Podcast Page Sponsor Ad
Display ad placement on specific high-traffic podcast pages and episode pages
Monthly Rate: $50 - $5000
Exist Ad Preview
How to Be a Better Human - How to have a better romantic relationship (w/ Stephanie Yates-Anyabwile)
Episode Date: May 5, 2025What is a romantic relationship “supposed” to look like? How do you feel when your relationship doesn’t check all the boxes? In this episode, licensed marriage and family therapist Stephanie Yat...es-Anyabwile talks about everything from how to get into couples counseling to navigating hard conversations to understanding the difference between relationship dynamics in reality and on reality TV (which she actually loves and thinks there’s a lot to learn from watching). FollowHost: Chris Duffy (@chrisiduffy | chrisduffycomedy.com)Guest: Stephanie Yates-Anyabwile (Instagram: @_steph.anya | Youtube: @stephanya) Linkswhatsanyamind.com/Subscribe to TED Instagram: @tedYouTube: @TEDTikTok: @tedtoksLinkedIn: @ted-conferencesWebsite: ted.comPodcasts: ted.com/podcastsFor the full text transcript, visit go.ted.com/BHTranscripts Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi, it's Morgan from Off the Shelf and I'm here to tell you how my Google Pixel 9 helps
me read more. Google actually gifted me this phone and now I use it non-stop. The other day,
I was trying to remember the name of this book someone recommended and instead of spiraling
into a 40 minute social media scroll, I just asked Gemini on my Pixel. What's that romantic
book with a competition and a ghost helping her through the trials.
It's like having that one friend who always knows what you're talking about.
Learn more about the Google Pixel 9 at store.google.com.
Audible invites you to listen for the thrill.
Escape the everyday with stories that leave you breathless.
Whether it's heart-pounding suspense like the Audible Originals' 10 Rules for the
Perfect Murder by James Patterson,
or the downloaded with Brendan Fraser.
Or how about a fantasy adventure like Onyx Storm or Amelia Heart's The Sirens?
Audible has an incredible selection of audiobooks, podcasts, and originals all in one app.
Start listening and discover what's beyond the edge of your seat
when you sign
up for a free 30-day trial at audible.ca.
An Apple Watch for your kids lets you stay connected with them wherever they go. They
can call you to pick them up at grandma's or text you because they forgot their lunch
again. Their watch will even send an alert to let you know they finally got to school.
Great for kids who don't have a phone, because their Apple Watch is managed by you, on your
iPhone.
iPhone XS are later required with additional wireless service plan.
You're listening to How to Be a Better Human.
I'm your host, Chris Duffy.
When it comes to romantic relationships, they often start with a lot of mystery.
We're always trying to figure out, what does this person like?
What's their favorite food?
What makes them laugh?
Where are we going to go together?
Later on, after you've been together for a while, sometimes we lose a little bit of
that curiosity about the specificity of the other person and what our relationship with them is going
to look like.
Instead, we can sometimes get bogged down in ideas about what a relationship is supposed
to be.
So then, instead of being thrilled by their idiosyncrasies and quirks, we're kind of
comparing our actual relationship against this imagined scorecard of some hypothetical
perfect one.
And that can be really difficult to navigate.
It's also incredibly common, and it's something that today's guest, Stephanie Yates-Añabuele,
has thought about a lot.
As a licensed marriage and family therapist, she has found that that mode of comparing
our relationship to an imagined idea of what a relationship is supposed to be,
it can often hold us back from deeper love
and happiness and connection.
Here's a clip from Stephanie's TED Talk.
Relationship experts have found
that one of the primary obstacles that couples face
are their own expectations.
When we compare ourselves to societal norms,
we can develop a sense of resentment toward our partner,
as well as a sense of shame
for how we ourselves are coming up short.
Now, before we really get into this,
I have to say that some of us have to reckon with the fact
that we may be with the wrong person.
And that will be clear if your deepest desire
is that your partner change fundamental aspects of who they are.
You really want them to be a different person.
But if you're confident that you're with the right person
and you just still feel frustrated and dissatisfied,
we may find that rejecting everything we've known
about good relationships is the key to actually having one.
In today's episode, we're gonna be talking a lot about what a good relationship looks
like and how anyone listening, yes, even you, can get there.
Let's get into it.
Hi, I'm Stephanie, a son, you really a licensed marriage and family therapist.
Okay, well, Stephanie, let's start at the beginning.
How did you first become interested in relationship dynamics?
As a child, I became really obsessed with what was a traditional family structure versus
what was untraditional, because I grew up in a traditional family structure with two
parents, two kids.
As a child, I was very inquisitive and I was kind of encouraged to just ask whatever was
on my mind.
And so I remember going to like someone's house
and I would look at a family photo and I'd say,
okay, is this their child?
And they say, yes, I'm like, and are they married?
