25,040 Speaker 2: to ask ourselves. And everyone is walking around, every single 134 00:06:25,040 --> 00:06:28,360 Speaker 2: person is walking around with some internal conflict. Yeah, and 135 00:06:28,440 --> 00:06:34,080 Speaker 2: so bringing that which is unconscious into our awareness saying okay, oh, 136 00:06:34,480 --> 00:06:36,720 Speaker 2: this is what I have a conflict about or this 137 00:06:36,760 --> 00:06:38,680 Speaker 2: is a belief that mom had that I have, or 138 00:06:39,120 --> 00:06:41,599 Speaker 2: you know, I saw my mom being treated a certain way, 139 00:06:41,600 --> 00:06:44,800 Speaker 2: and so this is what I've seen myself doing. And 140 00:06:44,920 --> 00:06:48,400 Speaker 2: just being able to do that necessary self examination. 141 00:06:48,200 --> 00:06:51,360 Speaker 1: It's almost just becoming conscious of your natural patents, because 142 00:06:51,360 --> 00:06:53,240 Speaker 1: when you've been doing something for such a long time, 143 00:06:53,320 --> 00:06:56,839 Speaker 1: that pattern can feel like normality, yes, and then suddenly 144 00:06:56,839 --> 00:06:58,640 Speaker 1: when you tune in, you're like, wait, why do I 145 00:06:58,720 --> 00:07:01,640 Speaker 1: believe in this and why do I think? Like for me, 146 00:07:02,160 --> 00:07:04,479 Speaker 1: one of the things that I noticed when I started 147 00:07:04,560 --> 00:07:08,240 Speaker 1: dating or even when I started dating Jay, was my 148 00:07:08,520 --> 00:07:10,640 Speaker 1: vision of what a man should look like in the 149 00:07:10,680 --> 00:07:12,720 Speaker 1: house was purely based on my dad. My dad does 150 00:07:12,720 --> 00:07:15,400 Speaker 1: all the handyman work, so of course a man in 151 00:07:15,400 --> 00:07:16,000 Speaker 1: the house. 152 00:07:15,800 --> 00:07:18,160 Speaker 3: Like Jay should be able to do the hands. 153 00:07:18,240 --> 00:07:21,080 Speaker 1: He's a screwdriver, and if something breaks, he should be 154 00:07:21,120 --> 00:07:23,480 Speaker 1: able to fix it. And oh, my dad handles all 155 00:07:23,480 --> 00:07:25,760 Speaker 1: the finances at home. So that's what I would expect 156 00:07:25,800 --> 00:07:27,560 Speaker 1: Jay to do. And I realized that even though I 157 00:07:27,560 --> 00:07:30,840 Speaker 1: appreciated that in my dad, that wasn't necessarily you know, 158 00:07:30,920 --> 00:07:34,080 Speaker 1: That's all I knew of a husband was what I'd seen, 159 00:07:34,160 --> 00:07:36,400 Speaker 1: and so Jay didn't know how to use a screwdriver 160 00:07:36,480 --> 00:07:38,119 Speaker 1: when I met him, and like, he isn't the person 161 00:07:38,160 --> 00:07:40,480 Speaker 1: that like saying handyman work, but I was because I'd 162 00:07:40,520 --> 00:07:43,560 Speaker 1: learnt it from my dad. And so it's just interesting 163 00:07:43,600 --> 00:07:47,400 Speaker 1: the patterns and the things that you incubate within you 164 00:07:48,040 --> 00:07:50,120 Speaker 1: and you kind of put onto someone else before you 165 00:07:50,160 --> 00:07:52,760 Speaker 1: even meet them, Like you create this whole view of 166 00:07:52,800 --> 00:07:56,000 Speaker 1: what the person is based on your own experiences, and 167 00:07:56,040 --> 00:07:58,400 Speaker 1: then it's kind of setting them up a failure because 168 00:07:58,400 --> 00:08:00,240 Speaker 1: you're like, well, these are the boxes you have to 169 00:08:00,240 --> 00:08:03,680 Speaker 1: fit into before I even know whether you have those 170 00:08:03,720 --> 00:08:06,400 Speaker 1: skills or those abilities to do that. And I loved 171 00:08:06,400 --> 00:08:10,040 Speaker 1: what you said about how do you feel when those 172 00:08:10,160 --> 00:08:12,960 Speaker 1: when you hear those words, because I noticed I've started 173 00:08:13,000 --> 00:08:15,760 Speaker 1: noticing that in myself, Like when you said, how do 174 00:08:15,760 --> 00:08:17,600 Speaker 1: you feel when you think of the word marriage? Like 175 00:08:17,640 --> 00:08:19,960 Speaker 1: what are the initial not even just the thoughts, but 176 00:08:20,040 --> 00:08:22,040 Speaker 1: what feeling comes into your body? 177 00:08:22,560 --> 00:08:23,360 Speaker 3: Do you cringe? 178 00:08:23,520 --> 00:08:27,640 Speaker 1: Do you get scared? Do you feel excited? Like seeing 179 00:08:27,680 --> 00:08:30,240 Speaker 1: what the narrative is in your mind and your reactions 180 00:08:30,280 --> 00:08:31,960 Speaker 1: can be such a great depiction of whether it's an 181 00:08:31,960 --> 00:08:33,080 Speaker 1: area you need to work on. 182 00:08:33,400 --> 00:08:35,920 Speaker 2: Yes, one hundred percent And I love what you said 183 00:08:35,960 --> 00:08:40,320 Speaker 2: about needing your future husband to kind of look, you know, 184 00:08:40,360 --> 00:08:42,840 Speaker 2: look a certain way. And this is this is this 185 00:08:42,920 --> 00:08:46,160 Speaker 2: is what we do, and this is we're skipping ahead. 186 00:08:46,200 --> 00:08:48,280 Speaker 2: But there is a chapter on LUs does not Love. 187 00:08:48,679 --> 00:08:53,160 Speaker 2: And what we tend to do is we have this ideal, right, 188 00:08:53,240 --> 00:08:57,640 Speaker 2: and we project the health the unhealthiest relationships, or the 189 00:08:57,679 --> 00:09:01,640 Speaker 2: relationships that start off really hot and heavy and then 190 00:09:01,640 --> 00:09:04,000 Speaker 2: crash and burn, like you know, three months in or 191 00:09:04,040 --> 00:09:07,520 Speaker 2: maybe six months in, people go and this is unconscious. 192 00:09:07,520 --> 00:09:13,440 Speaker 2: They project their ideal onto the other person. It's the idealization, right, 193 00:09:13,880 --> 00:09:16,160 Speaker 2: and then as soon as we start to get wind 194 00:09:16,200 --> 00:09:18,040 Speaker 2: of the fact that the person is just a person 195 00:09:18,559 --> 00:09:22,400 Speaker 2: with depth and nuance and flaws and shortcomings, that's when 196 00:09:22,400 --> 00:09:26,120 Speaker 2: we're like, oh, we're like we all our expectations are 197 00:09:26,160 --> 00:09:29,480 Speaker 2: sort of they cannot win. And then that's when we're like, oh, 198 00:09:29,520 --> 00:09:32,040 Speaker 2: this must not be love, or something must be wrong 199 00:09:32,440 --> 00:09:35,640 Speaker 2: or I'm just not into them. And so having that 200 00:09:35,800 --> 00:09:38,360 Speaker 2: awareness of just like, okay, so this is what I 201 00:09:38,400 --> 00:09:40,880 Speaker 2: was raised with, This is my projection of the ideal, 202 00:09:41,720 --> 00:09:45,079 Speaker 2: but maybe this is actually not You know, how many 203 00:09:45,120 --> 00:09:48,120 Speaker 2: people you think are missing out on a great relationship 204 00:09:48,240 --> 00:09:52,680 Speaker 2: because they have too many rules about how it's supposed 205 00:09:52,720 --> 00:09:56,640 Speaker 2: to look and feel and be versus is this is 206 00:09:56,679 --> 00:09:58,720 Speaker 2: this actually someone who's good for me? 207 00:10:00,559 --> 00:10:02,679 Speaker 1: And what have you seen off to having spoken to 208 00:10:02,679 --> 00:10:05,200 Speaker 1: so many people and being in this world for a while, 209 00:10:05,240 --> 00:10:07,600 Speaker 1: what would you say look like the biggest hurdles that 210 00:10:07,640 --> 00:10:10,480 Speaker 1: people are having at the moment to actually getting into 211 00:10:10,520 --> 00:10:12,280 Speaker 1: healthy relationships. 212 00:10:11,760 --> 00:10:15,839 Speaker 2: Definitely their own stuff over having to overcome their own selfishness. 213 00:10:16,440 --> 00:10:19,320 Speaker 2: You know, we have to sort of quote unquote normalize. 214 00:10:19,480 --> 00:10:22,200 Speaker 2: We can all be selfish, right, especially when it comes 215 00:10:22,240 --> 00:10:25,280 Speaker 2: to love. Because the thing is, there is nothing more 216 00:10:25,400 --> 00:10:28,719 Speaker 2: than a romantic relationship that's going to trigger in us 217 00:10:28,760 --> 00:10:33,200 Speaker 2: the fear of losing love. Yeah, so we don't want that, 218 00:10:33,440 --> 00:10:36,400 Speaker 2: you know, a state. We want to secure relationship where 219 00:10:36,400 --> 00:10:38,120 Speaker 2: we don't where you can go to sleep at night 220 00:10:38,200 --> 00:10:42,080 Speaker 2: and everything. We're not worried about the relationship ending. But 221 00:10:42,280 --> 00:10:44,920 Speaker 2: uncertainty is built into anything. We just don't know what's 222 00:10:44,920 --> 00:10:46,600 Speaker 2: going to last, what's not going to last, what's going 223 00:10:46,640 --> 00:10:51,200 Speaker 2: to happen in life? Right, So when we are triggered, 224 00:10:51,240 --> 00:10:55,120 Speaker 2: and some people are so triggerable because they haven't dealt 225 00:10:55,160 --> 00:10:59,720 Speaker 2: with the things that are triggering them, that we become 226 00:10:59,760 --> 00:11:02,040 Speaker 2: when or pushed to the edge of our insecurity, we 227 00:11:02,160 --> 00:11:05,360 Speaker 2: become obsessed with what we're not getting right, and we 228 00:11:05,480 --> 00:11:09,680 Speaker 2: don't consider what we're not giving, and then people forget. 229 00:11:09,720 --> 00:11:10,400 Speaker 3: It's unbelief. 230 00:11:10,480 --> 00:11:12,920 Speaker 2: I know, people have been together for years and in 231 00:11:12,960 --> 00:11:15,400 Speaker 2: many ways they're strangers to each other because they don't 232 00:11:15,559 --> 00:11:17,680 Speaker 2: actually know what the other person needs. 233 00:11:18,080 --> 00:11:18,480 Speaker 3: Wow. 234 00:11:19,080 --> 00:11:21,480 Speaker 2: And so that's really what I see most in terms 235 00:11:21,559 --> 00:11:24,560 Speaker 2: of what people kind of get wrong about love. That 236 00:11:24,800 --> 00:11:27,440 Speaker 2: love is not is something that we receive, it's also 237 00:11:27,480 --> 00:11:28,240 Speaker 2: something that we give. 238 00:11:28,440 --> 00:11:30,640 Speaker 1: Yeah, it's interesting because I think that that stems a 239 00:11:30,679 --> 00:11:33,400 Speaker 1: little bit from the idea of like a scarcity mindset 240 00:11:33,400 --> 00:11:35,320 Speaker 1: where you're constantly thinking about. 241 00:11:35,080 --> 00:11:36,480 Speaker 3: What can I get, what can I get? What can 242 00:11:36,520 --> 00:11:36,960 Speaker 3: I get? 243 00:11:37,240 --> 00:11:39,160 Speaker 1: And how can I keep this and how can I 244 00:11:39,160 --> 00:11:43,920 Speaker 1: take this? And many of us operate from a scarcety mindset. 245 00:11:43,960 --> 00:11:46,480 Speaker 1: And then that scarcety mindset isn't just in money, it's 246 00:11:46,559 --> 00:11:49,640 Speaker 1: in the relationship. So it's more how can I receive 247 00:11:49,880 --> 00:11:52,480 Speaker 1: versus what am I actually putting on the table? Like 248 00:11:52,559 --> 00:11:56,280 Speaker 1: what am I bringing to this? Yes, And that then 249 00:11:56,600 --> 00:12:00,240 Speaker 1: inten turns into oh I'm not receiving this or I'm 250 00:12:00,240 --> 00:12:02,360 Speaker 1: the one that's the victim. In this, and I'm the 251 00:12:02,360 --> 00:12:04,360 Speaker 1: one that's hurt in this because it's so much easier 252 00:12:04,360 --> 00:12:06,360 Speaker 1: being the victim. It is like, it's so much easier 253 00:12:06,400 --> 00:12:08,800 Speaker 1: being the victim than it is owning up to Oh 254 00:12:08,840 --> 00:12:10,880 Speaker 1: my god, I have so much work to do, and 255 00:12:10,960 --> 00:12:13,280 Speaker 1: I actually have a role to play in the demise 256 00:12:13,280 --> 00:12:16,440 Speaker 1: of this relationship or in the issues that we're having, or. 257 00:12:16,480 --> 00:12:19,360 Speaker 2: I have a role to play in the success of 258 00:12:19,400 --> 00:12:20,160 Speaker 2: the relationship. 259 00:12:20,200 --> 00:12:21,920 Speaker 3: Yes, yes, exactly. 260 00:12:22,040 --> 00:12:23,839 Speaker 1: Yeah, you wrote this in the book and I thought 261 00:12:23,840 --> 00:12:27,000 Speaker 1: it was really beautifully put. Your life will change too 262 00:12:27,120 --> 00:12:30,040 Speaker 1: when you realize that your relationship struggles are not because 263 00:12:30,080 --> 00:12:33,200 Speaker 1: they all cheat, but because you keep ignoring red flags 264 00:12:33,240 --> 00:12:36,199 Speaker 1: and choosing the cheaters. The problem isn't all the good 265 00:12:36,280 --> 00:12:39,760 Speaker 1: ones are taken, it's that you keep choosing the unavailable ones. 266 00:12:40,000 --> 00:12:42,320 Speaker 1: It's not that they didn't choose you. It's that you 267 00:12:42,400 --> 00:12:45,560 Speaker 1: haven't chosen yourself. And it's not that they're avoidant. It's 268 00:12:45,559 --> 00:12:48,360 Speaker 1: just that your anxiety may play a role too. The 269 00:12:48,400 --> 00:12:50,559 Speaker 1: story you share about yourself at the beginning of your 270 00:12:50,600 --> 00:12:54,920 Speaker 1: book is pretty heartbreaking, and I would love you if 271 00:12:54,920 --> 00:12:55,840 Speaker 1: you want to mind sharing it. 272 00:12:55,920 --> 00:12:58,240 Speaker 2: Yeah, no, not at all. Many years ago, I guess 273 00:12:58,280 --> 00:13:01,880 Speaker 2: then now we're going back by thirteen fourteen years ago 274 00:13:01,920 --> 00:13:05,480 Speaker 2: I met the man who had become my husband. He 275 00:13:05,559 --> 00:13:07,600 Speaker 2: was in my class. I mean, what else are you 276 00:13:07,640 --> 00:13:10,760 Speaker 2: going to do? And I always say that our relationship 277 00:13:10,800 --> 00:13:13,280 Speaker 2: because we were before we got married, were together almost 278 00:13:13,280 --> 00:13:16,480 Speaker 2: two years, and I always say that our relationship pre 279 00:13:17,600 --> 00:13:21,839 Speaker 2: marriage was about ninety percent really good or great even, 280 00:13:22,280 --> 00:13:25,480 Speaker 2: and ten percent really problematic. And you might say, well, what, 281 00:13:26,120 --> 00:13:28,880 Speaker 2: that's a pretty good stat But the ten percent was 282 00:13:29,040 --> 00:13:34,480 Speaker 2: so profound, so so so so profound that when we 283 00:13:34,559 --> 00:13:37,679 Speaker 2: got married, the ten percent became the ninety percent, and 284 00:13:37,720 --> 00:13:40,080 Speaker 2: the ninety percent became the ten percent. And so what 285 00:13:40,120 --> 00:13:43,440 Speaker 2: I did is I ignored significant red flags. And I did 286 00:13:43,480 --> 00:13:46,720 Speaker 2: that because I just wanted to be married. I loved him. 287 00:13:46,760 --> 00:13:48,720 Speaker 2: The thought of losing him was too much. I just 288 00:13:48,880 --> 00:13:51,640 Speaker 2: didn't have that real sense of self. And then when 289 00:13:51,679 --> 00:13:53,120 Speaker 2: we got into the marriage, I didn't know how to 290 00:13:53,120 --> 00:13:55,240 Speaker 2: speak the truth. I didn't know how to love at 291 00:13:55,240 --> 00:13:57,240 Speaker 2: a level that I know how to love now, and 292 00:13:57,280 --> 00:13:59,040 Speaker 2: I didn't know how to stand up for myself at 293 00:13:59,040 --> 00:14:02,240 Speaker 2: a level that I do now. You know, he we 294 00:14:02,240 --> 00:14:04,160 Speaker 2: were having troubles, but then we were in a good 295 00:14:04,160 --> 00:14:08,400 Speaker 2: place and I was pregnant but did not know it 296 00:14:08,880 --> 00:14:11,880 Speaker 2: or yeah, or it was very It was very very 297 00:14:11,920 --> 00:14:15,600 Speaker 2: early on, and my mom had been diagnosed with lung 298 00:14:15,640 --> 00:14:19,880 Speaker 2: cancer was dying. And on June second, twenty fourteen, I 299 00:14:20,040 --> 00:14:23,400 Speaker 2: woke up to what was an early miscarriage, and he 300 00:14:23,440 --> 00:14:25,840 Speaker 2: texted me later that day from work that he wasn't 301 00:14:26,240 --> 00:14:27,760 Speaker 2: coming home, that he was going to go stay at 302 00:14:27,760 --> 00:14:30,280 Speaker 2: his parents. So he literally it was like he fled. 303 00:14:30,560 --> 00:14:33,880 Speaker 2: It was like totally fleeing, the most awful thing you 304 00:14:33,960 --> 00:14:35,280 Speaker 2: can do to someone. 