Call Her Daddy - Jay Shetty: The Rules for Falling in Love and Not Fucking It Up (FBF)
Episode Date: July 12, 2024Jay Shetty joins Call Her Daddy to discuss the rules for falling in love and not fucking it up. Alex and Jay break down common mistakes people fall into when navigating the early stages of dating and ...how the pace of the relationship is a crucial part of not missing any potential red flags. Jay explains the link between the way our parents raised us, how that influences potential partners we seek out, and how to become aware we are even doing any of this. He debunks the idea that a fairytale proposal and wedding is synonymous with true love and teaches us ways to be grateful and content with the life we have. Alex and Jay discuss the terrifying moment when you lose the ‘spark’ in your relationship and Jay gives practical advice on how to settle into a relationship that is rooted in trust, respect and growth. Every relationship comes with stress and conflict but Jay breaks down how to navigate these situations with your partner in a way that ultimately ends up deepening the relationship. This episode is packed with advice on how to cultivate a healthy relationship in your life whether you are currently single or coupled up! Jay's second book, 8 Rules of Love, releases January 31 and is available for pre order at 8RulesofLove.com. To catch Jay on his first ever world tour 'Love Rules', go to JayShettyTour.com for tickets and VIP packages.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
what is up daddy gang it is your founding father alex cooper with call her daddy
jay shetty welcome to call her daddy i'm so grateful to be here i am so happy to have you
here i feel like we've become quick podcast friends yes everyone i went on jay's show the
first it was i don't really go on podcasts and you made me feel so comfortable so i'm so happy to have you here now at my studio you're a comfortable vibe
you're amazing people loved you as always as expected but i think people love seeing that
side of you and i'm just so grateful that you gave me that opportunity so thank you so much
well thank you because now we're going to learn from the master today we're going to talk about
love the real reason you're here is you have a new book out, The Eight Rules of Love.
Yes.
I read this and was like, daddy gang.
Every single person listening today, you are going to learn something because I learned
so much from your book.
What inspired you to write a book breaking down all things love related?
So I think I just had so many friends, clients and people in my life for the last few years that had a passionate career,
but they felt unfulfilled because they didn't have love in their life. Or they were hustling
and they were making things happen. But then their partnership was falling apart,
their relationship was falling apart, and that was affecting their self esteem.
And I started to find that whether you were at the beginning of your career or at the peak of your career, if you weren't figuring out your
relationship, it was causing massive issues with self-worth, self-esteem and self-respect.
And so I realized that no matter what you achieve in your life, if we don't pay close attention to
this, we're going to feel extremely disconnected from the quality of our
lives. And so I don't want people to live their lives feeling unhappy, dissatisfied. And then
let's talk about this. School didn't teach us how to fall in love. It didn't teach us how to find
people. It didn't teach us how to keep love. Our parents may have struggled. Most people didn't see
a great example. If you did, you're extremely fortunate. So we
didn't have a good example at home. And then when you look at your friends and family members,
you see a lot of dysfunction. And so I wanted to study all of that. I wanted to look in within the
dysfunctions I've had in my own life and then go, okay, how do we actually give people a guidebook,
a map and not tell them how to do it and what to do perfectly, but give them everything they need to think about along the way.
We're going to get into all of this, but let's start from the beginning the first rule you write in
your book is let yourself be alone we see it all the time people can convince themselves to say
like in a really bad relationship rather than ending it and just being good with being alone
how can people get over the hump of actually breaking up with someone they know is scared of being alone and single.
Both our hands are up.
Everyone in the room's hands are up.
We've all done that.
And here's what happens when you get into a relationship
because you're scared of being alone.
The first thing that happens
is you settle for less than you deserve.
The second thing that happens
is you become more dependent on them.
And the third thing that happens
because of the first two
is you are so scared of breaking up with them.
You struggle to break up with that person,
which is the core of your question.
And the reason for that,
and we have to dive into why that happens.
Like when I get to the question of like,
how do you break up with someone
when you know they're not right for you?
We have to go backwards
and look at how we ended up there.
We ended up there
because society makes you feel less than when you're lonely. If you went to school and you had a
birthday party and no one showed up, you were the loner. If you sat alone at the lunch table at
school, you were the weirdo. If you're in your 20s or 30s or maybe even 40s and you turn up at a wedding without a plus one, it's like, oh, poor you. And so
society's made being alone the victim. And so somehow that's gone inside our minds and we've
gone, oh, wait a minute, if I leave this person, that reflects on my self-worth. And what I want
people to understand is the difference between compatibility and self-worth.
You may be incompatible with someone, but that doesn't mean that that's a reflection of your
self-worth. And so we need to disconnect the idea that just because this person's not right for me
doesn't mean I'm bad. The way you just described that, it's so fascinating to actually,
if you dissect the concept of like
you're right being alone has always been something that you feel shame for and then I think as we
get into our adulthood we start to realize like shit I feel so uncomfortable when I'm alone but
I think that's what I'm supposed to feel the most comfortable with but how do I achieve that again
back to like no one taught us that being alone is actually very cool and it's like the sexiest thing about someone is if you can be good on your own you're gonna
attract better energy because you are an independent fully formed human being that's not
then attaching yourself to someone else just because you're trying to fill a void or a need
throughout the book you use your own love story with your wife, Roddy, as a reference point for the reader.
Where were you at in your life when you met your wife? And how did you grapple with being alone
prior to finding your person? When I met my wife, I hadn't been on a date in probably around three
to four years. And then all of a sudden I'm dating this girl
that I'm really into.
And I go back to all my old habits.
So I'm trying to impress her with everything.
By the way, I have no money.
I'm $25,000 in debt.
I don't have a job.
And I'm trying to craft this thing to her
that I'm really cool and I have it
and I know what I'm doing.