And they'd say, no, and I'd be so confused.
This is their child and they're not married, you know?
And then I remember a time when I was like a toddler,
my mom tells this story or told this story,
she passed away in 2014. I was in a toddler. My mom tells this story or told this story. She passed away in 2014.
I was in a high chair and we were at her sister's house
and my aunt is a principal.
And so sometimes, you know, if there's a kid
who's having a hard time,
at the time she would kind of open her home up to them.
She had three kids of her own.
So here I am three years old.
I have a crush on this 16 year old boy
that my aunt's taken in.
And you know, I'm thinking in my head, I'm like, we're going to get married one day.
In this high chair, we're at dinner and my cousin refers to him as her brother.
And I was like, brother, don't say brother, then him can't marry with me.
So literally at three years old, I understood that if my cousin claimed this man as her
brother, that made him my cousin and that it would be inappropriate for us to get married.
A lot of little girls at that age still believe they can marry their father.
So those are the kind of things that my dad was paying a lot of attention to.
And he was like, this girl is obsessed with relationships and family and marriage. And as I got older, I became more inquisitive,
you know, less rude of my questions,
but definitely always curious about how a family became
the type of family they are today.
Well, I'm curious because obviously this is one
of the big things that people think about
when they think about you and your work
is taking some of this pressure off of relationships to conform to,
and I'm putting this in big quotes,
what a relationship is supposed to look like.
You have really been a strong advocate
for a relationship is supposed to look like
whatever is healthy and functional for the two people in it,
or for the more than two people in it.
When I was younger, we were in a church environment
that my grandparents founded
where most of the children around me were in a similar family structure like me. And I just
assumed that that's how all families worked. So that's why I was always very perplexed when I
would see families that were structured differently. But what's interesting is that as I got older and really paid attention to the health
of those relationships around me,
I realized that just because a person is in
what would be considered a traditional
or classic family structure,
it doesn't necessarily mean it's healthy,
doesn't mean it's thriving,
doesn't mean that they're happy.
My parents, their story is really weird
because my mom was actually engaged to someone else when she got engaged to my dad and he knew and he didn't care.
My dad was just like, if she likes me, she likes me.
And then she told her other fiance like three weeks before the wedding with my dad that she was marrying my dad.
But they knew each other for a very short period of time, very short engagements.
People would be engaged for maybe like six weeks. they put it together, get married at the church.
And so when I got with my husband, I was 18 and we dated for six years
before we even got engaged.
And I remember, you know, having family members, close friends say, you know, I
don't agree with this, I don't believe in being with someone that long before you
get married.
And, you know, at the time I was kind of thinking, but this is the healthiest relationship I've even
seen. Like it's the relationship I'm in, but it's the healthiest one that I've seen. And so
why are we judging it based off of like an arbitrary decision of when we should get married
or if we should get married? It was always our plan to get married, but it frustrated me that people were putting their own projected timeline on it.
So as I got older and I witnessed and experienced different types of structures for families and relationships,
that the people who were choosing to do their own thing were the people that I found to be the happiest.
And I see the same in my work. It seems like there's often this challenge
in healthy relationships,
which is even though this is good and healthy,
I worry that it doesn't live up
to what it is supposed to look like.
Absolutely.
And I think it's based on those preconceived notions
we have about how a relationship should be structured and the trajectory that a relationship should take.
For example, if I'm, you know, on year four or five with my boyfriend,
and, you know, I'm looking around at other people who are getting married and thinking,
wow, that's where we should be. If we're not there, then maybe that's a reflection of us not actually being as happy as I thought we were. That comparison can
create some tension or relationship that otherwise would have been fine, but it's
the comparison itself that's creating the tension. So I find that helping people
peel back the layers of why is this important to you and seeing how much of
it is just this is what you've seen, this is what you expect, and this is actually in
alignment with your personal values. For me, my personal value was being with
someone who was respectful, someone who was reliable, someone who was committed
to me. That was more important to me than just being married, especially at a time
when we're not financially ready,
when we hadn't gotten our degrees yet, when we really hadn't done any living yet. It was more
important to me to have those experiences than just to get married. What does it mean to be in
a traditional relationship and what does it mean to be in an untraditional relationship? So I think
of it just that traditional expectation
we have with relationships or historically we've had.
You meet someone, you know,
typically you would meet them when you're maybe
in your twenties, maybe you date.
I think the expectation now is probably around two
or three years, then you get engaged.
Maybe nowadays engagements are about a year to two years
and then you get married.
But it's even interesting to think about
how that timeline has changed,
because 30 years ago,
that timeline would have been considered pretty long,
whereas now that's more expected.
And so monogamous and being in a relationship
where you're following this expected timeline.
It does seem like a lot of what we're talking about is the performance of a relationship where you're following this expected timeline.
It does seem like a lot of what we're talking about
is the performance of a relationship
rather than the reality of a relationship.
