Dear Chelsea - Family Secrets with Therapist Nedra Tawwab
Episode Date: October 10, 2024Therapist Nedra Tawwab joins Chelsea this week to chat about managing unhealthy family relationships, living with someone who can’t process their emotions, and growing up with emotionally immature p...arents. Then: A gay man wants his sister to stop stealing his friends. A newly-single woman struggles with boundaries with her ex. And a daughter wants to introduce herself to her half-siblings - who have no idea she exists. * Buy Nedra’s book Drama Free! * Need some advice from Chelsea? Email us at DearChelseaPodcast@gmail.com * Executive Producer Catherine Law Edited & Engineered by Brad Dickert * * * * * The views and opinions expressed are solely those of the Podcast author, or individuals participating in the Podcast, and do not represent the opinions of iHeartMedia or its employees. This Podcast should not be used as medical advice, mental health advice, mental health counseling or therapy, or as imparting any health care recommendations at all. Individuals are advised to seek independent medical, counseling advice and/or therapy from a competent health care professional with respect to any medical condition, mental health issues, health inquiry or matter, including matters discussed on this Podcast. Guests and listeners should not rely on matters discussed in the Podcast and shall not act or shall refrain from acting based on information contained in the Podcast without first seeking independent medical advice. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Hi, hello, this is Chelsea Handler at Joy, Chelsea Joy, Chelsea Joy Handler. Hello,
this is Catherine Elizabeth Law. How are you? I'm good. I'm just sitting here in my bedroom with my big black lover, Doug, and he is so cute. Now I came home. I was gone for two weeks. I went
to Mallorca and I came home and he has this new thing where he just jumps on you and then puts your hand in his mouth with a light
and he's not really biting,
but he's trying to drag you.
And I'm like, you better cut that fucking shit out, buddy,
because people are not going to respond well
to them doing that.
People who don't like dogs are going to be scared.
Right, dad?
Make sure my bell trained him to do that
while in my absence.
She's like full of shenanigans, that my bell.
Of course,
of course. I was just listening to Alex Cooper's interview with Kamala Harris on my drive in.
I was so, so blown away that she got that interview. I texted her right away. I was like,
holy shit. So that's awesome. That's amazing. I love to see that. Yeah. I also like to see
candidates being real and normal in the
modern world, like doing something like a podcast. Yeah, exactly. Exactly. I like when they just act
like normal people. Like you don't have to always be spouting Paul like you're a human being. I want
to see the human humanity in everyone, you know, and be like, OK. But anyway, I've been spending a
lot of time in my hyperbaric chamber because I'm home for two weeks and I figure I might as well regenerate and rejuvenate.
Somebody told me the other day that my skin looked incredible.
And I was like, you know what?
Thanks for that hot tip.
I'm going to keep going.
I'm like, it must be the hyperbaric chamber.
Yeah, it was like sleeping like a vampire in your tube.
Among all the other things that I do to myself.
Are you reading anything exciting right now?
I did.
I just read a great book. I
think, I don't know that it's out yet because my editor sent it to me. It's called Like Mother,
Like Mother by Susan Rieger. I read that. I read Cutting for Stone over the break. That is long
and laborious. And I would not recommend that unless you're into, because he's the one who wrote The Covenant of Water,
Abraham Ferdowsi.
Oh, yes, yes.
I did just reread Many Lives, Many Masters
because it's come up so many times on the podcast.
I did pretty much, I just reread that
and then I gave it to my aunt
because she could use a little spirituality booster.
I gave that to her with her Wellbutrin
that I dropped off at her house the other day.
I said, start taking one of these a day, every please she's like you know I'm not unhappy I'm
like no no no one's saying you're unhappy you just need a little bit of a mood lifter I'm like it's
just so that you're a little bit more optimistic yes and she's like I am optimistic but I'm also
realistic and I'm dying I'm like you're not dying you're just old we're all dying that's my dad he's
like ever since he turned I mean I don't probably 30, but like literally every year he's
like, I probably won't make it five more years. I'll probably die by the time I'm 50. Why do
people say things like that? I don't know. I either read or listened or someone told me that
if we make it through the next 10 to 15 years, then we're going to be able to live until we're
120. I'm like, no, thank you.
First of all, I can't afford to live until I'm 120. Okay. I don't have that kind of money.
You want to retire someday. Who the fuck wants to do that to 120? I mean, have you seen old people?
It's hard to get around. Oh, please. Well, apparently there's going to have, there are
going to be all these things to help us keep us young, but it's like, I'm going to spend most of
my time in a fucking hyperbaric chamber. I already feel like crazy, like a Fox. Oh, by. Well, apparently there's going to be all these things to help us keep us young, but it's like I'm going to spend most of my time in a fucking hyperbaric chamber. I already feel like crazy like a fox. Oh, by the way, there are still tickets for Kansas City, St. Louis and Indianapolis that are coming up at the end of October, October 25th, 6th and 7th. Anyway, we have a serious guest today. We have a professional today on the show. No funny stuff. This was a recommendation from my friend
Yannica. So please welcome Nedra Tawwab. Welcome Nedra Tawwab. Thank you so much for being here
today. Thank you for having me. I have lots of questions for you. I follow you on Instagram.
A lot of my friends also follow you on Instagram. So I'm not sure who turned who on to you. But I read your book,
Drama Free, and I've sent it to a lot of people anonymously. Just so you know, I like to just send
books to people without them knowing exactly where it came from. But there's a couple of things in
your book that I want to touch on right away. First of all, you're a licensed therapist. So
you have a lot of experience, right, with dealing with different people, different kind of dynamics in relationships. What I found very interesting,
I had never really understood the term enmeshment before. And I was interested in you kind of
delineating the difference between codependency and enmeshment? Because some of the examples in the book that you used for enmeshment
sounded to me like codependency. So I want to be better at knowing what the real differentiation
is. Oh, that's a good one. When I think of codependency, I think of us trying to enable
some unhealthy behavior in a person, trying to rescue them from some sort of outcome,
trying to manage things in their lives so they will be better. When I think of this enmeshment
that we have in our relationships, people can be very healthy in their own life and very
enmeshed at the same time. It's that couple that doesn't have any outside friends.
