Feel Better, Live More with Dr Rangan Chatterjee - The 3 Key Ingredients For A Thriving Relationship, Practical Strategies To Manage Conflict & How To Build Deeper Relationships with Yung Pueblo #531
Episode Date: March 5, 2025How much of your relationship tension comes from expectations that were never communicated? And what if changing the way you handle conflict could completely transform them?  While we often dedicate... countless hours to our careers, many of us never devote time to the basics of emotional awareness. Yet my guest today believes that learning to love better might be the most important, transformative journey we can undertake.  Diego Perez, widely known by his pen name, Yung Pueblo, is followed by millions of people all around the world who are keen to learn from his wisdom. He’s the author of multiple best-selling books, including his very latest How to Love Better: The Path to Deeper Connection Through Growth, Kindness and Compassion.  In this powerful conversation, you'll hear about: Diego's remarkable journey from addiction to transformation - including how meditation became the cornerstone of his recovery and personal growth The three essential qualities that meditation can cultivate - discover how self-awareness, non-reactivity, and compassion can transform your relationships The art of conscious communication - learn practical strategies for moving from conflict to understanding in your relationships The concept of "selfless listening" - discover how to truly hear your partner without preparing your response The three key ingredients for thriving relationships - explore how kindness, growth, and compassion create deeper connections Practical conflict resolution strategies - learn how to handle disagreements constructively and use them as opportunities for growth  Whether you're in a relationship or not, Diego's insights offer valuable wisdom for anyone looking to develop deeper connections and better understand themselves. It’s a conversation about love, growth, and the courage to face ourselves honestly. Understanding that true change starts within and that our relationships can be our greatest teachers on the path to becoming better humans. Support the podcast and enjoy Ad-Free episodes. Try FREE for 7 days on Apple Podcasts https://apple.co/feelbetterlivemore. For other podcast platforms go to https://fblm.supercast.com.  Thanks to our sponsors: https://vivobarefoot.com/livemore https://exhalecoffee.com/livemore https://www.thriva.co  Show notes https://drchatterjee.com/531  DISCLAIMER: The content in the podcast and on this webpage is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your doctor or qualified healthcare provider. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay in seeking it because of something you have heard on the podcast or on my website.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Everything is temporary. There's never been a permanent emotion. Like all of them are temporary.
There's never been a storm in the history of the universe that's lasted forever.
Hey guys, how you doing? Hope you're having a good week so far. My name is Dr. Rangan Chatterjee.
And this is my podcast, Feel Better, Live More.
live more. Whilst many of us dedicate countless hours to our careers and work, we don't tend to
devote the same amount of time to the basics of emotional awareness. Yet this week's guest
believes that this may well be the most important skill we can learn.
Today's guest is Diego Perez, widely known by his pen name, Yung Pueblo.
Diego is followed by millions of people all around the world who are keen to learn from his wisdom,
and is the author of multiple best-selling books, including his very latest,
How to Love Better, The Path to Deeper Connection, through growth, kindness and compassion.
In our conversation, you will hear about Diego's remarkable journey from addiction to transformation
and how meditation became the cornerstone of his recovery.
He also beautifully articulates why he considers his daily two-hour meditation practice the best investment he's
ever made, cultivating three essential qualities – self-awareness, non-reactivity and compassion.
You'll also learn about the art of conscious communication, the concept of selfless listening,
the three key ingredients for thriving relationships
and how to navigate conflict in relationships constructively and use it as an opportunity
for growth. Whether you are currently in a relationship or not, this conversation is
full of powerful insights that will absolutely help you on your path to a more contented life.
It's a conversation about courage, love and growth, but it's also a conversation that helps us deeply understand
that it is our relationships that can be our greatest teachers.
I want us to start off by asking you about meditation.
Sure.
You meditate, I believe, for two hours every single day.
That's right. Every single day.
Why is that?
Because it's the best investment I've ever made.
It's it has absolutely transformed my life for the better
internally in my own mind,
and it's elevated my relationships
to a whole nother level of depth
that I didn't really have access to before.
I think I was sort of shocked by the,
like how much I get back from meditating,
because I went into it as an experiment,
but then when I came back out, my mind was lighter.
So I tried it out a bunch of times,
went to a few silent 10 day retreats.
And when I started meditating daily,
the progress was tremendous.
There'll be some people who have stumbled across
this conversation, who I believe will be thinking,
Diego, listen, two hours a day, you don't get my life.
I'm busy.
I've got kids, I've got work pressures.
I've got ABC that I have to do each day.
You know, what would you say to someone like that
who feels that two hours of meditation
is unrealistic for them?
I think you start where you can, you know, it also felt unrealistic to me too,
until I started seeing that there was time, you know, there was a lot of time where, you know,
I'd wake up in the morning and I would kind of dilly-dally and do what not, take my time to
really start my day and then now when I get up, I just get up and start meditating or in the evening,
the same thing too, where I just cut out an just get up and start meditating or in the evening the same thing too where I just
Cut out an hour from Netflix and just meditate and I can still watch some shows before I go to bed
So there is some time there. I know some people have extremely busy lives, but I think of it as like how would I
remove what
Profoundly helps me like it's almost like why would I not allow myself to drink water?
You know, like I think of meditation in a similar vein where it's like,
water is so nourishing to me, I need it every day.
For meditating as well, it feels like it's something that's just
helping me learn and grow and keep developing my self-awareness.
So it's a gift that I'm giving to myself.
What I find interesting about meditation, I'm also a fan like you, although to be completely
transparent I don't need two hours a day.
Although I will say over the last couple of days reading your books, researching you and
your life, you've really got me thinking about what would your life look like if you did meditate for two hours
a day?
Right?
So, first of all, your approach is inspiring me actually at the moment to make me think
maybe this is something I can start to increase in my own life.
I think with a lot of practices that people want to engage with for their health or their
happiness or their relationships,
they kind of know the outcome before they start. They know the outcome that they want.
So, for example, someone may start moving their body and working out because they know it's going
to give them energy or make them feel different or help them lower their anxiety. And I would say with
five minutes of movement, you can feel a difference straight away.
Totally.
Is it fair to say that with meditation that, you know, that return on investment question
that we have to ask ourselves, do you think that's a little bit more cloudy for people
that they don't really understand what they're going to get?
So they try and go, it ain't working.
Yeah, especially because a lot of people think that, you know, the point of meditating is to like,
stop all your thoughts. And it's not, that's not really the point at all. And also when you look at
meditating as a whole, meditating is like, just, there are so many different traditions, there are
so many different types, and these different types of meditation have different goals.
Some are very bliss oriented.
The one that I practice is oriented
towards building equanimity,
a sense of balance, non-reactiveness.
And meditating itself,
especially in this Vipassana tradition,
we focus on developing the qualities of self-awareness,
non-reaction and compassion.
So you're literally taking yourself to the mental gym.
You know, these are qualities that your mind is born with,
but they are like muscles
that haven't been really strengthened.
So to me, it's like,
you have to know what you wanna get out of it.
And I think non-reaction was the key element
that I was missing in my life,
where I was just getting so attached to everything,
creating so much mental tension in my own mind.
And once I started being able to observe that everything changes,
so why am I really holding on?
It helped tremendously.
I can't imagine there's anyone listening, Diego,
who doesn't want those three things.
More self-awareness, the ability to be non-reactive and the ability to have more compassion.
Totally, but these things take training.
They don't just happen overnight.
They literally require cultivation the same way, you know, you're not just going to run
a marathon tomorrow.
You have to train for it. If you have those three things or as you cultivate those three things, I imagine that one would
be, one would feel calmer. They'd calmer, feel happier. They'd probably be healthier
in many ways. Right? So I guess what I'm leading to, if these are things you have to cultivate, are they
our natural state or are they things that are not our natural state that we have to
work on in order to get?
Oh, that's a really good question.
It's interesting because when the mind is really clear and it's not clinging to anything,
the mind is automatically aware, automatically compassionate.
It is really clear in its decision-making and it's quite creative.
But we unconsciously gather so much conditioning.
Like, literally, I mean, one of the key things that I learned
that helped me understand myself
and why my mind was the way that it was in the past
was that every single time that you react,
you are creating an imprint in the subconscious of the mind
that is molding and shaping your mind
so that you are not only perceiving the present
through the lens of the past,
but you are reacting in the way that you used to.
So let's say in the past
when you would defend yourself with anger,
that anger is more likely to come up
because you're constantly looking at reality
and it's like, oh, this reminds me of the thing
that threatened me before.
So now the anger flies up.
But for people, they think that's their natural selves.
That's actually incorrect.
That's just their past reappearing
through this impulsiveness.
Yeah, no, I love that.
I always think about this idea of whether happiness is our default
state or not, because some people push back against that, go, no, it's not. We're wired
to survive. And I believe happiness is our default state actually. And one of the things
that leads me to that conclusion is my experience of being a father.
So when my kids were little, when they were young, you literally,
you just see them being present.
That in the moment, they're fully absorbed in what's happening. They're content.
They can't be happy.
So my belief is that happiness is our default state,
but society, culture, education, conditioning,
it trains it out of us.
Yeah, and you see that, like what you're pointing to is that the mind is a sponge.
The mind is like just soaking in everything, all different,
you know, everything that it's reading, the people that it's around,
it's just consuming so much conditioning.
And over time, that will not only shape your personality, but it'll also shape,
uh, the behavior patterns that cause difficulty in your life.
And that's why to me, like when I go and I, and I put my time, like right before I
came here to see you, I meditated for an hour on the train and that hour helped
just calm my mind, help it develop its awareness
and support me in clear decision-making.
Okay, so you've got a train roughly two hours
from London to my studio.
Okay.
So I observed this when I get that train regularly myself.
Yeah, you take that train all the time.
I do, a lot less over the last years.
In the last few weeks and months, because of my book launch, I've been getting it a lot.
But what I observe, and of course I don't know what people have got on in their earbuds,
right?
People could be meditating, right?
But I imagine the vast majority of people on that train that you just took are not meditating.
I would imagine most of them are either working.
They're hitting the keyboard.
They're hitting the keyboard or even if they've got their eyes shut and they've got their
headphones on, they're listening to a podcast, they're listening to music, they're listening
to the news, they're watching something on Netflix, whatever it might be.
Yet you have chosen on that journey
when you could have done all of those things,
you chose to meditate.
So that's really interesting to me.
What is it that you know about meditation
that maybe the people around you don't know?
I think, I mean, I just,
I've had a lot of experience with it.
