Ear Biscuits with Rhett & Link - Should Link Get A New Therapist? | Ear Biscuits Ep.312

Episode Date: November 22, 2021

Rhett & Link discuss their experiences with therapy, the challenges they face, and the progress they've made in this episode of Ear Biscuits! To learn more about listener data and our privacy practi...ces visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:23 Welcome to Ear Biscuits, the podcast where two lifelong friends talk about life for a long time. I'm Link. And I'm Rhett. This week at the round table of dim lighting, we are going to be pulling back another curtain. And behind that curtain is two men who have been going to therapy for certain lengths of time. And we're just going to do a little check-in. I thought you were gonna say you're gonna pull by their curtain and it's two men and it's our therapists.
Starting point is 00:00:50 They're not joining us today. They're not joining us. We can say anything we want about our therapists. But we won't. Well, we will. We're gonna be talking about our experience thus far in therapy and how we're viewing that, what kind of stuff is happening. And let me just in case you're immediately like,
Starting point is 00:01:09 I don't care, I'm not from Los Angeles. You guys obviously are. Listen, therapy's not just for boys in Los Angeles. Therapy can be for anybody. And it's been beneficial to us. We don't know if any, we don't know if you think that, but we used to think that. Yeah, yeah, yeah, we're speaking to our former selves.
Starting point is 00:01:32 And we've, therapy's come up a lot in conversations because we're talking about, you know, processing our lives and therapy is a big part of that, an important part of it. Yeah, you have a hair that- Oh, I can see it. Here we go. I know you don't like when hair is in that place or out of place and if you don't point it out,
Starting point is 00:01:54 you get upset. So I'm just letting you know right now, I don't want you to be looking back at this and be like, why'd you let me do that the whole time? I'd hate for my therapist to be the one to bring it up. But what we haven't done is devote an extended conversation to the topic in some time, if ever. So now's that time.
Starting point is 00:02:14 I will say I have a little update, recent travel excursion. I mean, thankfully, I mean, thankfully, you know, certain places in the country have kind of, you know, we're not out of the pandemic, but certain, there's certain places and you take certain precautions, you can feel somewhat safe to travel. I've kind of taken advantage of that.
Starting point is 00:02:40 But also this was a wedding of a friend that took place in Kansas City that I was gonna go to regardless, but thankfully I could sort of feel safe in doing so. But the most notable thing besides a beautiful wedding, beautiful couple getting married and beginning a beautiful life together, which is not what I'm gonna talk about,
Starting point is 00:02:59 is the fact that we stayed at a haunted hotel. Okay. Now, you know me, I'm into horror stuff. I like the idea of haunting. I'm pretty skeptical about the paranormal. I can act like I'm really into it, but in my heart of hearts, in my heart of hearts, I'm just, eh, this is probably all made up, right?
Starting point is 00:03:25 But that did not stop me from being very enthusiastic about the ghost tour. And this is coming from someone who's been on a few ghost tours. It's hard for me to get enthusiastic. The two that I went on with you, in one in New Orleans, and what was the other one? London. London.
Starting point is 00:03:39 It was the Jack the Ripper tour. That's right. Oh boy, I just, I kinda needed to just turn in for the night about halfway through. Well, let me tell you why I was particularly excited about this one. Both of those ghost tours were going around a city and then like coming up to a corner
Starting point is 00:03:59 and looking at a building and hearing somebody who had just been told information what to say about this thing. Are you telling me you had an actual ghost give the tour? Well, it wasn't that good, but it's somewhere between the original experience and that. Which is? A ghost tour of a hotel where you are staying.
Starting point is 00:04:18 First of all, we're in a different category. And secondly, well, there's actually three points to this. The second point is- Oh, the points are expanding. The guy doing the tour, and this isn't something I knew ahead of time, but the guy doing the tour wasn't just talking about things that other people had said.
Starting point is 00:04:34 He was telling his own stories and being an employee for 15 years at the hotel. So many of his stories were like, this happened to me. Again, never experienced that. And then the third thing was, the bride and groom had experienced some metaphysical unexplained phenomena, you might say. Okay, what?
Starting point is 00:05:01 The first night in the hotel. Well, when you're consummating a marriage. The night before, well, the night before the ghost tour. Things can go really wild when. The night before the ghost tour. So, oh, and also Locke told me that something happened in his room. I'll tell you about that in a second.
Starting point is 00:05:19 Apparently, they wake up and the bedside table little deal with a drawer, it's a drawer. What would you call a bedside little thing that's got a drawer? Bedside table. My bedside table's got two drawers, man. My previous one had three drawers.
Starting point is 00:05:37 I don't think that's technically a table. Like in furniture speak, I don't think it's a table if it's got a drawer. Bedside chest of drawers? Definitely not that. There's probably like a French word for it. I'd like to get to the haunted part. The drawer had opened in the night.
Starting point is 00:05:51 Okay, okay, well that could happen. They close the drawer and the drawer opens again before their very eyes. Now this could be like the gravity of the, you know, it could be like the floor, it's an old hotel. The gravity can open the drawers. the, you know, it could be like the floor, it's an old hotel, like the gravity can open with the drawers. Yeah. But then, the, a water bottle, like a whatever, you know,
Starting point is 00:06:15 the one that you have, one everybody's got. Like a Nalgene? No, like Hydro Flask. Hydro Flask. So like a metal water bottle was on that same table and it, at some point in this process began to do that thing where, you know, like a bottle isn't quite settling and it's kind of like, kind of rotating a little bit like right before,
Starting point is 00:06:36 like a coin settling and then stopping. Okay, yeah. That was happening, but it was just happening indefinitely. It was just like, okay, this bottle is gonna do this. They're just watching it. And they stopped it and put it back down and it started doing it again. And then they were just like, okay,
Starting point is 00:06:55 you can have your drawer open. I don't know exactly the sequence of events, but because I kind of heard it as they were telling a group of people and it was enough for me to be freaked out. I have an explanation for that. There's vibration in the hotel from the laundry room. There's always a natural explanation.
Starting point is 00:07:12 Or the elevator shaft. I told you I'm a skeptic, man. Vibration takes care of everything I've heard so far. But, of course, and every single thing I'm gonna tell you, I'm not gonna tell you everything that happens on the ghost tour, but every single thing I was told, because Locke and Shepard after the ghost tour, but everything, every single thing I was told, because like Locke and Shepherd after the ghost tour, because Locke had heard somebody whispering in the vent
Starting point is 00:07:29 at like 3 a.m. in Locke and Shepherd's room. And then he actually told the guy on the ghost tour that, the guy giving the tour. And he was like, that's just because all our, the whole system is connected. So you just heard somebody whispering in another room. He wasn't like feeding into it. That's good.
Starting point is 00:07:44 Maintaining credibility. He's kind of like the it. That's good. Maintaining credibility. He's kind of like the Pope. He's like, I'm the only one who can tell ghost stories. Well, no, no, because he was, he had many people on the tour were saying things that had happened to them or, and he was validating some things, but if it wasn't, if he actually thought it wasn't true.
Starting point is 00:08:01 He's keeping it real. But when Locke and Shepherd were, after the tour, they were like, dad, what do you think about this? I was like, well, you wanna know what I really think? I was scared at multiple points on that ghost tour, especially the moment when we were standing at the top of the stairs and some little girls who apparently knew that the ghost tour comes by their room
Starting point is 00:08:22 and they could hear the guy talking, Jay is his name, he's actually, he's wearing one of those headset microphones with a speaker that's around his neck, like a tour guide does, you know what I'm saying? So that he can just speak in a normal volume, but everyone can hear him. So he's just like, coming by your room,
Starting point is 00:08:40 you know, oh, Jay's there, he's doing the tour. They waited until he was in the middle of the story and they started going. And he had already just told us a story about somebody being in a room and seeing the handle move. And so then he's telling us a story and that's when these little girls in the room started like taking their door and like shaking it.
Starting point is 00:08:59 And me and Lock and Shepherd were like standing a little bit down the hall. And we immediately run up next to the tour guide. You know, before you have time to process, oh, this is probably somebody just playing a trick, but I still was legitimately scared. Did the girls come out and say, gotcha? They just laughed from in the room,
Starting point is 00:09:16 which actually was sort of creepy. Little girl laughed her through a door. But I said, having said all that, I believe that if you just, if you put me, you know, put my back against the wall and tell me I've gotta give you an honest answer, I think there's probably a natural explanation for all this. There's a reason that it happens at night.
Starting point is 00:09:36 There's a reason that it happens during the so-called witching hour, you know, after 3 a.m. That's because you're usually, you've been asleep and you're waking up and you're not, your senses aren't complete, you're just pouring water on yourself now. Are you okay? It was haunted, man.
Starting point is 00:09:50 My tea was haunted. So in other words, what I'm saying is that I think that there's probably almost always a natural explanation, but I'm not sure. I'm open to the fact that places can be haunted. And it's more fun to believe that the place is haunted. So, and this guy Jay, he's, oh, this is the other thing that happened.