It's the siblings who won't let anybody else in.
Nobody has a drug addiction.
Nobody needs saving from anything.
But there is no outside influence.
It's just us.
And so the enmeshment is really like,
we have no boundaries because we have nothing else
besides what's in this situation.
So would you say it's like a little bit like isolation, like isolating someone?
Well, it could be isolating a lot of people. I think, you know, you brought up
Drama Free, which is about dysfunctional family relationships. And one of the things that happens in dysfunctional families is there is this enmeshment around we are the only people who can love us, right?
Like everybody else is an outsider, a friend, a teacher.
Everyone is an outsider.
It's only us.
And it doesn't mean that those people aren't healthy for you, but it certainly breaks up that dynamic and can point out some of those things that are a bit dysfunctional.
And so for the dysfunctional system to sort of continue, we have to be enmeshed.
Okay, because one of the examples you used for enmeshment, I think, if I recall, it was about like getting accepted to a college that was far away from home and your family desiring for you to go to college
close to home and you choosing to go out of state, say, and then having there be a consequence within
your family about that. Like, how dare you go so far away from us? You're supposed to stay close.
So that's a good example of enmeshment. Absolutely. When we are unable to get away
from something, even if we're going to this healthier thing, even if our family has taken really great care of us, they don't want us to leave.
It's very healthy for people around a certain age to leave the nest. And if you're not allowed to do that, that can be problematic for you. If you're not allowed to raise your children a little
differently than how you were raised, if you're not allowed to have friends outside of the family,
if you're not allowed to go on vacation with people who are other than family,
those things are problematic. That very much sounds to me like an instance of a man controlling
a woman, say say in a relationship
where they isolate them right and they don't want them to have any friends they don't want them to
do anything unless it's been approved that kind of abuse that that kind of situation that most
typically leads to abuse control right yes so it typically is a control tactic because
the people we love we want other people to love them as well. And if I
am saying to you, I am the only person who can love you, or we are the only people who can love
you, I will pick the people. That's not good for your sense of autonomy. Like you don't get to,
you know, be at work and maybe pick some people who are good for you because they've already been picked. And so if I am saying I am the barrier for entry of anyone else,
yes, I'm trying to control your life in some sort of way.
Okay, let's talk about counterdependency versus codependency. So would you say that
counterdependency is basically the opposite of codependency? Well, yes. Counterdependency
is the isolation of people as supports, as confidants, as emotional companions.
People who are counterdependent, they tend to function pretty well in life. They have this
very strong exterior. They have a mantra of, I don't need anyone. They're really do-it-yourselfers.
They believe in this philosophy of being self-made, and they have a high ability to feel
very lonely because we need people in the world. When you are of the mindset that people have harmed you and the safest thing to do is stay away from people,
it causes this isolation of I am the only one with me.
So even if I can do it all,
I still feel bad about having to do it all,
even if I'm pushing people away.
So sometimes, you know, we'll see this in dating
as the person, everything is going really
well. It seems like it's a, you know, really great relationship. And then it's supposed to
maybe go to the next step and they start to push you away because there's too much closeness.
There's too much vulnerability. So you see that a lot with folks who are counterdependent or
you may see them carrying a heavy load and they are unable to allow you to help them.
Sometimes with our family members, this is the person who we don't see very often, the person who
may not call us, the person who keeps to themselves, but they function pretty well in life,
but they are very isolated from everyone else. And is there a way to be counterdependent?
Because my sister and I were talking about this term over the weekend,
and we were saying how we were both,
we both became counterdependent because our parents were so,
well, useless, pretty much.
I mean, they were around, but they weren't really doing anything.
And so we were like, oh, we're both, but we weren't,
we were both very much involved in our family.
We're not isolated from our family.
So how does that fit in? Like,
if you're somebody who's very self-sufficient, like, I always feel like that. I'm like,
oh, I'm all on my own. I've got to do everything on my own. But I've become quite used to that because that's how I grew up. Like, I had to be self-sufficient. But I'm not isolated from the
rest of the family. Well, how do you invite people in? I always have people around.
But how do you invite people in emotionally?
Because there's a difference between having people around and being around people and being able to show up in that space and allowing people to be there for you.
Allowing people to support you when you're going through something. not you always being the supporter, but really
letting people in, letting them know what's going on. So you can have relationships and still not
be emotionally available in those relationships. So I would wonder if a person is counterdependent,
how are you being vulnerable or not? So counterdependent would mean that you're not,
that you are being invulnerable, or can you be counterdependent and be vulnerable?
Counterdependent and vulnerable with a small few, with a small few sometimes.
Okay, well, I'm just gonna lump myself into that category.
I think that's true.
Yeah, with a small few, because what I've seen with that is people who are vulnerable with a small few, it is very small.
I mean, it's not enough to even have a party with.
It's really like I have two people.
And if something happens to these two people, I don't have anyone else.
There's no inviting in.
There is no more opening up.
