Good Life Project - How to Keep the Spark Alive: Secrets from 40 Years of Love Research with Drs. Julie and John Gottman

Episode Date: May 9, 2024

What makes love last decades instead of years? After studying thousands of couples, Drs. Julie and John Gottman discovered what separates the masters from the disasters. Learn their research-backed se...crets, like the 5:1 magic ratio, bids for connection, and the 4 horsemen to avoid. It's all here - including insights from their book, Eight Dates: Essential Conversations for a Lifetime of Love.You can find The Gottman's at: Website | Instagram | Episode TranscriptIf you LOVED this episode you’ll also love the conversations we had with Eli Finkel about the self-actualized marriage.Check out our offerings & partners: Join My New Writing Project: Awake at the WheelVisit Our Sponsor Page For Great Resources & Discount Codes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 In a great relationship, even during conflict, the ratio of positive emotions to negative emotions was five to one, five times as much positivity as negativity. But in unhappy relationships, it's like negativity is like one of those whirlpools that just spiral down and people can't dig out of it. They're caught in this trap, this whirlpool of negativity. But in good relationships, they have so much of a cushion of positive emotion that they easily escape when negativity hits. They can exit as well as enter. And in unhappy relationships, they can't exit. They can enter, but they get sucked into it and they can't get out. So when you think about the experience that so many people pretty much say makes life worth living, the word love tends to come up pretty often. And a ton of questions tend to follow. How do you find
Starting point is 00:00:56 it? How do you keep it? Can you keep it? Is staying in love something that is mythical? You only see it in the movies and TV. Is it a skill set that you develop? What are the things that tend to trip people up? And what can you do to really build beautiful relationships that allow you to stay in love for life? Is that even possible? That is where I go in my conversation today with John and Julie Gottman. They are sort of luminaries in the field
Starting point is 00:01:27 of relationships and love, founders of something that has become known as the Love Lab, where for decades, they have studied relationships, successful, disastrous, and really been able to deconstruct and figure out what are the things that go into creating and sustaining extraordinarily beautiful, in love, deeply committed relationships for long times. They have a new book out called
Starting point is 00:01:54 Eight Dates as well, which is really fantastic. It is eight dates and how to have them that cover eight different topics that are super important for pretty much anyone who is in a relationship or who is looking to find that person to explore. We dive into all of this. We dive into their personal journeys, their individual research. They both started out in psychology, one, though, with a very experimental mindset and the other with a very clinical mindset and came together to create not just a fantastic relationship and marriage between them, but also incredible professional collaboration that has benefited now millions of people. So excited to share this best of conversation with you. I'm Jonathan Fields, and this is Good Life Project. The Apple Watch Series 10 is here. It has the biggest display ever.
Starting point is 00:02:57 It's also the thinnest Apple Watch ever, making it even more comfortable on your wrist, whether you're running, swimming, or sleeping. And it's the fastest-charging Apple Watch, getting you eight hours of charge in just 15 minutes. The Apple Watch Series X. Available for the first time in glossy jet-black aluminum. Compared to previous
Starting point is 00:03:13 generations, iPhone XS or later required, charge time and actual results will vary. Mayday, mayday. We've been compromised. The pilot's a hitman. I knew you were gonna be fun. January 24th. Tell me how to fly this thing. Mark Wahlberg. You know what the difference between me and you is? You're going to die.
Starting point is 00:03:30 Don't shoot him. We need him. Y'all need a pilot. Flight Risk. I am so fascinated by you individually and by the work you've done together, and your latest work as well. Why don't we start with you, John? You're out there in the world, building a career, but with a focus on the experimental side, on love, on relationships. And on children. Tell me more about that part of it. So, at the University of Wisconsin, I got to study with some of the great developmental psychologists in the country.
Starting point is 00:04:03 Ross Park, Mavis Etherington, people who were focusing on families. And I was very interested in the study of interacting systems, families, organizations, parents and children interacting and really focused on child clinical for a postdoc I did. And so I'm oriented much more toward development. And of course, that's a really great strength at the University of Wisconsin, looking at families, looking at interaction. And that became something I got trained to do. Right. So when you move on from the University of Wisconsin and you start to actually build your own thing, what becomes the central focus?
Starting point is 00:04:47 Observation. Really observing moment by moment what's going on in two people interacting with one another or parents interacting with children or interacting with infants. And kids in classrooms. So I started studying kids' peer social relationships in classrooms and kids' friendship, studying, well, how do kids make friends? And why do they reject one another? And what are the consequences of peer rejection and bullying and things like that? So, you know, something that I was very interested in, sort of interacting systems, social interaction. And then I teamed up with my best friend, Bob Levinson, and we combined studying emotion not only by observing, but also looking at physiology
Starting point is 00:05:33 and people's internal experience of emotion as well. So that was my focus. What were some of the big ahas that came out of that collaboration? One of them was that in a great relationship, even during conflict, the ratio of positive emotions to negative emotions was five to one, five times as much positivity as negativity. Bob and I had gone from one disastrous relationship with a woman to another. And I know in my relationships, I would have been happy if there was as much negativity as positivity, not overwhelmingly more negativity. But here, in great relationships, it was five times as much positivity as negativity, even when they're conflicting about something. So a great relationship was something I'd never experienced before. I hadn't met Julie yet, but you know.