And so what I'm doing is I'm tutoring kids on the side,
like students
making like 20 pounds an hour from teaching economics to a student at university or college,
saving up to pay for our dates and then trying to pull off the most expensive, epic, show-off
18-year-old dates that I thought were impressive. Classic. And so I took her to La Candela Catelli,
which is like this Michelin star, like David Beckham there it's in London I can't I couldn't afford it to save my
life I like save up everything I possibly can to book a table there you can never get a reservation
I took her to see Wicked in theater like saving up for that so I'm saving up like literally my
20 pound an hour student payments to pay for a date and I'm realizing what am I doing and the best
thing was my wife came to all these things and now I know obviously I know her we've been together
for 10 years but at the time I didn't know I thought that's what women want when you start
dating and if you're not so self-assured with yourself and who you are and what you can offer
in a relationship and confident I think that's a huge thing, right? You can then start to try to appease
the person sitting across from you like, what do they want? What do they want? It's like, hey,
what do you want? What would you naturally want to give this person? And what kind of experience
would you want? I would say that I felt confident about who I was internally, but I was really
unconfident about what I had externally. Because I didn't have a job, I didn't have a job I didn't have money I didn't
have a car I didn't have a home I didn't have anything and because I thought that's what
relationships were value based on I was devaluing myself and I think we all do that right like we
just we find another way to find one of our own inadequacies and devalue ourselves and that's the
thing we're trying to devalue who we are and value what we think the other person will value and that paradox like that challenge
ends up making you move so far away from who you are that actually that person could have fell in
love with that and i think i feel the opposite now and it's really interesting where and i'm sure
i'm sure you've gone through some form of this,
but I found that as I became more externally successful,
I wanted my wife to validate my external success.
So every time I'd win an award,
I'd be like, look what I did.
Like, look how cool this is.
Or like when we did something big,
I'd be like, love me for this.
Like, please appreciate me for this.
And luckily I have a wife who humbles me
in every possible way and just doesn't care and and I started to realize that actually my wife
loves me for who I am and I should just see that as the greatest truth and accept that rather than
constantly trying to get her to love her for stuff that I have yeah that that reminds me of something
I I really appreciated you talked about in your book. And I actually pulled a quote because I thought it was so powerful.
Something I say all the time, and I think we're aligned on this, is like the best way to get into a relationship, I always think, is to focus on yourself.
Really focus on, obviously, without being fully selfish.
Like, what do you want?
Who are you?
What do you need in a relationship?
That's when you're going to attract someone that then is going to be a great partner for you. You wrote in your book, in solitude, we practice giving ourselves what we
need before we expect it from someone else. People determine how to treat us in large part by
observing how we treat ourselves. A relationship with someone else won't cure your relationship with yourself.
Can you give us an example of like, how do people negatively talk to themselves and how does that
impact then how they're going to be treated? Yeah. So I think that a great example would be,
we think like, I'm, I'm not smart.
And so, or I'm not intelligent, or I don't have anything valuable to say.
And I have a bunch of friends who the world would consider absolutely stunning and gorgeous
and beautiful and everything else, but they're super smart and intelligent, but they never
show that side of themselves because they're scared they're not allowed to be that.
And what ends up happening with that is you never show and display that side of yourself. So in a conversation, when a topic comes up, you stay quiet. When you have something
to say, you remain silent. So you're constantly like suppressing your own voice. And now what you
don't realize is that you've created a persona for that person to fall in love with. And if that
person falls in love with that persona, now you've got to act and perform for the rest of your life, right? Exhausting. Exhausting. Or chances are they don't like that
person because they would have liked you. But now you've started to think there's even more
inadequacies in you. So I think what ends up happening is I think we've just been made to
believe that there are certain things that people are attracted to and there are certain things that
people are not. And I think when you play that game, you run the risk of not being attracted to yourself anymore. And I think
that that's the most dangerous thing. You're right. A lot of life is about viewing ourselves
through the eyes of other people. And if you don't really know yourself, you're probably,
your self-worth is going to be predicated on how other people view you. And if you're probably your self-worth is going to be predicated on how other people view you and if
you're seeing someone treating you a certain way though what we don't realize and what you so
beautifully write in your book is like because you're probably giving that energy that you treat
yourself that way and you're not even noticing it you don't speak up or you talk you literally
talk down on yourself to a group of people and so you are devaluing yourself in their eyes. And the only
way that people are going to then all of a sudden start to treat you as an equal or what your worth
is, especially in romantic relationships, is if you carry yourself in the way that you want to
be treated and you actually can see yourself, but you can't get there unless you actually do
the work. I've done a few episodes talking about how our relationship with our parents and our
siblings has so much influence on our behaviors and our life course I love that these two lines
are literally in bold in your book you write this is so fucking smart I loved this part
if there is a gap in how our parents raised us we look to others to fill it and if there is a
gift in how our parents raised us we look to others to give us the same which I immediately
I mean there's so many gaps and there's so many obviously gifts that my parents gave me but like
just a personal note I was fortunate my parents
are still very in love how they've been together for 30 40 years that's so beautiful I love that
totally and everyone would always look at it when I was young like you are so lucky and I feel that
way but then I started dating and I was like I had the craziest standards because I was like no one
is gonna be the way that my dad treats my mom like I
it's a perfect relationship and so everyone has the way that they look at it like oh I was fucked
up from this way or this way if your parents are divorced you're fucked up if your parents are
together you're fucked up right like yeah it's all the same so how can figuring out the gifts
our parents gave us and the gaps that they left impact how we operate in dating? Yeah, that's such a great
question. And thank you for sharing your personal because that that's exactly how I wanted it to hit
that. I didn't want people to be like, Oh, yeah, well, Alex, your parents are great. So you're
lucky like you should be. And it's like, well, no, no, no, you don't understand. Like, it's really
hard for me to find someone to make me feel that way. The first thing is, I want everyone to know
what their gaps are and the way you and I have exercises all over the book to help you do this deeply, but in essence, the way
to build a gap or figure out your gap is obvious. It's like, what do you feel you wish you got from
your parents that you didn't get? Maybe it was praise. Maybe it was encouragement. Maybe it was
belief. Maybe it was presence and energy. You just wish they were there at your football game,
or you just wish that they showed up to your dance rehearsal or whatever it may have been what are those gaps
that have been left out i want you to go fill those gaps yourself i want you to go do each and
every one of those for yourself if your parents didn't compliment you compliment yourself if you
didn't if your parents didn't show up for what you love show up for what you love if your parents
didn't turn up at your games
or whatever it was, make sure you're turning up. Have you given up on your passion because your
parents didn't show up for you? And so I want people to fill that gap themselves because what
that does is that now when you go meet another human, you allow them to just be themselves
and give you love in the way that they like to show it rather than them trying to figure out
how to be your dad or your mom.