Because, you know, again, somewhere along the way, no more opening up because, you know, again,
somewhere along the way, like you said, like, you know, my parents were useless. So I grew
accustomed to doing things on my own because I know I can do them well. I know things will be
done. And I have not developed that trust for other people to do them. Now I can talk to people
about my problems, but I don't really want people to
get in there and resolve my problems for me. So, I think there is some variation of how we're
vulnerable with others as well. Sometimes with counterdependency, people are very vulnerable
after the fact. They talk about things as they have already resolved those things and not
necessarily maybe as they're going through those things. Okay. Let's talk about the term,
is it alexithymia? That was a word I had to look up that I learned in your book. So thank you. I
love learning new words. So tell us what that means. Alexithymia is where we have like this emotional restriction. We're not aware of
what we feel. We almost can't tap into our emotions. Sometimes this will show up in people
saying things like, I don't cry, or I don't get upset about stuff, or I don't get very angry. Well, emotions are very helpful for us. Now, how we
express those emotions, it matters. You can be angry, but do we want you to be angry and get out
of your car and yell at a driver? No, we don't want that. But it is okay to have some level
of a feeling in your body. Ultimately, people have to be able to identify what their feeling is. And
with alexithymia, I think we see a lot of folks who don't even know what they feel. It's like,
I don't know what I feel. I'm often confused about what my feeling is about this thing,
or they're pocketing everything into, you know, maybe two feelings. I'm angry or I'm sad.
Well, let's talk about this whole wheel
of other things you might feel.
You might feel disappointed.
You might feel confused.
You might feel lonely.
So being able to communicate your feelings,
especially going back to counterdependency,
a lot of counterdependent folks really struggle
with being able to identify what they're feeling. And so it can be challenging in your relationships with people if you can't even show feeling and then be able to recognize those feelings in other people and respond to it, I don't even understand why they're upset about this thing, because that wouldn't upset me.
Well, we have to be able to show up for people in relationships.
We have to be able to acknowledge what we're feeling. mood trackers to kind of help you distinguish between a happy moment, a exciting moment, a
sad moment, or this moment, or that moment, because most people will give you like two things, but
once you break it down, it can be helpful to know that actually I was enraged when I did that. That
was a step beyond anger when I responded in that way. I was actually very hurt. I wasn't angry. Those can
be very helpful tools for you to be able to communicate with others and certainly to manage
your behaviors. Yeah, you talk about that a little bit with a couple that like this woman was just
frustrated with her husband and not, he wasn't able, she was ready to leave him and he wanted
to maintain the relationship and stay in the marriage, yet he didn't know how to.
He didn't know how to communicate or what the problem was because he had grown up with a family of parents who were divorced or had an unhealthy dynamic.
And so he didn't know how to express his emotions.
And when someone is that stuck, and you talk about this also, like having patients that aren't ready to make changes. You know, sometimes there's like a phase of, there are several phases of going to therapy
where you're curious enough to think that there is a problem.
Then you go and you start talking to somebody.
But I know from my own therapy experience that it is, there's phases to when you're
willing to accept and learn more about yourself and actually gain self-awareness about your
behavior. But when someone is so stuck and is emotionally unavailable
and emotionally almost uneducated, right?
They have an inability to express themselves.
Where do you begin?
How do you salvage a marriage
if somebody is that far removed from their own emotions?
Well, if that person is in therapy,
I think a therapist
would point out their feelings for them. There have been times where I say, you know, you sound
very sad about your partner wanting to leave the relationship without that person being able to
identify, oh my gosh, I'm sad. I'm like, is this accurate or am I far off? Right. And then we'll talk about what that feeling
looks like. But if that person is not in therapy, I think sometimes when we're in relationships with
people, it can be really challenging to push them to the point of change because people have to want
that. And there are, you know, there are people who grow in age who never change because it's
so uncomfortable. It can be so uncomfortable to move away from this idea that I have to manage
everything or I have to keep things really private to I'm going to be an open book with someone.
So for some people, they would rather that marriage end than to risk being
vulnerable in that relationship because that's way scarier. I have had some clients where it has
taken, you know, maybe years maybe for them to get to this point of being able to quickly recognize
what they feel and act on it, particularly in marriages.
You know, a lot of marriages, you know, we kind of talk about infidelity.
We talk about, you know, how you communicate when people have kids.
That's a really troubling spot as well.
I want to talk about this section of your book.
I took a screen grab because I found this, it resonated for a lot of situations that
I've seen before.
Signs of emotionally
immature parents. So there's a list. The first thing says you feel lonely when you're with them,
which is so sad. The relationship is one-sided. They dismiss or minimize your emotions.
They demand compliance and they don't respect boundaries. Also, they make their problems seem
more significant than yours and they are unable to hold space for
your feelings or problems so it sounds that sounds also very narcissistic is there a correlation
between being like an immature parent because all of these things are also signs i think of
narcissism no they could be but i i think a narcissist is a little more strategic. I think
an emotionally unavailable parent is maybe a little more aloof because there can be love there.
Like the parent can love you, but just not have those tools to really show up in a way, even if you tell them. The application of these things,
they can't quite grasp it. So I would say what a narcissist is, is a little more strategic.
They really don't have a desire to change. They are certainly manipulating a situation with
an emotionally immature parent. There just may be a lack of understanding.
Certainly, they don't have a good grasp on their mental health. And I think that if a narcissist
or emotionally available person was a client, the emotionally unavailable parent would likely
be able to change and the narcissist would not.
Right. Because that's typical, right? I remember asking my therapist if I was a narcissist,
and he said, typically, narcissists aren't asking for feedback.
Yeah. I think sometimes we confuse narcissism like being highly concerned or putting your needs in the forefront.
Like that's not necessarily narcissistic.
I think there is some strategy to a narcissist that maybe we don't understand about that dynamic where someone is strategically trying to manipulate you or make you believe something is happening that's not happening.
With a parent, I think what's happening is that parent probably still needs a lot of parenting
themselves. So being able to show up for a child is just out of their wheelhouse because they're
really still looking for the same things that you're looking for, which is a lot of nurturing.
