Love Life with Matthew Hussey - 297: Don't Let These Silent Killers Destroy Your Relationship
Episode Date: May 21, 2025What REALLY kills relationships? We often think it’s huge differences in personality or values that cause break ups, but just as often it’s the small, subtle, repeated behaviours that lead to rela...tionships ending. From the "Four Horsemen" of relationship conflict to the resentments that go unspoken until it’s too late, Matthew, Stephen and Audrey explore how these silent killers show up—and how to catch and heal them before they do lasting damage. Topics include A deep dive into criticism, contempt, defensiveness, and stonewalling (and how they sabotage love) Why “repair” matters more than perfection in long-term relationships The unconscious reasons some people can't say sorry and how to deal with it How resentment builds when we don’t feel seen, appreciated, or included The importance of creating a relationship culture where nothing is off-limits to talk about A listener question about red flags before marriage The difference between expecting love to be perfect vs. building a love that lasts Links mentioned: 🎥 Watch the Dating Made Simple Replay (available until May 30th): https://www.LoveLifeReplay.com 💬 Try Matthew AI and ask your first questions for free: https://www.askMH.com 🎟️ Join us at the Miami Retreat (October 18–19): https://www.MHRetreat.com 💞 Become a Love Life Member and join future live events: https://www.JoinLoveLife.com 📧 Have a story, question, or want to share your favorite podcast moment? Email us at: podcast@matthewhussey.com
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Hello, Audrey.
You can't start that softly.
Why?
Because this is the beginning of a podcast.
You can't start that soft.
What do you mean?
We have to start some ghastly morning radio.
Hello and welcome back to the Love Live podcast.
I'm Stephen Hussey with me, Matthew Hussey and Audrey.
You don't need to start like that.
You can't start that soft.
You can. You can. There's no like that. You can't start that soft. You can.
You can.
There's no rules here.
You can start like this.
Hello, Stephen.
Hello, friends.
How's everyone doing?
I'm wearing a t-shirt with a logo on it today.
I never wear t-shirts with logos anymore, I realized.
One thing I do know about you,
you have never been a logo on the T-guy.
You do not like the actual logo on your T shirt. You never have.
Well, when I was like 14 and DJing, I did wear some Burberry gear.
Yeah, but they don't have the logo on it. I'm talking like Ralph Lauren.
People with no context are going to think, like people in America are going to think that meant
that it was like money was sloshing around. It wasn't. It wasn't. It was like...
Yeah, Matt wasn't like the win in Vegas DJing?
No, that's just what you,
that's what you did is you had just something,
a lot of it was just fake, wasn't it?
Do you remember that?
It was just like, you know, teenagers walking around
with night sort of brand names.
Right.
I was-
And you were DJing at local clubs.
I was, I was, putting another life. But then I retired the brand names. Right. I was, and you were DJing at local clubs. I was, I was putting another life, but then,
but then I retired the brand names. And people would come into the DJ booth, ask you for relationship
advice and Matthew Hussey was born. That's how it happened. That's a completely different origin
story and there's absolutely no truth in it whatsoever. Well, welcome to the show everybody.
We should probably get started.
We have a great show lined up today.
We're gonna be talking about the silent relationship killers.
We have a love life line
where we're gonna be answering a listener question.
Another segment of Steve's Sleeves.
These sleeves are getting longer and longer.
David, would you say people are starting to look more forward
to Steve's sleeves or is it still a divisive subject?
It's definitely a craze that is sweeping the nation.
I'd say 97% positive, the feedback.
Yeah.
I do listen intently to what those 3% say
about Steve's sleeves.
And those 3% couldn't check out 10 minutes before the end.
So everyone wins.
For the 3% that absolutely abhor Steve's sleeves,
we apologize.
But we're gonna keep doing it anyway.
But we're gonna keep doing it.
There was too many things up his sleeve to quit now.
Yeah, we have some great stuff coming up
for all of our Love Life members.
No, we haven't found a name for them.
Live Loves.
Live Loves is the best we've come up with.
I like it.
So for all of our Live Loves, on May the 28th, there's a live coaching session with Audrey.
And on August the 21st, we have Love Life Live in London.
So if you are a Love Life member, you get to come out and see me and Stephen and Audrey
live in London town.
Oh, the big smoke.
On the 21st of August.
Will you DJ in your Burberry gear?
It's possible.
It's possible.
If you don't show up in your Burberry gear and DJ,
I'm not coming.
Okay.
I'm not...
Then I, then fine.
I will see if I can wrangle a little bit of Burberry and a couple of decks and I'll see you there.
By the way, we also in October for all of you Love Life members have a Miami member meetup that is
happening to coincide with our weekend retreat. Tickets are available, by the way, for the retreat at MhRetreat.com.
But that is happening in Miami, which is very, very exciting.
For anyone who is not a member of Love Life or one of our live loves,
you can join at joinlovelife.com.
Hey, you seem to have perked up.
He's been really miserable all day.
He has been a bit sheepish, hasn't he?
Yeah, slowly down.
Oh, I was absolutely gutted, Steve.
I've been beside myself.
Why is that, Matt?
Yeah, well, that's the thing.
You remember the Dating Made Simple event
I did on the 20th?
Yeah.
The one that was attended by, you know,
over 10,000 people.
Lovely day.
I missed it.
What do you mean you missed it?
I missed it.
I was so busy doing the event,
I wasn't able to see it.
And I wanted to see how I did.
Ah, that makes sense. Well, you do know you can just go online and watch the whole event again right now.
You are a liar and a cheat and a deceptionist.
No, it's just a fact. If you go to lovelifereplay.com, you can watch the whole event in its full glory.
Here you go. I pulled it up on my phone.
Oh, I suppose there it is right there. Sorry
about the whole deceptionist thing. No, I mean, it's fine. Well, it does say here that
you can only watch this until the 30th of May. That's right. So if you do want to see
it and I will be watching it right now after this podcast, you can go to lovelifereplay.com but only until the 30th of May.
So we wanted to talk about the silent relationship killers.
Yeah, kind of the converse to our last episode where we talked about a lot of stuff, a lot
of research about what makes relationships work.
We kind of want to flip it and look at what are the small insidious things that grow into
big bad things that kill relationships.
And this is important because a lot of relationships end in ways that people didn't see coming.
Things build up over time and things can end up being catastrophic to a relationship that
needn't have been if we were able to reach them in time.
That emphasis here is on the silent relationship killers. So what are they?
Well, we did talk about the Gottmans last week and...
Not the bloody Gottmans again.
Well, they're very good and I do want to talk about them because they do great work. But they
did say about how one way you can predict a breakup with like 95% accuracy is the way that a couple conflicts with each other.
Hmm. And they talk about the four horsemen of the apocalypse in communication, and those four things are criticism, contempt, defensiveness, and stonewalling.
Criticism being attacking your partner's character
or personality rather than a specific behavior.
Contempt, speaking from a place of superiority,
mocking, eye rolling, sarcasm, name calling.