So I wonder if you could just speak about that,
the difference between performing a relationship
and living a relationship.
Absolutely, and I think social media
is a huge factor in that now.
We had to perform in our relationships,
you're performing for your community, maybe your church, maybe the people at
your job. Now we're performing on a really large scale, you know, getting the
perfect picture, having the perfect captions, you know, getting that silly
moment on your story to show people how unserious you and your partner are.
And so when I think about performance,
it's so much bigger even than just that timeline.
It's how we interact.
You know, we don't want people to even know
that we have conflict a lot of the time.
My husband and I have always been kind of big on,
well, I am, he's not.
But if something's frustrating, I just say it.
I don't care where we are.
I don't care who's around.
You know, I'll just say it.
And people, when we were dating, people would always comment on like, you guys
will get so annoyed with each other.
And then like five seconds later, you're hugging and kissing.
And I'm like, to me, that's how it should be is just get it out, express the
grievance, address it, get past it and move on.
Whereas a lot of times I see people kind of harboring because they so badly do not
want other people to see that they're having frustrations with their partner. And then by
the time you get home, maybe you're also not comfortable bringing it up because now was hours
ago, then now it's days ago, then now it's weeks ago. And so I think the performance aspect can
affect so many elements of our relationship, even just a conflict management.
can affect so many elements of our relationship, even just a conflict management.
We're going to take a quick break,
and then we will be back with more from Stephanie Yates,
Anya Bwile, Don't Go Anywhere.
Hi, it's Morgan from Off the Shelf, and I'm here to tell you how my Google Pixel 9 helps me read more.
Google actually gifted me this phone, and now I use it nonstop.
The other day, I was trying to remember the name of this book someone recommended, and
instead of spiraling into a 40-minute social media scroll, I just asked Gemini on my Pixel.
What's that romantic book with a competition and a ghost helping her through the trials?
The book you're likely thinking of is Phantasma by Kaylee Smith.
Here's a breakdown of why it fits your description.
It's like having that one friend who always knows what you're talking about.
Learn more about the Google Pixel 9 at store.google.com.
An Apple Watch for your kids lets you stay connected with them wherever they go.
They can call you to pick them up at grandma's or text you because they forgot their lunch again.
Their watch will even send an alert to let you know they finally got to school.
Great for kids who don't have a phone because their Apple Apple Watch is managed by you, on your iPhone.
iPhone XS are later required
with additional wireless service plan.
If you're anything like us, you love attention.
And my favorite way to get all eyes on me
is with next level shiny glossy hair.
Which is why we're so excited to tell y'all
about the new LaMela gloss collection
from the girlies at Tresime.
And gigglers, we've got you too,
because Tresemme partnered with us to bring you 1-800-GLOSS,
a special bonus episode of Giggly Squad,
where Hannah and I give advice
on all things hair and giving gloss.
Check out the episode
and grab the LaMeller gloss collection today,
because I'm officially declaring this spring gloss season.
And we are back! We've been talking with marriage and family therapist Stephanie Yates-Agnébile about
how many of us get held back by our ideas about what a good relationship is supposed
to look like.
And then we feel disappointed if our actual relationship doesn't match this movie template
that we have in our minds.
Letting go of some of those rigid ideas can help us figure out with our partners the relationship
that actually works best for both of us.
And yet, there is a reason why these relationship templates are so appealing.
It's nice to not have to spend all your mental energy making decisions and reinventing the
wheel, building a relationship shape from
scratch. There's an ease to these templates. And I don't think that's all bad. So how do we
balance that tension, Stephanie? I imagine this must come up in your practice with couples all
the time. Actually, it doesn't. But I love that point. And I think there's a lot of value in the
template. It's one of those things where it's not about totally invalidating the template. It's one of those things where it's not about totally
invalidating the template.
It's about allowing yourself to customize when needed, right?
So if I get a car, I love the car,
but I don't really love the color,
I can change the color of that car.
Even if other people aren't a big fan of bubble gum pink,
if that's what I like, you know, that's
what's going to make me happy.
I'll hop in that car, that bubble gum pink car,
and have a smile on my face.
And so I totally agree with that. I mean, we're not talking about necessarily like the most drastic,
most unconventional changes.
Sometimes it's something very, very small.
So small in fact, that one of the biggest asks I'll get when I'm doing interviews
is the people want to hear those crazy examples of you know, what's something really out there that somebody did?
Because that's what's enticing. That's what is juicy. But the reality is the most effective changes are things that really sound boring because at the end of the day, they are boring.
They're just different. It's like, yeah, they sleep in two different beds.
That's really not that exciting.
But somebody could hear that
and now it's a juicy piece of gossip.
They're like, oh, did you hear they're here?
They're sleeping in separate beds.
It's interesting how fascinated we are
with what other humans are doing.
