Armchair Expert with Dax Shepard - Part 5: Monica & Jess Love Getting Called Out on Their Bullshit with Dr. Drew

Episode Date: March 11, 2020

In Part 5: Monica and Jess Love Getting Called Out on Their Bullshit with Dr. Drew, M and J invite the esteemed addiction medicine specialist and personality Dr. Drew Pinsky to the attic. Dr. Drew cut...s right to the chase asking Jess about his relationship to mania, asking Monica about family trauma and he calls both of them out on negating themselves. He talks about removing expectations and how our country puts pathological love on a pedestal. He discusses neurological wiring regarding attachment styles and asks about Monica’s sexual history. The two are assigned a very interesting challenge at the end of the episode. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hi, I'm Monica, aka Miniature Mouse. I love boys. But I don't have one. And in fact, I've never had one. I could probably count on two hands how many dates I've been on in my entire life, and I decided it's time to change that. decided, it's time to change that. Hi, I'm Jess, and I love boys too. And in the opposite way of Monica, I can't count on all the hands in America how many people I've had sex with. And yet, I still don't have a boyfriend. And I want one. And I'm Dax, and I love Monica and Jess in so many ways. They don't have partners. And that is a huge mystery to me because they're both incredibly attractive, so fun, so smart, and have so much to offer. So what we decided to do is examine these unhealthy patterns and bring in experts and outsiders to help critique us, advise us, guide us, pretty much call bullshit on us so that we can find the romantic companion that we're looking for. We started this thinking it was gonna be just cute,
Starting point is 00:01:05 little dating challenges that we would go on and talk about and laugh about. Turns out it is very hard to be vulnerable in real time in public. Yes, I'm so excited! You are so lying. We romanticize pathological love. One to 10, how much do you want love?
Starting point is 00:01:20 Go, you can't even get the sentence out. I would just eat around it. It's a little selfish. Why do I want something? And then why have I designed a defense? We must put the chum in the water for the sharks to come, buddy. Monica's like, so apparently I have to join Raya this week. He likes fucking.
Starting point is 00:01:36 You don't even have a kiss, a handheld, anything. Your frontal lobe is just in the way. Push-up bra, low-cut top. That's what you should be doing. I masturbate every night. Rob's too uncomfortable for this. Please enjoy part five. Monica and Jess love getting called out on their bullshit with Dr. Drew.
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Starting point is 00:02:05 designed to our body because one size does not fit all. Helix has a sleep quiz that takes two minutes to fill out. It was so easy to do. And they use the answers to match your body type and sleep preferences to the perfect mattress for you. With Helix, there is a specific mattress for each and everyone's unique taste. I sleep on my stomachy side and I want a mattress that's kind of medium. I don't like it when it's too firm or too soft. So when I took the quiz, I was matched to the Helix Sunset.
Starting point is 00:02:35 What about you, Jess? I was midnight. Pretty firm, side sleeper, and run a little warm. Nice. I love the mattress. Do you love it? I love it so much. Oh my gosh. And you've replaced like a 40. I love the mattress. Do you love it? I love it so much. Oh my gosh. And
Starting point is 00:02:45 you've replaced like a 40 year old mattress. So you really stepped it up with Helix. They have a 10 year warranty and you get to try out your mattress for a hundred nights risk-free. If you don't love your mattress, they pick it up from you and give you a refund so easy. So go check it out for yourself. Go to helixsleep.com slash monica. Take their two-minute sleep quiz and they'll match you to a mattress that will give you the best sleep of your life. Upgrade your sleep. Sleep's important. It's worth it. And right now, Helix is offering up to $200 off all mattress orders for our listeners at helixsleep.com slash monica. Monica don't like boys. Monica loves boys. Jess don't like, Jess don't like boys. He loves boys. Monica and Jess, you know they don't like boys. They love boys. Love Boys.
Starting point is 00:03:46 Hi, Jessica. Our fifth installment of Monica and Jess Love Boys. Jess, we're halfway done. I know. We're halfway done. How are you feeling? I'm feeling uncertain. I don't know where it's going, and it's not what I thought, but I like it.
Starting point is 00:04:06 Yeah. It's a lot deeper than I thought. Kind of a metaphor, right? Yeah. For relationships? Yeah, exactly. You guys are hysterical though. Already? Already. I'm enjoying this so much. Yay. So we feel very lucky to have our guest today. Dr. Drew P with us today snap snap snap to help us and let's get in let's go let's begin okay let's begin so i'm feeling like one of the things that makes this uncomfortable particularly for you jess is that it's you feel a little regressive like you you look like a little boy sometimes when you're talking about this. What's that all about? I've always been a little boy trapped in a 6'5", 230 body. Did something happen that sort of you never got through that left you a little boy? Wow. We're going there.
Starting point is 00:04:55 I love this. I'm so happy already. I'm coming for you now. I know, I know, I know. I've loved that about myself. I've loved that all my boyfriends have said I have this joy and this like- Childish energy. Yeah. I get all that, but I'm seeing something a little different, which is all asset, right? It's all good.
Starting point is 00:05:14 But I'm seeing that when you talk about whatever it is, what makes you anxious that we're getting into here, we don't even know what that is yet. Yeah. I see you get a little regressed and I'm wondering what that is. I'm wondering why that takes you back to that place. Is that when you first recognized you were gay and sort of had to hide that part of yourself and that part of yourself has been sort of unattended to for some reason? Maybe, but also this is public.
Starting point is 00:05:35 It's uncomfortable. Yeah, I feel comfortable in my own skin. I'm 43 and I also don't hate that I'm kind of like that. But you're confusing two things. Okay. One is the asset that you But you're confusing two things. Okay. One is the asset that you're childish and that's awesome. Yeah. But the other is whenever you start and I see you getting uncomfortable with what might happen in the podcast, I see something different.
Starting point is 00:05:55 Okay. Which is I see you sort of being a child. Like it takes you back in some way. Not I'm childlike and I have all these assets. It's like something's like there's a part of you that hasn't been attended to and it's present here in all this. Yeah. That's all I'm saying. I haven't had a lot of love and relationships.
Starting point is 00:06:13 All the way back to a little kid? Well, yeah, they got a divorce when I was four and my mom lived in California. My dad lived in Sweden. I was with him. What was year eight, nine, 10 like? That was all Sweden. I was, you know, my dad, he passed away a couple of weeks ago, actually. It's all right. It was, oh man, it was strict. You know, I was an only child and I was in Sweden and it was cold and I missed my mom in America and I didn't understand why they got a divorce.