Defensiveness, self-protection in the form
of denying responsibility, making excuses or flipping
blame and stonewalling, withdrawing from interaction to avoid conflict, shut down, go silent,
physically leave. Those are the conflict. In conflict, if you do any of those four things,
they believe they can predict your relationship will fail.
If you do them, how often?
Like if it's a pattern of behavior in your relationship.
If it's a regular form of dealing with differences.
Let's take those one by one,
because you said some really important things there.
So criticism.
You said you talked about attacking their character
as opposed to taking issue with the behavior.
Yeah.
This is a really important point.
You could say like, you never think about anyone but yourself.
Yeah.
Or you're so selfish as opposed to that thing you did was selfish.
You're so selfish.
There's something about that that's very, it's damning of them at their core.
Yes.
There's a, I think it's Dow Carnegie,
an old piece of advice,
but the idea of give someone the identity
you want them to have,
that there's something very dangerous
about ascribing an identity to them
that means they now have to like convince you
that they're not bad at their core.
Right.
As opposed to giving them, I think the way that,
the way that he talks about it in one of the books
is this idea of ascribing a righteous motive to someone,
because no one wants to think of themselves
as a bad person, right?
And by the way, if we're going to stay with someone,
we should probably start by not thinking of them as a bad person,
because it doesn't make sense to stay with anyone you think is fundamentally not a good human being.
So if you start from a place of this person is good,
and they wouldn't intentionally try to do something bad, then you can describe
the identity of them being a good person
who maybe acted selfishly in the moment
or maybe did something with consequences
that they didn't anticipate.
But it's far easier for anyone to come back
from a behavior and a mistake easier for anyone to come back from a behaviour and a mistake
than it is to come back from a fundamentally broken identity.
Yes, if you think that is how they see me and I cannot change that view, you lose motivation.
You're kind of like, well, that's what I am to them. And I think that's when people get
resentful and resentment is kind of like the most, that's what I am to them. And I think that's when people get resentful
and resentment is kind of like the most toxic thing, right?
I also wanna extend this point about criticism
to also just trying to change somebody
and generally not accepting them for who they are.
I think that's a really big relationship killer as well,
because I think it's okay to,
you know, want your partner to improve and always be a better person. We're always working
on ourselves, right? All of us, we're always trying to be better people. But going into
a relationship with a bunch of things that you kind of would change or want to change
about your partner or that bother you about them and their personality or their habits,
I think over time that can only be a
destructive thing for the relationship. I think with criticism as well when you argue or criticize
someone something, A, they're saying you acted selfishly there but there's also you kind of
have to couple it with an acknowledgement of the things they did right. Like almost saying I know
right, like almost saying, I know you did X, Y and Z and you were trying to X or you did do that well the other day. I saw you were trying then, but you did this selfish
thing, this lazy thing, this frustrating thing again, because if someone just feels like
I just get attacked for the things I'm wrong on, but you never notice when I got it right
or when I tried.
So I think that's crucial.
That's so true.
That's so true.
And also the mistake of throwing in like five other things you're frustrated about because
that's, it ends up diluting your argument about the specific thing that you're trying
to remedy or have a conversation about.
Okay.
So that was the, I thought that was just insightful about criticism,
criticize behavior, not character. The contempt point. So this is, you described one of the things
as eye rolling, right? I've heard them talk about the eye rolling thing. Why is eye rolling?
Which Audrey has jokingly said she thinks she does sometimes.
So we have this joke. So Matt and I have a running kind of
playful pattern of behavior where we make fun of each other
and we pretend to be mad at each other for small things.
It's like it's just a stupid thing that we do.
But I end up like because I'm really leaning into it,
like I'll start eye rolling and huffing.
But then I read somewhere that apparently eye rolling
is one of the biggest predictors of divorce.
And then I was like, oh my God, I need to stop doing this.
Because even as a joke, like what if I'm like, you know,
what if unconsciously Matt is reading that as me eye rolling
at him and it's going to damage our relationship.
So it became this joke where whenever we eye roll
at each other, I'm like, don't do that.
It just makes me wanna do it more.
Well, I will say in your defense Audrey,
I don't see you as a person who expresses contempt.
I don't think you ever really do that.
You're very appreciative of Matthew, I think in general
and very praising of him.
Would you say that's true, babe?
I don't remember any specific eye rolls from you.
You've probably rolled your eyes a couple of times.
I'm sure I've rolled my eyes at you.
You roll your eyes a lot in jest.
Yeah, that's my point, it's like a joke.
Yeah, but I don't look at it and go,
oh no, she's put the curse on our relationship
because she's rolled her eyes at me.
I like, me and Audrey have this thing where we,
I feel like this, we're gonna have to be,
we're gonna have to beep these out
because it's just too many f***s.
But like, we'll just start going into a thing
where I'm like, oh, f*** off.
And she'll be like, no, you f*** off.
And I'll be like, no, you f*** off.
No, f*** off, mate.
And we just start going back and forth like that for a good like two minutes.
As a joke?
Yeah, as a joke. It's one of my favorite things.
Yeah, they'll do it in front of me.
We've done it in front of David before and it scared him.
David thought, oh god, the podcast has fallen apart before me.
Yeah, we upset David.
I have to go seek consolation from that capybara.
From that capybara in the corner there with the toast around his head.
Yeah. I think another way contempt comes out is, you know, when you're with a couple
at like a party or something and you see like one of them is really just repeatedly disrespecting
the other and just clearly just is treating them like they're a bit of a joke, like oh god there
they are like saying something dumb and there's this kind of underlying feeling of they're a bit of a joke, like, oh God, there they are, like saying something dumb. And there's this
kind of underlying feeling of they're always undermining them in public. Yeah. I, there's,
there's certain things that you, when people sort of shamelessly just make life difficult for each
other in front of other people, I always think that's a really like, it's not good. Like they'll
be telling you something they do and then their partner will go, you don't do that.
Like you never do that.
You just constantly-
That's not what happened.
Like calling them a liar in public.
It wasn't that many.
Oh, you did that once.
You don't go rock climbing.
Just let them have it.
Yeah.
Or when someone's just like standing next to their partner
and they're like, can we go? And they're like, why don't you just pretend to be a team in front of everyone?
Just for like 60 seconds.
Yeah, those make me very uncomfortable.
It shows like a lack of, there's something there that's like, there's a rift in the team.
But you got to back each other up in public.
You've got to have, you've got to like, you two have to make each other look good.
Your job is to make each other look good.
You want like, it should be the equivalent of like,
you're on, I'm on stage and I just gave a speech
and to a very lukewarm audience
and Audrey's at the back of the room just clapping.
And...
And...
And...
And...
On go!
On go!
He's great, isn't he?
You know, it should be...
I would do that.
It should be, you've got, like, that's your team mate.
But you've just said something really, really interesting
because I do want, I have a lot of compassion
for people who are listening, who are in relationships, and they're like, oh, well, maybe I do want, I have a lot of compassion for people who are listening, who are in relationships
and they're like, oh, well, maybe I do that sometimes
or maybe like I go through these things
because it's hard to get it perfect all the time
because you are dealing with two people
who sometimes have been together a really long time,
resentments have built and you know,
in the case of for instance, like,
I don't know the person who you know
might criticize their partner and say you don't do that maybe they feel undervalued
and under appreciated at home and then they struggle to feel like their partner's being
appreciated in public because they feel really under appreciated and so I think there's always
I'm not saying it's right to do that but I think it's also important to apply a lot of self-compassion
and almost trying to go on an excavation
as to why that behavior is happening.
