Matthew Cox | Inside True Crime Podcast - James Sexton: The Hard Truth About Love, Sex, & Divorce
Episode Date: June 9, 2025James Sexton, a divorce attorney in New York City. His books, How To Stay In Love:Practical Advice From An Unexpected Source and If You’re In My Office It’s Already Too Late:A Divorce Lawyer’s G...uide To Staying Together are available on Amazon.James's Website: https://nycdivorces.com/our-attorneysHow to Stay in Love (book): https://amzn.to/3t61ujiIf You're in My Office, It's Already Too Late (audiobook): https://amzn.to/3PkVECgFollow me on all socials!Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/insidetruecrime/TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@matthewcoxtruecrimeDo you want to be a guest? Fill out the form https://forms.gle/5H7FnhvMHKtUnq7k7Send me an email here: insidetruecrime@gmail.comDo you want a custom "con man" painting to shown up at your doorstep every month? Subscribe to my Patreon: https: //www.patreon.com/insidetruecrimeDo you want a custom painting done by me? Check out my Etsy Store: https://www.etsy.com/shop/coxpopartListen to my True Crime Podcasts anywhere: https://anchor.fm/mattcox Check out my true crime books! Shark in the Housing Pool: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0851KBYCFBent: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0BV4GC7TMIt's Insanity: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08KFYXKK8Devil Exposed: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08TH1WT5GDevil Exposed (The Abridgment): https://www.amazon.com/dp/1070682438The Program: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0858W4G3KBailout: https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/bailout-matthew-cox/1142275402Dude, Where's My Hand-Grenade?: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0BXNFHBDF/ref=tmm_pap_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=1678623676&sr=1-1Checkout my disturbingly twisted satiric novel!Stranger Danger: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0BSWQP3WXIf you would like to support me directly, I accept donations here:Paypal: https://www.paypal.me/MattCox69Cashapp: $coxcon69
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When a woman has been cheated on and a man has been cheated on,
The question they ask is different.
A man asks, did you have sex with him?
And the woman asks, do you love her?
Just like a surgeon looks at a person's body differently.
I look at marriage different.
Look, all marriages end.
They end in death or divorce.
So what happens in between is what's mattered?
Was it lovely to be loved and was it lovely to have someone to love?
I wish people could hold on to that.
Because to love anything is to accept the inevitability of losing.
Do you have any like all-time, the worst divorces?
The chapter, everyone's fucking a nanny was a true story.
And that's one of my favorite stories, only because it has a karmic piece to it.
They have this very cute nanny.
And he convinced his wife, he's like, let's try to get the nanny to ever.
it's recent ones.
I went to law school to be a divorce lawyer.
Oh, okay.
So, which is a rare thing.
You know, I think it's very funny when you ask someone who's a divorce lawyer, how did you
become a divorce lawyer?
You always hear two words that I think are very funny to hear in his story.
And that is, I ended up.
I ended up.
You never end up somewhere.
you meant to go. Like, it's always like, yeah, I was trying to get to a giant stadium. And then I ended up
taking the wrong road. And all of a sudden, I'm in Rutherford. You know, like you, you, it's never a good
thing, usually. I ended up there. You know, yeah, my luggage ended up in Tulsa, you know, but so I, whenever
you ask you to Worcester, how'd you come to Worcler, there was like, well, I was working in a firm that did
this and then I did this and then I ended up taking a case. The words ended up always in there. And I
always thought it was really funny because it's it's just not something like if you meet someone
who works for scadden or Simpson thatch or any white shoe law firm there was a well I did a federal
clerk ship and then I did this and it's never well I ended up like it's always it wasn't consolation
prize you know but I um I went to law school to be a divorce lawyer I my undergraduate
degree was in psychology I wanted to be a therapist um but I was always a debater I had debated in high
school at a fairly high level.
Like my freshman year, they put me on the varsity team.
And I just enjoyed debate.
And I figured out pretty quickly that as a therapist, you're really supposed to listen
more than you talk.
And I'm better at talking than listening if you haven't figured that out.
And so I said, okay, that's not the career for me.
So I went to graduate school.
And I was studying culture and communication.
persuasive speech. I was basically studying propaganda studies. And I was teaching at NYU. I'd
finished my master's degree. I was working on my PhD. And then I realized how little money college
professors make. And I went, okay, my son had just been born my first child, who's now 27. He's a
lawyer now. He's an ADA in the Bronx. So he's put people in jail. And in the Bronx, people still
commit crimes. So, you know, that's like one of those places where people still are. He's got job
security. And I decided, well, you know what? I always like debate. I always liked to sort of,
you know, weaponize my verbal abilities. So let me take the law school admission test. And I took it
and I got the 99th percentile and I got through the law school for free. So, but when I went to
law school, I remember thinking, well, I don't, I don't want to do corporate law. I don't want to be
a highly paid proofreader. I don't want to do transactional stuff like real estate and bank
or immigration. Criminal law sounded really interesting to me, but I was honest with myself
that the people who commit interesting crimes and have money usually only do it once. And the people
who commit really interesting crimes frequently usually have no money. So you're not going to get
paid a lot. Right. So I kind of went, well, where else could I get courtroom work other than,
and personal injury sounded no fun to me because personal injury work, you're essentially staking your
own money, like your own time.
And if you win, okay, you get a return.
If you don't, you'll lost. And I'm not that much of a cowboy.
Like, I just don't enjoy gambling in that way.
Yeah. A lot of people don't realize that.
A hundred percent. Yeah. And it's, if you've ever been around a personal injury lawyer
when there was a defendant's verdict, like that you, it's like somebody killed their puppy.
Like they, they're like, oh, they could see them doing the math in their head going like,
oh my God, I've spent so many hours and so much of my own money. So I sort of
and went, well, look, you know, the weather man have it good. You know, if you get the weather
wrong, you still get paid. You know, you get it right. Still get paid. So I went, well,
divorce slayer, if you win, you get paid, you lose, you get paid. Like, I'll do that.
And I also liked that it checked some of the other boxes, you know, gave me that courtroom stuff
that I like, the performative streak that I like. And it also, what I liked about the potential
of being a therapist, which was helping people who are going through a serious time and
and sort of an opportunity for transformation.
And I like the fact that people couldn't be full of shit when they're getting divorced
because no one could ever say they meant to be there.
You know,
that's what I think you and I have in common in terms of the stories we tell
or help facilitate people telling is no one meant to be in jail.
No one meant to be getting divorced.
Yeah, I was, I was going to say, it's funny every time I would, I would,
I'll meet people and you'll meet some, you know, a woman or a guy or something,
And they'll say, you know, oh, yeah, well, I'm divorced.
I'm like, oh, I'm sorry.
And they'll say, oh, no, I'm glad.
And I'm thinking, really?
And I've always been like, well, I mean, I'm sorry because I know you didn't enter into that marriage thinking you were going to get divorced.
That's what I mean.
And yeah, the jerky thing for them to say, oh, I'm not.
Okay, I get it.
Yeah.
You know, I think I know what people mean.
And I think you do too when they say that.
And that is that people do sometimes.
I think that what people mean to say when they say, oh, I'm sorry, like I, I never make
someone feel odd about that.
Like the eighth anniversary of my mother's passing away from cancer just past Sunday.
And I was, when I tell people, oh, I was doing this because it's the anniversary of my mom's
passing, they go, oh, I'm sorry.
And of course, I understand what they mean, which is I'm sorry for your loss.
But there is a part of you that if you have a dark sense of humor, it's like, well,
you didn't kill her. Like, you didn't give her cancer. Like, you know, like, what are you sorry about?
Like, if sorry is, I, I am sorry for my responsibility for what occurred. So, like, divorce,
like, I'm a divorced person. I'm thrilled that I got divorced. I mean, it was, it turned out to be
one of the greatest things that happened to me and to her. You know, we're still dear friends.
We have one of her sons together. We're now adults. She's been remarried for 12 years to a wonderful
guy who's a much better fit for her. And we all, everybody gets along. And, you know,
really enjoys each other.
But was it terribly painful when we were going through?
Of course, it was very painful.
So when someone says, I'm sorry, I hear it as I'm sorry you went through that, not
I'm sorry that happened to you.
Like I, you know, you're someone who's been through tremendously stressful and
traumatic things.
And I'm sure that you're not sorry that they happened to you because you, you wouldn't
be who you were or were it not for the things.
things are gone through.
Yeah, I understand what they meant.
I mean, obviously, when they always say, but it's funny that people, I mean, I don't
think I've ever met anybody that didn't say, you know, where I'd say, I'm sorry.
And they immediately, you know, oh, I'm not sorry.
That's just always, yeah, that's like all the, all of it's always, it's always, it's always
I guess people don't want to feel wounded.
I don't, I don't know.
I think there people do feel self-conscious about like that they're, like, there's
something wrong with them.
I mean, I think we have been very.
to people when it comes to divorce.
You know, I grew up, I went to Catholic school my whole life.
I'm 51.
I went to Catholic school my whole life.
And so growing up in the 70s and in a Catholic environment, there was like one kid in the class
whose parents are divorced.
You know, it was like, be nice to him.
His parents are divorced.
But it was like the one kid, you know.
Right.
And he happened to be biracial too, which is like that poor fucking kid.
Like, he had everything in the 70s.
these were two very complex things to navigate at Catholic school.
But the truth is, like, I don't know that now, I wish we were a little more like, oh,
yeah, like it's a chapter in a book.
Like, like love is, you know, I've had some great loves in my life, like, and I, maybe three,
four, you know, and each one of them, like I used to tell my sons when they, we might,
they were five and seven when the mom and I divorced.
and as they got older I would say to them all the time like oh your mom's one of the great loves of my life
she made me such a better man you know like and like we made our lives so much better because of
each other and you know we had a chapter where we loved each other in the way that married people
are supposed to but then we realized we didn't love each other in that very special way it doesn't
mean we don't love each other but there's a lot of people I love it would want to be married to
but you know we're family and we always will be and so when you say it you've you
divorce that way, there's nothing to be sorry for. It's sorry for the pain you went through because
every divorce is painful, every breakup is painful. But it's certainly nothing. People I think don't want to
be pitied, I guess, is maybe that's it. What they're responding to. But I think the instinct in you
to say that is actually like an empathetic one, you know, which is to say to something like,
oh man, I'm sorry that things didn't go the way you wanted them to. But I do think sometimes the
lives. One of the things that's really cool about being a divorce lawyer that you wouldn't think
because people are always like, oh my God, like how do you deal with a sea of human misery you
must have to do with? But there's also like so many redemption arts because like I've had
clients who come in and they're just destroyed like their spouse was cheating on them or they've
been a victim of intimate partner abuse or their spouse walked out on them. And they're just
sitting at my conference room table and like their life's over. Like their life's over. They're just
they're miserable, they're crying, they don't want this, but they can't, you can't make
someone love you, you can't make someone stay with you, you can't make someone not cheat on
you. And they're just, they can't imagine that they're going to be okay, you know? And then,
you know, we have to go through the whole thing, but it's like five, ten years later, I get invited
to their next wedding, you know, or they send me a holiday card or they stop in, like,
their life is so good, you know, their life is so good.
and they're okay and their kids are okay and they find new love and like you know I always say like
56% of marriage is in divorce and people love that statistic because they love to be like look at how
reckless it is to get married but the more interesting statistic in my point of view is that
86% of people are remarried within five years of their divorce so that's people have already
been through it and they still go fuck it I'm doing it again like let's go let's go so that tells me
there's something there, you know?
Right.
So I kind of love that, that part.
That's the part of it that drew me to it, was the opportunity to be with people and part
of the architecture of their redemption arc or their next chapter.