I think when I did that silent 10 day course,
it was so stunningly difficult to be by myself,
to not be speaking to other people,
to just be with the emotions that I used to dedicate my life,
literally running away from them,
to getting as far away from my emotions as possible
because I was scared to feel.
And after getting over that fear
and just allowing myself to feel
whatever's arising and passing in the body,
I started realizing that there is just a great opportunity
here for growth, for learning.
I mean, I finished the first silent 10-day course
and I felt like I had learned more in those 10 days
than four years of university.
And it was so shocking to me.
So whenever I do, you know,
I've been meditating two hours a day now
for I think like nine years.
And I just know that the investment is too,
like the results of the investment are too big to pass up.
So when I sit there, I close my eyes,
I am observing my body, feeling whatever is there.
And that outcome is that, you know, I come out,
my mind is calmer, I'm able to, you know,
check in with my partner, because she was also meditating.
And then we also got on our laptops,
but I think we were able to make decisions
that felt just much more aligned.
I think we were able to make decisions that felt just much more aligned.
One of my philosophies, Diego, is that the reason people struggle to make changes that last in their lives
is often because of an internal agitation that they feel that they're not aware of, right? So again, these three things you're talking about, self-awareness, non-reactivity and
compassion.
Okay.
If we just take non-reactivity as an example, I was at Euston yesterday, so the station
in London, okay?
I got the journey that you got today, yesterday. And what was really interesting is that all the trains were cancelled for three hours.
There was an incident somewhere along the line and Euston station,
in the middle of the day, was turning into chaos.
I was observing lots of people getting stressed out
and I do feel a sense of inner calm these days.
So I was able to watch that and go, wow, I think that would have been me a few years
ago.
You know, going, oh man, I can't believe it.
This has happened.
You know, I had to get back.
Whatever.
Right.
And so where I think that gets in the way of people for their health, at least, is that
what I think a lot of people don't realize is that they are actually generating that
internal stress.
They don't realize that they think it's the external event that caused that in them.
I don't think a lot of people realize that, no, that external event is out of my control.
It's actually a neutral event.
I am choosing, whether I know it or not, to generate that internal stress. And that internal stress will then have to be neutralized
in some way.
Now, if you then get on a train,
you ain't gonna be doing it in a healthy way.
Most people are gonna neutralize that emotional stress
that they created with sugar, with more caffeine,
with alcohol, with numbing their minds with something.
And so I believe, and what's really fascinating for me, and we're going to talk about meditation
relationships for sure, but I think what you're talking about there, these qualities that
you have cultivated within yourself through meditating, are going to have such profound
effects on people
that they don't even realize.
Yeah, and you know what's interesting too
is I really believe that one of the most empowering things
that you can understand is that your perception
and your reaction are happening in you,
in your mind and in your body.
So we think that these external events,
they can be quite challenging.
Like people can do things to you that are disagreeable,
that are not good, that are objectively wrong,
but then you still have to understand
that your perception and your reaction
is happening inside of you.
So then what does that mean?
Am I going to cause myself more misery than I need to?
Like, am I gonna make my own stress bigger
than it really needs to be?
Because that's something where it feels
like such a valuable skill to learn
is to not throw more fuel onto the fire.
Let's say you have a lot of anxiety coming up,
you're there, you're waiting at the train station,
and you are irritated,
but why am I gonna try to fuel that irritation?
Why am I going to make it bigger?
Let me just observe it, feel it,
and then it'll pass away like every other emotion.
And as you say, you mentioned on your journey
that by meditating for an hour,
then when you then open your laptop
and try to do your emails, you had a clarity.
You can make decisions, right?
Absolutely.
So let's relay that to, let's say the parents
who's stuck at Houston and who was thinking,
damn, I have to pick up my child from school in three hours.
This train being canceled now causes a problem, right?
Which is completely understandable
because you want to pick up your child.
But what you're saying is,
the situation may not be the way you want it to be.
The train cancelled. Who wants that? No one wants it to be.
But if you don't then generate more and more internal stress,
you're probably going to feel calmer and be able to go,
okay, I can't control that. There's an incident on the line.
This train ain't going for a few hours. Okay, who can I phone?
Totally. Let me solve the problem.
Let me solve the problem.
Whereas you stressing about it is not going to help you solve it.
Right. And when you call the person who could potentially help you
and they just feel your stress oozing all over the place,
like it's, it'll be much easier to just, you know,
to solve the situation with a calm mind.
I really believe a calm mind. I really believe
a calm mind has incredible decision making power and that's something that is a gift
that only you can give to yourself. So why not just lean on observing the emotions that
are happening as opposed to reacting and making them bigger and bigger and bigger.
You said that it's almost a decade since you've been meditating with two hours a day.
Okay.
Can you paint a picture for us
about the state of your life
before you discovered meditation?
Totally, totally.
It was utter chaos.
I think when I, so I was born in Ecuador in South America
and my mother and father decided that we should move
to the United States for a better economic opportunity.
And when we got to the United States, I grew up in Boston.
So it was just my mother, my father, my brother and I.
And when we got to Boston, it was just,
we were living in this classic American poverty trap.
Like we were just stuck in poverty for about 15 years,
you know, just growing up.
And it was a constant struggle where my mom and dad
were always fighting about how to make the rent,
like how to pay the rent, how to put food in the fridge.
And I saw this happen cyclically
and it was just constantly happening every month.
And even though my parents were great parents,
they loved me and my brother really well,
took great care of us as best as they could,
the stress of poverty was so intense
that it felt like we were like living in a submarine
that was too far underwater.
And you could just feel like, you know,
the pressure of life pushing in on us.
And that unknowingly created a lot of stress,
a lot of anxiety, the scarcity mindset in me
that was just living inside
of me totally unprocessed.
Like I was oblivious to all these emotions that were,
you know, begging for my attention.
And I ended up going to university in Connecticut
and I was in such a different environment
that even more anxiety was coming up
that I felt like I just needed to run away from my emotions.
So the best way that I found to flee was through partying,
through alcohol, through drugs.
And I was just such a party monster.
Like I was constantly going out
and I ended up just driving my body to the absolute edge
where I became so unhealthy physically and mentally.
And then there was one night after I graduated from college,
so the summer of 2011 where I hit my rock bottom moment
and I almost lost my life that night
where I'd done way too many drugs
and I could feel like my heart was just going to explode.
And fortunately for me, I didn't die that night,
but I realized that what caused this whole
problem, this like long series of events was that I just didn't want to tell myself the
truth.
I didn't want to tell myself the truth that I didn't feel good.
And then I had to do something about it.
Wow.
It's interesting.
You know, as I hear you tell that story, it reminds me in some ways
of a conversation I had with a monk, a Buddhist monk. He's called Jilong Tupton and he was
in New York in his early 20s. Very, very similar story. Partying, you know, all kinds of stuff,
basically distracting himself from life until things
got really, really bad.
He realized he couldn't go on.
I think he was trying to be an actor in New York and he's now a Buddhist monk.
And he meditates, he does long meditation, he meditates every day.
And what's striking to me is, since you walked into my house,
I've noticed a real sense of calm radiating from you.
Thank you.
And it's really noticeable,
especially cause you probably a little bit jet lagged,
you've been traveling from America,
you've just come out to my house,
but there's still the sense of calm.
Tubton also had a sense of calm. And I'm wondering if there's still the sense of calm. Tupten also had a sense of calm.
And I'm wondering if there's something about the human condition where we have to go to
these extremes.
You know, you almost died one night from taking too many drugs.
And now you're sitting here having meditated for two hours a day for the last 10 years
with this calm, this clarity.
Do you know what I mean?
It's striking to me.
Yeah, you know, it's interesting.
I feel like, I think it's sometimes we can think
that that's necessary, but I really don't believe
everybody needs to hit rock bottom
for them to totally take their evolution
into their own hands and decide to build the habits
that will actually support, you know, their thriving.
You know, I think my wife and I are the perfect example.
Like I was in utter chaos and she just realized
that she could benefit from something like,
you know, this type of mental training.
And so for me, like I hit rock bottom with drugs and alcohol,
but she didn't really have that problem, but she also into it and you know, she also like me goes and meditates for you know
30 day long courses 45 days long meditating in silent retreats
And so I think it's it really just depends on the person like everyone's living with some degree of agitation
and that agitation and that tension in the mind
just makes everything cloudier and heavier.
And sometimes you just get tired of it.
You're like, I have to figure out a way
to solve this problem.
And for some people it's therapy,
some people it's psychiatry,
other people it's like, you know,
some form of meditating or another.
And for me, I've been fortunate that I found this tool
that profoundly connects with my intuition.
You know, like the style that I meditate is quite rigorous.
So it's not for everybody.
What is it?
It's Vipassana and the Goenka tradition.
So that's V-I-P-
V-I-P-A-S-S-A-
A-N-A.
N-A-M.
And it's a very rigorous style of meditating.
And it's definitely, you know, it's for a lot of people,
but it's not for everybody.
It's you have to make sure that you're going into a situation
that is good for you, that meets you where you're at.
Like, you know, some people have experienced
such severe degrees of trauma
that they may need way lighter forms of meditating,
or maybe even meditating is not the thing for them.
They may need some type of therapy
to help them take steps forward.
So, but for me, I'm grateful that I found something that totally meets me where I'm at.
And I'm like, I love that it was so challenging.
And really like the meditation instructions are amazingly simple,
but they're very hard to do because they're asking you to just observe,
just observe what's happening. So there's no distract yourself.
There's no soundtrack. There's nothing you're listening to.
When you're there in the retreats, it's a guided meditation.
Like you're being led.
You know, they're giving you instructions every day and they're building on it.
And by the tenth day, you'll understand the technique and be able to do it at home.
And but it's quite simple.
But part of that is you being able to train the mind like the first three days,
you just spend it just being aware of the breath.
Being aware of the breath, coming in, going out, observing it as it's moving naturally.
You're not doing anything else to it.
If you were in the middle of constant distraction, drinking, partying, staying up late, doing
drugs, right?
It strikes me that even three days of just having to sit there and observe your breath, did it feel like a form of torture?
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forward slash, live more. It was terrible.
I mean, I only was able to finish the first course because Uber didn't exist.
Like there was no way for me to get back home.
I was in a place that was, you know, I took that first course in Washington state
on the West coast of the United States.
And I was just so far away in the middle of nowhere.
And I had gotten a ride there
from somebody who was also taking the course.
As you were stuck, you couldn't leave.
I was stuck.
So I remember seeing, I remember like looking
at the back of this guy's head and wondering,
if he leaves, I got to get my stuff and go too.
Cause like, I'm trying to get my ride back.