Because oftentimes if there's a rift in the team,
it's because one or multiple people is feeling like their needs aren't being met
and they're not feeling respected and they're not feeling kind of appreciated
and actually to say to that person you should be more of a team doesn't really fix the core issue
of what they're suffering with and so I do want to add that nuance as well for people because I
think it's important. Yeah what resentment in the relationship is not being addressed
for sure that is leaking in public.
Exactly, yeah.
And if you find yourself acting like that,
that's the clue that there's something going on
and there's nothing wrong with that,
so long as you are willing to address it
rather than just keep doing it
and keep allowing it to get worse and worse and worse
because that is when it will eventually
kill your relationship.
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So defensiveness. So number three defensiveness. That's self protection in the form of denying
responsibility, making excuses or flipping blame to someone else. You're kind of never taking
accountability. You're saying, oh,
it's not my fault, we're late. You always take forever.
Yeah, this is something I talk about in the book as like one of the kind of
ultimate red flags that makes relationships really, really hard.
Because if someone can't take ownership and if someone can't say sorry, then they really can't grow.
They can't improve.
It's one of the reasons I remember a psychologist,
Guy Winch, talking to me and saying,
you know, narcissism is associated much of the time
with incompetence.
And the reason that it's associated with incompetence
is because narcissists have an almost impossible time admitting fault.
And if you can't admit fault, you can't learn.
And if you can't learn, you can't improve.
So you remain incompetent. And that happens in relationships all the time,
where people just cannot improve because they can't take ownership. And even if they do improve,
they try to improve in quiet away from you, where there's no humility to it.
There's no like, I'm doing this for us. And I am like, I've heard
you, and I'm going to improve this. They just, they, they
want to just go away and have whatever their own form of
improvement looks like and come back. And, and, you know, it's a
solitary journey that they're on. And that's why it's, being in a relationship
with someone who can never apologize
and who only gets defensive
is an incredibly lonely experience.
One of the biggest red flags in my opinion,
someone who can't apologize and take accountability.
And the blaming comes with that, right?
Cause if you can't, if you can't take responsibility, then you need to
shift it somehow.
So then it goes to the other person.
Yeah.
Or you're crazy or you're overreacting or you're too much or, you know, all of
those things.
Okay.
So take us to stonewalling.
Stonewalling, that's withdrawing from interaction to avoid conflict.
So shutting down, going silent. you just leave without any resolution.
Yeah.
I think the problem with this is it makes your partner feel abandoned often, and it
makes them feel like there's coldness, there's disconnection.
You don't work, you don't solve things together.
They just have to move on and get over it because you're not gonna participate in joining them
You don't ever deal with anything real you just kind of shut down and leave
that's your way of like I'll come back when I feel better and
It just makes your partner feel very lonely. I think it really activates any
lonely, I think.
It really activates any, like it makes people feel very abandoned.
Yeah.
It can even feel like a kind of betrayal.
Like where you left, you left me to just anxiously ruminate about this to the point where I liken it to a child who almost loses
some innocence because they're just left in a room to cry. I don't not talking
about babies or I'm talking about like when a parent just abandons a child and
freezes them out and that child goes through stages, right?
Is there's like a fear there and a survival instinct of you know, something awful is happening
or is gonna happen because I've been left and that can't somewhat no one can stay in
that state forever because it's too painful.
So at a certain point, it's like short circuits
and someone stops crying.
But it's not that they've stopped crying necessarily
because they're no longer in pain.
You can stop crying because you've gone somewhat numb.
You can stop crying because you dissociate.
And when we do that in relationships, You can stop crying because you dissociate.
And when we do that in relationships, when someone stonewalls us and we go through
that kind of abandonment and what feels like
a form of betrayal, and it is in some ways
a form of betrayal, it's a betrayal of our safety.
And we're just left to anxiously ruminate until the point where we
either disassociate or distract ourselves. That robs us of a genuine, of a deep feeling of
safety. It's almost like I now don't trust you with my emotions. I don't trust you not to hold
me hostage. Yeah.
It now feels like this is a hostage situation
and that something kind of breaks in there.
I think there's a loss of,
there's a loss of innocence in there
because you realize we're not playing by the same rules.
I, if I saw you hurting like this
or if I saw you struggling with something,
I would wanna make sure you're okay. Well, but you saw me struggling with something and you were quite happy not just
to freeze me out, but to then come back and just carry on as if nothing happened. I can't now
trust you with my feelings. I can't, and I, more than that,
I resent you for holding me hostage.
Yeah.
There's so much there though,
in all of these behaviors where I think,
you know, like, did you guys grow up thinking
or being told, being fed a rhetoric,
which was almost like relationships are about like,
there's always like a power dynamic going on
and there's always someone that loves the other person more
and it's always about like, almost the kind of like-
Like keeping score.
Yeah, like the seesaw of like,
almost like who's on top at what moment and who,
you know, I think a lot of relationships operate like that
where, you know, one or two of the parties have
a wound, maybe they're anxious, maybe they've been through a traumatic childhood or whatever,
and they try and control their way into feeling safe.
And so when their partner feels, and I'm not condemning this behavior because on the more
sinister and extreme end of it you have narcissism. So I do think that needs to be addressed. But you know, on the more kind of the less,
I suppose, the less toxic side, you have people, a lot of people who are not emotionally conscious
enough and mature enough to realize that what they're trying to do is they're trying to put
their partners on the back foot so they feel like they're in control. And it's really interesting because in so many of these
things that we've talked about, you know, you can only sustain a relationship for so long
where you're constantly in a kind of push-pull dynamic because a relationship, actually the
only relationships that work are relationships of equals and if two people come to the table willing to be wrong and
you know
accepting the fact that sometimes they're gonna mess up and sometimes they're gonna make mistakes and sometimes
they're gonna be the ones who are saying sorry and who are they're gonna have to work on themselves and
Just always coming in with so much humility about who you are as a partner and how you can improve.
I think like, if you're not doing that, and if you don't realize that that is kind of the magic source to a relationship, then you end up falling into these other traps.
And it's really sad because a lot of people who have these behaviors at the core, they just want to be loved.
a lot of people who have these behaviors at the core, they just want to be loved. Yeah.
I think the, the day what, what a lot of us are afraid of when we say sorry.
Is that we will get eaten.
Yes.
Like if I show weakness and I admit fault, I can't trust the other person not to take full advantage of the fact that I'm
admitting some fault. Like that's going to be the only truth of this situation and I'm
going to have lost all of my power. And often that's because we came from some kind of dynamic where it was perceived as shameful or weak to be wrong.
We felt we couldn't be wrong with a certain person
because they would just eat us alive
if we showed them a chink in the armor.
And so it's like, we don't feel safe enough
to admit we're wrong.