And that's been really, really gratifying.
Sometimes you have to wait a long time to see it.
But one of the most enjoyable things I get to do now is when I have that broken person,
at my conference room table. I'll say to them, you know, in that chair you're in right now
10 years ago was a person in exactly your situation. And I'm going to give you their phone number
and I want you to call them. And I want you to tell them that what's going on in your life
and that I'm representing you. And I want you to hear their story. And I'll, I have a roster of
former clients. And I've said to them, do you mind if I give a client your number?
so that you can say like, hey, I was sat in that chair.
I know where you think you're at the bottom now, but trust me, like, your life is going
to be so good.
And those clients, like, they love that opportunity.
They're always like, oh, my God, if someone had done that for me when I was sitting in that
chair, like, that would have been like something to hold on to.
So that's the joy of having done this for so long now is that I've got this whole
roster of people that I can kind of, you know, and I can do it on the negative too.
Like, I have guys who are women who are going to do some dumb shit in a divorce
litigation, I'll say, okay, before you do that, can I connect you with one of my other clients
who did the same thing for the same reason, understandable, but they'll tell you how it went for
them. And then I'll connect them. And sometimes that's really like a transformative thing for
people. So I have a question. And this is funny because it's actually kind of related to a friend
of mine who was locked up like a year ago. And he was, and he has got all these
stories from being locked up. And he was telling me, he said, listen, he said, you want to hear
one of the weirdest things? I was like, what? He said, there was this, there's this guy who's
in for stalking. I was like, okay, what did he do? He's like, he, he was, and it was his,
his wife. So they're in the middle of a divorce. Yep. He wouldn't stop calling her. He wouldn't
stop coming by. She got a restraining order. He gets locked up again because he shows up.
or he calls. He had been, while he was there, the guy got locked up, did like 10 or 15 days,
got out, got locked up again, did like 60 days, got out. And he said, came back like two days
before he was leaving. And he said, every time he was leaving, these guys in jail were like,
listen, you know, you understand. You cannot contact her. No, no, I understand. I, I don't know,
I don't know what I was thinking. And then he would leave it. Come back. You go, you know, I just wanted to,
if I could just sit down and explain to her.
If I could tell you how many times I have had that conversation with a client, it's a lot.
It's a lot.
And they are sincere.
No, no, if I can judge, the only thing I can compare it to, what it reminds.
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It reminds me of
is it reminds me of
the gambler who goes
I just got to get ahead
I just got to get if I just
no no no I know I'm 50,000 down
I just need another grand
if I get that grand I'm going to get right back up
and then I'm going to cash out once I get back up
now I know I'm 150 grand down now
but I'm telling you if I get an
and you look at them and go do you
how do you not know how ridiculous you sound right now
like this is no different
Then when you were $5,000 down and you threw another $5 on top of it, $50,000 ago,
they don't see it.
They just don't see it.
They just don't.
I've had so many clients that just do not understand that you have, this is one of the most shocking things I tell people, is that you have the right to say to someone, never contact me again directly, period.
Ever.
I refuse to speak to you.
and then if they contact you again, if you make clear that contacting me will serve no
legitimate purpose but to harass a lawyer norm and intimidate, then if they contact you
again, ever, they have engaged in harassment in the second degree, period.
And you get a restraining order.
You get a restraining order and they violate the restraining order.
It's harassment.
They violate the restraining order.
It's criminal contempt to court.
Like I've seen so many people locked up because they just do not understand.
No, no.
I just have to explain to her. No, I'm telling you, she's going to understand. It's like a human desire to be understood is like the undoing of so many people. It's like the desire for closure. There is no closure. It is not going to happen. I was so fine. I'm like, they want to have a trial. You know, and they're like, well, no, I want her to hear. I'm like, listen. There is a moment where she's good. Like, because guys, you know, women will say all the time, like, I want him to know what he did. I want him to feel how much he
hurt me. I want him to, I want him to regret. And I go, listen, there will be a moment where that
happens. It's not going to be in a courtroom. He's in, you're probably never even going to see it.
It's going to be when he's alone in bed at night when the monsters come for all of us.
You know, years from now and back. Years from now when we're alone and the air is still and the
night is silent is when we go, you know, I was a piece of shit. Like, that's what our demons come
for us. And I said, I'm like, and you think he's going to call you in that? You're kidding yourself.
But just know that, you know, if your truth is like, my beliefs don't require you to believe.
You know, the truth is the truth, whether you believe the truth or not. Truth is the truth.
So I, there is a desire humans have for some kind of closure or some kind of aha moment. And I just, I don't know.
I think sometimes it's like a siren song that just leads us to the crash because we just,
want to be heard and understood so badly and we're just willing to just sacrifice so much to
try to for that illusion you know and it's a myth it's it's a siren song you think it's more
of men that do this or women or is it 50 50 50 I think it's 50 yeah I think it's I mean I don't
think either either gender has the market cornered on delusion and on you know men I heard an
interesting comment once in my experience has proven it true because I work in the clay of adultery.
You know, the adultery is either a cause or an underlying symptom of a lot of the marriages
that end up in my office. And someone once pointed out to me, and it's absolutely true in my
experience, is that when a woman has been cheated on and a man has been cheated on, the question
they ask is different, a man asks, did you have sex with him? And the woman asks, do you love
her? And that's proven to be true in my experience, is that men are very possessive of a woman's
body and possessive of their right to intimacy with her or the access they have to her as an
intimate partner and women are are more tied to like your bond with me your connection to me
your devotion to me your loyalty and love for me and so I think men and women are they engage in
that same behavior that same delusion that same but to different ends because with the woman
it's like I want to understand how you could do this to I thought you've
felt this way and you couldn't feel this way because if you really felt that way you wouldn't
do this to me and men it's more obsessive about details like men are just obsessed with the details
of infidelity like they are just here's where were they and where what position was it or like
they want to know everything they think it's going to make feel better it never does in my
I can't imagine it oh my never does you like I don't want you kidding me why would you want to
know it's like when guys talk about like a woman's body count like they're like well you
you know, how many women did she, how many men did she sleep with before you? I'm like,
I don't want to know. And I don't want to have to tell you how many women I was with before
you. Like I just, look, we're all born and new in a relationship. So, you know, judge me by how
I behave towards you. If I cheated on somebody else, it doesn't mean I'm going to cheat on
you. You know, if I was happy with someone else, doesn't mean I'd be happy with you if I was
like, I don't buy that. So I have a, okay, yeah, I wish I hadn't watched that.
interview because I'm going to ask some of the same questions. I do have I one of the
questions is that you know and I I already know the answer to this but it's funny that real
quick I want to mention that it's something that you had you had brought up was I think the
the love thing will like people going out and getting married again right away whatever
people ask me like in my own story when when the girl
I was with at the very end of my little, you know, being on the run, guys are like, when you found
out that she knew who you were, why didn't you leave? All I ever have to say is I was in love.
And every guy is like, they totally, like all those rules go out the window the moment you're
in love because of that feeling. And, you know, and so I would actually overly even simplify
it, drill it down beyond that. That's even a more complex emotional state.
like to say I was in love that's sort of like I had rose colored glasses on you know and that that's
when you're wearing rose colored glasses all the red flags just collect flags you know but I I I jokingly
have said that there was a couple of relationships I stayed in way too long just because they were
good in bed like we were just good and bet like honestly like I was I was date here for a month
because I really liked her and thought we were compatible and then we were together for a year
and a half because she, you know, was really good and bad. Like, that's really, you know, but, but it's,
but it's true. Like, there's so much we will overlook. Like, there's a lot of people that would say,
oh, I stayed with this person because they were very reliable or they were very financially
secure or my parents liked them. Like, people stay in relationships for very odd reasons. You know,
sometimes they'll, they just have invested so much time. They're like, I am not. It's like people's
investments. You know, I bought this stock a long time. I'm not going to
sell it now and it's like well yeah but you should you know like but yeah i think people do um
you know people will under do understand anyone who's ever been you know there are people that
say that love is a delusion brought on by inadequate lighting you know and and anyone who's ever
been under the spell of love knows what it feels like to go yeah but that's nothing no like
it's i love this person like you can just overlook everything but
you know in my line of work it's fascinating because it it goes the other way fast which is
that same phenomenon that like oh like everything this person does just see it in the best
possible light and even the things they do that might be annoying if someone else did
and you're just like oh it's so cute like she snores like it's so cute she snores like meanwhile
anybody else would like fucking stop snoring Jesus you know but like in the early
days like that's just so lovely that this firm care if you're in love with a person you just don't
fucking care you know but it goes so easily the other way when the relationship ends like that
they can do nothing right that they're just horrible like i've had cases where you know a client
will just like do the right thing like just because it's the right thing to do like they'll be like
well no she wants the kids for Thanksgiving so she can have it just like well you know obviously
you gave me them for Thanksgiving because i did you're like dude he just did something nice like
just because he cheated on you doesn't mean there's nothing good about him ever like right it's just
not how it works like people are all good and all bad like this is what is this pro wrestling like this is
ridiculous like this is real life so um what like what like what do you have any like all time
the worst divorces the like the worst case i mean there's so many the last the last chapter of my
book is the final chapter or may even be the epilogue is called cannibals and i wrote it about a
divorce that was finishing as i was finishing the book and it was like it had gone on for four
years and it they you could actually use that divorce in law school to reverse engineer everything
people shouldn't do when they're getting divorced. Like, they just did everything they could
to kill each other in the divorce and ended up just destroying their own lives in the process,
like protracting it, burning millions of dollars in counsel fees. Like, it was just ruining
their children, ruining any goodwill between them. And it wasn't that sexy. Like, it was just a
succession of really small bad choices that just led them down this path where they just kept
finding the permission of their own conscience to do the wrong thing. And so in reality,
to me, that's the worst. The worst is when people just make these small, terrible choices.
Like you and I are both fit guys, you know, and I think when you're, you know, have a healthy
lifestyle or healthy body, you realize it's not like, well, what did you eat on Saturday?
You know, whatever you ate one day. It's not, or if you go on vacation for a week, like,
eat whatever the hell you want on vacation, you know, it's small choices you make every day.
Do I do my little half an hour workout or hour workout? Do I try to eat healthy, you know,
most of the time? Like, yeah, like that's kind of how you, you don't just gain weight in one day.
It's a lot of little stupid bad choices, you know, and you don't get fit in one day. It's a lot.
lot of little healthy choices. And it's the same kind of thing. I think that, you know, a lot of
these, it's like I, you know, on fire of the vanities, Tom Wolfe, one of the characters is talking
about how they went bankrupt. And he says, well, I went bankrupt the way everybody goes bankrupt very
slowly and then all at once. And I think that's what happens. You know, it's most, to me,
the most painful things to watch are people making small bad choices that just leaves.
them down this path of ruin that they don't even realize. It's like when your clothes just start
getting tight, like slowly. It happens so slowly that you're like, wait, how did this happen?
You know, and I think that to me is the most holy shit. But most of the time when someone
asked, like, I don't really go to parties, but if I went to part, when I used to go to parties,
people would say like, oh, what do you do for a living? Oh, I'm at Borsler. And holy shit,
you must have stories. And they don't want to hear that story.
They don't want to hear the like small succession of bad choices.
They want to hear about the Methodist minister who was like 60 something years old and happily married,
but having sex with a 22 year old, Guyanese male immigrant and who then as his defense
tried to claim that the sex that they had had was not consensual, meaning that so he was
he claimed that he'd invited this young man over to dinner while his wife was away just to have
dinner with him and then he was doing the dishes and the guy came up behind him and began having
sex with him but it wasn't consensual and I said so are you saying he raped you and he said well
no I didn't tell him to stop but I didn't tell him that he could either so I was like okay
so you resisted in some fashion they said no no I allowed it to happen
I'm like, okay, then it was consensual that.