Kids need a lot. They need people to tune into their world. And some parents, they just don't
have those skills and they don't really know how to develop them because they're still trying to
get it from you or to give it to themselves. And what advice would you give to children like that,
that are dealing with an emotionally immature parent?
How do you guide that?
Well, you can have a relationship with an emotionally immature parent.
The relationship is not going to be ideal because you cannot change that parent.
So, you know, for instance, if you have a parent who doesn't respond to, let's say, your career successes and you're like, mom, I got a new show or mom, I got this thing going on.
You're like, oh, OK. You may want to not share with your parent until you feel secure in the way that they might respond.
You may want to share with people who can really have a warm level of excitement and then tell your parent as a formality.
But going to that person who has shown that they can't support you and looking for that support, that's going to hurt you every time. unavailable people is really to manage how you interact with them, your expectations around
what they are actually capable of. With parents, we often give them expectations that they can
never achieve because, you know, everybody is not prepared to parent. What is the stat? Like 70%
of people have unplanned pregnancies. So, you know, people are not necessarily equipped to deal with everything that, you know, happens with a child, even when that child is an adult.
Because you'll have a lot of adults who say, well, maybe I could understand that they didn't get it when I was a kid, but now I'm 30, I'm 40, and they still don't get it.
And it's like, why do you think that the aging process means maturing emotionally?
It doesn't necessarily mean that.
And you're talking about them maturing during a high stress scenario.
They were raising you and working and doing all these things.
That's not the time to mature.
Right.
So, you know, this idea that our parents should be
able to get it at some point, it's like, well, what work have they done? What work are they
doing? Are they listening to this podcast? Are they going to seminars? Are they in therapy?
What are they doing? If they're not doing anything, the expectation of them changing is pretty small. And if you're into this sort of
self-improvement work and mental health projects and all of this sort of stuff, if you're into that,
then that's great for you. But it's certainly not something that is likely to rub off on a person
who is uninterested and certainly a person who doesn't seem to have a problem with themselves.
Okay. That's very interesting. Not everybody is maturing just because they are getting older.
That's an important nugget of information to remember
when you're dealing with a 60-year-old moron. Remember that, everybody.
Okay. We're going to take a quick break and we'll be right back to take some callers.
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and we're back we are back okay we're back with nedra toab yeah so i wanted to ask about
enmeshment and we get a lot of calls and emails from people who are having difficulty with their
family either because they have chosen to leave the religion
that they grew up in, that they were raised in,
or that they come out of the closet
and their families have a poor reaction to that.
So I wonder, is that a consequence of enmeshment?
Leaving a religion can be,
particularly if you're unwilling to support your child
in discovering the new belief,
or if you are unwilling to even
accept your child if they have a new belief, particularly one that they're not joining a
cult. You know, you have this sometimes like within Christian sex, right? Like, oh my gosh,
you've went from Catholic to this other thing, or you went from this to that. And, you know,
people can have a lot of conversation around that, meaning that everyone in this family needs to be Presbyterian. Everyone
in this family needs to be this particular thing. And if you are not that, we cannot accept it. So
that is an example of enmeshment. I would say that if you have a child or someone in the family who is
LGBTQ, typically that is a value challenge in families that we do not believe or we do not
support this thing. It's not necessarily we all have to be this one thing. I think that is a little deeper and it goes to,
you know, if you are not this thing, you end up here. So it, you know, I think that's a really
big thing in families. And I do talk about that a bit in Drama Free as to what I've seen sort of
backfire for families. I live in the South. And so I do encounter a lot of folks who are, you know, perhaps Christian and, you know,
their family does not believe in, you know, them having a certain type of lifestyle.
And it is a rough road.
And my suggestions there is always to, one, be yourself and two, also recognize that in those situations, you are redefining their idea of who they thought you were.
And they have to be able to process that.
Sometimes they process it with you, which is terrible because who wants to hear it?
And sometimes they find, you know, a therapist or someone else to process it with. But there is this period of
time where, you know, in some families, they do go through this like value or moral crisis,
even when they love you and want to be in relationship with you. And I would say that
that is, you know, on the realm of normal to have this sort of like, I thought it was this,
and now I'm starting to understand that you will have a different of like, I thought it was this, and now I'm starting to
understand that you will have a different life than what I thought it was.
Yeah. And I think it's very important to remember the processing time because for someone like me,
I'm very impatient. I want everything to be quick. I'm quick. I take things in quickly and I can spit
them back out quickly and I can comprehend a situation, but a lot of people do need a duration
of time to actually process whatever new information that they've been given. So when
you do get a bad reaction, if you're say it is you're coming out to your family and your family
isn't as receptive as you would hope they would be, there is a period of time that you have to
allow people to adjust to the new information. And I think we can say, you know,
I know personally, I can lose sight of that. And it's a good reminder for all of our listeners,
you know, everybody processes things differently. And some people take a lot of time, and some people take, you know, less time. So to be open and not looking for immediate results.
Well, I think it's very similar when we restructure our boundaries in families
and we change, you know, hey, I know every year I come home for Thanksgiving, but this year I'm
going to do this other thing. That new information can be very problematic. Changing anything when
people are used to it being a certain way is, you know, a problem. And there is some adjustment people have to make
on their end. We have the information well before them. And so we're already adjusted. And we're
like, what's the problem? Like, I just told you this thing I've been thinking about for two years.
Why don't you love it? And it's not to be received in that way that people really do need some time
to sort of figure out what they feel about it and
how to show up with you. Well, should we take some questions? Yeah, let's go. I can't wait for her to
drop some more wisdom. Let's start with a caller. Our first caller is Lauren. She says, Dear Chelsea,
last year, my partner of 14 years ended our relationship and moved out of our apartment.