It's one of the things I don't know
that it gets talked about enough that in order to admit fault, wrong. It's one of the things I don't know that it gets talked about enough
that in order to admit fault, we have to feel safe.
That's so true.
And you know, you Audrey are so good at this.
You've been a very healing kind of presence for me
because I think I had a healthy dose of that, of thinking that, and it's funny
because I'm pretty, I think I'm pretty good at taking ownership in life in general, but
I think there was a kind of fear romantically of letting my guard down by admitting fault
in an argument and being like,
yeah, I messed up there in the way I said that,
or I shouldn't have done that.
And part of that was this feeling of
not wanting to be vulnerable,
that it would be hugely vulnerable
to say I was wrong about that.
And you have always been so willing to A,
be going back to the point about criticism,
you've always been so willing to be really generous
towards my character and to be like,
I know you're such a good person,
that you're one of the best people I know.
And I know that where this comes from for you.
And I know why you did that.
I understand you and I know where that comes from.
And you doing that was like, you know,
me feeling very seen, but at the same time,
when you would be unafraid to say
when you felt you werefraid to say when you felt you were wrong.
And to say even even by the way, in an in an argument where
really it was me, like I'm the one who owed an apology and did apologize.
You would still say, I know I didn't approach that very well.
Like I was upset with you and I
really appreciate what you said and I know I didn't approach this conversation
as well as I could have or I know that I didn't you know like that also like it
was something healing about that because I realized it didn't have to be either
or. Well if you're arguing you should both be sorry because you shouldn't you
shouldn't be arguing and it's sad that
You as a team as a group, you know two people as a pair of people
Having this fight and if you're not both sorry something is wrong unless it's that she's a person sat here going calm down
I don't want to fight, you know blah blah blah and any other person
Screaming at them in which case yet as a person who should apologize and someone's literally done nothing wrong.
But often if it's an argument,
you're having a back and forth.
And so there's something for both parties to be sorry about.
But I think that there's a,
if I were to define how I think you show up to situations,
it's there's a real sense of strength
and call it strength, call it confidence,
call it standards, but there's a real sense of strength
about it's important someone owns it
when they're wrong in your life,
but that gets blended with humility
where you're able to share whatever part you played
and generosity of spirit,
where you're able to fully acknowledge that someone,
like the best parts of someone
at the same time as they're apologizing.
And that has all three of those things together
have a very, very potent effect.
And I think that that's, in a a way it solves so much of what we're
talking about here in terms of criticism, contempt, defensiveness and stonewalling.
If you can have a healthy mix of standards for yourself, you know, self
respect that you people own problems around you or own the things they do
wrong around you but you combine that with humility and generosity of spirit,
that makes for a really, really great relationship.
I want to remind you that we have our live retreat happening in October this year in Miami, Florida,
on the 18th and 19th.
This is my signature program that I have been running
for 17 years of my life.
You may be asking yourself,
what's my personal reason for attending a retreat like this?
Let me tell you.
First, we all have patterns that get in the way
of us being where we could be in life.
Whether it's finding the love that we want to find,
whether it's having the career we want, or just getting the enjoyment and the happiness out of
life that we deserve. We have patterns that get in the way and most of these patterns follow us for
the rest of our lives unless we do something to interrupt them. So if you are sick and tired of
these patterns governing your life and you want to break them once and for all, that is what I do with you. The next
thing I do is I show you how to regulate your emotional states. Let me tell you
the quality of your life is the quality of your emotional states. Whatever the
circumstances of your life are, they do not control your happiness nearly as
much as what is going on in your mind. So I show you how to take control of your mind by taking
control of your emotional states. I give you very practical tools for that. And
the third thing I do is I show you how to transform your confidence once and
for all but in a very meaningful and lasting way by changing your
relationship with yourself. We all have
an inner voice, a voice that doubts us, a voice that berates us, a voice that's too
hard on us, a voice that tells us we're not good enough. When you learn how to
change that voice you change your relationship with yourself and that is
the number one thing that builds what I call core confidence. So if any of those three
things, patterns, emotional regulation and core confidence are things you want to
work on, if this is the deep work you know you need to do, you need to be there
in Miami this October. Tickets are available at MHRetreat.com. Grab yours
now while they're available. There are limited seats in the venue and I will see
you in Miami this October.
On the topic of broader relationship killers,
do you think that we're talking a lot here about communicating
when you have differences and solving problems.
Do you think some people, especially in the modern day, just don't
expect to even have differences or problems in the first place? Like there's, there's just
expectations, mismatched expectations about how easy it should be. Like I've even heard a joke
before about how it's like some people are just looking for the female version of themselves or
the male version of themselves. I can't think of anything worse for the female version of themselves or the male version of themselves.
I can't think of anything worse than the female version.
But they're just looking, they don't want someone who has different needs or expectations.
And we think it should just be like easier than it is.
I mean, that's crazy. That's wild.
And we have a clip on this and I just want to show you it so I can get your take on it before we answer.
You really want, think for a minute, you know, if you're going to get married
and you want a marriage that's going to last, not necessarily the happiest marriage, you know, or one
that Martha Stewart will talk about or anything, but you want a marriage that's going to last.
What quality do you look for in a spouse? One quality.
Do you look for brains?
Do you look for humor?
Do you look for character?
Do you look for beauty?
No.
You look for low expectations.
I mean, no.
That is the marriage that's going to last.
Both have low expectations.
I mean, and I want my partners to be on
the low side on expectations coming in because I want the marriage to last. It's a financial
marriage when they join me at Berkshire and I don't want them to think I'm going to do
things that I'm not going to do. So that's our guiding principle. So I know that you have really enjoyed learning
from Warren Buffett over the years.
Can you elaborate on what you think he means by that?
Cause I know a lot of people will hear that and go,
that can't be right.
Well, I think there's something,
and this is what I mean when say like,
people don't expect there to be differences
or they don't expect there to be conflicts or, you know, things they have to solve.
But I think this idea of, like, acceptance to what Audrey's point is, acceptance of
who you're with and what they're like, and what's reasonable to expect this person to
do and be like. And I think there is a sense where like, if you both always expect
the best of everything, my partner's going to be the maximum of every trait I love of like,
intelligence and the perfect humour and the perfect way, their needs are just going to match mine
really perfectly. And, you know, they're never going to be difficult. And it's like, yeah, of course then a lot of marriage is going to feel really
dissatisfying.
And I do think, I do think there is a thing a lot now in relationships where
people are always comparing their relationship to an imaginary perfect
version. That's like, imagine if they sanded off all the edges off my partner.
And they also had a bit more of this and that. Oh, it'd be perfect then. And I do think there's a sense where just a lot
of things it's like, it's like in life, a lot of times you'll be happier if you start
with like lower expectations of what it's going to be like. And everything is a more
of a positive surprise then. And you don't crumble when you expect
you're gonna have conflicts.
They're gonna have some needs I find annoying.
I don't understand certain things,
but yeah, I just almost,
it's not like you accept the worst,
but I think you also start with like,
there's only so much as reasonable
to expect a person to satisfy.
