Armchair Expert with Dax Shepard - Synced: M+R or L+D

Episode Date: August 2, 2023

In this episode of Synced, Monica and Liz evaluate their wedding-to-funeral ratio, Monica talks about humiliating her dad and Dax joins the two, which instigates potty humor and a significant battle. ...They discuss listener questions on how to date as a single parent and how to fall out of “love” with a celebrity.  Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Hi Liz Hi Who is here? Like a very short Monica Monica It was me I'm small Liz
Starting point is 00:00:22 You are small This is really exciting We have a lot to talk about today. Oh, we do. Before we even get into our questions. The main event. Welcome to Los Angeles. Thank you. You live here now. It's hard for you to even say. Let's talk about it. Oh, God. I mean, I... Are you going to cry? Yeah. I've cried all week. And I was just telling Rob, I had last episode of Friends vibes of the empty apartment, but there were no friends because I banned anyone from saying goodbye to me. Oh, you did. You hate goodbyes?
Starting point is 00:00:55 I'm really bad at goodbyes. Even like leaving a party or ending a conversation. I have a lot of issue with just being like, this is it. See you. Bye. And got really emotional. It was like 10 years in New York. So there's like a numerical effect, which I think is always interesting. That's science. It is. It's like a completion. Because in Punjabi weddings, my friend Komal told me, and I started to cry when she told me, obviously, she was like, no, because you know how funerals in Western cultures, everyone's in black. Everyone's like very sad. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:01:27 I always have wanted to create a cool funeral playlist, like a very happy one where I want it to be a celebration. And I feel like in Indian weddings and particularly Punjabi culture, it's more of a celebration than like a mourning. I mean, there is mourning, but there's also a celebration. Wait, for the funerals or the weddings? The funerals. Okay, because you said weddings a couple times. Did I say weddings? Yeah. I'm out of it. I think you're conflating the two because it is the death of your solo self. Weddings are funerals. Yeah, that's how I view, that's a Puritan slip. So basically, Como was like, it's a completion.
Starting point is 00:01:58 A funeral is like, you've completed this life and now you're moving on to, and then I started to cry because I was like, oh, I'm complete. What a wonderful time that I've had. I moved to this country where I didn't know anybody, met people who became really like family. And then I have family here too. New chapter. New chapter, new characters, new season, new writers. I love all of that. Now I'm realizing it might be Hindu weddings and not Punjabi.
Starting point is 00:02:22 So if it's Hindu, we'll take it out. No, we're keeping, you don't understand how this show's going to work, okay? I'm keeping everything. All the mistakes because that's life. All my racism. Okay, got it. Great. It's a show where it's just the mistakes. It's just the stuff we want to take out. Yeah. And we leave it. And we leave it in.
Starting point is 00:02:39 Isn't that life? Yeah, it is. Okay, but Punjabis, I think, are Hindu. Hindu is the religion. Punjabi is a area, Punjab. Right, right. So the people from there are Punjabi, but they're probably Hindu or some might be Christian. I don't know. Okay. My secret knowledge does come out sometimes. I can't really hide it. But this actually is very relevant because recently I had to go to a memorial. My friend's mother passed and I realized before, do I wear black? I think I'm supposed to wear black. Are there speeches? Is there food? And I realized
Starting point is 00:03:21 I've never been to one of these. No way. Yes. And I've only been to one, knock on wood, funeral in my life. What? Yeah. And no memorials. And it is not part of Indian culture at all. I mean, people in my family have passed, but we're not doing that. And then I wondered, what do we even do? I mean, there's no burials. Everyone's cremated. My dad's mother is dead, but I don't think he like went there to do something for a memorial. Were you there around when she passed? I was little. Yeah, but she lived in India. Okay. So you didn't go to the wedding. Oh my God. What am I? No, but can I? Okay. Oh my what am i no but can i okay can i okay oh my god no but can i tell you so i have the reverse experience where i can count on one hand the amount of weddings
Starting point is 00:04:11 i've been to not a lot funerals funerals no weddings i've been to like maybe six weddings in my life and before the age of 14 i've been to 10 funals. I have been to so many funerals. I know how to funeral. I could be your funeral wing person. And I think it's a mix of things. When I was really young, my sister's best friend died of chicken pox, like suddenly. Yeah. Very, very sudden death. And my sister was in the fifth grade and I was in the second grade. And she was also in fifth grade? Yes. Oh, my. And we would take the bus every day together.
Starting point is 00:04:48 What? And she just, yeah, got chicken pox. Is that because of Canada's health care? It's not about Canada. Don't turn it into a Canadian thing. I'm sorry, but I've just never. No, now kids, they don't even get chicken pox anymore. Yeah, there's a vaccine.
Starting point is 00:05:01 Yes. But at the time, again, we were encouraged, you get it and then you don't. Of course, we all got it. Yes. But there are some rare cases that have complications, and it's one of those crazy rare. Oh, that's awful. And I also think that my parents just have, like, it's like a habit of going to funerals. Like, I remember being at funerals of the parent of someone, and we just would go. We just were like, yeah, that's really sad for this person. You, like, funeral crashed? You, like like looked in the newspaper to see what's not it. That's not it. No, no, no. We didn't take it that far, but it's like such a common experience and something everyone can understand, like losing someone. And it's so devastating that like I
Starting point is 00:05:39 would kind of go into a random funeral and just be there to honor that life. And if it's helpful, I don't know. Okay. It's really sweet. It's probably not. It's very sweet. But I'm just wondering if I was throwing a funeral. Throwing? Is that the term? Are there funeral throwers? Probably. If I was hosting a funeral. Hosting? I don't know what you say. I don't think that's the word. Okay. I think it's just having. Okay. I don't think it's like a positive, uplifting. Well, we could make it that. You're right. If I was hosting a funeral party. I like that. And I sent out the invites and then people came. And I looked and I thought, who's that? I don't remember inviting that person. And then I went up and I said, oh, hi, I'm Monica.
Starting point is 00:06:25 I'm hosting this. How did you know Rob? Rob's dead in this. Okay, Rob is, it's Rob's funeral. It'd be kind of weird that I'm hosting Rob's funeral, but I am good at hosting. Yeah. Well, my family was all killed in an accident. So that's why you're hosting.
Starting point is 00:06:40 Oh my God, that's really sad. See, would you go to that funeral even if you didn't know who they were? I feel like I would go. No, I think that's disrespectful to just like pop in where everyone knows each other and they know the life of Rob and Rob's family. I don't even like, I don't want to, I don't like this. I'm knocking on wood again. Okay, my friend Barry, okay?
Starting point is 00:07:02 I'm hosting for my friend Barry. Let's role play, okay? Okay. I'm hosting for my friend Barry. Let's role play. Okay. Hi, I'm Monica. I'm hosting this funeral. Welcome. Do you like the decorations? I want to take back the premise of this because it wouldn't be like, oh, there's a funeral.
Starting point is 00:07:16 Let's check it out. But again, I have been to funerals of people I've never met, but it was like the sibling or the parent of someone that I knew. And in that case, yeah, I didn't know Grandma Teresa. Yes. But there is a person there that you are supporting. I wouldn't actively seek out funerals. But I also think that I could enjoy the experience of mourning life, even if I didn't know who the person was.
