On Purpose with Jay Shetty - 4 Pivotal Decisions in Life We Make Daily & 3 Ways to Approach Conflict Resolution in Relationships
Episode Date: August 18, 2023How can we navigate the challenges of communication in relationships, especially when faced with difficult conversations? How can personal growth and self-development impact our relationships, and wha...t challenges might arise from this? Communication is the lifeblood of any relationship, yet navigating tough conversations can be daunting. And society loves painting relationships with broad strokes, but the canvas of human connection is far more intricate. Today, I am excited to share the conversation I had with Krista Williams of the Almost 30 podcast. We focused on why nobody teaches us about love and how to give and fully receive it. Life has a knack for teaching us lessons that craft intimacy but let's not be swayed by the virtual façade. Instead, let's tear down the walls and unearth the truth behind meaningful connections that transcend screens.   Understanding oneself is the gateway to banishing the echoes of loneliness and by exploring love's multi-dimensional essence, we will learn the three focal points that breed growth, trust, and intimacy. We'll uncover the roles we play in relationships and shatter society's molds to find our truth as well as unlock the art of communicating through discomfort. In this interview, you'll learn: The key decisions we make in life How to unlock your truth The real definition of love The different roles we play in any relationship How to deal with relationship struggles How to set the right intentions Your journey to self-discovery and enriched connections starts here. With Love and Gratitude, Jay Shetty What We Discuss: 00:00 Intro 02:40 Here are the four important decisions you will keep making in your life 07:13 How do you get your relationship right? Maybe, allow life to humble you 10:11 The truth is social media doesn’t have much impact on genuine relationships 13:38 If you don't feel you understand yourself, you will feel alone 19:04 Love doesn’t have one definition, it has three key areas you can focus on 25:27 Spark alone doesn’t make a relationship work 29:40 Should people marry their bestfriend? Is it a healthy relationship choice? 32:00 Everyone grows at a different time and at a different phase 37:48 What are the three different roles we play in our relationships? 41:09 46:34 The projection society has for men and women might not be our truth 54:07 Not everyone is going to learn from the resource materials you have learned from 01:19:40 Are women going through personal growth, self-development, and work fatigue? 01:01:00 This is why making other people your purpose doesn’t work 01:04:31 We want to talk about how people behave and or how they act, but we don't want to talk about our intentions 01:09:02 People often struggle in a relationship because they don’t know how to talk about hard things 01:13:11 Books are not meant to be read, it’s meant to help guide you in difficult and challenging times Want to be a Jay Shetty Certified Life Coach? Get the Digital Guide and Workbook from Jay Shetty https://jayshettypurpose.com/fb-getting-started-as-a-life-coach-podcast/See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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What do a flirtatious gambling double agent in World War II?
An opera singer who burned down an honorary to kidnap her lover, and a pirate queen who
walked free with all of her spoils, haven't comment.
They're all real women who were left out of your history books.
You can hear these stories and more on the Womanica podcast.
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I'm Jay Shetty and on my podcast on purpose, I've had the honor to sit down with some of the
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today.
We think like a monkey was good to have my face on the cover because
it had elements of my story.
And while I do tell stories about me and Rade in this book, this book is not about our relationship or about our experience.
It's about relationships.
And so I didn't want this to ever feel like a book
of I have mastered relationships,
look how perfect my relationship is,
learn from me, that's not what this book is.
This book, like all my other work is me studying something,
me coaching clients, working with people,
and then trying to extract the lessons
and saying here's what I learned by watching, observing, coaching, researching.
And I felt that I wanted something bold and beautiful on the cover that
almost felt like you were part of a movement as well.
And I thought how beautiful would it be that millions of people across the
world, billions of people are going to see the word love every day in a very
bold, beautiful way. And even if that just, even if they don't buy the book, but it injects
some love into the world, I think that's a good thing.
Yeah, I was curious about why a book on relationships and love. I mean, you could have done so many
different things after, you know, your first book and then the second book of quotes, but
why love in relationships?
What could I have done? Tell me, I wanna know, what should I have written about? Oh, best hair, how to be, how to crush entrepreneurship.
I feel like it makes sense, but when I think about
love and relationships, it's like a very kind of
narrow focus when you usually are so broad
your life, your purpose coach, you could have done purpose.
Yeah, so I have, no, and I really appreciate that.
And I think for me, I've always talked about how there are four important
decisions you make in life.
And this is something that I developed a few years ago.
The first decision is, how do you feel about yourself?
That is one of the most important decisions you make every single day.