Starting point is 00:06:26 Let's make that one perfectly clear. That's right. Tell me what you mean by positivity and negativity, though. Humor, empathy, understanding, kindness, compassion, calming your partner down, reassuring your partner, all kinds of things that people do to be nice to one another. Kindness and generosity, all those positive emotions, including joy and ecstasy and domineering and anger and disappointment and sadness and hurt feelings and all those negative things. And those come out in conflict as well. But in unhappy relationships, it's like negativity is like one of those whirlpools that just spiral down and people can't dig out of it. They're caught in this trap, this whirlpool of negativity. But in good relationships,
Starting point is 00:07:27 they have so much of a cushion of positive emotion that they can easily escape when negativity hits. They can exit as well as enter. And in unhappy relationships, they can't exit. They can enter, but they get sucked into it and they can't get out. So that was a real surprise. In a way, those findings are really very simple in describing the differences between happy and unhappy marriages.
Starting point is 00:07:54 So to think that we need five of these positive experiences for every negative experience to reach, you know, like however we describe healthy. Well, that's only during conflict. Okay. During non-conflict, it's 20 positives to one negative. Right. How do you define conflict versus non-conflict? Conflict is when you're trying to solve a problem and you have a disagreement. Okay.
Starting point is 00:08:23 That's what we mean by conflict. So you're discussing a problem, you have a disagreement. That's what we mean by conflict. So you're discussing a problem, you have different points of view about it, and you're trying to figure out how to solve it. That's how we're defining conflict. So during that phase of discussion, the good couples, five to one positive to one negative. And when you're just going about your everyday interaction, you're cooking in the kitchen, you're just having fun with the kids,
Starting point is 00:08:52 you're hanging out together, that's 20 positives to one negative. See, that sounds so counterintuitive to me. How so? Because to me, I would seem like, okay, so when you're in it, when you're in the conflict, that the potential to go into that downward spiral is so much higher that you would need a higher ratio of positive to negative. Rather than when you're just kind of every day, things are good, but you go on about your life, that you would actually need four times that number of positive to negative.
Starting point is 00:09:25 It seems… Well, here's why. We're looking for the good enough relationship, not the perfect relationship. So any disagreement typically is going to bring forth negative emotion, right? So it's less likely that you're going to have a huge number of positive emotions expressed or positive interactions compared to negative. But if you can at least succeed at five to one, that's doing really well. It's much easier to elicit the positive interactions during non-conflict. Got it. That makes sense. Now I get it.
Starting point is 00:10:07 Okay. Good. I'm a little slow on the update. No, not at all. When you're just hanging out, right, and your partner tries to get your attention, and the other person really, you know, doesn't respond. It seems like a small thing, but it kind of hurts when people are trying to connect, you know, and just say something like, oh, Jonathan, look out there, you know, that looks like, that's a hawk, isn't it, on that ledge, and there's no response.
Starting point is 00:10:35 It hurts a lot more because you expect nice interaction when you're not conflicting. So when there's a turning away, you know, during one of those moments, it's much more painful. Yeah, that makes sense to me. And I guess that also introduces this concept from the work that you do of bids. Tell me more. So John and I created on the University of Washington campus an apartment lab. And in this little apartment, we created a room that was very much like a B&B. So, people stayed there for 24 hours. They were bringing groceries in, they would make meals, there was a TV and so on. And we watched them for 24 hours. So it was just like a B&B, except that we had three cameras bolted to the walls, we took their
Starting point is 00:11:33 urine, we took their blood, you know, but other was that people would make these little tiny bits for connection. So at first, you know, we couldn't figure out what were the differences between the successful couples and the ones who didn't do well. Because we were following these couples for years after they came to the apartment lab. And finally, John and a colleague of his figured out that there were these little bids for connection, meaning you might just call your partner's name and see if your partner said, yeah, that's a good response to a bid for connection. Or one person would look out the window because there was a beautiful view outside and might say, wow, look at that fantastic boat going by. And the other person could do one of three things. They could either turn against, which looked like, stop interrupting me, I'm trying to read.
Starting point is 00:12:47 Or they could turn away, meaning nothing. There'd be no response whatsoever. Or they could turn towards, and that would just look like this. Huh. Wow. That's all it took. And it made a huge difference. We found that when we followed these couples, the successful couples turned towards each other's bids for connection 86% of the time.
Starting point is 00:13:17 86, that's a lot. The disastrous couples who ended up really unhappy or divorcing turned towards each other only 33% of the time. See that difference? 53% difference in whether they turned towards or turned away or against. So we saw that this was an incredibly powerful factor in what made relationships successful or disastrous. How much of the result of success versus failure was due to the turning towards, the act of turning towards versus the response to. So to me, I guess my curiosity is, how much of it was about simply noticing that there was a bid being offered and acknowledging it versus the nature of the response to the bid?