It was an adjustment to take over full rent payments. My parents offered to let me move
in with them, but I was determined to stay in my home and maintain my independence.
I've received my lease renewal, and the rent will increase by a whopping 12%.
I've been dipping into an inheritance left to me by my grandparents to cover any shortages.
There's not much inventory in my area that's less than what I'm currently paying either, so I can't move. I've renewed my lease,
but made a commitment to myself that this will be like my last year in this apartment,
after which I'll temporarily move in with my parents. This will allow me to pay down credit
card debt I accrued while my relationship was ending and I became depressed and did some
emotional overspending. I'll build my savings and eventually begin looking for a more permanent home.
However, I'm afraid that moving back into my childhood bedroom at 38 will tip me further into a depression that I've been fighting my way out of for two years,
and I'm uncertain if my self-esteem can take this hit. I've felt shame in losing my relationship
and struggling to afford my own home and using my grandparents' money for rent. That feeling
will now be magnified by living in my childhood bedroom and I'm scared I'll be trapped. Plus, the loss of independence is scary. How will I date as
an adult from my childhood bedroom? I'm truly grateful to have the support from my family.
However, I'm still finding it tough as I prepare myself for the emotional toll of leaving home
and with it the chapter of my life I spent with my partner and for losing some independence in
my parents' house. Thank you both. I absolutely love this podcast. Listening to your wise words of advice to others is getting
me through this tough time of my own. Lauren. Hi, Lauren. Hi. Hi, Lauren. Hi, Kathy. Hi,
Katherine. Hi. This is Nedra Tawab. She's our special guest today. She's a licensed therapist,
so you're in good hands. Hi. Oh, hi. Thanks so much. Okay. So first off, you have a year, right, left to prepare for
this move, correct? Yes, I now have a year. Okay. So isn't there a possibility that within this year
you can figure out a different dynamic that won't make you have all of these feelings like finding a
roommate to move in with or finding a different kind of, I know you said most of the apartments in your area
are the same price, but I mean, you have a year to kind of find another solution if moving into
your parents' house represents all of these kind of misgivings you have about yourself.
Yes, yes, you're right. And I'm considering the roommate option as well.
And possibly getting an additional job. Like what do you do for a living? Do you have time
to get another job or something that you could what do you do for a living? Do you have time to get another job
or something that you could do on the weekends
for extra income?
I work at an independent bookstore
and sometimes I have to work on the weekends
and that's not always easy for me to tell in advance.
So it's hard to schedule a second job,
but I have thought about looking into second jobs
I can do from home.
Maybe that aren't tied to a schedule,
but data entry, writing, those kind of things.
Yeah. I mean, that sounds a lot better. Like I would say move into your parents if you were
okay with that, but you sound like you're definitely not okay with that. And that has
all of these separate meetings to you and figuring out this situation independently before you have
to move in with your parents and coming up with solutions so that you don't have to move in with your parents are going to serve you a lot better than
kind of folding into a situation that you're not looking forward to.
Yeah, I think you're right. And part of why I decided to stay for one more year was trying to
find the fortitude in myself to make changes in how I live, make changes to my budget and see
exactly what can I do? What can I do in a year?
Yeah.
What do you think, Nedra?
You know, I wonder if you could reframe this from moving into my childhood home to moving
in with my parents and reinventing that space, talking to your parents about what living
with them as an adult looks like versus living with
them as someone zero to 18.
I think this is a wonderful opportunity for you to reposition yourself, to be able to
move out and maybe stay out for a longer period of time.
But this sounds like a wonderful opportunity. I wonder if you could
reframe this really as a gift to be able to have parents who have a space for you to move into
where you can revisit your finances and think about how you want things to be in maybe five
years or three years or whatever the plan is. But, you know, if you keep thinking of this as like,
you know, little Lauren's bedroom where she had this, you know, poster on the wall,
it will be a terrible experience. You are an adult and I'm sure your apartment looks a nice,
lovely way and you can recreate that, you know, look at some tiny home stuff on Pinterest. You
could get really creative with this space and really maximize
where you are at this point. You'll have more discretionary income to hang out with your
friends. You might be able to do some of that frivolous spending that you were talking about,
and you can certainly buy as many books as you like. So this is really, to me, it's like, will they take more people in this
house? Because it's a wonderful opportunity to reposition yourself for a better situation in
the future. Lauren, I'm going to tattle on you a little bit, but this is something that came out
when we were having our sort of pre-interview call. You know, I know the breakup happened like 18 months ago or so, and you're still in contact with your ex and like hanging
out. And I know that's been sort of difficult for you guys. And to me with that and like having this
extra year to sort of make a decision about moving in with your folks, it feels like maybe there's a
bit of like a things are moving a little bit slowly and I wonder Nedra if you would have
some advice as far as like boundaries there with the ex if it's okay to keep seeing him if it's
very painful for them or what are good sort of next steps for Lauren well I think we think about
life is like this upward progression of stuff and if we go back to some period in life,
it's like a disaster. It's like, go back to school, go back to my parents' house, go back to my ex.
When in actuality, maybe everything is just kind of fluid and we are moving in and out of
situations. And maybe this is a time with your ex where you need to evaluate how the relationship that you're establishing
with your ex now is adding any value to your life or not? Is it putting you more in this space of,
oh my gosh, we should have been here with things? Or is it like, this is wonderful companionship.
So, you know, it's not necessarily bad to have a relationship with your ex, but what is the
meaning of the relationship?
How is the relationship impacting how you see yourself? Those are important things
to think about as you're continuing to connect with this person.