And I think that that's often what happens
is that we become a project
and we're looking for someone to fix us.
And what we do is we become broken,
hoping that we're gonna find a fixer
and exhaust the fixer trying to fix us
because we're broken from something that they never did.
If you don't fill in those gaps for yourself, back to what you were saying earlier, you're
then going to enter a relationship and want that person to fill the gap for you. And you'll never
even know if that's the right person for you. Because if your gaps were filled, you probably
would have a very different compatibility rather than you're finding someone that's like
filling your need for compliments, filling your need for this. Well, imagine if that was filled. Would you even be
with that person? What would your relationship be like if they didn't have to constantly fill
you up in certain areas? Exactly. And then the gifts part is looking at the same things as what
you just said. Like what were the way your parents loved you or showed you love that you thought were
beautiful, that you thought were amazing? And then ask yourself, is that something that I want? Or is that something my parents had and it was beautiful for them? But
maybe I don't want that. Like maybe that's not exactly how I want it to be. And when you figure
out the gifts that you received, now what you're going to do is when you meet someone, you're going
to realize if they give those gifts, that's amazing, but don't become blind to the other
gifts that they want to give you. And I think so often we're like,
well, they're not giving me these three things
that I really wanted.
And you're missing out on all this amazing stuff
that they're giving over here
because you don't think that's love.
You think love looks like ABC.
And if they're giving you X, Y, Z,
you're like, no, no, no, but that's not love.
This is love.
And I think so often we limit how people love us
because we put limits on what love looks like to us. And so I'll give a practical example of this with me and my wife. So me and my wife have completely different love languages. We have completely different parenting situations. For my wife, love was shown by presence and time and energy. Her parents took the day off on her birthday. They would take her out on long walks.
They'd spend lots of quality family time together. My parents didn't have lots of time. They were working really hard to make sure that we had enough money and had enough food and working
hard to take care of me and my sister. So my parents gave me gifts. They would save up to
buy me the one thing I wanted. So when we met, I just wanted someone who'd buy me epic gifts.
And my wife's like cooking an amazing meal
and making all this time and energy
and I'm going, well, why didn't I get the gift I wanted?
And that's how the gifts and the gaps play through
because your love language is just based
on the gift and the gaps you had.
But what I'm saying is don't limit love
to your love language.
Your partner may be able to express love
in a far more beautiful, greater way,
and you're just missing out on it.
Speaking of, you know know material items you talk a lot about the tradition around diamond rings and the culture around engagements just in general yeah you also mentioned disney
princess movies and how we were taught from a young age like your prince will come and your
life will be complete um what is the fallout from this fairy tale fantasy
that all of us grew up watching?
Yeah, I have to tell you this story.
I think you may have read part of it,
but I think I want everyone to hear it
because it's amazing.
So when I was deciding to propose to my wife,
I went to my brother-in-law and I was like,
dude, I think I'm gonna propose.
And he was the only person in my life at that time who'd already got engaged and married. So I was like, he's the right person to go to.
And I was like, okay, I want to propose. How much should I spend on a ring? I have no idea,
right? I've never thought about getting an engagement ring for anyone before,
never been into a store, no idea how much it costs. And he was like, yeah, you just spend two
to three months salary. He just threw that number out there and i was like okay cool and then i went and asked another friend who was
about to propose and he was like yeah yeah two to three months salary so i started here two to
three months from a lot of my male friends i didn't make a lot of the time and i was like okay
two to three months salary okay cool and so i was like fine i went and spent two to three months
salary i proposed i we got married she said yes all the rest of it. And then years later, when I was researching this, because I was thinking
about this and I was like, how did everyone know that number? Like, where did that number come from?
Literally in 1977, De Beers has a commercial. You can YouTube this. And in that commercial,
it's this black and white commercial.
There's like silhouettes of a man and a woman. And at the end of it, in this silhouette, there's a
diamond ring that's sparkling and shining that's going onto the finger. And it literally says,
what better way to spend two to three months salary in 1977? A full marketing ploy. A full marketing ploy.
What advice can you give around being happy with what you have as opposed to focusing on what you don't have?
Happiness actually sits at the intersection of gratitude and growth.
And so I would encourage anyone who's listening
to genuinely be grateful for what you have,
but then think about who you want to become
and who you want to grow into, not the house or the car or the external thing. Because
we both know this and everyone knows this. And I will never be the person who say money doesn't
buy happiness or money's not important. I just don't like that rhetoric. I think it's unhealthy
because it makes people feel like, well, A, it makes people feel
bad if they do want that, but it also feels like it always comes from people who are already
financially stable who say stuff like that. I'd actually say that you need growth in your life
constantly, but the goal is to bring out growth. I appreciate that because I think even just in
the world of social media, everything we just talked about of like you viewing things that make you feel less than or you're not adequate enough and
and then it's like and then on top of it just where you're at in your life I think a lot of times
I think the younger generation is having a hard time finding their own path of growth because
there's a lot of people trying to be like I want to be like that person or I want to be like that
person because people are more accessible and sharing more of their life. And although it can be someone that you look up to and you're like,
I appreciate how they do that. I think there's been a little too much of people trying to quite
literally emulate exactly what people are doing on the internet. And I think growth wise, it's,
you're in danger of not allowing yourself to pave your own path and figure out what's good for you.
We all learn from people that came before us, but I do think there's, there's some type of like
copycat mentality that it's like, wait, wait, but what do you want? Do you even, you're watching
that person on Tik TOK, but like, do you even like that? And they're like, no, it just looks cool.
Well then maybe carve your own path. I thought what you wrote in your book was interesting.