305 00:14:35,320 --> 00:14:37,640 Speaker 3: And so that was you've been together. 306 00:14:37,680 --> 00:14:40,400 Speaker 2: At this point we the Merit was exactly two years. 307 00:14:40,680 --> 00:14:43,320 Speaker 2: Exactly two years it was the next day was our 308 00:14:43,320 --> 00:14:47,480 Speaker 2: wedding anniversary. I entered a very significant dark night of 309 00:14:47,520 --> 00:14:50,160 Speaker 2: the soul because my mom was dying, my husband left, 310 00:14:50,200 --> 00:14:52,920 Speaker 2: and I had all these beliefs around, well, no one's 311 00:14:52,960 --> 00:14:54,960 Speaker 2: going to want me now I'm too old or you know, 312 00:14:55,040 --> 00:14:59,000 Speaker 2: all these things, and I'll have kids. My life didn't 313 00:14:59,040 --> 00:15:02,280 Speaker 2: match what I thought life would be. In fact, it 314 00:15:02,360 --> 00:15:05,640 Speaker 2: was so different, and I felt totally out of control 315 00:15:05,840 --> 00:15:11,000 Speaker 2: and I suffered immensely until I became obsessed with what 316 00:15:11,120 --> 00:15:12,400 Speaker 2: makes a relationship work. 317 00:15:13,360 --> 00:15:13,840 Speaker 3: Obsessed. 318 00:15:13,880 --> 00:15:15,840 Speaker 2: I could not believe that I was in this position 319 00:15:15,960 --> 00:15:18,480 Speaker 2: so I took all that pain and I channeled it 320 00:15:18,560 --> 00:15:22,280 Speaker 2: into learning, and I felt a calling to teach. This 321 00:15:23,000 --> 00:15:26,640 Speaker 2: definitely not glamorous, really hard. I needed a lot of help, 322 00:15:27,200 --> 00:15:32,000 Speaker 2: but I thankfully learned how to take something really painful 323 00:15:32,040 --> 00:15:34,840 Speaker 2: and turn it into something very purposeful and. 324 00:15:34,800 --> 00:15:35,520 Speaker 3: I of interest. 325 00:15:35,640 --> 00:15:38,440 Speaker 1: And obviously you don't have to answer this, but you know, 326 00:15:38,440 --> 00:15:41,120 Speaker 1: for many people who have been through really hurtful things 327 00:15:41,160 --> 00:15:44,680 Speaker 1: with their past relationships or something like this happening to 328 00:15:44,680 --> 00:15:46,960 Speaker 1: you that feels so traumatic and leave such an imprint 329 00:15:47,040 --> 00:15:49,080 Speaker 1: in you, do you feel like the work that you've 330 00:15:49,080 --> 00:15:52,320 Speaker 1: done has enabled you to actually feel like one you 331 00:15:52,360 --> 00:15:55,800 Speaker 1: forgive the situation, and two that you don't actually feel 332 00:15:55,800 --> 00:15:57,000 Speaker 1: the pain that came from. 333 00:15:57,080 --> 00:16:00,800 Speaker 2: Great question, I don't feel the pain. So here's the 334 00:16:00,840 --> 00:16:04,280 Speaker 2: interesting thing about human beings. I could take some time 335 00:16:04,320 --> 00:16:06,240 Speaker 2: and really focus on it and not focus on it 336 00:16:06,320 --> 00:16:08,560 Speaker 2: like this talking about I mean, like in the quietude 337 00:16:08,600 --> 00:16:11,360 Speaker 2: of my own home and lay in bed and really 338 00:16:11,360 --> 00:16:13,840 Speaker 2: focus on it, and a lot of emotions would probably 339 00:16:14,040 --> 00:16:17,120 Speaker 2: probably come up, because that's what happens when you focus 340 00:16:17,160 --> 00:16:20,560 Speaker 2: on it. One, I don't feel any compulsion to focus 341 00:16:20,600 --> 00:16:23,360 Speaker 2: on it, and two yeah, no, I was able to 342 00:16:23,400 --> 00:16:25,080 Speaker 2: write about it, and I can talk about it with 343 00:16:25,240 --> 00:16:28,720 Speaker 2: no emotional charge. There's zero emotional charge A process that 344 00:16:28,760 --> 00:16:31,880 Speaker 2: one hundred percent. But the good news is or and 345 00:16:32,120 --> 00:16:34,000 Speaker 2: the good news is when I talk about it, I 346 00:16:34,080 --> 00:16:38,720 Speaker 2: can say objectively, that was a terrible thing that happened. 347 00:16:38,760 --> 00:16:42,960 Speaker 2: He did a terrible thing, But I don't feel angry. 348 00:16:43,200 --> 00:16:46,840 Speaker 2: There's no emotion behind that. It's truly very objective. 349 00:16:46,960 --> 00:16:49,360 Speaker 1: Well, it's so nice that it's possible for people because 350 00:16:49,400 --> 00:16:51,480 Speaker 1: it is in the pain. I imagine at that time you 351 00:16:51,560 --> 00:16:54,640 Speaker 1: probably had no idea how you would have gotten through it. 352 00:16:54,840 --> 00:16:57,040 Speaker 2: Oh, I really did not know how I was going 353 00:16:57,120 --> 00:17:00,160 Speaker 2: to survive. It was a very, very dark, ugly time 354 00:17:00,200 --> 00:17:03,560 Speaker 2: in my life. But yes, you just have to process it. 355 00:17:03,640 --> 00:17:08,240 Speaker 2: And part of processing it is examining the story. And 356 00:17:08,280 --> 00:17:10,000 Speaker 2: in the beginning I had to tell I told the 357 00:17:10,000 --> 00:17:11,880 Speaker 2: story of like, oh, you know, this was my story. 358 00:17:12,359 --> 00:17:15,000 Speaker 2: But then you know, you have to make things mean 359 00:17:15,080 --> 00:17:18,040 Speaker 2: something else, right, And that's part of how you get 360 00:17:18,080 --> 00:17:21,159 Speaker 2: out of a catastrophe like that. 361 00:17:21,160 --> 00:17:22,440 Speaker 1: That's a great way of putting it. You have to 362 00:17:22,480 --> 00:17:24,480 Speaker 1: find a way to make it mean something else, because 363 00:17:24,480 --> 00:17:26,679 Speaker 1: I think for many people when they're going through the 364 00:17:26,720 --> 00:17:29,840 Speaker 1: thick of pain, especially in a relationship. It's like it's 365 00:17:29,840 --> 00:17:32,760 Speaker 1: so much easier said than done. Like my heart's broken. 366 00:17:32,920 --> 00:17:35,879 Speaker 1: I feel like I am broken. A whole part of 367 00:17:35,880 --> 00:17:39,359 Speaker 1: me has left, And you know, it's it's so hard 368 00:17:39,440 --> 00:17:42,720 Speaker 1: to create meaning from something that has ripped you apart. 369 00:17:43,359 --> 00:17:45,920 Speaker 1: And so it's it's interesting when you have to make 370 00:17:46,000 --> 00:17:49,280 Speaker 1: meaning separate meaning from it, because if you don't, then. 371 00:17:49,160 --> 00:17:50,560 Speaker 3: It is just the pain it is. 372 00:17:50,600 --> 00:17:53,639 Speaker 1: There has to be something else because otherwise there's no 373 00:17:53,720 --> 00:17:56,040 Speaker 1: other explanation for it. Then it is just pain that 374 00:17:56,080 --> 00:17:58,360 Speaker 1: you are supposed to feel, and it's supposed to feel horrible. 375 00:17:58,560 --> 00:18:01,480 Speaker 2: Yeah, And in the beginning, when you're going through that 376 00:18:01,560 --> 00:18:04,040 Speaker 2: acute stage of it, the shock and all of that, 377 00:18:04,119 --> 00:18:07,159 Speaker 2: it is just all emotions. But as you start to 378 00:18:07,200 --> 00:18:09,560 Speaker 2: sort of like come out of that a little bit 379 00:18:09,720 --> 00:18:12,040 Speaker 2: able to i don't know, like live more of like 380 00:18:12,080 --> 00:18:15,639 Speaker 2: your life again, then it's time to re examine the 381 00:18:15,680 --> 00:18:17,480 Speaker 2: story and make some and make it mean something else. 382 00:18:17,520 --> 00:18:20,600 Speaker 2: That's why I feel so passionate about helping some people 383 00:18:20,680 --> 00:18:24,920 Speaker 2: like post divorce or post breakup, like okay, think about 384 00:18:25,040 --> 00:18:30,000 Speaker 2: like for a relationship. For most relationships that end, the 385 00:18:30,040 --> 00:18:33,560 Speaker 2: time leading up to it was really hard. It's a 386 00:18:33,600 --> 00:18:38,800 Speaker 2: lot of endless discussions about the relationship and anxiety, and 387 00:18:38,840 --> 00:18:43,280 Speaker 2: it takes up so much energetic and mental space that 388 00:18:43,760 --> 00:18:46,760 Speaker 2: so I try to help people. Okay, now you don't 389 00:18:46,760 --> 00:18:49,199 Speaker 2: have to spend your energy on that. Let's see, like, 390 00:18:50,119 --> 00:18:52,560 Speaker 2: do you need to find a greater sense of self? Now, 391 00:18:52,720 --> 00:18:56,680 Speaker 2: let's help you find meaning and purpose in life. That 392 00:18:56,920 --> 00:18:58,560 Speaker 2: so it's a little bit of a rebirth for you. 393 00:18:59,119 --> 00:19:01,000 Speaker 1: Do you think man is people who have had a breakup. 394 00:19:01,040 --> 00:19:02,840 Speaker 1: Do you think there is like an equation of how 395 00:19:02,920 --> 00:19:06,159 Speaker 1: long you can spend wallowing when it's for you to 396 00:19:06,320 --> 00:19:07,719 Speaker 1: just get up and get going. 397 00:19:07,960 --> 00:19:12,639 Speaker 2: It's so hard to say because it's not linear. Yeah, 398 00:19:13,000 --> 00:19:15,360 Speaker 2: certainly the first couple of months you can wallow. 399 00:19:15,760 --> 00:19:17,879 Speaker 1: Said, it's like half the time of you give your 400 00:19:17,880 --> 00:19:19,439 Speaker 1: saying half the time in the relationship. 401 00:19:19,440 --> 00:19:20,919 Speaker 3: But I'm like, what if you're in a relationship for 402 00:19:20,920 --> 00:19:21,640 Speaker 3: twenty five years? 403 00:19:22,320 --> 00:19:26,040 Speaker 2: So that makes absolutely no sense. It makes absolutely no sense. Eventually, 404 00:19:26,080 --> 00:19:28,000 Speaker 2: you just want to get to the stage where you 405 00:19:28,000 --> 00:19:30,320 Speaker 2: know there's there's steps to healing. Like in the beginning, 406 00:19:30,320 --> 00:19:32,879 Speaker 2: you're just like sometimes you're devastated, right, and so you 407 00:19:32,920 --> 00:19:35,240 Speaker 2: can't even get out of bed, and then other times 408 00:19:35,240 --> 00:19:38,240 Speaker 2: it's just like Okay, I can focus on work today, 409 00:19:38,480 --> 00:19:40,920 Speaker 2: but maybe I like cry myself to sleep a little bit. 410 00:19:40,920 --> 00:19:43,800 Speaker 2: But I was able to do stuff today. But I'll 411 00:19:43,800 --> 00:19:46,520 Speaker 2: just never forget. As I was building this new life 412 00:19:46,520 --> 00:19:49,720 Speaker 2: for myself, I definitely felt hurt because I was also 413 00:19:49,800 --> 00:19:51,639 Speaker 2: mourning the loss of my mom. There was just so 414 00:19:51,760 --> 00:19:54,560 Speaker 2: much and I'll never forget someone saying to me, you know, 415 00:19:54,600 --> 00:19:58,679 Speaker 2: don't deny yourself the privilege of moving on. Those words 416 00:19:58,680 --> 00:20:01,440 Speaker 2: really stuck with me. It's like, why would I do 417 00:20:01,520 --> 00:20:04,760 Speaker 2: that to myself? Why would I deny myself that opportunity 418 00:20:04,760 --> 00:20:07,080 Speaker 2: and privilege to actually move on with my life? And 419 00:20:07,119 --> 00:20:09,720 Speaker 2: so letting go is a process. I'm definitely one of 420 00:20:09,720 --> 00:20:11,720 Speaker 2: those people where it takes a little bit longer to 421 00:20:11,800 --> 00:20:15,080 Speaker 2: let go. But I don't think that's good. I mean, 422 00:20:15,119 --> 00:20:18,320 Speaker 2: I accept myself regardless, but I don't think it's great. 423 00:20:18,400 --> 00:20:22,399 Speaker 2: I think that we have to really I want people 424 00:20:22,440 --> 00:20:27,160 Speaker 2: to teach their children to say next Yeah. 425 00:20:27,240 --> 00:20:29,000 Speaker 1: And the longer you end up sitting in it, the 426 00:20:29,080 --> 00:20:31,680 Speaker 1: longer you're still in it, like you're reliving it over 427 00:20:31,720 --> 00:20:35,639 Speaker 1: and over again. So the pain still feels raw because 428 00:20:35,640 --> 00:20:38,560 Speaker 1: you're still living in that pain day in day out. 429 00:20:38,720 --> 00:20:40,720 Speaker 1: But if you're not pulling yourself out of it. Then, 430 00:20:40,800 --> 00:20:43,400 Speaker 1: of course, even a year later, it can still feel raw, 431 00:20:43,560 --> 00:20:47,200 Speaker 1: just as the day, Yeah, because you're constantly replaying those 432 00:20:47,200 --> 00:20:48,560 Speaker 1: feelings over and over again. 433 00:20:48,680 --> 00:20:50,720 Speaker 2: Yes, And I've spoken to a lot of people or 434 00:20:50,720 --> 00:20:53,080 Speaker 2: people have written into me saying, you know, it's been 435 00:20:53,160 --> 00:20:55,200 Speaker 2: sixty years, like a long time, and I still can't 436 00:20:55,200 --> 00:20:58,000 Speaker 2: stop thinking about my accent every time. Really, every time 437 00:20:58,000 --> 00:21:01,800 Speaker 2: that I've investigated this with someone, they're not mourning their 438 00:21:01,840 --> 00:21:04,800 Speaker 2: ex anymore. They're caught in a story of I'm not 439 00:21:04,880 --> 00:21:06,680 Speaker 2: good enough or I'm not going to meet anyone else, 440 00:21:06,800 --> 00:21:10,919 Speaker 2: or they're not taking life by the reins and living 441 00:21:11,040 --> 00:21:13,560 Speaker 2: life right, and so they think it's about them, but 442 00:21:13,640 --> 00:21:16,240 Speaker 2: really at this point they're just a metaphor for something else. 443 00:21:16,480 --> 00:21:16,680 Speaker 3: Yeah. 444 00:21:16,720 --> 00:21:20,000 Speaker 1: I also think sometimes it's creating this narrative so then 445 00:21:20,160 --> 00:21:21,280 Speaker 1: you don't have to. 446 00:21:21,160 --> 00:21:23,360 Speaker 3: Do the work, because it's kind of like that. 447 00:21:23,359 --> 00:21:25,840 Speaker 1: You know, again going back to that where of course 448 00:21:25,880 --> 00:21:29,719 Speaker 1: I still love my ex because putting into another relationship 449 00:21:29,800 --> 00:21:31,919 Speaker 1: is going to be so much work and so much effort. 