Starting point is 00:10:15 A lot of famous people have been to this hotel. In fact, the room that the bride and groom were staying in is the room that Harry Truman slept in the night that he found out that he won the presidency. He went to sleep thinking that he had lost and they woke him up at like 2 a.m. and said, "'Sir, you won.'" And then there's another room that is a room
Starting point is 00:10:33 where Al Capone would come and play cards and stuff. And they're like, he would sit right here and he could see through this window and this window. He had both entrances covered in case the feds came and he could go out this way or whatever. So it's been around a hundred years, it's got a storied history. Where is it? It is outside of Kansas City, Missouri.
Starting point is 00:10:50 So he's telling a story about some famous person that was on the tour and then, I can't remember who it was. So then we get to the next spot and I kinda, me and Lock and Shepard were sort of ahead of everybody and we kinda walk up and we're right next to him and kinda waiting for the group to gather. He said, and he was like, you look like a famous guy. You famous?
Starting point is 00:11:13 May I include you in subsequent tour mentions? And I was like, you know, I never know how to answer that question. So I was like, to some people. Yeah. And he was like, naked and afraid. Okay, was he changing the subject or was he thinking you were on that show?
Starting point is 00:11:32 He thought, he was like, I was a guy, because I was like, no, I've been naked and afraid on YouTube, haven't been on that show. But naked, just because you- No, he said, oh, there's a guy on season so-and-so, Nicky and Afraid, that looked a lot like you. But then the next day, when I see Jay, now, of course, we're all masked
Starting point is 00:11:56 as we're walking around this thing, and of course, if you don't watch our content regularly and you see me now, you may not immediately recognize me because my hair is so different. So the next day, he's like, "'Hey man, Good Mythical Morning, of course. "'I didn't put it together. "'Like my daughter watches a lot and I watch it with her.
Starting point is 00:12:16 "'So love what you guys do, but-' But still, I'm naked and afraid. I thought you were from Naked and Afraid at first. You should really look into that. You got demoted overnight, man. So shout out to Jay at the Elms Hotel, historic hotel. They have a European lap pool in the basement. Do you know what a European lap pool is?
Starting point is 00:12:38 It's like an indoor, it's just like a ditch that. It's a track that goes in a circle that you swim. Oh, a track? It's a canal. It's a ring? It's a moat? That's wide enough for a track that goes in a circle that you swim. Oh, a track? It's like, it's a canal. It's a ring? It's a moat? That's wide enough for a person to swim in and it goes in a circle.
Starting point is 00:12:51 It's kind of awesome. And when you get to the end of one side, there's- It's a circle, there's no end. Well, it's an oval. It's a very long oval like this. Oh, wow. At one end of the oval, well, at one end of the oval, there's a ghost, of course.
Starting point is 00:13:07 Right. But- Negative afraid. The other end, there's a hot tub and a cold plunge pool right next to each other. So we had fun kind of going back and forth between those. I've never seen a racetrack made of water. There was a part of me that was just like, how necessary is this?
Starting point is 00:13:22 You didn't try it out? Oh, I swam in it, so yeah. What was it like turning, banking the corners? NASCAR? Yeah, I mean, I felt like I was about to come right out of that thing. Well, as long as you are going around those corners, was your like feet and hands hitting?
Starting point is 00:13:36 It's big. Wow. It's very cool. In the bottom of a hotel. They probably just were gonna make a pool and then they were like, you know what? Let's just fill in the middle except for a little bit and let's call it a European swim track. No one will know the difference.
Starting point is 00:13:51 I think it's the only European lap pool in America. What? That's what they said, I think. Okay, yeah. They said in Missouri. Hey, listen, once you start blurring the lines of truth with ghost tours, you can say anything you want. You can't believe these people,
Starting point is 00:14:04 they're not credible anymore. And neither are you. I'll tell you right now, if you have an opportunity to go into a European lap pool, and if you're in America, that may only be available to you in the Elms Hotel in Missouri. Excelsior Springs, I think is the name of it. You should go do it and swim some laps.
Starting point is 00:14:23 All right, let's dive into some therapy. Ooh, is this gonna hurt? But first we wanna remind you about our Black Friday sale. It goes live Thursday, not Friday, November 23rd through Sunday, November 29th, all right? And you know what you get? Everything at mythical.com is 40% off. Also, all Mythical Society monthly memberships
Starting point is 00:14:45 on mythicalsociety.com are gonna be 25% off. There's a lot, this is deep. Yeah. These are deep discounts. 40% off every single thing at mythical.com, 25% off monthly memberships on mythicalsociety.com. Wow. Should we do it? Ah, I'm having second thoughts at this point.
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Starting point is 00:15:18 But where do we wanna start with it? Well, let's just give some background about how long we've been going to therapy, maybe what got us into it. These are things that have come up before, but just for the cohesiveness of where we're headed. And since you've been going to therapy longer, you go first. I think that it was 2017.
Starting point is 00:15:38 2017 was the end or the beginning of, didn't last long, the longer version of Good Mythical Morning, if you do recall that, where we did a bunch of videos every single day. And my wife had been going to therapy for a couple of years at that point and had been asking me or telling me
Starting point is 00:16:00 that I should be going based on things that she was learning about herself that were then immediately sort of transferring to me because I think she, like me, thought that I didn't need therapy. Do you know what I mean? You think she thought that? Okay. I think that she thought
Starting point is 00:16:18 that the one with the things that needed to be addressed from a professional standpoint, it was probably her, right? Because she struggled with OCD since she was a young child. So there was like diagnosable things, OCD and depression that she knew she had and had been professionally diagnosed by like a psychiatrist years and years ago.
Starting point is 00:16:41 And I had never had that. And I had always sort of presented myself as, well, I mean, I'm super stable and reliable, and I'm not saying I'm perfect, but I don't think I need professional help when it comes to my mental and emotional health. But as she began to explore her own and realize, oh, it's not just about addressing this diagnosis,
Starting point is 00:17:04 but there's a whole lot more to therapy in the same way that you might have a physical problem, like, oh, I hurt my knee in this very specific way, I need to go to the doctor. Well, even if you haven't hurt your knee, you're a person with a body and there are ongoing needs to having a regular physical checkup. You see the analogy here.
Starting point is 00:17:23 So as she started to talk to me, she also started to be able to see the way that I was sort of dealing with the immense amount of stress that had built up in my life over many, many years of our, this mythical thing growing to where it had and our schedule being crazy and the amount of weight and pressure on us to perform and to keep growing the business and to be relevant
Starting point is 00:17:45 and all the things that come with being a public personality. And she started saying, you really should go to therapy and I think you should just go to my guy because he's great and he's open to doing that, you know, having both of us. So anyway, after, and when, at the end of 2017, in the midst of all that stress, I had some physical problems that developed
Starting point is 00:18:05 that definitely seemed to be stress related. I've talked about that before. That was when I started. But just, I mean, to give them the blurb though, you went- Well, I had multiple things. You had a form of blindness. You know, I've had multiple things that are known to be stress induced,
Starting point is 00:18:21 like skin issues, like psoriasis and eczema, back issues can often, so I'd always had those, but the straw that broke the camel's back was when I developed central serous retinopathy, which is literally when there's like a fluid sack that gets behind your eye and creates a blind spot on your eye in your field of vision.
Starting point is 00:18:45 And it was first observed or maybe not observed, but first sort of recognized and labeled when these World War I or II pilots were coming back from war and a bunch of them had this condition because they had been under so much stress. So there's reason to believe that it's stress induced and it is not permanent. If it happens once, it's not unlikely to happen again.
Starting point is 00:19:08 But anyway, I go to the doctor, the eye doctor, they tell me that's what this is. It's gonna take months for this thing to resolve itself, which it did. For a while, I think, I can't remember which eye it was, but I basically couldn't see in the middle of my field of vision with one of my eyes. If it was like-
Starting point is 00:19:24 It was like black or wavy? It was blurry and wavy and made you feel like you have vertigo. And he made a connection to stress or some inner mental workings. I made the connection to stress when I started reading about that condition. And I was like, man, okay.
Starting point is 00:19:40 Yeah, I guess, cause I always would say I don't feel stressed because, well, I'll talk about what my process is and what I've been working on, but it was because I wasn't dealing with it in an emotional way, I was dealing with it in a physical way. I do believe, and I don't understand, and I don't have the science to back it up,
Starting point is 00:19:56 but I do believe that there's a natural connection to when you don't process things emotionally, that it kind of, it finds a way to get out of you and it can manifest itself physically. So that's what led to me having my first appointment in sometime in like late 2017. So it's crazy to think that coming up on four years of therapy.