Starting point is 00:14:18 Was that something that was even deconstructible? No, not usually. I mean, basically the unit was the attempt to connect and the response to it. So it's a kind of interaction unit rather than, but it was true, interestingly enough, that in couples where there wasn't much turning toward, there was also not very much attempt to really connect as well. But of course, you know, in all of these findings, these are correlational findings. So we don't know what's causing what. Is it the happy relationship that's causing this? So we had to do experiments. And it turns out when you increase the amount of turning toward noticing bids, you know, which is an important part of that, and the willingness to really meet
Starting point is 00:15:05 the need that's being expressed, sometimes non-verbally expressed, then a lot of other good stuff increases. So we could really measure and assess whether these things were causally related or just correlations of being in a happy relationship. So it turns out that these things really are skills. If you build the skills, you'll change the nature of the relationship. That's what Julie and I discovered when we first started working together. Julie, from her really huge amount of experience doing therapy with the most distressed people,
Starting point is 00:15:44 my experience measuring things, put that together, and we created a theory with hypotheses about causal connection. And then in 23 years of working together, we could test those out. And mostly we were wrong. So the data were informing both of us. But it was a combination of her clinical experience, her sensitivity for people in pain, and my training and measurement and mathematical modeling of relationships and statistics combined together experimentally that could create a theory that could help people. Yeah, it's like the super skill of observation, the super skill of coding, sort of like together, creates this near magical. Yeah. Let me also point out that because we studied over 3,000 couples,
Starting point is 00:16:40 what we could do is look at the successful couples, see exactly what they were doing because there were really very clear patterns about what they were doing to make their relationship successful. Then we could create exercises and interventions to help those who were distressed to do the same things in their relationships that the successful couples were doing. So we very carefully analyzed what were they doing, created exercises, tested those exercises to see if they actually worked. And sure enough, they did. And then we began teaching those to couples who came to our workshops, who came to therapy. Yeah. So it's almost like if, John, as you described, when you noticed in the problematic relationships that there were just very low level of bids happening in the first place, and then you do the research to figure out causation versus correlation, then you can start to understand
Starting point is 00:17:43 maybe this is actually more of learned helplessness that you just give up. Right. And then if you can see that, you reverse it and say, okay, if people are learning helplessness, well, then maybe they can also relearn. Exactly. To be constructive together. Yeah. Exactly.
Starting point is 00:17:57 Beautifully, beautifully put, Jonathan. What we were really trying to do is create the safety for those couples to actually make more bids for connection so that they could slowly build trust. And teaching the other partner how to respond to those bids, it didn't take a lot. It was just a small little tiny response like, yeah, or uh-huh. That's all it took. And they could change the whole course of their relationship over time. Which seems almost so counterintuitive. It's that hard, yet that easy. Exactly. You've got it. And we'll be right back after a word from our sponsors. And it's the fastest charging Apple Watch, getting you 8 hours of charge in just 15 minutes. The Apple Watch Series X.
Starting point is 00:19:07 Available for the first time in glossy jet black aluminum. Compared to previous generations, iPhone Xs are later required. Charge time and actual results will vary. Mayday, mayday. We've been compromised. The pilot's a hitman. I knew you were gonna be fun. On January 24th. Tell me how to fly this thing.
Starting point is 00:19:25 Mark Wahlberg. You know what the difference between me and you is? You're going to die. Don't shoot him. We need him. Y'all need a pilot. Flight Risk. You, at some point along the way, also, I know in the work that you did, you identified these things that you call the Four Horsemen.
Starting point is 00:19:43 I think it's Four Horsemen, the apocalypse, right? Right. Right. Can you sort of like walk us and walk me through those a bit? Sure. So we found very clear patterns of negative behaviors, negative emotions, and how they were expressed that were the big problem. It wasn't the emotion that was the problem, it was how they were expressed. So let me talk about each one. Criticism is when you put the blame for a problem on a personality flaw of your partner, right? So an example of that might be something like, you're just too lazy. There's the criticism. You're too lazy to
Starting point is 00:20:26 clean up the kitchen. So the emotion is frustration that the kitchen is dirty, right? You're blaming a personality flaw, lazy. You're blaming the problem on that personality flaw of your partner. You're too lazy to clean up the kitchen. So it's like an identity level thing. It's a character thing. Okay. Yes. So there's a character trait that you're seeing in your partner that's very negative, very bad, and all problems come back to that particular flaw in your partner.
Starting point is 00:21:02 Okay. You're too selfish. You know, you're so thoughtless, you're so inconsiderate. Those kinds of words are criticisms. And when you express your anger, your frustration, your resentment, and so on, by describing your partner negatively that way, that doesn't work. It creates defensiveness. Defensiveness is the second one. Defensiveness looks like, I did too clean up the kitchen. So it's kind of righteous victimhood, right? Don't get mad at me. I'm such a good person. So that's one form of defensiveness. Another form of defensiveness is counterattack. So you say something like, oh, yeah, well, you didn't pay the bills, right? So you're attacking back.
Starting point is 00:21:57 All right, so defensiveness doesn't work. You're not taking any responsibility for the problem at all. You're just saying, no, it's not me, or no, you're also criticizing your partner, but you're doing it from a place of superiority, of moral superiority. And contempt manifests through sarcasm, through mockery, sometimes through a facial expression. Like if any of you have teenagers, right, and you see that roll of the eye, you know, or the, you know, left cheek, left lip corner going up, you know, like with an eye roll, that is contempt. And contempt makes the other person feel ashamed. It shames them. It's saying, you know, you're so disgusting to me that I can barely look at you. That's contempt. And not only does contempt create demise in the relationship, it's also been found in our research to really destroy the immune system of the listener. So the number of times a
Starting point is 00:23:29 listener in a relationship hears contempt correlates with how many infectious illnesses they'll have in the next year. So there's a whole psychoneuroimmunology thing happening. Yes, that's right. So it's really hurting the immune system. The other person is probably secreting cortisol and adrenaline when they hear that contempt, which erodes the immune system. So that's the third. So contempt literally, quite literally, causes physical harm to the other person in the relationship. Yes, psychological harm and physical harm. You've got it. That's right. So the fourth horseman is what we call stonewalling. And it looks exactly like it sounds. The other partner turns into a stonewall and doesn't give any response whatsoever to what the speaker is trying to say. Now, we found out, because John and Bob measured
Starting point is 00:24:28 physiology in the lab, we found out that stonewalling, which typically happens more in men than it does in women, is a way that that person is trying to go inside and self-soothe. What we found is when that stonewaller was actually really questioned later on about their experience, they felt like they were facing a saber-toothed tiger who was attacking them. And their heart rates would jump above 100 beats a minute, even though they were sitting there quietly listening to their partner. They'd be aerobically escalated. They'd be in fight or flight because they felt so attacked and powerless at the same time. But my guess is, while internally, they're just trying to hold on for dear life, externally, it probably presents as something which is disrespect.