Starting point is 00:06:43 Okay. Have you gotten into those feelings ever and like really looked at them? Yeah, I have. And I've talked to my mom and 20 years later, I found out my mom was addicted to alcohol when I was four. So that's why I got pulled away from her. It wasn't like a loss of love. So there was something, some really was going on. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:07:00 And was she around unpleasant people that you got exposed to? No. I think he got me out of there in time. Got it. And then that sobered her up and she became a police officer and she's been sober ever since, 25 years. You were an inspiration to somebody. Your own mom. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:07:17 How cool. Very cool. I love her dearly. Our relationship is amazing. And then at 11, I was old enough to say, I want to move to LA and I got to. Okay. That sort of is important. Yeah. It's a big deal. I don't know that it figures into this in an explicit way, what we're all talking about today, but our early relationships get recapitulated in our current stuff. And one way or another, the behaviors are manifestations of
Starting point is 00:07:43 those feeling states. Definitely. And particularly when there's unattended parts of ourself, that's sort of what I was getting at. The unattended parts of ourself will get attention one way or another, whether it's through drugs or sexual acting out or whatever or dysfunctional relationships or blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. That part will come through. Right. And our conscious self, our sort of prefrontal cortex self will be going like, what the hell's going on here? Why do I keep doing this? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:08:07 They seem like the right thing this time and I was so sure of it and blah, blah, blah, blah. And yet we don't look at the deeper patterns that we got going somewhere back in Sweden. Right. Or whatever. Yeah. So, and in your case, what was it? My case. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:08:22 I mean, I'm the opposite of Jess. I don't. I don't believe that. You may manifest opposite, but I don't think you're that different. Well, yeah. We're also learning that. Every time we come in here and we do these things, it's becoming more and more apparent that we, and I think maybe everyone, is the same thing. Shocking. the same thing. Shocking. Yes. Everyone's the same. Everyone holds like five insecurities that they're jumping from. And yeah, so you're right. We are very similar ultimately. But let's talk about the similarities. Well, it's interesting because so I grew up in Georgia. I was an Indian girl in Georgia. I felt like nobody was attracted to me. Was that true? I think yes. Okay, I shouldn't say nobody, but the people that I wanted to feel loved by, attracted. Do you think that was other non-Indian adolescents felt differently?
Starting point is 00:09:15 I could not get a boyfriend that I wanted. And all my friends did have that. So it did feel like something was different. So legitimately you had a different experience than your peers. I felt that. Okay. But of course, they were still going through, I'm sure, the same thing. Similar stuff.
Starting point is 00:09:30 Similar stuff. But you had an extra burden. Exactly. And as we sort of think about these things, reasonably so. Yeah. Right? I mean, in Georgia in the, when was this, 90s? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:09:40 Yeah. Yeah. Okay. Yes. And mine felt like it was so external. I couldn't hide behind anything. I had brown skin and I was walking around. Let me ask you something.
Starting point is 00:09:50 This is going to sound silly, but I think it's important. Did the kids understand the different ethnicities and races that were around them? Or were you sort of classified in one block and weren't differentiated from other dark-skinned kids? I'm sure some people grouped it into a block, but I think they did. So you had good friends that came, visited your family. Oh, yes. Understood what was going on.
Starting point is 00:10:12 Yes. Did you talk about it when you were that age? No, so I was like adamant about separating that and making that a non-existent part of my life. So I was trying to be as white. So back to my comment about unattended parts of self, here we are again, right? Exactly. Interesting.
Starting point is 00:10:28 I was like an over, and still am an over-assimilator. Like I can sort of chameleon my way through and be what they need, so I become sort of indispensable to them. In some ways, that's been a great asset for my life, and also it's a problem. Where's the problem? Well, I think it's a problem in that now as an adult, I realize that as a kid, I don't know who I really was. I was like always a person who was just shape-shifting a little bit. And so now I am that person. It's all made me into me now, but sometimes I wonder, like,
Starting point is 00:11:13 ooh, all that sort of repression. Does it make you sad? Yes. I think it definitely makes me sad to feel like a kid felt like they couldn't be them. Some random kid? Me. Me, I couldn't feel like a kid felt like they couldn't be them. Some random kid? Me. Me, I couldn't feel like, but any, if I heard that about another kid, I'm saying,
Starting point is 00:11:30 if I could separate and hear the story of a kid growing up who felt like they couldn't be them, which, by the way, another similarity, Jess is the same thing. He felt trapped in being gay, and he couldn't fully tap into fully him and i feel the same way so when did you realize you were gay i mean i had some five six seven year old stuff sexual stuff in sweden that was maybe a little bit more
Starting point is 00:12:00 than what more normal kids did with other kids boys who was initiating oh both i think maybe the boy that was a little older right so that's called child on child sexual abuse that lasted till i was 11 on and off with these nates same kids yeah and then one one of them and then um high school came around and i was pushing it all away and i became the best basketball player and the best singer and the best, you know, all these things. And I had a girlfriend and then I cheated on her with another girl and I was doing it and I was popular and I was funny. Then it was senior year and me and Bobby, I can say his real name because he's out now. We started touching each other and then that became sexual
Starting point is 00:12:46 is it another person in high school yeah high school and then went to college got really depressed gained 30 pounds because i wasn't popular anymore and i was scared and i was alone and i didn't know what this gay thing was and i was looking at bathroom walls seeing pictures of penises and phone numbers for phone sex and this was 1994 and i was just like losing my mind were we in college uc san diego i was there one year and then i came back then i was out without sex so then i was at the groundlings doing gay sketches i was a chubby i had zits around my mouth he loved to say that i had yellow teeth i just was a one-dimensional gay guy that would but would never act on it.
Starting point is 00:13:25 So would you have identified as asexual or something? No, I was gay and insecure, I guess. Then I got cut from the Groundlings at 25, and that was a life-changing moment for me where I thought not – the one thing I was good at, which was comedy and acting, I cried for a month, and then I got a personal trainer, and then I started doing steroids. Oh boy. What was the moment you turned and started pulling out of it? Cried for a month and then all
Starting point is 00:13:52 of a sudden you got a trainer and started getting better. Was there a moment of change? It was just, I have to look hot. I'm going to look gorgeous and I'm going to get a great body. And then I started having sex and it went for five years i was having sex with 28 30 guys a week so can you can you see how the the anorexia and then the hypersexuality flip side of the same coin the sex sexorexia dax definitely i adored him and i would i'd partied with him here and there but i I couldn't. He was volatious. What's the word? Voracious.
Starting point is 00:14:27 Voracious. Voracious. His appetite was just. Yeah. But I would just want his attention, his approval. So I would buy the cocaine and he would do it all and he would take it home with him. And I was like, okay, that's fine. And he would drink till six in the morning and I would throw up and not drink for two weeks.
Starting point is 00:14:43 And I always considered myself a half addict. Are you using now or you stopped using? I am a casual, not drugs, casual drinker. Okay. I would say more than casual. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I'm definitely a... I mean, you have the childhood trauma stuff, right? Various stripes. Like you have the mom... I have three or four aces. You do? She has one. And what's your one? Oh, mental illness. In your family? Mm-hmm. Can you talk about it?
Starting point is 00:15:11 Or can you tell me and cut it if you want to? Yeah, I'll tell you and cut it. Yes. They have a lot of family trauma. My mom has massive abandonment issues. So it's major mental illness and intergenerational trauma. Correct. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:15:23 Which gets rained down on us from previous generations. Yeah, exactly. Yeah, and that's rough. Yeah, and it doesn't feel real. Like this idea of this event that happened with my mother when she was younger, the idea that I've inherited that somehow feels silly. Well, you inherited the stuff she was carrying around. Yes, exactly.
Starting point is 00:15:47 And whatever that is, it gets rained down. Little kids are sponges. Yeah. And then that becomes a bit of a roadmap for our emotional landscape and how we fit with other people. And so we adjust accordingly or we act accordingly. Let's put it that way. We don't adjust typically.
Starting point is 00:16:04 We just sort of find fit uh and you know sex can be what does it do for you sex i think it's it's become transactional for me and since i've been in love and had three boyfriends i definitely choose that and being monogamous over it all okay but i definitely still dabble i still dabble in it at all i still dabble in some cocaine i still dabble in some happy hours i still dabble. I still dabble in it at all. I still dabble in some cocaine. I still dabble in some happy hours. I still dabble in doing Molly twice a year. So I am a dabbler, and I definitely still a lot of casual sex, not like in my early 30s by any means. So what was it doing? What was it filling back in the earlier days? It was something that I didn't experience at 16 and 15, which was feeling wanted and hot and like. Desirable.