Starting point is 00:07:42 Because life is life. That's really beautiful. It's so early to be talking about funeral crashing. That's crazy. Okay, so you've barely been to any weddings. I've been to so many weddings. Well, no one gets married in Quebec. We just buy condos and have kids.
Starting point is 00:08:00 So you know a lot of people who are not married but with children. So many. My best friend Kat's parents have been together for 35 years. It's her boyfriend. My parents got married at the courthouse. It's just not a big wedding culture. Right. And so I don't have an aversion to weddings, but I feel weird about it sometimes. It feels like a weird performance. Wow. I love them. I feel very life affirmed at weddings. Life is beautiful. Love is beautiful. Really, a lot of it is seeing the two families. Yes. I like that part. And not
Starting point is 00:08:35 just the families, but it's everyone in this person's life is here. Everyone in this person's life is here. And all of these people have contributed to getting this person here. Weddings are just so happy. Oh, you're mixed messies. You love funerals and you hate weddings. Okay, it's like I find airports more romantic than a wedding. People saying goodbye at the airport, like you'll see. Oh, love actually.
Starting point is 00:08:59 And that's like a quote. You'll see so much more sincere I love yous at an airport terminal than in a church. Yeah. And funerals to me are like such a deep expression of love. There's no performance. It's the opposite. You don't want to be there. You wish you weren't doing this. And so there's something very like real and raw about it. There is. You're right. And beautiful. It makes sense. You enjoy crying much more than me. Do you enjoy sadness? I think I have an issue. I think I enjoy nostalgia too much. I need to like work on that.
Starting point is 00:09:30 Well, no. Unless it's causing you harm. Are you a nostalgic person? I used to be and in this sort of melancholy longing space for a time I'm never going to get back. And also it kind of manifested in weird ways. Like I had this period where I was obsessed with taking pictures. I think it was because like we have to save this memory and capture it. And it just, then I like wasn't having fun at the parties. And it was a fear of losing that moment. I think so. Yeah. It's like, oh, I got to capture this or And it just, then I like wasn't having fun at the parties. And it was a fear of losing
Starting point is 00:10:05 that moment. I think so. Yeah. It's like, oh, I got to capture this or else it will be gone forever. Where do you think that's from? That fear of loss? Yeah. That's so old. Which again is ironic because as we just said. So much wood knocking. Yeah. Get used to it. I have had very little loss. I've been extremely lucky. Well, no. You had 10 funerals by the time you- I know, but no one actually in my- I mean, my grandmother, grandparents.
Starting point is 00:10:35 But I've been very lucky too. Yeah. Healthy family, friends. I know. And so almost because of that, perhaps, I had no connection to that feeling. And it is so scary. The idea of it is so astronomical. I feel like I would never overcome it.
Starting point is 00:10:55 So I live with a lot of fear. Also, I just live with a lot of fear because my parents have so much fear. And we talked about this the other day. When I was home most recently, so you know, the airport. I got to the airport and I just shook my head and patted myself on the back. Said, you've come so far. In the fear department specifically. Because they are so scared of everything. And I think a lot of people would say that about me, which is
Starting point is 00:11:26 why I felt like now I've just been gaslit by all these people because they have no idea what I've accomplished from where I came from. Okay, this weird thing happened. I might have to cut it because it's like embarrassing by proxy. Okay. We went to this restaurant, my family, the four of us, in like a kind of hip-ish part of Atlanta, Decatur. Shout out. And it's a bit far from my house. And then Atlanta traffic's awful. So it took us over an hour to get there. I could feel my dad getting anxious because of the traffic. I was like, it's fine. They know we're coming. They know we're going to be a little late. It's not a big deal.
Starting point is 00:12:06 And then he's like, I knew we shouldn't have come at this time. I'm like, what else are we doing? What else? And then I get in that tone, that like mean kid tone. And then we can't really find parking because, of course, it's a hip area. So there's going to not be a parking lot and you have to park on the street. And my dad have to park on the street. And my dad. It starts to park.
Starting point is 00:12:28 It was a huge spot. So he could have parallel parked, but also he could just go right in. And so he was like, should I parallel park? And we were like, no. My brother and I said, no, just go in. And we kind of, again, have that sort of mean voice. And so I think he kind of panicked and he went in so fast at a weird angle it was just like scraping the rim of his car well he
Starting point is 00:12:58 just wouldn't stop he was just continuing to move forward my brother and I are just staring at each other with mouths agape. Yeah. And I scream, dad, stop. Like he's a child. And I said, let me do it. And I made everyone get out of the car and I parked it. I know. I've done that for someone before.
Starting point is 00:13:20 But for a parent? No. I feel really guilty. Don't. This is the first time I've said it out loud. People are bad at parallel parking, though. I think my dad is extremely tough and I don't believe him to
Starting point is 00:13:32 have any feelings of humiliation ever. That is humiliating, what I did to him. I don't think he processed it like that because I don't think he's that type of person, but I think I might be protecting myself by saying he's just not that type of person. Is that on the might be protecting myself by saying he's just not that type of person. Is that on the curb sad, watching you?
Starting point is 00:13:47 Oh, no. What if you had been a man, though? Is it the fact that you're his daughter? If Neil did it. Oh, that's a good question. Do you think he would be as bad? Because I feel like that changes it a bit. Maybe that his little girl has to parallel.
Starting point is 00:14:01 But again, I'm projecting this on him. He didn't say anything. And that's why it's extra sad because he did just like get out and let me do it. Sounds like maybe you should call him and ask him if it made him sad. No, no, no. Or maybe it's not. I don't want him ever to think about that. Or maybe that's not even sad.
Starting point is 00:14:18 Maybe that was like, I don't want to do it anymore. Or he raises a tough daughter. Yeah. Right. Who really is good at driving. I don't think he thought that in the moment. I mean, I don't know how to drive, but I feel like if
Starting point is 00:14:29 you're in a position where things are going badly, it might just be a relief for him and none of the sadness or embarrassment. Like, maybe that's what you're projecting. That's nice. Oh, we have a visitor. Hi. Oh, no. We have a dad. Just in time to hear a horrible story that you're going to judge me for bad.
Starting point is 00:14:47 Oh, my God. Did you puke more hot dogs? No, we're not talking about that. Never again. Oh, no. Well, the experiment's complete. I'm not talking about that on this podcast. Okay.
Starting point is 00:15:01 That'll be out by then, though. That's been compartmentalized into. Yeah. Okay. Okay, I puked a hot, though. That's been compartmentalized into. Yeah. Okay. Okay, I puked a hot dog once. A whole hot dog? And blamed a single mom. It's a sweet, sweet story.
Starting point is 00:15:12 Oh, my God, I didn't. One of the family's last hot dogs. Ever? Stop eating. This is the last money they had they spent on the hot dog. She was a little girl. She was a 10-year-old little girl. No, we decided you were in fourth grade.
Starting point is 00:15:22 Probably nine. I was probably nine. No, ninth is 10 years. I know, but I'm young for my age. Oh, okay. Are you? That's not even a sentence. That's not even your grade.
Starting point is 00:15:31 But no, but you're not, are you? Yeah, yeah. You didn't graduate at 17. Yes, I did. You did? Yes, I started college at 17. Oh my goodness, you're a wunderkind. A little bit.