Starting point is 00:25:30 As something which is, you're not even hearing me, you're shutting down. And it actually probably exacerbates the problem. Exactly. If these are the four things that are massively destructive, what can we do about them? Well, when we look at the masters of relationship, we see we get additional information. So instead of criticism, most of the time the masters are reassuring their partner and pointing their finger not at their partner but at themselves and having a very gentle beginning
Starting point is 00:26:05 to the conflict discussion where they say, hey, Jonathan, don't get upset about this. You know, I love you. You're a great guy. I love this relationship. You know, we're doing fine. It's just that every now and then at dinner, you know, you'll be doing your email. And that kind of makes me feel unimportant. And I wish you wouldn't do your email during dinner.
Starting point is 00:26:29 Positive need. A positive need is there. You know, it's what you're asking for. You know, let's have conversation during dinner instead of you doing your email and us being disconnected. So a very gentle startup. But even when the partner was critical among the masters, they would be communicating, okay, that makes sense. Sometimes I am kind of selfish. Sometimes I am really thoughtless. You're right.
Starting point is 00:26:56 Tell me more about what you feel and what you need. They're taking responsibility for the problem. Unlike defensiveness, where they're pushing it back and accelerating and counterattacking or acting like an innocent victim, they're saying, you know, you're probably right. There are times when I'm not a very good listener. There are times when I'm not a very good partner. Tell me more. I want to hear more. I want to know what you need. A totally different reaction than defensiveness creates. And then instead of contempt, in the apartment lab, we saw them in very small moments building respect and affection, saying things like, you know, you really look sexy this morning. I'm having all
Starting point is 00:27:38 these lewd thoughts about you. Or thanks for getting me the butter. Or thanks for doing the dishes. Or I enjoyed the conversation at dinner. They're doing that. And when they do get physiologically aroused, they're talking about what they need and what they feel. So they're repairing effectively when things aren't going well, rather than stonewalling. So it's a whole different kind of configuration
Starting point is 00:28:01 where they're communicating to their partner, you know, when you're upset, the world stops and I listen and I'm not defensive. I try not to be defensive. So that was kind of what we learned from the good relationships. And part of our research strategy was to oversample unhappy couples and oversample happy couples. So we had enough power statistically to describe what they were doing. And you get all these wonderful recipes that can be useful in therapy from these good relationships. It's not just that they're not doing the Four Horsemen.
Starting point is 00:28:39 It's that they're doing additional things that actually build that positive climate of acceptance, understanding, shared humor, all those kinds of things that really work to make understanding much more likely. Let me add a little bit more to that. So for both criticism and contempt, you know, typically there's anger and resentment, there's sadness, and so on. There's typically a need that's going on that they're trying to express, but they're doing it the wrong way. So, we saw there was a formula, actually, that John is describing. Here's the formula. I feel something. I feel upset. I feel stressed. I feel angry. I'm worried. I'm threatened. I'm frustrated. I feel angry that the kitchen is a mess.
Starting point is 00:29:50 I feel frustrated that there's a new dent in the car. Then they say, here's what I need. And when they express their need, they're expressing it positively. So they don't say what they don't need, what they don't want. I don't want you leaving the kitchen a mess. That's a negative need. The positive need, they flip it on its head. They say, I would love it if you would wipe down the counters after dinner. They tell their partner what their partner can do to shine for them, you see.
Starting point is 00:30:34 And that's a whole other message. Doesn't make the person feel defensive. They're describing themselves, their feeling, then the situation, and the positive need that can help the partner shine for them. Now, another thing about stonewalling that's very important is that when somebody is what we call physiologically flooded, they stonewall. And that flooding means they're in fight or flight. They're just overwhelmed at that point. They're overwhelmed. Their heart rates are high. They're in fight or flight.
Starting point is 00:31:09 And physiologically inside, they feel awful. You probably can't even hear or see what's really going on at that point. Exactly. That's exactly right. All you perceive is attack. So what really needs to happen when somebody is stonewalling is that they need to take a break. They need to take a break.
Starting point is 00:31:28 They need to call for a timeout. You know, just like sometimes we give our kids a timeout. They need to give themselves a timeout. And the best way to do that is to say to the partner, you know what, I'm flooded. Then they need to say when they'll come back. I need to take a break. I'll be back in an hour. And typically, a break should last at a minimum 20 to 30 minutes. No longer, though, than 24 hours. So they tell their partner when they'll come back to continue to talk because the partner will feel abandoned, right? And then when they go away, a really important
Starting point is 00:32:15 thing to do when they separate is don't think about the fight. Don't figure out what you should say when you come back because if you keep thinking about the fight, Don't figure out what you should say when you come back. Because if you keep thinking about the fight, you'll keep yourself around. Yeah, it's like you're stewing and it defeats the whole process. That's exactly right. Because you're like, you just keep yourself in fight or flight until you come back, and that's probably even worse. You got it. That's right. So what makes better sense is to do something that's self-soothing,
Starting point is 00:32:44 something that takes your mind off it. So you can read a magazine. You can watch TV as long as it's not one of those 6,000 murder TV shows, you know, where people are getting killed and killing each other. You can take a walk. You can meditate. You can do yoga. You can listen to music, play music. All those things that are self-soothing for us.