Starting point is 00:16:47 Desirable. And loved. Yeah. Or something like that. Some form of love. Yeah, something that you wanted to feel, that people wanted you. Yeah, and I feel like I was 10 or 15 years behind my straight counterparts that were doing this so much earlier. So you were sort of owed it.
Starting point is 00:17:04 Yeah, I took it too yeah yeah well and and i think there's a sense of see i'm like you yes where yeah because all your friends have been having sex and and casual sex and fucking girls and then walking away and and i think part of your interest in that probably stems from like, yeah, I'm the same. I'm just like you. There's a much more powerful drive than that. Okay, let's hear it. I'm just like you.
Starting point is 00:17:31 You'd be over with in a couple of weeks. This is a drive. This is like heroin. And I brought it up last week too when I did fall in love and it was that feeling, which was high completely, it was not sustainable. It was a year we lasted. That breakup, I cried for a year. I had never felt that pain in my life.
Starting point is 00:17:54 And it was like I was losing a part of myself. And do you see how having sex was a way of avoiding that? Yes. Filling it without doing that? Yes. But I will say when I'm down, when my dad passed or when I broke up with Greg, when he broke up with me, I should say, I do not turn to those things. I don't turn to sex to feel better.
Starting point is 00:18:15 For me, I turn to sex and drugs and alcohol when I'm feeling good and exciting. It is one thing that I do if I book a job. If something good happens in my life, I want to make it better. And how old are you now? 43. And is there any bipolar disorder in your family? Not that I know of. I joke that I'm maniche, but I've never felt bipolar or low lows.
Starting point is 00:18:39 You've described multiple low lows to me already. Yeah. That's true. Crying for a year and crying. lolos to me already yeah that's true crying for a year and crying but that's funny because i would never place jess in that category but it doesn't mean it's not true yeah say to yourself what he's described yeah i know you're right write that down and like oh that would fit in this i am exaggerating i think as a comedian like crying for i year. I do. I exaggerate all the time. Crying for a year was more like a thing that I've said over and over again. But you did. You were in a bad place.
Starting point is 00:19:10 It was bad. But I was going to work and I was hanging out with my family. And I mean, it wasn't like institutionalized. We are supported by Tushy. Tushy is an amazing, albeit unconventional, but amazing gift for anyone in your life. I brought it to a white elephant party a couple years ago. You sure did. And it was a hot ticket item. Everyone wanted it, as they should, because everyone's got an ass. And everyone deserves the gift of tushy. It's important to take care of.
Starting point is 00:19:47 We can't just neglect. If you got poop on a part of your body, would you wipe it off with dry paper? No. This is a great question, actually. No, you wouldn't. You'd use water. Yes.
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Starting point is 00:20:17 and sprays your butt completely clean with fresh water. It's called Tushy and it's the best thing you can do for your mind, your body, and your butt. It's hooked up to fresh water. It's called Tushy and it's the best thing you can do for your mind, your body, and your butt. It's hooked up to fresh water. It's not toilet water, which I think a lot of people get a little confused about and nervous about, but it's fresh water. Also, it's only $79. That is a steal. Go to hellotushy.com slash monica. Get 10% off your order. Get clean. We are supported by stamps.com. Do you wish you were at the post office right now? Nope. Me either. Nobody does. But running a business or keeping up with your schedule takes a lot and sometimes there just is not enough hours in the day. You have more important things to do. So that's why you need stamps.com. Anything you can do at the post
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Starting point is 00:22:04 That's Stamps.com go to stamps.com, click on the microphone at the top of the homepage, and type in Monica. That's stamps.com, enter Monica. Have you ever thought about hurting yourself? Have you? No. No. Good. But I did. I went into this really intense state of anxiety, maybe PTSD. I kept feeling like it's going to happen to me. Not like I want to or that I had any, but I was like, I'm going to look down and I will have done that to myself.
Starting point is 00:22:41 And it really, it was a real spiral. How old were you? I must have been 20-ish, 19 20 it was in college and it was really really intense for a fair amount of time that anxiety and panicky did you have panic yeah it manifested really physically like i would have all these weird sensory things where if there was a sound that was happening that I couldn't identify. It would trigger. Yes. I had that too.
Starting point is 00:23:10 It's crazy. It was just telling somebody else's and they also experienced it, which I felt so obvious. I was like, no one knows what this is. This is so bizarre. No, because panic has a behavioral component to it so it can get triggered. And once it goes, like watch out. Yes. Ugh.
Starting point is 00:23:24 Yeah, it was rough. And I had one more bout of that very specific type of anxiety when I was, I guess, probably like five years ago. And I mean, this is such a weird thing to say, but I think possibly it got triggered after Robin Williams killed himself. So when I put, that makes sense, right? Yeah. It's kind of goofy, but it makes sense. Yeah. And that makes me think also you must have certain OCD qualities with what goes on with
Starting point is 00:23:56 you too. Yeah. I mean, it's funny because Dax and I talk about this all the time on our show because he has had these crazy OCD tics and stuff. And I don't think, I mean, I'm a very obsessive person. It goes into a lot of this boy stuff. You guys are so funny. You both talked exactly the same way. You both go, I don't have any of that. I don't have any OCD. What I am is totally obsessive. And you go, I've cried for a year. I have no depressive symptoms.
Starting point is 00:24:25 It's true. This is where you are the same. You're right. I really truly believe that you're, I took the Landmark Forum 20 years ago and they talk about your story. I've said this fucking story so many times. I am getting sick of it.
Starting point is 00:24:38 Good. And I want to throw it away and I do want to change my narrative, but it's so, I don't know what part is me and what part is not me. And it's all bullshit. But that is the job of emotional health, which is integration. That's why I was pointing out the little boy stuff, which by the way, is gone right now when I see you. I'm very, it's kind of like an antenna. I pick up crazy shit. The little boy stuff that I was talking about to begin with, I just don't see right now. So you can integrate, you can be present and you can do that and own it and be part of you and integrate as a
Starting point is 00:25:10 whole. And I think that's what you're doing right now, right? I mean, that's the reality of what your life is. Let's be fair. Now, are you doing that? Jess, it seems like he's sort of integrating and regulating and getting a whole concept of self. And he's fragment sometimes, and he still enjoys his manias and whatever. But he's sort of like integrating. And I would bet, as a manifestation of that, you're better to have healthier relationships. I want to. Are you able to?
Starting point is 00:25:38 I haven't had a relationship in four years, and this show is kind of like, what are we doing? All of our friends are married and have kids in our group pretty much well i'm gonna guess that the reason that is a guess is that you've made not great choices in the past and they've been traumatic when they leave or when they rupture you know and what people do is they flip to the other side then go well then forget it you have to be and i don't know if you have this too yet, Monica, but Jess, you have to be careful.
Starting point is 00:26:09 I mean, you're a love and sex addict, essentially. I mean, as a way of thinking about it. I mean, it's not, you're not, you don't need treatment. I'm not saying, but the way of thinking about this is that. And when you have those kinds of things going
Starting point is 00:26:19 on, you're a perfect instrument for trouble. In other words, your attractions every time are going to end up in a place that is familiar. So what you have to do is either A, get a lot of treatment, get therapy, or B, stop looking for lightning bolts and look for butterflies. Does that make sense? 100%.