What's that?
That saying it's happiness is reality minus expectations.
Yes.
Kind of that, right? That's what you're saying.
I don't know if some people find that depressing.
I don't because I do think it's like having a good day.
It's like if your expectations are always like perfect day is when I'm happy,
you don't have a lot of perfect days. But if your expectations start low of like what's necessary
for me to feel great for good today, kind of everything that good that happens above that
is kind of like a bonus. Yeah, I think a huge part of it is coming to terms with the way that life is. Like how life actually is.
There's a great moment in the show Rick and Morty where Rick and Summer and Morty, they're all in
family therapy together after like a completely disastrous series of events.
And Rick is just like falling apart and they're in family therapy and Rick hates
the idea that they have to go through family therapy.
He's just like, this is a waste of time.
I don't care.
This is a, you're a hack.
Why are we even here?
this is a you're a hack why are we even here and the therapist goes on this incredible monologue to kind of basically say look you don't have to be
here and the reality is being here is work and it takes time and energy like
brushing your teeth it takes work and it's often boring and laborious and some people are willing to brush their teeth
and do that work and other people would rather die.
And it's such it like I get chills as I say because it's such a poignant moment in the episode.
in the episode, it says, it's a very sobering moment for this is what reality is. Reality is an extraordinary amount of repetition. It is routine. It is waking up every day.
Sometimes I literally wake up and I think,
I have, like, I'm having the same day again.
It's like, I'm doing the same.
I'm going, I'm getting in the shower.
I've done this thousands of times.
I'm washing my hair the same way I wash my hair every day.
I'm brushing my teeth.
I'm getting ready.
I'm going to jujitsu.
I'm like, what, this is,
like at a certain point you go, this is weird.
I'm doing the same thing every day.
But you also realize that at a certain point, what's the alternative?
There's certain things I have to do to keep my body in check so that it
doesn't fall apart on me and old age.
There's certain things I have to do to make sure that I have a career still a year from now
and that we're in a financially independent position.
There's like, there's so much repetition involved in life
and accepting that reality is I think a very,
in some ways a very liberating thing
because you realize it doesn't mean
you're doing anything wrong. It's, this is what life is like. I know when I get on stage
and I do a retreat, there are always people who come and see me or when if I'm on tour,
there are people who I know, I know by the way because I've
been one of those people many many years ago I was one of those people there will be people in the
audience who see me on stage and they're like I want to do that that's what I want to do for my
career and what they're seeing is this me on stage performing and the lights and the like
that fun of it all the big event and all of that but that's like 5% of my whole
year yeah most of the year is spent doing everything sat at home on a laptop
managing teams like writing another script for a video, sitting down and doing it all over again.
Like that's what most of it is. And it ends up coming down to, are you someone who really,
do you want the reality of it? Or do you want the idea of it? That I believe is why so many people
struggle when it comes to relationships. Because we want the idea of a
relationship. We love the idea of waking up with someone on a Sunday morning, and the sparks and the fireworks and the fun of finding love,
the reality of it is that you now have a thing that you're,
as Warren Buffett says in that clip, like,
if you want it to last forever,
then there's all sorts of things you're going to have to do
to tend to that relationship.
And it is going to be repetitive, but guess what?
So is being single.
So is going on yet another date with someone
that you're not that interested in.
Or waking up with someone after a hookup and being like,
okay, it didn't change my life.
Maybe it was fun, but it didn't change my life. Maybe it was fun, but it didn't change my life.
I'm not now saved because I had a hookup with a hot person.
I'm not now thinking like, there, I did it, I did it.
I'm happy now.
Being single is also incredibly repetitive.
So it's making peace with the reality of how things actually are.
And then when you work from that reality, you get to improve your reality because you're now not
trying to live up to some idea. Instead, you're going, this is how life is. Now let me make real
life better. What you just said really reminds me of something I read today.
You know Celeste Barber on Instagram who I love.
This is by the way, if anyone doesn't follow her,
you should follow her right now.
She's amazing and very funny.
She's a comedian.
She posted a photo of her and her husband
and said, a love letter to my husband
on our 12th wedding anniversary.
Wow, this is fun.
I love you.
This is hard. Thank you. I'm sorry. You're welcome. We need
milk." And I thought it was perfectly encapsulating of what you're talking about. The mundane
and the ups and the downs. And it's just, it's never going to be one thing, right? It's
never going to be just amazing all the time it can't be. And just to put a button to my original point you still choose well at
the beginning it's still like if you're gonna it's like your career you still choose the career that
fits you really really well but like with the career you expect even your dream career even
your dream person it's gonna have like mundane it's gonna have like mundane, it's gonna have
bits that are tough, it's gonna have bits that aren't a highlight, it's gonna have peaks, it's
gonna have hard bits and I yeah I just think again the expectations thing it's like expect that
those things will come. I couldn't agree more.
Well, I think it's time to do what is my favourite part after Steve Sleaves, of course, of the episode and that is Love Life Line.
Who do we have today?
So this is a voice note from one of our live loves.
Is this going to stick?
I don't know honestly.
Let's see.
Her name is Sameen and David please could you play
Sameen's voice note. Hi my question is how to know that what kind of trait and
the things that you are seeing as a red flag or green flag wouldn't change after
getting married. So I was I was married for four years and my ex-husband used to be very friendly, female friends,
very close female friends and I actually ignored that initially because I thought that would
change after marriage but I did not.
And that was one of the reasons of getting divorced.
So that's what my question is, if you got it.
So she got divorced because she ignored it in the beginning that her husband had a lot of close
female friends but it started really bothering her presumably is that what she's saying?
Yeah I think it turned out to be a red flag. I don't know if he cheated or if he ended up
getting too close to them in ways that was simply inappropriate but yeah it sounds like she kind of
gave him the benefit of the doubt before the marriage because it's like people are allowed to
have friends and then afterwards it turned out to be a red flag this is this
is a big question because it gets to the heart of what if someone changes after
marriage or what if you know are certain aspects of their character only come out
after I've already said, I do,
which is not an uncommon experience for people.
And you do hear that a lot. You know, a lot of people say,
the moment we got married, he or she changed.
That's actually a really common thing that you hear. It speaks to not getting married too fast as just a
simple rule. I think that there are some people who do seem to get married very
very quickly and there are certain aspects of people that you just can't really know in a year.
We like to think that we learn everything there is to know about someone in that space of time,
especially if it's been very intense. But the truth is we don't, you know, we have friendships
that change over the years because four years in that friend behaves in a way that we
really don't like and we see aspects of their character that sort of surprise us.
So it's quite it can be quite disconcerting and even scary to think
that I could marry someone three years in who I really think I know and then
all of a sudden find that there's someone entirely
different or at the very least that there are some serious problems that are coming out or that they
frankly just stop trying. You know that's another one they just oh they just out of nowhere they
just seem to stop putting in the effort that they used to. These are really, really difficult things. And I think it certainly speaks to
taking our time. It also speaks to being very careful to have lots and lots of conversations
about things before you get there. What does marriage mean to you? What does loyalty look like to you?