450 00:21:32,000 --> 00:21:32,720 Speaker 2: That's a very good point. 451 00:21:32,800 --> 00:21:35,439 Speaker 1: So sometimes the pain ends up being an easier option 452 00:21:35,520 --> 00:21:36,840 Speaker 1: than the work that has to be done. 453 00:21:37,119 --> 00:21:39,199 Speaker 2: Yes, because in the pain. At least you're getting some 454 00:21:39,400 --> 00:21:42,400 Speaker 2: you know, you maybe there's some excuses to not put 455 00:21:42,400 --> 00:21:46,920 Speaker 2: yourself out there again, to not take risks again, to yeah, 456 00:21:47,000 --> 00:21:48,320 Speaker 2: to wallow, and to. 457 00:21:48,320 --> 00:21:51,320 Speaker 1: Not forgive because they think sometimes when you let go 458 00:21:51,359 --> 00:21:54,040 Speaker 1: of the pain, you think that means that you're forgiving 459 00:21:54,040 --> 00:21:57,159 Speaker 1: that person and that what they've done is okay. And 460 00:21:57,200 --> 00:21:59,000 Speaker 1: so you're like, well, no, I have to hold onto 461 00:21:59,000 --> 00:22:02,360 Speaker 1: this because even if I'm not telling them, somehow they 462 00:22:02,400 --> 00:22:04,480 Speaker 1: need to know that what they did isn't right. And 463 00:22:04,520 --> 00:22:06,000 Speaker 1: so if I let go of the pain and I 464 00:22:06,040 --> 00:22:08,560 Speaker 1: seem happy, they're going to think that what they did 465 00:22:08,640 --> 00:22:11,080 Speaker 1: was absolutely okay. And so I think there's also this 466 00:22:11,160 --> 00:22:13,280 Speaker 1: guilt that you feel for letting go of the pain 467 00:22:13,400 --> 00:22:17,080 Speaker 1: because but what if that means I'm just giving in 468 00:22:17,119 --> 00:22:20,119 Speaker 1: and allowing them to do what they did to me? 469 00:22:20,280 --> 00:22:22,240 Speaker 2: Yes, totally. We could become a stubborn like. 470 00:22:22,240 --> 00:22:25,240 Speaker 1: This, which brings us onto truth too. The mind is 471 00:22:25,280 --> 00:22:28,080 Speaker 1: a battlefield. You said, stay in your head and your 472 00:22:28,119 --> 00:22:31,600 Speaker 1: relationship is dead. That statement was like, it's like one line, 473 00:22:31,640 --> 00:22:33,720 Speaker 1: but I feel like it has so much meaning to it. 474 00:22:33,800 --> 00:22:37,120 Speaker 1: And how does someone start to get out of their 475 00:22:37,160 --> 00:22:39,520 Speaker 1: head and the stories that they end up telling themselves 476 00:22:39,560 --> 00:22:41,720 Speaker 1: over and over again, Like how do you start shifting 477 00:22:41,720 --> 00:22:42,240 Speaker 1: the narrative? 478 00:22:42,400 --> 00:22:45,640 Speaker 2: Yeah, well it starts with self awareness, which is okay, 479 00:22:45,880 --> 00:22:47,960 Speaker 2: Like some people are very good at just creating a 480 00:22:48,000 --> 00:22:52,359 Speaker 2: negative meaning out of everything. We're storytelling machines, and so 481 00:22:52,560 --> 00:22:57,080 Speaker 2: we want to become better at looking at circumstances that 482 00:22:57,160 --> 00:23:00,239 Speaker 2: might be difficult, whatever that is, and giving it some 483 00:23:00,280 --> 00:23:03,119 Speaker 2: sort of meaning that makes it so that life doesn't 484 00:23:03,119 --> 00:23:08,800 Speaker 2: feel so brutal, honestly or just or meaningless. So it's 485 00:23:08,800 --> 00:23:12,159 Speaker 2: a practice of well, if you really love me, then this, 486 00:23:12,640 --> 00:23:14,960 Speaker 2: or if that person you know, oh that person gave 487 00:23:15,000 --> 00:23:18,080 Speaker 2: me a dirty look, then blah blah blah. So just 488 00:23:18,119 --> 00:23:19,919 Speaker 2: being able to say, oh my god, I'm in my 489 00:23:20,119 --> 00:23:22,560 Speaker 2: head right now, what is that all about? Like why? 490 00:23:22,720 --> 00:23:24,280 Speaker 2: You know? It probably has to do with a stress 491 00:23:24,280 --> 00:23:26,600 Speaker 2: about something else, or you haven't moved your body in 492 00:23:26,640 --> 00:23:29,080 Speaker 2: a long time, or you're dehydrated, or something else is 493 00:23:29,119 --> 00:23:32,639 Speaker 2: bothering you. That is true emotional intelligence. And my book 494 00:23:32,680 --> 00:23:35,760 Speaker 2: is just having that awareness. And so we do need 495 00:23:35,840 --> 00:23:39,400 Speaker 2: daily practices of people. I mean, I actually think one 496 00:23:39,400 --> 00:23:43,919 Speaker 2: of the biggest psychological and epidemics of today is anxiety 497 00:23:43,920 --> 00:23:48,840 Speaker 2: and people and overthinking and it's plaguing our society and 498 00:23:49,200 --> 00:23:52,560 Speaker 2: we need to get ahead of it by regulating our 499 00:23:52,560 --> 00:23:56,280 Speaker 2: nervous system, working out, spending time with friends and nature 500 00:23:56,400 --> 00:23:59,120 Speaker 2: and meditation I think is very important. And even if 501 00:23:59,119 --> 00:24:02,240 Speaker 2: that meditation is just quiet ten minutes a day, but 502 00:24:02,320 --> 00:24:06,920 Speaker 2: in a relationship, most of the time where people are 503 00:24:06,960 --> 00:24:09,879 Speaker 2: having an argument, let's say it's more than just an argument. 504 00:24:09,960 --> 00:24:11,840 Speaker 2: Let's say it's like a it's a pretty heated fight. 505 00:24:13,160 --> 00:24:16,040 Speaker 2: They're not really fighting with each other. They're fighting with 506 00:24:17,080 --> 00:24:20,600 Speaker 2: mom in that moment because that's something they did reminded 507 00:24:20,600 --> 00:24:24,240 Speaker 2: their unconscious of mom. Or they're fighting with you know, 508 00:24:24,720 --> 00:24:29,080 Speaker 2: their ex right, So we're projecting a lot. Really, what 509 00:24:29,359 --> 00:24:32,480 Speaker 2: tends to happens that people no longer fight with each other. 510 00:24:32,520 --> 00:24:35,959 Speaker 2: They fight with the story that they have about each other. Oh, 511 00:24:36,040 --> 00:24:37,879 Speaker 2: I knew that they did this, and we go we 512 00:24:37,960 --> 00:24:42,920 Speaker 2: can really go into such a deep, deep wormhole of despair. 513 00:24:44,280 --> 00:24:49,880 Speaker 2: And I think that just knowing that our minds can 514 00:24:49,960 --> 00:24:55,560 Speaker 2: be incredibly unruly, they really can become a battlefield, and 515 00:24:55,560 --> 00:25:00,920 Speaker 2: that one of the principles of cultivating and maintaining stable 516 00:25:00,960 --> 00:25:07,439 Speaker 2: and healthy relationships is bringing mindfulness to a relationship. And 517 00:25:07,480 --> 00:25:11,760 Speaker 2: part of that is mindfulness is what predicate's mindfulness is 518 00:25:12,240 --> 00:25:15,399 Speaker 2: the understanding that the mind can be a battlefield. 519 00:25:15,640 --> 00:25:16,480 Speaker 3: Yeah, I think you know. 520 00:25:16,520 --> 00:25:18,000 Speaker 1: I remember when I did my yoga te to training 521 00:25:18,000 --> 00:25:19,960 Speaker 1: that always say when you're in your mind, that means 522 00:25:19,960 --> 00:25:22,440 Speaker 1: you're just not present here. Yeah, And so actually, when 523 00:25:22,480 --> 00:25:26,080 Speaker 1: you are anxious, or when you are in your mind constantly, 524 00:25:26,480 --> 00:25:28,639 Speaker 1: there's such a lack of presence. So whether you're in 525 00:25:28,680 --> 00:25:31,000 Speaker 1: your mind while you're arguing with the person, you're not 526 00:25:31,000 --> 00:25:34,560 Speaker 1: even hearing what they're saying, you're just reacting, or whether 527 00:25:34,600 --> 00:25:36,480 Speaker 1: you're in your mind instead of being part of a 528 00:25:36,480 --> 00:25:39,040 Speaker 1: social situation, you feel like you come away lonely because 529 00:25:39,080 --> 00:25:42,960 Speaker 1: you weren't even present, which comes from anxiety. And anxiety 530 00:25:43,080 --> 00:25:45,320 Speaker 1: is when you are constantly there's repeated thoughts in your 531 00:25:45,359 --> 00:25:47,600 Speaker 1: mind over and over again, and so you lack presence. 532 00:25:48,280 --> 00:25:50,200 Speaker 1: And so I completely agree. I think the more present 533 00:25:50,240 --> 00:25:52,120 Speaker 1: we are, the more we're noticing things, the more we're 534 00:25:52,160 --> 00:25:55,200 Speaker 1: noticing I'm making my partner feel uncomfortable here, not I'm 535 00:25:55,240 --> 00:25:56,560 Speaker 1: in my mind right now and I'm thinking about all 536 00:25:56,560 --> 00:25:59,600 Speaker 1: the things I need or Oh, this conversation is actually 537 00:25:59,640 --> 00:26:01,439 Speaker 1: not going in the direction that it should be. I 538 00:26:01,440 --> 00:26:04,119 Speaker 1: need to stop defending myself and comfort the other person. 539 00:26:04,560 --> 00:26:06,160 Speaker 1: If really reminded me of so many times where I've 540 00:26:06,200 --> 00:26:09,439 Speaker 1: been like, what you said, you're bringing things from your 541 00:26:09,480 --> 00:26:11,480 Speaker 1: past into the arguments that you're having in the present. 542 00:26:11,840 --> 00:26:16,240 Speaker 1: I remember at the beginning, Jay's so incredible, but he 543 00:26:16,640 --> 00:26:19,760 Speaker 1: would always try and help me with things, which is 544 00:26:19,800 --> 00:26:21,760 Speaker 1: a very natural thing to do. But in my mind, 545 00:26:21,840 --> 00:26:23,479 Speaker 1: I tell this story a lot, I would be like, no, 546 00:26:23,520 --> 00:26:24,600 Speaker 1: I can do everything myself. 547 00:26:25,000 --> 00:26:26,720 Speaker 3: Yeah, it's all myself. 548 00:26:26,840 --> 00:26:27,600 Speaker 2: I don't need you. 549 00:26:27,600 --> 00:26:28,879 Speaker 3: You don't need to help me. I can do it 550 00:26:28,880 --> 00:26:30,160 Speaker 3: all myself. And he's like. 551 00:26:30,200 --> 00:26:31,240 Speaker 2: Make them feel terrible. 552 00:26:31,320 --> 00:26:32,520 Speaker 3: Probably He's like. 553 00:26:32,480 --> 00:26:33,800 Speaker 1: I know you can, but I want to do it 554 00:26:33,840 --> 00:26:36,679 Speaker 1: for you. So I would deprive him the ability to 555 00:26:36,720 --> 00:26:39,000 Speaker 1: help me, which is his way of loving me. Yes, 556 00:26:39,080 --> 00:26:41,520 Speaker 1: because I had something to prove, not to him, but 557 00:26:41,560 --> 00:26:43,120 Speaker 1: to other people that used to be in my life. 558 00:26:43,320 --> 00:26:44,800 Speaker 2: Do you know how many women are doing that to 559 00:26:44,840 --> 00:26:47,520 Speaker 2: their male partners right now all the Okay, so I'm 560 00:26:47,520 --> 00:26:50,800 Speaker 2: not alone, Yeah, no you're not. No, it's that happens. 561 00:26:50,840 --> 00:26:53,239 Speaker 2: That's a dynamic that happens a lot. It's because they 562 00:26:53,240 --> 00:26:56,239 Speaker 2: don't they're not recognizing that is love. They're making it 563 00:26:56,280 --> 00:26:58,560 Speaker 2: all about them. And you know, oh, I can take 564 00:26:58,560 --> 00:27:02,000 Speaker 2: care of myself and that whole story, and so we 565 00:27:02,040 --> 00:27:04,680 Speaker 2: have to wake up to those things and be like, oh, 566 00:27:04,760 --> 00:27:06,440 Speaker 2: this is this person trying to love. 567 00:27:06,280 --> 00:27:09,200 Speaker 1: Me, just love me, and maybe I can receive that exactly, 568 00:27:09,280 --> 00:27:11,639 Speaker 1: and not receiving it is actually cutting him off from 569 00:27:11,960 --> 00:27:14,480 Speaker 1: you know, the cycle of love of me receiving it 570 00:27:14,560 --> 00:27:16,880 Speaker 1: and accepting it. And it's just kind of like it's 571 00:27:16,920 --> 00:27:18,359 Speaker 1: literally like him giving me a gift and me just 572 00:27:18,400 --> 00:27:19,040 Speaker 1: throwing it away. 573 00:27:19,160 --> 00:27:21,360 Speaker 3: Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. 574 00:27:21,440 --> 00:27:24,680 Speaker 1: The truth three. Lust is not the same as love. 575 00:27:24,760 --> 00:27:28,199 Speaker 1: And this one I think so many people get confused with. 576 00:27:28,600 --> 00:27:31,359 Speaker 1: Could you just define the difference between love and lust? 577 00:27:31,400 --> 00:27:32,720 Speaker 1: And what are the signs of lust? 578 00:27:33,200 --> 00:27:35,400 Speaker 2: Lust is that thing that we feel in the beginning 579 00:27:35,400 --> 00:27:40,159 Speaker 2: when we feel an intense physical attraction to someone and 580 00:27:40,480 --> 00:27:47,000 Speaker 2: we feel alive inside and we feel pretty amazing, until 581 00:27:47,480 --> 00:27:50,520 Speaker 2: you know, it can easily become not amazing. It can 582 00:27:50,560 --> 00:27:54,520 Speaker 2: easily become obsessive. We can easily then become incredibly disregulated. 583 00:27:55,640 --> 00:27:57,720 Speaker 2: And so what kind of starts with all these sort 584 00:27:57,760 --> 00:28:00,520 Speaker 2: of like beautiful love hormones can actually you turn into 585 00:28:00,560 --> 00:28:04,959 Speaker 2: a lot of cortisol and dysregulation and stress. So lust 586 00:28:05,160 --> 00:28:07,240 Speaker 2: when they say that, you know, love makes us crazy. 587 00:28:07,280 --> 00:28:10,439 Speaker 2: I think it's more lust that makes us crazy. So 588 00:28:10,600 --> 00:28:14,440 Speaker 2: lust is that feeling of intense attraction, and we think 589 00:28:14,520 --> 00:28:18,920 Speaker 2: that it's love because we can't stop thinking about the person. 