Starting point is 00:26:39 You have to kind of find people that are more interesting, nourishing, a little bit boring compared to what you're used to, especially when you like those manias. And that will be a real relationship then. That will be somebody who's available for actual intimacy. Do you feel you have difficulty with intimacy still? I'm sure you did. Because the sexual compulsion is sort of a substitute for that. Right. But with the three boyfriends, I felt very healthy. Was it a real intimacy where they were taking care of you? They valued your relationships? As soon as they valued your feelings.
Starting point is 00:27:06 They've cared for you and you cared for them. Yeah, especially one was more of a friendship and we're still friends. And I thought that was really healthy. I don't want that for you either because that will never last. Right. You know what I mean? That's you trying to do what's good. Be careful with that.
Starting point is 00:27:21 Right. We'll have occasional lightning bolts. You know what I mean? Right, right. Which was the next one was maybe too many lightning bolts. Right, right, right. I do think I have to find the balance of. Okay, all right.
Starting point is 00:27:31 But your relationship with Greg, you've said, was operating on a level that was not, as you just said it a second ago, sustainable. It was not. Too friendship. Too friendship. No, no, this is the other one that he cried about. He looked like Tarzan.
Starting point is 00:27:47 He was a 10. And it was like, look at this person that likes me. He's so handsome. Okay, well, that's your thing. Do you have any of that? Oh, well, I have a ton of wanting unattainable people. What do they look like? The physical is important for you too.
Starting point is 00:28:01 But actually, I mean, like, you know, I've had like really big crushes on teachers. So our challenge last week for me was to write down the list of the people that I had massive fantasies over. Because fantasy is a huge thing for me. Write down a list and then like see what the through line is. What did you learn? All of them, unattainable across the board. Some physically unattainables, like Matt Damon is on that list, you know.
Starting point is 00:28:30 But also something about them is better than me. The way they look, their knowledge, you know, teacher-wise, they have something I don't have and I want. And I feel like maybe I could get through proximity to them. But the counter to that is, you know, these fantasies exist are super, super heightened. They kind of, you know, they OCD, I guess. They take control in a lot of ways over me.
Starting point is 00:28:57 And then some of them have come a little close to getting real. And as soon as that starts to become a little real, I am completely uninterested. I think if you're interested in me, no thanks. So it's Groucho Marx. Never want to be a member of a club that would have me as a member. Exactly.
Starting point is 00:29:17 That's what Harry, our therapist last week, said the same thing. And it's definitely that. But the fantasy is a bit OCD. That's a way of avoiding. Yeah, it is OCD. Yeah. Period. Wow, I'm learning.
Starting point is 00:29:29 But I've never had OCD. Yeah, exactly. I've only had OCD. But I've never had OCD. I just have the O of the CD. This is Dax's fault, by the way, because I've said, I think I'm a little bit of that
Starting point is 00:29:41 and he's like, you're not. Anxiety, panic, and OCD go together. Okay. You don't get to have anxiety and panic without some OCD. Oh, interesting. It's just the way it is. Anyone that has less stuff than Dax doesn't have any. I know.
Starting point is 00:29:53 I know. It's insane. You're right. I love it. I know. But the avoidance of intimacy is really what's at the core here, isn't it? Yeah. So think about it.
Starting point is 00:30:01 I go from unattainable to rejecting. Yeah, exactly. Have you had relationships not really i mean i've had a cut i've had small like a couple months i dated this person and but no no i will no are you virgin no but but close ish close ish i mean it's But close-ish. Close-ish. I mean, it's hard to say close because, no, I'm not. This is what makes this podcast so great, the way you guys talk. It's scary. It's scary to answer that, you know, or to even have to really think about it. How old are you now?
Starting point is 00:30:39 32. I'm trying to listen to my own feelings about what you're saying. Yeah. And I'm having a peculiar reaction that I don't quite understand, which is I want to be sad about that. Okay. But I am not. Okay. What is that?
Starting point is 00:31:01 I feel that sometimes. For her? Yeah. This whole thing, I almost am more invested in her because I have an avalanche that I have to stop. She has to start an avalanche. Yeah, yeah. I don't want her to have an avalanche. I don't want an avalanche. I know you like them.
Starting point is 00:31:15 I know you dig that. They're so fun. But I should be feeling sad because you're telling me a sad story about an incredible person who should be engaged on a deeper level. And that makes me sad to think about. Yet when I sit here and talk to you, I don't feel sad. That's very interesting. It is interesting, and I don't understand it. Well, is it success and status and attractiveness and that her life other than this one portion is amazing? Maybe something like that. How much do you miss all this? I really do wish I had it, but I also, and maybe this is what you're picking up on,
Starting point is 00:32:02 I have a happy full life and i think i walk around knowing that when she said that i had another thought that it must again what i experienced sort of has meaning to me yeah is kind of what was somewhere hiding in my head which was oh when you find when you're ready for this it will come and you don't want what Jess has. No. No. You want something else and that something else will sort of present itself. I have to only disagree because I'm with her a ton and I think there are many opportunities in her life that she could be going out of her comfort zone and she chooses not to.
Starting point is 00:32:39 I completely agree. I'm certain that's true and it's going to make it harder and longer for the thing to come to be. So kind of my challenge for you would be to go out and just, and this word's going to scare you, but date. Just spend time with people breaking bread. And what are we doing right now? This would be a date if we had a meal in front of us, right? We'd be talking about our lives and our thing and our person. And it could be anybody. It could be a married person like me who's not going to go anywhere. But you've got to start spending time communing with people and see what grows out of that. Yeah. I mean, a couple. So my first challenge was to go out on two dates in one week. Was it interesting that everybody wants you to date?
Starting point is 00:33:19 Yeah. I mean, clearly, that is the purpose. It's like, how do I start doing that in a way where I feel open to an actual connection? Don't worry about it. Do you like spending time with people? Yeah. Go spend time with people. All right.
Starting point is 00:33:37 Very simple. Don't be so worried about it. She has a ton of amazing friends though. New people. Have them introduce you to people or hang with people. She's been going to dating like, is this the one? Is this the one? Is this the one?
Starting point is 00:33:49 Leave that behind. I just think you need to spend time with people doing interesting things. Yeah. But then don't you think there'll be an expectation on their end? Yeah. Jesus, the OCD comes kicking in right away. But that's real. That's their problem because that's kind of what I was expecting from you
Starting point is 00:34:08 was more codependency, which is that's what that is. What's going to happen to the other person? Are they going to expect something from me? It's their problem. And by the way, that's part of the reason to start dating is to practice boundaries and compassion. Right. Right?
Starting point is 00:34:22 Oh, look at you closing off to me. I do not like that. Yeah. No, it's true. Don't worry about what the meaning of it is or where it's going. Just do that. But don't you think I'm doing that? Do you think it, I mean.
Starting point is 00:34:37 Yeah, but you're doing that with your friends. And you're doing that with a podcast. People I know. Yes, new people. Expand your horizons. But shouldn't there be a clause that there should be a potential possibility for romance slash attraction? There will be eventually, right?
Starting point is 00:34:49 That just happens, right? And somebody will go, God, I know this great guy. He'd be great for you. Do you have any studies or percentages as far as steroids and looks and age between straight and gay men as far as- I know gay men are doing it a lot, the steroids. And my patients that are stimulant addicted that do steroids die.