And I kind of want you to talk about this because you talk about there's five people that we fall for, right? The rebel,
the chase, the project, the fuck boy, and the opulent one. Yeah. When I read that, I was like,
this was my ex-boyfriend. This my like first boyfriend like i was can you explain
what the opulent one is yes yeah absolutely so i had to put this one in there because i think this
is the most uh misguiding one this is the one that you don't quite understand so the opulent
one is the idea that they have one thing that you really like about them so you may look at
obviously the obvious one is they're so attractive the other one is like oh they're so smart like i
love the way they think or oh they're so educated they went to a great school right so you find one
thing rich yeah rich right like he or she drives a nice car like he or she is famous whatever it
may be you find one thing and you start giving someone other qualities
because they have that quality.
So I'll give an example.
You say, oh, he's rich, which must mean he's organized.
Got it.
He'll be an organized partner.
Oh, they're good looking.
They're trustworthy, right?
I can trust them.
We think anything we find attractive about someone,
we start to give them softer qualities. We like oh they must be kind they went to a good school they must be nice
they must come from a good family and we just start giving people all this ammunition good that's so
because we start painting a picture and so the opulence completely is an illusion because now
you're not letting someone earn the right to be
those things. You're not letting them become those things or demonstrate those things. You're just
assuming. And I think that that's really unnerving because it's so intoxicating. Like when you're
we all know what that feels like. Yeah. I've had an opulent one, Jay. Yeah, exactly. When you're
attracted to someone, it is so intoxicating that you will push
yourself out of these reasoning techniques and the reason i put these all there was just like
please reflect if this is all you're doing and i'm not saying you shouldn't go after someone
you're attracted to i'm just saying check that the other things you think they have they actually
have don't just give it to them because you assume that they must have these abilities so i did this
little uh uh video on instagram recently which i think made the point and i i lit a match and i was
like this is what chemistry feels like and it's amazing and then i lit a candle with it i was like
this is what connection and compatibility looks like it's going to burn a lot longer this this
match is going to run out and so the idea being that like i'm not saying you shouldn't feel chemistry i want everyone to feel chemistry but chemistry is just this one specific spark and now your job
is to turn that spark into a burning flaming candle but if you don't make that transition
that spark in and of itself is not going to create love it's the idea of how the chemical
what's happening chemically and i think we have to look at that. So when you find someone attractive, there's two things happening. You're experiencing attraction,
but you're also experiencing stress. So there's attraction of like, oh, they're hot. The stress is,
do they think I'm hot? The attraction is, oh, they're really smart. I really like how they think.
The stress is, do they like how I think and so there's this when you first
meet someone you're experiencing attraction and stress and that's what feels like chemistry
now the science shows that what happens as you become more comfortable with each other
is the stress decreases because you now actually they make you feel de-stressed because you feel
comfortable with them but we see that comfort as anti-chemistry we see that comfort that that
person now provides
is a spark is gone but it isn't that it's literally a feeling of our bodies i think everyone always
says like the spark is gone and you even talk about the flame versus the candle it's like the
spark isn't gone your stress is now down you're now not so freaking nervous to walk into a room
and wondering like is he gonna think i look good and it's like well now they're you've been with
them for a while you know they, they find you attractive. You're
comfortable. And so eventually when you get into the right relationship, it, there is nothing better
than that comfortability because they are the person that you trust. And that trust is built
where the stress comes down and the trust raises, I think. And so some people get a little
stressed out about that different dynamic,
but then you have to look internally of like, why are you so addicted to the chaos? And I was for a
very long time. Like if I look back at my relationships, I'm like, I was so addicted to
drama and like all the guys that I was dating, it had to be something, but because I wasn't ready
to settle down. And then when I was, I started to look for those qualities of trust and not feeling so on edge and not feeling insecure. And then all
of a sudden I was like, oh, that's definitely more of the vibe and the person I want to be around.
But it takes time. It takes time. It takes time. When looking back at past relationships,
what types of things should we look to examine to make future relationships easier?
When you're starting, it's better to look at pace. I think one of the things in a relationship,
I would look back on your relationships and look at how fast did they get serious,
intimate, or close. And I would analyze the pace of the relationship. And you find that relationships that have a steadier,
slower build help you make better decisions.
And so I'm not saying that if you have a slower rise,
you're more likely to stay together.
I'm just saying that if it doesn't move in too fast,
if you don't fall in love too fast,
you have the ability to make healthier,
better decisions sooner
before you're too attached and you're too deep in.
So I would look at pace of relationship
and go, let me look back at my last few relationships
and ask myself, did I fall in love too fast?
Maybe did I fall in love too slow?
Was I too skeptical or was I too optimistic?
I would look at, was I letting the person
show me who they were
or was I painting the picture of who I thought they were and I think
that in and of itself is everything like we're constantly not actually letting people earn their
stripes and this applies to trust like I talk about trust a lot and and you just brought it
up and that's what's on my mind And I created these four levels of trust.
We often think of trust as binary.
Like we think of like, I trust you or I don't trust you.
And that's how we think about people.
You walk into a room and like,
yeah, you're trustworthy, you're not trustworthy.
I would go home with you, I wouldn't go home with you.
You can drop me home, you can't drop me home.
So we think of trust as black and white,
but trust isn't, it's actually levels.
And so the first level of trust is zero trust.
When you meet someone, I don't care how good looking they are. I don't care how smart they are. I don't care where they went to college
or how much money they had. Don't trust them. They've got to earn that trust from you. And I
know that sounds really dark, but it's not. It's give them the opportunity to show you where they're
trustworthy. So they may say, I'm going to pick you up at 7 p.m. They picked you up at 7 p.m.
They may say, I'm going to text you on at 7 p.m. They picked you up at 7 p.m. They may say, I'm going to text you on Sunday.
They texted you on Sunday.
These are like signs of transactional trust.
That's the next level.
There's a transactional trust.
They say something and they live up to it.
Then the third level of trust is reciprocal trust.
Now you're getting deeper where it's like you do nice things for each other,
but you're not checking in.