Starting point is 00:15:39 A Douglas Hauser. I started kindergarten when I was two months. Two months old. Two months, days old. I was four, but yeah. Okay, so she was nine, fourth grade, and she was at her girlfriend's house. Single mother. Apartment.
Starting point is 00:15:52 Yep, yep. Why do those parents have to be retold? Well, I'll tell you why. If you threw up at Richie Rich's house, you'd be like, oh, fuck those people. The stakes are there. Their butler cleaned it up, not the single mom. Yes, the single mother who's already worked to the bone and frazzled. Oh, my God.
Starting point is 00:16:09 Now worried she had poisoned this kid with her tainted hot dogs. And then poor Monty threw up in the middle of the night. Oh. In bed or in the toilet? In the child's twin bed. Yeah, the trundle. And did you have to go wake her up? No, I had to lie about it.
Starting point is 00:16:23 Here comes the deceit. Yeah, so she was embarrassed, naturally. And she just pretended she had no clue why there was a puked up hot dog in the bed in the morning. Oh, you kept sleeping in the pew? She had no choice. I think I had no choice. It was for survival. It was for survival.
Starting point is 00:16:42 I probably asked my friend in the morning, did you do that? Oh, no, that bad. I mean, I don't remember that, but I know me. And if I'm in survival mode, I'm sure I did do that. And you have to play it like someone who didn't puke last night. I'm good at knowing. Your motivation. You're an actor.
Starting point is 00:17:00 This is the beginning. I wonder if it was obvious it was you. Like you had to throw up on your face. And everyone just played along. I'm sure. I wonder if it was obvious it was you. Like you had to throw up on your face and everyone just played along. I'm sure. I'm sure. Okay, Monica. It's probably all over my shirt. T-shirt on says I love throwing up at sleepovers that no one noticed
Starting point is 00:17:13 until that morning. Okay. We recorded this yesterday. Now we're really exposing ourselves, which Dax hates. Three months ago. We recorded this many months ago. In 2020. And the whole reason we got into this is because I brought up something from Dax's past. He got a little sensitive about the fact that I brought it up.
Starting point is 00:17:34 Go ahead, tell her. He didn't have control over it. He pooped in the bed in an orgy. Okay. And I kind of was like, oh, it just came out of nowhere and we just dropped right into the punchline of the story. Right, because he's talked about it many times. It's not like it was a story I knew and nobody knew.
Starting point is 00:17:49 He's talked about it. Right, right. So I brought that up and then it gave him a little bit of the jolt. You see already now I feel like I need to tell Liz. I'm back now. She just heard the punchline too. It was oily. Okay, okay.
Starting point is 00:18:03 Oh yeah, that was his cover up. It was just oil. Let me be honest. Oh, yeah, that was his cover-up. It was just oil. Let me be honest. Oh, yeah, we were supposed to cut that part. Hold on a second. Hold on a second. What happened, Liz, was, this was obviously 20 years ago.
Starting point is 00:18:14 Okay. I think it was one of the first times I ever was in New York to do a late-night talk show. Went out. He wasn't sober. Great night, doing a ton of coke, hanging with some other people. We all end up back at my hotel room, a guy and his girlfriend and this gal I met. Sex on the bed, all of us at the same time. Now, there was no swappy swap, but it was a very heightened kind of 70s playboy experience. It was wonderful.
Starting point is 00:18:38 They then got hungry because they were not doing as much cocaine as I was. And it's a suite, and I'm putting that in quotes. The hotel room was a suite, but really it was like, the bed's here and the couch you're sitting on right now, that's about the gap. So they were like in that little couch looking that way, eating this breakfast they had ordered to the room at like 8 a.m. I'm now sitting on the bed still.
Starting point is 00:18:58 I might be having a cigarette or something. This is post-coital. And I think, hmm, I just have to fart. Just the tiniest bit. And they're very far. Well, they're not very far away. Yeah. But they're far enough away that I'm just going to test and make sure that it's odorless.
Starting point is 00:19:12 Can I real quick? Okay. There's no test. There is. You crack the bottle. Like if you're opening a Pepsi. Yeah. And then you quickly screw it back.
Starting point is 00:19:22 Then it will still smell. But the volume you've let out will be manageable. You'll get a hint of it. You're like, oh, don't do that. Go into the bathroom. Okay. Conversely, you, and then you, oh, no, no. This is totally fine.
Starting point is 00:19:37 I'm going to let a little more out. And then step two, and then you close it. Wait around. And this is a safe way to determine whether there's going to be something offensive. Have you ever done this? You are nodding. I do this. You're testing sound, too.
Starting point is 00:19:50 Because you don't know. Sure. And so you'll have an idea. No, I'm going to stop you right there. You can't test for sound. Sound, sure. Either the sound will come out. Yes.
Starting point is 00:20:01 You're right in that monotony. You act like you have so much more control over your butts than most largely that has been the case but obviously the story i'm telling that wasn't the case this time i had underestimated whatever impact the cocaine on my stomach and no eating and that was another thing like i hadn't eaten in 20 some hours so i wasn't really concerned that there's anything and then all of a sudden i just went went, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh. And now they're right there. And I'm like, oh, my God.
Starting point is 00:20:31 And then I, in a panic, I just grab the sheets. And I walk into the bathroom. And I shut the door. And then I hop in the shower. And then I am making sure there's zero evidence. Smart. Liz, be normal. What?
Starting point is 00:20:45 That is not smart. You bring all these sheets from the bed into the shower and try to act like it's normal. What else are you going to do? Thank you. Work backwards from the options, Monica. If someone did that in your hotel room, wouldn't you be like, wait, what's going on? They took a sheet into the shower. Yes.
Starting point is 00:21:07 They obviously puked a hot dog or shit in the bed. Those are the options. Well, you pull them off. You'd be like, who brought the sheets? Did you bring the sheets in here? That's what you do. You just like gaslight. We'll follow Monica.
Starting point is 00:21:19 Listen, no. Yeah. So, okay, yeah. So, I'm in the shower and I'm in a bit of a panic now. Sure, of course. And I'm cleaning the sheets up. And then I'm quickly trying to think of my explanation for why I went to the shower with the sheets. And then I decide, oh, God, this is as bad as you asking your buddy if she had puked.
Starting point is 00:21:37 Have I never heard this? What I said is like there was kind of some sex on the sheet that needed some cleaning. Oh, sure. Marv. No, but you said it was the girl. No, I did not. I did not. Okay.
Starting point is 00:21:48 Some sex. Yeah, yeah, yeah. It could be anything. It could have been the guy. I think you went straight there. Well, because you're embarrassed. I don't think you'd be embarrassed if it was cum. Well, no, I wouldn't, nor would I be embarrassed if there was sex, but I thought that was a
Starting point is 00:22:01 plausible explanation. Sure. And no one seemed to really dig deeper. I mean, look, we went out 15 hours beforehand. Yeah. They're trying to get that free breakfast and then hit the road. Were they strangers? The dude I knew a bit.
Starting point is 00:22:15 He was a guy who was a club promoter in New York. Oh. You know, there's this whole industry in New York that doesn't really exist in LA. And when I was young and partied and I went to New York, I knew some of these promoters. And you would go to clubs and you'd get free everything. And then they'd drive you around and they knew who had drugs. And so, yes, I knew the dude, but no, I didn't know him well. Okay.