Starting point is 00:35:10 That's the one thing I will tell you. They die at an uncanny rate. And I don't know why. They don't die of the same things. I don't know what the steroids do to them or the manias. Steroids make you manic. Right. You felt it, right?
Starting point is 00:35:23 Yeah. You know what that is. I do. And it's another stimulant let's face it you think the percentages of straight men and gay men in addiction are there more gay men than yes i guess i'd say no i don't think there's more i'll tell you if you have trauma you're more likely to addiction trauma is the is the inciting ingredient a lot of gay men that are acting out sexually have trauma in their background. Definitely. And so that probably correlates.
Starting point is 00:35:47 Right. So if you're out there with people that are hypersexual that are doing stimulants, you're going to find trauma. Right. So that's that group. Yeah. Can we talk a little bit about sex and love addiction? Because I think maybe some of our, whoever's listening to this might be interested in the
Starting point is 00:36:03 details of what that means. Because it sounds so like, you know, this esoteric sex and love addiction. Yeah. But it's real. Yeah. Real sex addiction is, I mean, people hurt themselves. Yeah. They get physically harmed.
Starting point is 00:36:16 Yeah. And they still go on. They still keep going. And when you see real sex addiction, it's like, whoa. Yeah. And they're not happy. But I will tell you that what all the sex and love addicts say to me when the door is closed is, I just want to have a relationship.
Starting point is 00:36:28 That's what they all say. Yeah, well, that's what Jess says. Yeah. I do. And they just seem like they can't get that intimacy, can't get that closeness the same way from quiet intimacy. You know, the drive, the desire to be wanted and loved and the intensity. They're addicted to that intensity.
Starting point is 00:36:46 But what about half of that? What if like the person that has two or three aces and not seven or eight? What are the people that don't have consequences? What about, is there such a thing as- Is there a gradation? Yeah. Yeah, yeah, yeah. You know, listen, I told you that I don't want you to have no lightning bolts, right?
Starting point is 00:37:02 Right. I told you you've got to have something because I know that's important to you. And I know that's going to be a sustaining, nourishing part of your relationship. So I'm not saying expect to have quiet intimacy and that's going to be your life and sex every couple of weeks. And that's not you. You need to be realistic about that too. But you have to be able to tolerate the balance. Well, and fortunately in the Western society, in this country in particular, we romanticize, we amplify pathological love.
Starting point is 00:37:30 Yeah. What is our paradigm story of love in the Western culture? Romeo and Juliet. Romeo and Juliet. Yep. Which was a love addiction that ended in a death
Starting point is 00:37:41 of both parties. Right. Exactly. The love addiction was so pathological that there was suicide and murder involved in it. That's how fucked up that was. And we look at that as a glorious story of romance.
Starting point is 00:37:54 No, ladies and gentlemen, that was a catastrophe. These kids were living in a fantasy. They were ridiculously intense to the point of almost illusion. Yeah. And then because of the depression associated with the rupture, suicide. Yeah. Come on now. I know.
Starting point is 00:38:14 Come on now. I know we do. We like hold that on a pedestal of romance or something. I still want it. I want it still. So right. And so correct. And you should have a version of it, just not a big, you know.
Starting point is 00:38:27 Yeah. Well, it's funny because I've been thinking about, so we had Alex Katahakis. Oh, you had Alex in here? Yes. Oh, she's the best. Oh, my God. We loved her. So she knows exactly.
Starting point is 00:38:37 She deals in this day in, day out. She's my go-to when I have questions. Yes. Oh, well, so we had her on armchair, but we should also have her on here perhaps. Oh, yes. Because she talked a bit on our show about love addiction. And ever since she's been on, I've been sort of just like spinning that in my head a little bit because of course. Not obsessionally, of course. No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, not in an OCD way, just in an obsessive way. Well, I always felt like there's no way i can be a sex or love addict
Starting point is 00:39:06 obviously i can't be a sex addict i'm not having sex i can't be a love addict so also like not really been in love but when she's sitting here and she's sort of explaining especially the level of fantasy that goes on i was like huh i wonder and i maybe asked, and I'll ask you, can you be a love addict who's not in love? Not really. Okay. Okay, that's good to know. You can kind of be. What we're sort of dancing around generally are intimacy disorders.
Starting point is 00:39:37 Right. Things that avoid genuine intimacy. Yeah. And fantasy does that. Yeah. And again, these terms like love addiction, sex addiction, they're not diagnoses. They're not in the DSM-5. They're constructs.
Starting point is 00:39:49 They're ways of helping us talk about things and understand things. There's a great book out there called Overcoming Love Addiction by Pia Melody. I recommend you read it. Okay. It's about certain kinds of relationships with your primary caretakers, how if they're overly enmeshed or overly rejecting and how that kind of gets acted out where people go through these love avoidance, love addiction cycles. You may be in some of that. Yeah. Where you start, you know, you get in and then you start getting out and then you act out sexually and then you get in again. And it's these sort of cycles people get
Starting point is 00:40:21 into. You should read it too. You'd get a lot out of it. The first 100 pages or so, you'd get a ton out of it. Great. Yeah. Interesting. Overcoming love addiction. But let me also share with you, so I've been coming in here, what, a couple years from now? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:40:34 Much more of you present now than when I first came in here, where you were very quiet and very withdrawn and very, like you said, your chameleon self. You were inserting yourself into this as the dutiful caretaker. And I have concerns that you would overdo that as anything got going, the caretaking, the codependency, the being what other people need you to be, and less of this, which is what should be present all the time. Yeah. Should be present all the time.
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Starting point is 00:42:51 but sometimes we don't really know where to go or how to get it, or it can feel overwhelming. But BetterHelp is available for you. BetterHelp offers licensed counselors who specialize in issues including depression and anxiety, as well as complicated relationships, family relationships, sleeping, grief, stress, trauma, anger. You can really see your therapist about anything. Sometimes I even go and I feel like I'm doing great. Like there's nothing going on. And that's when I really get into a deep dive of something that felt really under the surface that I didn't even know. It's so helpful. You can connect privately with a counselor through text, chat, phone, and video
Starting point is 00:43:24 calls and get help on your own time at your own pace at an affordable rate. Monica and Jess Love Boys listeners will get 10% off their first month with the discount code MONICA. That's betterhelp.com slash MONICA. Guys, why not get help? For real. Betterhelp.com slash MONICA. you know this is a gross thing to say out loud but i think status is sort of a factor like you know when you first came in and it's armchair experts dax's show technically and yeah i get it there's
Starting point is 00:44:00 a reality component to it that you have a certain job to do and you do it. I get that. Yes, but also I'm probably more in the mode of I will shapeshift if it's somebody who I think has high status or is above me. It's the same thing, like better than me. Because if they were to see me, they'd be rejecting. Correct. That's bullshit, right? Yeah, maybe. and then it's a weird cycle we're like then okay if they see me and then they like me but they're higher status and actually they're not higher status because you take their status down at that point exactly
Starting point is 00:44:34 exactly i knock them off the pedestal there's no way you can stop that huh well i would love to i mean that's the goal that is why do i feel like this is coming from your mom? Was she a very status-y kind of person? No. No. She's definitely not. But she's not a... Maybe status isn't the right word. I don't think...
Starting point is 00:44:54 I did not grow up in a household where there was a lot of nurturing or a depiction of love, really. They stayed together. They were practical together. They're still together. And I mean. Were they in a arranged marriage? No.
Starting point is 00:45:08 Are you ever threatened with that? They're really good about that. They really are fine with me doing whatever I want. Me? Yeah. Can you imagine an arranged marriage for you? I'm out. I'm out.