And he's like, well, no, because I didn't explicitly tell him.
I'm like, listen, I, as a heterosexual man, if someone came up behind me and started
even attempting to have sex with me, I would say, hey, excuse me, I'm not, you know,
let's not do this, perhaps, you know, like let's, let's just be friends.
And, uh, at a minimum, that's how I would handle that.
And, uh, and he just, you know, would not, but then it turned out he didn't bezzled a bunch
money from the church. I mean, like, those cases are, I have so many bizarre, salacious,
only like a hundredth of them ended up in the book. Like the, the chapter, everyone's
fucking the nanny was a true story, absolute true story. And that's one of my favorite stories
only because it has a karmic piece to it. And that is this guy who was kind of a dick. He
wasn't my client, but I'm not the kind of guy that like, if you're not my client, you're the
dick and my client's the hero. Like I acknowledge that I represent good people and that people,
whatever. I don't wear the white hat, you know, like I'm a weapon. You know, you point me at the
person. That's a weapon in the hands of a good person can save people and protect people. And
the weapon in the hands of a villain can hurt people. But I'm, it's, don't get mad at the weapon.
Right. And I, this guy convinced his, they have this very cute nanny from South America. I think she
was Brazilian. And he convinced his wife, he's like, let's try to get the nanny to have a threesome
with us. And she was like, no. Like, this is like our nanny. We're paying her. It's inappropriate,
you know. And he said, oh, come on. You know, she's cute. She's fun. Like, let's, you know,
and he convinced his wife. And then he went to the nanny. And he said to her, look, you know,
my wife thinks you're really attractive and she wondered if we could have a threesome and so the nanny
goes to the wife and says listen did you really say this and she said yeah you know i think it'd be
fun whatever so they get drunk and they end up having threesome and they end up doing this pretty
frequently for like six months and then one day the wife is out and the husband goes to the nanny
and it's like hey what do you say you and i and she says no no no i don't want to have a thing with you
it's you know either three of us or not or nothing he didn't like that but the wife i guess
sometime later that week gets home and the nanny says to her you know he tried to sleep with me
and the wife gets very upset about this the p s of this is within a month the wife and the nanny
left the husband and took the kids and divorced him and then they subsequently have married each
other and are quite happily married and have custody of the kids. Wow.
I think about the threesome gone wrong. I was going to say they let first of all they
always go wrong like they I don't ever I don't I can't imagine a married couple having a
threesome and that marriage gets stronger as a result of it and goes on and becomes super
healthy like if only way I've heard a threesome workout is if it's like
both parties are into it and they do it like on vacation with someone they're
never going to see ever again like and it's just a thing that happens and it has no
connection to their life like it's like it's like on vacation they did this thing and that's
that sad and it was something both of them both of them approached in roughly the same way like
if one person initiated that conversation that's the person who they're going to be hurt feeling
against that person at some point. But I totally agree. I mean, I totally agree that that is a,
it is a red flag when somebody in the relationship goes, maybe we should invite someone else
into the bedroom. Hey, so, so which one of those two couples or which one of those two parties did
you represent the husband? The wife. The wife. Oh, the wife. Yeah, the wife. How did that
conversation go? You know, every one of these kinds of conversations goes the same way. And that is
that they say to me you're not going to believe this story or well i've got it i've got a unique one for
you and i'm like okay like it never is it never is it's like while i secretly had two girlfriends
or i this and i'm like aha like you don't know how fucking vanilla you are buddy like this is not like
this is this is this one was different you know it the first person it's this one they said she said
it and it was her and her friend so the girl was with her right
on the on the on the on the in the meeting just as though this is my friend whatever name was
and I said hi nice to meet you a lot of times people do bring somebody because it's a
stressful scary thing talked to a divorce lawyer the first time and she's telling me this
story and I'm going thinking okay this is a unique story you know and and I realized that the
girl who's with her is the nan right and then now that they're together and I'm I'm just
try to but what's interesting is when that happens you really do have to be sort of one you
You can't go,
fucking really,
are you serious?
Like,
you have to,
you know,
like,
I've all been joked
with my law partner
that, like,
what would happen
if somebody was telling us
their story and I was going,
oh my God,
what are you going to do?
Like,
holy shit.
Like,
that's nuts.
Oh my God.
Like,
they don't want,
like your lawyer,
you just want them to,
uh,
sure,
sure.
Okay,
and then,
uh,
yeah,
and that happened,
sure,
sure,
like you have to,
but you develop this.
I mean,
in court,
you know,
Your Honor, the suggestion that my client has an alcohol problem is utterly devoid of basis, in fact.
This is rote speculation. They're weaponizing this. What about the fact your client had at DWI last week?
Last week, yeah. Last week. Well, obviously, Your Honor, listen, no one is impervious from the possibility with the laws being where they are in terms of the blood alcohol content, where it is.
Does that conclusively prove the fact that he's had on one occasion, perhaps one too many drinks?
operated a motor vehicle in order to return home to his children that night.
You know, well, it's his fourth BWI, fourth, fourth, fourth one, okay.
You know, to your honor, who among us has not, you, you just have to find like a way to sort
to go like, mm-hmm, sure, that, yep, keep going. Okay, yep.
But I, that is one where as she's telling the story, I'm going, holy shit, this is going
in the book. This is something. This is, this is, I actually got an email from
because of course you have a legal edit had to change names and details right but people still
knew who they were and it was all people that like if it was a story like that i always said to the
person did you mind if i share this in the book and they were like yeah whatever as long as you
change you know i gave him the changed version of it and uh you know she laughed because they're
still together and quite happy from what i can tell you know sometimes when things are born of these
bizarre adverse circumstances like the bongs that come from that are very
So what happened?
So was it
I mean was it
I'm not that
I'm sure there are amicable divorces right?
Like you've had amicable
Oh my God tons of them.
Okay.
None.
More of them now because
you kind of don't hire me
if you're having an amicable divorce.
There's much cheaper options.
So like if someone comes in and they're having
an amicable divorce,
I'd send them right back out the door.
Like I'll go, here's a mediator.
Here's his number.
Go do that.
If it breaks down and turns a number.
The warfare call me, but if you get, don't do it, you know, with a chainsaw.
If you could do it with a scalpel, like go, go do it, go do it the right way, go do it the
cheap way, go do it the proper way where you're going to keep the goodwill between the two
you.
It's just better on every level to have an amicable divorce.
And most divorces are amicable.
Most divorces are amicable with the nanny.
Was that, did that end up being amicable?
Oh, no, no, no, okay.
I was not, there was semi-amical.
Well, this is an interesting phenomenon, Matt, because, you know,
know, I like to imagine, it's never happened to me, but this is a fairly common thing that
someone leaves for a same-sex partner. So like a man says, look, I'm gay and he leaves his
wife. Or a woman says, listen, I'm in love with a woman and this is how it is. And it's
never happened to me, but I'd like to imagine that if it did, that like, I don't, I don't
think I'd be as upset.
Do you know what I mean?
Like if a woman I was in a relationship with said to me, listen, I'm leaving you for
another man.
That's like, I won't one like you, but not you.
Right.
Right.
Whereas if you're saying I'm leaving you because I'm in love with a woman, it's like,
all right, well, I don't even have that equipment.
So like, I feel like I'm fighting biology that I, I, yeah, I'm unequipped to if not, right.
I think with the same way.
Right.
Like I don't serve that at this restaurant
Like it's not that you don't like the restaurant
Like you want sushi
This is a pizza
That's a bad choice
You want pizza
And I'm you know
I'm an Indian restaurant
Like so okay
Like we don't
You know
Dislike my food
It's just this is what you want
It is quite the opposite
In real life
In real life
People do not
Handle it though
Like
Because it amplifies
I think that sense
Of you lied to me
like you lied to me about what you want, which is weird because I don't know that that's always
the case. I think sometimes people lie to themselves. You know, like I've done a lot of divorces
for men who came out of the closet. And they're like, I was lying to everyone that I was about
being gay. I was lying to my family. I was like, like I couldn't face consequences of being
gay. Like I didn't, you know, and I mean, it was a different time, I think, generationally.
But like, you find yourself thinking like, all right, I get that.
you know like I get that we've all backed ourselves a new corner you know at some point in our lives
some more than others and I get it you know like but but in that case he was so pissed I mean he lost
his wife and he lost his girlfriend sort of you know and any it was good at any kids and he did
it to himself right he did it to himself over something fucking stupid like the juice was not
worth to squeeze you know like I really hope you enjoyed those like whatever seven eight
threesomes that you got to have with the nanny because boy did that fucking cost you
because this was not on his wife's radar like he had it took him a couple of months of talking
her into this for this to happen you know so talk about being an active participant in your own
undoing yeah but i think that what's interesting the right response to that i think
is to be mad at yourself but there's this human phenomenon where people are
like I can't fucking believe what you did to be and it's like you she did to you what did she do
you know like I mean that's crazy like you you cause this buddy like you know play stupid games
win stupid prizes like I don't know what to tell you you know yeah yeah there's so many
people that typically have the you know inappropriate response to something you know that was
a definition you know fuck around and find out like that person fucked around and they found
out, you know? And I think that turn that rage inward because, you know, you made your choices. Learn
for a bit for the next relationship. So my wife had a question for you, but you've already
answered it. I just don't think she, I think she had walked out when, but you're currently
single. You're not with? I'm not married. I'm not married. I'm in a relationship. Yeah. Oh,
okay. Okay. I've been in a relationship for a number of years and, and I'm very happy. Yeah. Okay.
But I don't, and again, I have no critique of marriage.
I think that, you know, I understand why people marry and I'm certainly happy that they do.
It provides job security for me.
But I don't generally feel, because I view marriage differently than other people do, because I see it as a legal status.
I see it as a, so I see the nuts.
Just like a surgeon looks at a person's body.
differently. And a car mechanic looks at a car differently. I look at marriage differently. And so I don't
need the government or the state to get involved in the way I interact with another person
with whom I romantically involved. But I believe I'm, you know, I'm very much a romantic
at heart. I'm very much someone who sees tremendous value in love. And I'm a very monogamous
sky. I've never been a guy who was interested in running around with multiple people. I enjoy
being alone very much, but I also enjoy being in a relationship. I don't cohabitate with my
romantic partner because I like having my own space and she does too. And we have a tendency
to like share, we share some space and then we also have our own spaces. So,
It's kind of a nice thing, you know, that we have like a shared space together.
And then we have, you know, our own places to kind of go back to and retreat to.
And I like that for me.
For me, for me, relationships are about the you, the me, and the way.
And I think there's a tendency, which is good for my business, but I wouldn't want to emulate in my personal life to turn the you and the me into the we and let the we just kill the you and the me.
but like your wife met you and you're the one she fell in love with like this this autonomous
island this person you know this person that existed before her and it's wonderful that love transforms
us but you know you fell in love with her because she was this other person this independent entity
and so i'm a big fan in a lot of my writing i i just try to encourage people to remember that
it's wonderful to grow together and to have intimacy with each other in terms of the ability
to be yourself with another person. But don't forget who you are and who you were when you met
because that's a terrible loss to like, I love you so much that I'm going to try to extinguish who
you are. That seems weird to me. Like let this person be who they are, you know, let them blossom
into the fullness of who they are independently. And that doesn't, that doesn't mean you aren't
In love, it doesn't mean you're not monogamous.
It doesn't mean any of those things.
It just means that you're encouraging this person to be the best, most authentic version
of themselves they could ever be, you know.