Starting point is 00:20:20 I'm coming up on two years of therapy in like the January, February timeframe. So that means I started like just a couple of months, had a couple of in-person sessions before the pandemic hit and we went to Zoom meetings. And for me, it's been pretty much every week except when like scheduling challenges or trips or whatever. But yeah, the reason why I got into it,
Starting point is 00:20:54 the best that I can remember is, yeah, Christy had a few therapists for many years and had been very open and experienced the benefits of that of going to therapy back home in North Carolina and then out here when we moved out here and like all the stresses and everything associated with that, therapy reentered her life.
Starting point is 00:21:23 And we always had a really positive view of it because she had a very positive and helpful experience with it. And of course we're talking to Jessie, she's having positive experiences and then you get on board and you start having positive experiences. And I was always very open to it,
Starting point is 00:21:46 but I think in a similar way that you're describing, it was, well, I'll say that I started going because Christy kept encouraging me and I was benefiting from hearing from how everybody else was benefiting from therapy. So I felt like I was getting therapy by proxy and I was, you know, I've made jokes about that, but in a way to acknowledge that like,
Starting point is 00:22:13 I'm warming up to this. I wasn't opposed to it, but I didn't feel like I had an urgent need to go to therapy, like to run there to fix a specific problem. I didn't think that I had any problems that needed therapy. Meanwhile, I was wrong. Meanwhile, I mean, we never,
Starting point is 00:22:32 I don't know if we've ever talked about this, but meanwhile, like me and Jessie and Christy would talk about, well, when is Link gonna go to therapy? Yeah, and sometimes I would be there. But like, it's like- So it wasn't weird. It wasn't like, when do we intervene? You can't really talk to someone,
Starting point is 00:22:49 you know, you have to let somebody come to that decision on their own. I would say that for anybody who like thinks that somebody in your life needs to go or you've experienced something and you're like, oh man, I wish that they could experience this. Right. You can't force them into it.
Starting point is 00:23:03 And- Well, your spouse can kind of do that. Yeah. Depending on the nature of your relationship. It became more of like, I'm going to do this. I have plans to do this, but they're not, it's not pressing and it's not imminent. So I'm gonna just keep back burner-ing it
Starting point is 00:23:20 for probably a couple of years. In the meantime, I would read books, a lot of the books that Christy was reading of the like introspective self-help, self-discovery variety, like stuff that she would be recommended by her therapist or that she would take to therapy. So it was like an extension of that.
Starting point is 00:23:42 I would read those books and I would start to feel the benefits of that. And so I think the thing that got me over the hump was, as a result of my spiritual deconstruction and my ongoing spiritual journey, and really coming to grips with my priority of doing the work, as they say, like really invest in myself
Starting point is 00:24:08 and understanding myself, discovering more. And just, I knew there were things in my past that affect me now and I was fascinated by that and I knew I could benefit from it. So when I started going, it was like, I know I experienced a lot of anxiety and I do want help with that. You know, there was like an opening meeting.
Starting point is 00:24:35 The way that I found my therapist was on like psychology.com they have, you can search for somebody locally and you can read reviews and there was an initial interview process. You can search for somebody locally and you can read reviews. And there was an initial interview process, which if you want to, you can tell how you met your therapist. But with mine, it was like, I didn't have a personal recommendation.
Starting point is 00:24:57 I just had an interview meeting, phone call. And I remember in that meeting, I kind of just laid it all out. I was like, you know, I wanna send the in that meeting, I kind of just laid it all out. I was like, you know, I want to send the message that like, I'm an open book and I'm all in for however I can benefit from this. And I know that I deal with anxiety and I know that I have things in my past.
Starting point is 00:25:20 When it came to the anxiety. But it felt more like an improvement thing, not a fixing thing or not a help, please help me thing was I think my mindset going in honestly. Because when it comes to the anxiety element of it, like would you have considered yourself, like what level of anxiety would you, if somebody was like on a scale of one to 10,
Starting point is 00:25:46 how much anxiety do you have? How would you have described that? I would say that I'm able to manage it at like a six is what I would say at the time. And well, maybe a five, maybe I would have said five or six. But I guess what I'm saying is ultimately, like if your baseline level of anxiety
Starting point is 00:26:05 is self-assessed at a six out of 10, I'm no expert, but that's sort of like, okay, I'm actually- Well, because I dealt with that so long, I was kinda, it just kinda- Well, that's just what everybody does. Feels like a normal, but I remember going to the cardiologist back when Christy and I were first married
Starting point is 00:26:22 and I worked as an engineer at IBM and every day I'd come home and lay down on the couch and just to chill out. And then my heart would just be like skipping beats and like jumping out of my chest. Sometimes I would wake up in the middle of the night with like those heart palpitations or whatever. I don't know if that's the official title,
Starting point is 00:26:41 but like, and I remember I told my therapist very early on about that and I was like, that was 20 years ago, but I knew that it was stress, at least I really hoped that it was stress because when I sent in the EKG readings, the tech said, yeah, this just looks like you're stressed out and this, so I never followed up with the doctor.
Starting point is 00:27:05 And you're like, oh, of course I can handle that. But I kind of knew, and then I would, I developed various coping mechanisms over the years and just kind of felt like I was putting the anxiety in its place. But there's also, I think there's also a thing- So then only in certain times would my heart rate, heart start to flutter like that
Starting point is 00:27:24 when I was in a really stressful zone. I mean, I think, and I'm not trying to generalize here, but I do think I am going to generalize. So I'm just, I guess I'm just giving a generalization, disclaimer, that in my experience, there are a lot of men who, based on like certain cultural pressures and expectations, especially if they are in a relationship with a woman who is already kind of addressing
Starting point is 00:27:50 her mental and emotional health, I think there's a resistance. There's a resistance to be like, I feel, I mean, I gotta be the one that's got it together, man. Like, and so even if you would assess yourself at a six out of 10 of like a baseline anxiety. I got it together, man. And so even if you would assess yourself at a six out of 10 of like a baseline anxiety. I got it under control.
Starting point is 00:28:09 I got it under control. Like I'm not about to explode. I'm a safe person. But so then you kind of say, but you know, she's really the one that needs help and she's getting the help that she needs. And I would have never said that. I'm just saying that there was a subconscious thought
Starting point is 00:28:28 that just, I thought that that's just the way that it was supposed to work. I agree with that experience. I relate to that. And I think that it wasn't fair to our wives to like put them in that box. It was like, okay, you're the ones that need therapy because you have, what I think was going on
Starting point is 00:28:46 was that they were actually much more in touch with what was going on inside of them and much more willing to seek help for it. When we were just out of touch with it and I just kind of put it in this box, the physical evidence that there's something going on deep inside of me that I need to wrestle with and deal with. And that's why it looked different.
Starting point is 00:29:14 And I could say, well, that's what, you know, I would describe, well, Christy's situation or she's the one who needs help because that's what it looks like. But really what she was demonstrating is an openness and an in touchness with herself. And I didn't realize that for me, it was a closed off, not willing to go there thing.
Starting point is 00:29:37 And I just chalked it up to differences. Your mom hates it when you leave six half full glasses on your nightstand. it's a good thing mom lives on the other side of the country and it's an even better thing that you can get six ikea 365 plus glasses for just 9.99 so go ahead you can afford to hoard because ikea is priced for student life shop everything you need for back to school at ikea today. And I think that unintentionally, there's this amplification effect that you actually make the,
Starting point is 00:30:13 whatever it is that your partner or your friend is dealing with more intense by not addressing your own problems, right? So if you're somebody who's walking around, I mean, obviously I got my own- You mean comparing? Well, no, no, I'm just saying- Someone's worse than me.
Starting point is 00:30:29 If you're going around a six out of 10 anxiety, base level anxiety, you're not the best person to rely on for someone who's going through those issues. You can even exacerbate the anxiety that she's dealing with. I know that I did that for Jessie. As someone who wasn't processing my emotions in a healthy way, I was not the best resource. And again, I don't wanna get into like codependent situation.
Starting point is 00:30:59 What I'm saying is that if you actually want to be the healthiest partner to your partner who is having their own issues, dealing with your own shit is one way to address that. But when you're like, I don't have anything, I don't have anything to deal with, then you can actually create more of a burden for your partner who's already dealing with their own stuff.