But I noticed by the eighth day,
I'm like, this guy's not going anywhere.
He's here.
So then I was like, all right, I'm here too.
Let me just face it.
Let me stop fighting it.
Let me just face it.
And when I finished the course
and I got back to where I was staying,
I immediately felt that my mind was lighter.
It was lighter than it was before.
And that sort of decrease in tension,
it started introducing me not only to the beginnings of peace,
but it introduced me to my creativity.
Like I never ever in my life,
like I was just talking to my wife about it the other day,
I'm over here signing books and I'm like,
what are, like why am I an author?
When did this happen?
This was never the plan.
Yeah.
I always love to listen to things and then try and get to the root cause.
What's the principle at play here?
So if I think about what you just told me about meditation or your particular, the type
of meditation that you practice, my mind goes to this idea that, okay, today it's never
been easier to distract ourselves than ever before.
So the point where actually, could we make a case that if Uber did exist and you had
a smartphone back then that had Uber on
it.
I would have been gone, man.
Yeah, gone.
So your career, your flourishing Instagram account.
Whole other life.
Yeah.
So it says at these sliding door moments, right?
Uber not existing was a fantastic thing for you.
Amazing.
But that also, I think on a macro level applies to all of us.
These apps that exist, the constant distraction, it means so many of us are never being forced
because it sounds like it's somewhere you were forced to do what you did.
Yeah.
And think about these apps.
A lot of them, whatever the product is that they're offering to people, they're trying
to make life easier.
And this was a moment where I had nothing that could make the situation easier for me.
I just had to face myself.
And I was grateful that not only did I have the sort of,
you know, this like hidden resilience
that I never even was aware of,
because I never had challenged myself like that,
but I was able to benefit from that challenge
because then I saw, I was like, okay,
I'm actually stronger than I thought.
Many of us are living these days with constant distraction. Okay. So the stuff that is there
in our mind, we never have to face. Yeah. Can we say very simplistically that what's
that meditation retreat gave you and what it's given you and what the practice has given you since then, is simply an outlet for those thoughts,
instead of being buried,
and then you distract yourself at surface level
and keep them buried,
you're just giving yourself space
to allow those thoughts to come up and be processed.
And therefore, that internal noise
that was clogging up your system and your mind and your behaviors
through the acts of meditation, you're allowing those things to almost evaporate up out of you.
So what's left behind is clearer and lighter.
You used a word that I use all the time is evaporate.
The conditioning will literally evaporate when you don't repeat it. So in the
moments when I'm meditating, what I'm really doing is is basically tapping into the universal wisdom
of impermanence, right? The the law of impermanence that everything is is changing and bound to change
that's pervasive throughout the universe, whether it's at the atomic level, at the biochemical level, at the cosmological level,
everything is in motion.
This whole universe exists in a manner where
everything is just flowing forward like a river.
And when we fight that, and we fight that through attachment,
literally clinging and craving for things to exist
in a very particular way, then life gets very hard.
So the mind is often geared towards attachment.
And when I sit and meditate,
I'm just embracing impermanence.
I'm literally feeling, you know,
how change is pervasive throughout the entire body.
Like I was mentioning before,
when you're meditating and you're developing your awareness,
you know, being aware of the breath,
like we, in the 10 day course, you do it for three days,
in the 45 day course,
you're being aware of the breath for 15 days
before you even start observing the body
for the next 30 days.
But in those 15 days,
you can make the mind so powerful
that the body doesn't feel hard anymore.
It feels like a rushing river of atoms
where you turn your attention to your hand
and you just feel the way that there are just
so many vibrations,
like everything's constantly in motion in there.
And even though it feels still,
simultaneously you can feel things changing inside of it.
And that's something that's like,
that truth when you tap into it multiple times a day,
it reminds you and it helps cultivate the mind in a direction that's opposite of attachment.
Like impermanence and attachment are totally opposite of each other.
When you're on the train just now meditating, you have nothing in your ears like headphones.
So a lot of people feel that life
and their external conditions have to be perfect
in order to meditate.
I used to feel that.
And when my kids were younger,
they'd come down and be with me.
When I was meditating, I learned very quickly,
oh, why don't you just reframe this and go,
hey, if you can meditate when your kids are around you,
even better.
Like it's like weight training, right?
Because you're meditating now with external noise around you.
Right, right.
But when you're meditating on the train and there's people walking by you and there's
noise and the ticket conductor is coming or whatever it might be, are you hearing it?
Are you aware of it?
Or are you tuning it out?
Yeah.
In the beginning I hear it and I can, you know, in the beginning I hear it,
and I can hear the changes in the noises, but more so my attention is being really sort of,
I'm pointing it back to the actual body,
so I'm like feeling the way my arm feels,
feeling the way my leg feels,
and moving through the body like that.
And so after a while, yeah,
the noises in the background just kind of get tuned out,
and I travel a lot for work.
So I've learned to, you know, I got to meditate
two hours a day anywhere in whatever condition I'm in.
So whether it's at home and it's very easy to meditate there
or whether like, you know, I'm meditating 30,000 feet up
on a plane or whatnot.
So being able to meditate in transit
while other people are around
or in some random park bench when I need to give myself an hour, it doesn't matter. Because then
people just, they kind of, they look at you and I don't know what they're perceiving, but I imagine
they just look like they're like either he's meditating or he's sleeping very, you know,
like in a sitting posture or something like that. Do you think someone might be able to get similar benefits
with a different form of solitude practice?
So let's say they went for a 90 minute walk each day
without listening to music, right?
Or, you know, some form of other practice.
Do you think it's possible?
I mean, walking is my jam.
Walking is like, that's become my new sort of like
favorite thing. I think, yeah, a lot of, there are a lot of ways to build
the quality of self-awareness and just introspection
and also building that resilience towards just feeling
your emotions and letting them be whatever they are.
I mean, I've seen people benefit dramatically from
just simple journaling or simple gratitude practices
or, you know, taking their health more seriously.
And I've just seen people change in such different ways
using different methods.
So I'm always very supportive of people doing whatever it is
that helps them become a better version of themselves.
But with each thing, you get a very particular benefit.
So there's like a benefit, you know, reminding yourself,
having a gratitude practice and remind yourself that you actually have a lot of beautiful things to be grateful for when times are tough.
That's really helpful.
But then, you know, you don't need to like pull everything into one place and say they all give you the same benefit.
Things do different things for you.
I want to talk about your new book, How to Love Better, the path to deeper connection
through growth, kindness and compassion, which I freaking love.
Oh, I'm so glad. Thank you for saying that.
So good, honestly. And I can't imagine, I can't imagine anyone who wouldn't enjoy this, honestly. It's full of wisdom on every page.
Okay.
And I guess the segue between talking about meditation
and your new book is this idea that meditation
has transformed your relationship with your wife.
Totally.
How has meditation impacted your relationship?
Yeah.
So I did this, you know,
that first 10 day meditation course,
that was the summer of 2012 when I did that first course.
Remember what I said earlier, summer of 2011
was when I hit my rock bottom moment,
almost lost my life.
And then about six months later, a friend of mine,
he did that same course in India
and he came out raving about it.
Was just talking about love, compassion and goodwill.
And this was the same person
that I used to party really hard with in college.
So I was shocked.
I was shocked that he was, you know,
like felt so inspired by it.
And I ended up signing up because I knew that I was,
even without even thinking of the word healing,
I knew that I was in a transitional moment.
So I went into it for personal healing
and I was shocked to see that it revealed the truth to me.
I started seeing that a lot of my relationships
were just super shallow and surface level.
They were just like, you know, I was barely connecting with people, barely connecting
with my, my, my wife, who was my girlfriend at the time, you know, my, my relationship
with my parents was very stagnant.
Same thing with my brother and my sister and with my friends as well.
I was just like caught in this loop where I'm just repeating the motions as opposed
to like really
delivering presence into every sort of moment where people you know, where we're interacting and
I not only felt sadness about that, but I also felt inspired. I was like, oh I can change this and
As I kept meditating developing my own self-awareness. I realized that I have more power in these situations Like I have the power to be present. I have the power to say something different.
I have the power to be honest, to be vulnerable.
And I started noticing that like,
as soon as my wife and I started meditating,
she started meditating in 2013,
our relationship slowly started developing harmony.
Where before that, the first six years of our relationship
felt like utter chaos.
You know, like it was just like the blame game, constantly pointing fingers. where before that, the first six years of our relationship felt like utter chaos.
You know, like it was just like the blame game,
constantly pointing fingers.
We felt this strong pull towards each other.
We wanted to be together,
but we didn't know how to be together.
We didn't know how to care for each other.
And it was through meditating
that we started developing emotional maturity.
We started developing self-awareness.
And then intuitively intuitively we started understanding
how to communicate better with each other.
We just had the reminder of the gorgeous piece
that you write in the introduction.
After just two weeks of officially being a couple,
we told each other, I love you.
Both of us were telling the truth,
but neither of us realized yet
that love is more than a feeling. It's a practice
that needs intention, care and skill. That's quite a common misconception, isn't it?
Absolutely.
That love is more than a feeling.
Absolutely. I think we go into love often with attachment and with this, you know, this feeling of like, okay, I wanna be with you
because you make me feel great.
But then when I don't feel good,
I want to immediately blame it on you.
And sometimes your partner will do something
that they should apologize for.
But a lot of times, and that's when my wife and I
started finding out was that we were constantly arguing.
But what we realized was that a lot of that was just a failure in communication where
we were not telling each other and ourselves how our emotions were changing through the day.
And that was one of the sort of first things we really started developing.
And this happened, especially after our first, the first 30 day course that we both sat.
When we came back, we realized we're like,
hey, we need to just tell each other like in the morning,
like how do you feel?
Because sometimes you wake up in the morning,
you know, you know, like that you feel great,
you're ready to take on a day,
your mind feels relatively balanced.
And other times you wake up in the morning
and you're like, I don't feel that good.
You know, I feel pretty tired, pretty lethargic.
And giving each other that information
and naming it for ourselves was so helpful.
And then we started doing that also again,
sometime in the early afternoon
and just letting each other know like,
oh, I feel good or I don't feel good or,
and that way we are cognizant of like,
not only where my partner stands and where I stand, but how can we give
each other support? And we started noticing that our arguments decreased dramatically.
And it wasn't any more like, oh, if I don't feel good, I need to figure out a way to blame
this on you. Because the mind will jump through hoops, like it'll jump through all these like,
you know, trying to build and resurface old narratives so that it tries to figure out a way to place this blame onto someone else.
But instead, we start taking ownership and it's like, oh, actually, I just didn't wake up.