Yes, thank you. That all sounds like so many things I need to think about. I think we've had
blurred lines over the nature of our relationship,
him not wanting to put a label on it and having some of his stuff still in my home.
It definitely, at times,
I'm not really sure what we're intending.
So good things to think about.
Yeah, I mean, all different
and lots of different advice to think about.
I mean, a lot of different perspectives
or at least a couple different perspectives.
But do you feel like with relation to your ex that you guys are in, do you feel like it's a healthy dynamic, your communication with him and your relationship with him as it stands
today? You know, I'm not sure. The last time we spoke, he expressed a lot of self-loathing on his part for having ended the relationship
and not knowing why. And listening to him talk, I just kept thinking, you know, like he's not in
good working order to start up again. You know, he needs to love himself. And I want him to do
that. And it's, you know, at times I do feel selfish, like think, oh my gosh, he, you know,
he's second guessing this, or he's not sure why he did what he did.
Maybe we'll go back.
But I do worry that he might be returning or thinking about returning as a way to kind of boost his self-esteem and not have the guilt for ending the relationship.
You know, I'm less concerned about what he's doing and what you're choosing to do, Lauren.
I wonder what do you want in this dynamic?
I hear
a lot about, I think he's doing this and it's probably like this. And it's like, well, this
is your life. What type of relationship do you want with a person? If you're dating, I don't
know if you consider this dating, but if you're dating a person, what do you want that dynamic
to look like? And is this it? Yeah. Thank you for reframing it that way. Yeah.
Right now it's not it. So maybe this is just companionship for now and whatever his desire
is for the relationship, it doesn't override what your desire is for a relationship. So if you want
to go to the movies with this fellow, that's fine. But what you're looking for is not what he's offering.
So just being clear about that can be really helpful. It can help you draw those boundaries of
I need you to get your stuff out of my apartment in 30 days, right? Because if we're just companions
and we're spending time together, maybe in that type of relationship, I don't allow myself to be a
storage facility. Right. So you think of what that looks like, like, OK, so we have some sort
of relationship. But what would the boundaries for this type of relationship be? Right. We haven't
really put boundaries on it at all and definitely need it. Definitely. Yeah. Yeah. It sounds like you definitely need
to implement some boundaries in all of your life, you know, like to decide what you want to do. Like
if you're going to go move in with your parents, commit to making that a really positive situation.
And if you're not going to commit to figuring out a way to make that a really positive situation
because you're in a gray zone. So hopefully some of the stuff that we've talked about today will help you. Yeah, it is. It is so helpful. Thank you, all three of you. This is
really wonderful. Okay, well, great. Well, keep us posted on what happens with you. Okay, Lauren,
pick up drama free, read some there's some stuff there that will apply to you for sure.
Oh, will do. All right. Thanks, Lauren. Thank you, Lauren. Thanks so much.
Our next email and this is just an email so he won't join us, but this comes from Chris.
He says, I'm a gay man in my early 30s, the youngest of three, and this involves my sister,
the middle child who's four years older. Almost 10 years ago, after graduating college,
I enrolled in graduate school. My older sister, after doing nothing for a few years in her 20s,
enrolled too. I initially thought it would be great to have her with me during what was sure to be a stressful few years, and I quickly
made a tight-knit group of friends, three guys and three girls. Toward the end of grad school,
my sister became increasingly close to my friend group, despite having made her own friends during
her time in school. Eventually, I finished grad school and moved to a big fun city one hour north.
I was excited for a fresh start to be whoever I wanted, make gay friends, and live as an out gay man for the first time in my life.
Six months later, my sister moved to the same city as me.
I quickly made gay friends and made up for the fun I didn't have while in grad school.
Before I knew it, I had so many gay friends and was having a blast.
But soon my closest friends were becoming my sister's close friends.
I realized she would meet them in passing and then DM them to hang out. Now, while this might not have been inherently wrong, it felt suffocating to me. Soon I'd show up to gay friends'
houses and she'd already be there. She'd cook dinner for my friends when I wasn't around,
and she even once went on a trip with a few of my friends, and I didn't find out about it until
later.
Shouldn't she be busy making her own friends and having her own life?
I know the importance of family and how much you talk about sisterly love.
I love my sister always, but I do not think that just because we're siblings that my sister has allowed carte blanche access to my life,
especially when I've expressed wanting boundaries to have some things for myself.
Am I wrong for feeling this way?
Chris.
I don't know.
Doesn't that sound like enmeshment, Tetra?
It definitely sounds like enmeshment. And I'm thinking here that Chris could do a better job of not introducing his sister to his friends. There are some things it sounds like that need
to be private because if he's expressed that I want my friends to be my friends, please do not
call them. Please do not. There is something sacred that he needs to keep in place that
doesn't involve her because she's not really honoring this request to have these separate
relationships or you go find your own people. It Doesn't sound like she's going to do that from city to city, from, you know, life event
to life event.
She's really latching on.
And so he will have to be the person to say, I will not invite you to this thing.
I will not introduce you to these people.
So she cannot continue to have these relationships.
You know, I think it could be very hard for your friends to meet your
sister and she's a very lovely person and to say to her, hey, we can't talk anymore because I'm
your brother's friend. That's a really hard thing to say, but it might be something that
he needs to talk about with everyone in his life that, hey, I'm in this situation with my sister.
I love her dearly,
but I'm really trying to help her meet her own people.
She has this history of really latching on to my people.
So if she DMs you,
you could just let her know
that we've had this conversation.
Sometimes with our boundaries,
we like to say things once
and give people the chance to do something.
And then after we say it once and we say it twice, we have to do something about it.
We have to start to issue some sort of consequences.
The consequence of this would be eliminating her from social things so she no longer has that opportunity.