Starting point is 00:31:18 So I went in with this like optimization, self-improvement, become my best self kind of thing. And I was willing to go to dark places in order to get there, but I was also like, how dark can it be? Yeah, really, you know? And so I did bring everything I had to it, but you know, there's a little bit of a dance because you have to ease into it
Starting point is 00:31:47 because it's a relationship. This is a complete stranger with qualifications and reviews. And so this dude's checked out and I feel like we're starting off on a good foundation, but you gotta build on that. And you gotta talk about yourself and you don't expect immediate, I'm learning that like, okay,
Starting point is 00:32:08 I don't wanna expect like immediate results. I gotta give this some time and let this blossom. Then the pandemic hit and a lot of, I mean, therapy for me evolved into crisis management, like the crisis of the pandemic and all the pressures that we then, that you mentioned earlier, filtered through that and leading a company and, you know,
Starting point is 00:32:40 being a resource for my, loving my family became a week to week crisis. You know, I've talked about Christie's health challenges and I'm so grateful that I had gotten in under the wire and we had met in person a few times that then, and I got in a slot with this guy so that I could then, you know, when the shit really started hitting the fan and boy was it hitting the fan for the majority of that year
Starting point is 00:33:11 every week was just help me hold this together. I think is what I brought to our meetings. Now this has happened. How do I deal with this? How do I respond? So it was kind of, it was a survival type thing. And I've described the low points and all those challenges. So I don't wanna go into that,
Starting point is 00:33:33 but that really impacted the tenor of what therapy became for me for that entire time. And then there was, and then when things are better or like when the light shines, when the clouds clear for a little bit and the light shines through, I remember there being a few sessions
Starting point is 00:33:59 where it was actually about kind of living in that moment of I'd walked through all of these difficult things it was actually about kind of living in that moment of, I'd walked through all of these difficult things and anticipated more, but with this person, that then it was kind of a, it was a sweet session when we could just kind of celebrate it. And so I discovered that like, that was a different session when we could just kind of celebrate it. And so I discovered that like,
Starting point is 00:34:28 that was a different facet of therapy. That like the relationship paid off and it could be a positive celebration of moments of growth or just of survival. But I'm painting a picture of us not really getting back to that like deeper inner work that was like the thing that I thought I was signing up for, because getting through the day and the next night
Starting point is 00:34:59 and the next week was kind of all that I had the capacity to focus on. was kind of all that I had the capacity to focus on. So I would say that described a phase of therapy for me. And I'm interested if you see it that way or how you see it, but then I'll say there's a next phase that I'm kind of in now, which is really great news that like there's been enough space between crises that I can start to say,
Starting point is 00:35:27 what are some deeper things that I wanna work on or places I wanna go? But it wasn't without a very specific challenge that related to therapy itself that I'll get into. But I wanted to hand it back over to you in terms of like how you see the trajectory of building that relationship and has it gone through phases?
Starting point is 00:35:48 So my therapist was Jesse's therapist first. Okay. And also my boys had been to see him initially. You know, actually the thing that was the impetus was kind of recognizing that Shepherd had ADHD and that was in somebody recommended, who is now basically our therapist that everyone can see. I mean, Jesse and I are the ones that see him regularly,
Starting point is 00:36:13 but so he had a lot of insight into our family. And I think, and again, not every therapist will do that. And it was a long process. And there's people have different opinions about whether or not a therapist should serve a couple or a family in that way. For us, it's a really good circumstance. I don't think I would recommend it for everybody.
Starting point is 00:36:32 But one of the things that did is there was a level of trust and connection. And I think actually the first time I met my therapist was in a couple session with Jessie there. And that was the introduction to like, oh, this is the guy that she's been talking about for years and now I know who he is. So that first session was like talking to somebody
Starting point is 00:36:53 that I already knew. I think when that's the way that it starts, and of course, if your wife has been going to a therapist and your wife has been going to a therapist and your wife has been talking about you in therapy. Yeah. You come as a, there's a narrative attached to you, right? Which could be a negative thing,
Starting point is 00:37:15 but I think that Jessie was very fair in the way that she kind of described the things that I dealt with. But then I immediately confirmed all those things while meeting. And again, my main issue, the main sort of ongoing thing that is my struggle is the fact that I tend to intellectualize and rationalize my emotions versus just experiencing them, right?
Starting point is 00:37:45 So something comes in experientially and there's a natural emotional response to that thing, whether it be sadness or anger, whatever. And if it's an inconvenient emotion, I think I've always seen myself as a very, you know, self-reliant, super dependable, like you can put me through basically any circumstance and I'm gonna be the one person that's still standing,
Starting point is 00:38:17 right? It's a pride thing, I don't know what it is, but I've kind of, you know, like, give me something else to do. I will not break. Give me a new challenge. I will succeed at it. And so negative emotions feel like wastes of time for me.
Starting point is 00:38:37 Right? Being sad about something. Well, that's like, who's got, ain't nobody got time for that. You know what I mean? And so what you end up doing is if there's something that's genuinely difficult for me to deal with that should result
Starting point is 00:38:53 in an outpouring of grief or sadness, frustration, whatever, I will immediately, and I'm very skilled at this, reframe that circumstance to remind myself that it's actually not that bad. Like this is not that bad. Lots of people have it worse than you. Like you can actually easily get to over here
Starting point is 00:39:14 and see the bright side of this and see the optimistic side and see the future of where this thing could go. And I immediately just moved to the side and I get on that track and you know, there's a lot of benefit in that when it comes to like being successful in a capitalistic society, right? And so I have experienced a tremendous amount of success in one sense because of my tendency
Starting point is 00:39:37 to not let myself feel things and just to kind of, but what was happening over time is that if you continue to do that, those emotions are going somewhere to be processed. Usually if it's a sadness that you're dealing with, then it will be an outburst of anger. It will be a short temper, which I definitely have at times. And it will be like, oh, you went from zero to 100.
Starting point is 00:40:03 Like, where did that come from? The kids came in and did something and you snapped at them immediately. A lot of that comes from not processing and letting myself feel things. So that's my main issue. There's a lot of other issues, but I'm saying that that's the main sort of emotional
Starting point is 00:40:22 sort of misfire that happens repeatedly with me. And so my- And that's something that you discovered, you became acquainted with. Because what I would have told you and what I would have told Jessie is I would have just told you the positive side of that thing.
Starting point is 00:40:36 I would be like, I'm kind of a stoic guy. Like, you know, I can get very enthusiastic about things and it's not like I don't cry. Like I said, I'll cry at Hallmark commercials. But, and then when my therapist explained to me, it was like, well, the reason you do that is because you're very willing to feel emotions for other people.
Starting point is 00:40:58 Like if I go to a wedding, I don't care if I know the people, I'm gonna cry. If I go to a funeral, I'll most likely cry. But if I'm experiencing something, very rarely will I cry. If it's something that's an emotion that, like I'm the target of it and I'm the one who's supposed to feel sadness, I'll deflect it and I'll save it.
Starting point is 00:41:18 You put it over here in a little jar, it's building up. It's gotta be, that jar has gotta be empty somehow. It's either gonna come out as anger, it's gonna come out as emotion for someone else. I just always was like, I never had never sorted through any of this stuff. I was just like, you know, I'm like my dad. I'm just like, I'm super dependable.
Starting point is 00:41:37 I'm not the emotional person in the room. Like I'm not gonna take any of your energy. Like if you're in a relationship with me, if you're working with me, we're never going to have to stop to accommodate me. Like I'm not that guy. And so I just was like, and that's what makes me great. You know what I'm saying?
Starting point is 00:41:56 But what my therapist was beginning to, well, and Jessie was saying things about it. Like, well, you just, you're not just letting yourself feel this. You're not opening yourself up to this. It was just a couple of meetings as I explained, you know, he was like, you know, tell me about yourself. I mean, the first few meetings were talking
Starting point is 00:42:13 about my upbringing, talking about the way I see things. And, you know, I'm presenting myself in a certain way. And I wasn't trying to present a good picture of myself. I was like, I know I need something because I mean, I got all this physical stuff happening. I don't really understand what it is because I don't have the language to talk about this. But, and my therapist is a very good friend now as well.
Starting point is 00:42:38 Right? So he can say, he just tells me like it is. And sometimes- But hold on, let's not skip ahead though. So, but early on you were telling about yourself and then you were unpacking these things and he was helping you come to these realizations that you've just shared.
Starting point is 00:42:54 Yeah, but like what I'm getting at is there was an immediate relational connection. So I'm not just saying he's a friend now, there's an immediate sort of relational connection, which is not necessarily normal or expected. I will just say that, it just worked out that way. And I don't even think it's necessary to be clear, but in my situation, it was great.
Starting point is 00:43:17 But like, I specifically remember a time where I would like explain something and he just laughed. You know what I'm saying? Because he was observing how adept I was at moving myself out away from like, you get on the uncomfortable peak of an emotion and you immediately dodge it. And he could just observe that happening
Starting point is 00:43:38 and he would be like, no, no, no, stop. Let's stay there with this thing. Where do you feel it? Like where physically? And like the first time he asked me where I felt something physically, I laughed at him. Because I was just like, man, what does that even mean? Where do I feel it?