And I can't think of a better compliment at the end of someone's life than to be able
to say, this person helped me become the most authentic version of myself, you know.
And to me, like, I love love.
I love being in a relationship.
I know I can't learn everything I need to know about myself from myself.
I know I can't see my blind spots.
That's where they're blind spots.
Like, I need someone to help me see them.
But I always, for me, want a partner who's cheering for me.
You know, I don't want a partner who's an automatic yes person.
But at the core, I really want someone who's like a fan.
You know, and when I'm getting it wrong, it's going to say you're getting it wrong,
but I know you're capable of so much more.
Like, you're getting it wrong, but you're not a bad person.
You're just getting it wrong.
You know, and like, they're cheering for me.
And to me, that's a beautiful thing.
Yeah, I don't think I'd ever, you know, legally marry again.
But, I mean, listen, with a pre-nup, like, marry as many times as you want.
I mean, nothing more fun than getting married, the hard part's being, getting married.
It's a blast.
Oh.
You're what's in the background going on?
Oh, yeah.
She's gone.
Yeah, that's good.
Normally she would.
She knows she talking to a divorce lawyer.
That's right.
She knows she's talking to divorce.
Listen, what you should do, man, is to keep my card around.
Just keep it around.
And then if she's there.
you know, not on her best behavior, you sort of go like, yeah, I was talking to sex
him the other day, you know, and that's...
See, I feel like I'm in a different category because...
So I met my wife in the halfway house.
Okay.
And she was getting out of prison.
Okay.
And I was getting out of prison.
And we started just after that, like we were flirting in the halfway house.
She really fell for me in the halfway house.
She doesn't want to admit that, but that's fine.
What a name for the book
You write it, Love in the Halfway House
Falling in the Halfway House
Like that is
Well you know
Honestly I
This is the way I feel is like
You know
She's been beaten up
You know by society
By just life in general
So her expectations were really low
Like that's really the place to get one
Because you're gonna get a lot for your buck
Because they're down on their luck
They're living
that she's living in her dad's spare room.
I'm looking pretty good.
Yeah.
Well, I also think there is something very true about what you're saying that I think,
you know,
I don't know if you watched,
this is my guilty pleasure.
If you haven't watched it,
you should.
There's a show on Netflix called Love on the Spectrum.
Yeah.
Have you ever seen it?
Yeah.
Yeah.
I need a couple episodes.
I am addicted to the show.
And I will tell you why.
Because it strips down to the core.
these people just want to love someone and to be loved.
Yeah.
That's it.
There's no, they're not overthinking it because they're kind of not able to.
Right.
And they're not reading too heavily into anything because they can't, like they can't read
cues properly because they're so on the spectrum.
And they just, the joy that they find of like, will you be my girlfriend?
Yes.
Will you be my boyfriend?
Yes.
Like, okay, great.
I have a girlfriend now.
okay I have a boyfriend now like there is something about just stripping away all of the other stuff and just going like I love stories of people that are like dude I fucked up yeah I fucked up too like you want to be fucked up together and figure it out yeah let's do that like let's just hold each other's hand and just walk through this thing and see where we can go and like she's in the background saying she's in the background saying you know that's definitely us I mean think about it's a beautiful story that's a beautiful story that's a beautiful
because you know if you're if you were the incredibly successful person and she well of course
she finds that attractive right like but there are people like I have a buddy from college I just
talked to and um he's down on his luck a little bit and I helped him with some things and he said to me
like oh man you've been so good to me and I said you know Mike you were good to me when there was
fucking no reason to be good to me like I had nothing to offer you I had nothing I was broke like
I was the guy in college who would like go to the diner with everybody and I would eat all their coleslawn pickles because I just couldn't afford food. Like I literally, I could afford a pack of cigarettes or food and I'd order, I'd fit the cigarettes because cigarettes were like a buck 50 a pack back then. And I don't, I quit smoking many years ago. But I, I, I look at people like that now and I just go like, man, you just loved me when there was no benefit to that. Like there was no like, dude, you on paper when your wife met you, fuck that.
Like, there's no way, like, you are not the guy.
Like, you were not the guy.
And yet, you know, so now, like, when you're ascendant and you, like, succeed, it's like,
well, man, that's a person who, like, that is, like, I would have such loyalty to that woman.
And I'm sure she has such loyalty to you because there was such a, like, the fuck were you going to get out of that.
You know, like, you were, you know, like, that's amazing.
Like, and to me, that's where people, if they can keep that gratitude, that sense of like,
there are fucking 8 billion people in the world and you picked me and you said no i'm in like
i'm going to hold your hand and walk into the fire whatever this looks like like to me that's
like the most beautiful thing like like how do you not love that like i get misty eyed with you know
you're going to make me cry bro we stop you're going to make me cry look i might also get you laid
later i mean no it's listening in here so this is like you get yeah no either way
I mean, you're right.
Like, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, you know,
we're both barely making it.
You know, this is right out of the halfway house.
We, we, we have to get permission from our probation officers to, to date each other.
I mean, it's, it's the most pathetic thing, you know, we're meeting in hotel rooms.
I'm, I'm running my credit cards up, you know, just to get a hotel room.
Like, it was just, it.
And then, you know, and then it ultimately, you know, we end up getting, you know, we end up moving in together.
we get married we you know so yeah it's it's a that's a great great story though like it is a great
story to have someone who and see that's why to me that i hope look all marriages end they end in death
or divorce but they all end and and everything ends right like that's very buddhist of me but like
everything ends you know so like every story ends the same both of you die so what happens in between
is what matters you know and and to me like I I wish people could hold on to that like like it sounds
like you're both still holding on to that story and that appreciation like we do it in other
relationships like like if you have a dog like people you know there's a lot of people that are
dog people I happen to be a dog person and no one has ever looked at like an eight year old
dog that they have had for eight years and kind of like
I kind of get a new dog.
I got to get a pubby.
This fucking dogs all have had for like eight years.
Like there's so many cooler, newer, nicer, you know, fuzzier looking dogs.
Like, you'd never look at it that way.
You love this thing more and more as time goes on.
Like, so why, what is it about romantic relationships that were just so quick to just be like,
oh, this same old meatloaf?
Like it not sort of go like, hey, this person is just, you know, they locked in with me.
riding with me, like they're loyal to me. I'm loyal to them. That can just be such a, I think,
such a beautiful thing. And then if it does end, if you can hold on to, well, we had a great
run, you know, like we had a great run. I look at my ex-wife. We were married 12 years,
and we loved each other well. We weren't right for each other for life permanently, but we left
each other well. We did the best we could do at the time. And I'm really glad we were married.
I don't look at that and go, that wasn't successful.
Like, I'd tell my current romantic partner, like, if you broke my heart tomorrow,
it had been worth it.
It would have been worth it.
Like, because, like, one day is the lion.
You know what I mean?
Like, I just, like, if I, one week of really being loved and really loving someone,
break my heart.
Go ahead.
Break it.
Like, I got to have that.
I got to have that experience.
And to me, that's it.
Like, that's everything, you know?
So I'll never count the cost.
Like, and I think that, you know, people like the relationship you have where all you had to offer each other was each other.
Like, that's a really pure thing.
And that's, you know, that's a really nice thing.
And that's the kind of thing that if you can keep that in your line of vision, I don't think, you know, you ever end up in my office.
Did you ever see the movie, Michael?
No, no. City of Angels.
I don't think so.
Well, it's basically, it's one of the angels decides not to be an angel.
He falls in love.
And it's, gosh, who is?
Oh, is it Nicholas Cage?
I did see it.
Yeah, very.
At the end, he spends one night with her, and then she gets hit the next day by a truck.
And it's over, and his buddy's there to collect her.
And he says, you know, and he's like, was it worth it?
he says absolutely yeah absolutely and I believe I believe really that that you know all of
it is so uncertain I have learned in my work how fragile love is and and love is never
permanently gifted it is it is on loan you know and it's either on loan with time meaning
this person will tie someday and be taken from us or I'll tie and be lost to them or
the love changes and it it no longer works you know for one or both of the people but the question is is like
was it was it lovely to be loved and was it lovely to have someone to love i believe it is like i believe it
is i don't buy into the suggestion that well you know things end this way so why bother you know
or you could be hurt so why but like to love anything is just fucking crazy like because to love
thing is to accept the inevitability of losing it. But I believe you should love anyway. You know,
but I, you know, my favorite poem is a poem. If you've never read it, you should look it up.
It's a poem by Joseph Brodsky called, um, a song. And he wrote it after his wife died. And I won't,
you know, but you should look it up. But what, but the refrain of the poem is, I wish you were here,
dear. And it's, I wish you were here, dear. I wish you were here. I wish we sat on the porch and you
sat near. It's a very sweet poem. One of the lines is, I wish you were here, dear, I wish you were
here. I wish I knew no astronomy when stars appear. And I love that line because the idea that
if you've ever studied astronomy, like, it takes some of the magic of the stars away, you know,
because you're like, oh, that's a flaming ball of gas. That's this many thousands of miles away.
Like, whereas otherwise, it's like, oh, these little beautiful lights in the sky, you know,
Like, and I think that doing what I do for a living, it's very easy to just become disillusioned with love and say like, oh, love is like a con.
Love is just a con.
Like, it's just the ultimate con.
But I was just say one of the things you mentioned in one of the other interviews was that, you know, when these people, when they're in your office or, you know, whatever, you're, you know, in the conference room and they're going at it.
and sometimes if you can take them back to when they first met how it they will transform
back to that and it it it'll leave you know they go back to that place and I you know I definitely
think that it's funny I hate that I'm mentioning all these movies but I'm not very but Lex
Fredman and I half the we recorded for five and a half hours he edited down to like four
at least two of the hours
because that's talking about movies.
True romance made it in,
like four other movies made it in.
There was like 15 that didn't.
The wedding,
what about the wedding crashers?
Love it.
At the beginning,
when they're fighting and he's like,
what are we doing here?
Come on,
let's get in here,
we'll get some strange.
Like,
you move on,
you had some fun,
you made some bad choices together.
Like,
come on,
what are you doing?
Like,
when he gets them to talk about
when they first met,
they immediately start,
Hey, okay, you go ahead and have that.
Yeah, you're right.
No, no, that's your...
That's what happened, though.
It's the truth of me.
Because we get so invested in the conflict that it takes on a life of its own and you forget
that we loved each other.
There's a poem, I see, we keep bringing up movies, I keep bringing up poems.
There's a poem that's called one last poem for Richard.
And I forget who wrote it.
You can look it up, but it's a poem this woman wrote to her ex-husband.
And it's just basically says, well, I think it's actually.
actually over now, Richard, like, and you've stormed out, and you've stormed out before,
but this time, you know, you took your keys or whatever. And, and there's a line in it where
she says, you know, we, we, something along the lines is that we loved each other as best we
could, you know, and that there should be stars for wars like ours and champagne for the
survivors, you know, and I really believe that, like, if you kidding, you know, when you look back
going to break up 10 years later. You look at it with such a helicopter view and like it's so
much easier. I'll tell you funny story. So I saw I was in therapy for, you know, quite a bit of
my 30s and 40s. And then my therapist, you know, basically like retired. And so I had to,
I went without being in therapy at all. And then I said, oh, you know, I'd want to go back into
therapy. So I went to go find a new therapist. Now, I'd been with this other therapist weekly
for like 20 years. So this person saw me through a divorce, the death of my mother, like my children
growing, going off the college, so many things, you know. So now I'm sitting down with a brand new
therapist and I'm giving them sort of the cliff notes of my life. And I thought to myself as it's
coming out of my mouth like holy shit like this is just like a couple of sentence like yeah i was
married for 10 years and then we got divorced and um my son like dude like like your whole thing
like everything you said in your soft white underbelly interview your prison everything it's like
three sentences right right like three sentences like if there's a wikipedia page of you it's like
a paragraph it's it i mean well you were in it like you were in it you went through it you
had the long nights, you had the near misses, you at all like. And so to me, like, if you can find
a way cognitively to get to that place sooner, where you can look at it and go, all right, let's look
at it in the totality of the circumstances and let's have a little emotional distance from it
and put it in context. But that's a very hard thing to do without time, lots of time. That's why
would they say, like time heals all wounds. Like, yeah, because time puts things in context, you know.