590 00:28:19,600 --> 00:28:22,480 Speaker 2: But really what love, love is way more than just 591 00:28:22,520 --> 00:28:26,199 Speaker 2: a feeling. Love is something that we do. The perfect 592 00:28:26,240 --> 00:28:28,639 Speaker 2: example is the example you share it of Jay wanting 593 00:28:28,680 --> 00:28:31,000 Speaker 2: to do things for you because he's wanting to love, 594 00:28:31,640 --> 00:28:34,040 Speaker 2: and that by you sort of rejecting that because if 595 00:28:34,040 --> 00:28:37,480 Speaker 2: your own past and story, you're sort of blocking the 596 00:28:37,560 --> 00:28:42,000 Speaker 2: flow of love, right. You know, when there's lust, you 597 00:28:42,080 --> 00:28:44,800 Speaker 2: might be like okay, you know fine, you know whatever 598 00:28:44,880 --> 00:28:47,560 Speaker 2: that is, you know, and it's not like passion and 599 00:28:47,600 --> 00:28:49,880 Speaker 2: attraction has to go away, but certainly in a long 600 00:28:49,960 --> 00:28:54,400 Speaker 2: term relationship, it takes mindfulness to keep it alive. And 601 00:28:54,440 --> 00:28:56,920 Speaker 2: in the beginning, like I said, it's just lust is 602 00:28:56,960 --> 00:29:01,080 Speaker 2: also when we're just projecting our ideal onto you know, 603 00:29:01,160 --> 00:29:04,440 Speaker 2: it's like, oh, I met this amazing person, they're just perfect, 604 00:29:04,480 --> 00:29:06,800 Speaker 2: Oh my god. And sometimes that happens because we meet 605 00:29:06,840 --> 00:29:08,560 Speaker 2: someone they have like a few things on our list 606 00:29:08,600 --> 00:29:11,400 Speaker 2: that we want and we go mad over them and 607 00:29:11,440 --> 00:29:14,240 Speaker 2: we put them on a pedestal. We can't stop thinking 608 00:29:14,240 --> 00:29:18,360 Speaker 2: about them and they're a stranger. And love is really 609 00:29:18,440 --> 00:29:23,080 Speaker 2: something that happens after that settles where we want to 610 00:29:23,120 --> 00:29:26,320 Speaker 2: build a life with someone where someone's whole being and 611 00:29:26,360 --> 00:29:28,959 Speaker 2: their needs are very important. There is important to us 612 00:29:28,960 --> 00:29:30,000 Speaker 2: as our own. 613 00:29:30,440 --> 00:29:34,640 Speaker 1: You mistake instability and the unknown with excitement, yes, and 614 00:29:34,720 --> 00:29:37,120 Speaker 1: in love it's kind of like you feel this sudden feel, 615 00:29:37,240 --> 00:29:43,080 Speaker 1: you feel this underlying feeling of stability, yes, and safety yes. 616 00:29:43,240 --> 00:29:47,000 Speaker 1: And I think sometimes lack of safety can feel like 617 00:29:47,040 --> 00:29:50,280 Speaker 1: excitement and lack of the unknown and this like what 618 00:29:50,520 --> 00:29:52,800 Speaker 1: if and you know, you get you get into this 619 00:29:52,840 --> 00:29:54,640 Speaker 1: well wind of the what if, and the what if 620 00:29:54,720 --> 00:29:59,120 Speaker 1: feels really exhilarating and sometimes then when you're used to 621 00:29:59,160 --> 00:30:02,040 Speaker 1: feeling lost. So I have a friend who I talked 622 00:30:02,040 --> 00:30:04,160 Speaker 1: to her about this pretty much on a weekly basis. 623 00:30:04,160 --> 00:30:06,120 Speaker 3: She's really wanting. 624 00:30:05,920 --> 00:30:08,239 Speaker 1: To find a partner, but she keeps saying, I just 625 00:30:08,320 --> 00:30:10,440 Speaker 1: don't feel the way that I've felt in my twenties 626 00:30:10,480 --> 00:30:12,560 Speaker 1: when I meet people in my thirties, Like it just 627 00:30:12,640 --> 00:30:14,200 Speaker 1: isn't that feeling that excitement. 628 00:30:14,280 --> 00:30:15,560 Speaker 3: I don't feel that anymore. 629 00:30:16,080 --> 00:30:18,320 Speaker 1: And I'm like, what you felt then, was you becoming 630 00:30:18,360 --> 00:30:21,200 Speaker 1: obsessed with people without you even know you'd have one 631 00:30:21,240 --> 00:30:23,640 Speaker 1: conversation and you'd be obsessed. So you are looking and 632 00:30:23,680 --> 00:30:27,719 Speaker 1: craving for this obsession versus this stability and this feeling 633 00:30:27,760 --> 00:30:30,400 Speaker 1: of safety. And I've fund a lot of my friends 634 00:30:30,400 --> 00:30:32,040 Speaker 1: in there. I wonder what you think about it. Where, 635 00:30:32,400 --> 00:30:34,720 Speaker 1: especially when we were younger, we would be you'd go 636 00:30:34,760 --> 00:30:36,320 Speaker 1: on one day and you start thinking about your wedding. 637 00:30:36,640 --> 00:30:39,200 Speaker 3: Yeah, why do we do that? Where does that even 638 00:30:39,240 --> 00:30:39,680 Speaker 3: come from? 639 00:30:40,000 --> 00:30:42,640 Speaker 2: Because women just because a lot of women want to 640 00:30:42,640 --> 00:30:44,960 Speaker 2: get married and they want the love and the partnership. 641 00:30:45,240 --> 00:30:48,000 Speaker 2: You know. One thing about I'm curious, like with you 642 00:30:48,040 --> 00:30:50,600 Speaker 2: since you brought your friend to this conversation, is she's 643 00:30:50,640 --> 00:30:53,600 Speaker 2: someone who values uncertainty at a high level. 644 00:30:53,960 --> 00:30:57,360 Speaker 1: I think she's used to men who have been uncertain 645 00:30:57,400 --> 00:30:58,080 Speaker 1: in her life. 646 00:30:58,120 --> 00:31:01,160 Speaker 2: But what about outside of men this something? Does she 647 00:31:01,240 --> 00:31:04,680 Speaker 2: seek out adventure? Is she adventurous? Does she get bored easily? 648 00:31:05,000 --> 00:31:07,600 Speaker 1: I wouldn't say she seeks out adventure. The places she's 649 00:31:07,600 --> 00:31:09,840 Speaker 1: the most adventurous are all the men that are the 650 00:31:09,840 --> 00:31:10,480 Speaker 1: opposite of. 651 00:31:10,400 --> 00:31:13,880 Speaker 2: Her, the opposite of her. Yeah, well, so she actually 652 00:31:13,920 --> 00:31:15,600 Speaker 2: has much more of a controlled life. 653 00:31:15,960 --> 00:31:19,160 Speaker 1: Yes, she definitely has a very regular life. 654 00:31:19,280 --> 00:31:23,280 Speaker 2: Yes, right, So, well that very regular life that's filled 655 00:31:23,320 --> 00:31:26,640 Speaker 2: with certainty can also get quite boring. So what she's 656 00:31:26,640 --> 00:31:28,720 Speaker 2: doing is that she's trying to meet her need because 657 00:31:28,760 --> 00:31:30,959 Speaker 2: we all have the need for novelty and adventure and 658 00:31:31,000 --> 00:31:34,640 Speaker 2: the unknown. So she's trying to meet her need for 659 00:31:34,800 --> 00:31:40,240 Speaker 2: the unknown because her life is very predictable through men 660 00:31:40,440 --> 00:31:44,120 Speaker 2: and relationships, as opposed to learning how to meet that need. 661 00:31:44,320 --> 00:31:47,680 Speaker 2: If she actually maybe took some risks in life and 662 00:31:47,720 --> 00:31:51,240 Speaker 2: maybe was a little more leaning towards uncertainty and not 663 00:31:51,280 --> 00:31:54,240 Speaker 2: just certainty, she may not need to find that. 664 00:31:55,080 --> 00:31:55,960 Speaker 3: Take as many risks. 665 00:31:56,080 --> 00:31:58,920 Speaker 1: Yeah yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Some of those risks have 666 00:31:59,160 --> 00:32:01,000 Speaker 1: ended her up in for twenty four hours. 667 00:32:01,640 --> 00:32:02,640 Speaker 3: She knows what I'm talking about. 668 00:32:03,960 --> 00:32:05,360 Speaker 1: You know, when I was talking about the love in 669 00:32:05,400 --> 00:32:08,400 Speaker 1: your twenties versus thirties, I was reading about this, and 670 00:32:08,480 --> 00:32:10,080 Speaker 1: I don't know whether you know more about it, but 671 00:32:10,800 --> 00:32:12,640 Speaker 1: it says how our hormones when we were in our 672 00:32:12,680 --> 00:32:15,000 Speaker 1: teenag years and when we're in our young years, they're 673 00:32:15,040 --> 00:32:19,160 Speaker 1: completely different, and because they are kind of coming into ourselves, Yeah, 674 00:32:19,240 --> 00:32:22,479 Speaker 1: there's so much more erratic, and so that obsessiveness actually 675 00:32:22,480 --> 00:32:24,920 Speaker 1: comes a lot easier when you are in your teenage 676 00:32:24,960 --> 00:32:28,680 Speaker 1: years and when you're getting the first feelings of liking someone. 677 00:32:28,760 --> 00:32:31,440 Speaker 1: And so when you've been through a few relationships or 678 00:32:31,640 --> 00:32:33,440 Speaker 1: you felt that feeling quite a few times between your 679 00:32:33,440 --> 00:32:36,160 Speaker 1: twenties and your thirties, once you get to your thirties 680 00:32:36,240 --> 00:32:41,640 Speaker 1: or your forties, actually you don't have that intense hormonal 681 00:32:41,760 --> 00:32:42,880 Speaker 1: attraction anymore. 682 00:32:43,040 --> 00:32:45,440 Speaker 2: Yeah, well I know people who do have that, yeah, 683 00:32:45,440 --> 00:32:47,680 Speaker 2: in their thirties and forties. But yes, that does track. 684 00:32:47,760 --> 00:32:50,960 Speaker 2: I mean, look, it's also part of like immaturity, right, 685 00:32:51,280 --> 00:32:54,040 Speaker 2: we're at that age, and yeah, I mean that definitely 686 00:32:54,480 --> 00:32:58,560 Speaker 2: makes sense. There is some biological stuff to that. I mean, 687 00:32:58,760 --> 00:33:03,280 Speaker 2: the presence of means that women create more oxytocin, and 688 00:33:03,320 --> 00:33:05,080 Speaker 2: so that's more of the bonding hormone. 689 00:33:05,120 --> 00:33:08,920 Speaker 1: So there's yeah, yeah, it makes sense. Do you believe 690 00:33:09,560 --> 00:33:11,040 Speaker 1: that there is such thing as the One? 691 00:33:11,160 --> 00:33:11,960 Speaker 2: No? 692 00:33:11,960 --> 00:33:13,280 Speaker 3: No, okay, Please tell me more. 693 00:33:14,640 --> 00:33:17,200 Speaker 2: What do people think of when they think of the One? 694 00:33:17,320 --> 00:33:19,600 Speaker 2: They think of this person who's going to come into 695 00:33:19,640 --> 00:33:24,280 Speaker 2: their life make all their problems disappear, and that they 696 00:33:24,400 --> 00:33:28,360 Speaker 2: are this is unconscious. They think that this person is 697 00:33:28,480 --> 00:33:32,760 Speaker 2: going to be more evolved than them and is almost 698 00:33:32,800 --> 00:33:36,360 Speaker 2: going to be close to almost like a parental figure 699 00:33:36,520 --> 00:33:38,480 Speaker 2: in that way that they're going to come and fill 700 00:33:38,560 --> 00:33:42,680 Speaker 2: all our voids and that when we find our soulmate, 701 00:33:42,960 --> 00:33:46,200 Speaker 2: everything is fine, and that's not true. I mean, and 702 00:33:46,240 --> 00:33:48,400 Speaker 2: there's also many the ones. There's the one that you 703 00:33:48,440 --> 00:33:50,480 Speaker 2: were with when you were sixteen, there's the one that 704 00:33:50,760 --> 00:33:53,760 Speaker 2: some people got married to and then later divorced, and 705 00:33:54,600 --> 00:33:57,000 Speaker 2: you know, it's also it says like if you're with 706 00:33:57,160 --> 00:34:01,760 Speaker 2: the one, then you are guaranteed the relationship you want, 707 00:34:02,480 --> 00:34:06,480 Speaker 2: and that is not true. And that probably is like 708 00:34:06,720 --> 00:34:11,640 Speaker 2: the biggest problem with that concept that erodes are understanding 709 00:34:11,920 --> 00:34:16,160 Speaker 2: of what love is. And so with the person who 710 00:34:16,239 --> 00:34:19,399 Speaker 2: is right for you, you still have to show up 711 00:34:20,000 --> 00:34:23,400 Speaker 2: and your problems are still going to be there, and 712 00:34:23,480 --> 00:34:27,200 Speaker 2: you still have to participate in there and nurture the relationship. 713 00:34:27,960 --> 00:34:29,879 Speaker 2: I know. I think if we thought there's just one 714 00:34:29,920 --> 00:34:34,839 Speaker 2: person for us, that's a very depressing perspective because then 715 00:34:36,080 --> 00:34:40,560 Speaker 2: waiting and waiting, they or they tell themselves, the hypnotize 716 00:34:40,560 --> 00:34:43,759 Speaker 2: themselves into believing that the person who they lost is 717 00:34:43,800 --> 00:34:46,040 Speaker 2: the one and so there's no one else for them 718 00:34:46,040 --> 00:34:47,480 Speaker 2: and that's tragic. 719 00:34:47,600 --> 00:34:50,200 Speaker 1: And then trying to mimic those feelings in someone else 720 00:34:50,239 --> 00:34:51,880 Speaker 1: and thinking that's what I have to feel in the 721 00:34:51,920 --> 00:34:55,279 Speaker 1: next relationship. Yes, I think that's something that people have 722 00:34:55,320 --> 00:34:57,239 Speaker 1: struggled with that I've spoken to too, and I don't 723 00:34:57,239 --> 00:34:58,600 Speaker 1: feel the same as I did when I was in 724 00:34:58,600 --> 00:35:01,759 Speaker 1: that relationship. But each person is so different so it 725 00:35:01,760 --> 00:35:04,799 Speaker 1: doesn't have to be a replication of that. You can 726 00:35:04,840 --> 00:35:07,000 Speaker 1: have a different type of relationship and it can still 727 00:35:07,040 --> 00:35:07,799 Speaker 1: be considered love. 728 00:35:08,000 --> 00:35:11,239 Speaker 2: Yes, absolutely, and ultimately we choose so the one will 729 00:35:11,280 --> 00:35:13,160 Speaker 2: be yeah, oh yeah, And. 730 00:35:13,080 --> 00:35:13,960 Speaker 3: How do you choose that? 731 00:35:14,440 --> 00:35:17,480 Speaker 1: Like, what if someone's trying to attract a partner right 732 00:35:17,480 --> 00:35:18,280 Speaker 1: now in their life. 733 00:35:18,680 --> 00:35:21,000 Speaker 3: You're saying you choose that? What is that process? 734 00:35:21,640 --> 00:35:25,000 Speaker 2: It's emotions, but it's also a process of discernment. It's 735 00:35:25,160 --> 00:35:27,560 Speaker 2: very important to know what it is that you want 736 00:35:27,760 --> 00:35:31,200 Speaker 2: in a relationship and what it is that you need. Specifically, 737 00:35:31,239 --> 00:35:34,080 Speaker 2: if you're someone who doesn't have the best track record, 738 00:35:34,239 --> 00:35:36,719 Speaker 2: or you've been single a long time and you really 739 00:35:36,719 --> 00:35:39,080 Speaker 2: want to meet someone, know what you want and what 740 00:35:39,120 --> 00:35:42,239 Speaker 2: you need, but don't have a whole list of what 741 00:35:42,320 --> 00:35:44,520 Speaker 2: this person looks like, or you know they know how 742 00:35:44,520 --> 00:35:47,160 Speaker 2: to work or screwdriver or whatever it is. You have 743 00:35:47,360 --> 00:35:50,680 Speaker 2: to like, we have to be very very clear about 744 00:35:50,680 --> 00:35:54,239 Speaker 2: what's tolerable and what's intolerable right, and then have a 745 00:35:54,280 --> 00:35:58,279 Speaker 2: lot of flexibility and open mindedness about the rest. But 746 00:35:58,520 --> 00:36:01,520 Speaker 2: do get very clear about what your non negotiables are 747 00:36:01,560 --> 00:36:02,879 Speaker 2: and what your deal breakers are. 748 00:36:03,280 --> 00:36:05,920 Speaker 1: What do you consider Do you think everyone's deal breakers 749 00:36:06,160 --> 00:36:07,000 Speaker 1: are going to be different? 