Starting point is 00:43:56 Like I can't even tell you what I feel, much less where I feel it. But you know, I've since, we'll get into later like what I've actually learned and how I've applied that. But that was kind of my initial experience was like immediately kind of understanding what the challenge was and having it explained to me in a, and this is my tendency is I'm gonna like
Starting point is 00:44:21 try to like academically define what it was. And so right from the beginning, I was like, oh, this is what's wrong with me. So this is the thing that I need to start fixing. That happened really quickly. The fixing- Then what? The fixing is a different process. Well, so I do a session,
Starting point is 00:44:41 I've consistently done every other week, not weekly. For an hour and a half instead of an hour. Well, yeah, at least like a double session. So I guess it ends up being the same amount of time as if I was doing it every single week. But, and it's actually gotten a little bit shorter recently in the past year or so, it's pretty much just a single session every other week. It's an entirely new experience that combines the best of Lego Play and Fortnite.
Starting point is 00:45:29 Created to give players of all ages, including kids and families, a safe digital space to play in. Download Fortnite on consoles, PC, cloud services, or Android and play Lego Fortnite for free. Rated ESRB E10+. You know, when I describe like the crisis thing, like, I mean, are there times when you're like, this happened or there's a crisis? Yeah, well, every session- And it's external. It's an external crisis. Well, yeah, it usually- Obviously there's an internal component.
Starting point is 00:45:56 It usually starts with that, yeah. I still do this, it's still my tendency, but I will start off a session kind of telling him everything that's kind of going on in no particular order. I don't have an agenda. I don't really think about it until I see him on the call. And then I'm just like, I just start going and I just start talking.
Starting point is 00:46:23 And the things that are the heaviest and feel like the biggest sort of burden are the things that become very obvious very quickly as I talk. And then he'll kind of rewind, let's go back to this, you know, and then we'll kind of talk about that. And again, it's a subtle process
Starting point is 00:46:48 of just getting me to actually understand what it is that I'm feeling. It's pretty simple with me because the issue is so severe, you know what I'm saying? I'm sure there's other things to continue to deal with, but because the tendency is to just reframe, redefine, and cope versus feel, it's really just like, all right, let's talk about that. Let's see what you're feeling.
Starting point is 00:47:14 And so one of the things that, I know we're gonna talk a little bit about how you gauge your own progress. So I don't wanna to say that now, but because the issue is kind of singular for me, and yes, it will be like, we're having this particular issue. And again, because he knows our family so well,
Starting point is 00:47:35 he might be like, well, I already know the issue that so-and-so is dealing with. Now he doesn't tell me anything. You know, there's privacy. It's a little complicated, but like he, if I had to say, well, Jesse's going through this thing right now, or Locke's going through this thing right now, he already has insight into that
Starting point is 00:47:51 because he's already talked to them about it. Which again, for me has been a great benefit because you got somebody who understands the dynamics on both sides of the situation. So there are times when you're walking through like processing a crisis, but the general mode for you is like a continual, an exercise of bringing your emotions to the table
Starting point is 00:48:19 and processing things on a level, on that level, like instead of just the way that you would left to your own devices pre-therapy. Yeah, it's just kinda sorting through all that stuff. Okay. Because it's interesting because there's a difference between vulnerability and emotional vulnerability. I'm actually a really vulnerable person
Starting point is 00:48:46 in terms of like, I'm not a secretive protective person. If I meet you on the subway, which I don't go on the subway because I'm in Los Angeles, we call it the Metro and I don't usually take that. But you know, I could have a conversation with somebody and immediately get into like some deep stuff and be very personally disclosing about myself, my issues, et cetera.
Starting point is 00:49:10 Yeah, you can share things factually. And I'm a very introspective person, meaning that I'm willing to look at myself and analyze my actions, et cetera, et cetera. But those are not substitutes for emotional vulnerability. Again, yes, I've cried on this podcast, whatever. But what I'm talking about is just like getting to a place where I give myself permission
Starting point is 00:49:45 to feel something. Like it's okay, you can stop and feel this. Like no task is gonna be left aside. Or it's okay for this person to see you in this state. Mm-hmm. So those issues can get conflated pretty easily. Well, as an aside, I think we're both very vulnerable here, but there are things that we've decided
Starting point is 00:50:07 that we're comfortable sharing. But there's moments when we might be experiencing something on an emotional level. Like if we tear up or cry about something here, that happens much more rarely. It's a different type of vulnerability. So even if you look at it here. See, the reason why I'm asking like the questions
Starting point is 00:50:30 of like how you go about therapy and how you view it is because I feel like even though it's been almost two years, for me, I'm still just getting started because there was so much acute crisis to deal with. And there was so much acute crisis to deal with. And there was definitely, I mean, I'm not saying that there weren't times when like we've made connections
Starting point is 00:50:54 between my past and how that impacts me now or what's going on inside of me. And definitely I've been processing the emotional aspects of the crisis that I'm going through and finding it as a resource. I do tend to overanalyze everything. And so at certain points I would describe therapy as, you know what I feel like if I were just talking to a wall
Starting point is 00:51:24 and I was disciplined enough to like verbally process to that wall every week for an hour, and then kind of that I would come to a lot of the same conclusions, like that's probably not true. That says a lot about your therapist. I'm just kidding. It says a lot about me, right? I understand exactly what you're saying.
Starting point is 00:51:43 I mean, I'm just being honest that sometimes it feels that way. Cause it's like, well, how much did he say? I can talk a lot. I can get, you know, I can get going. And I am such a verbal processor that like hearing myself is a huge part of the process for me. And on the skeptical side, I'm like, yeah,
Starting point is 00:52:01 he only asked me three questions, but- How much am I paying him? And how much am I paying him? But on the other side, I'm like, yeah, he only asked me three questions, but- How much am I paying him? And how much am I paying him? But on the other side, it's, those are some pivotal questions, you know? And those moments when I stopped and thought and answered the question, probably redirected the whole conversation
Starting point is 00:52:20 in a way that the wall wouldn't. But I'm just being honest and saying, you know, it's like- There's a Tesla wall, I don't wall, I don't know how those work. I always feel that way. But I've noticed in the points when there's not something that like, I feel like I need to run to someone for help, that I'm drowning in some way, or that I want to help somebody else that I love
Starting point is 00:52:42 or something, you know, if there's not an emergency and the session's coming up, I just really started noticing the amount of trepidation that I would bring to it. And this started happening, I think pretty early. Like I actually, I went through a period of time in the first year where I would jot down on my phone, like a sentence or two from the therapy session.
Starting point is 00:53:12 And I went back and looked and I realized like a year ago, this was happening. Like we had gone through a lot of things and like it was one of those, like the clouds had cleared moment. And I jotted down that I was just, I approached the sessions with so much trepidation because I did not know what I wanted to talk about.
Starting point is 00:53:36 And then I noticed over the past few, and by the way, when that happened, I remember I canceled an appointment. And then it was, and then the next week, I like, I wanted to cancel again. And I ended up talking about it a little bit instead of canceling the, I felt like I confessed it. I was like, listen, I canceled on you last week
Starting point is 00:53:59 because I was just too afraid to show up and not, and the unknown just was too much for me. I didn't know what I wanted to talk about. And then a lot of shit hit the fan again, or I guess, because over the last few weeks, maybe months, it's come up again. And I guess it's a good sign that like I have the room, I have the head space to say,
Starting point is 00:54:25 I'm not drowning here. I'm not afraid. I'm not desperate for help about a specific thing. But my mind immediately goes to now what? That's how I know therapy. So going back to that first place of like, I'm gonna just gonna start working on some like longer term or deeper issues, shadow work type stuff, you know,
Starting point is 00:54:46 the real sexy hard stuff. Instead, I would just get frozen with, I don't know what to say. And I would get so stressed out, like five, six days in advance. And I would notice the moment that I would come up with something, I'd feel relief. And I'd realize that like, you know,
Starting point is 00:55:14 this is what I felt in college every time I had an assignment. Until I could finish the assignment or develop a plan that I knew I could finish it, it would drive me nuts. And I started to think this might be a good thing to talk about in therapy. But so, you know, but so my question is,
Starting point is 00:55:33 because again, like what I'm hearing as your friend, as you say these things is just like, yes, the reason that you should be in therapy is being evidenced in the way that you approach therapy. Yeah. And so when you take this to your therapist, what do you feel, do you feel like there is some, and again, I understand, it's not about necessarily,
Starting point is 00:55:59 you're not necessarily paying them for their insights, so to speak. It is like paying for time to process, which everybody needs, but you are, they are trained professionals. So do you feel like when you take that- A year ago when I took it to him, he was like, you know what?
Starting point is 00:56:24 I want you to feel like you can come with absolutely blank slate, not knowing anything. Some of the best sessions I have with people are when they have no clue what we're going to talk about. And they still show up. And he encouraged me to think about it as I'm prioritizing myself and something that I need. This is me time that's protected.
Starting point is 00:56:50 And he didn't say, you're not performing for me or we didn't really, he just reassured me at the time. It's like, you know what? You don't have to come up with anything. I got this. I can handle this. And I could not bring myself to believe him in action. It was difficult.
Starting point is 00:57:13 And then more shit hit the fan and I had stuff that I felt like was urgent and it was. So, and then it kind of, again, it moved to the back burner but I realized that was a year ago. That was October that I put that in my journal, my phone journal. So a few weeks ago, a few sessions ago, I brought it up again.