And because of that, we can make the most basic, boring,
benign things,
you know, topics for weeks.
And so that's what I'm talking about.
I'm so glad you brought up the beds thing.
It's a good example of something that is like at its core,
just a purely logistical thing, right?
Like where do we sleep at the end of the day?
And yet it can get loaded up
with all of these sort of expectations,
societal, personal, and also like, what will our friends think?
Even if you wanted to sleep in separate beds and you had the space for another bed,
you might think like, but what will that mean when it doesn't have to mean anything?
Yeah, exactly. I actually even hate the term for it now.
You know, before people were just
sleeping in separate beds and now they're calling it a sleep divorce.
I'm like, woo, why, like why that language?
That's so intense sleep divorce.
I remember there was a couple that has a big platform that came out about sleeping
separately because they had two babies under one, right?
They just had a newborn and then they had like an 11 month old and they were having a super hard time with their schedule for sleep. And so one of them was sleeping, I think, in a bed in the nursery and the other one was sleeping in the bed.
And everybody was like, Oh, well, I hope you're ready to get a divorce. This is step number one. Or people were using it really to support their own theories about how unhappy this couple really was
and how they were pretending to be in this great relationship.
And I was like, wow, we're really reading a lot into something that they didn't even have to share.
They were sharing it so that they could help other couples who might be having the same struggle
because at the end of the day, if we're well-rested, we're better partners for each other.
We're better parents. But if we're both exhausted, we're better partners for each other. We're better parents.
But if we're both exhausted, we're cranky, we're frustrated, we're resenting each other,
we're questioning why we ever had kids in the first place, that's not really a thriving
environment for a relationship to grow.
And transitions are some of the most stressful aspects of life.
And most of the time when people are coming into therapy, it's because they've just experienced some major transition whether it's hey
I just got married, hey I just moved, I just had a baby, I just got divorced.
Those changes create somewhat of an identity crisis and in those moments we
have to be willing to reevaluate the rules of our life and something as
simple as sleeping in the same bed with our partner could be a rule that we kind of change just so that we can both get sleep and know that we're
tending to our kids and being our best selves.
How do you handle transitions and reevaluate rules in a way that brings you together rather
than pushes you apart?
Well, I think by really checking in with each other on how do you envision yourself changing
through this transition. That's an ongoing conversation, especially when people are making that transition
from zero to one kid, you know, it goes from just us to now we have somebody who needs
all of our attention and you know, how do we still focus on ourselves? Then the transition
is like two to three kids where now the kids outnumber the parents and it's like, you know, we can't just both take one and do something, you know.
So in those moments, you really have to check in with each other and be honest.
Sometimes we don't really share where we're at because we're worried
about our partner being offended.
Let's say you might not be the primary caretaker.
Maybe you're back at work, but you're still helping with the kids while working a full-time job.
And maybe one partner is working, staying at home at this time, taking care of the kids.
That partner who's working might not feel comfortable saying like,
I'm so exhausted and it's so hard now transitioning into having these kids and,
you know, having to manage not just my life, but our lives.
And they might be worried that there are other partners like, you're stressed, you're tired,
I'm the one at home all day.
And when we don't allow our partners the space to really process what they're going through
emotionally, nobody has the opportunity to rethink what they're doing.
So if we can just hear that and say and validate it,
I can understand that I'm also really exhausted. I can't imagine what it's like to be working in
helping out in the capacity that you are. Like I thought it would be a little bit easier being
at home, but I'm finding this to be way harder than what it was when I was working full time.
So I get it. And then asking each other, is there anything that I could do that would make your life a little bit easier?
They might say, I haven't been able to sleep well. That's how we get to sleeping separately. Or maybe they say, you know, I've been really thinking that I need to go on a trip by myself.
I know that sounds super selfish, but I'd be willing to take care of the logistics, maybe get my mom or your mom to come and stay with you
for a while, then it's your turn.
You take a trip by yourself, you know,
really allowing ourselves to think creatively
because your partner could get offended by that.
Oh, you're gonna take a vacation
and I'm gonna be stuck here with the kids.
And if they feel that way, they say,
hey, how about you go first?
I can see you be, you're probably really burnt out.
Let me hold down the fort and then I'll go because we really realistically both of us can't go right now
With the kids and so I think that
Checking in with each other being really honest about how you're feeling with the current structure of your relationship of your life
That naturally opens the door for conversations about what we could be doing differently
and if you're struggling come to a couple's therapist,
because so many of the, you know, a little bit outside of the box,
things that my couples do, really, they came up with those ideas.
And I just kind of said, hmm, you said you wish
that you guys could live in a different, live in different houses.
You wish that. Is that a possibility?
Is that feasible? And they're kind of taking it back like, oh, I didn, you wish that. Is that a possibility? Is that feasible?