Starting point is 00:45:21 I feel like you'd take it more in stride than me. An arranged marriage? I could kind of see if it was somebody, like if we did some vetting and it was like, look at this person. Look at his body. I don't think the arranged part would scare him. If it was his arrangement, it was everything he wanted. Well, that's true. That's true.
Starting point is 00:45:42 Maybe I should arrange something for him as a challenge. But yeah, so no, I mean, no romance. And so I also think there's like that whole idea was sort of put on a pedestal. Idea of? Love. Because I was getting it from movies. I was getting it from Romeo and Juliet. I was getting it from these heightened places.
Starting point is 00:46:03 I wasn't getting it from real life. Friends. Goodwill hunting. I was getting it from friends and goodwill hunting. I was. Fantasy, yeah. Yeah. Wow, I just put those two things together, I think.
Starting point is 00:46:16 Because, yeah, I never saw that day to day and saw what it meant to have highs and lows within that that were real. Do you write yeah have you had some success doing that yeah yeah i write everything i think about it i mean jane eyre jane austen they all the same story yeah worse yeah same kind of story you write for other people though more than yourself yeah but i i used to write a ton i have like i had tons of spec scripts and really all that stuff fell out because of time. Yeah, I love that. I love
Starting point is 00:46:45 making my own worlds. As a kid, I wrote, me and my best friend, we would just write stories all day long and create worlds where I had control of the narrative and there was so much love and this and that. It's again so interesting. Do you write? Well, not really. Except all day, all night.
Starting point is 00:47:04 It's like, I don't know what that is. You both do it. I don't either. Your starting point is, no, no, no, no, no, no. Not me. And then there it is. Because I also feel like we both believe that we're very self-aware. Right.
Starting point is 00:47:18 Like we both sort of take that in as like, we're self-aware people. You're self-aware in different ways. Tell us. I'll grant you that. Well, your frontal lobe is just in the way. Yeah. You've just got this powerful intellect that's just analyzing and OCDing everything and analyzing. That's a great asset, but it's in the way of connecting to your emotional landscape.
Starting point is 00:47:40 Yeah. You're in. You live in the emotional landscape. That's the difference. And you're aware of it, but it's a little fragmented. And you move in and out of these fragments, and I don't think you're aware when you move in and out of them. That's the non-self-aware part. And for you, Monica said, you're disconnected from those emotional landscapes, and your intellect kicks in and tries to explain everything then. Does that make sense? Wow, this is good. Yeah, I know. yeah good yeah i know it's the truth yeah i do i lean in mine yeah you're in it you're living it you're
Starting point is 00:48:12 yeah that and that's what makes you guys very interesting by the way that's that again although this whole business you both denying everything at the front and then coming out with this massive no i'm not six five i'm not six five i'm5". I'm 6'5". I'm 6'5", you guys. 6'4 and 12 inches. And I don't know what that is. I mean, you both have it. I don't know if it's minimization or denial or what that first move always is.
Starting point is 00:48:35 Also, weirdly ties into the assimilation that we've both been programmed for our whole lives, which is like, I'm good at saying I'm not this. I'm this. But it's all one thing. Is it ignore me? Ignore these real things about me? Maybe.
Starting point is 00:48:53 Nothing to see here. Yes. Nothing to see here, literally. And you too. Right. No gay. No Indian. Yes.
Starting point is 00:48:58 No, no. Don't see that. Don't see that. So everything starts with nothing here. I think so. And then lots of it. And then you end up accumulating way more than you should. Yeah, I think that's part of the soup.
Starting point is 00:49:12 I love soup. A hearty soup. Can you explain something to me? I've never asked any gay friends of mine. A lot of gay men I know have a little bit of a recoil from the idea of female genitalia. Do you have that? I think that's a joke no they they like they they joke about it but they really feel it i think and i'm always
Starting point is 00:49:31 wondering what that was i don't have that don't have that i think it's a sassy queenie kind of gay thing they're like pussy gross like it's like a yeah yeah it's kind of a it's a thing i know i know that it's also a base level joke which is not really that funny it's not fair to women and not funny yeah so i don't partake in that and i also don't have that whole thing that everyone It's a thing. I know that. It's also a base level joke, which is not really that funny. It's not fair to women. And not funny. So I don't partake in that. And I also don't have that whole thing that everyone's gay thing that a lot of gay guys have. Oh, he's gay.
Starting point is 00:49:53 He's gay. I'm like, no, everyone is straight to me until there are dicks in my mouth. Definitely. I have a question for you. So being Dax's friend for 20 years, he has changed so much in 20 years. What are some things that you said 20 years, he has changed so much in 20 years. What are some things that you said 20 years ago that you've changed your opinion on? Is there anything that you've loosened the reins on? I mean, the basic patterns are still the same. And remember, I work in the extremes, right? And so I see extreme stuff. In the world of trauma,
Starting point is 00:50:21 that's sort of where I've always been and that's never changed and drug addicts are always the same consistent very consistent very that's one of the things i find so fascinating it's so predictable and and people are so they're so interesting when they're when their motivations are broken and then so great when they get back i've loosened up on myself a bunch. When I was starting out, I was really felt very, like I was doing something super important. Got it. What I was doing was really important, and I took it very seriously.
Starting point is 00:50:56 Right. And if anybody tried to get me to not be serious, it was extremely uncomfortable for me. And so personally, I'm not as serious as I used to be. I think this, I think I probably would have been more rigid for lack of a better word in the idea that there was a developmental process that ended in something, a maturity of some type. And that anything that wasn't fully integrated and fully brought into
Starting point is 00:51:24 something, I would call a hole, that there's something wrong. Now, my feeling is, no, whatever your pieces are, wherever they are, you want to be this piece and that piece, and that's fine. It's all good. You don't have to go anywhere for anybody or be anything for anybody, but you have to be whole for yourself, whatever that is. When you were doing Loveline, were there any that really stood out to you that you still remember? People always ask that question. So we sort of arbitrarily picked a couple of them because every night there was always
Starting point is 00:51:57 something. So one was a couple of Vietnamese orphans that got put, they're actually not sisters, but they call themselves sisters because they were put in the same orphanage on the streets of Saigon and then were adopted to this country. And then one of them called us and found out that this one was like in Orange County and the other one was in Denver, as I recall, that the one in Denver was starting to admit to her she was being sexually
Starting point is 00:52:22 abused and we helped her get, you helped her get out of that situation. On the more usual love-line-y side, the other story we would tell was about a guy named Jim. I think his name was Jim. Anyway, he had a dog named Brutus. I don't remember the dog's name. Uh-oh. Oh, no. Oh, yeah.
Starting point is 00:52:39 Oh, boy. And Brutus was having sex with this gentleman. Oh, my goodness. And he called and he said, you guys are these open-minded. This is a forum where people are supposed to be able to share their ideas. How come people are so freaked out when they find out about my consensual, loving, intimate relationship? We go, what's going on with this relationship? Who is it with?