You're not having to check every minute detail,
but you know it's going to be reciprocated.
And the highest level is unconditional trust, which is like God level trust, which to be honest, beyond your parents, probably most people are never going
to have it. But we want that so bad that someone does one nice thing for us. We're like, they're
the best. They're amazing. Like I'm done. Like, you know, I love them. They, they won. Like
they're, they're not like my ex at all. And it's like, guys, they got one thing, right?
Like, that's okay. That's great. And I'm not saying you're going to test the person i'm just saying
just don't trust them based on a couple of things and so i think pacing is what i would look at from
a last relationship i would look at how much you let them show you who they were versus you
made them who you wanted them to be it's so fucking good jay because i think you're so right everyone can
fall on the spectrum of like either you're someone that trusts so fast and it's like wait did you
even know them now all of a sudden you're getting engaged and it's like do you even know their
childhood trauma or what they like you don't know anything about them and you've just trusted them
to like hold your heart and go forward and it's like hold on and then when one weird things happens and you're going to your friends crying, they're
like, well, did you ask him?
And she's like, no.
And I think the other side can be people that have a really hard time trusting.
And even as much as someone's showing you, there's clearly something from your past that's
withholding you from being able to move forward.
Because it's like, I've seen relationships.
I've done it in the past where they're like, I have literally done nothing. Why do you not trust me?
And it's because I didn't heal my past relationship where someone broke that trust. And so it's like,
everyone's going to have a different level. But I think the pace is such an interesting concept
because I know from my personal current relationship, we were in the pandemic. It
moved way too fast in the very
beginning. And I made a very, very hard conscious decision that I worked on in therapy to slow it
down. So I could, we, I was like, we need to go back and pretend we're not in the pandemic.
We're spending so much time, which is great, but we're moving too fast. We can't move in together
yet. We've only been dating for like six fucking months like hold on
and so I think you can always alter the pace you're never too far gone there's always times
to reel it in but you have to be with a partner that's willing to also adjust pace wise and not
be like what the fuck are you talking about we like we live together we don't need to talk about
that now well no I realize we've never had a conversation about x. So pacing can also be on your terms and you can dictate it,
but you have to have a partner that's willing also to work with you on it.
I love the point you just made that it can change at any time.
This isn't like, oh, I messed up in the beginning and moved too fast.
I'd say the same with me and my wife, actually.
I'd say in the beginning, we moved way too fast.
We spent every day together because I didn't have a job.
We spent every day together for like six months.
And then all of a sudden i got a job
and now i couldn't see her every day and it shifted and so the pace changed again
yeah and so i i fully agree with you that the pace can change at any time and the reason why
i talk about pace is just you make better decisions when you have more time and you have
more clarity and you don't feel pressure uh all the research shows that when you are clear of mind, you can
deal with seven things at once. But when you're stressed, that number goes down to three. And
acute stress, it gets lower and lower and lower. And so when you start making really big decisions
based on really small pieces of information, you're going to make some unhealthy choices.
Another recent study I read that blew my mind was that this really hit me, especially with, I'm someone who really likes to
make new friends. And I like building new connections with people I feel a similar value.
And this science really blew my mind. It said it takes 40 hours of spending time with someone
to consider them a casual friend. 40 hours. I was like, wow, I haven't spent 40 hours of spending time with someone to consider them a casual friend.
40 hours.
I was like, wow, I haven't spent 40 hours with a lot of people.
Of course, I do think things like interviewing someone, being interviewed by someone, podcast.
There are certain things like deep, intimate conversations, vulnerable conversations accelerate this journey.
100 hours counts as a good friend.
And 200 hours counts as a good friend. And 200 hours counts as a great friend.
So the question when you're dating,
you have to ask yourself is,
do I want to spend 200 hours with this person?
And have I spent 200 hours with this person?
It's a great metric to like just check
because it gives you something tangible
when your feelings are like running ahead
at like 2,000 hours.
Like Daddy Gang,
don't you dare be telling some guy you love him
and you haven't even
spent like 80 hours together yeah like let's like the fourth date i get it it can feel like it's
very exciting but you don't really know that person yet so maybe like hold hold your cards a
little closer to the chest yeah the next rule that you talk about that i i is very, very important is define love before you think it, feel it,
or say it. So Jay, how do you define love? I define love romantically as when you like
someone's personality, when you respect their values, and when you're committed to helping them achieve their goals. And the reason why I define
love that way is liking personality is obvious. And that goes back to, do I want to spend 200
hours with this person? Do I want to spend 2000 hours with this person and 20,000 hours with this
person? Respecting someone's values, I use that word very carefully Most people feel that relationships are where you have the same values
And that you're on this magical search to find someone who believes in the same stuff you believe in
That is so hard and so impossible
And I don't even want to put fairy dust on it
I don't think that's going to happen because people are so different. We're wired so differently
Yes,
we can have shared values, but we have Trump values and priority values. And so I'll give
an example with me and my wife. My wife values family above everything. Her immediate family
that she grew up with, that is like her number one priority. My number one value is my purpose.
It's my work. It's what I do for others. It's my service. It's my passion. That's what I love above everything else. And when we met, we both talked about this,
and we realized that if she had a family event, she would choose that over anything. And if I had
a purpose-based opportunity, I would choose that over everything. And I don't want to change that,
and she doesn't want to change that either. we respect it so when she says to me and the
reason i respect alex it kind of comes back to your relationship my wife's amazing because of
how her parents raised her and my wife's incredible because the relationship she has with her parents
why would i want to take that away from her why would i say no you got to come and support me at
my thing no you got to give up your family to come be with me at this thing because my thing's so
important because i'm doing X, Y, Z.
Like there's a certain respect that I have because I know that her love for her family is what makes her so lovable.
And she knows that my drive and my ambition and my persistence is what makes me attractive to her.
And so why would she want me to give that up?
I feel like, of course, there's going to be some values that you hold very similarly to the person, because naturally, if you are in simpatico with like how you want to live your life, there's going to be things that are overlapping.