I didn't feel that good today.
And there's not really a big reason for it.
But I'm going to be aware of it.
I'm going to treat myself gently and I'm going to make sure to not project it onto you.
One of the things you said that meditation gave you
is this insight that you could be honest.
Yeah.
And as I read this book and as I think about your work,
I would say honesty is an underlying theme
that permeates all of it.
Totally.
Like you cannot change your life unless you're honest, right?
You cannot change your relationship unless you're being honest.
So talk a little bit about honesty and this idea that we project often in relationships
and why it's so important to be honest, both with ourselves and with our partner.
The main reason is because dishonesty creates distance. Where if you're dishonest with yourself,
you're literally creating distance between you and yourself.
And that distance will emerge as tension.
When you're being dishonest in your relationship,
you're creating distance between you and your partner.
And that is something that when the both of us
started meditating, it was like,
the beginning of it was, you know,
we finished meditation retreats and we'd come back home and we're sort of reevaluating our relationship,
apologizing for past wrongs and also just telling each other more of the truth because
we were both leaving a ton out. And I think that's something that like, just literally,
it was hard to face the truth, but it also brought us way closer together. So dishonesty internally and externally,
it just creates distance.
Okay. You also mentioned the importance of communication and relationships. Okay. But
honesty is really important here, isn't it? So of course we want to be honest with our
partner, but it's very hard to be honest with our partner if we're being dishonest with ourselves.
Totally.
I believe that many people are day to day dishonest with themselves all the time and
they don't even realize they're being dishonest.
What you said about, you know, when you're dishonest, you create distance.
The way I think about it, I'm always thinking about how do you help people change
their behaviors? How do you make these changes last in the long term? I'm always thinking
about what is the root cause? Why is it that everyone wants health and happiness and better
relationships, yet they're not doing the things that they know will lead to better health,
happiness and relationships, right? And I think if you were going to really simplify,
it's the language I use, which is not dissimilar to the language you're using,
is you have who you really are, okay?
That's the core of who you really are as a human being.
And then you've got the person who you are being out there in the world.
Yeah. And then you've got the person who you are being out there in the world.
Yeah.
The greater the separation between those two things, the greater the void.
And it's that void in which all of your unhelpful behaviors start to come from.
Like, I really believe that.
I love that hypothesis.
Do you know what I mean?
I kind of feel that it's that void.
And the more you close it,
and of course we can be fearful to do that.
We don't know what it feels like to be honest.
Wow.
So do you notice too,
so because you're creating these almost these two figures,
the real you and who you're out there being,
when you notice that your nervous system really relaxes
when the performance stops, like there are certain people in your life who you can be around, you can just be your raw real self,
and you just feel so calm around them.
Why? Because you don't have to perform for them.
Exactly.
Right? And the same thing like with your partner or whomever,
like you want to be around someone where there's,
you don't have to like put a guard up or put on any type of performance.
Yeah, 100%. around someone where there's, you don't have to like put a guard up or put on any type of performance. Yeah.
100%.
We often see these, these parts of our life as separate.
Okay.
I'll be honest here at work.
I'll be honest here or I won't be honest at work or whatever, but I'll be honest in my
relationships.
So I'll say what I need to at work, but I'll make sure I'm honest with my wife, for example.
I don't know what you think about this, right?
But more and more, I think that kind of separation,
I'm not sure exists.
Like, I'm not saying that you have to be, you know,
fully transparent and honest about everything
with your colleagues, right?
And overshare.
I'm not saying that.
But I think it goes back to those three things
you were talking about, what meditation has given you,
your particular practice, self-awareness, non-reactivity and compassion.
Right.
At least if you have the self-awareness at work to know,
you know what, I don't need to share everything here.
It's not the right environment.
Totally.
That's different from kidding yourself that you're being honest when you're not.
Totally.
And I think that's the thing about honesty is that we have to understand that
things aren't just black and white, right?
It isn't like, oh, I have to tell all of my truth
all the time every time someone asks a question,
because no, you have some things that are just for like,
between you and your partner
and between you and your parents and whatnot.
So you don't need to throw your truth
all over the world all the time.
Instead, there's gonna be a balance.
So with each truth, with every sort of self-development lesson or things that we're coming across,
everything has to be dealt with balance.
And I think that's really important for people to understand.
I want to get into the ingredients of a good relationship, but I can't help thinking about
your progression to meditation and honesty.
So that low point as it were was the summer of 2011 for you.
And then in the summer of 2012, so 12 months later, for a variety of reasons, you end up
going deep into meditation.
But I think you said your wife didn't start until 2013, so the
year after.
Yeah.
Okay. So you're in a relationship, you've got a certain dynamic.
Yeah.
Okay. And then you are starting to go on the process of change.
Yeah.
So in relationships, if one party is going on the process of change and the other one
is not, the dynamic starts to change.
It totally shook up the house.
Like, not even the house, sorry.
Our tiny little apartment that we lived in in Crown Heights, Brooklyn.
It was on fire?
Yeah, it was interesting because like she knew and she was happy.
She knew that I wanted to, you know, just become a better version of myself.
But very intuitively, she felt that pull as well.
She wanted to go meditate.
She wanted to go do a 10-day course,
but at the time, she was working as a scientist
and working 50 hours a week,
so she had so many responsibilities.
So she had to wait until March of 2013
to do her first course.
And during that time period, I ended up doing, so I did my first one in July of 2012.
I did my second one in September of 2012.
And then I did my third one with her in March.
And she, my third one was her first one.
And it was like a breath of fresh air for her
because she was happy for me and supportive,
but she wanted to really try it for herself.
And there was also another transitional moment
where in 2015 was when I started meditating daily.
And at first she was like, you know, I'm too busy
and she didn't have the time for it.
But then she watched as I just didn't give up.
I was like, you know, putting in my two hours,
putting in my two hours.
And then she started joining me for an hour a day.
And she did that for a number of months.
But it was interesting that that sort of transitional moment
because she was kind of like watching
me to see if I was really going to stick to it.
Like is he really going to like cement this, you know, aspect of meditating daily into
that?
Because I'm taking away from our time together, you know, like she's so busy and the way that
we were shape our morning and our evening totally changed because of meditating two
hours a day.
Yeah, this is so fascinating. Okay, right. So, number one, is she doing the same type
of meditation as you?
Yeah, same type.
Okay. So, this two hours that you do a day, can you just paint a picture of what sort
of time that happens in your day? Not when you're traveling, but when you're at home.
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Just wanted to take a moment to tell you about my first ever UK theatre tour taking place
this March. So I've just finished two days rehearsing for the show with the entire tour team,
the director, video tech, sound crew, tour manager, and I'm even
more excited for these live shows than I was when I first announced the tour.
Now if you enjoy listening to my podcast, I think you are going to love coming to this
tour. Don't think of it like a book tour. Think of it as an immersive, transformative,
fun evening where you will walk away with a personalized
blueprint of the things you need to work on in your own life. It's not just me on a stage
talking to you. There will be lots of interactive moments and a few surprises.
Now, I know that many of you listen to this podcast to learn things that will help you thrive. But I also know
that at times it can feel hard. On this tour, you are going to be in a room with other people
who are interested in the same things as you are, which will feel incredibly special and give you a
massive boost. These events are going to be fun, inspirational, educational
and hopefully will be the springboard you need to take action as we move out of winter
and get into spring. There are 14 shows all around the UK. The two warm-up dates in Wilmslow
and the London Lyceum date has just sold out. So don't delay if you plan on picking up tickets.
All details can be seen at drchattygy.com forward slash events.
So get your friends together, make a night of it,
and I hope to see you in person in just a few weeks.
When we're at home, I mean, usually it's at probably like nine in the morning. What time do you wake up?
Like eight.
So you wake up about eight.
Yeah.
And then we kind of like, you know, just wake up, drink some hot water, like look at some
messages real quick and then hop on the cushion.
So nine to ten, roughly you're meditating.
Is your wife also meditating then?
Yeah, usually.
And sometimes...
In the same room?
Yeah, we have a meditation room in our house.
Just an empty room that we just put our cushions in.
That's a good name, the meditation room.
It's got two meditation cushions in.
I'm down with that.
Yeah, yeah.
When we have friends over who also meditate, they like, you know, we'll have dinner and
then people come and we'll meditate.
So the morning one I get, right? Because I guess I'm a morning person,
although by the time you wake up, I've already been up for three or four hours by that time.
But tell me about the evening meditation.
The evening one is interesting, where it'll land anytime between late afternoon and late evening.
It just depends on like, if I have a ton of meetings,
because I work with so many people who are on the West Coast.
So I'll have a lot of meetings that are like later on in the day
because I live on the East Coast.
So they're three hours behind.
So sometimes I'll meditate my second set at four in the afternoon,
four to five p.m.
Sometimes before dinner, sometimes it's after,
sometimes it'll be like from 10 p.m. to 11 p.m.
And do you ever feel that you're going to fall asleep?
Sometimes I'll spend, you know, a whole hour, like fighting off sleep
and I'll like make sure, but I just, I go into it with determination.
Like I know I want something out of it
and like I want to just be, you know, observe.
It's really interesting hearing your relationship with meditation and also your wife initially
at least wondering, is he going to do this?
Is he going to stay to this?
How long, when's he going to run out of steam here?
But there's another point that I think for me comes up there, which is one of the reasons I think we struggle with our behaviors in the long
term that our desired behaviors that say is that we haven't really got clarity on what
we want and why we want to do it.
Now, I genuinely believe that for most people, when you truly decide with all of you, your
mind, body and soul that I'm going to do this, it happens.
That's like, well, those are one of my favorite moments in life.
Like, and it's, and it's, they don't happen all the time.
No.
You know, these moments where it's like, you're going to make a big change
and you feel almost like an elephant putting his like leg down.
It's just like, boom, like I'm putting down my strong determination
and I'm going to go in this direction no matter what.
And I felt that in that, you know,
I felt like this was something I really wanted
to really be part of my life.
And I was also, I was incentivized.
Like I did my, I did a number of 10 day courses
and I knew there was a 20 day course that I wanted to take.
To take that 20 day course, you have to, one of the requirements is to meditate
at least, you know, two hours a day for two years.
And I was like, okay, well, I need to start
that two year process of bringing meditation
into my daily life.
So that was what initially inspired me
because I was like, I wanna go deeper into this experiment.
And that's also why, you know, so I, back to 2011,
like I stopped all the hard drugs,
like anything that would endanger my life,
like cocaine and just taking random pills
and all this stuff, but I still was drinking alcohol
and smoking marijuana.
But then in 2016, I was like, you know, done.