When you look in the mirror, when you wake up, when you're talking to your partner, when you're talking to
a friend, what do I feel about myself?
The second most important question, or the second most important decision we make every
day, or what we do is who we choose to give our love to, and who we choose to receive
love from.
The third most important decision we make in life is what do we do for
money and how do we make money? And the fourth most important decision we make in life is who do I serve
and how do I serve? How do I contribute back to the world? And so I am working through writing a book
on each decision and after answering think like a monk answers the decision of how do I feel about
myself, that's what it's dedicated to. I was just sitting down with so many friends, so many clients,
so many people, where their relationship was the cause of their greatest pain and suffering. So
I knew people who were incredible entrepreneurs, but their relationship was on the back burner
and they didn't feel fulfilled.
Or I knew people who were starting something cool up, but because they didn't have a partner,
they didn't feel complete.
Or I knew people who'd got divorced and broken up and they had a beautiful relationship
with their kids.
They had great friends, but they still felt inadequate because they weren't in a relationship.
And so I just saw relationship as like the core
of so much human happiness.
And when I interviewed Dr. Robert Waldinger,
he talked about how this 75 year study at Harvard,
he's the fourth professor to complete the study.
I think he just told me it's now 85 years.
They've been looking at humans and watching humans lives for 85 years.
And the number one thing that human happiness came down to was the quality of our relationships.
And so I felt as someone who loves serving and supporting people, I couldn't avoid this
topic.
And I think I was drawn to it because of my own mistakes in the space, my own successes
in the space and looking own successes in the space,
and looking at both those around me.
Something you and Roddy have talked about that I thought would be a beautiful way to sort of start
the conversation was kind of understanding the landscape for how we understand love today.
So I know you talked a lot about Bollywood culture and sort of like happily ever after.
And I've been thinking a lot about that too, as far as the programming around relationships. I remember my life was once you get married and have kids, it's
like, hi, you know, there wasn't any other resources or support. And I, my parents separated
and now I have so much compassion for them because I'm like, oh my gosh, like now I understand
what it takes to build a healthy relationship. it's not just happy to other after.
So I'd love to talk a little bit about your upbringing, the Bollywood experience and sort
of where we are today as far as our understanding of love.
Yeah.
So for anyone who has never watched a Bollywood movie, Bollywood is like Hollywood on romantic
steroids, right?
So if you take a rom-com and then you add music, dancing,
or a more color,
over dramatic stories of love and sacrifice and surrender,
you get Bollywood.
And I grew up on Bollywood and Hollywood movies.
And to me, I loved romcoms growing up.
Like I love romcoms.
And I think that's a big impact on my mom,
like watching romcoms at home.
And you know, I was getting together
and watching them and me wanting that kind of fairy tale love. And I can definitely admit openly that I
want today fairy tale kind of love. I want today romcom kind of love because you start
to realize that that's the only images of love that you see. And then I started to think
about other images of love I saw. My family didn't have great relationships.
So there were no good images of love there that I could say I want that.
If anything, I was saying I don't want to repeat that.
And then if I looked at my friends' parents or I looked at extended family,
I didn't see any great images of relationships there either.
So the only happy relationships I saw were in movies.
So then that became my image of that's a good love story. And I think I pursued that and chased that a lot
only to feel really
Disheartened every time
Because you couldn't recreate a movie in real life. It just wouldn't work. And so when I talk about my upbringing I found a lot of
Habits that I didn't want to repeat in my own life. I saw a lot of things that I didn't want to repeat in my own life.
I saw a lot of things that I would never want to replicate.
And I started almost making a mental note saying, I don't want to argue like that.
I won't behave like that.
I won't speak like that.
Anything that I saw that was hurtful or damaging,
I almost made a mental note saying, I don't want to be a part of that in my life.
I don't want that to be my behavior.
And then everything I saw in the movies, unfortunately, I wrote a list going, I want that.
I want that.
I was like, I was getting 50% right.
And then I was getting 50% wrong.
And you know, you have to let life humble you.
I think that's what's so beautiful about this whole journey is that life shows you what
reality is.
And I think a lot of us are thinking, how do I get my relationship right or what did
I get wrong or how do I find the right person or I just met the wrong person and I don't
think it's about right and wrong.
It's about reality and reality is right in the middle of right and wrong.
And so if you just go, what is the reality of what I'm experiencing? What is the reality of what's possible? Reality is
a much healthier metric than right or wrong. Yeah, and I think so in addition to the media programming
and Bollywood, there's also social media. And that can also portray a certain type of love. So
people nowadays are figuring out relationships from social media or looking at social media. And that can also portray a certain type of love. So people nowadays are figuring
out relationships from social media or looking at social media is kind of like the new TV.