Starting point is 00:33:07 And come back at the designated time. If you need more time, that's okay. Come back at the designated time and ask for more time and say the second time you'll come back. Also, there's a different goal for the masters in conflict. The goal for the masters is mutual understanding. For the disasters, the goal is to win. That's huge. Yeah. I mean, that shift alone seems like it's everything. It's everything. Yeah, because one of it is adversarial and the other is collaborative. Right, exactly.
Starting point is 00:33:42 Yeah. Not only is it collaborative, but it's curious, it's cooperative, and it's compassionate. You're trying to understand with compassion where your partner's coming from. And to assess your partner as they are. With their position on the issue. Yeah. It occurs to me that all of these are, as you both described, these are skills. They're learnable skills. But it also seems like there is a meta skill which has to be there before any of this works, which is awareness.
Starting point is 00:34:28 You know, for any of this, for you to have the ability to recognize any of the things that we're talking about and then respond intentionally rather than reactively, you've got to have the bigger skill of awareness of being able to actually zoom the lens out in a moment and say, oh, what's actually happening here? Like, what am I feeling internally? What is this other person like showing me they're feeling and what's happening between us, which is a skill which I don't think many of us are trained in. You know, Jonathan, I beg to differ a little bit. Let me try to explain. You know, out there today, there's a lot of emphasis, of course, on awareness and mindfulness and so on,
Starting point is 00:35:23 which I think tends to make people feel like, gosh, I'm not healthy enough, I'm not aware enough. I'm not mindful enough to be able to have a decent relationship. I've got to develop all that stuff first. I've got to be healthy in order to have a good relationship. And the reality is even neurotic people, highly neurotic people can have great relationships. And so I went, yes. I was really excited. It kind of cuts right through the whole awareness thing as the necessary thing. All that you have to do, really, is to know how to do two things. To recognize when something doesn't feel right.
Starting point is 00:36:13 You don't have to necessarily know what you're feeling exactly. You just have to sense that something doesn't feel right. And most people have that. They have that, you know, instinct that something doesn't feel right. It's part of our self-preservation, right? So notice that things don't feel right. And then be curious. What the heck is going on?
Starting point is 00:36:44 Be able to ask questions. What is going on here? Something's wrong. I don't like it. What's going on? And pause, breathe. If you can sense when something is wrong and you can breathe at the same time, that's really a good thing. That's all it really takes. And then, you know, the skills can kick in. Then you can learn, you know, the skills. Yeah. I mean, and that makes a lot of sense to me. I think part of the struggle that I have with the idea, it's not even a struggle, it's just maybe an observation of what's coming up in my mind, is to sense when we feel something's not right. I feel like so many of us are moved through life almost entirely disembodied.
Starting point is 00:37:39 We're living from the head up. We're living cognitively, not in a sensory way and i feel like so many of us have become disconnected from the physiological signs that our body gives us all day every day that would let us be like oh i'm not entirely sure what's going on here but something's not right and uh like and i'm sure you you julie you've seen this um especially with uh people have been through trauma like one of the first things that happens, you disconnect from that. But that also shuts off all the good signals that would let you know something's not quite right. You're absolutely right about that.
Starting point is 00:38:16 So, you know, when folks are really suffering from trauma, and a lot of people are, they try to disconnect from their physical sensations, from their emotions, from their fear, from everything. However, the thing that I've noticed with people in trauma, it's interesting, is that the signals are still going on. They still have those signals in their bodies, all they have to do is turn slightly to the right, and there they are, right there. So, it's simply a matter of listening. It's just listening to their body, listening to themselves. And, you know, this brings up another point, which is maybe a little tangential. But here we are sitting in New York, right? And there's a whole lot of concrete, there's water, and so on. I think there's a way in which people have cut off from their bodies and their emotions because they've been cut off from nature, from their own natural habitat, right?
Starting point is 00:39:39 And so, you know, in Seattle, where we're based, certainly you see some of that cut off, especially in the tech industry and so on, where people are really compelled to think black and white, you know, very cerebral. But not as much, because people are still connecting with nature. Yeah, I completely agree with that. And it's funny you bring that up. Where we are right now is strategic, specifically for that reason, because we are three blocks from Central Park, which is the size of some small cities,
Starting point is 00:40:18 and two blocks from the Hudson River. And because I'm so aware of exactly what you said, and I'm also, I'm somebody who really, I'm very tuned into my need for nature and how it affects me when I don't have my hit. That like we are where we are, because every day I'm either walking in the park, or I'm walking down by the water, because I just, I don't need to be, I just need to have that as it's my reset. It allows me to go in. I don't need to talk to people. I'm just to get back into that, to breathe it in, you know, to breathe a little bit of the salt water from
Starting point is 00:40:52 the Hudson River or just, you know, like the greenery and smell the foliage in the park is so important to me that even living in this massive city, I don't think that I could live here without having access to both of those things on a regular basis. That totally makes sense. Totally makes sense to me. Well, Jonathan, one of the reasons that we wrote this book, Eight Dates, was because many long-term relationships, people get so busy in their lives. They get so absorbed with the minutia of career and children that their lives turn into this infinite to-do list. And they're not making time for one another. And so we wanted to write a book that would create eight dates in which people could connect with one another and we could rekindle curiosity
Starting point is 00:41:46 in one another. And that's what these dates are for. They're for really talking about, you know, what do you need in terms of play, adventure, fun, you know, what's intimate connection, sexuality. What about money? What do you feel about money? What's enough money? Why is money so important? What's the history of your family with money and your own life with money? So these eight dates are designed to reconnect people. And some of that is about nature. It's about sense of meaning, about life dreams,
Starting point is 00:42:17 shared purpose, children, community, family, all those kinds of things. Yeah, and what's interesting to me about, I mean mean the book is is fabulous by the way it's called eight dates and we'll certainly we'll mention it in the show notes as well um it was interesting to me that that you wrote this book also initially it sounds like for people who are looking to find love like here are eight days that you can go on and eight really important things to talk about and explore with a sense of openness and curiosity to find out, are you with somebody who may be compatible, you know, long-term?