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Starting point is 00:24:48 You have nothing to lose. I feel like I'm proud of you. I feel like you are very intrepid and resourceful. That's my takeaway. This leads me to what I really want to talk about today. Okay, good. We found the thread. We had a lot of threads going.
Starting point is 00:25:11 It's about Liz's mixed messages. Oh, good. How do I want to get into this? How can I jump away? No, because I find this extremely fascinating, and I do think this is the second episode of our show, and I think it's going to be a through line throughout for both of us. Okay. Where we are very smart, you're too smart, and you're- To be forgotten.
Starting point is 00:25:35 That's what I wrote in your yearbook in seventh grade. Too smart to be forgotten. You are extremely knowledgeable on feminism, on how the world truly should operate, how the patriarchy infiltrates every single one of us. You speak on this publicly. You go on the news, the actual news. America's news. To talk about this because you're an actual expert. That's the context. I'm afraid of what's going on.
Starting point is 00:26:03 No, no, no. But also. I know where you're going. Yes, I know you know, but I'm going to do it. No. Also, you're a real person. Yeah. And you have some conflicting actions to your beliefs. Yeah. And what I really want to be clear about is it's not hypocrisy. It's what we all do, which is we have a set of values and beliefs and what we know the way the world should be. However, the reality of the world doesn't always add up to the way the world should be. And there's often conflicting pieces there. Again, for all of us, for me majorly too.
Starting point is 00:26:44 My therapist always says, let's try to do this so that your actions match your beliefs or your values. Knowing that often they don't. And that's why you have to actually make a huge effort to do that. The statement, humans are full of contradictions is like the most concise for me. And I believe that and I support it. And I don't think it's something to be ashamed of. It's not. It's not hypocrisy. It's contradiction. We're going to be talking about this throughout the show because we are in a position where I do think people, for some reason, have been interested in listening to what we have to say,
Starting point is 00:27:22 which is very flattering. And I want to be very open about the fact that we live in reality. And so there's going to be contradictions. Actions that might seem inconsistent. And I want to dissect that. It's fascinating that we know how things should be. And then sometimes we don't behave that way. I would argue it's the only thing interesting about humans. It's the number one thing. When you're watching a show you love, generally what you love is that the lead character, the protagonist that you like, is trying to juggle many different objectives and goals and desires. And often they're at odds with one another.
Starting point is 00:27:59 And that's drama. That's what's interesting. That's what makes humans fascinating is the tension and contradiction and the challenges. For sure. Does it resonate? I mean, I also want to say I've done a lot of things that are hypocritical. Like, I think if you're a smart person, actually, you are able to reflect and be unsure about your own positions and your own behaviors. And I think that that's actually something that I wasn't always good at doing. I was so convinced of the way that I thought that I was and of the way that I thought
Starting point is 00:28:33 other people were and systems, right? Like, I don't think I'm the only one. It's all in the sort of air of this moment of everyone has their own reality that's reinforced in all these different ways. But I think it's good to reflect on our contradictions. Yeah. Originally, I wanted to name this podcast Mr. Jones off of the movie Burnt that Bradley Cooper stars in. He's a chef in that movie. He plays a very Anthony Bourdain-type character. And he's a dick. I mean, he's awful. He like shoves this girl across the kitchen, Sienna Miller, by all accounts, a bad dude. And I am watching this movie. Spraying in your pants?
Starting point is 00:29:19 Wet. Like turned on. Turned on. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Turned on. Turned. He is so hot in it i'm getting turned i know i know a little more well he's got those eyes his hair looks great at one point he's walking and it's just the back of him it's just the back of his neck and it's hot and i got so angry with myself during this when I was watching it because I thought, why do I like him? He's awful. To me, that was an example of this, right? Where I know that this is
Starting point is 00:29:56 a bad dude. He's hurting women. He doesn't give a shit. He's so entitled. And that is not a person I should ever want to be with. And there you are all fucked up. But here I am. Yeah, getting your equipment out of your nightstand. Shut up. Oh my God. But yes.
Starting point is 00:30:20 Do you feel like that about women? I feel like guys have that with women too. Like women that they're attracted to or women that they want to, and they're like, this doesn't align. Okay, I'm going to join that. I'm going to answer that. But I do want to just say, you might tell yourself as I'm a proponent of this and I'm outspoken about that and I believe in this.
Starting point is 00:30:37 And if you know this thing about me, it will discredit the other things. And I will lose the thing that I like because I will have lost credit. Which if you distill that even further, it's really just the most fundamental thing, which is if you know everything about me, you won't love me. I'm not worthy of love if you know all about me. And then we dress it up as like the economic model of it, that your livelihood's on the line. And then so that becomes a justification that feels very real and defendable. But really at the core, it's the same thing everyone's struggling with nonstop, which is if you actually looked at all of me, you would run away from me.
Starting point is 00:31:14 And in my experience, that fear is just that. It's a fear. And in fact, all the things that I'm afraid you'll hate about me, probably you'll like about me. And that's a rejection of ourselves. I'm rejecting this facet of me that's attracted to someone that's not aligned with who I want. Yes. And that's your rejection. I don't think anything differently of you because of that. I think it's in our self-rejection and what kind of story we make based on certain feelings or
Starting point is 00:31:42 certain attitudes or certain behaviors that we have. I don't think there's anything wrong with being attracted to the kind of guy that you're like, this isn't who I would want to marry. But that's not also who you want to marry. And that's not probably who you're going on dates with. And there's a difference between a preference and like making life decisions. Yeah. I do see what you mean. It could also be an application.
Starting point is 00:32:02 Like, oh, this guy's good for this application. Making me crazy horny in my bed one night. Exactly. But not for the other application. Yes. What I think is fascinating personally is me as someone who is hyper aware of the problems of a person like that and what it does to women specifically. The fact that my body can still react like that is interesting. Minimally, it's just interesting that we can hold two things at once. And like you said, my actions, I can force to more match my values. But our innate selves sometimes betray us.
Starting point is 00:32:42 And I think we're going to explore that. But I don't see it as a betrayal. I really don't. And I think that's actually like an old version of me was like, that's bad. And anything in sex that's like aggressive or dominating or playing into any kind of power dynamic, that's patriarchy. I don't think that's true at all. And I think that's the most feminist thing you can do is be free to explore all of that. thing you can do is be free to explore all of that. I think thinking that there's something wrong with wanting that in a sexual way might be what you want to like think about because I don't
Starting point is 00:33:12 think that's what you want in a long-term. And maybe we can think about is it bad if a woman wants that in a long-term relationship? I don't know. Can we judge her? But I think, yeah, there's like a sexual component for you for that. And I think that's a great thing for you to explore. And tons of women want to be thrown around in bed and like be handled in a certain way. And that's, I think, a positive thing to know that and to explore that with someone who's respectful and doesn't throw you around when you're eating breakfast next day, you know, that contains it in a certain environment. Yeah. Well, the reason I brought this up is now I kind of forget, but you said something to him. You puked eye shit.