And they're kind of taking it back like,
oh, I didn't really mean that,
but it's like, let's think about it.
That's a possibility.
Could we make that happen if we really wanted to?
How would we feel about that?
What would that mean on a larger scale?
Would you look at that as your relationship is failing
or is that something that your relationship could survive?
And so those kinds of conversations, I think,
can open up the door to those creative solutions.
It also makes me think that a lot of what we've talked about
is underlined by like a real fear
that if we step away from what I've been holding onto,
that this thing is gonna instantly dissolve.
The house of cards is gonna collapse.
Like the one thing that is keeping our marriage together
is that we sleep in the same bed.
Or the one thing that is keeping our marriage together
is that I'm not admitting how hard it is right now.
And if I was to say, like, this is actually a challenge,
or I was to say like, hey,
I'm going to sleep in another room,
then like that is the first step in an impossible
to reverse slide towards divorce, heartbreak, disaster.
And I think it's also worth saying,
sometimes divorce isn't the worst option,
but people are really thinking about these as like,
if I do this one thing, it's gonna go terrible
and it's gonna be horrible for everyone.
And what I'm hearing from you is that a lot of your work
is to say, it doesn't necessarily mean that.
You can try things and you can be honest
without it meaning that this person is gonna get pushed away
Yeah, and the key word there is try I always present it to my couples as an experiment
Let's test it out. So if you feel like alright, we've tried for two weeks sleeping apart and
I'm actually crankier. I actually feel more distant. This is not working for me.
Then we need to figure out other solutions.
I do want to ask though, we are just talking from the assumption that couples
may have different needs, but that they're working in good faith and that
it's a healthy relationship.
Where is the line where it's like, this is untraditional, but not because it's
just different because it's unhealthy or it's like a power dynamic
that you don't want to continue in the relationship.
How do you figure that out?
I think simply by measuring both partners level of wanting
or being open to the change, right?
So if one partner is like, I want to live separately
and the other partner is like, I want to live separately and the other partner is like,
live separately. So who's going to have the kids? This is dysfunctional for our kids. We're going
back and forth between two different places, you know, where I'm going to be stuck with watching
them. And then they're like, well, I just feel like this is what's going to work for me. And
otherwise I just don't want to be together. Well, that's an ultimatum.
That's not you putting the relationship first.
You're not doing it for the health of the relationship.
You're doing it with the sole focus of what works for you.
That is what I think is dysfunctional.
So if you and your partner are both open to experimenting and
also coming through on your promise that this is an experiment.
If I have a couple that's going gonna test out living apart, for example,
I like to have some sort of contract in place.
How often are we gonna talk on the phone?
How often are we gonna have a date night?
How often are we having sleepovers?
Let's be very concrete, because this is gonna be what we consider the bare
minimum for making sure you're maintaining your emotional intimacy while living apart. So making sure you're coming through on those things, being loyal and making
it clear. The reason we're making this change is so that our relationship can be better. This is not
a punishment toward you. This is not me just testing out the waters of being without you,
right? Because this is not a trial separation. Me sleeping in a separate bed is not me just saying,
how would I like if I slept in a separate bed
so we could break up?
You know, if you're looking at it as,
I want to be my best self for you,
and I recognize when I'm losing rest,
I'm not a good partner,
that's a healthy motivation to try something different.
If the motivation is exclusively about what benefits you,
or more so about punishing your partner or testing out what it's like not to be together and just not using the word separation.
I would consider those to be unhealthy intentions.
And what about if you feel like if you're the partner who is not proposing it, but who is being proposed to, I think a lot of people feel fear when they're talking about navigating changes in relationships that it's like if I don't do this, I'm going to lose this person. And so I'd rather try anything than lose them,
even if they really wouldn't rather try that thing. What do you say to those people?
And that is a tricky, that's a tricky balance, right? Because in that sense, it could also feel
like an ultimatum. If you have that mentality that if you don't do this, you're going to lose your
partner, that is you basically giving yourself an ultimatum, even you have that mentality that if you don't do this you're going to lose your partner, that is you basically giving yourself an ultimatum even if that's not what your partner
is saying, right? But I think if you recognize that your relationship is in a place where
experimenting with something different from what you all have been doing for the last few months
or years of your relationship and you think
that there's a chance that this relationship that you do really want could be salvaged.
Even if you know you're not you aren't really sure about this, who would be? It's out of
the box for a reason. It's not normal. You have no model for what this would look like
and how successful it will be. It's scary for everybody.
I don't expect you to be completely comfortable
with something you've never seen.
But if you're open to seeing if this can improve
what has felt like a dysfunctional dynamic,
I think that's still healthy.
You're just worried and concerned about the outcome.
That's the case for all experiments.
We don't know the ending.
We don't know the outcome of an experiment. That's the purpose of doing it.