Starting point is 00:57:37 And I was like, this is still happening. I'm having such a difficult time. I don't know what my hangup is. And we started to explore like, well, I wanna make sure it's worth my time and my money. Am I afraid that I'm not demonstrating, that I'm not making the most of this, that I'm not bringing enough to this
Starting point is 00:58:01 and my therapist knows it? I'm telling him this stuff at that time and I'm realizing that there's definitely barriers there for me to accepting it as a place that's a nonjudgmental zone. Because there's a lot of things going on, but one of the things that I realized was that I just assumed that he is analyzing me in the same way that I'm analyzing the session and myself.
Starting point is 00:58:32 And control is obviously a big thing for me that I'm working on and I see it at play here. That's like, when I don't feel like I can, I have plans, meaning that I have control over where the therapy starts so then I know when I've gotten to it, when I've gotten to the answer, when I've made the most of the session, when I've gotten my money and time's worth,
Starting point is 00:58:58 when I've demonstrated that I'm willing to make progress because I actually have made progress because I brought a starting point and then there was some sort of conclusion. I definitely found myself towards the end of a session, I would look at the clock throughout the session and realize, okay, I'm halfway through, there's something else I wanted to talk about
Starting point is 00:59:18 so I'm gonna get to that now. I would very much control everything in order to try to feel okay about it. And then at the end, if it went well, I realized that I would thank my therapist. I don't know if this seems weird because I wanted to acknowledge to him kind of in like a code that like, yes, you helped me.
Starting point is 00:59:41 I got what I needed out of this. You know, it's like kind of giving him a review or and demonstrating that I've made progress. And I did, so all of these things I'm starting to realize as we're having the conversation about how freaking difficult it is for me and how much I put on myself and bring into therapy just because it's therapy
Starting point is 01:00:06 or what I think it should be in my mind. And then I realized that like, you know, I haven't before going to therapy in this environment, like the way that we would do it before is we would, I would go visit, I would have a counselor, which would normally be my church pastor. And I knew that that was not a judgment-free zone. Like I always knew that innately.
Starting point is 01:00:34 There was like, you know, a pastor was always comparing, at least in my mind, comparing my, like whatever I was confessing, and again, I never confessed to a Catholic priest. It wasn't like that. Never went into the closet with the Catholic priest. Just the Protestant guy would be comparing, well, this is comparing my point of view
Starting point is 01:00:59 and my actions to the morals of the Bible and then saying, okay, well, this is how you need to change. This is what you need to repent of. This is where you're in sin and this is where you need to get right with God, right? It was an implied place of judgment, the exact opposite of what therapy is supposed to be, right? And it's so difficult for me to believe
Starting point is 01:01:26 that he's not constantly judging me. Cause I'm like, aren't you coming up with an assessment? Don't you have like, what do you, I've been talking to you for almost for a year and a half, more like, what conclusions are you drawing about me? What do you know? Did you drawing about me? What do you know? Did you ask him that? Yeah, he said a number of things that were like,
Starting point is 01:01:51 made me feel they were edifying, but then he basically said that I deal with, I can't remember the term he used, basically like I have anxiety, and it seems it's like, well, it may be, it seems obvious, but in this was just a few weeks ago. And I know, and I harness all of my neurosis for comedy.
Starting point is 01:02:17 I am acquainted with it enough to use it to my advantage and also kind of laugh at myself, but to hear the therapist just kind of say it in more of like a diagnosis kind of way, it shook me up a little bit because it was like, oh, I don't just experience anxiety, I have anxiety? It felt different to me.
Starting point is 01:02:45 And I just uncovered a lot there, but it's like- There's a few things that come up for me as you talk about this. I mean, one is the conversation that you're having with me right now about your therapy. And you've done this a little bit, but it definitely feels like that's the conversation that you should be having with a therapist.
Starting point is 01:03:08 Now, like you said, you have kind of done that, right? Yeah. Because the nature of the way you're seeing it and the nature of the conversation that we're having about it is indicative of what your work is in the anxiety and control and those things, right? Yeah. I mean, if you feel like when you asked him that question,
Starting point is 01:03:29 I mean, again, it's tough for me, like I'm not here to evaluate the effectiveness of your particular therapist, right? There's a part of me that in the way that like Jesse had already told my therapist a bunch of things about me, someone who's in relationship with you, which is actually something I wanna talk about
Starting point is 01:03:51 in terms of how I evaluate what I've actually experienced in therapy and what the benefit has been, but also kind of understanding what it is that your issues are, are sometimes most eloquently articulated by the people in your life. Because I could have told you that your issue is-
Starting point is 01:04:09 Yeah, I've gone to therapy with Christy and been able to provide my perspective that really kind of coalesced some things for Christy. It's like, I feel like if me and Christy could sit down with your therapist for one hour and just be like, can we just tell you some things about Link? Because I don't know if it's coming across
Starting point is 01:04:34 as he talks to you. I don't know if he's packaging it differently or he doesn't have a, because no one has a great self-assessment, right? I don't have a great self-assessment. So, but you're really, I mean, I think you are, and I'm totally cool with this, that like you are questioning whether after all this time,
Starting point is 01:04:52 couldn't he have gotten, do I need a new therapist? Well, no, I guess what I'm saying is that, okay, as I think back on our life together, first of all, there was a lot, like if you take our life in sections really quickly and you take like growing up together, I had absolutely no clue that you were dealing with so much anxiety.
Starting point is 01:05:15 I was not. Like that was not, anxiety wasn't something I was dealing with. You were like nervous and shaken up by all kinds of things and no one had any idea that it was happening. Your best friend had no idea it was happening. And then for most of our adult life, I kind of dismissed a lot of your anxious,
Starting point is 01:05:38 first of all, I would be like, yes, he's got, like once we started working together, I was like, oh, he's got a lot of control issues. I see that. And that is interesting in like creative collaboration, but it didn't feel like a mental problem or like emotional problem, it's just like Link has control issues,
Starting point is 01:05:52 it's something that he understands, I understand, and we work it out. But your anxiety was something that I did not have an understanding of. I was just like, I know he's stressed out, quote unquote, because he's as busy as I am. And I know what it feels like to be this busy. And I know what it feels like to have this much pressure
Starting point is 01:06:15 and have this many projects and this many employees and all these issues that we're constantly dealing with. Like it's stressful as hell. So, and we do everything side by side. So I know that you're stressed out, but the anxiety that you bring to like every type of experience, not just the stressful things,
Starting point is 01:06:39 is something that I didn't have a language for until I started going to therapy and we started like talking about this stuff, right? And so I've come to understand like, oh, like Link is running really, really hot. Yeah. That baseline anxiety that you're talking about. And now, okay, I see it come out
Starting point is 01:06:56 in some of the things that he says and does, it's just like, oh, that's coming out because he's so anxious about this thing right now. And so to me, and I'm not saying, I mean, he's told you that you deal with anxiety. I'm not saying he's a bad therapist, but I'm just like, okay, we're two years in. And he's like saying that like, no man,
Starting point is 01:07:16 like this is your, this is an issue that like is very consequential in your life. Do you know what I mean? And so I just want, I mean, I guess I'm just, what I want him to do is- I have a hard time judging my therapist because I'm just constantly judging myself. No, I understand that.
Starting point is 01:07:35 And we do talk about those things and we do, and so it's like assignments, like think back on memories from your childhood, let's explore explore your family life growing up. Like, okay, your dad wasn't there. Then your stepdad wasn't there. And this is how you interacted with your mom. It's like, we do talk about those things and it has shed light on my impulse to control
Starting point is 01:08:08 and the roots of my anxiety. Right, and the control being the thing that is, you're trying to get hold of the anxiety with the control, right? I didn't even, we talked about this earlier, I didn't even realize until like six months ago that a lot of the things you told me in situations where you vote, you were just vocalizing something to yourself, but you were telling me because I'm with you.
Starting point is 01:08:32 You know what I'm saying? And then I'm like, oh, he does that a lot. Like, he's like, now don't forget to make the most of this or what you say something to me. And I'm like, and for years I was always just like, yeah, you're right, man. It's like, and for years I was always just like, yeah, you're right, man. It's like, I didn't really need to hear that, but you're right in what you just said.
Starting point is 01:08:50 All of a sudden it hit me, I was like, oh, he's self-soothing right now by saying this thing to me. And so I guess what I'm saying is this, I just wanna sit down with your therapist and be like, cause I wanna hear him talk and I wanna know like, do you really understand this guy? Do you understand him?
Starting point is 01:09:08 I mean, I do think that my work is like understanding what I'm so afraid of. And I think that, I don't, you know, it's, do I need a new therapist? Listen. It's really hard. I mean, Christy's been through different therapists.