So, like, if you were meant to marry your wife, and that was your destiny, you know, to love her and to be loved by her, right, and to have something with her, well, then you never would have done that if you hadn't done every fucking wrong, bad, illegal, crazy thing you did.
And if you hadn't got caught, you owe the people who arrested you, the people responsible for your, you owe them a debt of gratitude.
because if you hadn't made every one of those choices and every one of those things
hadn't happened you wouldn't have been in that exact halfway house at that exact moment
and the same thing's true of her so I don't know to me like that tapestry is so cool you know
like to look at and to go like so that's why when people get or getting divorced like I'm always
like why can't you just approach the I like hey this is what happened this is what it is
see it clearly like we don't know if this is good or bad but it is what it is it's it's
You know, there's a saying someone said to me once, I love it, which is, if you don't learn to find joy in the snow, you will have less joy in your life and precisely the same amount of snow.
And I think that that's the truth. Like, if you don't learn to find joy in the pain that's coming at you, then you'll have less joy in your life and precisely the same amount of pain.
So you just have to make the choice to just go, okay, this is part of whatever, the universe is,
plan, God's plan, whatever you want to call it,
karma, fate,
you know, whatever.
Like, it is what it is.
And I, I think if people could connect to that the right way,
I think I'd be out of a job at some point.
I don't think it's happening soon.
I was going to say there, I did,
I did a podcast the other day with someone we were talking about,
about Sam Bankman-Fried.
Sure.
From FPS.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, and we were talking about like,
what's prison going to be like for him, and I was explaining where he would go,
depending on the time, you know, we're going back and forth and, you know, how bad will
it be? And I was like, well, you know, here's the thing. If he's lucky, you know, it'll take
whatever, you know, well, part of the problem is he's going to be, you know, part of the problem
is obviously he's going to file, you know, he's going to appeal it. He's going to. So he'll have
a couple years of hope. Yeah. Which really is a problem.
Because it keeps, it doesn't really make you realize I have to make a life in here.
So, but once he gets past that, and his expectations of life are dropped dramatically.
And he realizes I'm going to do some time.
Is he in federal time?
He's definitely federal.
Yeah, he's.
Yeah, it's federal.
Okay.
Because I was not to say, because a lot of the problems my clients have is they end up in county while everything is pending.
And actually, there's so much more in prison, like in state prison, there's so much
more in terms of resources and shit
to do and quality of life
to some degree. There's a lot more violence sometimes
too, but there's certainly like
county, if you stay in county, you're getting
like, you know, additional credit for that time
but like I didn't, with
federal, it's obviously it's a different animal.
Well, I mean, for right now he's still
in like the U.S. Marshall's holdover.
So it's basically county. It sucks.
Now it's a better quality of criminal
but not that much great. Better.
So my whole thing was once he goes
to prison is that
I was saying, look, at some point, you know, once he realizes, once he, I don't have access to
this and this and this and I basically have to make a life in here and I have to get a job and I have to
keep myself occupied and I, those sort of things. And I was like, at some point, he'll get a group of
friends. He'll, he'll get a group of guys that are like-minded that he can talk to, that he can
hang out with. And if he can, you know, obviously the first part is that, hey, I made some mistakes.
Like, that's a huge thing. Like going to prison is probably the only time I
really stepped back and not just said, yeah, yeah, I've, you know, I broke the law, but really
step back and said, wow, you're kind of a scumbag, bro. Like, like, you've done some really
shitty things, you know, and, and stopped, you know, where you, you basically justify, stop
just justifying everything, making it okay and just step back and said, hey, you're just not a good
person. Like, what you've done is fucked up. But once you get, if you can get to that point,
and then I was saying that at some point, though, you'll be surrounded.
by a bunch of guys. You'll be playing a board game or doing whatever you're doing. You will be laughing
your ass off about something or talking to somebody. And in the middle of that, if in that at that moment,
you'll realize like, this is a great guy. Like, these are great guys. Like, this is a great moment.
This, there's nowhere I'd rather be right now. Like, right? This is great. And, you know, if he's lucky he gets
there. I'm like, because that, I think, really.
that's when you realize that you can be okay anywhere anywhere anywhere you know and and it's a great because
it wasn't until I think I got to prison you know and did all of those things and got out of prison
that I can kind of say like I'm a I'm a different person that I was when I went into prison
you know myself different and the things that I did when I went in not that I'm not that I'm saying
I'm low and now I'm a really good person but what I'm saying is at least I can look at myself and
say here are my personality defects yeah
Yeah. Well, and I think you have a lot less to be afraid of because I think when if horrible
things happen or, you know, credibly traumatic things happen, you realize like the human capacity
for pain, the human capacity for endurance is like so much greater than you'd think. Like,
like you survived very, very difficult things. Like you're, you know, and you, you know,
I imagine that there's a period of time. I don't know how long it lasts.
But, you know, I just got over COVID.
First time, I ducked it for almost four years and got it for the first time three weeks ago.
I was quite sick for about a week.
Half my voice is still kind of weak.
That's why I keep coughing as I'm still getting over it.
I'm negative.
I think of it.
But, you know, the first four days I could literally could not breathe through my nose and my throat's
telling me like you wouldn't believe.
And I remember laying in bed and thinking, oh, my God, if I could just breathe through
my nose again, I would be so happy. Like, I'll be so grateful. And I'd tell you for about a week
after I could breathe through my, I every day got up and was like, oh my God, I can breathe through my
nose. Like, it is going to be a good day. It is going to be a good day because I can breathe through
my nose. I know in like three weeks, I'm just going to go back to me in the ungrateful fuck I am.
Like I'm just not going to get up in the morning and go, I can breathe through my nose. Look
of that look at that you know good day it is a good day like i'm sure there was a time where you woke
up and we're like oh my god i'm not in jail this is awesome you know like my wife and i are i feel like
i'm still like that there's something i hope that is and that's a gift man that's a super good it is
somebody cuts you off there's a moment where i'm like whoa and then i'm like you go ahead and get in
go ahead buddy you're a bigger rush than me yeah i get and let me say that is a
superpower. Listen, and I always say people have no idea. They have no idea. Like, they have no
idea how good they have it. Like, this is a magic box. Like, you have no idea. You can turn the
TV. You can eat what you want. You go to bed when you want. You can, you decide to work. You
decide that like you, like the, the choices that people complain about are such gifts. And they have
no idea how good it. Yeah, how bad it could be. Well, there's a line.
to go to movies.
There's a line in Fight Club where Tyler Durdon says to the main character,
where you are now, you can't even imagine what the bottom would be like.
Like you can't even imagine.
Like most people, the shit they complain about, most like I remember when I trained
Brazilian jiu-jitsu for many years and I've been to Brazil several times to train.
And one time we were training at a boxing gym inside the Cantangelo favel.
And you can't even go in the favelas, particularly the contentional of favela.
It's where City of Angels or City of God came from.
City of God was a very good film about.
Yeah, I remember.
Okay.
So it's run by drug cartels.
It's like if you went in, you'd just get killed.
You either get killed or robbed their boat.
But the guy we were with who runs this boxing gym that's like for the kids in the favela is like he's a protected guy.
So if you're with him, no one's going to, no one's going to bother you.
So there's a big group of us and we're with this guy and everyone's just leaving us alone.
And I walk through there and the level, I mean, there's just human sewage running through the things and see like a little kid like dirty like playing with a doll's head like a broken doll's head.
And I'm looking at this and going like the poorest person on Skid Row is doing so much better than anyone in this place.
like the wealthiest person in this favela and we just don't like we're still so fucking unhappy
so much of the time so i i think when we can have that approach to life of like gratitude
like a lot of what i do for a living people's dissatisfaction with their marriage is a function
of how fucking good we have it that we just don't realize how good we have it like it does
not have to be like we could just be so grateful for what we have and we choose not to be
we choose not to be and it's to our own detriment and to our own poverty but yeah look I think there's
something to be said for you know for reminding yourself that you could do with a lot less
and still survive and that you would still find moments of joy you know that my father is a
Vietnam veteran and he used to say how you know in the middle of like this horror
setting, there were these moments of levity and joy, you know, where like, you know, and I found
that in my own parenting journey, like, I remember I used to, I used to like want to bond with my
sons, you know, I was a divorced dad and I wanted to like spend time with them and feel connected
to them. And I would like make a plan, like, okay, I'm going to make this for dinner and
then we're going to do this. And it would never end up the way I wanted it to. I would never
feel the way I wanted it to. And then like every once in a while, like, I just wouldn't
have a plan and they'd be over and I'd be like you want to go outside and throw the frisbee and he'd be
like yeah sure we go outside and throw the frisbee and all of a sudden they're talking to me
and like telling me about their day and we're laughing and i'm like holy shit this is the thing i was
trying to engineer like it's just happening you know and i actually used that metaphor i was
talking to a friend the other day about sex how you know all of us have had the experience
where we we're like we're going to have like a sex night you know tonight like
We're going to get, you know, like she got the lingerie or you got the dinner and the candles or whatever.
You like make, and then it's good, but it was like, yeah, you know, like it was like a little overhyped in your head or whatever.
And then we've all had the experience where it was like a random Tuesday where you didn't even think you were going to have sex.
And then the two of you when you finish go, what the fuck was that?
And you go like, yeah, I don't know.
I was who the stars aligned or I don't know what that was.
But where did that come from?
Like it was just like so good.
and if you've tried to have it be that good or hyped it up of like you know what's going to happen this
afternoon like it would be different but the fact that it's just like organically happened is so and
I think that that is there's something to learn there you know that like you can just sometimes
the trying to make the thing happen prevents the thing from that and sometimes just letting
it you know let it enfold you you know let it wash over you and I think if you
you if you let it wash over you it unfolds you like sometimes there's tremendous joy that's just
waiting you know what i mean in in your book do you go over i mean i mean you kind of said it already
but do you go over discuss um what what is what is your yeah let me try and say that
sure why do you feel like most marriages
end. I think it's like bankruptcy. I think it's very slowly and then all at once. I think it's
disconnection. I think if we just took little steps every day to remember for ourselves and remind
our partner that we love them and we chose them, that we would never end up in my office. But it's
little thing. So the challenge I give to my male friends is to leave your wife a note.
Just every day or a couple times a week, just leave her a note, like a little note. Just so glad
we had that date on the couch last night. I'm married to the prettiest girl in the world.
You know, can't wait to see you again. Text don't count. Just leave it. Text don't count.
You know what? Text might count. No, text could count. Listen, you see. You see.
send her a text that says, you know, I had such fun hanging out with you last night or
I'm so excited. You got to know. You got to know by the way. Yeah. You got, you got to know,
you got to know they tell them. I think the hand, I think there's something about a note because
then they could, you know why they like shoes so much is so they can keep the fucking boxes
and keep every card we ever gave them and every note we ever gave them. I think that's the truth.