We're going to do a quick experiment right now that's called taking a break for podcast ads. And my hypothesis is we will be right back. It's a very strong hypothesis. Hi, it's Morgan from Off the Shelf, and I'm here to tell you how my Google Pixel 9 helps
me read more.
Google actually gifted me this phone, now I use it non-stop.
The other day I was trying to remember the name of this book someone recommended and
instead of spiraling into a 40 minute social media scroll I just asked Gemini on my Pixel.
What's that romance-y book with a competition and a ghost helping her through the trials?
The book you're likely thinking of is Phantasma by Kaylee Smith. Here's a breakdown of why
it fits your description. It's like having that one friend who always knows what you're talking about.
Learn more about the Google Pixel 9 at store.google.com.
Audible invites you to listen for the thrill.
Escape the everyday with stories that leave you breathless.
Whether it's heart pounding suspense
like the Audible originals,
10 rules for the perfect murder by James Patterson,
or the downloaded with Brendan Fraser.
Or how about a fantasy adventure like Onyx Storm or Amelia Hart's The Sirens?
Audible has an incredible selection of audiobooks, podcasts, and originals all in one app.
Start listening and discover what's beyond the edge of your seat when you sign up for
a free 30-day trial at audible.ca.
If you're anything like us, you love attention.
And my favorite way to get all eyes on me is with next level shiny glossy hair.
Which is why we're so excited to tell y'all about the new LaMelaure gloss collection from
the girlies at Tresemme.
And gigglers, we've got you too, because Tresemmay partnered with us to bring you 1-800-GLOSS,
a special bonus episode of Giggily Squad, where Hannah and I give advice on all things
hair and giving gloss.
Check out the episode and grab the LaMeller gloss collection today, because I'm officially
declaring this spring gloss season.
And we are back.
Stephanie, how do you encourage people to have conversations to figure out what their
individual and then shared relationship expectations are?
Just to give a low stakes example, silence can be really bad.
It can be like, you're giving me the silent treatment, you're fuming, we're not communicating.
Or it can be, you're so comfortable that you don't need to say anything,
that we're just sitting in the same room
and you're reading your book and I'm eating my breakfast
and we're not talking in the most loving of ways.
But often there's a mismatch in like how we interpret silence.
And I know that there's many, many, many other things
that could fill in that blank instead of silence.
So how do you encourage couples
to actually have communication about that?
In that case, most of the time it is our history, our past, a lot of times trauma
that influences the way we experience a situation.
So if I grew up in a withholding environment where my mom punished me by not talking to me,
for example, then I might interpret my partner's silence as doing the same thing. Whereas if they grew up in like a household full of introverts
where everybody did their own thing, they view silence as a comfort, it means something totally
different to them. And this is why it's very hard to talk about managing these conversations without
therapy. I'm biased on that because a lot of my couples,
I just can't imagine them trying to manage these conversations on their own because we
so rarely can see our own bias or the impact of our history on how we're engaging without
an objective person telling us that.
And that objective person sometimes can't be our partner, right?
Because it feels like you're taking things I've shared with you and using them against me.
So it feels like they're breaking that trust by bringing up your past.
Whereas a therapist is a little bit of a safer, more neutral person to bring up something,
maybe your partner or maybe even you already see, but they're bringing it up in a way that's gonna
feel more productive. So for me, it's important sometimes if you're at that point to bring it to therapy.
I have couples who come to me preventatively. They're like, okay, we're just going to be
preemptive here. We don't have any issues, but we want to make sure that we have good skills for
communication. We want to explore if there's anything in our history that might affect
our upcoming marriage or just our relationship. And I love sessions like that because we're
not conflict focused. Let's explore what you've learned about relationships growing up. What
is your the healthiest relationship you've seen? What's been the most damaging interaction
you've ever had? Those sorts of things so that we can kind of plan ahead.
But if you haven't already done that in advance, it's not too late.
But I think it is helpful to have a third party that can help you kind of process and
see, okay, you said something similar about your child, that when your child isn't speaking
to you, you get really anxious and worried and frustrated.
So that lets me know it's not just your marriage.
You're feeling this in multiple contexts.
So do you think there's a possibility that it's more your perception than what the person's
intention is and gently walking them into that silence is a great example of how people
can be having completely different experiences in the same moment.
How do you actually get into couples therapy as a couple?
How do you have that conversation
and then make it actually happen?
I always say to focus on the positives
and to focus on your goal of like thriving
in your relationship.
What the mistake we make a lot of times
is we wanna bring it up when we've just had an argument
or when we're in a bad place, frustrated with our partner and we're like, Oh my gosh,
we need to go to couples therapy or you need help or I need somebody to explain
you why you're doing this and this wrong. That,
that's not really saying I'm invested in our growth as a couple that saying you
need to fix yourself and I want to be there to witness it.