750 00:36:07,120 --> 00:36:08,680 Speaker 2: Yes, yeah, definitely. 751 00:36:08,960 --> 00:36:12,240 Speaker 1: It's so interesting to him because I feel like there's 752 00:36:12,360 --> 00:36:14,879 Speaker 1: so many people, especially online, that are like, these should 753 00:36:14,920 --> 00:36:17,080 Speaker 1: be the non negotiables, and you know, you have your lists, 754 00:36:17,080 --> 00:36:19,400 Speaker 1: and I think people are so swayed by other people's 755 00:36:19,400 --> 00:36:21,440 Speaker 1: opinions when actually if they think they're like maybe I 756 00:36:21,440 --> 00:36:24,480 Speaker 1: actually I am okay with this, and maybe this isn't how 757 00:36:24,640 --> 00:36:28,000 Speaker 1: I see it. Like I know, when I started dating Jay, 758 00:36:28,160 --> 00:36:29,600 Speaker 1: he was like, the one thing I'm just going to 759 00:36:29,640 --> 00:36:31,160 Speaker 1: tell you now, these are the things that I know 760 00:36:31,200 --> 00:36:32,759 Speaker 1: I won't be able to do. And he told me 761 00:36:32,760 --> 00:36:35,000 Speaker 1: all that Who's like, I will not get in the kitchen. 762 00:36:35,520 --> 00:36:37,360 Speaker 1: It's not because I think you should be in the kitchen, 763 00:36:37,520 --> 00:36:39,680 Speaker 1: but I really don't enjoy it, and I will wash up, 764 00:36:39,680 --> 00:36:40,600 Speaker 1: but I will not cook. 765 00:36:41,120 --> 00:36:42,920 Speaker 3: And I was actually so fine with it. 766 00:36:43,360 --> 00:36:46,400 Speaker 1: Then some of the other women in my life are like, 767 00:36:46,640 --> 00:36:49,400 Speaker 1: but what about if you want him to cook for you? Like, 768 00:36:49,880 --> 00:36:51,759 Speaker 1: what about if you, But don't you think that it's 769 00:36:51,840 --> 00:36:53,880 Speaker 1: unfair that he doesn't want to cook in the kitchen. 770 00:36:54,000 --> 00:36:57,600 Speaker 2: And that's all their belief system and all their conditioning, 771 00:36:57,920 --> 00:37:00,520 Speaker 2: and you've got to turn down the volume of that 772 00:37:00,719 --> 00:37:02,279 Speaker 2: noise and just decide what's right for you. 773 00:37:02,360 --> 00:37:04,040 Speaker 1: So come home, and I'd be like, so, Jo, but 774 00:37:04,080 --> 00:37:05,799 Speaker 1: what about if I got sick? Would you cook for me? 775 00:37:05,800 --> 00:37:07,239 Speaker 1: Then he goes, no, I would get someone to cook 776 00:37:07,239 --> 00:37:08,480 Speaker 1: for you, and I'd make sure they have the best 777 00:37:08,520 --> 00:37:09,040 Speaker 1: meals for you. 778 00:37:09,239 --> 00:37:11,719 Speaker 3: Yes, but what if I really wanted you to make 779 00:37:11,760 --> 00:37:12,440 Speaker 3: my suit for me? 780 00:37:12,920 --> 00:37:15,040 Speaker 1: But I've just said, like, that's not something I feel 781 00:37:15,080 --> 00:37:17,640 Speaker 1: comfortable doing. Yeah, But and I was like, I'm so 782 00:37:17,800 --> 00:37:19,880 Speaker 1: okay with it. But it was so interesting because I 783 00:37:19,880 --> 00:37:23,040 Speaker 1: started seeing the shift of my beliefs or what I 784 00:37:23,080 --> 00:37:26,200 Speaker 1: was okay with all my non negotiables because other people 785 00:37:26,280 --> 00:37:27,080 Speaker 1: thought that should have. 786 00:37:27,080 --> 00:37:27,920 Speaker 3: Been a non negotiable. 787 00:37:27,960 --> 00:37:28,600 Speaker 2: Yeah, exactly. 788 00:37:28,600 --> 00:37:31,600 Speaker 1: So it's also ending how much that can shift based 789 00:37:31,640 --> 00:37:33,680 Speaker 1: on how much you take in other people's values. 790 00:37:33,840 --> 00:37:37,319 Speaker 2: That's a very very excellent point. I would say that 791 00:37:37,400 --> 00:37:40,719 Speaker 2: maybe universally, if you want, there's certain principles that are 792 00:37:40,760 --> 00:37:44,080 Speaker 2: really important for long term partnership, Like I don't know 793 00:37:44,239 --> 00:37:49,280 Speaker 2: saying values similar values kindness, you know, kindness, respect, trust, 794 00:37:49,360 --> 00:37:51,840 Speaker 2: those things. But beyond that, it's very personal. 795 00:37:51,960 --> 00:37:54,479 Speaker 1: Yeah, it definitely is. I would love to switch gears 796 00:37:54,520 --> 00:37:58,920 Speaker 1: to breakups. You talk about healing from past relationships. What 797 00:37:59,040 --> 00:38:02,080 Speaker 1: do you find the common mistakes people make when they're 798 00:38:02,080 --> 00:38:05,200 Speaker 1: trying to heal from previous relationships before they get into 799 00:38:05,200 --> 00:38:05,720 Speaker 1: new ones. 800 00:38:05,920 --> 00:38:08,440 Speaker 2: A big one is not taking the time to self 801 00:38:08,480 --> 00:38:12,880 Speaker 2: reflect on what happened, understanding. You know, some people they 802 00:38:12,920 --> 00:38:15,360 Speaker 2: really need to understand where the other person was wrong. 803 00:38:16,480 --> 00:38:19,400 Speaker 2: You have to also understand where maybe you've contributed to 804 00:38:19,480 --> 00:38:22,040 Speaker 2: the demise of the relationship. So it's really and I'm 805 00:38:22,080 --> 00:38:23,600 Speaker 2: not saying you need to do this for years and 806 00:38:23,680 --> 00:38:25,600 Speaker 2: years and years, but you do need to take some 807 00:38:25,680 --> 00:38:29,360 Speaker 2: time to just self reflect. I would say for a 808 00:38:29,400 --> 00:38:33,200 Speaker 2: lot of women, a big mistake is that they grieve 809 00:38:33,280 --> 00:38:37,280 Speaker 2: too long. I forgot what the stat was, but something 810 00:38:37,320 --> 00:38:40,000 Speaker 2: like the average of like it takes women like after 811 00:38:40,040 --> 00:38:42,959 Speaker 2: a marriage seven years or something insane to get into 812 00:38:42,960 --> 00:38:47,120 Speaker 2: a new relationship. So I would really love for those 813 00:38:47,160 --> 00:38:51,840 Speaker 2: women to not deny themselves that privilege of moving on 814 00:38:51,920 --> 00:38:53,719 Speaker 2: and opening up their hearts again. But I would say 815 00:38:53,800 --> 00:38:55,640 Speaker 2: not self reflecting is a big one. 816 00:38:55,680 --> 00:38:57,000 Speaker 3: And do you work with both men and women? 817 00:38:57,160 --> 00:38:58,920 Speaker 1: I do have mean, you know, just a big difference 818 00:38:59,080 --> 00:39:04,440 Speaker 1: in the ability to move on that's different between between 819 00:39:04,440 --> 00:39:04,959 Speaker 1: men and women. 820 00:39:05,080 --> 00:39:09,600 Speaker 2: Yeah, men tend to move on get into relationships much quickly, 821 00:39:09,880 --> 00:39:14,440 Speaker 2: much more quickly than women. Part of that is because 822 00:39:15,320 --> 00:39:18,520 Speaker 2: women tend to be more comfortable with really feeling their 823 00:39:18,560 --> 00:39:22,280 Speaker 2: feelings and maybe sometimes even being in their feelings too long, 824 00:39:22,600 --> 00:39:26,880 Speaker 2: whereas men typically have an easier time suppressing their feelings 825 00:39:26,920 --> 00:39:30,680 Speaker 2: and then they start to feel it later. Another theory 826 00:39:30,719 --> 00:39:32,959 Speaker 2: that I think is really interesting that why men tend 827 00:39:33,000 --> 00:39:36,520 Speaker 2: to can easily jump into a relationship after a hard 828 00:39:36,560 --> 00:39:40,680 Speaker 2: breakup is a lot of men value their freedom above 829 00:39:40,719 --> 00:39:44,120 Speaker 2: anything else, and a lot of men will value freedom 830 00:39:44,160 --> 00:39:48,400 Speaker 2: more than women value freedom, and so when a relationship ends, 831 00:39:49,239 --> 00:39:52,879 Speaker 2: it's almost like even though they can be sad, and 832 00:39:53,040 --> 00:39:55,520 Speaker 2: of course I'm not talking about every man out there, 833 00:39:55,560 --> 00:39:59,600 Speaker 2: every guy out there, but they're able to really embrace 834 00:39:59,680 --> 00:40:02,440 Speaker 2: their freedom more whereas women are like, I don't want it, 835 00:40:02,480 --> 00:40:03,880 Speaker 2: I don't want it, like I just want to be 836 00:40:03,920 --> 00:40:07,040 Speaker 2: with this person, and so they feel it's almost like 837 00:40:07,160 --> 00:40:10,520 Speaker 2: they are there's a part of them that feels more 838 00:40:10,600 --> 00:40:14,080 Speaker 2: comfortable with that breakup, and so then they're able to 839 00:40:14,160 --> 00:40:17,080 Speaker 2: get almost get over it. But of course men are 840 00:40:17,440 --> 00:40:20,759 Speaker 2: humans too, right, We're all humans, and everybody wants closeness, 841 00:40:20,760 --> 00:40:22,520 Speaker 2: and so they're just able to just kind of go 842 00:40:22,600 --> 00:40:23,399 Speaker 2: there again, do. 843 00:40:23,360 --> 00:40:26,640 Speaker 1: You think there is a specific protocol that people should 844 00:40:26,640 --> 00:40:29,759 Speaker 1: do when they break up with someone, so like no contact? 845 00:40:30,120 --> 00:40:32,920 Speaker 1: Do you think no contact is necessary as a clean 846 00:40:32,960 --> 00:40:35,279 Speaker 1: break from the person when you break up with them 847 00:40:35,400 --> 00:40:36,800 Speaker 1: or can people be friends with eggs? 848 00:40:37,360 --> 00:40:42,520 Speaker 2: I think everything is nuanced and contextual. So you can't 849 00:40:42,560 --> 00:40:44,759 Speaker 2: go no contact if you have a family, if you 850 00:40:44,760 --> 00:40:48,040 Speaker 2: have children, So there's that. What I have found is 851 00:40:48,080 --> 00:40:52,560 Speaker 2: that a period of no contact is very, very very helpful. 852 00:40:53,480 --> 00:40:56,760 Speaker 2: But if you had a marriage and a long term relationship, 853 00:40:57,080 --> 00:41:00,160 Speaker 2: it's really hard to just switch that off. And some breakups, 854 00:41:00,840 --> 00:41:04,560 Speaker 2: some breakups happen over a span of several months, but 855 00:41:04,680 --> 00:41:10,400 Speaker 2: I will say it does more times than not really help. 856 00:41:10,840 --> 00:41:16,960 Speaker 3: Yeah, people struggle with that. I know it can bounce back. Yeah. 857 00:41:17,080 --> 00:41:19,279 Speaker 1: Do you think the idea that love is enough can 858 00:41:19,360 --> 00:41:21,920 Speaker 1: hold together a relationship or can you love someone and 859 00:41:21,960 --> 00:41:23,839 Speaker 1: realize that actually they're not the. 860 00:41:23,800 --> 00:41:25,680 Speaker 3: Right person for you? Can both be true? 861 00:41:25,840 --> 00:41:29,279 Speaker 2: Yes, both can be true. Relationships actually rarely end because 862 00:41:29,320 --> 00:41:33,320 Speaker 2: of lack of love. They more commonly end because people 863 00:41:34,080 --> 00:41:38,480 Speaker 2: don't feel seen, they feel misunderstood, they feel so helpless. 864 00:41:38,600 --> 00:41:42,160 Speaker 2: They go into a state of learned helplessness where they 865 00:41:42,200 --> 00:41:45,399 Speaker 2: don't see a way out of the pain that they're 866 00:41:45,400 --> 00:41:50,240 Speaker 2: in with this other person. It's not always the falling 867 00:41:50,280 --> 00:41:53,799 Speaker 2: out of love, and sometimes it's sometimes the love is 868 00:41:53,920 --> 00:41:58,400 Speaker 2: so strong, but the attraction is gone, so you don't 869 00:41:58,640 --> 00:42:02,520 Speaker 2: feel motivated to meet that person's needs because they don't 870 00:42:02,800 --> 00:42:05,960 Speaker 2: they You just don't feel that passionate love towards them anymore. 871 00:42:07,640 --> 00:42:09,759 Speaker 3: I wanted to move one to truthful. You have to 872 00:42:09,800 --> 00:42:10,600 Speaker 3: love yourself. 873 00:42:10,880 --> 00:42:13,239 Speaker 1: Yes, you said what you accept in a tract is 874 00:42:13,280 --> 00:42:16,040 Speaker 1: a reflection of what you deep down believe you deserve. 875 00:42:16,360 --> 00:42:19,600 Speaker 1: Why do you think people with that in mind, why 876 00:42:19,640 --> 00:42:22,840 Speaker 1: do people accept abuse in relationships over and over again? 877 00:42:23,160 --> 00:42:24,279 Speaker 1: Where does that stem from? 878 00:42:24,440 --> 00:42:26,960 Speaker 2: Well, I'm going to answer that question, yes, but I 879 00:42:27,040 --> 00:42:29,360 Speaker 2: want to just add something, which is that I don't 880 00:42:29,360 --> 00:42:31,680 Speaker 2: believe that. I do say in the book that there's 881 00:42:31,719 --> 00:42:33,840 Speaker 2: two camps of thought you have to complete. One is 882 00:42:33,880 --> 00:42:36,360 Speaker 2: you have to completely love yourself and feel whole in 883 00:42:36,440 --> 00:42:39,600 Speaker 2: order to be in a relationship. The other one is no, no, no, 884 00:42:39,600 --> 00:42:41,200 Speaker 2: you don't have to love yourself. You learn to love 885 00:42:41,200 --> 00:42:44,000 Speaker 2: yourself through relationships. And I don't believe it's so binary. 886 00:42:44,040 --> 00:42:45,879 Speaker 2: I believe it's somewhere in the middle. You don't have 887 00:42:45,960 --> 00:42:49,040 Speaker 2: to completely love everything about yourself and be totally healed 888 00:42:49,080 --> 00:42:52,960 Speaker 2: to be in a relationship. But getting to abusive relationships, 889 00:42:52,960 --> 00:42:55,560 Speaker 2: I've never known a person who's been in a very 890 00:42:55,680 --> 00:42:59,520 Speaker 2: unhealthy relationship and or an abusive relationship who also did 891 00:42:59,520 --> 00:43:01,960 Speaker 2: not strug to accept who they are and love to 892 00:43:02,000 --> 00:43:07,239 Speaker 2: love themselves. So why do people stay in abusive relationships? 893 00:43:07,239 --> 00:43:08,439 Speaker 2: That was the question, right, Yeah. 894 00:43:08,440 --> 00:43:12,120 Speaker 1: I just see so many successful, ambitious women who see 895 00:43:12,160 --> 00:43:15,200 Speaker 1: what they've got it all together and they end up 896 00:43:15,239 --> 00:43:19,080 Speaker 1: in severely physically or emotionally abusive relationships. 897 00:43:19,080 --> 00:43:23,759 Speaker 2: Shocking, right. So it's interesting how we can have so 898 00:43:23,880 --> 00:43:26,160 Speaker 2: much confidence in one area of our life and then 899 00:43:26,200 --> 00:43:29,680 Speaker 2: another area of life we just don't. There's a few reasons. 