Starting point is 00:33:46 I know, but you had a reaction to him that I thought was contradictory. Okay. Maybe it was you saying you're proud of him because you're not. I am. You are? No, I fully mean that. Okay. I don't even want to tell the story.
Starting point is 00:34:01 It's not like great. But did you think Monica's and I were really great? I know. But mine is more recent. That's why it's not like great i did you think monica's and i were really great i know mine is more recent that's why it's not old just change the day like i have i've had poop sure and like slept over this guy's place i just started dating wearing his boxers he goes for a shower and i do the test i'm like i'm just gonna let one little and it wasn't it wasn't a poop right but. But there was something. Cleanup necessary. Cleanup mess in his boxers.
Starting point is 00:34:26 And then I was like, same thing. We're like, oh, my God. This is the worst. I'm in his apartment. I can't go anywhere. Yeah, that's horrifying. I was like, take off the boxers. Put them in your bag.
Starting point is 00:34:36 Never. And the fact that I figured it out and that he never knew, I was very proud of myself. Yes. And so that's what I mean. Yeah. Where I'm like, and it's shame and it's, you know, humiliation and that you're able to be like, I figured it out and like problem solved it without going into a bad behavior or other coping mechanism that would be negative. Like you just figured it out. And that's what I mean by I'm proud.
Starting point is 00:34:57 You survived. Yes. Poop emergencies are like throw ups. There's this sense of like, oh, you know, I have to manage this. And what am I going to do? And I think when people are able to do it, I think it's good. Okay, for some reason, this is weird, I am proud of you. About the boxer?
Starting point is 00:35:14 Yes. Yeah. I think you handled that perfectly. Okay. I'm very sorry that happened to you. I'm excited that that happened. That's a great story, and it definitely makes me like you more. Anyway, I am proud of you for doing what you had to do in that moment.
Starting point is 00:35:31 I do think that both of you are clearly wrong about opening the Coke bottle. That's a true. Because both of you have made huge mistakes. But Monica. I would advise everyone listening to never test it. Can I defend us? Sure. Oh, I can't speak for it. Can I defend us? Sure. Oh, I can't speak for Liz, but I've cracked the Pepsi bottle in the three to 500,000 times in my life range.
Starting point is 00:35:54 It only takes one time. And I've had a few mix-ups. Those are outrageously good numbers. That's true. Those are above 99%. I agree. So it isn't a very effective technique, but you're right.
Starting point is 00:36:07 Once every five years, you're hiding some boxers in your purse. What's 100% is not doing that. But so what do you do? If you have to, what do you have to do? I can't wait to hear this. You have to suck it back in.
Starting point is 00:36:20 But then it like, you can do that to a certain extent, but it starts cramping monica doesn't know her privilege this is one of the this is one of the rare situations where monica cannot own her privilege for some reason she doesn't have to fart as bad as the rest of the people do and she's convinced herself it's willpower and integrity that is exactly what it is. It is not about privilege. It's about my fucking hard work that I've worked to not. This is what white people think. They're like, I work my ass off.
Starting point is 00:36:52 What do you mean? Of course I'm CEO. I work my ass off. Oh, my God. You have no idea what I've been through because I don't want to be excommunicated. Uh-huh. Wait, so. I've never been allowed to fart.
Starting point is 00:37:05 This is real. Will you acknowledge that you pee one-tenth the amount that normal people pee? Let's start there. Something we can agree on. Wow. Yes. I'm so jealous. Okay, so anatomically, I don't know why.
Starting point is 00:37:17 It's so curious. I do. I've also had many bladder infections. Like, it's to my detriment. It's not like my mom used to tell me, you need to pee. You need to force yourself to do that because I would get sick. But there's something about going to the bathroom or stuff that is embarrassing. I just was very scared of embarrassment. I would do any, obviously. Obviously with the puke in the bed. I would do any, obviously. Yeah. Obviously with the puke in the bed. The hot dog.
Starting point is 00:37:45 I would do absolutely anything to avoid something bad going on. And so that includes farts, pee, poops. Sneeze, cough. Honestly, yeah. Yeah, yeah. It's your privilege that you're fucking farting everywhere and having no repercussions. What I know is that you're not fighting the same level of gas pressure that I am. I know it for sure because I am a strong person and I do have great will.
Starting point is 00:38:08 I've demonstrated it. And I can't, when you have three gallons of air trapped in your lower GI, what do you mean just deal with it? I don't think you think that if you farted that you'd be excommunicated. I'm 100% agreeing with you on the socialed that you'd be excommunicated i'm 100 agreeing with you on the social pressures that you're under liz is under the same ones she can't manage not letting some out it sounds like liz is also not going to get excommunicated because she's so pretty well this i disagree with you yeah i'm going to fundamentally disagree with you on that that's
Starting point is 00:38:42 not what this podcast is well now we're not here for you to disagree. I dissent. It's not about that. I put on my white collar. So have you never farted, like had an accidental fart? No. No, I have. I have. I've known her for nine years, traveled the country, sit in a room with her six hours a day, five days a week. I've never heard or smelled a fart. I've encouraged her. I've begged her. I said, it makes me very uncomfortable that you're uncomfortable and we're best friends. So let's let it rip. I have had accidental farts in my life. Tell me. In your life though. In my life.
Starting point is 00:39:17 And somebody's heard it? Let's talk about this week. Oh no. We're on Thursday. I've had 50 accidental farts since Monday. I mean, this is why I can't. Rob, how many accidental farts have you had, be honest, since Monday? None. See? You guys should cohabitate. Yeah. And Liz and I should move into an outhouse together. I know Rob is also afraid of getting excommunicated. I know that about his personality. Did you grow up in a family that farted? Like there were no farts ever? My grandpa used to fart all the time because he had a gallbladder issue. He should have held it. You don't want to have your gallbladder removed?
Starting point is 00:39:50 What I want you to do is treat me. He had it removed and he had no more farts. What I want you to do is to treat me as if what I'm telling you is the truth. And that the level of gas I have cannot be dealt with in the manner you're dealing with it, which is ignoring it. That's not on the table for me. And I want you to accept that. Okay, but that is saying your truth is more honest than mine. No, no.
Starting point is 00:40:12 I'm not telling you what your truth is. I'm telling you what mine is. Mine is there's no way they could be held in. You brought this up by saying that I have less of an ability. It wasn't about you. You made it about me. And I'm saying that's not true to me. I have worked on this skill.
Starting point is 00:40:30 I believe you that you can't hold your farts and that you can't hold your farts. How have you worked on the skill for people who are listening? Thank you so much. What is the methodology? It's too late for you. It's too late for you.
Starting point is 00:40:42 It's a lifetime worth of practice and clenching and being really uncomfortable. It hurts so bad, but then it goes away. No, it grows. It does. It hits you. And it aches. Yeah, there's like a sharp knife pain. Yes.
Starting point is 00:41:00 Have you ever had like it feels like someone just put a fucking saber up your ass? Yes. Ow. Yes, that is what it feels like someone just put a fucking saber up your ass? Yes. Ow. Yes. That is what it feels like. That's correct. That's how you know it's working. Yes.
Starting point is 00:41:10 And you keep, you sit through the pain and over time it will subside. I just don't think. Where does it go, Monica? Is it reabsorbing to your cells? Yes. Oh my God. So you have a ton of trapped gas in your cells. Do you burp a lot, Liz?