So making sure it's clear to your partner, you know,
I'm noticing that we're kind of coming to the same issue over and over again
I don't think we're successfully talking about it
It's super important to me that we communicate well because I want us to be together as long as possible
And I don't want something as small as this or even as big as this to get in the way of that goal
When I decided to be with you, I didn't mean to do that short term
And so let's get as much help as we can to make sure that's a reality for us. So as couples, it's
easy to look at our partner as the problem or our partner's behavior as the problem.
The more that you can externalize that and look at the problem as separate from your partner or
from your relationship, the more successful communication will be as we're talking about
that issue, right?
So let's say your partner smoke cigarettes.
We don't want to say, you're smoking is such an issue.
We'll say, I've noticed in our relationship,
cigarettes have been a major stressor for our relationship.
And then your partner probably can agree with that.
They probably can say, yeah, that has been a challenge,
not just in this relationship, but others I've had.
Or it's something, you know, I don't want to continue doing, but I'm having a really
hard time stopping.
Now, we're a team tackling the issue of cigarettes, not me attacking you for smoking.
That makes sense.
Oh, it totally makes sense.
I mean, I think this is long enough in the past that it's fine for me to talk about.
But like seven years ago now, my wife and I had like a really big fight.
And I remember like going into the other room
and furiously typing on the computer,
like marriage and family counseling,
how to have a loving relationship,
like fixmymarriagenow.com.
And you know, I'm just like,
this is probably not the best way
to like approach a loving partnership
is to be like angrily typing,
like how to make love bigger,
how to help relationship.
Ah, you know, like that's just like not the energy
you want to bring into like a productive counseling.
And I just remember like feeling like we need help.
This is how we're going to do it.
And I know that that's not the right way,
but it does seem like that's often how people end up
in couples counseling is like in these low moments,
in these really challenging moments.
Yeah.
I just think that as long as you can reiterate to your partner, like I recognize
that I also play a big part in the issue that we're having. I think there's a pattern playing
out here. I'm not smart enough to figure it out. And I'm struggling and I would like for us to get
some help so that it doesn't continue happening. just communicating that because when your partner feels like they're about to be brought into a situation
where they're attacked because you found this counselor
and you updated them on all these issues
you're having with your partner,
that is not an environment where they're gonna feel
comfortable opening up enough and being vulnerable enough
to really identify the issue that's causing the problems
in your relationship.
It requires so much trust and safety and therapy
especially couples therapy to really really find the issue because we develop a pattern of skirting around
problems in our relationships and it takes a while to feel safe enough to
Actually say the problem or to actually show emotion or be comfortable with our
partner showing emotion. The better you can approach the idea of therapy, the more open your
partner will be coming into therapy. Because if they already come in feeling like they need to be
as defensive as they are in your arguments, it's going to take us a while to get to where we need
to be so that we can make some real progress.
Do you view couples counseling and marriage and family therapy? Is it more like you have
a house that has a burst pipe and you don't know how to fix the pipe? So you call a plumber
in and this plumber fixes the pipe and solves the problem. Or is it more like you have an
issue with the landscaping and it gets fixed, but you're always going to
need to mow the lawn and trim the hedges and rake the leaves. Is it like a discrete fix or is it this
ongoing thing that you can't really ever be done with because that's not how it works?
I love both of those metaphors and it depends on the issue we're coming in about, right? So
if we're coming in about an issue really with one
of these out of the box solutions
that we've been talking about,
like if it really boils down to you're having
a hard time sleeping and you want to make sure
that your partner understands your intention
and asking about sleeping in separate rooms
and you guys are able to do that,
we get three months past and you know,
everything is still going well, no one's feeling threatened, that issue has been resolved. That is
not really something we need to continue being in therapy about but if things
come up later feel free to come back. You know if we're talking about something
that's a trauma response, like I have couples that might come to me where
their sex life is affected because one person has experienced sexual trauma,
something has happened that has experienced sexual trauma, something has happened
that has activated that trauma response for them and now they're not interested in sex.
That's probably going to take us a long time because, you know, maybe we've had a few moments
where we've been able to safely enjoy sex with each other.
That doesn't necessarily mean that that issue has been addressed.
And I would go further to say that that's a problem that probably would be better addressed
in individual therapy
So couples therapy might be good for just helping your partner understand the root of these issues and how you know
They can safely touch you and things like that
But as far as really unpacking the impact of that trauma, that's probably going to be best addressed in individual therapy
I always say, you know, if we can, let's get everybody in
individual therapy and couples therapy. And if we have to choose, if you can't
afford all three, let's do the individual therapy. Because individual
therapy, I think, can be more effective when we're talking about those
long-standing history-related issues that are affecting your relationship
today.
I have worked with people individually
where their relationship has improved
just through individual therapy.
And I've never even met their partner,
but because they've dealt with the issues they were having
with their own anger response and things like that,
their relationship has improved.