Because, you know, you like a girl breaks up with a guy and it's like, you know, fine, screw you. You
know girl guy breaks up with a girl it's there's you better tuck in for a day because there's
good testimony and evidence you know they're going to be like what about this card i've marked
for exhibit a that you gave me a valentine's day did you not say that you love me and would love
me forever i i don't say that well what here's the card you said it in the car so that's
why they keep all that stuff in shoeboxes but i i really do think that that if you leave a note
or if there's just some small mindfulness that the connection
that builds even from that, like the first few days, most of my friends have been like,
yeah, she wanted to know if I was cheating on her. Like, she was like, what the fucker? Why are you
leaving me notes? Like, what are you doing? You know, what's your agenda? But after a while, like,
most people, I think, figure out that like, if you're really, most women, if you ask them in my
experience, do you want four hours with me where I'm pretty distracted checking my phone
and kind of half there but half not? Or do you want an hour where you have my
my undivided attention and you are the only person in the world and the only thing they will
hand seven days a week and twice on Sunday they will take the hour instead like so I think there is
something to be said for just real small intimacies like intimacy we mistake sex is a form of intimacy
but intimacy is defined as the ability to be completely yourself with another person and so
to me, I think the thing you can do to prevent ending up in my office, before all the cheating and
the financial, like all that shit is a side effect of the underlying problem. The underlying
problem is disconnection. Because at some point, you were deeply connected. Just like at some
point, you were deeply grateful you could breathe through your nose or you're deeply grateful
that you weren't in prison anymore. Like, at some point, you looked at this woman and you went,
holy shit I can't believe what I'm going to get with her I can't believe it like I can't believe
like she's fucking giving me the time of day like this is incredible she was looking at you going
oh my god I can't believe I found this guy I can't believe this is the guy like this is the guy
and she's still that person you're still that guy like you just forgot like it's just not in
your line of vision so to me anything you can do that puts that person back in your line of vision
whether it's just reminding that person of a memory.
Like, what, I mean, what do you have to lose?
What does it cost?
Like, what would it cost you to say to your wife after this call?
You know, hey, babe, remember that time where we did da-da-da-da-da, and we did this and da-da-da-da.
That was great.
Like, I think about that sometimes.
Like, that's such a low percentage move.
It didn't even cost a penny.
It is.
And I noticed that periodically we do that already.
you know and you're right
every time we've been
we've done that
there is this kind of moment
you know there's that last
that honestly sometimes can change
that the remainder of
the day
right right
if you know she's putting on
chapstick and she'll say
do you remember we used that night
we first met and we kissed so much like
we couldn't see each other for four days
because I'm like oh yeah all right
and we were talk about and joke and laugh
about that first on how bad it was and then and then the next day we're an hour later you kiss
her again and you go you know I still really like kissing you we don't kiss as much as we did
those first days but you know I still really like it like there is something about that that's so
real and transformative and beautiful and honest like it's honest because it's it's not like you ever
stopped loving this person it really is that you just the world gets in the way it gets
distracting, you get caught up in other things, you want to be a good provider, you want to
be a good partner, or you want to deal with all the shit that's going to make sure the
turkeys comes out right or you want to whatever, you know, like the truth is, like at the
end of the day, like I said, there was 8 billion people in the world and picked each other.
And like, I just believe that there's so much value in, I even have friends who
have taken the ideas from my book and built it into their routine. So, like, I have a,
a friend who he once they go for what they call a walk and talk and they do it every like
Saturday or Sunday and they've built into that telling the other something they did that they
really liked that week you know and or if there's something that that they that went the other way
they'll sometimes work that in too but it's usually they make a point of saying like oh you know
I felt really loved when you did a being safe and I. And I,
I think that's such a cool thing because I know sometimes, like, I think I know everything
and I know I don't, you know, and I think I understand my partner, but I know sometimes I probably
don't, like, we're a different species to some degree, you know?
Right.
And sometimes she'll say to me something she liked that I did, and I'll go, what?
That?
Like, I didn't even, you know, like, oh, you went and, you know, you took the recycling and didn't
ask or you know like you always oh you made my tea and you like left me the tea you know and it's
like that like that was such a nothing throwaway thing or oh you asked about how my sister's doing
you know and like you know i thought it was so sweet that you said that you know and i'm like
really like i'm i'm like planning on like buying some shit to give to you and thought that
was going to impress you and this impressed you like it's my sister's six years older than me and
I remember when i was a like young guy and she was like at her college age
were a little older. I would listen to her talking with her girlfriends. And the stuff that they would
say they liked about a guy, like, I remember being like, I should write this down. This is fucking
not what we thought. Like, it's rarely where they're like, and he has an eight pack. Like we're
not about that. They were like, yeah, he's like so like, you know, he listens to this and he said
this. I'm always like, oh, okay. So like they're way more impressed by that, you know, like.
And so as a very, I really think sharing with your partner, no one likes, like, no one ever
dislikes being told what they did well, you know, like, no one dislikes being told
you did a great job.
Right.
Like, so saying to someone like, oh, I loved when you did X, Y, and Z, like, constructive criticism
is still just criticism.
Well, you mentioned, you mentioned in another interview where you said that you had the one
client and she said she knew, she knew it was basically was that going.
her the marriage was over or going downhill
when the husband
stopped buying the granola bar
or the granola. Yeah, granola for her yogurt.
Which was something that was so
silly and small.
But it wasn't. But it wasn't. It was
a symbol. Huge. Yeah.
Right. It was an indicator. It was the canary
and the coal line. You know, like
it was the thing, like
the granola showed you were paying
attention. And when the granola
stopped, it was an indicator that
you're not fucking paying attention at.
more, you know, and, and that is why, like, to me, do you just let that go? Or do you go,
okay, wait, let's fix this before it becomes a real problem? Like, that's why the title of
my book is if you're in my office, it's already too late. Like, if divorce is anything other than
a passing thought you occasionally have when your spouse does something particularly boneheaded,
like that, you know, most of the time, like, you know, if it's already in my office, it's bad.
you know it's better to just we all have moments where we just feel disconnected from our part
where we feel disconnected from ourselves and therefore also our part and that's the time to try
to lean into finding some connection and it's so easy like it's so easy to feel connected it's so
easy to to honestly tell your partner the things they do right you know the things they do well
and and let those winds build on top of each other you know and i've always said like this is a
leverage that people don't exert enough because it's so easy.
Like, it's so easy to, you can tell your spouse all the things that you, you, um,
wish they would do or that they don't do that you really wish they would do.
Or you can criticize the things.
Like, why?
Like, that's not going to help.
You know, why not parse it in a way that leans into the positive?
You know, like, I've always said, like rather than criticize, if there's something you
want to do in bed with your partner rather than like, you know, just calling an audible in bed
and trying it, you know, and just freaking everybody out. Like, you know, there's ways or saying like,
how come we never, blah, blah, blah, which then is setting it up for them to explain why we're not
doing that or making them feel like they've done something wrong by not doing that. Why not go,
you know, I had the hottest dream about you the other night. It was crazy. Really? What was going on?
I was real.
I don't even know
we're a kid
but we were doing
not something
we normally would do
what was it
and then you just
and it's like
really?
Yeah,
was that something
you're like I don't know
in the dream
pretty good
you know
like I don't
we've never done it
and remember we used to do that
I had a dream about it
and it was like
ooh
it brought me back
to how good that was
when we used to do that
who's not going to jump on board
who's not going to go like
oh yeah
I could do that
like you know
like
because it's
it's so subtle
of a distinction
but it's a real distinction
right
I think you're going to stay out of my office
I got I got a good feeling
I got a good feeling
I don't listen the whole time
I think it's just the
I'm getting the little little tiny
little bits and pieces of
yep uh-huh
I'm sending her an inscribed copy of the book
I'm going to say I'm going to say
you don't need this book
but I hope you like it
what is it
oh my god
you're male
you had to have confirmed it
you had read healthy at all
it was a gender thing
oh my god
this is me mansplaining it
I mean
you know
I
I there's a lot of female divorce lawyers
but I'm the only one who wrote the book
so it's a weird thing
It was such a good to know that both of us, you know, it's good to know both genders
see some of these same things. You know, I think these are human things. Like, I don't,
I don't think that, I even think they're true of, you know, same-sex couples. Like, I think
it just has to do with human connection. I mean, even a lot of the things I've said,
they don't even just apply to romantic relationships. They reply to, you know, they apply
to any number of types of relationships, you know, interactions with family members, interactions
with business colleagues. Like, I think a lot of it's just how we relate to a
other human being. It's hard to navigate yourself, you know, much less another person. You know,
so it, I just think it can be such a lovely thing to, to leverage those good things. You know,
that's, that's such a, such a, I have, for a divorce lawyer, I have an abundance of optimism.
Oh, listen, what a mistake it was to, to, to mention. Yeah. You said, when she was leaving and she
said, so. Oh, no.
And she said, so are you, what are you doing today?
I said, oh, I have a, I have a podcast.
I said, you know, I said, it was this attorney.
I said, I said, we were supposed to do it before.
And then he had a, he had a trial that went longer.
And then she's like, who is it?
And I explained, oh, okay, next thing I know.
Suddenly she's around.
See that?
Oh, and she watched your soft white underbelly.
Oh, one time ago.
Okay, now.
Oh, boy.
In the back.
But, you know, here's the thing, you know, just to let you know,
She's, unlike you and I, she'll watch, she also watches the, you know, the fit and all ones, the, I can't, and I mean, we'll be at the gym. We wake up around, around four and we go to the gym around, like, say, five, five, well, five. You and I are in the same, same, same, same, we're on the same habits, you and she'll, you know, she listens to, she'll listen to the drug addicts and the this and she just, oh, my God. And I'm like, how can you watch those?
yeah oh okay well okay she said no i know she didn't usually watch all of them all the way through
but she will watch it's like me i watched some of it and i it i watch enough to remind me how
god damn lucky i am yeah you know and and um and also i can tell sometimes like if there's a
redemption arc like because the part that's hard for me is like like i can i'm a animal person so
like i can watch the thing about we found this abandoned dog and it was near death's door and it had
been terribly abused and then it got rescued and now it's doing so great like that i can watch
that shit all day long but if it's like and it was abused and terrible and yeah it's still kind of
fucked like okay well i don't want to like now i'm just leaving feeling terrible like so i think if
it has a redemption arc it's easier to get through you know but listen those kinds of human stories
are are amazing but yeah next time if you know if we have another conversation you just have to
tell her that like, oh, yeah, I'm meeting with a dude who, uh, I don't know, makes the shit up.
You like, I just out of making a boring white collar criminal.
Yeah, I'll, like, and I'll, yeah, Ponzi scheme guy is not in.
Yeah, but it's another one of these Ponzi guys, you know how it is, you know, yeah,
you tell her you're talking to a divorce lawyer, he's going to be hovering nearby, you know.
Why did you write your, you're, I mean, obviously like you're, I'm, I'm, and this may be
an assumption, but, you know, I'm assuming you obviously have a, a very, a successful
practice. You know, you're doing, you're doing well. Like, why? Oh, yeah. I made no money. I mean,
the book, you know, you make it like a six figure advance, but your aging gets a third and
government gets their piece of it. So I joke that I make more in a month than I did. As a
divorce lawyer, I make more in a month that I didn't the whole book. Like, you make nothing on books
and you do very well as a divorce lawyer. Um, no, I, I did what I did. Um, I wrote the book
because I'd been doing the same job for 20 years at that point.
And as much as I really love my work, it just felt a little like the same thing every day.
And I love to read.
And I'm a big reader, a voracious reader.
And I was listening to an interview with Stephen King.
And they were asking him how he manages to write like three books a year.
And he said, well, if you write a page a day in a year, you have a book.
Yeah.
and I thought, well, I could probably write a page or two every day.
And I'm like, you, I get up at 4 a.m. every day.
And I usually have about a half an hour that I drink my espresso.