Starting point is 00:41:25 I don't, actually. I can't burp burp. Yeah, same. I also don't really burp. I wish I could, though, because I feel like I have more farts because I can't burp. I feel like things only can come out one way. How about this? If there were an implant you could get, and it was very tasteful, and it was just a little
Starting point is 00:41:44 port, tiny little guy, and it just very tasteful. And it was just a little port, tiny little guy. And it just let the pressure out before it went through everything else, which produces the odor. Because your perps don't smell like farts, let's be honest. It's the process of going through the whole intestines. So I wonder if we had a little top valve. Yeah. Just a little side port. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:41:59 And you could just let it out. Would you be up for it? That would be so nice. You could just do it throughout the day before it gets – because you get bloated it out. Would you be up for it? That would be so nice. Yeah, it would be nice. You could just do it throughout the day before it gets, because you get bloated a lot. Sure, I feel some bloat. Yeah, yeah. You could just like preemptively, you know.
Starting point is 00:42:13 Oh, here we go again. And before you go to someone's house, also like sleepovers. Like a lot of these stories involve sleep because you could do it for a few hours. But after you've been with someone for many, at a certain point, it accumulates within you. Sure. What about in the middle of the night? So I have done that. Okay, at sleepovers.
Starting point is 00:42:34 I wait till everyone's asleep. Okay. How do you know? And then you do fart whatever farts you have from the day. whatever farts you have from the day. And you make it so that it doesn't smell by wrapping yourself so heavily in comforters. Hermetically sealing yourself with the blanket. Yes, you're trapping it.
Starting point is 00:42:55 And then you're also spreading your butt cheeks so it doesn't make a sound. Oh, so you got a lot going on. So you're both tight in a swaddle, but somehow you're splitting out your butt cheeks. You use your hand. You use your hand. So you're both tight in a swaddle, but somehow you're splating out your butt cheeks. You use your hand. You use your hand. So you're down and you spread.
Starting point is 00:43:09 You're spreading your butt cheeks. This is what I used to do on sleepovers. I haven't had a sleepover in a long time. So if you were to stumble upon more than you bargained for, as Liz did and I did, you would really be in a pickle because you're spreading your butt cheeks. Yeah, it does a lot. If you get a surprise at that point, you're toast. Yeah. That's never happened to me.
Starting point is 00:43:31 Okay. And I know the difference between my poop and my fart. I know what it feels like to have poop in there. You're very dialed in to what's happening down there. I am. What I like to fantasize about that scene you just painted was I picture little Monica in bed at a sleepover and she might go, Jenny, are you asleep? Mika, are you asleep? Sarah, are you asleep?
Starting point is 00:44:02 Yeah, I'm awake. No, no. Everyone's going to be asleep. You ruined it. I know, but I was done with this. Sarah, are you asleep? Yeah, I'm awake. No, no. Everyone's going to be asleep. You ruined it. I know, but I was done with this. Sarah, are you asleep? It doesn't sound like that. Well, of course it is because you spread your butts all the way wide open.
Starting point is 00:44:16 Yeah, but it doesn't even have that first sound. Do you have anyone you will fart in front of? Like your brother or Callie or Molly? Thanks, Rob. No. Not one person. Do you feel embarrassed when you fart and you're alone? Oh, great question. Actually, I don't love it, but I do it. I do do it. I'm not so embarrassed that I won't do it. I wish it wasn't happening.
Starting point is 00:44:36 Can I ask on an average evening at your home? This has gone off the fucking rails. We haven't even done any listener questions. But hold on. I really do think it's important to establish baseline gas levels between the four of us. Okay. On an average evening at home by yourself, you're making one of your great meals. You've got a chicken in the oven. You've brined something. Things are being roasted and simmered. On that evening, how many farts throughout the night?
Starting point is 00:45:03 At night? From the time you walk in your door, you have your whole evening. They don't ever happen until I'm in bed. Oh, okay. You're not. This is the different physiology. There's something different going on with you. Anatomically, there's something definitely different.
Starting point is 00:45:14 I'm like Monica, though. Yeah. God, you guys. What's it like? Dude, I'm fine on an average night. First of all, if you ask me that question, I'm like 12, 24. A day. For sure.
Starting point is 00:45:24 If I'm by myself and I'm cooking, I'm a little here, a little sit down, and I push a little bit. Oh, my. Wow. They're coming out, yes. Certainly more than one an hour. Can we call someone who's your height? Oh, you think this might be height? I'm curious.
Starting point is 00:45:39 Oh, that's interesting. But Liz is tall. Liz, what height are you? I'm 5'9". Too tall. That's too tall, yeah. Maybe it's diet. Hey, guys.
Starting point is 00:45:46 Now we're starting to victim shame, I think. You took us down this road. I cannot feel bad for you even one iota. You've done this. Do you poop every day? Yes, multiple times. Okay. So that's normal.
Starting point is 00:45:59 So maybe that's why. Maybe I'm just pooping more. You poop out when you're pooping? Maybe. And morning, right? You have morning farts, Rob. No. No, poop.
Starting point is 00:46:08 Morning bowel movement. Okay. Morning BM, MBM. Yeah, yeah. Well, I'm every morning as well. Liz, are you? Depends. Oh, you're not every day?
Starting point is 00:46:16 Well, you travel a lot. Yeah, I do. You get nervous when you travel. I do. I do. I think it's tightened up a little bit. I want to get in. And then wherever you are at in your opiate addiction, that obviously impacts things. That plays in. Yeah. For sure. A lot of variables. I do. Tightened up a little bit. I want to get in. And then wherever you are at in your opiate addiction, that obviously impacts things.
Starting point is 00:46:26 That plays in. Yeah. For sure. A lot of variables. Well, look, I guess this is how it shook out. Two of us are fart monsters. Maybe this is a representation of society. Oh, that would be cool.
Starting point is 00:46:36 Maybe. We'd have to do some polling. We can do that. That'd be funny. Maybe we'd do it on Instagram. Sound off in the comments. And I want to make it. Oh, that's a cool. That's what you say? Yeah. do it on instagram sound off in the comments and i think i want to make it oh that's a cool that's what you say yeah i like that sound off in the comments but i think we could make it least embarrassing as possible so i think in the comments you would
Starting point is 00:46:54 just say m and r monica and rob or you'd say l and d and you're basically just declaring which version you are okay and then we can kind of go from there. And tell us your height. And tell us if you spread your butt cheeks open as far as you can while you're in a swaddled burrito. Not as far as you can. Okay. It's hotter when I think that you're...
Starting point is 00:47:18 Hot. All right. Well, I was telling, before you got here, I was telling a very sad story about my dad. I'm sorry. And now I really took a turn. That was good. That was a good turn, though.
Starting point is 00:47:32 Let's get into a couple, because I've declared this show is going to be an hour and 15 minutes. Well, I may leave you guys for this, then. You don't want to do this part? Oh, I'll do one. Yeah, yeah. Okay. I just want to be pumping iron by 1030 so that I can fart. I thought you were going to say.