You break down a lot of relationship dynamics
from popular TV shows and movies on your YouTube and in other work that you've done.
What do you think that you learn from watching and analyzing those shows as opposed to the real people who you're working with in your practice?
I love looking at the earliest seasons of these shows before they really take off, you know, like reality dating shows.
You know, like reality dating shows.
Yeah.
You know, like Married at First Sight, Love is Blind, because I'm genuinely invested in the people who looked for love and could not find it any other way.
And they had to resort to something that's a little out of their comfort zone,
being on television and, you know, really put themselves out there to find love.
So, you know, there are some couples like Brett and Tiffany from season four of Love
is Blind, I'll even say like Jamie and Doug from season one of Married at First Sight.
Those couples that really show you that if you allow yourself to really be open, like Jamie on
Married at First Sight, she didn't find Doug attractive at all. And she made that clear. She
was crying before she walked down the aisle and here they've been married now, 10 years later, four kids.
And you came on a reality TV show and you were paired with someone that you didn't find
attractive.
But 10 years later, you're still in a successful, happy marriage because you were open to an
experience very different from what you want.
Nowadays, they're just casting hot people
who anybody would be attracted to
and who love to create drama,
and it just makes it a lot harder sometimes
to pull out those lessons, but there are lessons to be found
for the couple, the people who are there
and really looking for something serious.
So there's something you can pull from,
from anything for relationships,
and I have a lot of fun doing it because unfortunately I can't just sit back and
watch things. I'm just doing the same thing.
Same thing when I was three years old.
Yeah. Looking at pictures and like, are they married? Is that their kid?
Like, I can't just watch it. I'm just dissecting everything.
Oh, that's amazing. Thank you so much. It was such a pleasure talking to you.
I really, really, I can't thank you enough for making the time.
This was amazing. I love this.
I can't wait for it to come out and I can't wait to see
the other episodes because you actually have me walking away from this with
so many great examples and metaphors and I really
appreciate it because I'm using examples and metaphors every day with clients.
Oh, thank you. Please, steal it all.
It's yours now. That's super helpful. Oh, thank you. Please, steal, steal it all. It's all, it's yours now.
That's so nice.
I really appreciate that.
That is it for this episode of How to Be a Better Human.
Thank you so much to today's guest, Stephanie Yates Anya Bule.
You can find more from her on YouTube, social media,
or at whatsonyamind.com.
That's what and then the name Anya, A-N-Y-A, mind.com.
I'm your host, Chris Duffy, and you can find more from me,
including my weekly newsletter and other projects
at chrisduffycomedy.com.
How to Be a Better Human is put together by a team
who all sleep in tiny separate beds
in a large room together each night.
On the TED side, we've got Daniela Belarezzo,
Ban Ban Cheng, Chloe Shasha Brooks, Valentina Bohannini, Lainey Lott, Antonio Leigh, and Joseph De Bruyne.
This episode was fact-checked by Julia Dickerson and Mateus Salas, whose deepest and most powerful love is for the truth.
On the PRX side, they are throwing out all expectations and building a more beautiful audio relationship from the ground up.
I'm talking about Morgan Flannery, Noril, Patrick Grant, and Jocelyn Gonzalez.
Thanks again to you for listening.
Thank you for being in this audio relationship here with us.
Please share this episode with a friend or family member, with someone who you love and
you think would enjoy it is the number one way that we reach new listeners.
Thank you, thank you, thank you.
We will be back next week with more How to Be a Better Human.
Until then, take care and thanks again for listening.
Hi it's Morgan from off the shelf and I'm here to tell you how my Google Pixel 9 helps
me read more.
Google actually gifted me this phone and now I use it nonstop. The other day I was trying to remember the name of this
book someone recommended and instead of spiraling into a 40 minute social media
scroll I just asked Gemini on my Pixel. What's that romantic book with a
competition and a ghost helping her through the trials?
The book you're likely thinking of is Phantasma by Kaylee Smith. Here's a
breakdown of why it fits your description. It's like having that one
friend who always knows what you're talking about.
Learn more about the Google Pixel 9 at store.google.com.
You searched for your informant who disappeared without a trace.
You knew there were witnesses but lips were sealed.
You swept the city driving closer to the truth.
While curled up on the couch with your cat.
There's more to imagine when you listen.
Discover heart-pounding thrillers on Audible.
If you're anything like us, you love attention.
And my favorite way to get all eyes on me is with next level shiny glossy hair.
Which is why we're so excited to tell y'all about the new LaMeller gloss collection from
the Gurleys at Tresemme.
And gigglers, we've got you too.
Because Tresemme partnered with us to bring you 1-800-GLOSS, a special bonus episode of
Giggly Squad where Hannah and I give advice on all things hair and giving gloss. Check out the episode and grab the LaMeller gloss
collection today because I'm officially declaring this spring gloss season.