Do we share the same vision of what trying
in a relationship looks like?
Of what commitment looks like over time?
I even heard something interesting recently.
This was, I think this was anecdotal,
but there was a lawyer, where did I see this?
It's on one of our peers' YouTube channels.
But there was a lawyer saying that couples
who sign a prenup and go through that process together
are more likely to stay together based on his experience.
Because aspects of them would get revealed in that process?
Because they either don't make it or because to the wedding day or because
what he says is the kinds of people who can have those conversations with each other and have the hard conversations,
maybe have friction over parts of it and come out the other side are the kinds of people
who can communicate better when it comes to a marriage. Now I don't know whether that bears out statistically or not, but it made sense to me as an idea
that anything that forces those kinds of really challenging conversations ahead
of time reveals things about each other that for some people only get revealed
in a divorce. For most people, they only know who their partner is
in those difficult moments at the point of a divorce.
And by then, obviously it's too late,
because now it's like, oh my God,
I'm dealing with a monster here,
and I never knew they would behave this way.
At the end.
It reminds me of that book.
Is it called Eight Dates?
Was it a New York Times article or something like that?
I don't know, I know it's a book. Maybe you've got turned into a book. But it's eight dates? Was it a New York Times article or something like that? I don't know. I know it's a book.
Maybe you've got to turn into a book.
But it's eight chapters and it's this idea of you should have eight dates.
And on those dates you focus the conversation around eight different subjects.
One of them being money, another one being family, another one being...
I can't remember but there's all these different...
There's eight of them.
I'd have to look it up.
I do remember that one.
There was a New York Times article on it, yeah.
One of them being trust and commitment,
the other one being addressing conflict,
another one being sex and intimacy, work and money,
family, fun and adventure, and growth and spirituality.
And the idea behind it is they give you a bunch of questions
that you ask each other to see how well matched you are
in all of these subjects,
because presumably these subjects are the subjects
that are the root of so many divorces and separations.
So it's kind of what you're saying,
it's like, if you're not able to have those very,
very important conversations around things like money,
or, you know, a really big one is family
and like boundaries around family.
And what does, how much do you see your family
and how like, how much do they know about your relationship
and what are the boundaries there about kind of
what you share with your family
about the relationship, et cetera.
You know, those are such important conversations to have
and they really do lead to breakups
when people don't have them because if you avoid them,
they end up being these massive sources of conflict
where you realize your values are just not aligned.
And it's really difficult to come back
from a misalignment in values.
I think that's actually why a lot of people break up.
It's, you can agree to disagree on the small stuff,
but if it's on the big stuff, that's tough.
Well, it's like if you have very different,
like loyalty was one of them, right?
Some people's version of loyalty is like,
oh, I'm chill about you being friends with exes
and we both do that and that's cool.
And some people it's like,
if you talk to someone else at a party,
that's like not okay and that's flirting.
And if you're really mismatched there, like if ever,
no one's ever had that, it's like, you just feel completely stifled.
Like we do not see the same on this at all.
Yeah.
And on the flip side of that, for some people, loyalty is, you know, I'm
loyal to, I don't cheat on you, but I do, you know, like girls' pictures and
message other women on social media, but I don't do anything there.
I'm just being friendly and just being flirty and whatever
and also like stop trying to box me in
versus another person who's like,
that's completely inappropriate to me
and that makes me feel really anxious and insecure
and I don't trust that.
So yeah, I think there's so loyalty.
We talked about this in the last episode.
And by the way, if anyone hasn't listened
to the last episode, you should definitely go and do that.
But we talked a lot about loyalty in the last episode
and the importance of it in relationships.
It is the bedrock of a lot of things.
But I would argue a lot of these subjects we've covered,
this book covers, sorry, the eight dates,
is the bedrock of really kind of all relationships
and really understanding.
And to Samin's question, it's kind of all relationships and really understanding and to, you know,
Samin's question, it's kind of maybe they were not enough conversations. I don't know,
Samin, maybe you tell me that you did speak about it and you felt like, you know, you
were kind of tricked and lied to, but perhaps there wasn't enough conversation around kind
of, you know, what you seem, what you deem as appropriate in
terms of the relationships with those friends, those female friends and what he deemed appropriate.
And having those conversations early on, even if they result in the breakup, is much better than
having them later on in them resolving in a divorce. I also think just setting a creating a culture for your relationship where
everything is on the table to talk about, no matter how hard it is, is a really powerful thing.
We've literally had conversations where it's like if you're ever struggling with the relationship or attraction or you know if you're ever
struggling with thoughts about someone else you can come to me about that.
You have to come to me about that.
Yeah like you've literally said that like you have to come to me about that and I
think that that's firstly it's incredibly brave but it's
what it does is set a kind of tone and a culture that says nothing is off limits. I am your best
friend, I am your greatest supporter, no one cares about your happiness more than I do.
supporter, no one cares about your happiness more than I do.
My goal other than my own happiness is your happiness. So there is nothing you can't come and share with me
in advance so that we can figure it out together as a team.
And it can't be when we start to,
let's say it's attraction and you start to go maybe I'm
losing attraction. The risk is that instead of it being you and your partner against the loss of
attraction it becomes you and the loss of attraction against your partner. It can never be you and the
problem against your partner. It always has to be you and your partner against a problem but to your
point your partner has to and you have to make it so that anything
can be talked about.
Otherwise, they're not gonna feel like
they can bring that to you.
And then they do have no, they have no other choice
than to make it them and the problem against you.
Yeah.
It's huge.
That way of thinking is huge.
And look, you can achieve that by,
if you're really great at communication together,
I think you can achieve a lot of this between you before marriage, before getting to that point.
But you might do it with a therapist.
It might be that you have a therapist for the point, for the purpose of let's have any,
like let's have some challenging conversations together about
the future, about the way we see life, about how we think we'd handle it if
problems came up, like let's do that with someone there who's trained. Either way,
having those difficult conversations now as uncomfortable as they may be is one
of the the safeties against those future issues.
And you can't mitigate against everything.
You can't account for every possible thing that could go wrong in a marriage
or what could be unexpected.
But I think we can have a lot more conversations than we do.
And we can check ourselves in those romantic moments where we go, let's,
I'm feeling very romantic about marriage right now, but let's have also a very sober approach
to what marriage means to us. And I don't think that just because someone proposes,
And I don't think that just because someone proposes,
we should feel pressured into staying in a romantic mode with that person all the way until the wedding day.
Because that, for some people, firstly,
I don't think you should be surprised
by a marriage proposal.
Like-
Oh, controversial.
I, to me, if you're surprised-
Kind of agree. By a proposal. Like it means you're surprised by a proposal.
Like it means you haven't communicated well enough.
The fuck is going on?
Like why is that surprise?
Oh my God, I can't believe it.
Can't you?
Where have you been?
Where have you been?
Where have you been?
How is this, what they've,
somehow you're completely ignorant
to how they feel about you,
or they've done such a great job of hiding the fact that they want to spend the rest of their life with you.
What do you, like, this isn't a surprise birthday party, it's your fucking life.
How is that surprising?