I was like, you know, done.
I was like, I don't even like alcohol anymore. I don't like the way marijuana makes me feel.
And I wanted, and my wife and I had been talking about it
for a while where we both wanted to just
have lived totally clean lives.
And that was an interesting moment too,
cause that kind of shook up our household
because my wife was ready before I was,
she was like also done with alcohol,
also done with marijuana. And we tried it for a period of three months where we just
didn't consume anything. And then I told her, I was like, I'm feeling a lot of tension around this
because I'm, I was a little worried about my friendship dynamics because I didn't realize how
much of friendship was ritualistic, where it was like, we're going to like smoke a joint together,
we're going to drink alcohol together.
And I was worried that like I was going to miss out on communing with my people, with my friends.
And many people are worried about this. So what happened there?
So we did three months totally sober.
And I told her, I was like, hey, I'm feeling pretty stressed.
I think I'm gonna start smoking again.
I know I don't even want to,
but I just almost as to just try it out
and see how it feels and see what it's like
with my friendships and whatnot.
And then as soon as I started, I was like, oh, I hate this.
I actually don't like smoking at all.
And I ended up smoking for like two more months. This is smoking weed. smoking at all. And I ended up smoking for like two more months.
This is smoking weed.
Yeah, smoking weed.
Ended up smoking for like two more months.
And then I stopped completely.
Cause I was like, listen, like my friends,
they're gonna, like if they're really my friends,
they're gonna love me no matter what.
And we'll just figure it out.
We'll just like, you know,
continue developing our relationship without,
without these intoxicants as part of it.
And, and that's what ended up happening.
Like the first six months of being,
without any type of intoxicant,
it was challenging because I just learned,
I had to realize that like,
it actually wasn't about my friends.
It was about my own perception of myself.
Like, who am I when I'm in this bar
celebrating someone else's birthday?
Why do I feel like I even need to drink to be part of,
I actually don't need to drink.
If I really feel that insecure,
I can just hold a cup with water or like Sprite
or something in it.
And then over time, it just got a lot easier
to just exist in these situations
where other people are drinking alcohol.
And then eventually I was having fun too.
So it became pretty normal to just exist without it.
So fascinating.
I wanna keep going down that rabbit hole,
but I'm gonna move this on to back to relationships, okay?
Because you do have this wonderful new book out.
It was funny,
because when we were talking about our books earlier
and you were telling me how your newest book
is like your favorite one.
And like, it's just, you know that it,
you put the work into it.
And with this one in a similar manner,
I needed the time to not just develop myself as a writer
and like understand how to explain myself
in an accessible and clear manner,
but also allow meditating to continue marinating in my life
because I noticed these changes in 2020
that like meditating was improving my relationship
with my wife, but allowing that extra time
to really see the way this understanding and embrace
of this law of impermanence and bringing that quality into our relationship
and understanding how that can help us relieve ourselves
of these attachments that were manifesting as control,
manifesting as like, you know, blame,
manifesting in these ways
where we're creating struggle for each other.
Us doubling down on this, like the path growth, on the path of embracing impermanence
has just helped us, you know, not develop a relationship around attachments, but instead
develop a relationship around commitments.
You can tell when you read this book that there is a real clarity of thoughts.
It sounds as though meditation is a big reason why you have this clarity.
Oh, it helps tremendously.
Of thoughts.
Yeah.
In terms of relationships, right?
And this is what you made the case that there is kind of these three key ingredients to...
Totally.
Relationships.
Okay. So can you talk about them?
Absolutely. So I think there's three things that are really important.
So one is kindness, like being able to be, to treat each other with a degree of kindness and sweetness,
because you, when you're in proximity with somebody, whether that's your roommate or your partner,
whoever's closest to you, that person is usually going
to get the best version of you
and also the worst version of you.
So when you understand that, you want to make sure
that you're not just giving the worst version of yourself
to your partner, that you're also, you know,
giving them sweetness, giving them your best,
trying your best to just, you know, bring that best step into the relationship
with your best foot forward.
The other aspect that's really important is growth.
Like when you're in a relationship,
you're basically accepting that you're gonna have to grow
because relationships aren't just about understanding like,
okay, that this is gonna just make my life easier and better and now
everything's okay.
It's not like that at all.
When you go into a relationship, yes, your partner should accept you as you are, but
you're also going to become very aware of where you need to grow as an individual, what
habits you need to cultivate, what aspects of character do you need to refine?
Do you need more patience?
Do you need more compassion?
Do you need to work on your listening?
Like as human beings, when you're in a relationship,
that is the clearest mirror you're ever going to face.
And I think that's been,
I'm grateful that I've been in a relationship so long
because it clearly helps me see my defects
and not in a way where, you know,
my wife is like, you got to change this and that.
It's more so like, I see them, you see them, and now I'm going to slowly
chip away at them over time.
And the third element that's really, really critical is compassion, but a
very specific type of compassion.
The type where you're able to step outside of your perspective to see the
perspective of another person, because only through the ability to really step outside of your shoes and put yourself
in the shoes of another, are you going to be able to come to a new level of understanding
of each other and be able to solve your arguments.
Yeah, love that.
So kindness, growth and compassion.
One of the questions I did have for you was what's the difference between kindness and
compassion?
Because I think many of us
kind of go with it, the sort of the same thing, right? But I think you described that how
it's quite different. Kindness there, I think, being sweet to your partner, making sure they're
not getting the worst of you. I think you're spot on with that. I think that unfortunately
that is the truth that people close to us often see the worst of us.
But the idea of compassion being your ability to step outside of your own perspective.
That's challenging for a lot of people.
It's really challenging,
but think about the way that we normally approach arguments.
We usually approach arguments in a way
where each person is trying to win.
And it becomes a battle. And when you're both trying to win, you actually both lose.
You're automatically both losing because an argument is not a place
where you're trying to really dominate the narrative.
The point of what an argument is trying to show you is that there's something here
that is almost like a wall between your connection.
And if you're able to really both observe it,
understand it, understand each other,
then that wall will dissolve and help you be closer together.
So when an argument appears, don't try to win the argument.
What your goal should really be is understand each other.
So take your time to, you know,
both of you can practice selfless listening
where you share how the series of events worked for you.
I'll do my best to listen.
And then you give me that same opportunity.
I'll share how the series of events went for me.
And when we're both able to really understand that,
you know, where each other's emotions are coming from,
a lot of the tension just fizzles out.
One of my favorite chapters in this book is chapter seven,
the art of arguing.
Yeah.
That was a very seductive and compelling title
for that chapter.
The art of arguing.
And, you know, there's a bit in that chapter where you write,
when a fight arises, it does not necessarily mean that the two of you are not right for
each other. I love that. Okay. Because thinking about these common societal myths that exist
about a relationship.
The classic romantic comedy.
Yeah. You can probably list a whole bunch of them and you do in the book,
but I guess one of them would be that in the perfect relationship,
if there is such a thing as the perfect relationship, okay, there shouldn't be any fights.
And you categorically say in the book that's not the case
and there's a whole chapter dedicated to this idea of arguing.
Yeah, I mean, that attachment to perfection
is absolutely corrosive, whether it's the way you see yourself
or the way you're trying to live a perfect life
and show up in a perfect way, or the same thing
where you expect perfection out of your relationship.
That attachment to perfection will make you throw away
a good partner
because arguments are going to happen.
Why?
Because perception is imperfect
and the way we use language is imperfect.
It's like, it's so hard to have everyone understand you
perfectly all the time.
So there are going to be miscommunications
and even outside of miscommunications,
there are gonna be times where someone just makes a mistake
and they do something that's wrong.
And then you have to explain and receive apologies
and be able to reconnect in a way that feels good
to the both of you.
So I think really embracing the truth
that arguments are not a sign that something is wrong.
They're actually just opportunities for you
to get closer together to each other.
Perception is imperfect.
That's really powerful.
Perception is imperfect.
When you said that, my mind immediately went to, well, to a couple of places. One is this idea that I think about a lot,
which is what is reality?
What is the reality of a situation?
You know, the example I often use is,
if a husband and wife are having a disagreement
around a table.
What happens?
Well, it kind of depends who you ask.
Right?
If you ask five minutes after what happened, you ask the husband,
they will give you a report that is probably accurate from their perspective,
from their imperfect perspective.
Talk to his wife, and they'll give you another accurate report of what happens from their perspective. Talk to his wife and they'll give you another accurate
report of what happens from their perspective.
This idea that you're talking about,
perspective is impermanent, right?
And so why that's such a powerful idea for me
is this idea that actually there are multiple
interpretations of any given situation.
And for me in my life, at least in my relationship
with my wife, I would say that once I understood that,
the broader idea that once I understood
that every situation is pretty much neutral,
and it's the story that I choose to put onto it.
And I use those words intentionally,
the story that I choose to put onto it, right?
Is what determines this outcome. Yeah. Right, so the first thing when you said that I thought about that, the other that I choose to put onto it, right? Is what determines this outcome.
Yeah.
Right.
So the first thing when you said that, I thought about that.
The other thing I thought about was this idea that we see the world through the state of
our nervous systems, right?
So the problem today is that many people are feeling chronically stressed and they're burnt
out, right?
So they're wired, their nervous systems are fully amped up. So they're looking for threats everywhere.
Totally.
So therefore, if you come back from work,
and this is why I think your practice
and your wife's practice of meditation is so important,
because you develop that non-reactivity,
that self-awareness,
but if you don't have your own version of that,
you come back from work with all the stress of the day,
your partner says something, you're not seeing it as it is. You're seeing it as you are. And so you
interpret that as threats. Well, maybe it was a neutral comment that you chose to look
at it, but that was all you. What's your perspective on that?
I completely agree. And now check it out. So perception is not just imperfect, but perception is also evaluation.
You're literally evaluating something very quickly.
And that evaluation is driven by whatever happened to you in the past.
So your perception is literally like you're literally taking the lens of the past
and you're seeing the present through that.
So that makes it very difficult to be objective.
I mean, you're literally like you're a doctor, you know how to be able to find to be able
to create objectivity.
It requires like randomized trials.
It requires like clinical studies, like, you know, like you have to really create a situation
to be able to produce objective results.
Now, to do that with the human mind, it's possible for the human mind to be objective,
but it requires a lot of intentional training, like a lot, because our immediate sort of mode
is to have a very tilted and pass-coded perception.
So we have to be very careful because it's so easy to take the simple sentence that someone says and just because
someone said something to us that was mean at work and then you come home and you end up, you know,
that was a thing that sent you over the edge, the tipping point.