Starting point is 01:09:34 It's very common. Other people that I know have been, most people that I've talked to that I know really closely about therapy have been to multiple therapists and sometimes they've gone back. Just to know what they may have been missing. Well, if you were to ask-
Starting point is 01:09:49 And I feel like I would like to start over anyway. It's like something about the way that it, again, we talk about it. We talk about two weeks ago, we have so much. And so it's an opportunity to kind of change the trajectory to not be so crisis oriented. We talked about that specifically. And that's why we got into the, you know,
Starting point is 01:10:08 reflect more on your past and we can unpack some of that and talk about this impulse to control. Like this is where we've talked about going. But I do wonder, there is a part of me that's like, I feel like I gotta have somebody to, I gotta have a different experience with a different person to compare it to. Yeah, I mean, I can't advise you in that.
Starting point is 01:10:31 I'm just, I guess- Because I think the thing that I feel like I'm missing is like, I just anticipated that I would be breaking down left and right in therapy. I mean, I just don't I would be breaking down left and right in therapy. I mean, I just don't, I've got a shit ton of issues, but it's not like, I don't think I have the issue you're talking about where I'm not gonna like weep about my own emotion,
Starting point is 01:11:01 let that emotion out. I actually think that I, that's what I thought I was signing up for. I thought I was signing up for crying a lot. And you know, And because I haven't, and I just feel like, I feel like that's a reason to look for, see if another therapist can get me to cry more
Starting point is 01:11:21 because I thought that was gonna be part of it. That's an outward sign for me that I'm getting somewhere. And it may be, I mean, as somebody who, just to put things into perspective, as somebody who's been going to therapy since 2017, specifically focusing on being able to feel things and process things, I still haven't cried.
Starting point is 01:11:46 And my wife just laughs at me. I mean, not in jest, but just because she's like, I cry every damn time. But do you think that I would? Listen, I'm not- At least a few times. Like I want a breakthrough, I guess is what I'm saying. Here's what I'll say.
Starting point is 01:12:01 I wanna be really hesitant to like, cause I'm not a professional by any means. Well, I know that. It's just- I know how to filter your advice. In comparing it to my experience, where the way that I would categorize, the way I would characterize what happened with me is
Starting point is 01:12:19 very, very quickly we got to the root. And now when we got to the root, we saw that the root was really thick and really deep and splayed out in many different areas. So it's not like just identifying the issue solves it because I still have all the tendencies. But it didn't take, it took two sessions to get to the root, not two years to get to the root.
Starting point is 01:12:45 Yeah, and I feel like we're certainly digging in the right place, and there's reasons why maybe it's taking this long to get back to it, but I feel like that I can't continue the root analogy in talking about the point I'm trying to make. What is the point I'm trying to make? Well, okay.
Starting point is 01:13:13 I'll talk a little bit about, because I recently- Oh, I know what I was trying to say. We're looking in the right place, like saying this is the root of the issue. And I'm envious of the way that like, now you kind of know, well, I'm envious. I feel like you've described an assignment. Like you bring the therapy your life
Starting point is 01:13:33 and then you make sure that you're processing it on a level that you haven't been able to until therapy unlock that for you, an emotional level. So the protocol seems clear to me. Again, it's a plan. I feel like, and so is my exercise to find someone new who can give me that breakthrough and then filter every experience I have
Starting point is 01:13:59 through the trauma that I've endured as a child that then is making me want to control everything to soothe it or is my exercise that and also letting go of the control of needing a plan to get there and analyzing- That's what makes it really complicated for you. And in a different way, again, because I like to present myself as having it together
Starting point is 01:14:29 and I do it unconsciously. Again, I don't know what, now I'm not gonna get into the way, what I've explored specifically about, you know, my childhood that kind of potentially led me to a place that this is the way that I cope with things. But because I present as someone who's got it together as a default, sometimes it takes 30 minutes of talking and therapy to begin to break through the shell
Starting point is 01:15:01 because I'm doing it without even knowing it. Just like, I think things are going pretty good, but they're not, like, and they may be externally, but like in here, no, there's something that you're not really, I gotta bring that out. So yeah, there is this, I'm constantly, what I'm saying is that my issue does directly impact the way that I do therapy.
Starting point is 01:15:23 So I'm not saying that like every time I start a therapy session, I'm like, here we go. I know what the work is, let's do it. No, the work is directly related into the way that I approach therapy in a very similar way, just a different issue. But I feel like my therapist is so attuned to that being the problem that he will just be like,
Starting point is 01:15:46 okay, let's stop a second. Now, do you see what you did there? You've been talking about this for this much time and you see how quickly you move to this thing? But what about this thing? And so, because he's like, I'm dealing with a guy, if it was like he was a coach and it was just like, the thing this guy can't do
Starting point is 01:16:05 is he can't go to his left. Right. Then he would be- There's a level of authority there. I'm envious of that too, because I feel like- You don't feel like he's assertive enough. Yeah, like he's like, stop. When you said that, could that mean this?
Starting point is 01:16:19 It's like, I just don't, I feel like it's all up to me. It's like, he's gonna answer, he's gonna ask a question and he's gonna, you know, what else am I gonna say? Now what am I gonna say to the wall? The fact that you've now referred to him as a wall multiple times makes me think, listen, I don't want it, again, everybody's experience is different,
Starting point is 01:16:38 but because there's a question in your mind- But I think it's a style thing. I don't think it's a criticism of him as much as like, am I discovering what I need? And it's just, it's a relationship. So it's the style, right? The therapist is a person. So I'm really feeling like I wanna try somebody else
Starting point is 01:16:58 just because it's just a fit, it's a style. You wanna go to my therapist too? No, that would be unethical. it's just a fit, it's a style. It's a- You wanna go to my therapist too? No, that would be unethical. We can't, like, at some point, the circle has to stop expanding. I mean, could there be a handoff? Like- Maybe you take the weeks that I'm not there.
Starting point is 01:17:16 No, again, this is two very, very non-professional guys talking about therapy, but I think the only thing that I want to affirm is that I don't think it's wrong to think, should I just, could I try something else out? I know it's not wrong and I know that they do it all the time. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:17:36 But it's like, I get hung up on it and I'm definitely thinking that I'm not gonna tell him. I'm just gonna get a second therapist at the same time. Wow. I don't know how I feel about that. It's fucked up. I should be able to tell him. He's my damn therapist.
Starting point is 01:17:51 Yeah, I think- But say, hey, I'm breaking up with you for a little time until I changed my mind and realized that the grass wasn't greener, and then I'll come back to you. He knows all of that. It happens all the time, right? I could just be like,
Starting point is 01:18:02 because the- I think you have to talk to him about this. The temptation is, I'll just go like, because the- I think you have to talk to him about this. The temptation is, I'll just go to every other week and then I can hedge with somebody else. I think the whole point is- I gotta build the other person back up while I taper the other guy off.
Starting point is 01:18:15 Well, I feel like- I don't wanna be left in a lurch. This is the thing that I was kind of getting at earlier is that I feel like there's the real narrative that's happening in here and then there's the real narrative that's happening in here. And then there's the curated narrative that you bring to your therapist. And I think that, and I do the same thing.
Starting point is 01:18:31 Well, I didn't know you were saying that. But what I'm, no, because I'm performative in a different way, right? I'm definitely performative, okay. But you're- But my performative is that I'm getting- You're trying to control it and get the most out of it and make it the best possible session.
Starting point is 01:18:47 I'm just trying to appear like I got it together. Yeah. Even if I don't. But they're both performative in a certain way. So the thing that he breaks me out of is the curated narrative. And either you got to break yourself out of the curated narrative or-
Starting point is 01:19:03 Or if I don't have a curated narrative, whatever it is, I just want to have more of a, I think his style is more like raise a question and then it's self-discovery, but it's not, it's not a conversation. We're not batting ideas back and forth. Well, and you know, this is a way that- And I kind of want a little more of that.
Starting point is 01:19:24 This is a way that we tell people who work for us and work with us this all the time, because if there's anything that we are, we have in very much in common in the way that we work with people is we invite collaboration really intensely. And we tell people when we get ready to work on a project, we say, listen, you can't offend us.
Starting point is 01:19:43 And we don't hold any ideas sacred. If you don't like something, you should tell us because that's how we work. And listen, if you step back and you make it a light touch thing and you don't ever voice your opinion, we will bowl over you because we have so much intense creative energy.