To me, when someone's shocked, I had no idea that they were going to,
that they wanted to marry me.
You guys should talk more.
You, even if you just said yes, you guys should now spend a lot of time talking about this.
Hey, I know I said yes, but we have a lot of conversations that we need to have.
Right?
Even if you say yes, fine.
You said yes, you had the romantic moment, great.
Now we need to talk.
This is real because it's your life.
They never showed that bit on the Instagram proposals.
David is ferociously nodding in the corner. Well guys, this leads us nicely into what happens after the romantic bit, after the
proposal and our Steve Sleeves feature today is all about that.
Really?
It is.
That's a really natural segue.
People should know that Audrey and I never know what is going to happen in Steve's Sleeves. We never know what's up your sleeves.
It's like a proposal that shocks us.
It's a huge risk.
A magical cave, those sleeves.
Well, Steve's Sleeves today, we're going to return to one we did before,
but a different version. We're going to play Compatibly Never After.
So we're going to look at some famous couples
from Disney and animated films.
And we're going to speculate on why it didn't work out.
Why didn't it work out?
What resentments could have killed the relationship
after the couple got together?
There can't be that many Disney couples
that didn't stay together.
No, it's hypothetical, babe. It's like, oh, like a year after. Yeah, it's like, yeah, I was a bit slow
on the uptake on Steve's sleeve. It always ends at the bit where they get married. Got it, got it,
got it. And it never, it never. So the credits roll. Okay. So you're saying. 10 years on what's
going on in that couple. And we're going to guess what resentment might have damaged or killed that
relationship. So after the credit, like the couple got together, it's the end of the Disney movie, the credits roll.
What are the problems that now happen that we didn't see?
Yes, and I actually asked Matthew AI to speculate on some of them himself.
So we're going to see some of his answers as well.
All right.
So Simba and Nala from The Lion King, why didn't it work out?
Why? So we're just going with the pre-supposition that it didn't work out. It's not even like what
problems could they have had. Yes. In this Steve's sleeves, they did break up and I have to say why.
All of the Disney couples broke up. This is so heartbreaking. Yeah. I don't want to start,
but I'm going to play along. I'm going to, I'm going to go with this, but I just want to say,
Yeah, I don't want that. I just want to start, but I'm going to play along.
I'm going to go with this, but I just want to say, shame on you.
Can't we just say, can't we just say like, what's happened, it's 10 years after, what
have they like been through and are they still together?
Cause some of them might be fine.
No, cause we already did that.
No, she, he's saying that in this hypothetical, they have to, they've broken up.
Oh God.
Okay.
So in a way that gets us off the hook.
We're not ruining these relationships.
We got a lot of angry emails last time.
They're at least on the rocks.
Steven will get a lot of angry emails.
Or you can assume they got over it,
just what resentments have come up.
Okay.
No, I say it didn't work.
Okay, David.
If you guys need to put it on me, it did not work out.
David's saying definitively then these couples didn't work.
Okay, so Simba and Nala.
Simba and Nala, the Lion King.
She's pissed because he abandoned her
and left her to basically like defend the tribe
against Scar, who's the biggest,
the best example of a vulnerable narcissist ever,
has Disney has ever created.
So you think she's still holding that over him
well into the marriage? She's sort of like, you went away, you had your fun, you
lived out all of those wild years, you know, with your mates eating bugs,
swinging from trees, like and now you're just gonna come back and do one heroic thing, which by the way,
you didn't have to kill Scar.
You know, that's not quite the man I thought you were.
You didn't have to like actually off him.
No, well you kicked him into the fight,
the hyenas killed him, that's true.
And she doesn't wanna be in a polyamorous relationship.
Also, I don't know about this whole lion thing.
Yeah, cause you know, like lionesses,
there's one male lion and all the women and they do
all the work.
So she's just like, what the fuck is this?
I don't know if Disney lions act.
All right.
Well, may I say you've both been more cynical than Matthew AI in assuming they never got
off the ground.
This was your game.
We're just playing along.
Matthew AI says the micro behavior was Simba had a habit of zoning out in conversations,
especially when Nala was discussing serious matters like the Pride Lands. And then the
resentment was Nala began to feel like Simba wasn't fully present or invested in their
shared responsibilities, which made her question his commitment.
I mean, that's kind of what we said. We just said it differently.
It might be that now he's like sort of king of the
pride and he rules over the pride lands that maybe he's just sort of starts to feel a bit
entitled. Okay. Well, Ariel and Eric. Oh, easy. These two obviously did get together. They
got married in the end, didn't they? Sure. Classic. Yeah. I've got so much to say about
this. Do you want to go first? Go on. Well, I mean he didn't have changed much Eric. Did he? Did he need to change?
Well, I mean like she sort of left her fishy world. She did. It's a bit like, you know, she was living in, you know, France and he was living in Australia,
and she just went to Australia and never went back.
She fell in his lap, and he just snapped her up.
I feel like their whole relationship
was very shallow to begin with.
Because Eric is like kind of boring,
but obviously like definitely the hottest
of all the Disney princes, princess, princes.
And he never even heard her speak.
So he's obviously just drawn to her looks.
Now that she can speak, he's like, oh no.
I've made a huge mistake.
No, because Ariel's so cool.
Do we know that?
Yeah, we do know that.
How much does she speak in the film?
We saw her speak.
Yeah, we see her speak.
We saw her sing and speak.
Oh, that's true.
And she's really adventurous and she's a free spirit and she's kind and she's friends with
all the fishes.
In my head, I mean, the Little Mermaid to where she didn't speak the whole film.
And then when she started speaking to Eric, she just spoke about like films he didn't
care about and things that he just wasn't into at all.
But you're right. Maybe
he didn't have to speak that much, did he? He's not a very, he's a very one-dimensional character.
She couldn't speak to him, so she never really had a conversation with him. So he turns out to be an
idiot. Right. With nothing to say when he's not performing heroic acts.
Like now that Ursula's gone.
Ursula.
Is it Ursula?
Ursula.
Ursula.
Ursula.
Now that Ursula is gone.
Sorry, does this count as me correcting you in public?
Yeah, you're supposed to be applauding violently.
Now that she's gone and there's sort of nothing,
like he's sort of a wartime partner.
He's like really shines when there's like sea voyages
and things, sea monsters to take on.
But now that they're just at home on the land,
she realizes he has absolutely nothing to say.
Right. He's seen like two films in his entire life.
Yeah. He's never read a book. He's just got nothing. She's like, I can't believe I gave
up my, my, my, uh, tail for this. And my tail. Well, as Matthew AI says, Eric would often forget to include
Ariel in decisions about their life on land,
assuming she wouldn't understand or care.
Ariel.
I thought it was going to say, because she's already like,
you know, she's already given up everything.
So he's like, you just continue in that vein.
Well, Ariel felt excluded and
undervalued, especially after sacrificing so much of her world to be with him. That's a good one.
And she struggled to make friends on land. Right. She's like, why would you struggle to make friends?
She's only lived a fish life. She doesn't even know what they're doing. It's like, she's got this
glorified sort of idea of what people are like. But now that she's on land, she's sort of finding that actually
everyone's a bit cliquey.