But I agree that there's going to be an emphasis for each individual on a different value and where it lies on the scale of importance to you. And I think it's really interesting because if you are
with the right person, I think it's really good to have different values, obviously, that don't
completely contradict each other, that you're like you can't stand each other. But having different
values, I think, allows you to grow as a human being and in a dynamic of a relationship pushes each of you to learn to
compromise and compassion and to learn to respect the other person because you respect your value
so you're going to respect what they like and so I really think it's it's a really great way you
just dissected that because I think sometimes people worry if we don't have exact same values how are we going to make it well do you like what they value do you agree with that
exactly then you're you're good yeah it doesn't have to be your number one it's it's their number
three it's your number one like it's okay what you're trying to do is get someone to value
what you value and that's not possible they can respect what you value but they're not going to shift
their value to value what you value yeah i i love what you're talking about because i want to get
into the part of the book where you talk about the three date rule yeah and i think this is very
applicable to transition in this way because we're talking about finding that person and the values
and feeling like you can really connect with that person on multiple levels that allows you to
be like that's my person that's my partner for daddy gang listening that's like i'm in the dating
phase like jay i'm single i'm trying i'm trying to get there but back up a little bit you have
this three date rule and your theory is that by three dates in you should have had
enough time to determine if you and the other person will be a good match.
So these are not the first three dates.
They're three dates that I recommend you sprinkle across 10 dates, 20 dates, 100 dates.
I don't mind where you put them in.
I'm not expecting you to make the first three dates an interview.
And I don't want you to do that and I actually think that dating that dates that start like an interview end like a firing right like I really
feel like that like that's how it feels because all you did was put your best foot forward
and then all of a sudden you feel fired or rejected because you're like oh no no I was
interviewing for this role like right I came dressed and prepared and you know, so I don't expect you to make these
your first three dates. I expect you to use them in your dating journey. You're saying there are
three dates within the scope of you getting to know someone that you would like them to sprinkle
in these questions. So your first date questions you think should be asked that are geared around finding out someone's tastes
or preferences. What's something you love to do? Do you have a favorite place? Is there a book or
movie you've read or seen more than once? What is occupying your thoughts most at the moment?
What's something you wish you knew more about? What's the best meal you've ever had?
What I'm saying in this is you're getting to know someone's personality. The question you're asking is like, do I find someone interesting?
Do I find someone intriguing?
Do I like them?
Do I enjoy who I am around them?
But on a very personality chemistry level, sometimes you don't even have to ask these
questions.
Sometimes you're actually going to just observe those.
You're not like having these in your notes.
Yeah.
Can I ask you a few questions?
Jay and Alex told me to ask you these questions.
But this is something you can be looking for.
And do I like the tone with which they carry themselves, right?
And the tone is so important even compared to the words.
To really listen out and go, oh, is this person arrogant?
Is this person like coming across like my ideas are not interesting?
Like, do they ask the
question back and by the way you know i think that a lot a lot of some of these questions like
men may struggle to answer because they feel quite you know they feel quite personal and
they can feel quite like intimidating sometimes because you can feel like oh god like why am i
and so these questions are going to be fun they They're meant to be, they're not an interrogation.
They're not an intervention and they're not an interview.
It's being inquisitive, right?
And I like to make that difference between,
you're never asking a question from an interrogation standpoint
or intervention standpoint,
because everyone, no one likes that.
You're asking it from a point of like genuine interest.
And by the way, have your answers ready.
Because if you have your answers ready,
you can say, well, let me go first.
Let me tell you mine.
And now it's a conversation
and now it's open and vulnerable.
And it's not this forced thing of like,
well, I want to know what you have to say
and I'm judging you.
It's like, no, no, I've thought about this for myself too.
It's all coming from a place of,
which I think if someone's open,
you just want to get to know them better.
And I think that's very fair. So second date date questions at some point while you're dating this person you're gonna feel
like you're ready to get underneath a little bit more if you won the lottery what would you spend
the money on I think that's so telling about someone yeah are they just gonna which is totally
fine if they're like oh I'm retiring and I'm just like never doing anything again totally fine but
like is that someone you'd want to be with exactly they just told you they just told to, which is totally fine if they're like, oh, I'm retiring and I'm just like never doing anything again. Totally fine. But like, is that someone you'd want to be with?
Exactly.
They just told you.
They just told you.
They're not going to be driven.
They're not going to be ambitious.
They're not going to push for it.
And there's nothing wrong with that.
Right.
That's the point.
Like, I think sometimes we have a hierarchy of like, oh, this kind of person is better.
Totally.
And it's not.
People should just be happy.
Well, no.
And I think even the way you said it, I think because you and I have kind of have kind of agreed like for me i wouldn't be happy if i didn't have a purpose i think a lot of my purpose comes
from my creativity i think you're similar so that question to me is like i would keep working if i
won the lottery like i i don't i but there's also then i know a friend of mine that was like bitch
i'm getting five dogs,
moving to a ranch and living my goddamn life and having 10 kids.
And I'd be like, like, and do you?
And I totally respect that.
But again, then maybe the person sitting across from me would be better for me or my friend based off of that answer.
You would find out.
Correct.
You got to ask these questions.
Correct.
And then the third day, this is where you get really a lot deeper,
right? At some point, you're going to feel like they've opened up to me in some capacity.
And what types of questions are you thinking should be asked on this third date where you're really trying to get under it? Yeah, these are the ones where you're trying to do something called
like self-disclosed vulnerability, where you're really trying to get to a point where you're
building a sense of trust and you're building a sense of openness where you're really trying to get to a point where you're building a sense of trust and you're
building a sense of openness where you're comfortable having uncomfortable conversations.
And I think that that is an art and skill that you have to test in a relationship. If you think
you're getting serious, if someone asks me, how do I know that a relationship is getting serious?
It's when you can have uncomfortable conversations
in a comfortable way.
That to me is a sign that your relationship
is actually serious.
Not that you moved in, not that you get nice gifts,
not that you can spend lots of time together
or you go on vacations together.
Can we have a conversation that usually creates conflict
and not get mad at each other
and not make it about each other's weaknesses?