900 00:43:29,760 --> 00:43:33,000 Speaker 2: One is that's how they saw their parents do it. 901 00:43:33,800 --> 00:43:38,279 Speaker 2: Another one is that they just don't see themselves as 902 00:43:38,360 --> 00:43:41,319 Speaker 2: worthy in that way. They don't see themselves as deserving 903 00:43:41,360 --> 00:43:46,040 Speaker 2: of love. Maybe they've never seen it. Sometimes people stay 904 00:43:46,040 --> 00:43:49,480 Speaker 2: in these relationships because they don't know the way out. 905 00:43:51,120 --> 00:43:54,560 Speaker 2: Maybe they're afraid that there's going to be some sort 906 00:43:54,600 --> 00:43:59,480 Speaker 2: of repercussion or consequence. Yeah, But most times it means 907 00:44:00,320 --> 00:44:04,359 Speaker 2: something needs to be looked at within about why you 908 00:44:04,400 --> 00:44:08,120 Speaker 2: tolerate that. And sometimes you see there's a lot in 909 00:44:08,160 --> 00:44:12,880 Speaker 2: women they just are so empathetic. And what it is 910 00:44:12,880 --> 00:44:14,840 Speaker 2: is that So we can't just reduce it to we 911 00:44:14,880 --> 00:44:17,960 Speaker 2: don't love yourself. But what we can say is there 912 00:44:17,960 --> 00:44:22,239 Speaker 2: are some people who are so adept at seeing the 913 00:44:22,280 --> 00:44:29,040 Speaker 2: good in others, yes, that they are able to ignore 914 00:44:29,400 --> 00:44:31,319 Speaker 2: what's really right in front of them. 915 00:44:32,000 --> 00:44:34,440 Speaker 3: But he's got such a good heart, and I know 916 00:44:34,520 --> 00:44:37,200 Speaker 3: that do better. Yeah, I know he wants to be 917 00:44:37,239 --> 00:44:37,800 Speaker 3: a better. 918 00:44:37,600 --> 00:44:41,920 Speaker 1: Person and less exactly, just constantly see that, and it's 919 00:44:43,960 --> 00:44:46,560 Speaker 1: and it trumps the feeling that it's making you feel 920 00:44:46,560 --> 00:44:50,120 Speaker 1: about yourself exactly. You can just lose yourself in this 921 00:44:50,280 --> 00:44:52,920 Speaker 1: idea that you can. I think it goes back to 922 00:44:52,960 --> 00:44:55,759 Speaker 1: the feeling of wanting to better someone else and you 923 00:44:55,880 --> 00:44:58,480 Speaker 1: thinking that you can fix that person, yes, And so 924 00:44:58,560 --> 00:45:00,920 Speaker 1: you think I can fix this person and I know 925 00:45:01,040 --> 00:45:04,120 Speaker 1: that they are worth fixing, yes, And so it's I 926 00:45:04,160 --> 00:45:06,799 Speaker 1: know that this is just because that they're having a 927 00:45:06,960 --> 00:45:08,960 Speaker 1: bad time in life right now, and you kind of 928 00:45:08,960 --> 00:45:11,719 Speaker 1: compartmentalize it too, that they're a good human and I 929 00:45:11,760 --> 00:45:14,480 Speaker 1: can help them and these things are just that stemming 930 00:45:14,560 --> 00:45:18,719 Speaker 1: from their deep rooted issues versus this. 931 00:45:18,680 --> 00:45:19,480 Speaker 3: Is actually abuse. 932 00:45:19,719 --> 00:45:23,960 Speaker 1: Yes, yeah, it's have How have you seen people come 933 00:45:24,000 --> 00:45:24,520 Speaker 1: out of that? 934 00:45:24,880 --> 00:45:25,799 Speaker 3: In the work that you do. 935 00:45:26,200 --> 00:45:34,799 Speaker 2: It's difficult. It's helping the person recognize that that they 936 00:45:34,840 --> 00:45:39,640 Speaker 2: can learn to differentiate between that you can have compassion 937 00:45:39,719 --> 00:45:42,720 Speaker 2: for this person and you can empathize with this person, 938 00:45:43,280 --> 00:45:46,040 Speaker 2: and you can also do that from a distance, right, 939 00:45:46,680 --> 00:45:50,160 Speaker 2: And that's sort of the recovery work and codependency and 940 00:45:50,400 --> 00:45:53,520 Speaker 2: alcoholism and all of that is learning how to detach 941 00:45:53,640 --> 00:45:57,600 Speaker 2: with love and learning how to say, Okay, this is 942 00:45:57,719 --> 00:46:01,759 Speaker 2: not going to work, but it's It's also there's more 943 00:46:01,800 --> 00:46:05,359 Speaker 2: to it because in order to be constantly focusing on 944 00:46:05,400 --> 00:46:09,480 Speaker 2: the other, there is inherently a neglect of the self. 945 00:46:10,719 --> 00:46:15,000 Speaker 2: So it's also helping the person return to their life 946 00:46:15,040 --> 00:46:18,120 Speaker 2: and theirselfs themselves and what they want to build in life. 947 00:46:19,040 --> 00:46:22,279 Speaker 2: And depending on the situation it could be it can 948 00:46:22,320 --> 00:46:22,920 Speaker 2: be difficult. 949 00:46:23,480 --> 00:46:26,239 Speaker 1: And for a woman who wants to stop rebuilding her 950 00:46:26,239 --> 00:46:29,560 Speaker 1: relationship with herself, how do you do you have any 951 00:46:29,600 --> 00:46:34,040 Speaker 1: specific practices or ways that whether it's journaling, whatever, is 952 00:46:34,080 --> 00:46:37,000 Speaker 1: any cues that you can give to someone on how 953 00:46:37,000 --> 00:46:39,280 Speaker 1: they can stop changing that perception of what they deserve. 954 00:46:39,719 --> 00:46:43,279 Speaker 2: One of the hardest questions to answer for everyone is 955 00:46:43,920 --> 00:46:47,520 Speaker 2: what do I want? Yeah, but you need to reflect 956 00:46:47,560 --> 00:46:51,280 Speaker 2: on that and maybe what you to make the question 957 00:46:51,560 --> 00:46:56,360 Speaker 2: easier to answer is what would make me feel more fulfilled? 958 00:46:57,520 --> 00:47:00,279 Speaker 2: What would make me feel more connected, what would make 959 00:47:00,360 --> 00:47:04,600 Speaker 2: my life a little bit more fun? And you start 960 00:47:04,640 --> 00:47:07,399 Speaker 2: to think about that, and by doing that you start 961 00:47:07,440 --> 00:47:10,520 Speaker 2: to learn how to meet your own needs. Right, and 962 00:47:10,560 --> 00:47:13,160 Speaker 2: then of course journaling. And for some people this is 963 00:47:13,200 --> 00:47:15,279 Speaker 2: not for everyone. Some people are like, this doesn't work, 964 00:47:15,280 --> 00:47:17,799 Speaker 2: and other people they say, this is amazing, looking in 965 00:47:17,840 --> 00:47:20,000 Speaker 2: the mirror and saying I love you. Some people are like, 966 00:47:20,040 --> 00:47:21,279 Speaker 2: I absolutely cannot do that. 967 00:47:21,360 --> 00:47:23,160 Speaker 3: Yeah, this is so craze. 968 00:47:23,280 --> 00:47:25,880 Speaker 2: This is so cringe. But some people really get into 969 00:47:25,960 --> 00:47:30,680 Speaker 2: it and building community, building building community. I think that, 970 00:47:31,120 --> 00:47:33,680 Speaker 2: you know, bringing back this concept of freedom and women 971 00:47:33,760 --> 00:47:38,000 Speaker 2: who stay in abusive relationships, I think it really behooves 972 00:47:38,000 --> 00:47:42,200 Speaker 2: women to value freedom more than they typically do and 973 00:47:42,280 --> 00:47:45,920 Speaker 2: to value purpose more than they typically do. Right, it 974 00:47:46,000 --> 00:47:48,480 Speaker 2: kind of develops if you will sort of like their 975 00:47:48,520 --> 00:47:51,239 Speaker 2: healthy masculine side. I don't even know if we would 976 00:47:51,280 --> 00:47:55,040 Speaker 2: call that the masculine side anymore anyway, but you know, yeah. 977 00:47:55,000 --> 00:47:56,520 Speaker 3: Yeah, okay, there's a great tip. 978 00:47:56,600 --> 00:48:01,200 Speaker 1: So looking in the mirror, finding community and asking yourself 979 00:48:01,360 --> 00:48:04,040 Speaker 1: questions about yourself, and yeah, to know yourself. 980 00:48:03,680 --> 00:48:06,520 Speaker 2: And starting a new project like what a passion project 981 00:48:06,600 --> 00:48:10,200 Speaker 2: or hardly anything, it's so incredibly important. And stay very 982 00:48:10,200 --> 00:48:12,200 Speaker 2: close to your friends. Yeah. 983 00:48:12,360 --> 00:48:15,120 Speaker 1: Two five is you must speak up and tell the truth. 984 00:48:15,880 --> 00:48:18,719 Speaker 1: What are some questions that if you're already in a relationship. 985 00:48:18,719 --> 00:48:20,040 Speaker 1: What are some of the questions that we should be 986 00:48:20,040 --> 00:48:21,360 Speaker 1: asking our partners regularly? 987 00:48:24,719 --> 00:48:26,920 Speaker 2: How can I be an amazing partner to you this week? 988 00:48:27,719 --> 00:48:30,760 Speaker 2: What do you need that you're not getting? There's something 989 00:48:31,200 --> 00:48:33,000 Speaker 2: that I would really love for you to do for me. 990 00:48:33,080 --> 00:48:34,200 Speaker 2: Can I tell you what that is? 991 00:48:34,840 --> 00:48:35,760 Speaker 3: There's are great questions. 992 00:48:35,840 --> 00:48:38,400 Speaker 1: Yeah, Funny Jay asks me them like every week. I'm like, 993 00:48:38,440 --> 00:48:42,800 Speaker 1: I need to do that more. I spoke to a 994 00:48:42,880 --> 00:48:45,719 Speaker 1: friend recently. I have some questions that actually have come 995 00:48:45,760 --> 00:48:48,680 Speaker 1: also from I put up a poll online. Ohat, I 996 00:48:48,719 --> 00:48:50,319 Speaker 1: asked questions. But I spoke to your friend recently. He 997 00:48:50,360 --> 00:48:53,000 Speaker 1: was saying that they've been married for years. Both used 998 00:48:53,000 --> 00:48:56,040 Speaker 1: to their usual routines with their kids, but realized that 999 00:48:56,080 --> 00:48:58,680 Speaker 1: they had lost their connection. What can a couple that 1000 00:48:58,760 --> 00:49:00,120 Speaker 1: want to rekindle their loved. 1001 00:49:00,560 --> 00:49:03,720 Speaker 2: Part of what I hear in that question is it's 1002 00:49:03,760 --> 00:49:08,040 Speaker 2: not just rekindling love, is rekindling passion, because when we 1003 00:49:08,040 --> 00:49:10,279 Speaker 2: get stuck in the rut of routine, we can lose that. 1004 00:49:10,719 --> 00:49:14,520 Speaker 2: They need to do something very fun together, maybe every 1005 00:49:14,520 --> 00:49:17,799 Speaker 2: week that has just a little twinge of danger. Now 1006 00:49:17,840 --> 00:49:19,839 Speaker 2: I don't mean the kind of danger where you are 1007 00:49:20,000 --> 00:49:22,880 Speaker 2: literally putting yourself in danger, but just something that feels 1008 00:49:22,920 --> 00:49:26,120 Speaker 2: a little on the edge. Because what's that's going to 1009 00:49:26,160 --> 00:49:28,400 Speaker 2: do is spike some cortisol and give you some dopamine 1010 00:49:28,640 --> 00:49:31,240 Speaker 2: and then you guys are gonna be like feel very alive, 1011 00:49:31,800 --> 00:49:34,000 Speaker 2: and you're going to be doing that together. And that's 1012 00:49:34,160 --> 00:49:35,640 Speaker 2: that creates chemistry. 1013 00:49:35,840 --> 00:49:37,480 Speaker 1: Yeah, I said to me and Jay always trying to 1014 00:49:37,520 --> 00:49:39,560 Speaker 1: do like activities that we've never done before together. 1015 00:49:39,680 --> 00:49:40,279 Speaker 2: Yeah, that's great. 1016 00:49:40,280 --> 00:49:42,719 Speaker 1: Every time we don't like, this was so fun doing 1017 00:49:42,760 --> 00:49:45,960 Speaker 1: this together, and like whether it's going to a random 1018 00:49:46,040 --> 00:49:48,480 Speaker 1: dance class that we never have an intention of doing 1019 00:49:48,560 --> 00:49:51,279 Speaker 1: that dance at any other point in life, but it's 1020 00:49:51,320 --> 00:49:54,319 Speaker 1: just doing that one dance lesson that one time, or 1021 00:49:54,680 --> 00:49:57,239 Speaker 1: going to a pottery class, so like doing going to 1022 00:49:57,320 --> 00:50:00,719 Speaker 1: a secret escape room, which I'm horrible at. He's like 1023 00:50:00,880 --> 00:50:03,680 Speaker 1: really into And it's just so interesting because you see 1024 00:50:03,680 --> 00:50:05,480 Speaker 1: different aspects of each other and you get to have 1025 00:50:05,480 --> 00:50:07,879 Speaker 1: a laugh together. Since we always try and get out 1026 00:50:07,920 --> 00:50:10,200 Speaker 1: of our comfort zone of why we didn't want to 1027 00:50:10,200 --> 00:50:12,239 Speaker 1: sit here and just watch TV together all the time, 1028 00:50:12,400 --> 00:50:15,080 Speaker 1: or you know, getting out of your usual routine. 1029 00:50:15,400 --> 00:50:15,759 Speaker 2: That's it. 1030 00:50:15,880 --> 00:50:17,600 Speaker 3: To see each other in a different light. 1031 00:50:17,880 --> 00:50:19,520 Speaker 2: Absolutely, that is the name of the game. 1032 00:50:19,640 --> 00:50:22,120 Speaker 1: You also say, when we're committed to being in a 1033 00:50:22,120 --> 00:50:25,000 Speaker 1: healthy relationship, we do not play games. It's really that simple. 1034 00:50:26,560 --> 00:50:30,520 Speaker 1: I feel like games are so subtle sometimes, whether it's 1035 00:50:30,560 --> 00:50:32,440 Speaker 1: I'm going to play this island treatment right now so 1036 00:50:32,480 --> 00:50:34,400 Speaker 1: he knows how much I'm upset with him without me 1037 00:50:34,480 --> 00:50:37,600 Speaker 1: telling him, or Okay, I'm going to leave this here 1038 00:50:37,680 --> 00:50:39,279 Speaker 1: just to annoy her because she's annoyed me. You know, 1039 00:50:39,280 --> 00:50:44,000 Speaker 1: there's so many subtle ways of playing games with each other. Manipulation, Yeah, manipulation, 1040 00:50:44,239 --> 00:50:46,520 Speaker 1: And I get I don't even know whether I have 1041 00:50:46,520 --> 00:50:48,759 Speaker 1: a question in this, but do you think that that 1042 00:50:48,800 --> 00:50:51,200 Speaker 1: comes from a lack of ability to communicate with each other? 1043 00:50:51,239 --> 00:50:52,719 Speaker 1: What your needs actually are. 1044 00:50:52,960 --> 00:50:56,239 Speaker 2: Yes, And it also comes from just a habit of 1045 00:50:56,320 --> 00:50:58,000 Speaker 2: punishing your partner. 1046 00:50:58,320 --> 00:50:58,840 Speaker 3: Yeah. 1047 00:50:58,920 --> 00:51:02,480 Speaker 2: So one of the things that everyone that I always 1048 00:51:02,560 --> 00:51:05,839 Speaker 2: encourage people to ask themselves when they're in a relationship 1049 00:51:05,920 --> 00:51:08,400 Speaker 2: or if they're reflecting on their past relationships that they're single, 1050 00:51:08,520 --> 00:51:11,960 Speaker 2: is so, what is your preferred method of punishment? Meaning 1051 00:51:12,040 --> 00:51:15,080 Speaker 2: how do you punish your partner? WHOA when you're upset? 1052 00:51:15,120 --> 00:51:15,600 Speaker 2: What do you do? 1053 00:51:17,760 --> 00:51:18,440 Speaker 3: I'm quiet? 1054 00:51:18,640 --> 00:51:20,840 Speaker 2: Yeah, quiet, ye, little quiet, I'm quiet. 