And they're not that like open
and they're not inviting her into friendship groups.
So now she's like got too much time on her hands.
She's like, Eric, could you tell them to make more
of an effort to like, you know, bring me in?
Yeah, or she's like, now that he's going out with his mates
and she's like, where are you going tonight? And he's like, oh, I'm going out with my friends. She's like, well, what am I going to do?
And then she struggles to get a job. So now she sat home all day, bored, restless, and she, he
feels responsible for her. So now he's feeling like, Oh my God, this is so much. I feel guilty
all the time. She's at home. I do actually feel like this is probably what happened.
In a desperate act to like, back-climate her, he gets her like a pet goldfish.
And it just seems like patronizing.
And all it does is reminder of everything she's lost.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But that's a classic resentment.
Someone feels like they're sacrificing more than the other person.
Yeah.
I think we've done a good job on that one.
So depressing.
You've ruined the little mermaid,
Stephen and David, well done.
Okay. Yeah, well done.
Well, let's do another one.
What would you, yeah.
Buzz and Jessie Toy Story.
This is actually quite a good one.
Let's think.
So Buzz is a bit of a sort of lovable, heroic.
He's another idiot, really, in many ways.
I mean, he's pompous. Yeah. She's a bit, she's like sassy and he likes that. But over time, he sort of,
like enjoys this, you know, he wants to be like traditional masculine role.
And she's always been incredibly free-spirited
and sort of does what she wants.
In the beginning, that was hot.
But now he's a bit like,
I just, can you just be a bit more like traditional wife?
Can you just-
Trad wife.
He wants her to stay at home and like, you know, raise the kids.
He wants them, he wants them to be spacemen.
She wants them on horses.
And he's like, what are you doing with the horses again?
Can you just like take them to an engineering class?
It's not 1875.
Can you start?
They're not going to be horse ranchers.
Exactly. He's like, it's not 1875. Can you stop? They're not going to be horse ranchers. He's like from the future and she's still living out, she's like living this Montana
life and he's like, this isn't going to, this isn't going to work. I fly spaceships.
So he's like annoyed at the way the kids are being raised. And he also wants her to sort
of just sort of like stay at home and be a mom. And she's like this free-spirited cowgirl and she
can't she's like this isn't what I signed up for. Okay I just wanted like a simple resentment but
I mean okay well according to Matthew AI Jesse often teased Buzz about his overly serious demeanor
thinking it was playful and Buzz felt mocked rather than appreciated so one thing we talked
about here showing in public appreciation.
There's one talking about he liked, he liked us in the beginning and it starts to get old.
The resentment was Buzz began to feel like Jesse didn't respect his values or take him seriously.
Didn't respect his values.
That's what comes up in the kid raising.
Leading to a growing emotional distance between them.
You got to show respect emotional distance between them.
You gotta show respect and take someone seriously. Right.
One more?
Yeah, why not?
This, can I just say on record?
This has been brilliant.
This has been the most depressing Steve Sleeves
we've ever done.
I got to mix up the formula.
I agree, but like, I think people are gonna feel
like we're destroying these sacred things.
These beloved relationships.
These are really helpful,
because we're talking about resentments that come up.
You're not so much,
but you're talking a lot of speculation,
but we're talking about resentments
that come up in relationships.
All right, let's go to the next one.
Is this the last one?
Yes. Okay.
Shrek and Fiona. Again, let's preface the next one. Is this the last one? Yes. Okay. Shrek and Fiona.
Again, let's preface this.
We know they are still together
as another Shrek movie is coming out
and they have a family.
So we know-
You said that they will have to be broken up.
In this reality, yes.
So why didn't it work out?
I don't have anything.
Audrey's so angry right now.
Yeah.
Maybe then you give us just the stalwart defense of their relationship,
how it just doesn't make sense that they could be split up.
Maybe he sort of feels that she became.
Matt's right there.
Maybe he like sort of, like in the beginning,
he was like happy because it was like amazing solidarity that she became an ogre.
That was the ultimate act of love.
But maybe at a certain point he's like...
Maybe at a certain point he's like, you've become more swampy than me like she it
starts to like like like she takes the swampiness too far more than Shrek more
than Shrek where it's like you are leaning too hard into this life like I
what I I was with you when you became an ogre like me
and it felt like great, but I-
He's like, you were a princess though.
You still were a prince.
Can you be in like an ogre princess?
You've just become like even more aggressively swampy
than I have.
And it's like, I go to you for a little bit of polarity.
I feel like it would be, in that case,
he would be threatened.
Because that's Shrek's thing, he is the swampiest.
So I feel like he would feel-
Maybe it's like, you know how guys,
it's like one of the lovely things about women
is they smell nice.
True.
And maybe he's like, he wanted the swampy princess,
but not like a swampy, the ogre.
Like not like a ogre ogre.
Do you know what I mean?
Princess ogre.
Yes.
Not ogre.
You know, like princess ogre.
Shame on all of you.
Not ogre ogre.
What did Matthew Ives say?
He's like, if I wanted this, I could have just moved in
with my ogre brother, Stephen.
So there's not enough contrast, rude.
There's not enough contrast.
Yeah, she took it too far.
Okay, well that's good.
You're saying there's like not enough separation,
too comfortable, I get that.
Matthew Ai said, the resentment essentially is different visions of values of life. So Fiona resented
Shrek for his reluctance to embrace the responsibilities of their royal life. Remember, they do end up,
her parents are royalty. Shrek, on the other hand, felt like Fiona was trying to change him into something he wasn't, a polished proper ruler when all he wanted was the simplicity of his swamp.
Their inability to reconcile their differing visions for the future led to constant arguments
with both feeling misunderstood and unappreciated.
Can I just say, I think Matthew AI's answer is better.
Yeah, I think you all just shame on all of you, including Matthew AI, and especially looking at you, David,
who clearly enjoyed this far too much.
That's hard though, if someone has all the lavish
expectations of we're gonna live a royal life,
and someone's like, I'm a simple guy,
I actually like living quite simply,
that's of different values from the start.
Can't start that way.
Matt AI's answer has layers. Like an onion.
It is mostly the plot of Shrek 2.
You're really confusing me with this game.
I thought they didn't work it out.
I'm very just...
You don't like any of this, do you?
I don't like any of this.
I want to be done with this now.
You don't like breakups and divorces and things going on.
Well that's the end of Steve Sleeves everyone.
So we'll retire Steve Sleeves now,
because that's depressed Audrey.
You can't, we can't take one bad review too seriously.
You've got to win Audrey back again
with the next Steve Sleeves.
Okay, we'll win.
I need a bit of time to recover from this one, but.
Well, if you all want to restore your hope in love and the ability to find enduring love, go over to lovelifereplay.com because you can watch the replay of the massive live online
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and to get a plan for how to find enduring love
in a time where dating feels horrible.
If you are tired of dating or the way things are out there
or situationships or people never investing,
and you wanna actually find something
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Thank you everyone.
Thank you Audrey.
Thank you Stephen.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Bye guys. Thanks for watching!