Starting point is 00:52:58 Well, it's my Akita Kali mix, Brutus. And not only was he having sex with her, Brutus was having sex with him. He had trained him to do that. Oh, my goodness. And it was, here's the really interesting part of the story, is he taught me, he told me a lot about zoophilia, and he had these, and the internet was getting going then, so
Starting point is 00:53:14 he had little communities. In any event, he, I sort of did some research on it and found that these were often a lot of severe deprivation in early childhood, and so there's no attachment, and so they attach to animals or people sort of equally unattached. But the interesting thing happened is our staff freaked out while this guy was on the phone. This man needs to be burned alive. He's a horrible human being. I can't tolerate this. And Adam finally went, wait a minute. He goes, yeah, there's nothing
Starting point is 00:53:40 okay about this, but just hang on for a second. Every night on this show, we hear about children being abused sexually and physically. You guys don't react to that. And yet this guy, you want him killed. And by the way, this is Adam's word. He goes, how bad is it for Brutus? Would you rather be Brutus or would you rather be pulling a sled in the Iditarod? Which would you rather be? Why do you get mad at the guys doing the Iditarod?
Starting point is 00:54:03 Oh, my God. But yeah, so then that boils down to attachment for him. That's where that was coming from. Attachment screwed up, yeah. Wow, God. Yeah, which is a whole other interesting landscape, right? Attachment. And there's different types, right?
Starting point is 00:54:17 Everybody has an attachment style. Yeah. Avoidant, secure, disorganized. And what's the fourth? I always forget the fourth one. It's avoidant. It like kind of like avoidance because i deal with with disorganized all the time that's all i'm dealing with what is the third fourth one dismissive dismissive fearful right which is wait what then what's the give me another one secure anxious dismissive fearful so when you uh are born we have
Starting point is 00:54:42 a sort of a system in our brains that allows us to get close to somebody and attach them. And the primary attachment figure is mom. And mom brings all of her emotional machinery to bear on that relationship. And that relationship usually has four general categories to it. One of the ways they sort of evoke attachment styles is through challenging the child with removing her from the mom or mom having what's called a still face at reuniting. Because it turns out our face is where we express a lot of our emotional exchange, right? That we have signals that are going on all the time between us. And we don't even aware of 90% of them. the time between us. And we don't even aware of 90% of them. And essentially at its core,
Starting point is 00:55:31 this is the way it's constructed, is child has an emotion, mom tries to attune and understand that emotion. And then on her face automatically is a reflection of that emotion. And it's a pretend state. It's not the actual mom's state. It's the mom's appreciation of the child's internal state. Think about it. I hurt my finger. You hurt your finger. It's the mom's appreciation of the child's internal state. Think about it. I hurt my finger. You hurt your finger. It's sort of exaggerated. It's kind of an exaggeration, but it happens at the corners of the mouth and in the very tiny muscles in the eye. You have to watch it. And when you see it happen, it's like, woo. And the people aren't aware they're doing it even as they do it. And then the mom attunes and creates a co-created regulatory environment for the child's emotions in which the emotions are exchanged, identified, and sent back as something that the child can understand.
Starting point is 00:56:11 And that's the attachment sort of landscape. And when the child's in that attuned, connected environment, they could either be just completely chaotic and abandoning and neglectful, or it can be an environment where the mom catches the emotions and becomes rejecting. Like, I can't stand this anymore. I got to have a drink. Codependency kicks in there then. And so there's lots of qualities. And there are plenty of children that it's normal for the child after a separation from the mom to the child wanting to get back and sort of go to the mom for regulation and attunement and reassurance. fearful and avoidance move away from the mom because the mom is a source of distress. If the mom brings a lot of traumatic emotional machinery in with her.
Starting point is 00:56:51 And an insecure, chaotic connection is the mom's with trauma and mental illness and just can't, they can't get a stable environment for the child emotionally at all because it's, it's threatening to the mom. All these emotions are stirred up in her. Yeah. Does that make sense?
Starting point is 00:57:05 Am I explaining that adequately? Yeah. That's amazing. I would urge reading Unattachment. And the trick of it has anchored in neurobiology because then you know it's real. Yeah. So yes, from day one, what you're getting from your mom
Starting point is 00:57:20 is then what you replicate. Well, that's the beginning of your, what we might call love maps, right? These sort of, what we fit with. And that sort of becomes our fittedness that we start looking with out in the world, is that landscape. Now, of course, the other parent also can serve another map and it can help repair some of what the other parent is doing. But the primary parent is the primary source of this attachment. And then you had a major rupture and abandonment after that, right? Yeah. And so what happens, what's the longest relationship you've had, by the way?
Starting point is 00:57:56 A year. All 15 months. Yeah. And so when you have that rupture, just the potential of the rupture makes going back to that environment of closeness challenging, threatening. Because, oh my God, that trauma's going to come again. That's what it felt like when other people were like, it's just a breakup,
Starting point is 00:58:13 and it did not feel like that for me. Right, it's revoking all that old horrible stuff. And so a therapy, one of the goals of therapy, there's various ways to approach it, but one way to do it is to form a secure attachment. That's one of the things that people do in therapy, there's various ways to approach it, but one way to do it is to form a secure attachment.
Starting point is 00:58:26 That's one of the things that people do in therapy, and that takes work. You have to rework all that neuronal machinery, and the therapist has to kind of navigate all that and find his or her way into a secure connection with you. And then sustain that for a period of time so you can then reflect that back into your choices out in the world. Wow. Interesting. Yeah. I mean, I guess it's impossible if you have no example of a secure attachment to then go make one in the world. It's not even an example. You're wired the way you're wired. Yeah. And you have to, if you're going to change that wiring, it takes some work. Crazy thing about trauma is, and this is where some of the sex and love addiction comes in, is that when you've had a trauma in childhood, you'll be attracted forevermore intensely
Starting point is 00:59:13 to people in places that recreate that trauma. And we have no idea why that is. Freud used to call it traumatic reenactment. We call them now traumatic reenactments. And no one knows why the hell that happens. It's some wiring thing. So that's why earlier I was saying you're a perfect instrument. If you're attracted to somebody with lightning bolts, that's going to be an abandoning person.
Starting point is 00:59:34 I guarantee it. And it could be intense and cool and very gratifying for a while. They will leave you. But yeah. Yeah, that's, yeah. Yeah. And again, history of substance use. It's pretty chaotic stuff. You know, that's whatever yeah. Yeah. And again, history of substance use. It's pretty chaotic stuff.
Starting point is 00:59:46 Yeah. You know, that's, whatever was going on with her was intense. I love that your mom's a cop, Nigel. Yeah, yeah. Yeah, 25 years, LAPD. Oh my God. That's awesome. But taking your kid away from someone doesn't always sober someone up, and I'm grateful that it did.
Starting point is 01:00:00 Well, generally the things that get through to addicts are loss of freedom, loss of life, loss of children. But we all know people that overdose millions of times and have been in prison millions of times. But losing children does tend to get through to women. Did she talk about her traumas? That kind of explosion of addiction early on is usually sexual abuse to women. So you can kind of look for that in her background. Mom, come on in. She's here.
Starting point is 01:00:27 And one of the crazy things about moms who are sexually abused is it tends to happen to their kids too. The one thing they don't want to is again,
Starting point is 01:00:33 they get attracted to circumstances and things that are familiar with that trauma. They gravitate back to environments where the kids get sexually abused.
Starting point is 01:00:40 It's so, we're all cliches too. It's not a cliche. All of us though, all of us, we're just walking around and we're just doing the same thing over and over again. Oh, we're all cliches. It's not a cliche. All of us, though. All of us, we're just walking around. We're just doing the same thing over and over again. Oh, we do that. We all do that.
Starting point is 01:00:50 We're just in these patterns and these cycles. Yes, yes. Particularly in our interpersonal lives. Particularly there. Yeah. Why? Attachment, trauma, you know, unsolved, unresolved stuff, wiring that's left behind. That's why we have psychotherapy.