Starting point is 00:47:44 Take another dump. Maybe poop my pants down there while I'm squatting. Okay, let's'll do one. Yeah, yeah. Okay. I just want to be pumping iron by 1030 so that I can fart. I thought you were going to say. Take another dump. Maybe poop my pants down there while I'm squatting. Okay, let's do this one. This is from Ariel or Ariel. I'm a grown woman obsessing over a celebrity. How do I stop? Help. Ooh.
Starting point is 00:47:58 Okay, so ever since I watched Wednesday, I've been obsessed just like Monica. But the obsession kind of grew and it became more about Jenna Ortega. I have no idea why I, a happily married 31-year-old woman, care about what a 20-year-old actress is doing, but I can't stop listening to her interviews, watching her movies, and even going down some TikTok rabbit holes. I feel like it's weird, but I can't seem to stop. Am I a weirdo? Help. First of all, no, you're not a weirdo. Or if you are, you're in good company with other weirdos. Obviously, I have opinions on this because I go down so many. You do too. Yeah. Who? Very few select people. Who's your most recent one?
Starting point is 00:48:40 I got a little obsessed with her too, actually. You actually, in a weird way. She has a certain kind of way to like absorb you in. And Ryan Gosling, particularly Ryan Rosling and Ryan Gosling. And Ryan Rosling, his uncle. He's not as known, but he's really hot. I'm so obsessed with him. No, like the Rachel McAdams and Ryan Gosling era. I've seen every photo. Yeah, you sent me a video. Yes, the MTV award kiss that we found out that they were dating. And like, I've gone down the rabbit hole, even though it happened 12 years ago at this point. You revisit it sometimes. Yeah, I revisit it. It's like very calming to me and soothing. And I'm like, why am I watching this crusty video? I have a theory about why it's getting worse. You know, it's kind of been out there that like parasocial relationships. We're spending more time away from our friends and our real life interactions.
Starting point is 00:49:30 And so these virtual connections just become that much more like couples that you hardly know. Yes. You're like, they're not posting photos anymore. I got to go on a deep dive and figure out what happened in their relationship, even though you don't know who they are or barely. And you get very interested in people that you don't know. And fantasy. You project a lot onto these people about what your life could be like if they were in your life. I think that's a big part of this sometimes is if I had their
Starting point is 00:49:56 life or if I was somehow in their life, I would feel like this. I would be so happy or I would get to have this banter with them or they're so funny. I mean, look, I did this with Kristen. And so I have a very full circle of having watched videos of her and was obsessed with Veronica Mars thinking, oh my gosh, I could be her best friend. I know it because I understand her and we're the same, like the way we talk. And then that happened. Then we had a real relationship, which is so different. Turns out Kristen doesn't investigate a ton of crimes the way Veronica Mars did.
Starting point is 00:50:35 Well, she does. That's one of the immediate things you're a little bit struck by the fantasies. Disciplined, yeah. The show is the gateway. Yeah, yeah, yeah. No, I'm just teasing. I know what you mean. Like Wednesday is the gateway for her for Jenna Ortega.
Starting point is 00:50:50 And she's watching it and she's imagining what her life would be. This is subconscious, but it's imagining a life side by side. And it must be so good. And, you know, the reality is it's not. But you can't know that. You can't know that. So I can't tell her to just say, well, I know that the reality wouldn't match up. I think she has to do some practical things like go to dinner with a friend. Like if it's starting to get really deep, force yourself to have an actual connection with a person in your life, as opposed
Starting point is 00:51:21 to this kind of fake one. Yeah. I think first and foremost, it's an interesting question conceptually, which is what's the problem? I think a big thing maybe is like, we are all prone to like, I'm doing this thing. How do I stop? Why am I doing it? I was like, well, first of all, is there anything wrong with you doing that? What's the objective wreckage from this obsession? Are you not present when you're talking to your partner?
Starting point is 00:51:43 Are you not present with your kids? Are you distracted at work? If these things are happening, then yeah, maybe this is something. But also maybe lighten up on yourself. Maybe it's fine that you daydream about this person. In AA, a common saying is find someone who's got what you want and ask them how they got it. And that could be a million different things. It could be being a good parent. It could be that they have a cool car. It could be that they're financially, whatever the thing is you want that someone has, ask them how they got it. Learn from them. Look, I got obsessed with Jen Artega too. I haven't requested someone from a TV show that I've watched in at least a year and a half to be on Armchair Expert. And I came, I was like, we got to get this girl. I'm obsessed. She's such a wish fulfillment.
Starting point is 00:52:22 She seems to have zero codependency, which all of us carry a ton of. Yeah. So that's aspirational. That's great. That might be why you like her. Exactly. Is that she moves through the world without saying sorry, and she's driven and has purpose, and she doesn't really give a fuck what the fallout from that is.
Starting point is 00:52:35 Maybe that's what you're obsessed with. Maybe that is a great characteristic you need to be aiming for. A lot of my thoughts would just be like, maybe don't worry so much that this is happening, unless there's actual discernible wreckage. Well, she's saying I can't seem to stop, which means she has now found this to have been sort of out of her control. And I know what that feels like. That's living in fantasy land, which is a different thing than just admiring a person and wanting to know about a person and wanting traits of theirs. There's a level of that.
Starting point is 00:53:06 It's all in the nuance, right? It's like, when has it crossed the line into you're not living your life because you're living this fantasy life? Yeah. But a lot of us have a knee-jerk response to, I have this compulsion to do this. So that must be bad. Any compulsion to do something might be bad. But then you also go like, you got a lot of hours to fill in the day.
Starting point is 00:53:24 Some kind of compulsive thinking. If it's not about that, what's it going to be about? Food? Is it going to be about your diet? That's your brain. Maybe it's a safe one. I also trust that you know when something has gotten out of hand. Even with Alison Roman, for me, with cooking videos, every now and then I will have to take a second and say, this isn't very healthy. Am I avoiding something? I've been in this for too long. I'm trying to escape something. And to an extent, that's fine. But you can't let that get out of control because you do have to live in your reality. Even with Ryan Gosling and Rachel McAdams, there was a point where I was like, why is this so comforting to me? And I was
Starting point is 00:54:01 like, oh, because that's the kind of relationship I would want. This very raw, and again, romanticized, and I'm made up from my perspective, 100%. Why is that a fantasy that I escaped to? What am I avoiding? Being curious, actually, instead of indicting ourselves. Yeah, judgmental of ourselves. Yeah. I go to that so much and I'll just be like, oh, this is so bad that I'm doing this. And I'm like, wait, what if I approach this just by asking questions as opposed to coming in with self-judgment? Not only could she learn something about it, it doesn't mean that she'll stop necessarily, or it'll dramatically decrease the amount of time that she spends doing it, but at least she'll learn about herself through it. Also, every now and then just reminding yourself, we're little monkeys on planet Earth,
Starting point is 00:54:40 wasting time until we're dead. That's that. There's no big moral force in the sky evaluating our every decision and levying a verdict of hedonist, glutton, you know, whatever the seven deadly sins are. I agree with all of this. And I also think practically, if you feel like this is getting out of hand, I would connect with a real person. Real social connection is scientifically better for you. It's why friendships lead to longer lives. Parasocial relationships don't lead to longer lives. Real intimate relationships do. So it is important to make sure that it's balanced. Yeah. All right. Well, let's do one more or maybe two. We'll see how fast we can get through. This is from Corey. What perspective advice can you give to a single dad reentering the world of dating?