There's so many things that people are like, this tangible thing will allow me to be closer,
moving in with someone. You can move in with someone and realize you barely know that person,
but can you have a conversation and you don't even live together? Can you really go deep with
someone like where they're trusting you with information that they clearly keep close to
their chest that they're like, you know i trust you again trust stress is going down
trust is going up and i love what you just said about the trust element like the way we check
whether we trust someone is like we say we trust each other right like we literally ask that
question that makes no sense it's like it's like we trust each other right like you you trust me
right i trust you it's like no like trust is me being able to tell you stuff that may be
uncomfortable for me one of my favorite questions that, and you can read more from the book, but one of my favorite questions that's not in the book
is a question that I often ask my wife. And I ask it even till this day. And so every couple of
months I'll say to her, and it's not like it's in my calendar. It's not like it's in a spreadsheet.
I don't record the answers. This is a, you know, it's not a technique. It's a genuine thing.
I'll say to her, is this relationship going in the direction
you want it to go in?
And if it's not, what are we willing to do about it?
And if it is, what are we doing right
that we should keep doing?
It's just such a healthy question.
And it's asked not because I think things are going wrong.
Like I'm not asking that because I'm scared or I'm worried.
I'm asking it because it's the same as doing this podcast, right?
It's the same as doing anything.
There's a famous quote that says,
you can't improve what you don't measure, right?
You can't grow something that you don't measure.
Like whether it's a business, whether it's a podcast,
whether it's life.
And I just think life is something that is lived
so unintentionally and unconsciously that 10 years go by,
someone comes, knocks on the doors and goes,
I don't think it's working out anymore.
And you're surprised
because that person kept it inside them
every three months how they were feeling.
I was gonna say,
I think that's such a testament
to how much you trust your partner
to be able to go to your wife
and know that you're ready for any
answer but you also kind of know there may be something little she wants to adjust but you know
you're not going to be fully blindsided because you're constantly checking in because of consistency
exactly and i also think it's like there's a lot of people and I would really encourage daddy gang I know it's so
uncomfortable sometimes but like having those hard conversations allows longevity in a relationship
and it to grow because if you're not having that conversation like you said you're having so many
in your head I hate him for this I hate her for this I hate them for this and then you're like
what are we doing here so that's really cool that you do that with your wife and if anything i'm going to steal that from you because it's just a really mature way of basically
saying i'm giving you the opportunity to say anything to me and i'm willing to hear it because
i care so much about our relationship that my ego is on the floor right now and like i i care more
about our partnership than whatever you're going to say individually
that I could potentially also work on.
And then you also know she's willing to hear it from you
if you're like, because I've been thinking about this.
I mean.
I know this is hard.
Like, I want to empathize with everyone.
Like, I'm not saying this is easy.
I'm not saying that you should do this tomorrow.
What I am saying is I'm just trying to save people
from wasting 10 years of their life
with someone that doesn't
love them and that they don't feel loved by like that's where this is coming from this isn't coming
from a place of I'm really smart and I know what to do in a relationship it's coming from a place
of just I know how hurt people have been by relationships and I know how much pain it causes
when you feel blindsided and when you feel like you've just been surprised and someone just like delivered
you a big notice that you had no idea was coming your way. I just don't want you to have to go
through that. Like, you know, I just want to save you from the big, not that I can save you, but I
want this advice to save you from the bigger pain. To save someone for the bigger pain. I agree with
you. I think there are sometimes people, especially maybe in those early dating stages where they get
a little excited, they get a little ahead of themselves. What's your advice for managing expectations in a new relationship?
So I have an interesting take on this. I don't believe, so when people say like,
how do you make expectations? How do you set expectations? I believe the word expectation
is completely insignificant and useless. And I'll tell you why. An expectation
is a hope, a wish, or a want that something might happen, just hopefully, randomly, potentially.
I don't want to live my life in expectations. I want to live my life in intentions and actions
and attention. Like I want to live my life in saying, I'm going to be vulnerable in this
relationship and I'm going to see if the person's vulnerable back. I'm not going to expect the
person to be vulnerable or open because that doesn't give me anything. And so I kind of remove
expectations from pretty much every area of my life. And I go, how do I change that into intentions, action, and attention? So if I want a open, exciting, fun-filled relationship,
I'm going to bring that energy to the relationship
and then see where that person matches.
If they're on a lower frequency or a lower vibration,
it will show you won't have to ask them
because you can tell immediately, right?
Like if you bring your best,
it's kind of like with an interview,
you know when a guest brings their best energy
and now you were probably prepared anyway
because you're a great interviewer,
but you can bring your best energy too.
Now you're creating something amazing.
But if you're waiting to see what energy the guest brings
and then basing your energy off it,
it kind of starts creating,
it could create something that you don't want to create.
And I think that happens in a relationship
on a much bigger scale. What is your advice for people that are in a
relationship where both of the partners handle stress differently that's such a great question
so i mean one of the things i've realized about stress recently is that oftentimes when we break a habit for example you want to be strict about what you eat but chances are
you break that habit when you're stressed you want to be a nice kind person but chances are
you compromise with that because you're stressed i'm snappier with my wife when i'm stressed
i'm i say things i don't want to say to my wife when I'm stressed.
I won't say them to them if I'm not stressed.
So you start seeing how stress literally makes you who you don't want to be.
And so sometimes we're trying to manage our diet or we're trying to manage how we talk.
It's like managing our stress is actually the core of what allows us to be a nicer human,
a healthier human, a better person.
When you handle stress differently i think
the core in a relationship is knowing how the other person handles stress and i think for so
long in relationships we don't know or we don't like so another thing and it goes back to respecting
we have to respect unless it's abusive manipulative physically, physically, verbally, like there's no part of me that says
you have to be patient with anything of that sort.
But beneath that, if anything in your life,
if you don't understand and accept
the way your partner deals with stress
is different to yours, that creates issues.
So in the book, I break down three fight styles.
And the reason why I came up with the fight styles
is because me and my wife would always argue
and fight and have discussions.