And you took that as fuel, fuel for the agitation you were already feeling to make your agitation bigger.
Like every emotion, every emotion is like an invitation.
You know, if someone's calm around you, you, they're inviting you to be calm with them. If someone's
really angry around you, like you can join them in their anger. And it's very easy to
do that.
The book's called How to Love Better. What does the word love mean to you?
I think it means so many things.
I mean, I talk about that in one of the chapters in the book, but so love is not only this really powerful feeling that we have that makes us like feel intuitively connected with another human being.
But love is also the clearest perception. Like it is when your mind is stunningly clear,
let's take the apex of love, which is unconditional.
Right, when we think about the sort of the great avatars
of human history, you know, beings like the Buddha or Jesus,
they were beings of unconditional love
where they could look upon the world
and see no one as an enemy.
No one was an enemy, no one was a threat.
They just looked upon the world with compassion.
So that is like the apex of love.
When you're in a relationship,
you have a little microcosm of that.
It's almost like a training where you can start developing
and seeing and understanding that,
right, the person in front of you,
someone you really care for,
and you don't see them as an enemy.
And then sometimes that defensiveness,
that survival mode of the past will try to make you see
your partner as an enemy, but they're not.
They're just someone where you may be having some difficulty or another with them,
but through communication, you can be able to resolve that.
Through making your commitments to each other clearer,
you can also resolve it.
And not living from a place of attachment and control,
it just helps, you know,
you can support each other's freedom.
But it's interesting how that apex of love
that we understand, you know, even like you have,
there are so many different, in different traditions,
you have these different avatars of the apex
of what it could be to be a human being.
And that unconditional love
is definitely something to strive for,
but you get a sampling of that in your relationship.
Yeah.
Is this put primarily for people's intimate relationships
or can principles from it be applied
to your relationships with your friends
and your work colleagues and your wider community?
Because the reason I asked that question is that word love
in certain societies is quite conditioned
to only being relevant in certain situations.
Right. So for example, I would say in British society, certainly my experience of British
society, which is my whole life, I would say that we don't tend to talk that much or that
it doesn't come easy for us to talk about loving our friends.
Yeah. Yeah. Right. But it's, you know, it's for us to talk about loving our friends. Yeah. Yeah.
Right. But it's, you know, it's very accepted to talk about loving your partner.
Yeah. So, you know, just maybe unpack that a little
bit if you can. Yeah. I think it's the word, the word love
just means that it's like, you're really important to me. Like I really, really profoundly care
for you and your wellbeing. And you can feel that for a lot of people. I think obviously you have the intimate relationship
with your partner, but then I remember back in like 20,
I think it was like 2014 when like,
there was just a big shift.
And I don't know if it was like in the small culture
of my friend groups where like,
we all became okay with like, you know,
telling your boy like, I love you, I love you, letting your friends know,
you really care for them.
And even though there's no intimate quality with that,
it was just like, wow, my friends,
especially the ones who I've been friends with
since college or since elementary school,
these people are so important to me
and I want them to know that I love them.
But I think with this book,
I've really focused on relationships with your partner
because it feels like that exemplifies
all these key methods and rules
and it shows where the blocks can be
that stop any relationships from having harmony.
So I think in the intimate partnership dynamic,
you can see and start understanding that
the same rules really apply for you and your roommate.
And because whoever you're, like what I mentioned before,
whoever you're in proximity to,
whether you're living with your family, your roommate,
your friends or your partner, these things are gonna apply. Because when you're in proximity with someone,
they're your biggest mirror and you're in relationship with them.
And I guess taking it one step further, that analogy that I used before about if you can
meditate on a busy train, if I can meditate with my kids are playing in the same room
around me, that it's kind of weight training for your mind.
I guess you could apply the same principle with the things you write about.
If you get it right in your intimate relationship, you can get it right anywhere.
Yeah, exactly. Like your self-awareness isn't going to run out.
You know, a lot of us probably don't argue with our friends that much,
but we might do with our partner.
Right.
Right.
So if you can figure it out with your intimate partner, that's the hardest one.
Yeah.
I think your ability to communicate calmly with your friends, it just as a natural consequence
will get better.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And I think, yeah, I mean, your relationship, it's interesting because it should bring some ease to your life,
but it's not going to make life itself easy.
Like in some ways, like relationship has been a training ground.
Yeah. You know, and I think I'm grateful for that because I not only find so much joy from being with my wife,
but we grew up together, like literally grew up together. Yeah. Interesting what you said before about the past having a hold of us and impacting
our relationships. I've got a practice that I do with my wife that I wonder if I could
share with you and get your take on it. Cause you've written this wonderful book on relationships. And I wonder what you think of this.
It's a practice called starting with zero.
And it's a practice that your partner doesn't need to know that you're doing.
Okay. And all that it is, is it's this experiment to yourself to see how much the past is influencing
your present day interaction.
So every few months, I'll do this with my wife, Fidd.
I will go for the next seven days, Rangan.
Every time you interact with her,
you're going to try and imagine
this is the first time you've ever met her.
And, you know, somebody would push back and go,
it's impossible, you can't do it.
I'm like, it's not about whether it's possible or not, it's an experiment to go, if you enter every
interaction like that, not preconditioned by the past, so someone asks you to empty the dishwasher,
doesn't mean five things that you think it means, it's just a simple request, can you help me with
the dishwasher? For example, I tell you it's game changing, right?
And you could do it with anyone.
It's game changing because you realize, oh wow,
we're all making these assumptions all the time.
So you're the relationship experts, Diego.
You've written this wonderful book.
What's your take on my starting with zero exercise?
I think that's beautiful.
I've never thought about that and just like entering into a moment
where you're basically like charging yourself up to have more presence, especially because
if you're going to meet someone new, you're not defaulting, right?
You're just like, you have no data to work on.
This is like a brand new person.
And, and usually when you're meeting a brand new person, you are going to be the best version
of yourself.
Yeah. And to be clear, I'm not asking her name or asking her out on a date or anything like that.
I'm not taking it to that extreme. It's more, you know, I've just met her.
She's saying something. Oh yeah. I'm going to take it at face value.
That's really nice. I love that.
Let's get into this chapter seven, the art of arguing.
Sure.
I mean, there's so much practical gold here, honestly, in every chapter, frankly, but you
have these key practices in this chapter that you say can help facilitate a smoother transition
from argument to understanding.
Let's go through some of these practices.
Before we do that, you know, this concept of arguing, do we have to accept that
we're going to argue with our partners? Right? Or is it more that arguing might have a, for
some people, a negative conversation, right? So we almost say arguing means that I'm emotionally
triggered and, you know, I'm arguing. Whereas we could also look at it a different way.
I guess what you say there from argument to understanding, because I guess what I hear when I hear that is you're going to
have disagreements. There's going to be conflict. And if you can learn to navigate that conflict
in a more harmonious way, your relationship is going to be better.
Totally. I mean, your perceptions are not always going to align, and sometimes they're going to require a discussion for you to come together
and have some middle ground, some type of understanding.
And I think it's, you know, Thich Nhat Hanh, the great Buddhist monk,
he said that love is understanding.
And that was that idea that I sort of like based this chapter on because I've seen it clearly in my own life like
When I when my wife and I are having an argument and then we take turns to really explain to each other how we're feeling
What we're thinking and how the process of events moved for the both of us when I really understand her
I don't really feel tension towards her anymore. I'm like, oh, I see.
I see what happened.
And you're able to just much more easily let it go.
And if you need to apologize, you apologize.
But it just isn't something that you get stuck on because
stuck is agitation, stuck is tension.
And when you're able to understand, like understanding is flow,
it's like fluidity. So it helps you let go.
But I guess arguing and having conflicts in relationships is super common. Yeah. Okay.
And probably causes a lot of unhappiness. All kinds of tension comes in. It can happen
to children. It can happen to your health because when you have an argument with your
partner and you don't feel good, you know, you're much more likely to open the bottle of wine, go to the
sugar, smoke weed, whatever it might be, whatever your mode of distraction is, you're likely
to go to it more, right?
So the ability to not add fuel to the fire is really important. So let's say a couple are about to start an
argument. Things have started to develop over something trivial, let's say, which doesn't
feel trivial. What should they do?
So one of the very important things to do is like when, so you're basically going to
take turns to tell each other your story, but you're not gonna tell that story
in a way where you're saying, you made me feel upset,
you are doing this and that to me.
You're instead gonna describe it as,
I felt upset when you said X, Y, and Z.
I felt upset when whatever was that happened happened.
And in the act of framing things from your perspective
as if you're empowered in the way you feel
by using I statements,
I think it helps relieve that blame game
to a certain degree,
which can just cloud things much further.
And then literally practice selfless listening.
I mean, selfless listening is something
you have to train yourself over time,
where it's like, as soon as I'm listening to you,
my mind is already trying to think of some quick comeback.
What am I gonna say right then?
Instead of trying to think about what you wanna say next,
or how you wanna retort, just focus on listening.
And as soon as you find your mind being diverted
into another narrative, bring yourself back,
refocus yourself on what your partner's actually saying.
And that's literally compassionate practice.
That's you trying your best to not, you know,
take charge of the narrative and just see them as they are.
And the other thing is like,
you need to remind yourself that like,
why do you feel like you're fighting a battle? Like your best friend is standing in front
of you. You love this person. You share a bed with this person. So stop thinking that
they're your enemy. They're actually your friend and you're just having a moment of
disagreement. So these little reminders can just help, you know, ease into the understanding.
I mean, it's so obvious when you put it like that, isn't it?
I think, I can't imagine anyone would hear that and disagree.
It's just in the moment.
Again, coming back to your meditation practice, right?
It's that daily practice,
which helps you with your self-awareness,
your non-reactivity, your compassion.
That just then means that at 6.30 PM,
if things are about to kick off,
you've got the awareness to go,
hey, wait a minute, wait a minute.
I don't need to put fuel on this fire.
Totally, totally.
Because especially if it's one person
who's feeling the tension, right?
They're going to say or do something
to invite you into the tension.
They may say something to really,
that's really gonna help you kick off, right?
And then, but then in these moments-
That's a beautiful way to put it,
to invite you into the tension.
Yeah, and then we've had these moments where,
you know, sometimes I feel tension
and I wanna get into an argument with my wife
and she's like, I'm not even interested.
You know, like, I don't wanna fight you.
Like, what's going on?
Tell me what you're, how are you feeling?
I wouldn't even say in my own house
that happened this morning.
I'm quite tired at the moment.
I've been on book tour.
I'm traveling a lot.
Traveling all over, yeah.
And I can't remember what I said, right?