Starting point is 01:20:00 Now, I actually think we kind of function relationships in this way. And so I think what you're asking, it's like- When I have something to bring to therapy, I bowl over, I talk to the wall. Yeah, you want him to reach out and grab you by the collar, so to speak. And again, I feel like my therapist does that
Starting point is 01:20:17 in the most respectful, friendly way possible, but he just kinda is ready to, when he smells bullshit, he says, I smell bullshit. You know what I mean? I don't know what he needs to smell. Maybe there's a different scent from me, a different stink than bullshit, but yeah, it's not, whatever that is, I would like to be- So I think you gotta talk to him
Starting point is 01:20:42 and I think you gotta say that I'm just, this is how I feel and what I want to do is maybe meet with someone else because I just don't have anything, I don't have any sort of connection to compare this to. And then I'm starting over. It's like, that's why I haven't done it. And that's when things go better and I have that, like I don't have anything to talk about,
Starting point is 01:21:08 I'm like, I'll just, I'll stretch it out. I'll just meet every other week. We'll try that out. Maybe I don't need therapy. I start to tell myself that stuff. Okay. And then I know what- This is what I wanted to talk about
Starting point is 01:21:21 because I started to think the same thing, okay? And I actually asked Jessie when we were getting ready for this episode, I was like, I feel like, I understand what my problem is and I understand what I'm, kind of what I'm doing to work on it, but it's really difficult for me to talk,
Starting point is 01:21:41 to articulate the progress and what's actually changed. And she was like, well, do you want me to tell you? Right, and so I actually wrote down some of the stuff that she said, because I asked her to repeat it. Okay. First of all, she kind of laughed again. And it's like, would you want me to tell you what I've seen? She's like, you're much more in touch with your emotions,
Starting point is 01:22:07 which is translated into the way that we communicate, me and her communicate. Spent, you know, been married for 20 years, spent many of those years, if we were arguing about something, my main goal was to get a point across, to debate, to be like, this is why I think that I'm right about this and these are my supporting, this is the supporting evidence. Versus worrying about connecting.
Starting point is 01:22:31 Do you know what I'm saying? Or just saying, this is how I feel. Like I've literally changed the way that we argue about things by saying, well, this is what I'm feeling right now. And it isn't, I feel that you're a jerk about this. It's just like, no, this is what I'm feeling right now. And it isn't, I feel that you're a jerk about this. It's just like, no, this is the emotional response that I'm having right now.
Starting point is 01:22:50 And she's already there because she's been doing, and that's completely changed the way, that's changed conflict resolution. I didn't even know that until she pointed it out. She's like, you don't get mad as much. I mean, again, that's something that I didn't really have, you really don't have a way to perceive yourself in that way. She said, we are closer than we've ever been.
Starting point is 01:23:12 And I was like, well, you know what? I recently told somebody that I thought that too. Oh, is that something to do with me being in therapy? Yes, okay. And then she says, and think about the way that we, the differences in the way that we deal with our kids since before therapy. You know, one of the things that our therapist
Starting point is 01:23:31 has really harped on is this maintaining the relationship with our kids as they age. And as you, as they get older and get more independent, you know, like being a senior in high school, resisting the urge to datify every situation and to moralize and to correct and to teach and to use every conversation as an opportunity to give my wise perspective
Starting point is 01:23:55 versus using every conversation as an opportunity to connect emotionally. And again, that's just not something that, I love my kids, I love being with my kids, I love doing things and having fun with my kids. But usually if they start talking about something, my default is to be like, robot analyze situation, give solution.
Starting point is 01:24:18 Like it's just my personality, you bring me a problem, I'll come up with a solution real fast. Versus bring me a problem and let me get behind that problem with you. Let's not solve it, let's just agree that it's a problem and connect emotionally. These are things that have happened, but I needed my wife to point them out.
Starting point is 01:24:37 So I guess my question for you is, I think before you make any of this decision, you gotta talk to Christy about it. Oh, sure, we're already talking about it. Yeah, but like if she were to be like, oh no, like I've seen this change in you in these ways, or be like, no, I think you need a new therapist. Like she's gonna know way better than me.
Starting point is 01:25:00 Well, we had a fight last night. But we're having a date tonight. Okay, it's good to get the fight out of the way. Well, the fight was, the conflict was resolved, but I did not, I kind of showed my ass. So I didn't really demonstrate a lot of progress in any area. So I don't know if tonight is a good night to ask.
Starting point is 01:25:23 Cause she might be like, there's work to be done. I mean, that is the sense I get. You know, it's like, in an effort to wrap this up, I think just the benefit of kind of looking back, the other thing was that I looked back at my notes and they ended a year ago. I stopped jotting down.
Starting point is 01:25:44 I think I wanna start that back up because I'm sure Christy can give me perspective on all of this and I'll put that question to her in terms of like how I've changed or grown, if at all. I know, I believe I have. I've definitely survived a lot of things I couldn't. And that is saying a lot. And it's not something to diminish.
Starting point is 01:26:08 You've had acute situations that took a lot of energy and time. But I do think I wanna keep writing things down and I am gonna seriously consider getting a new therapist. I think that came from within me. That's not something that you were, that wasn't your idea. Is your therapist listening to this podcast?
Starting point is 01:26:31 Why would he? I don't think my therapist- That doesn't seem right. My therapist doesn't listen to it because every time he refers to it, he calls it earbuds. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Let's keep it that way. I don't think he would. And I do not correct him
Starting point is 01:26:44 because it's my way to know if he's actually listening. Boy, this is, therapy's tough. What have we learned? Is this a ringing endorsement? No, to me, you know, and it's funny because I've had two conversations in the past month with two close friends. one who just started therapy
Starting point is 01:27:07 and feels the need to change therapists, and one who just started therapist and wanted to check in with me after a few sessions and just ask the question like, it's hard to evaluate. And he was thinking about it from a financial perspective, which is a note we wanna make. I mean, being able to pay for your own mental health is a privilege that we have.
Starting point is 01:27:32 It's a luxury, sadly. Sadly, that's the case. But we were talking ahead of, before the show with Kiko and Jenna, and they were both kind of reminding us about like, there are mental health resources and groups. And there are actually, there's free resources depending on your background and things that you deal with.
Starting point is 01:27:54 And the community you live in, how big it is. There are ways to get at some of this stuff. There's affinity groups like LGBTQ. I mean, if that's, you know, or there's support groups. Yeah, and sometimes that can happen in a group setting and doesn't necessarily have to be one-on-one, but if you can afford it, you know, try to make it happen. But he was asking that question,
Starting point is 01:28:19 because he was like, you know, I'm spending a fair amount of money on this, and just like, what, you know, and I find myself, like he was, he's a lot, he's not like you, but it was funny because he did something that you would have done, which is he printed out like a summary of himself with background information, like a resume that you give to a therapist
Starting point is 01:28:36 and send it to the therapist before the appointment. Yeah. To kind of get it out of the way so they didn't have to spend a bunch of time talking. I love that idea. And he was like, the therapist was like, no one has ever done this. I don't know how to feel about it, but thank you.
Starting point is 01:28:48 Really? Hmm. So, but I told him the same thing. I was like, listen, man, like I had to ask Jesse because I can't immediately articulate, you forget what's actually happening. Therapy rolls around and I'm just like, oh man, I just want to watch TV.
Starting point is 01:29:02 I don't find myself longing for my next therapy appointment. If I have to miss it and I end up like, oh man, I just wanna watch TV. I don't find myself longing for my next therapy appointment. If I have to miss it and I end up going a full month, I don't feel the need. You get secretly happy? No, I don't get secretly happy, but I don't have this felt need of like all this stuff building up that's about to explode the moment that the Zoom call starts.
Starting point is 01:29:22 But then what I find is that when the Zoom call does start and I just start letting it flow. It's there, that's your MO. It's there, right. Yeah. So it's not a- So you're recommending therapy. I'm recommending therapy, but it's not, yeah,
Starting point is 01:29:35 it's not gonna be like some easy thing. My actual recommendation to wrap things up is a book that I've been reading called "'Why We Sleep' by I think his name is Michael Walker. Let me just make sure that's his name. Matthew Walker. This is like a New York Times bestseller a few years ago. And it's basically just all about sleep
Starting point is 01:29:58 and the importance of sleep. Now I will say that as I've dug into it a little bit, that there are some people, some researchers out there who question some of the conclusions he comes to. Okay. But so much of the book is him just saying, this was a study, a peer reviewed study that was done with these people and this is what it,
Starting point is 01:30:18 you know, he explores all these different aspects of sleep and you will learn a lot of really good information. But I've just been absolutely blown away at how, just reminded at how important getting a good night's sleep is. Like if you don't wanna read the book, then just get a good night's sleep. Get seven to nine hours of sleep every single night
Starting point is 01:30:40 is my recommendation. Hey, I like that. But if you're interested in that kind of information. If I could sleep with my therapist, maybe all my problems would be solved. Yep, right. And I don't mean like that. Yep, well, I understand.
Starting point is 01:30:52 But it's a good book in general with a lot of absolutely fascinating information that you would like hear on like a podcast or like NPR, all put together into a really fascinating book. All right. Well, hashtag Ear Biscuits, let us know what you think about this. You don't have to give me advice.
Starting point is 01:31:11 I've got enough people in my life to help me with that. But any other way that you're dealing with this, or if you wanna give Rhett advice, use hashtag Ear Biscuits. I'm sure you will. Talk at you next week.

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