Starting point is 00:42:51 But it also seems like along the way, you know, like you both realize never had, even though you may be together for a very long time, which I thought was really interesting. Interesting. So we field tested these dates with 300 couples. You know, we like to be empirical. These couples were gay couples, lesbian couples, heterosexual couples, and they agreed to audio tape their dates so we could listen to the dates and make sure they worked. Right. So, you know, what we saw was also coming from a lot of our clinical work, which is that couples can be together for decades, just like you're pointing out. And because their lives are so busy, as John was mentioning but they're not staying in tune with how that other person is changing, how they're evolving, how their values may have changed, how their experiences are turning them in different directions. So with each chapter, we focused on something that is really important in relationships. That's what we've learned from our research. And each date is constructed so that you prepare for the date by thinking about this particular topic and addressing some questions individually, then coming together and we describe some fun activities you can do on each date and discuss particular questions we've laid out that really take a deeper path into
Starting point is 00:44:56 understanding each other. So questions like, you know, for example, the chapter on money. How did your parents show that you either had enough money or not enough money? What did money mean in your family? Did it mean freedom? Did it mean power? Did it mean security? And what do you want it to mean in this relationship? How much money is enough? What are your values around money? How much money do you
Starting point is 00:45:29 want that would leave you feeling what? Secure, powerful, etc. Why on money, family, sex and intimacy, what do you really like sexually, how did you learn about sex when you were a kid, that's a hilarious part of the conversation. Most people didn't or they learned through pornography or something, who the heck knows. Also, chapters on dreams. What are your dreams? Did your family, when you were growing up, honor your dreams? Did you even get to voice them? And what are your dreams now? And how can I support you with those, living those dreams? Your underlying purpose for being on this planet, as well as spirituality. Some people have developed spirituality, some people have lost it, some people are not interested in it. So, who are you regarding that topic? So, the conversations are all very deepening of the relationship.
Starting point is 00:46:42 We even have one on conflict, but it's not about, okay, let's have a fight. It's not that at all. Instead, what it is, is, so what's the style in which you feel most comfortable discussing a problem? How did your family handle conflicts, and how do you want to? It's more like that. And we'll be right back after a word from our sponsors. Whether you're running, swimming, or sleeping. And it's the fastest-charging Apple Watch, getting you 8 hours of charge in just 15 minutes. The Apple Watch Series X. Available for the first time in glossy jet-black aluminum. Compared to previous generations, iPhone XS or later required,
Starting point is 00:47:37 charge time and actual results will vary. Mayday, mayday. We've been compromised. The pilot's a hitman. I knew you were gonna be fun. January 24th. Tell me how compromised. The pilot's a hitman. I knew you were going to be fun. January 24th. Tell me how to fly this thing. Mark Wahlberg. You know what the difference between me and you is?
Starting point is 00:47:51 You're going to die. Don't shoot him. We need him. Y'all need a pilot. Flight risk. I mean, it's really interesting also. My wife and I are about to become empty nesters. Whoa. And so it's fascinating. You. My wife and I are about to become empty nesters. Woo.
Starting point is 00:48:06 And so it's fascinating. You're not old enough for that, Jonathan. Oh, I am. You're like, you know, 30 years old. My hairline clearly reveals I'm old enough. So it's interesting to me because when I think about, even if you've had these conversations or some variation of them very early in the relationship, so many people, when they become parents, then all of a sudden all the focus goes to
Starting point is 00:48:29 the children, the family. The family unit becomes the center of everything. Everything happens on behalf of the family, very often the kids. What's best for the kids? And then you go about life. And then if you're fortunate and the kids grow up and at some point they move out and you find yourself in this place of, oh, it's just us again. You know, but it's been probably decades since it's been just us. This is such a fascinating set of exercises to revisit.
Starting point is 00:49:02 And sort of it's almost like saying, and who are we now? Exactly. Yeah. So, you know, we wrote the book to be an experience. I mean, how often is a book an experience, other than reading it? But you go and have the experience of rekindling curiosity in your partner. None of the dates are confrontational. They're all fun and exploratory.
Starting point is 00:49:26 That's the idea. One, you brought up a bunch of different topics that the dates are about. One of them kind of jumps out that I want to explore a little bit more, and that's the date around sex and sexuality, especially because very often that and money are like the two huge sources of both tremendous joy and connection and tremendous pain and separation. So if we talk about, you know, potentially just quickly about each one of them, but sex, you know, it feels like a topic that even more than money can be the source of great unhappiness and people just don't want to talk about or address. How important is sex really over the long-term success of a relationship? Can it actually stay alive and healthy for decades and decades and decades? And how does that conversation unfold to a certain extent? Yeah, it's really interesting.