But I said something that could have escalated.
Something really trivial.
The stupid things that married couples sometimes
I disagree about.
But actually my wife just handled it beautifully.
So the invitation for attention, she declined it.
And it's like, hey, I'm on.
Can you imagine that though?
It's like you're literally approaching someone with anger
and they're just like calmly sitting in their joy.
And they're like, oh, I see.
They have compassion for your anger.
And they're like, tell me, like sit down.
Like what's going on?
But they just refuse to accept the invite.
But there's a really powerful lesson there as well, right?
Because one thing I want to talk about with you at some point is this idea that in a partnership,
so let's, you know, although these principles, a lot of them are applicable to all relationships
in the context of an intimate relationship, husband, wife, boyfriend, girlfriend,
boyfriend, boyfriend, whatever it might be. Okay. It's great if both parties are on the
same page and they're both on the journey of self-expiration and growth. But sometimes
that's not the case.
A lot of the time it's not the case.
Okay. So let's talk about what people can do if that's the situation, but let's assume that both
people are having their own practice of self-growth.
Whether it be meditation or a walk or journaling, whatever it might be, yoga, they're doing
something to help cultivate these things within themselves.
What's really interesting for me is that in a couple, all
it takes is one of you to not react and take the bait. So in some ways you're saying it's
like spread betting, right? You're kind of, you're increasing the chances. If one of you
is doing it, it's like, Hey, I'm not going to take that bait. Do you know what I mean?
So it actually takes the pressure off.
Basically, there's going to be a lot of times where one of you is going to be in a different
state and not take the bait, which is a good thing.
I think so.
I mean, that's been one of my big goals for, I think, the past like two years is to literally
live in my own energy where I'm not going to just absorb
what's happening around me.
I'm not just gonna join, you know,
if there's like, sort of chaotic energy
or someone's near me who's just really angry or whatnot.
Like, I don't need to be like them.
I need to sit in my own energy.
And what I found is like,
the more often that I sit in my own energy, people will join me.
People will join me in, you know, like, why not?
Like, if you're really peaceful,
I'm gonna happily accept your invitation to be peaceful too.
So I think that's something that also is really important
in your relationships is like,
try to live in your own energy, especially when,
especially because there are times
where your partner will come up to you
and they're not actually trying to fight you, right?
They're just, they're trying to tell you
about how disgruntled they are
about something that happened at work.
And they're really, you know, you feel their agitation
and what they need is for you to just listen to them,
you know, and not, and you don't necessarily
need to say things or do things
that will add to their tension
or make an unnecessary argument happen.
So a lot of times if you just sit in your own energy, it just makes things better.
These key practices that help us argue or disagree better, let's just walk through them.
Okay.
Number one, valid perspectives.
What does that mean?
I mean, sharing your truth, being able to really honestly share your truth and be able
to tell it in a way where you are taking ownership over how you feel and letting your partner
get the opportunity to see the events happen through your perspective and then giving your
partner the same opportunity.
Okay.
So that, I guess, would require a couple to maybe not in the moment when something
is escalating, maybe at a different time, say, hey, I've realized that we're not arguing
very well or we're every time we have a disagreement, it's sort of escalating to conflicts. How
about next time we agree for a few ground rules? Is that the sort of thing which could
be helpful or is
that a bit too formal?
I mean, it's interesting because you can start with the formality, but then the formality
can become second nature and it just kind of melts away. So like in the beginning, you
may need some type of formality where you're like, hey, let's try, like, I want to hear
your perspective and then let me share my perspective and let's try not to make any
judgments upon those perspectives. And then after we really hear each other, then let me share my perspective, and let's try not to make any judgments upon those perspectives.
And then after we really hear each other,
then let's try to find a common ground.
How important is it to be aware of your own internal state
and therefore be able to say-
Super important.
Yeah, and therefore be able to say,
when it's escalating,
hey, listen, I'm feeling really triggered
tense at the moment.
I'm not sure having the conversation now is going to be helpful.
Is it okay if we revisit this in an hour when I feel a bit calmer, for example?
Yeah, that's totally fine.
I feel like if you're, it's fine to pause, like it's fine to pause and be able to take
a breath, like come back to yourself and then keep going. I think one of the funniest things
you were just reminding me is like moments where
you're so agitated or triggered,
but you're still saying like, I'm not mad,
but you're like screaming, I'm not mad.
You know?
I don't know what you're talking about, mate.
You know, in those moments it's like,
yeah, you have to be aware,
and just accept the truth.
Yeah, I'm feeling really tense right now.
And it's okay to say that,
and when you both own it,
there's something in the power of owning,
even though it's temporary,
owning the reality of it and saying,
okay, there is anxiety passing through me,
there's tension passing through me,
because this is the way my wife and I talk to each other now.
It's not like I'm sad,
or it's just like there's sadness moving through me right now.
Yeah.
Or I'm angry, I'm just like, I'm just feeling tense.
You know, the tension's moving through me.
And talking about it in that dynamic
is just more akin to reality,
because there's never been a permanent emotion.
All of them are temporary.
There's never been a storm in the history of the universe that's lasted forever. Like everything is
temporary.
Yeah. That's these key practices to help us argue. So we said valid perspectives, which
you just outlined. Number two is practice selfless listening, which you've kind of,
I think you've already elaborated on that, I guess, to summarize what you were saying,
it's really listen with a view to understand rather than respond.
Right. And in the actual act of listening, you're not trying to grab onto a phase and
react to it. You're not trying to stop them from, you know, give them their moment to
really say their perspective. And you're not really to stop them from, you know, give them their moment to really say their perspective.
And you're not really listening to retort, you're listening to really see their perspective
as clearly as possible.
Okay.
Number three there, be honest without being dramatic.
I mean, we love the drama, you know, like, this is great.
I mean, you literally right straight after that.
The drive to be correct can make you embellish things.
Yeah.
Okay.
This is super interesting.
Can you be honest and express yourself without going overboard or being mean?
Okay.
I think you need to explore this because this is, I think, really, really common.
Yeah, I think it is common.
I think when we get into these arguments, like we do sometimes feel like we're in a tiny little war
and we're really trying to win it.
And we just use bigger and bigger armament.
And eventually it's like too much, like you cross the line.
Like, you know, like you're taking something
that could be as small as like arguing over what's for dinner
or arguing over some petty argument
that comes over and over again in relationships
because we usually argue about the same things.
And then making it into like this huge,
like, you know, moment that just doesn't need
to be that big.
So I think balancing out your perspective in the process
by doing what we mentioned before,
reminding yourself like, this is the love of your life.
This is your partner.
This is your roommate.
This is your best friend. Like, it's the love of your life. This is your partner. This is your roommate. This is your best friend.
Like, it's not your enemy.
So make sure that what you are arguing about
is just as true as possible
and not some dramatic version of events
that your narrative is trying to make bigger
than it actually is.
It's a theme of honesty again, isn't it?
Always, yeah.
It's everywhere in your work.
It's everywhere in self-transformation.
If we want to grow, if we want to move our lives forward,
for whatever reason we want to do that, it starts with honesty.
Totally.
You've said before, I think, that you were quite unhealthy at one point in your life
and your change to better health came from radical honesty.
Absolutely.
Yeah, that's like one of the key pillars of self-love.
Is if you really, really love yourself, then you're telling yourself the truth.
And we're talking about radical honesty, not in the sense of like you talking to other people.
It's about between you and yourself.
Here's the truth there, binding you together.
So what does that mean for someone?
Like, you know, some people might know,
what do you mean by that radical honesty with myself
when it comes to health, for example?
Okay, you know, what story were you telling yourself
previously about your health?
And then you became radically honest with yourself,
which then led to you changing.
Oh, that's the story. I'm, you know, nobody's ever asked me that, but the story was I'm young.
I'm fine. You know, like I'm in my early twenties, like my body can handle it and it can handle all
the abuse. It can handle all the drugs, handle all the alcohol. And I was wrong. Like I could have died so early. I could have been dead at 23. And when I came to terms with that,
that like I almost lost my life,
I started realizing I was like, I'm so unhealthy.
And I was so like, you know, overweight.
And I felt like I just felt miserable in my body.
And one of the first things I started doing was
I started going on long walks.
Like I started walking.
I started, I remember it was, you know, 2011.
So wellness wasn't as big as it is now.
I bought a tub of barley grass.
It was like the first super food that I had come in.
You know, it was really popular back then.
And even taking the barley grass, like I would, you know, put it in some juice and drink it. And
I could feel the effect of having good nutrition. Like I wasn't eating in a way where I was
like really neutrophil my body. And these tiny little changes started like waking up
my health in a way where, you know, it was, I was just so, so unhealthy in the
past. And you've completely transformed that.
Yeah, to a big degree.
I think I stopped away.
I mean, health is like a giant spectrum.
Like you can be, you can take your health to like higher and higher levels.
I'm pretty happy with where I am right now.
I mean, I'm able to like run five miles, no problem.
I'm able to, you know, just much stronger than I was before.
And I feel good, which is like, which was not, you know, way healthier at 37 than I was at 23.
I was interviewed two days ago by the Times for this piece on men's health. Okay.
And it was interesting. I was in a hotel room, and I was a bit tired. So, by the times for this piece on men's health, okay?
And it was interesting, I was in a hotel room, I was a bit tired.
So I was, you know, when you were a bit tired, sometimes we speak completely freely.
And she was saying, well, we love your new book, we want to talk about it, but we want
to look at it through the lens of men's health.
And there's a lot of men in their forties and fifties who may be chronically stressed, have let their health go, et cetera,
et cetera. And, you know, we were talking about all kinds of things to do with that stress,
testosterone, sleep deprivation, all these kinds of things. So this idea that we can keep pushing
it when we can't, we think we can keep getting away with it. I think men particularly take care
of it later. Yeah. But the amount of people who I've seen over the years in my clinic who thought they could
keep pushing and couldn't and they wish they'd started early is, I don't know, hundreds,
thousands probably.
But one of the things I said, I really want your take on this based on what you just said
and in the context of what you write about in how to love better.
I would like to be slim and attractive to my wife as we get older.
Does that make me a bad person for seeing it like that?
No, I think every relationship is so unique and you're like literally what you created
with your wife is your own mini universe
like your own tiny little space that's just designed for the two of you and if that feels
important to you then great like do it because it's supporting you in feeling good and being healthy
and I think yeah attraction is a huge part of relationships. But I think also with the understanding that like balance,
right, not just black and white, but gray,
is that decay is inevitable.
Yeah.
So that's one thing that, you know,
old age is something that people struggle with.