1055 00:51:21,040 --> 00:51:23,520 Speaker 3: Yeah. And I didn't think of it as a punishment, 1056 00:51:23,560 --> 00:51:25,080 Speaker 3: but I can see to him that it feels like 1057 00:51:25,120 --> 00:51:26,959 Speaker 3: a punishment because he's such a communicator. 1058 00:51:27,239 --> 00:51:27,439 Speaker 2: Huh. 1059 00:51:27,719 --> 00:51:29,759 Speaker 3: But for me, I'm like, I'm quie. Are you okay? Yeah, 1060 00:51:29,760 --> 00:51:32,959 Speaker 3: I'm fine. Are you sure though, Like, no, I'm fine. Yes. 1061 00:51:33,120 --> 00:51:35,200 Speaker 2: But that keeps them clinging, And then there's a part 1062 00:51:35,239 --> 00:51:38,040 Speaker 2: of you that like it draws him closer, because if 1063 00:51:38,040 --> 00:51:39,920 Speaker 2: we're upset with someone, so a lot of times we're 1064 00:51:40,000 --> 00:51:43,120 Speaker 2: upset with someone, what that triggers inside of us is fear. 1065 00:51:43,239 --> 00:51:45,439 Speaker 2: Fear that maybe we're not good enough, fear that they're 1066 00:51:45,440 --> 00:51:46,960 Speaker 2: going to leave us. Even if we know they're not 1067 00:51:46,960 --> 00:51:49,120 Speaker 2: going to leave us, there's some sort of insecurity there, 1068 00:51:49,600 --> 00:51:53,200 Speaker 2: so we gain our power by doing that thing that 1069 00:51:53,320 --> 00:51:55,320 Speaker 2: makes them give us a lot of attention. 1070 00:51:55,640 --> 00:51:58,040 Speaker 1: Yeah, I guess it's also just this little, this feeling 1071 00:51:58,080 --> 00:51:59,440 Speaker 1: of Okay, I really want to be loved by I 1072 00:51:59,440 --> 00:52:00,279 Speaker 1: don't want to ask for it. 1073 00:52:00,560 --> 00:52:01,200 Speaker 2: Yeah. 1074 00:52:01,239 --> 00:52:03,239 Speaker 1: It's kind of that, isn't it. It's like, Okay, I'm 1075 00:52:03,280 --> 00:52:05,759 Speaker 1: leaving you all these hints. Yes, I want to be 1076 00:52:05,800 --> 00:52:07,759 Speaker 1: loved and I want you to love on me, but 1077 00:52:07,880 --> 00:52:09,399 Speaker 1: I don't want to tell you I want it because 1078 00:52:09,400 --> 00:52:11,520 Speaker 1: you should just know. And that's kind of like a 1079 00:52:11,560 --> 00:52:13,719 Speaker 1: little girl syndrome where it's just such a. 1080 00:52:13,640 --> 00:52:15,520 Speaker 2: Little girls syndrome because that's what girls do all the time. 1081 00:52:15,600 --> 00:52:18,359 Speaker 2: Let me test them, right, let me test them. 1082 00:52:18,600 --> 00:52:20,640 Speaker 3: Yeah, that cycle needs to stop. 1083 00:52:20,760 --> 00:52:24,840 Speaker 2: Follow me, But why are you following you? No? 1084 00:52:24,920 --> 00:52:27,000 Speaker 1: I want to be left alone. Five minutes later, why 1085 00:52:27,080 --> 00:52:32,560 Speaker 1: is he not coming? Stop playing games? People, stop playing games. 1086 00:52:33,400 --> 00:52:35,759 Speaker 1: You talk about the cool girl and good girl mentality. 1087 00:52:35,840 --> 00:52:40,360 Speaker 1: I absolutely love that because I think society and the 1088 00:52:40,400 --> 00:52:42,959 Speaker 1: way that we are wired is to be cool girl 1089 00:52:43,040 --> 00:52:43,560 Speaker 1: or good girl. 1090 00:52:43,680 --> 00:52:45,600 Speaker 3: Yeah, can you please explain the two? 1091 00:52:46,440 --> 00:52:48,880 Speaker 2: Yeah, so the cool girl is sort of like nothing 1092 00:52:48,960 --> 00:52:52,360 Speaker 2: bothers her and she can go out with the guys 1093 00:52:52,360 --> 00:52:54,359 Speaker 2: and drink a bunch of beers and be like one 1094 00:52:54,360 --> 00:52:56,000 Speaker 2: of the dudes, if you know, if she dates men 1095 00:52:56,160 --> 00:52:58,480 Speaker 2: or and then but in the bedroom, she's like, you know, 1096 00:52:59,280 --> 00:53:03,520 Speaker 2: like a porn star, you know, the cool girl. Nothing 1097 00:53:03,560 --> 00:53:06,400 Speaker 2: bothers her. Oh, it's all cool, Like she just goes 1098 00:53:06,400 --> 00:53:10,239 Speaker 2: with the flow. She doesn't wrestle any feathers. She's just 1099 00:53:10,400 --> 00:53:15,520 Speaker 2: like she does not create any problems because she doesn't 1100 00:53:15,560 --> 00:53:19,120 Speaker 2: do anything because she's cool, or like yeah, like I 1101 00:53:19,160 --> 00:53:23,279 Speaker 2: don't care or yeah, you know, like it's just that 1102 00:53:23,560 --> 00:53:26,239 Speaker 2: vibeing you try to be easygoing or you just try 1103 00:53:26,280 --> 00:53:29,600 Speaker 2: to be like yeah, like I don't care. Yeah, just 1104 00:53:29,600 --> 00:53:32,799 Speaker 2: just sort of like I don't care vibe that can 1105 00:53:32,920 --> 00:53:37,319 Speaker 2: attract people, especially immature people, right, just sort of like oh, 1106 00:53:37,480 --> 00:53:40,399 Speaker 2: like this is cool. She's cool, Like she doesn't tell 1107 00:53:40,400 --> 00:53:42,480 Speaker 2: me what she needs, there's no problems, I don't have 1108 00:53:42,520 --> 00:53:45,919 Speaker 2: to deal with anything. Everything with her can be easy, right. 1109 00:53:46,719 --> 00:53:48,680 Speaker 1: The desire to be the girl that's so easy that 1110 00:53:48,719 --> 00:53:50,399 Speaker 1: they can just hang out with whenever they want. 1111 00:53:50,920 --> 00:53:52,840 Speaker 2: Yeah, So what happens is that when you're playing the 1112 00:53:52,880 --> 00:53:56,200 Speaker 2: cool girl, you could be totally mistreated and be like no, no, 1113 00:53:56,360 --> 00:54:00,600 Speaker 2: it's cool, and that's great for someone who who loves 1114 00:54:00,600 --> 00:54:03,840 Speaker 2: to treat people poorly. And then the good girl is different. 1115 00:54:03,840 --> 00:54:06,920 Speaker 2: The good girl is do everything right by the books, 1116 00:54:07,120 --> 00:54:11,480 Speaker 2: and you don't assert yourself. You're just you are agreeable. 1117 00:54:11,880 --> 00:54:15,399 Speaker 2: And the thing is, agreeableness is a good trait. It's 1118 00:54:15,480 --> 00:54:17,719 Speaker 2: like there, but it's but we also have to have 1119 00:54:17,800 --> 00:54:20,640 Speaker 2: a limit because we have to bring a sense of 1120 00:54:20,760 --> 00:54:23,440 Speaker 2: self to a relationship. And if we're always being the 1121 00:54:23,440 --> 00:54:27,160 Speaker 2: good girl, then again like we're not, we feel lost 1122 00:54:27,200 --> 00:54:29,640 Speaker 2: inside ourselves, we feel lost inside our skin. We can 1123 00:54:29,719 --> 00:54:33,200 Speaker 2: be treated poorly, we don't get what we want. And 1124 00:54:33,239 --> 00:54:35,920 Speaker 2: so the antidote is not to become the bitch. The 1125 00:54:35,960 --> 00:54:39,000 Speaker 2: antidote is not to be you know whatever. It's not 1126 00:54:39,120 --> 00:54:41,080 Speaker 2: to be anyone. It's not to try to be anyone 1127 00:54:41,120 --> 00:54:43,800 Speaker 2: other than who you are. And so and that that 1128 00:54:44,239 --> 00:54:48,200 Speaker 2: can be easier said than done. The common thread between 1129 00:54:48,560 --> 00:54:52,799 Speaker 2: these two archetypes is I'm not going to tell the 1130 00:54:52,800 --> 00:54:56,719 Speaker 2: truth right to please you, to get you, to please you, 1131 00:54:56,880 --> 00:54:59,200 Speaker 2: to be enough to get you wrapped around my finger, 1132 00:54:59,360 --> 00:55:02,239 Speaker 2: to not leave me whatever it is. I am going 1133 00:55:02,280 --> 00:55:06,040 Speaker 2: to withhold my truth and I'm not going to have needs. 1134 00:55:06,080 --> 00:55:08,480 Speaker 2: And that does not work in a relationship. 1135 00:55:08,800 --> 00:55:11,319 Speaker 1: No, because and I Almoso think, coming back to what 1136 00:55:11,320 --> 00:55:13,359 Speaker 1: you said, one of the other truths were of you 1137 00:55:13,400 --> 00:55:15,560 Speaker 1: need to love yourself. It's like, if you're agreeable, you 1138 00:55:15,640 --> 00:55:19,320 Speaker 1: lose yourself in other people's decisions and other people's needs 1139 00:55:19,600 --> 00:55:22,239 Speaker 1: and other people's wants, so you actually lose complete sight 1140 00:55:22,280 --> 00:55:24,560 Speaker 1: of who you are. And then if you don't know 1141 00:55:24,600 --> 00:55:27,840 Speaker 1: who you are, you can't teach someone else to treat 1142 00:55:27,880 --> 00:55:29,480 Speaker 1: you how you want to be treated exactly. 1143 00:55:30,040 --> 00:55:33,160 Speaker 2: And to be clear, it's not that to be agreeable 1144 00:55:33,520 --> 00:55:37,680 Speaker 2: is bad. No, it's not being nice, not bad. It's 1145 00:55:37,760 --> 00:55:41,440 Speaker 2: really good. But it's about are you to what degree 1146 00:55:41,760 --> 00:55:45,640 Speaker 2: are you so agreeable that that you become a doormat 1147 00:55:45,680 --> 00:55:46,200 Speaker 2: in life? 1148 00:55:46,360 --> 00:55:46,560 Speaker 3: Yeah? 1149 00:55:46,560 --> 00:55:48,319 Speaker 1: I can think I can. I can relate to both 1150 00:55:48,320 --> 00:55:52,040 Speaker 1: of them in different ways. So I definitely thought when 1151 00:55:52,320 --> 00:55:54,080 Speaker 1: me and Ja got married, I would be like, I 1152 00:55:54,080 --> 00:55:56,600 Speaker 1: don't really have any dreams or aspirations. I'll do whatever 1153 00:55:56,640 --> 00:55:59,239 Speaker 1: you're doing. And he had no desire for me to 1154 00:55:59,239 --> 00:56:01,799 Speaker 1: be that way. In my mind, I thought that is 1155 00:56:01,840 --> 00:56:04,960 Speaker 1: what a good wife should be, like. You know, he's 1156 00:56:05,000 --> 00:56:09,440 Speaker 1: got ambitions, he's got his dreams. I should the wah 1157 00:56:09,480 --> 00:56:11,279 Speaker 1: right now, I don't have anything. I don't I don't 1158 00:56:11,280 --> 00:56:13,480 Speaker 1: think I want to do anything, so I should just 1159 00:56:13,520 --> 00:56:16,759 Speaker 1: follow in his footsteps. And what he wants is what 1160 00:56:16,800 --> 00:56:18,920 Speaker 1: I what I should do, not he's asking me to, 1161 00:56:19,000 --> 00:56:21,200 Speaker 1: but what I think I should be doing. And it 1162 00:56:21,280 --> 00:56:23,480 Speaker 1: was so interesting because the more I ended up following 1163 00:56:23,480 --> 00:56:25,480 Speaker 1: in his footsteps, the more miserable I got. And he 1164 00:56:25,600 --> 00:56:27,560 Speaker 1: kept noticing. He was like, you need I want you 1165 00:56:27,600 --> 00:56:29,920 Speaker 1: to do what you love doing, like you do what 1166 00:56:29,960 --> 00:56:32,880 Speaker 1: you feel happy doing. You being happy will make me happy, 1167 00:56:32,960 --> 00:56:35,680 Speaker 1: not you doing what I do that doesn't make me happy. 1168 00:56:36,200 --> 00:56:38,759 Speaker 1: And then I noticed that in little ways, like when 1169 00:56:38,880 --> 00:56:40,360 Speaker 1: we were trying to figure out what to eat, I 1170 00:56:40,400 --> 00:56:42,520 Speaker 1: would be like, no, you decide, not because I knew 1171 00:56:42,560 --> 00:56:45,160 Speaker 1: I wanted, but in my mind I would think, oh 1172 00:56:45,200 --> 00:56:47,720 Speaker 1: if I if I don't say, if I say something 1173 00:56:47,760 --> 00:56:51,720 Speaker 1: that he doesn't want, then he'll end up just choosing 1174 00:56:51,760 --> 00:56:53,240 Speaker 1: it because of me, and then he won't be happy 1175 00:56:53,239 --> 00:56:53,920 Speaker 1: and what he wants. 1176 00:56:54,200 --> 00:56:55,600 Speaker 2: So that two of it. But it's cute that two 1177 00:56:55,640 --> 00:56:58,200 Speaker 2: of you are just trying to make each other happy, and. 1178 00:56:57,960 --> 00:57:00,279 Speaker 1: I think, yes, but I think it's also it's also 1179 00:57:00,320 --> 00:57:02,960 Speaker 1: this lack of wanting to assert what you want, and 1180 00:57:03,000 --> 00:57:05,080 Speaker 1: sometimes it can come out in the smallest ways and 1181 00:57:05,120 --> 00:57:07,600 Speaker 1: sometimes in the bigger ways where and the other person 1182 00:57:07,640 --> 00:57:09,000 Speaker 1: is that what do you want? Like I always think 1183 00:57:09,040 --> 00:57:11,399 Speaker 1: of that notebook thing is like what do you want? 1184 00:57:11,960 --> 00:57:13,480 Speaker 3: It's like, yeah, what do you you? 1185 00:57:13,640 --> 00:57:16,680 Speaker 1: Even if you decide to compromise because of love, there's 1186 00:57:16,680 --> 00:57:19,880 Speaker 1: a difference between doing the compromising because of love and 1187 00:57:19,960 --> 00:57:22,640 Speaker 1: doing it because you're choosing to like oh if I 1188 00:57:22,680 --> 00:57:26,400 Speaker 1: say this, and maybe it's not the right thing, and therefore. 1189 00:57:26,360 --> 00:57:30,800 Speaker 2: And yes, and we're disappointing that person and it's all 1190 00:57:30,800 --> 00:57:32,800 Speaker 2: of that. Yeah, it's a huge awareness. 1191 00:57:32,920 --> 00:57:33,840 Speaker 3: Yeah, it really is. 1192 00:57:34,360 --> 00:57:37,880 Speaker 1: I wanted to head onto tooth six. Okay, you need 1193 00:57:37,920 --> 00:57:40,840 Speaker 1: to be your best self even after the honeymoon, and say, 1194 00:57:40,840 --> 00:57:42,440 Speaker 1: the fact is, even if you end up with the 1195 00:57:42,480 --> 00:57:44,960 Speaker 1: partner you've always dreamed of, you're going to have to 1196 00:57:45,000 --> 00:57:47,440 Speaker 1: face your demons. You're going to have to face yourself 1197 00:57:47,520 --> 00:57:52,320 Speaker 1: all the time. That is so, you know, I think 1198 00:57:52,360 --> 00:57:55,040 Speaker 1: when you end up getting married, a lot of people think, Okay, 1199 00:57:55,080 --> 00:57:57,480 Speaker 1: there we finally each other is done. Now now we 1200 00:57:57,520 --> 00:58:00,160 Speaker 1: can just you know, sail through. But it's almost like 1201 00:58:00,240 --> 00:58:01,320 Speaker 1: that's just the beginning. 1202 00:58:01,440 --> 00:58:03,040 Speaker 3: Yes, exactly, And. 1203 00:58:03,000 --> 00:58:06,160 Speaker 1: Working on yourself is working on your relationship. Do you 1204 00:58:06,200 --> 00:58:09,400 Speaker 1: have any recommendations of how each person, in their own 1205 00:58:09,440 --> 00:58:12,520 Speaker 1: way to be back to partners, can work on themselves, 1206 00:58:12,640 --> 00:58:16,200 Speaker 1: like what weekly, monthly things should they be doing, or 1207 00:58:16,200 --> 00:58:18,680 Speaker 1: reflections that they should be having about how they are as. 1208 00:58:18,600 --> 00:58:23,640 Speaker 2: Pon managing your stress, Yes, and noticing how your stress 1209 00:58:24,200 --> 00:58:27,000 Speaker 2: is coming out in the relationship, if it means that 1210 00:58:27,080 --> 00:58:30,960 Speaker 2: you withdraw, if it means that you get super irritable. 