I check email.
I kind of just sit there and stare into the middle distance.
And then I go to the gym.
And because gym doesn't open till 5.
So instead, I just would write a little bit during that window.
I would get up, have a little espresso and I'd write.
And sometimes I'd write.
I'd write a page. Sometimes I'd write 10 pages in that 45 minutes. But within like four months,
I had a book. Yeah. And I gave it to a friend who's a writer. And he read it and he was like,
yes, it's great. He's like, let me, let me, you know, you should send it to some agents. And I found
a literary agent, Richard Pine and Inquell. And I sent it to him and he liked it. At the time,
it was just a book of stories about divorces. It was not a self-help book. It was not
relationship advice book. It was just like stories.
And he said, this is really good.
I think it would be better if it was like a self-help book.
If it was the themes and then the stories backing up the themes or illustrating the themes.
And so that's what I changed it to.
And we shopped it out to a bunch of publishers and McMillan Henry Holt was the one that we got a couple of offers.
But McMill and Henry Holt picked it up.
And they had the creative team that I really liked.
It was an all-female editorial team.
at the time and um i thought that was really cool because it was a it was a male perspective and
and i didn't because it was very much tied into like male female relationships i didn't really
want it to get into like a misogynistic tone i wanted it to be something that was it had some
female influence so having an editor serenna jones who's still with henry holtickmillan um she was a great
editor because she she saw things that i didn't see because i had my blind spots as a guy and
She brought, asked interesting questions that I would then jump in to try to answer.
And yeah, the book, it's been a fun little footnote, you know, but it, my job is a full-time job and then some.
I mean, being a divorce lawyer is like, the law is a harsh mistress.
Like, I work all the damn time.
So I say no to about 90% of the media requests that I got.
I once soft, an underbelly hit, I got invited on no joke, at least 100 other podcasts, you know.
And I've turned a lot of them down because a lot of them, it's just me saying the same stuff over and over to someone who just wants content and has no real point of view that's in any way tied to what I'm doing.
I was excited to do this because I've enjoyed your show and I do enjoy your show as a consumer.
And, you know, I, again, you were one of the few soft white underbelly interviews I watched all the way through.
and I saw so much commonality in the way we are work for me my work is a lawyer for you
at one time you're more illicit work and now I think your work doing doing the interviewing
that you're doing and doing the perspective and writing that you're doing like we have to put
ourselves in another person's mindset and shoes and try to understand the levers of persuasion
and like I think that's a very interesting thing so I'm really glad we had a chance to chat
You know, I was looking forward to meeting you.
Yeah.
And I'm, I definitely want to meet your wife at some point now.
I feel like I know her because she's, she's the third interview.
Listen, she's, yeah, she's a character.
I mean.
She's married to you.
She'd have to be.
Yeah.
So, I mean, you know.
She's, uh, definitely.
So I, so she was in the military, got out, got married, was a hog, a tour guy.
I always say hog hunting.
Basically, a hog hunting tour guide for six years with her ex.
husband where they took people out and they haunted. They hunted hogs and and gators and things like that
in Florida. Then, you know, then she ended up, they got, you know, they got divorced and they, you know,
went their separate ways. They got hooked on, you know, drugs and she ended up in a meth conspiracy
ended up getting five years going to prison, getting out and meeting me. But so are, our, are, we have a very,
in some ways we have very traditional roles. And in some ways, it's like, I tell you, out of, I
take, I take the garbage out once out of every probably 10.
I, you know, my old car breaks down.
She pulls out the jumper cables and jumps it.
I say, she says, hey, you're, she's a, she is a marine mechanic.
So she works on boat engines.
So you can, you know, it's, you are never going to be bored, my friend.
You are, you, you've, you've got a wellspring of knowledge and experience on tap right there.
I mean, that is, you're not, you don't meet, you don't meet a hog hunter that often.
Do you know what I mean?
It's just not a, you know, marine repair person.
These are not, these are not traditional.
Her dowry would have been significant, you know what I mean, in olden times.
That is impressive.
Oh, yes.
Big on the, if the, if the grid goes down, worry, well, we'll, we'll, I can hunt and I can, and I'm like,
I'm not worried.
I'm not worried about the grid going down.
Yeah.
Yeah. Yeah. You're like, I would prefer the grid not go down. Let's work on that.
On that. Yeah. Let's focus on that. Yeah. You see like if there's a, if there's a nuclear attack, I'm like, look, I want to be under the bomb. Yeah. Yeah, I want to be. I want to even not know what happened. Why? I want to be lights out. Yeah, me too.
In the walking dead. She's one of the survivors in the walking dead. I feel like I want to the walking dead. Oh, for sure. For sure. Oh, yeah. No, I'm definitely the guy that's like, nope, sorry. Not sticking around for this. Yeah, I don't want to see how this ends. Yeah. Well, what.
Well, listen, man, I would not expect you to be married to anyone boring,
and I would not expect anyone particularly boring to want to be married to you.
So it sounds like you've made good choices.
Yeah, hopefully.
Well, I clearly have to.
I'm going to have to get a notepad or something else.
Get a note pad.
It's worth it.
It's a small and desk.
You know what?
You know what?
I've already done that.
And I'm going to let you go.
I'm going to give me one more minute.
Listen, she and her father went to visit relatives, and I took notes because she wanted my book to read my book.
And I actually took and wrote notes and stuck it like every 10 or 20 pages of the book.
Right.
Right.
This is how I know.
Why read my, why did you do it?
Because I was, you know, so in love and I wanted, I thought it would be sweet.
I knew she'd love it.
I think out of 10 notes.
I think she read maybe three.
Well, I mean, A, next time write a more interesting book.
You know what I mean?
I mean, that's on you.
You know, she only got through the first.
That great way to use.
What happened is Matt is she put it down because she picked up my book.
And she just was like, I got it.
This book is much more interesting than Matt says she's buying your book right now.
Oh, I'll say it's all I need.
This is the.
Yeah.
This was a mistake.
Yeah, you got no one to blame it yourself.
Yeah.
You're like, this whole thing was a mistake.
This is a terrible.
I'd be a terrible decision.
Would you know,
be the worst decision you've ever made.
That would be a real,
that would be an accomplishment.
You know what I mean?
Yeah, yeah.
Anyone who served time and I'm their worst mistake,
I'm really impressive.
Yeah.
My booking agent constantly is mentioning,
you know,
he'll give me people and I'm like,
he's like, hey, what about this guy?
I'm like, did that guy commit a crime?
And he's like, well, no, but he's this,
but he that.
I'm like, okay, stop bringing me people
that didn't commit a crime
or aren't in law enforcement.
that's it and then um and it and then he when he called up and said he he he said listen
you know i i have james saxton and i was like yeah second well sorry what sex thing
pardon common mistake sorry um and uh and i had and i it was i did mention to him that i
yeah this was like a month or so before yeah and yeah he and i was like he's like but you know
he hasn't committed a crime i was like i don't care yeah
Well, I haven't been incarcerated for any of them.
I mean, I are caught for any of them.
We've all committed crimes.
This is a question of, you know, which ones have we been caught up?
But yes, no, I think, listen, man, like I said, I was excited to do this.
I'm glad we got to me.
I felt, as I think you've gone through, you know, when you give a long-form interview like that,
and then you get the kind of views that you and I both got in our interviews, like a lot of people know a lot of
more about you than you do about them you know like oh yeah i i there's 25 000 comments on my
video like and i i can't possibly read them all i've read like 10 of and all these people know a
lot about me now because i talked about a lot of stuff just like you talked about a lot of very
personal stuff so it's very funny because i felt like i know you a little bit like i was like
oh matt yeah i definitely want to do that like i've listened to that guy talked like longer than
i've listened to a lot of people talk in my life you know so i was excited to do it
but yeah man no this is big great and like i said i love your show i really enjoy it i enjoy the
people that you talk to and i i think you have a really cool point of view and um this conversation
went in the directions i thought it would because i i i didn't know too much about your personal
life in terms of your current marriage and and you're the way you approach it you mentioned it a few
times on the show but not not too many um and and i think it's it's uh it's really neat that they're that you
have the gratitude that you have and that you and she found each other in the circumstances
that you did and that hopefully you guys you know keep that in your line of sight you know
and I'll be cheering for you certainly listen always the thing that takes you down my my wife
is in the other room and she goes I hope you're recording oh yeah I know this is my problem
when I like Mark I met I met Mark in the in the bar of like the W hotel and
in the city. And we started talking for like 15 minutes. He goes,
I do we got to go upstairs and put the camera on because like this is we're missing
stuff right now. But yeah, I was on I was on Mark's site as a fan and watched all of his
stuff. And my secretary comes in. She goes, yeah, Mark, a guy named Mark called from something
soft belly, some kind of soft belly. And I actually like dogs a lot. So I contribute a lot
to dog rescues. Right. She's like, is that like a dog rescue you donate to?
like soft belly and I was like no no no there's a website that it's like it's like true
stories I said I don't know and I thought wow he's he like did my credit card get
declined that he's like making his own phone calls for the five dollar a month thing because
that feels a little desperate and so I call and I'm like hi it's Jim sexton and he's like
hey it's Mark leot from soft everything then I recognized the voice yeah I was like oh wow
how you do it he goes good good listen I wanted to see about you coming on the show and I said
well, you know, I'm not a sex worker or a fentanyl addicts, right? And he goes, yeah, yeah, I'm trying
to branch out a little bit. There's only so many of those you can do. And I said, yeah, I said,
if there's anything, anyone to be interested in, you know, I'd be happy to do it. And he goes,
no, I think you have some interesting stuff. So I went in and I met with him and I just, you know,
you've done it. So you know, you just go in and he's such a great conversationalist,
but he's good at kind of queuing it. And the way he has the room set up, you kind of forget.
that you're not just talking to somebody
and I just
you know went and
we finished
and I said well how long was that? He said oh it was about an hour
and a half I said wow it didn't feel like that
and he said oh my god he goes we could have done another two hours
and I said well I hope you know it was good
the next day he text me
and he said you know that was one of the best interviews I've ever done
and I think it's going to do really well
and I thought oh I bet he says that to all the boys
you know I was like I bet that's just the thing
thing he says. So I went back and I said, well, it was great to meet you and I'm a big fan of the
site. So I just left. And about three, four days later, we said, look, it's going up this
week. And I'm telling you, we're going to get four million views. And I said, I really, I think
you might be overestimating how interesting I am, but let's do it. That's great, you know.
And within like two weeks, it had a million and a half. And then it was up to two or three
now. It's almost at four. So, and it's a couple of months, three months. So, yeah, it's crazy.
I mean, I think there are, I think he's telling unique stories, and I think, you know, it's the reason why I enjoyed watching yours is that I just think that unique lived experience of that kind presented in an unfiltered way. You just can't beat that, you know? And I guess what I do is interesting. For me, you know, whoever discovered water, it wasn't a fish. Like, I'm in the thing. I don't see it. It's just what I do. But every once in a while, there is this phenomenon where I'll be.
talking to someone and I'll say, oh, I have this trial next week and they're like, what's it about?
And I'm like, oh, this guy was sleeping with the nanny and then the nanny, you know, ran off with
his wife because they'd had a threesome and, you know, and they're looking to me like, what did
Jesus? And I go, oh, yeah, no, I guess that, yeah, I guess that is kind of weird, right?