Starting point is 00:50:20 I think Helen Fisher at Rutgers University has written a lot about this. She studied this idea of being in love. And a lot of people have said, well, being in love has a shelf life of about 18 months. Beyond that, you can't sustain it. It's too exhausting. And then you love your partner, but you're not in love with your partner. That turns out to be a myth. You can stay in love with your partner forever.
Starting point is 00:50:45 There's no shelf life to being in love. And again, science has helped us understand what's involved in that. And the answer is it's not very complicated. It's not rocket science. A study of 70,000 people in 24 countries recently done found that couples who have a great sex life are really different from couples who say their sex life is not alive anymore. And they're different in very simple ways. They say, I love you every day and mean it. They're affectionate, even in public. They give compliments to their partner. They cuddle. I find time to cuddle. They have a weekly romantic date.
Starting point is 00:51:26 They pay attention to their partner. They continue to play and have fun together. That's really vital. So our date on play, fun, and adventure is very important. And analyzing 40,000 couples about to start couples therapy, that I done, 80% of those couples say that fun has come to die in their relationship. And that's so sad. So fun, play, adventure, touch, affection, sexuality, emotional connection, they're all one fabric and they can stay alive forever. One of the other things that is really important in couples sexually to keep that passion alive is being able to talk about sex. You know, a lot of times when we listen to couples clinically talk about sex, you have no idea what they're talking about. You know, they'll say things like, well, you know, when you did that thing, that thing last night, it was really great, but, you know, it wasn't quite right.
Starting point is 00:52:31 And so I would like something else. And it's really hard to put into words. You know, they'll say things like that, and you have no idea what they're talking about. They may be talking about what they had for dinner, right? So, people need to learn how to talk about what their sexual needs are. They need to also be able to refuse sex if they need to, if they want to, without crushing the other person's ego. You know, a lot of times when people bring up what their sexual preferences are, the other person hears it as criticism. Somehow that other person believes they should read the person's mind and body and know exactly what kind of touch they want, where they want to be touched, how hard they want to be touched, what's going to feel right for them, what the tempo of the sex should be.
Starting point is 00:53:29 Well, how can they know all of that without really being able to talk about it? So in this chapter, you know, it starts with kind of those fun questions of how did you learn about it? But then it goes into, well, what is it that you would prefer? What do you like sexually? What kind of intimacy do you really prefer? Where do you like to have sex? How often? When do you like to have sex? What's your favorite time for it? In what ways would you like to be touched? What would you like for foreplay? Things like that, so that people can be really clear and on the same page and feel comfortable having sex, feeling safe enough because they know what their other partner likes. It's as simple as that. I think it's really interesting also to do this as an exercise because in this particular date, you lay out a set of questions that serve as prompts that don't come from either partner. So it's almost like somebody else is telling us that these are the questions, these are the things that we have to talk to each other about, and it almost says, well, I'm just following the instructions of this particular exercise rather than the uncomfortable thing of like, here's my checklist of things that, is that we live in a world right now where anxiety
Starting point is 00:55:05 runs rampant, where sort of like there's a heightened state of anxiety in so many people. It's causing stress. It's causing a lot of psychological angst. And my curiosity is, how does that, how have you seen that affect people and their desire for sex, the way that they interact around sex? And with that being such a part of the culture these days, how do you have that conversation? God, I love that question. Well, okay, a couple of things. First of all, the millennials went through, you know, at a very critical age, usually adolescence, they went through 2008, the big economic crash. They, as teenagers, were not able to get jobs.
Starting point is 00:55:54 They were seeing their parents lose jobs. They might have lost homes. They might be on the streets. You know, that's the worst case. And as a result, there's a ton of performance anxiety going on that generalizes into the bedroom. So that's one thing. So there's a lot of emphasis on, oh, my God, I have to have a career. I've got to have, you know, a job. Relationship? Well, maybe that'll come later.
Starting point is 00:56:39 So, still, they have sexual desire. So, what crops up? Tinder or Bumble, where there's sexual connections going on that are impersonal, that are not built on deep intimacy, deep connection, that don't have anything, if you will, of the sacred in them or, you know, that deeper layer of intimacy and passion. They're more for physical reasons sometimes. And there's performance anxiety involved in that because you don't know the partner at all. And so what does sex become? But can I reach the goal, right? So it becomes performance. Am I going to score a touchdown here?
Starting point is 00:57:20 So, you know, that's a very painful thing to see out there. The other thing is that there's so much pornography that people are using, almost in some cases, in an addictive way to relieve their stress, relieve their tension, their anxiety. But unfortunately, the porn out there sets them up to have, again, very impersonal sex in which they are the ones controlling it all. There's nothing about porn that is, what would you like? They're not saying that to the screen image, right? So, it's non-relational then they go into a real situation what do they do well it's not necessarily going to be emotionally intimate and really interactive except on a physical level. So, you know, that's one manifestation that we're seeing
Starting point is 00:58:27 out there of all the anxiety. Or people just shutting down and not having sex because they're afraid that if I have sex, does that mean I have to commit? Does that mean I have to have a relationship? I'm scared to have a relationship? I'm scared to have a relationship. I'm not ready for a relationship. My parents divorced. I don't want one. So people are reluctant to really engage in a deeper sexual connection. There are cultural differences in America, too, that are really important. And a lot of times people don't have access to the subcultures in America that actually do sex very well and do romance very well. So in a very large study that we did with the Regis Digest, where the Gallup poll did all the work, we were able to ask about sexuality. I learned that in Hispanic and Latino cultures in the United States, actually, you don't feel like a man unless you know what turns your woman on. You don't feel like a woman unless you know what turns your man on. So inquiry is a very
Starting point is 00:59:37 important part. And when children come, it becomes even more important in Hispanic and Latino cultures to really emphasize sexuality. It's not the last item of a long to-do list. And with gay and lesbian couples we've studied in our laboratory, they're much more comfortable talking about sex in a non-defensive way, using humor, and really listening to one another and being able to talk about it comfortably, compared to the European cultures, the African cultures in the United States that are really much more uncomfortable talking about sex and were seen as a test of your masculinity or femininity.