You know, also in a very loving way, you could, you know, hey, have you looked into book clubs? Hey, you know, I work with this lady who's really cool. It seems like you all would be wonderful friends. Helping her meet some people could be helpful, but ultimately, you will have to take things into your own hands where you say, I can't even include you anymore because I have learned the hard way over and over that you will start to
absorb these things I'm doing as your own. But this woman, this sister, sounds like she has
absolutely no boundaries. Like, I mean, she is following him from city to city, is hanging out
with his friends. I mean, she's not going to take that well, obviously. We already discussed people
having boundaries set
that haven't had them before and their bad reaction to them.
So how would you deal with someone
who's going to have a hostile reaction to him
trying to set a boundary?
Because I don't think it's up to him
to talk to his friends about it.
This is a her issue.
I have a lot of friends that are just nice enough to my family that they would hang out with them as a favor.
So he has to go around and basically tell all these people to stop doing it.
I mean, I feel like it's a her problem, not his friend's problem.
Well, I agree with you.
I think it's a her problem.
But I think if he has spoken to her, he may want to try something different.
Speaking to the friends is just one way to address it.
And other people may not feel comfortable setting that boundary.
That's why I say a lot of it will be not including his sister in on certain information or including her in these friend gatherings and social events where she has the opportunity to latch on to other people.
She can't DM anyone that she doesn't know about.
She can't invite people on vacation if she's never met them.
And it can be known that I will not mix my friends with you anymore.
And she is entitled to have whatever reaction.
But it sounds like, you know, the letter writer here has a really big, important reaction as well.
I mean, the letter was written to say, I'm having this really big issue.
So she can have whatever response she's going to have.
And I think the execution of it is I have to exclude you from certain things as a consequence of you not honoring the boundary
because the solution is not for her to start to do these things because she hasn't done them.
She has very poor boundaries and it's not really anyone's job to fix that.
But it is, you know, perhaps his job to make sure that his boundary is honored.
I feel like also if you tell your friends, like if you do meet my sister,
like she's a little bit clingy.
She like tries to hang out with all my friends
and sort of like with an eye roll,
they'll kind of get the gist, right?
They won't want to hang out with her, I think.
Well, yeah, I mean, but it's,
I feel like the issue is her, you know?
She has to like cultivate her own friendships
and her own relationships.
I mean, and it's hard to hear from a family member,
I don't want you around all the time, you know?
Right, right, right.
So it's like, I just am thinking about like
what it would feel like, you know,
she thinks probably like, oh, this is great.
Totally.
My brother and I have all the same friends.
We're super close.
We do everything together.
His friends are my friends.
So it's going to be like a real loud thud
when she finds out that's not the case.
Yeah.
But yeah.
Well, let's take a quick break
and we'll come back with a question to wrap up. Okay, so the case. Yeah. But yeah. Well, let's take a quick break and we'll come back
with a question to wrap up. Okay. So we'll take a break and we'll be right back to wrap up with
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Inside you, two wolves are locked in battle.
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Listen to The One You Feed on the iHeartRadio app,
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I'm Jason Alexander. And I'm Peter Tilden. And together on the Really Know Really podcast, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. cell signal? The astronaut who almost drowned during a spacewalk gives us the answer. We talk with the scientist who figured out if your dog truly loves you, and the one
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Hi, I'm Dani Shapiro, host of the hit podcast, Family Secrets. How would you feel if when you
met your biological father for the first time, he didn't even say hello? And how would you feel
if your doctor advised you to keep your life-altering medical procedure a secret from everyone?
And what if your past itself was a secret and the time had suddenly come to share that past with your child?
These are just a few of the powerful and profound questions we'll be asking on our 11th season of Family Secrets.
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Whatever the case and wherever you are,
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Listen to season 11 of Family Secrets
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Good people, what's up?
It's Questo, Questlove.
And Team Supreme and I have been working hard
to bring you some incredible episodes of Questlove Supreme
with guests you definitely don't want to miss.
Now, one of the things I love about this Questlove Supreme podcast
is we got something for everybody, every type of musical lover.
We enjoy speaking to the people who are the face of some movements,
some people you've seen on stage or TV or magazine covers,
but we also love speaking to the folks who are making it happen behind the scenes
and they pave the way for those that followed.
You know, keystones to the culture.
This season,
we've had some amazing one-on-one conversations
like Unpaid Bill chatting up
with hitmaker Sam Holland,
Sugar Steve chatting with the legend Nick Lowe,
and I've had pleasures of doing
one-on-one conversations with Willow,
Sonata Matreya, Kathleen Hanna,
and The RZA.
These are conversations you won't hear anywhere else.
So make sure you go back and
you check those episodes out. All right. Listen to Questlove Supreme on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
And we're back. And we're back. And I have one last quick caller for us.
So Allison is calling in.
She says,
Dear Chelsea,
I'm adopted.
I found my birth mother more than 25 years ago and my birth father at the same time.
Over the past 25 plus years,
I've built great relationships with my birth mother,
my half sister,
adopted sister,
cousins, etc.
I've enjoyed those relationships immensely.
I met my birth father
once and have no relationship with him. My question is, do I approach my four half-brothers on his
side, his sons, who he's told me have no idea I exist, and let them know they have a half-sister
out here before they or I start dying and we entirely miss the chance to meet? My adopted
sister found her birth family and is loving having two new brothers.
She's very encouraging of me to reach out to these people,
but I'm on the fence.
What do you two think?
Should this family secret blow up or stay dormant?
Allison.
That's a tough one.
Yeah.
The other thing that she mentioned is
they all live kind of in the same area
and she's worried about her kids
and their kids like meeting
and falling in love. Hi, Allison. How are you? I'm well. Thank you, Chelsea. How are you?