Starting point is 00:55:28 I'm a 31-year-old father of an eight-year-old boy and moved to a new state in order to continue to co-parent with my son's mother, now ex-wife. It has been a challenge feeling comfortable in the dating world again, especially with a relatively older son given my age. And a big challenge with that has been navigating emotional vulnerability with different women I've been romantically involved with. While I understand having a child and not being married can easily lead to the question of, quote, what happened, it's been hard to separate healthy emotional connection and trauma dumping at times. What are some recommendations for navigating that well? And what type of things are important for me to consider and understand
Starting point is 00:56:03 from the point of view of a woman I entered into a romantic relationship with as a single dad. Have you dated some single dads? Oh, yeah. Yeah, you kind of like single dads, don't you? I love single dads. I love a divorced dad. I really, it was my best relationship. Like, I was a little younger, like I was 31 or 30.
Starting point is 00:56:18 Our friend set us up. I was like, oh, divorce, two kids. It was not like a turn on. But at the time, I was like, okay, I'll go on a date with him. And it adds complications to a relationship for sure. And like there are a lot of other people in the relationship, you know, who are involved in the relationship, but he was the most responsible, generous planner. And he had two daughters. There's just like another level of reflection and understanding and caring. And I even think like nurturing that comes with being a father. Like there's something that's more important than you. So not that all dads are
Starting point is 00:56:48 necessarily perfect and don't have egos, but I think that there is like a little bit, not an ego death, but definitely like a knocking down of it. And so I think it actually makes you appealing to women. He's straight, right? He's dating women. And yeah, I view it as like a total plus. Out of left field question, do you think it's possible that women who have a pattern of being attracted to people who are unavailable would naturally be drawn to a single father because on some level you know yeah you're gonna be second and so the challenge is kind of there the pattern is there i think that's an interesting thought about being in his shoes is like trying to determine if the people that are attracted to you have that pattern. And
Starting point is 00:57:31 then how does that pattern ultimately always play out for people that have that pattern? Yeah, I do think that is a trap for a lot of people who are attracted to unavailability, but I wouldn't want him to enter every relationship worried about that. I just think the simple fact that as you like a guy like this, he's going to tell you, oh, I can't see you on this weekend and that weekend and these days and that day because I have a kid and I'm not introducing the kid to anybody for at least a year and a half. Right out of the gate, you're hearing like, well, there's some major boundaries here.
Starting point is 00:58:03 That's weirdly kind of attractive. And it's weirdly, you can't have enough of the thing you want, which makes the person more attractive. There's a lot of dynamics that go on in these. I love that part. There were like four days a week where we could be together. And then three days where I was like at my apartment doing my own thing. Because when you're in a relationship, you don't have the amount of time to just do whatever
Starting point is 00:58:20 you want in the way that if you're waking up with someone, going to bed with someone, you're kind of like on the same flow. So I enjoyed that part, but we were committed and we truly loved each other. And in the end, actually, I wanted more and it wasn't happening. And so if I were him, I would want to be dating the person who has a very full life on their own so that on those days when I'm not available, they are enjoying that as well. I don't know, like that's something I might be trying to screen for is like, oh, I want someone with a big old life of their own because I got this big old life of mine
Starting point is 00:58:51 and let's have these four days or whatever it shakes out to be. But is there a question in there, Monica, about something about emotional? Yeah, he said it's been hard to separate healthy emotional connection and trauma dumping because people want to know like, oh, what happened? Like you have this eight-year-old and he, I think it may be a struggling with connecting
Starting point is 00:59:09 and being vulnerable and open and honest without giving all this information. And I think he can just have boundaries around that. I think it's just knowing that if someone's really interested, this can happen over time. It's not like on the first date, you have to divulge all of the information. They're not entitled to that. Exactly. Vulnerability, right, is this buzzword. I think it's great that we're all talking about it more, but vulnerability doesn't mean saying everything. Yeah. Because even like, I don't know if I want to talk about your ex-wife like on our first date anyway. Right. Yes, yes. And maybe if it ends up coming up, I don't think that's an
Starting point is 00:59:41 appropriate sort of time to be sharing all of this. Like you share it with a friend and talk about all of the difficulties. Or maybe once you've been on more dates and you've established your connection more. But yeah, I think it's weird. We think we owe like, and if we're not sharing all this information, we're not being vulnerable. And it's like, no, there's appropriate moments to share and appropriate information to be sharing with appropriate people. Yeah. And I think if you're on a date with either someone who's recently divorced or has a kid, it's important for you to remember, just like if you went on a date
Starting point is 01:00:10 with a single person, you wouldn't say, so tell me about your exes immediately. Like there's something about someone divorced or someone with a kid that you feel- There must be some big story of why this ended. And I feel like I'm allowed to know it immediately. And that's not the case.
Starting point is 01:00:26 I would just also say, like, put yourself in the other person's shoes. I had a girlfriend who talked about her ex-boyfriend nonstop. And all I thought from that was like, oh, yeah, she very much is still in love with this dude and is still processing and can't understand why they're not together. There's nothing that makes me feel close or that she shared some intimate secret. I'm just like, oh, she can't shut the fuck up about this guy. Clearly, this is unresolved. That to me is a red flag.
Starting point is 01:00:49 If you're on a date with someone, you can't shut the fuck up about your ex. I don't want to be on a date with that person. Yeah. You know, if that's what you're doing on first dates, maybe like, well, I guess to be fair to him, he didn't say first date. So I think maybe it's in dating how to navigate this where your new datee is like, so what happened? Or like wants to know more. I think you just have to have some sort of solid boundaries around it. I'll also add unsolicited advice is if I ask someone what happened, why did their nine-year relationship or their eight-year relationship or their two-year relationship dissolved?
Starting point is 01:01:22 And they tell me all the things that the other person did. I don't want to be with that person. That's a really good clue for me that they're not on the path of bettering themselves. They're on the path of monitoring what everyone else does. So again, if you find yourself going, well, she just was so unavailable emotionally, and then she never, oh, she had this friendship with her boss that was like, oh, great. So nothing. You're clear on this. You're 100%. Yeah, I think you should only want to hear what the other person did wrong and what they learned and what they're going to change.
Starting point is 01:01:50 That's the only thing that would interest me. I'm not dating the fucking ex. Yes, and that's interesting conversation too, right? Because it's between you and me. There's not a third person at this date. Yes, and vulnerability is saying what you did wrong. Vulnerability isn't telling you how someone else harmed you. It's admitting how you have harmed someone.
Starting point is 01:02:05 That's vulnerability. That's the part that could be ugly or unattractive. And that's hot. Yeah, I think so. Find out a girl threw up some hot dogs or shit some boxers. You're like, what are you doing next Wednesday? That's my first date combo, yeah.
Starting point is 01:02:18 Oh, man. Well, I think that's what we have time for today. You guys, thanks for having me. That was very funny. Glad you joined us. I certainly think that this farting debate has some legs. I don't think this is the last time you'll hear all of us. It's going to be a lot in the comments.
Starting point is 01:02:36 It's only the beginning. It's only the... Oh, my God. All right. Well, this was super fun And we'll be back Next week Love you guys

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