1211 00:58:31,720 --> 00:58:33,720 Speaker 2: I mean, we all have stress, but we're talking about 1212 00:58:33,720 --> 00:58:37,200 Speaker 2: the chronic stress going in and out. And you know, 1213 00:58:38,000 --> 00:58:44,760 Speaker 2: because we can't show up to a relationship consistently moody 1214 00:58:45,000 --> 00:58:47,760 Speaker 2: and irritable and in a bad mood and then expect 1215 00:58:47,800 --> 00:58:51,200 Speaker 2: just to be loved. We can have our bad days 1216 00:58:51,800 --> 00:58:56,600 Speaker 2: and that should be totally okay. Yeah, but that consistent 1217 00:58:56,680 --> 00:58:58,760 Speaker 2: bringing it to the relationship. So I think it's really 1218 00:58:58,800 --> 00:59:04,920 Speaker 2: about really monitoring one's behavior and stress and being mindful 1219 00:59:05,000 --> 00:59:08,520 Speaker 2: of the energy that they are consistently bringing to the relationship. 1220 00:59:08,600 --> 00:59:09,560 Speaker 3: Yes, that's so true. 1221 00:59:09,640 --> 00:59:11,960 Speaker 1: You always think, oh, but I'm just having a bad day. 1222 00:59:12,040 --> 00:59:13,600 Speaker 1: But as soon as you're having a bad day, you're 1223 00:59:13,640 --> 00:59:15,840 Speaker 1: then transferring that energy for the other person to also 1224 00:59:15,880 --> 00:59:18,240 Speaker 1: have a bad day. So it's how do I manage 1225 00:59:18,240 --> 00:59:21,120 Speaker 1: my stress and my emotions to not constantly be bringing 1226 00:59:21,120 --> 00:59:24,720 Speaker 1: that to energetically pull both of us down. Yes there 1227 00:59:24,800 --> 00:59:27,040 Speaker 1: is truth seven, Truth eight, and truth nine, but I 1228 00:59:27,040 --> 00:59:29,200 Speaker 1: think we're already heading over an hour. But I wanted 1229 00:59:29,240 --> 00:59:30,480 Speaker 1: to tell you guys what they are so you can 1230 00:59:30,520 --> 00:59:32,880 Speaker 1: read them. Truth seven is you cannot convince someone to 1231 00:59:32,920 --> 00:59:35,440 Speaker 1: love you, Tooth eight is no one is coming to 1232 00:59:35,440 --> 00:59:38,040 Speaker 1: save you. And truth nine is you must make peace 1233 00:59:38,120 --> 00:59:40,200 Speaker 1: with your parent. And I feel like it's good that 1234 00:59:40,240 --> 00:59:41,600 Speaker 1: we don't go into them because it gives them more 1235 00:59:41,640 --> 00:59:43,400 Speaker 1: to read. Yes, but I want to go onto just 1236 00:59:43,440 --> 00:59:45,440 Speaker 1: a few questions that I was asked by some of 1237 00:59:45,440 --> 00:59:48,200 Speaker 1: the audience. What is the right time frame to move 1238 00:59:48,240 --> 00:59:48,680 Speaker 1: in together? 1239 00:59:51,280 --> 00:59:57,479 Speaker 2: This is such an interesting question because there's a part 1240 00:59:57,520 --> 00:59:59,920 Speaker 2: of me that sees the value in a more tradition 1241 01:00:00,080 --> 01:00:04,240 Speaker 2: and all old fashioned framework, which is, you know, maybe 1242 01:00:04,240 --> 01:00:07,560 Speaker 2: you shouldn't move in until you actually know if you're 1243 01:00:07,560 --> 01:00:09,520 Speaker 2: going to get married or not. But I know that 1244 01:00:09,520 --> 01:00:12,920 Speaker 2: that's very old fashioned. I'll never forget when I moved 1245 01:00:12,920 --> 01:00:17,200 Speaker 2: in with my ex husband, and obviously that relationship didn't last, 1246 01:00:17,720 --> 01:00:20,200 Speaker 2: but I didn't give up my own apartment. Even though 1247 01:00:20,240 --> 01:00:23,160 Speaker 2: I moved in. I thought, you know what, I haven't 1248 01:00:23,200 --> 01:00:25,280 Speaker 2: known him I've only known him a year or no. 1249 01:00:25,360 --> 01:00:27,680 Speaker 2: I at that point, I only knew him like seven months, 1250 01:00:28,000 --> 01:00:29,720 Speaker 2: and we moved in quickly, and I thought, you know what, 1251 01:00:30,520 --> 01:00:32,960 Speaker 2: I'm not giving up my lease in New York. I'm not. 1252 01:00:33,520 --> 01:00:35,200 Speaker 2: We were in New York, but I'm like, I'm not 1253 01:00:35,240 --> 01:00:38,080 Speaker 2: giving up my lease. And I think I think that 1254 01:00:38,200 --> 01:00:40,439 Speaker 2: was very smart. That was very good advice my mother 1255 01:00:40,520 --> 01:00:44,000 Speaker 2: gave me, because you know, living together is a whole 1256 01:00:44,040 --> 01:00:47,720 Speaker 2: different ballgame, and so there's no one way to do 1257 01:00:47,760 --> 01:00:50,600 Speaker 2: a relationship. But I do tend to err on the 1258 01:00:50,640 --> 01:00:53,040 Speaker 2: side of like, can you just go a little bit 1259 01:00:53,080 --> 01:00:58,000 Speaker 2: slow and really get to know this person, because if 1260 01:00:58,000 --> 01:01:00,600 Speaker 2: it doesn't work out and you live together, oh, it 1261 01:01:00,880 --> 01:01:02,680 Speaker 2: just complicates the breakup. 1262 01:01:03,240 --> 01:01:05,960 Speaker 1: I also think there's the flip side, which is when 1263 01:01:06,000 --> 01:01:07,680 Speaker 1: if I don't live with him, then I won't know it. 1264 01:01:07,800 --> 01:01:09,360 Speaker 1: Like I think I need to live with him before 1265 01:01:09,400 --> 01:01:11,680 Speaker 1: we get married, so then I know whether it's gonna I. 1266 01:01:11,640 --> 01:01:14,040 Speaker 2: See that too. Yeah, and I see that as well. 1267 01:01:14,280 --> 01:01:14,760 Speaker 2: For sure. 1268 01:01:14,960 --> 01:01:16,880 Speaker 3: It's definitely to know. 1269 01:01:18,400 --> 01:01:21,120 Speaker 2: It's very it is a matter of chords. Just know 1270 01:01:21,920 --> 01:01:24,400 Speaker 2: again the messages. Just know when you live with someone 1271 01:01:24,480 --> 01:01:27,640 Speaker 2: and it doesn't work out, and this isn't to scare people, 1272 01:01:27,800 --> 01:01:31,360 Speaker 2: But you know, do you really want to immessure your 1273 01:01:31,400 --> 01:01:34,800 Speaker 2: life with someone who maybe you just haven't even known 1274 01:01:34,840 --> 01:01:35,160 Speaker 2: a year? 1275 01:01:35,320 --> 01:01:37,920 Speaker 3: Yes, so let's give you a year as a ball. 1276 01:01:38,120 --> 01:01:38,360 Speaker 2: Yeah. 1277 01:01:39,000 --> 01:01:41,240 Speaker 1: Yeah, I still think about and feel like I love 1278 01:01:41,320 --> 01:01:42,680 Speaker 1: someone I was with for ten years. 1279 01:01:42,680 --> 01:01:43,600 Speaker 3: How do I let him go? 1280 01:01:44,280 --> 01:01:47,160 Speaker 2: I would just say, it's really not about that person anymore. 1281 01:01:47,600 --> 01:01:51,000 Speaker 2: You're replaying a story in your head and you're living 1282 01:01:51,040 --> 01:01:54,320 Speaker 2: in the past, which makes me think that you're not 1283 01:01:54,480 --> 01:01:56,800 Speaker 2: living in the present. We need to start living in 1284 01:01:56,840 --> 01:01:59,720 Speaker 2: the present moment and start building a life for yourself 1285 01:01:59,800 --> 01:02:04,520 Speaker 2: that feels compelling to you, that you have a compelling 1286 01:02:04,640 --> 01:02:09,560 Speaker 2: reason to get out of bed to help others, whatever 1287 01:02:09,640 --> 01:02:13,640 Speaker 2: that is. Without fail, every person that I've ever spoken 1288 01:02:13,680 --> 01:02:16,240 Speaker 2: to or worked with who felt very much stuck in 1289 01:02:16,280 --> 01:02:18,880 Speaker 2: the past of a relationship that ended a long time ago, 1290 01:02:19,400 --> 01:02:28,400 Speaker 2: it's because they were procrastinating, if you will, resisting building 1291 01:02:28,440 --> 01:02:30,040 Speaker 2: their life in the present moment. 1292 01:02:30,280 --> 01:02:34,760 Speaker 1: I think sometimes it's also this feeling of this person 1293 01:02:34,920 --> 01:02:38,600 Speaker 1: changed me, or this person made me the happiest, Like 1294 01:02:38,640 --> 01:02:41,080 Speaker 1: that was the happiest I was in that era, and 1295 01:02:41,160 --> 01:02:44,000 Speaker 1: so and or this feeling of this person fixed me, 1296 01:02:44,160 --> 01:02:47,000 Speaker 1: or this person brought joy into my life and I 1297 01:02:47,040 --> 01:02:49,560 Speaker 1: haven't felt that since, And so I guess a part 1298 01:02:49,560 --> 01:02:51,840 Speaker 1: of it is also how do you then create that 1299 01:02:51,920 --> 01:02:52,960 Speaker 1: again for yourself. 1300 01:02:53,480 --> 01:02:56,800 Speaker 2: It's your relationship with yourself, it really, truly is. It 1301 01:02:57,000 --> 01:03:00,200 Speaker 2: just means that something needs to be explored and your 1302 01:03:00,280 --> 01:03:03,880 Speaker 2: relationship with you and your life. And absolutely, but a 1303 01:03:03,920 --> 01:03:06,760 Speaker 2: lot of times we were deluded. A lot of times. 1304 01:03:06,760 --> 01:03:08,959 Speaker 2: It's not a good really, it wasn't a great relationship. 1305 01:03:09,160 --> 01:03:13,280 Speaker 2: But we're replaying stuff and we're stuck in time, and 1306 01:03:14,320 --> 01:03:17,640 Speaker 2: you know, you want to slowly untether yourself and sometimes 1307 01:03:17,640 --> 01:03:20,680 Speaker 2: you know, a spouse dies and that's very hard, and 1308 01:03:20,800 --> 01:03:23,840 Speaker 2: it's a process to open yourself up to love again. 1309 01:03:24,040 --> 01:03:26,000 Speaker 1: I also think the more that you replace stuff in 1310 01:03:26,040 --> 01:03:28,920 Speaker 1: your mind, it's almost like it gets a little bit 1311 01:03:29,040 --> 01:03:32,080 Speaker 1: changed each time based on the narrative you want to 1312 01:03:32,080 --> 01:03:35,120 Speaker 1: create in your mind. So the story can, like let's 1313 01:03:35,120 --> 01:03:37,040 Speaker 1: say you've been thinking about it for ten years, the 1314 01:03:37,120 --> 01:03:41,280 Speaker 1: story slowly, slowly, slowly shifts towards to be favorable, towards 1315 01:03:41,360 --> 01:03:43,400 Speaker 1: what you want to happen or what you want to believe. 1316 01:03:43,680 --> 01:03:45,000 Speaker 1: So I know, like, even if you've been in a 1317 01:03:45,000 --> 01:03:49,160 Speaker 1: toxic relationship, you remember like the really beautiful times, and slowly, 1318 01:03:49,160 --> 01:03:51,960 Speaker 1: if you keep thinking of the beautiful times, you completely 1319 01:03:52,000 --> 01:03:54,960 Speaker 1: forget the times that he called you x racy, and 1320 01:03:55,000 --> 01:03:57,520 Speaker 1: you completely forgot about the time where he like, you know, 1321 01:03:57,680 --> 01:03:59,360 Speaker 1: locked you out of the house or whatever it was. 1322 01:04:00,120 --> 01:04:00,960 Speaker 3: You're like, oh, but that. 1323 01:04:00,960 --> 01:04:04,000 Speaker 1: One time he like hugged me and it just felt 1324 01:04:04,040 --> 01:04:06,360 Speaker 1: like the whole world fell away, and it's like yeah, 1325 01:04:06,360 --> 01:04:09,120 Speaker 1: but the next day he's putting a bit yes, yes, 1326 01:04:09,200 --> 01:04:10,560 Speaker 1: you know, like yes, but. 1327 01:04:10,560 --> 01:04:11,320 Speaker 3: You really do. 1328 01:04:11,440 --> 01:04:13,160 Speaker 1: And so I think the problem is the more you 1329 01:04:13,200 --> 01:04:16,960 Speaker 1: repeat thoughts in your mind or like stories or visuals 1330 01:04:17,000 --> 01:04:19,840 Speaker 1: of what that relationship was like, the further away you 1331 01:04:19,880 --> 01:04:22,600 Speaker 1: get from it, the more distorted it has the ability 1332 01:04:22,640 --> 01:04:22,880 Speaker 1: to be. 1333 01:04:23,160 --> 01:04:27,880 Speaker 2: Yes, that's very true, right, Yes, all memory we distort 1334 01:04:27,920 --> 01:04:29,640 Speaker 2: and delete all sorts of memories. 1335 01:04:29,760 --> 01:04:33,720 Speaker 1: Yeah, absolutely, So stop rebuilding whoever this is, Stop rebuilding 1336 01:04:33,720 --> 01:04:36,680 Speaker 1: your own love for yourself and creating new memories that 1337 01:04:36,720 --> 01:04:38,680 Speaker 1: make you feel just as happy. How can I know 1338 01:04:38,680 --> 01:04:41,760 Speaker 1: if I'm being empathetic or justifying something I shouldn't. 1339 01:04:41,880 --> 01:04:47,320 Speaker 2: It's all boils down to defining and being able to 1340 01:04:47,360 --> 01:04:52,680 Speaker 2: define the tolerable versus the intolerable, and that is very 1341 01:04:52,720 --> 01:04:56,320 Speaker 2: important going into a relationship, especially if you feel like 1342 01:04:56,400 --> 01:04:58,760 Speaker 2: you have not been treated well on the past. So 1343 01:04:58,840 --> 01:05:03,480 Speaker 2: knowing what's tolerable the intolerable and then also investigating your stories. 1344 01:05:03,480 --> 01:05:06,440 Speaker 2: Are you're saying like this? You know? Is this? A 1345 01:05:06,480 --> 01:05:07,680 Speaker 2: lot of times it'll be like, well, I don't like 1346 01:05:07,720 --> 01:05:10,360 Speaker 2: the way that I'm being treated, but we don't think about, oh, 1347 01:05:10,400 --> 01:05:13,760 Speaker 2: how we're actually treating the other person too. But if 1348 01:05:13,760 --> 01:05:16,360 Speaker 2: you have a history of tolerating less than you deserve 1349 01:05:16,400 --> 01:05:18,520 Speaker 2: and you don't realize if you're being empathetic one, you 1350 01:05:18,520 --> 01:05:21,640 Speaker 2: can ask someone who you really trust, who has an 1351 01:05:21,640 --> 01:05:25,160 Speaker 2: objective point of view, and then to really have someone 1352 01:05:25,200 --> 01:05:30,800 Speaker 2: help you get clear about what is intolerable in a relationship. Yeah, 1353 01:05:30,880 --> 01:05:32,280 Speaker 2: a lot of people don't know that. 1354 01:05:33,360 --> 01:05:34,560 Speaker 3: Yeah, know what your boundaries are? 1355 01:05:34,680 --> 01:05:36,440 Speaker 2: Yeah, you have to know what your boundaries are. 1356 01:05:36,480 --> 01:05:39,120 Speaker 3: Absolutely, thank you so much for this. 1357 01:05:39,200 --> 01:05:41,000 Speaker 1: I probably could ask you a thousand more questions, but 1358 01:05:41,000 --> 01:05:43,240 Speaker 1: I won't take up too much of your time. Thank 1359 01:05:43,280 --> 01:05:46,600 Speaker 1: you again, and everybody please go out and get it 1360 01:05:46,600 --> 01:05:49,360 Speaker 1: begins with you. It is such a beautiful book, and 1361 01:05:49,400 --> 01:05:51,280 Speaker 1: I guarantee you will come away from it learning so 1362 01:05:51,360 --> 01:05:52,360 Speaker 1: much more about yourself. 1363 01:05:53,080 --> 01:05:55,480 Speaker 3: Did thank you, Thank you. It's really beautiful. And I 1364 01:05:55,480 --> 01:05:56,480 Speaker 3: thank you so much. 1365 01:05:56,520 --> 01:06:00,000 Speaker 2: I appreciate you too, Thank you