Like, I guess that is a thing. Like, but to me, it was like, well, it's a fact pattern and how am I
going to put this evidence in and like, I don't get it that way. You know, I, I don't hear how
interesting it is. So I don't think much of what I have to say. I used to joke with my
publisher that my book should have been titled, you know, advice I just pulled out of my
ass because it felt like it was like, well, yeah, like talk to your partner, you know, like try to
communicate, try to do the little things for them so that you don't ever get too far apart
from which, like this didn't feel like anything revelatory, you know, but, but apparently
there's a hunger for it out there, so I'll take it. Yeah, I was, I was going to say when at the
end of my interview with mark he said um you know i was like okay and you know he's like oh
you know well thanks you know thanks i really appreciate him like and i'm getting off the thing
and as i was getting off he said uh you're getting off the stool i'm kind of trying to take the
you know my like he said he said yeah i definitely think i'm going to use this and i went well was there
a question was there a question and he goes oh yeah he said i i do i do he said at this
point i'm up to doing two or three a day you'd be shocked how many i don't use and i'm thinking
i flew across the country like he's like yeah yeah i i don't like to mention that to people
yeah like but i have to tell you it's so funny because again like having watched the finish
product of yours and i i really do love all the mark's work but some of it it just feels like
I understand why he's trying to touch on some other areas because some of the commonalities,
like it's just so sad to watch it.
There's no redemption arc in a lot of them, you know, and it's like really, really painful.
And it's really, you know, everyone's story is unique, but some of the themes are exactly the same,
you know, people having difficult dysfunctional childhoods, getting involved in substance use issues
and we're being raised with people with substance use issues and intergenerational trauma.
and having that manifest in substance use and mental health issues.
So it's like, you know, a lot of it's the same.
But so I watch all of them, but I don't make it all the way through all of them because
I think that one of the things that makes Mark so skilled is that he lets people tell their
story.
And so you end up with two hours, three hours, an hour, yours I watched beginning to end.
And I think he had one sitting, which was really surprising to me because I have very little
attention span for sitting and watching a thing.
and so I sat and watched it
but I really did it felt like
if Catch Me if you can
was like modernized
because every time I've read the book
or watched the film Catch Me If You Can
which is really I think the most
detailed look into the life
of a con man technically
is it all relies on the lack of an internet
you know like none of this shit that he did
you could ever do now
because it would just be so easily
you know and so yours was more of like
the true
confidence, you know,
like the true, like one of the things
I think you and I have as a commonality
is I have found in my career that
the bravado
or confidence with which one conveys
information is like
the most powerful force.
Like it's the most, I was actually having this conversation
with a friend of mine last night
because I'd been invited to a bunch of Thanksgiving.
You know,
whenever someone knows you're like a single guy, they always say like, oh, do you want to,
you know, come to our place for Thanksgiving? The truth is like, no, I don't. Like, I'm so
happy to just not have to interact with anybody. Like, I feel I'm liberated from them. Once my kids
were old enough that I didn't have to like do a Thanksgiving for them, I was like, this is
fucking great. I'm going to just hang out and do nothing. I'm doing a jigsaw puzzle. That's what I'm,
so people invite you and they're very well-intentioned. And I don't like saying to people,
oh yeah I'm not going to come because I just don't like to or I don't want to like that feels rude
you know like oh I thought you were going to come like well I was good of it then I just went on living
my life like that feels rude so I was saying to this friend that you know if you say something
confidently enough the human desire to make sense of what you're saying and to look like
you know what you're talking about overrides logic so I was saying to my friend like when you know
when someone says to me, like, oh, can you come to this thing next Tuesday?
I'll say like, oh, Tuesday.
Yeah, see, the thing, you know how Wednesdays are.
Like, Tuesday happens and then it's Wednesday.
And then sometimes, you know, like there's so many trees in my yard right now that like all the leaves are off of them.
And then there's people that come and it's the whole thing.
And then, you know, so obviously like I'd love to, but I'm not going to be able to make it.
And I just said nothing.
But you as the listener go, wait, the tree, you can't come, but because of trees, but
maybe I missed something like I don't want to look stupid and they go oh yeah no that's fine
of course yeah like because they they cut to the core which is you can't come right so I think
that's something you and I have in our past or present vocations in common which is this ability
to sort of shift optics and and do this sort of sleight of hand that has a person look over here
instead of over here you know so I found your story fascinating I I I I
I mean, I appreciate it.
So I typically do not.
Whenever people mention that interview with me,
I typically say, yeah, I was like I was in full,
but full, you know, full flame, full mode psychopath during that interview.
I mean, I just straight just walked in.
I was irritated.
I we were in you know his his like most people don't realize that that mark's studio is on skid row
yeah I had no idea was on skid row I used to hear like if I watched one and I'm the same way I watch
five minutes it to me they're so depressing they are I can't people are missing teeth people have
you know they've got their they're missing eyeballs they're it's horrendous their lives are
horrible they've been sex trafficked i'm just like i can't i can't do this i have enough problem
i can't of the anxiety of your of your life yeah have a hospital's full i can't take it anymore
so so i um i like i said i never get through them but so when i would hear the sirens on those
interviews i always thought oh that's funny he pumps in like he puts a yeah that's a sound effect
no people are outside screaming people are yelling
We got inundated with homeless people when we got out of the car, them asking him for money.
And nobody asks me for money.
They don't, I, he's known as like kind of, you know, I've walked around like San Francisco in
L.A. Nobody ever asked me for money. And I remember thinking, I just don't look like the kind of
person you can ask for money. Yeah, you look like you wouldn't give it to me.
Right. You're looking at, that's not the way this goes. So he, um, anyway, yeah, it was that. It was
that I'd had a horrible interview the day before.
I had had just a series of bad things and I was irritated when I got there.
Then we drive it down in the middle of this hellhole.
We're in a day from all these guys.
We get in there.
I'm thinking, what am I?
What's going on?
So I just immediately just was.
And when I look at it, I can see it.
I could, I'm like.
But I think that's because you can see it.
Yeah, you're caught up, I think, in the, in the, because you know yourself so
well. I think that for someone who, because look, I've enjoyed your, your podcast as well. And there's
definitely a different layer of you, you know, than that interview. That interview is, I, I always
actually attributed that to the fact that you were, you were relaying in its timeline and totality
something that you've transcended, you know, and I know when I talk about the past, especially
about parts of the past that, you know, caused negative repercussions in my life, you know, as
much as I feel some distance from it, it still was me. And I still remember what it felt like
like when I talk about it, I have to sort of emotionally experience it a little bit, you know,
again, even though I thought about it and done the work and kind of transcended it. My life is
where it is. So I attributed it to that and also that it's a weird setting. You know, I think
when you're, I find all of this is kind of weird because I think whenever you're talking on any
kind of a forum like you you know this you're talking about your life your experience your
perspective and i don't know about you but i'm always like i just did lex friedman's uh show a couple
a couple months ago and we talked for five and a half hours and he edited it down like almost four
right it's like three hours on 40 45 minutes i just thought yeah yeah and that that was edited we
talked for five and a half hours and we took two bathroom breaks of about 10 minutes and i remember i enjoy
it tremendously because I'm again big fan Alex's work but I remember finishing it going yeah
there's nothing here like there's nothing that interesting you don't and me
millions of people have enjoyed that thing they've got nothing positive so I have no I think
sometimes we don't know because we're in it all you do is you watch that soft white underbell
and you think oh I was so annoyed and that's like me being so intense and feeling full on
psycho. I don't think that's how it was perceived. I watched it and felt very like, oh,
this is such a like hyper-intelligent guy who's really intuitive and really empathetic.
And this is what happens when you weaponized that. Like he weaponized it effectively. But that
then the CODA to it was you still have all of that talent. And now you've just applied it to a different set of tools.
So I love that because unlike the like junkie missing and I story that there's no redemption
arc and you're like, okay, in three months this person's going to be dead.
You know, and then victimized two or three more people before that happens to them.
Like there's a feeling of like hope of like, okay, maybe you can just set your shit on fire
and rise from the ashes of it.
And I love those stories.
Like that's why I went into divorce law because it, that's what inspired.
me. It was the feeling that like nobody meant to get forced. Just like nobody meant to go to
jail. Right. No one meant to it's like, you know, but it's like the old, you know, the barn burned
down and now I can see the moon, you know, like there's, there's so much opportunity in the ruin.
So let's a two, two things. One, I am just narcissistic enough to allow you to go on and on and on
and tell me how great I am. I can do that. Honestly, I do that for myself. Yeah. My wife can
to that she'll tell you her he gave you something so the the second thing is it you mentioned
something about and i don't know why i immediately think i always say this i'm like you know a fish
and i heard you say something similar yeah where yeah where it is water wasn't a fish right
well yeah but i i i always say like a fish doesn't know he's in water you know what i'm saying
like you're surrounded by it just like you're saying i don't think there's a story here well that's
because you're surrounded by it so it's like just guys i would meet in prison and i would write their
And they would tell me their story and I'd be like, sometimes I would just go, this is, this is insane. And they go, do you think there's something here? I'm like, you robbed 30 banks. Like, we spent three hours telling one funny story after another. Like, but they just don't know. And it's the same thing. Like, when you explain a trial that you're currently, you know, it's the stuff of law and order. It's the stuff of, you know, and what's even more unique about it.
is that is that it is that it is unique like it's not like you're a cop oh i showed up somebody
you know two people got into a two neighbors got into a fight they shot each other yours is unique
because it's kind of an offset of that and that kind of like my stuff it's not really prison
stories there's tons of prison channels i try and do something where it's like was the guy smart
about it i don't always get right you know was it what was unique about his story right that's or
that's kind of what like I try and yeah and and the human element to it I think is interesting that
that is the part the commonality is what interests me is is like what are the underlying because I guess
I do this professionally it's like a guy comes in and he says I want 50 50 custody and I think to
myself no he doesn't like no one looks at their children that way like no one's ever in the history
of children or parenting ever been like well I've only had 48% of the time with the children
this week. I need another 2%. Like no one's ever done that. What he's saying is I don't want to feel
like a second-class parent. I don't want to be just a fun parent. I want to be involved in the
heavy lifting parenting. So that I can understand, you know. And it's the same kind of thing.
Like when you, you know, when you hear the stories like your story or some of the stories you've
documented, there are really stories about incredible tools that people have and gifts that people have.
that they just applied to, and I'm not even going to say the wrong thing because, you know,
I'm not, you know, being someone who works in the law, I'm not really someone who's like a choir
boy about it. I think that, you know, people transcend the law all the time. And the question
is like, are you aware of the consequences, you know? And I always liked that, was it from Breaking
Bad or better call Saul one of the two where the Mike character says to the one guy like,
No, you're a criminal.
Like, just acknowledge that you're a criminal.
And then you can have a list of the things you'll do and you won't do.
But don't lie to yourself and say you're not a criminal.
You're a criminal.
You know, like, and I think everyone's got criminal in, you know, and it's just a question
of how far, how far over a line are we willing to go, you know?
Yeah, I was going to say everybody's bar is just, you know, mine's just lower of yours.
Well, like, what you see in divorce is a similar thing, which is if you judge any,
of us as a parent or as a spouse by our best moment, then we're phenomenal spouses or phenomenal
parents. If you judge us by our worst, weakest moment, we're terrible spouses and terrible
parents. The truth is we're kind of the average of all of it, right? Like, that's kind of what
you have to look at it like. And so I, we have a tendency either to view ourselves if we're very
narcissistic by only our best moments or if we're very self-effacing and, you know, the
world's had its way with us. We'll look at ourselves by our worst moment and compare ourselves
to someone else's best moment. You know, usually the performative one they've posted on social
media. But I think at the end of the day, like, we're really just all those things. We're all
just sort of flawed heroes. All right. Well, thank you. Hey, man. What a pleasure. Great spending
some time with you. And if you ever find yourself in New York City, please, please make a point of
getting in touch so we can get together. Hey, if you like the video, do me a favor. Hit the
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