Starting point is 01:01:06 It just seems like the knowledge should break the pattern and it does not. That's your crazy frontal lobe that gets in the way here. It should. How has it been working so far? Well, I can recognize it's not working, but I'm saying it should. It should work. This was Plato's construct, right? That the emotions were the horses and the intellect was driving the chariot.
Starting point is 01:01:27 Yeah. Yeah, it doesn't really work like that. No. The motivational systems, the maps that we have in our relating with others, our feelings about our identity and our place in society and success and all these things have deep feeling states associated with them. Yeah. I was a lot like you. And I was very disconnected from feelings. It took a lot of therapy to connect it up.
Starting point is 01:01:52 Yeah. And now I'm really, really, really grateful to be connected. I still have to pay attention. I have to really, like, really pay attention to kind of – because they're distant. They're not always in the – right in front of me. Because I'm such a freaking codependent, I feel other people's more acutely. Totally. That is so me.
Starting point is 01:02:09 We've had this situation. There's been some situations where somebody else's emotion is so strong and I feel it so attunely. Right. And it takes over. Right. And so I've used the word codependency many times now talking about you. You have. That's what that is. But that is an asset, right? Takes over. Right. And so I've used the word codependency many times now talking about you.
Starting point is 01:02:25 You have. That's what that is. But that is an asset, right? To be that available and attuned and empathic that you actually feel people's feelings. The problem with the codependent is that you will co-mingle your feelings with the other person's. Yeah. So you'll actually have your own pain mobilized by the other person's emotions. And then you'll want to fix it in the other person because it's your pain that you're
Starting point is 01:02:46 finding so intolerable. What happens to us, Monica and me, is the feelings come in. It's not fully a contagion. We just get them. And then they commingle with ours. And then to separate them is very difficult. It looks like it's the other person's. And we've got to make them stop because it's really in us that we want to make stop.
Starting point is 01:03:04 Yeah. like it's the other persons and we got to make them stop because it's really in us that we want to make stop yeah i've had a lot of discussions with you were and i have to tread lightly because it's hard to tell someone that that's not your shit it's yeah do you get that it's really hard for us she believes what she's saying and i understand that and i also said it's not your issue yeah it's always not your issue It's none of our business sometimes. Oh, but it's... It's like they didn't ask you to rescue them. They don't want to be rescued.
Starting point is 01:03:31 It's none of your goddamn business. And it's a boundary, right? That's how you have to learn about boundaries. But you've got to separate your feelings out to be able to really understand that. Yeah. And it's funny. I've been out of therapy for a long time now,
Starting point is 01:03:44 and I'm a little more commingley than I was when I was fresh out of therapy. Yeah. And it's funny, I've been out of therapy for a long time now and I still, I'm a little more commingly than I was when I was fresh out of therapy. Yeah. Yeah, it's a, I mean, it's a muscle.
Starting point is 01:03:52 It is. It absolutely is. And I think men are less skilled with this. You know, our corpus callosum is smaller, right? So we don't connect
Starting point is 01:04:00 to our right brain so much. And the right brain is where a lot of this stuff is going on in this interpersonal landscape. It's where the baby communicates with mom before they have language. And so all that attachment stuff,
Starting point is 01:04:11 guys like Alan Shore, I believe, are embedded in the right brain. So it's right brain, right brain communication that sets up this attunement landscape of attachment. Interesting. And the males are not as, our coat was close, I'm not as big, so we're not as embedded in that right side.
Starting point is 01:04:26 Even though you're really good, Jess is excellently, I think you are embedded in your right side, right? You feel stuff. Oh, yeah. Yeah, you're in. I don't gender it per se myself. Right. I just think of it in neurobiological terms and genetic terms and stuff. Right.
Starting point is 01:04:43 But I wouldn't expressly gender it. Yeah. terms and genetic terms and stuff right but i wouldn't expressly gender it yeah and there are plenty of men that have lots of what you have and there are plenty of women that have less of it you know and so it's it's always a spectrum so what brain am i you're living in your emotional brain which is what side right side got it yeah and she's frontal side she's she's got both frontal lobes in control firing off that prefrontal cortex is all in the way yeah i mean my therapist has said it every time i've been there basically she's like yeah i know you get it you know i know you understand it logically but you're not understanding
Starting point is 01:05:19 it you're not experiencing it emotionally okay so as far as our weekly challenge, because we're meeting again on- A week from Thursday. A week from tomorrow, yeah. So this challenge has to be completed by then. I want to arrange marriage you. I want to arrange a first and first. Well, that's interesting. That would be very interesting.
Starting point is 01:05:40 I mean, we could both do it to each other, I suppose. Why don't you? Just to see. No, no, I like it because I want you just to learn to hang with anybody. Yeah. And not be worried about it. Just learn to have a date with a human being and get to know them. Wait a minute.
Starting point is 01:05:54 We have to set each other up with a person? Doesn't have to be sexual or anything to hang out with? Specifically, I don't want it to be sexual, but if it, whatever. Right. But I'd want it to be sexual, but if it whatever, but I'd rather it not be. I'd rather it be an encounter. A sitting and exchanging with another human being. And I have to get hers
Starting point is 01:06:14 and she has to get mine? Yeah. And we can't know this person? No. Like you can't know mine? Right. And I can't know yours? Right. And then just the goal is to enjoy being present with other humans. A new person. Ultimately, what I'm looking for is I want you to see yourself through a new pair of
Starting point is 01:06:32 glasses. Wow. I want you to sit with people that you wouldn't normally be attracted to because the attraction is all that old trauma stuff, right? And so this is a way of taking that out and putting you with somebody who somebody thinks is suitable for you. They're not being, you know. So I'm confused. Is this a date or is this platonic? This is what Dr. Duzman's been saying the whole time is to not parcel that out. Oh, because then we have expectations?
Starting point is 01:06:57 Yeah. It can be a date. It can be sex. What I'm looking for is you just spending time seeing yourself through a new pair of glasses by just being with another person. And that can be, if you really do it and really pay attention during the exchange, you'd be surprised what that can do for people. People just hanging out with people they wouldn't normally hang with will like find sobriety. They'll suddenly have a moment of clarity in things that they see themselves differently. Because again you seek out each of you all of us are the fittedness the old patterns and if you step out of that and try something a little different and do it on a regular basis especially which i'm especially now just pointing at um you know who knows i'm terrified of to pick. For her? Yeah. I have no problem going to do anywhere with anyone.
Starting point is 01:07:48 I want to. But I'm going to pick someone who is an example of someone I want you to be looking at. Yeah. Yeah. But I hope you'd want it to be somebody that could care about him. Exactly. Exactly. And what are you going to do?
Starting point is 01:08:04 I don't know. Because my thing was pick someone that is intellectually stimulating. But she does that all the time. I kind of want to pick someone that, I don't know. I don't know. I'm scared. I think this is great. It is.
Starting point is 01:08:17 A new pair of glasses, ladies and gentlemen. Yeah, I like that. It's an extremely powerful experience. Wow. I like that. Thank you. Oh, thank you so much. This was fantastic.
Starting point is 01:08:27 It's interesting when you're in something, didn't time just zoom? Yeah. Oh, yeah. Yeah, when you're in an emotional space, time contracts and expands. Yeah. Yeah, for sure. Well, this was lovely. Thank you so much.
Starting point is 01:08:39 Thank you. Thank you, guys. Thank you.

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