And we would never swear or raise our voices,
but we would get into really intense discussions,
debates around stuff that didn't even matter sometimes
and stuff that did matter.
And I would walk away always thinking like she didn't care as much as me. I would always feel like she didn't even matter sometimes and stuff that did matter. And I would walk away always thinking like
she didn't care as much as me. I would always feel like she didn't love me as much as I loved her
because she had a different way of dealing with stress. So her way of dealing with stress was she
wanted to lock herself in a room. She wanted to be quiet. She didn't want to talk to me.
She just wanted space and time and she would figure it out. And my way of dealing with
stress is we're going to talk about it right now. We're going to talk about everything. I've got all
the points laid out, the bullet points are ready. And that shows I care. And her way of showing she
cares is give me some time. If I get to reflect and digest and introspect, I care. But I didn't
think that. I think you don't care and I care because
we always think what we do shows we care. Absolutely. And so my fight style, which I
broke it down, is called venting. And her fight style is called hiding. And the third fight style
in the book is called exploding. And so a venter is me. I want to talk about it. I want to talk
about it right now. A hider is I don't want to talk about it. I need space. And an exploder is, my emotions matter the most and I just need to talk about how I feel
emotionally. And so none of these are good or bad. None of these are better or worse. None of these
are things to judge each other for. But when you know that's how your partner deals with stress,
you can now create a healthier boundary. So me and my wife will say, all right, you need two days.
I want to talk about it right now. We're going to talk about in 12 hours. Let's find the space where you get enough
space, but I don't have to wait for two days because I want to talk about it now. And now I'm
dealing with stress healthier rather than saying, oh, I don't like the way you deal with stress.
You shouldn't be stressed. You don't deserve to be stressed. I love that. It's, I think everyone
in a relationship can immediately, if you're thinking right now about your relationship, you can kind of pinpoint how you deal with stress. In the beginning of my relationship with my boyfriend, it was the same dynamic. I would be like, I need a minute. I'm gonna go. And my boyfriend would be like, we need to talk about this. And he had the same exact response where he was like, I feel like I care more about you in this relationship. You don't care as much. And I'm like, just because I don't want to talk immediately. I'm thinking about it
up there, but like, I don't want to talk about it right now. And so I think eventually we got to a
point where we respected that boundary of, I know your need and I know my need and let's find
compromise. And it changed the dynamic because what it also allowed us to do is feel safe in the
relationship of like okay we now have established we know we both care yeah we are just handling it
differently totally and when you know that like even when i was up in the bedroom just like
ruminating on something i still knew like i know he's there and he wants to talk and we're both
we're gonna figure this out yeah but you have to first acknowledge the difference in how you handle shit before you can actually then actually handle it
yeah and it's and that's why i say respect because it's like judging someone for putting their milk
before their cereal right and it's like you put your cereal before your milk and you would never
be like oh i mean i mean some people get really passionate about this kind of stuff but generally
i would think that you wouldn't but that is exactly how we deal with stress it's that like
it's that example cereal first obviously yeah yeah but again no judgment but cereal first
but that's what i mean like we get so attached to like how we have learned to process emotions
and we think if you don't
process emotions like i do you don't care you don't love me we're not in this together and that's
and that's what we just create assumptions out of nothing and start pushing the other person away
and i'm like no just realize that that person deals with it that way you deal with that way
and we'll figure it out i have one one more final question, okay? What is the most common mistake people make in love?
I think the biggest mistake people make in love
is that they think the epitome peak experience of love
is only through romantic love.
And I think people devalue the love
a mother has for their kids, friends have for each other, people have for their brothers and sisters, the love kids have for their parents.
Like there are so many opportunities in get to give and receive love,
which means I know single moms who love their kids with all their heart and their kids love them back,
but they don't feel like that's enough because society has said, well, if you don't have someone
in your life, then you are not worthy of love. And so we kind of have a hierarchy of love where
it's like romantic loves at the top. And when I look at the greatest acts of love in the
world, often they're not romantic, often they're family, often they're friendship, often they're
people for society, like sacrifice. So I just want people to remember that as much as romantic love
is important, don't make the mistake to devalue all the other relationships in your life.
Studies show that 70% of people believe in soulmates,
which is the definition that there is one person
out there for me that is perfect for me.
And until I find them, everyone else is not that person.
And I think that's a mistake we make in relationships
because I think a healthy relationship is where two people say we want to make this work
Not a relationship where you're searching for this perfect person fully formed ready-made waiting to come out of a box
And I think that's kind of how we've been trained like the perfect barbie doll and the ken doll that sits inside a box
That's shiny, sparkly, brand new. They're wearing
the perfect outfit that we want them to wear. We can buy clothes to put on them and make them who
we are. And it's like, that person doesn't exist. But what does exist is this unique, interesting,
flawed, fascinating individual that wants to make it work with you. And you want to make it work
with them. And that's what makes it more special you and you want to make it work with them.
And that's what makes you more special because you chose each other. You weren't meant for each
other. If you were just meant for each other, that means there was no choice. That means it
was just meant to be. But if you chose each other, that's what makes you special. And that's what
makes them special. And that's what makes what you have special because every day you're working
against all odds to be together it's such a good point
the like we said the word growth and the effort that you're putting in is also why you're in love
with that person the issues you've gone through the things that you've had to overcome that's why
i'm in love with my partner that's why you're with your wife. It's like looking at what we've gone through and how we've gotten to this point.
I don't want something that's easy.
I want something that's worth the work and the effort.
Jay Shetty, everyone go read your book.
It is truly like there are exercises.
This is not a book that you're just casually reading.
Like I read this and it is really incredible.
Jay, just like you are able to do exercises
that are very thought provoking
and really give you an insight into yourself
and what you want for your future.
So Jay Shetty, it was an absolute pleasure.
Alex, thank you so much.
You're so phenomenal at what you do.
This was so fun.
You're the sweetest.
Like I'm so, honestly, this is like,
I'm so grateful to you on such a deep level
for doing this and to open me up to your beautiful community.
Daddy Gangster, I love you.
Thank you so much.