Starting point is 01:00:18 Yeah, I never really even thought about the idea that there's a cultural overlay to all of this. So I want to start to come full circle with us, but I thought I'd share a comment. What our listeners can't see is as we've been sitting here, we're in a little triangle. And as you've both been talking, I'm watching a dance happen between you,
Starting point is 01:00:44 which is fascinating and beautiful. It's this, I mean, literally, you know, what listeners can see is you're sort of like, you keep tossing the ball to each other. There's a knowing glance, like, this is you. And then like, and you, and you, and there's this like really graceful dance that's been going on at the same time. So is that natural? Or have you guys been practicing all of these things for a lot of years? Well, let's see. I, you know, I think it has evolved over time. So, yes, we have practiced.
Starting point is 01:01:21 We have practiced and reached agreements. And we also, because we know each other so well that's kind of evolved over time too, more naturally as to, okay, that's your topic. I have no idea how to answer that, right? And I have to learn not to interrupt. There are times when I get real enthusiastic about something Julie is saying and I want to add something to it. I have to learn how to be quiet and just wait for her to finish. And I make mistakes. We both do. But, you know, part of the thing is that's funny, speaking of cultures, is that, you know, John is from New York, so he'll talk fast. And, you know, I'm from Oregon, where we talk really slowly.
Starting point is 01:02:25 And so poor John is stuck, you know, having to wait and wait and wait, being a New Yorker. And also the other thing, you know, that is so true, both of us are Jewish, is that, you know, interruption and argument is Jewish love. So, you know, we have to slow things down a little bit. That's too funny. It's funny. I'm in Portland at least a few times a year, and it never stops to amaze me that wherever I go to get a cup of coffee, I'll step up to the counter and the person behind the counter will just look at me and say, hey, so what are you up to today? And I'm like, we don't do that. We don't ask. We don't answer.
Starting point is 01:03:10 We don't want to know. And it's sort of like it's this perfect sort of like just that one moment really demonstrates the difference in the way that we exist on the two different coasts. This is true. So as we come full circle here, the name of this is Good Life Project. If I offer out the phrase to each of you, to live a good life, what comes up? This is true. your purpose. So I've spent a lot of time figuring out what's my purpose. When I was in India, the problems there that I witnessed were so overwhelming. But eventually, as I wrote and wrote and wrote in my journal, I realized if I could just help one person to heal, by golly, you know, it would never offset all the luxury I grew up with, all the advantages and privileges I grew up with. But, you know, I'll try by reaching
Starting point is 01:04:19 out and trying to help other people. That's my purpose. So live a good life for me means continuing to do what I do and throwing a little nature in there every now and then. Well, for me, I think one of the really big realizations is that a really good love relationship is your best guarantee of health, longevity, happiness, success in life. And the emphasis is always so much in love relationships on getting the love you want. But I think what you really gain in a love relationship is you gain the ability to love. The joy is the opportunity to love fully. And that emphasis is what makes for good living, I think. That ability to love your children well, to love your partner well. And that's what you get. Can I just modify that phrase to fit what you're saying, which is give the love you want.
Starting point is 01:05:25 Right. Thank you both. Thank you. Hey, before you leave, if you love this episode, say that you'll also love the conversation we had with Eli Finkel about the self-actualized marriage. You'll find a link to Eli's episode in the show notes. This episode of Good Life Project was produced by executive producers, Lindsay Fox and me, Jonathan Fields, editing help by Alejandro Ramirez, Christopher Carter, Crafted Era Theme Music, and special thanks to Shelley Dell for her research on this episode.
Starting point is 01:05:55 And of course, if you haven't already done so, please go ahead and follow Good Life Project in your favorite listening app. And if you found this conversation interesting or inspiring or valuable, and chances are you did since you're still listening here, would you do me a personal favor, a seven second favor and share it maybe on social or by text or by email, even just with one person, just copy the link from the app you're using and tell those, you know, those you love, those you want to help navigate this thing called life a little better so we can all do it better together with more ease and more joy. Tell them to listen.
Starting point is 01:06:30 Then even invite them to talk about what you've both discovered because when podcasts become conversations and conversations become action, that's how we all come alive together. Until next time, I'm Jonathan Fields signing off for Good Life Project. We'll be right back. Tell me how to fly this thing. You know what the difference between me and you is? You're going to die. Don't shoot him. We need him.
Starting point is 01:07:26 Y'all need a pilot. The Apple Watch Series 10 is here. It has the biggest display ever. It's also the thinnest Apple Watch ever, making it even more comfortable on your wrist, whether you're running, swimming, or sleeping. And it's the fastest-charging Apple Watch, getting you eight hours of charge in
Starting point is 01:07:46 just 15 minutes the apple watch series 10 available for the first time in glossy jet black aluminum compared to previous generations iphone 10s are later required charge time and actual results will vary

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