And, you know, when I think about old age, you know, like,
and I think about, like, I have one meditation teacher
who's been meditating for about 50 years,
and he's 76, and him and his wife, you know, they're older.
And, but when you look into their eyes,
like, there is a beauty emanating from their eyes
that is like, that's something to me
that I wanna strive for.
Like, I know my wife and I are gonna get old at some point.
And, but like, as you keep meditating,
as you keep developing that self-awareness,
as you keep having more compassion for yourself
and for all beings, there's this like clarity,
this harmony that is visible in the eye,
because you know that this person,
they're not projecting onto you, they're not judging you,
they're not like thinking anything mean about you,
they're just observing you as you are.
And it's to me, it's like that,
that's the level of beauty
that's like so much deeper than skin.
Yeah.
I absolutely love that.
That's so beautiful.
Back to these key practices,
which I still can't get through
because we keep going down
beautiful rabbit holes.
So these key practices to help us move from arguments to understanding, we've said valid
perspectives number one, number two, practice selfless listening.
Number three, be honest without being dramatic.
Number four, ask yourself if you can let it go.
I like that.
What does that mean?
Do you really need an apology or is it just something that shouldn't have even have been
brought up in the first place?
Because there are so many petty little arguments that we fall into that become bigger than
they actually need to be.
And sometimes it's like, oh, you know, there's so many times when my wife and I were talking
or like, wow, that didn't matter at all.
Like I'm not even asking for an apology or something like that because there isn't...
It's not even worthy of an apology.
It's like, it's just like, wow, this is like misnamed tension.
Like, I forgot to even own the fact that I didn't feel good.
And now I've tried to pick a fight with you to make that tension bigger.
And actually, you know, I'm not trying to get an apology from you.
I'm the one apologizing.
I'm like, I'm sorry, I was not trying to get an apology from you. I'm the one apologizing. I'm like, I'm sorry.
I was lacking self-awareness in that moment.
Number five, take responsibility for your part in it.
Sometimes you're definitely going to make mistakes that you need to apologize for.
Or sometimes situations may arise that will reveal new things for you and your partner.
Like let's say as you get older and you know,
your parents start getting sick and frail
and these situations where you have to support your family
start coming up more often.
Like those situations have happened between my wife and I
and when we're supporting her family or mine,
it reveals new things and we're understanding that
we need to make new commitments for these new
eras of our life.
And sometimes in the process of learning what our new commitments are, we're going to make
mistakes so you own your part of it.
Number six, remember your partner is not your enemy.
Right.
Just like we talked about, like you got to, you know, bring that kindness into even into
the argument because you don't need to, you know,
you don't need to like treat your partner
with ferocity during an argument.
Number seven, victory is not winning, understanding is.
Right, love is understanding.
Yeah, I guess a key point as we think about these things is
just as we shouldn't expect the perfect relationship,
which of course doesn't exist,
we shouldn't also expect that we're gonna listen
to this conversation or read your new book
and suddenly not have any conflicts anymore
and not have difficult arguments.
I guess what I'm getting to is even if you have the awareness
from things that people have just heard us talk about,
and they then this evening,
I started to have an argument over something petty.
Even if they realize two minutes in,
it's not all or nothing.
They can stop, can't they?
Go, hey, actually, you know what?
It's cool, it doesn't matter.
Do you know what I mean?
It's not, this black or white thinking, I think,
gets us into all kinds of trouble in life.
And it's like, even if you start down the road
and put fuel on the fire,
you can bring the fire extinguisher in as well.
Yeah, yeah.
And it's really, I think that's one of the biggest points
of wisdom in a relationship is just understanding
that there are going to be ups and downs
and you need to face them as a team.
Because that's just what life is.
Like even if there's so much harmony between the two of you, what if there are really difficult family members
and are really difficult challenges with work?
Like there are so many situations that you just cannot control
and not all of them are going to be good.
So problems will arise, but how do you face those problems?
One of the key things you talk about
throughout this book and when you talk about your meditation practice,
and I know it's heavily influenced by Buddhism, I think, non-attachment.
I had this question for you, Diego.
So one of my intentions for 2025 is to try and give without expectation.
Beautiful.
Okay.
So that's probably one of my big intentions for this year.
It's like, how often can I give with no expectation of anything in return?
And it's a really, it's very freeing and it's really beautiful way to try and live.
It really is.
And so far so good.
Okay.
How does that fit in an intimate relationship?
Right?
Because if we take non-attachment to its extreme, non-attachment would be, I can be with this
person and I'm not expecting anything in return from this person. Whereas in reality, I guess we probably do have certain expectations of our partner.
So how do you help solve that potential conundrum?
You have to, when you go into a relationship, both people are going to have to work on giving
and receiving. Like that is something where, you know,
my wife and I, we realized that we were in a dynamic
where like she was really good at giving
and I struggled with receiving.
Where for some reason, you know,
through growing up and having very little,
it just felt it was hard for me to receive anything
from other people,
especially someone who was very close to me.
And I think when you are able to balance that out and see where you need to put energy into
your development, and I started intentionally working on receiving, I was able to better
receive the love that she was giving in my direction.
And I think it's the same thing for both people where you're going to be either more of a
giver, more of a receiver,
but when you're intentionally trying to balance that out and you get into a situation where
you're both intentionally giving to each other without necessarily being prompted to give,
then you're both going to have more than what you even could have expected.
Is it okay to have expectations of your partner?
It's better not.
It's expectations are really tricky, slippery,
and sometimes they become silent expectations
where you're literally like creating a trap for someone
and they just fall into it,
like you're falling into it and they fall into it.
So it's better to just communicate,
just like if you have things that can support your happiness,
then like you own your happiness,
it's up to you to make yourself happy,
your partner can support your happiness. So, but let them know how you own your happiness. It's up to you to make yourself happy. Your
partner can support your happiness. So, but let them know how you like your happiness
to be supported. Let them know what your needs are and you know, and they can do their best.
It all comes down to communication. I mean, one thing I've said before is that I think
most relationship conflict comes from unmet expectations that were never ever expressed.
Exactly. Like I can't read your mind.
You know, you can be together for such a long time and not be able to know exactly what your partner needs
because the person that you fell in love with on day one is not the same person on day 1000.
Like they're going to evolve over time.
Like you're going to, you know, your preferences and what your likes, your dislikes,
they're just going to mold and shift over time.
So be vocal about the way you're growing.
Yeah. It's interesting.
When I was reading your book, there was a couple of similarities between our lives.
It sounds as though you've been with your now wife for 17, 18 years. I've been married for just over 17 years now. So
quite similar, I guess, in length of time. We got married after eight months.
Eight months! Wow.
It was total whirlwind romance. I went a bit crazy, proposed after three months.
And, you know, we've learned a lot since then, basically.
But it's interesting as I was reflecting on your journey
with your wife and my own journey with my wife,
I kind of feel that the relationship is always changing.
The relationship from 17 years ago is not the same.
I almost feel that in some ways we're on our fourth or fifth version of being in a marriage
or being in a relationship.
Yeah.
No, it feels like different chapters.
Like, I feel like my wife and I just slipped into this new chapter where like it's easier
for us, like we've been able to build this culture
in our relationship so that we can have more harmony
without stumbling on each other's perceptions so much.
And now we're in much more of a flow state
of a relationship where we're just having a lot more joy
because the first, I mean, the first what,
like six to like 10
years of our relationship were very challenging. And there are less, I mean, we still have
arguments and whatnot, but like, we just deal with them with a lot more ease.
Before we finish, I just want to ask you about your pen name, Young Pueblo. So online with
this book on your Instagram account, which is one of my favorite Instagram
accounts to follow.
It's really, really phenomenal.
You go by the name of Young Pueblo.
What does it mean and why do you have this pen name?
Yeah.
So Young Pueblo, I mean, it literally means young people.
And I just, I picked up this pen name one day intuitively.
I that's how I started my Instagram account.
And then over time, it developed a lot of meaning.
So when I started meditating, I started realizing that I'm really immature.
I have a lot of growing up to do.
But I also I've I've always been just a big fan of history.
I've been studying history really closely my whole life.
And I started realizing that humanity as a whole
is very immature and has a lot of growing up to do.
So when you think about, when you send your kids
to the very early school, like kindergarten or whatnot,
what are these kids trying to learn?
They're trying to learn basics.
They're trying to learn how to clean up after themselves,
how to share, how to tell the truth, how to not fight,
how to communicate well with each other.
And these are like human basics that people,
some people can do as individuals,
but as a human collective, we totally fail, right?
We don't know how to share.
We don't know how to clean up after ourselves.
We're constantly at war with each other.
So these fundamentals have not been mastered
by the human collective.
So to me, young Pueblo is a reminder to myself
that humanity as a whole is growing up,
that we're like in this transitional moment
going from childhood
to like being teenagers, you know, we still have so much more growing up to do.
Wow, that's really beautiful and really humbling at the same time. For people who have heard
this conversation, Diego, and are feeling like there's a bit of conflict in their relationships and their lives.
And they have resonated with a few things.
I thought, yeah, I like that.
Oh, I see what you said there, but I don't know where to start.
What final words of wisdom would you have for them?
I think it's really, you know, we live in a really powerful and special time in human history, where there are just such a vast variety of tools
for self-development.
And we mentioned a number of them,
something as simple as journaling,
something as simple as gratitude,
or working with a therapist.
There are so many different forms of meditation.
I talked about Vipassana,
which is a much more rigorous form of meditation,
but then there are other simpler ones
that are easier to access or, you know,
there's just yoga, like there's so much out there.
So what I would say is if you're having some struggle
with relationship, you can simultaneously work
on your relationship and work on yourself and
Start developing the qualities that you know will make your life better
so if you're lacking patience develop patience like if you're lacking, you know, if you're
Like having too much anger come up too often
Then you have to cultivate non reaction so that you can allow yourself to be with the truth of the moment, be with the tension without making
it bigger than it really needs to be.
And these are things that we can all cultivate.
And I feel like we just live in this special moment in human history where millions of
people are seeing therapists, millions of people are meditating, millions of people
are doing yoga.
People are actively really working on healing themselves and you'll see that your healing
and your personal growth will directly help your relationship flourish.
I love that Diego.
Thank you for flying over.
Thank you for coming to the studio.
The book, How To Love Better is awesome.
You're awesome.
Thank you so much.
And I really loved our conversation. Thank you. Yeah, me too. Thank you so much. And I really loved that conversation. Thank you.
Yeah, me too. Thank you so much. Really happy to be here.
Really hope you enjoyed that conversation.
Do think about one thing that you can take away and apply into your own life.
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