I'm great. This is Nedra Tawwab, our special guest today. So you've discovered some of your
family members and not all of your family members. Correct. I've known my birth mother and father for
30 years. I've had a relationship with my birth mother and that side of the family all this time.
I have never had a relationship with my birth father.
And he has four sons whom I have never met, nor do I believe they know about me.
Okay.
What do you think, Nedra, about this?
I have a question here.
Whose secret is this?
It would be my birth father's secret.
Okay. Why do you feel the responsibility to keep someone else's secret?
That is a very fair question. And I don't know, my grandmother who raised me basically said
she was very old school and she's like, don't you ever embarrass him by coming out and, you know, telling his kids about you. But my other, my adopted sister has met her family and she's like,
who cares? He's an old, like, who cares? Why do you care so much? And I don't, I don't know.
I shouldn't, I suppose, but I'm here to hear your feedback. So let me know.
Yeah. It sounds like a lot of shame management. Like I'm going to manage his shame by not allowing this thing to come out that would make him feel some sort of way and, you know, be put in position to have certain conversations and confrontations and this sort of thing.
So I will try to make him feel comfortable by keeping this secret, even though it's not my secret.
Yep, that about sums it up.
And also, you can easily just reach out to them and leave the ball in their court.
You're reaching out to them.
You give them the information.
I'm your half-sister.
This is what happened.
And then you're covering both.
I live in the same community, right?
Is it the same town,
same community? Northern California-ish, yes. You all live in Northern California?
We do. Yeah. So, okay. I live in this area and it's totally up to you if you guys,
because that way you're kind of accomplishing all of the things you need to accomplish. You're not
holding anyone's secret. You're not managing anyone's shame. And you're doing outreach, you know, and actually taking a step towards meeting them. And
then it's in their court if they want to meet you. You know, you don't want to force that on anybody.
If they're interested, great. And if they're not interested, okay, well, you tried, right?
I mean, there's no harm, no foul, really. And I agree. I mean, who cares about your birth father
and his feelings? Like, you have your own life, and. And I agree. I mean, who cares about your birth father and his feelings? Like,
you have your own life, and this is your decision. Yeah, and it sounds like you owe him very little.
Like, he seems like maybe he was a sperm donor, basically, and, you know, here you are loving him.
That's what I call him, yeah. Exactly. Exactly. So, I don't think you owe him much.
Do I give him a chance to tell them ahead by letting this other cousin know that this is my plan and like 30 days I'm going to come out and reach out to them and give him the chance to come clean ahead of time? Or do I just lay it out and let the chips fall where they may?
Well, he's had 30 years to tell them.
True.
That's a very long time. I don't know if he needs 30 more days.
Understood.
Yeah, it's like you don't really owe him needs 30 more days. Understood. Yeah. It's like you don't really owe
him anything. That's another courtesy. Yeah. Yeah. I know. It's just so tied up in this whole,
like, don't embarrass him. Like, I don't know why he would be embarrassed. It was a mistake
30 years ago or 57 years ago now. Yeah. And there's not a lot of time. I mean, there's not,
I don't, sorry to sound so morbid. It's not that there's not a lot of time i mean there's not i don't sorry to sound so morbid it's not that
there's not a lot of time left but like enough time has gone by you know like yeah to to avoid
it and you're saying that your grandmother said that to you you know don't embarrass him and
there are always sentences that some adult has said to us that stick with us for the rest of
our lives that hold such little meaning it's in a moment where they're saying something and sometimes they don't even know what
they've said or they have no idea how hurtful what they've said is i can think of a couple
sentences my father said to me where i was like i will never ever forget those two sentences
and i know he would probably want to take that back if he could. So I wouldn't put so much value in what someone said to you
about another person. Okay. And if your grandmother could speak now, she might have
something different to say about the situation. I mean, she spoke from a place of being highly
concerned about him and less concerned about you and seeing how you've struggled with this probably over the last
30 years. I think it's, you know, it's fair to say that perhaps she misspoke and your loyalty
has been to her, but is she still alive? No. Okay. So that loyalty that you had with her,
you know, it sounds like you've transferred it to your dad.
And you haven't even talked to him about this for him to say that there's any embarrassment or, you know, any of these things that she assumes that he might feel.
So it's, you know, it's a lot of hearsay.
And sometimes this is the thing that's needed to break situations open.
It might explain a lot about who he is to his other children.
Like, who knows so I
don't know if keeping this secret is something that will feel good to you yeah I love what you
said about you know she might have something different to say now because it was also probably
a very different time culturally absolutely when she said that right it was like back then it was
this big you know shameful secret if you had a a, quote unquote, out of wedlock. But, you know,
things are different now. Yeah. All right. All right, ladies. Okay. I guess I'm taking the plunge.
Yeah, lady, go for it. Report back. Let us know how that works out. I shall.
Okay. Well, thank you so much for joining us. Thank you for all these wisdom pieces. I loved
your book. I hope all of our listeners get it.
And do you have another book?
Yeah, I have a few books.
I have Set Boundaries, Find Peace.
I have Drama Free.
And I have one coming out, Consider This, that will be out in October.
Okay, great.
Exciting.
Okay, well, thank you so much for being here, Nedra.
You're welcome.
And have a great day. You as well. Okay, bye, listeners. We'll hear you so much for being here, Nedra. You're welcome. And have a great day.
You as well.
Okay.
Bye, listeners.
We'll hear you and see you next week.
That's from you to us, not the other way around.
Okay.
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I'm coming to Texas.
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And I have tickets on sale throughout the end of the year in December.
So if you're in a city like Philadelphia or Bethlehem or San Diego or New Orleans or Omaha,
check ChelseaHandler.com for tickets.
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