How do you think that impacts people and their relationships? And do you have any advice
for how people should sort of navigate social media if they're looking for a relationship
advice or expanders? Yeah. Wow. What a great question. And you're right. Social media is
the updated version of rom comes of Bollywood movies or whatever it may have been. So there's two sides to this.
Everyone's allowed to share and show whatever they want to share and show of their own relationship.
It's up to you to decipher and learn to create distinctions in what's reality and what's an image that you're seeing.
And I think I like to take that responsibility on myself because I don't think you can
expect everyone in the world to change how they communicate.
And at the same time, when you take that responsibility for yourself, now you're in a
position of strength.
And if you're someone who has real relationships
and you're spending time connecting with real people, you will know that every couple argues,
you will know that every couple goes to sleep sometimes not talking to each other. You will know
that people wake up angry next to each other. You will know that people wake up the day after
they're wedding and have the worst argument they've ever had, you know people who are about to get married
and are fighting the day before they get married
because of all the pressure and stress.
If you have real friendships and real relationships,
social media actually doesn't get
as much of a hold on your mind as it could.
Whereas I find that if we're not investing
in real friendships and real relationships
and no one ever tells you,
like, I've been really fortunate. I've always had friends that are older than me and I think that's been one of the biggest
techniques of growth that I've
Lifehacked is that I've always had friends who are older than me and having friends who are older than you meant that they made mistakes before you
They were able to share their learnings with you
They were always ahead of you in life decisions so they could come back and share their notes.
And so I had so many friends who had said to me, hey, Jay, like, I got married for this
reason. I think that didn't work out for me.
Or, hey, you know what? I think I rushed having kids. I wish I slowed that down. Or, you
know, I wish me and my wife had that conversation up front. We should have talked about it there not 10 years later.
And so I was almost collecting all of these great pieces of insight
and then I was able to use their hindsight to help me.
And so again, if you have these real friendships and real relationships
where you're vulnerable with each other and you talk about these things,
you're not using social media as your frame of reference.
You're looking at real life human media as your frame of reference,
you're looking at real life human experience
as your frame of reference.
In the same way as if I see a picture of Bali on Instagram,
or I talk to my friend who just went to Bali,
who's going to give me a better insight
on what that experience was actually like.
And I think if you have a friend who just went to Bali,
that's who you'd go to.
And that's why I think our relationships,
our depth of connection, our vulnerability
with our friends and the people we love,
saves you from using social media as a frame of reference.
That is like the, I guess, facts.
I want to talk about in the book kind of moving
from the dating period to relationships
and then even breakups.
So in the book, I really loved this part about solitude
and solitude being the antidote to loneliness.
I'd love to talk about that
because most people listen and they're like,
those are the same thing.
So how are they different?
Yeah, it was Paul Tillick who talked about how,
there's a difference between being alone and being lonely.
And he talks about how, or being alone is like the strength of being alone.
But loneliness is the weakness of being alone.
And it's really interesting that in the English dictionary, we have two words for being alone.
One's alone and one's solitude, but we never use the word solitude.
So we always say, I'm going'm gonna be alone tonight, right?
We say, oh, no, I'm just gonna stay in and be alone tonight
or if you were at school
and lots of people didn't come to your party,
you'd always be considered less popular.
A loner.
A loner.
Exactly.
If you're the person at the lunch table
who's sitting alone, you're the loner.
If you turn up to a wedding and you don't have a plus one,
it's like, oh, poor you.
When are you gonna get married?
Like, when's your turn?
That's 100%.
That's the lack.
And of course, you know, so that's the language.
We've made being alone an enemy.
We've made being lonely the enemy.
And we all know this.
This is common wisdom today that we can all feel surrounded by so many people and still
feel disconnected.
That's what we all experience pretty much every single day.
So being alone doesn't mean being alone is not defined by your physical proximity to
people.
Being alone is defined by how well you understand yourself and how well others understand
you. If you don't
feel understood by your friends, you will feel alone. If you don't feel you understand
yourself, you will feel lonely. So solitude is a space you create to take the time to get
to know yourself. And I know that sounds strange. It's like, what do you mean I need to get
to know myself? Shouldn't I just know myself? Don't I just know myself? And I equate this to something I learned during my time as a monk.
I was going to say this is monk vibes. Yeah, it is. It is full of monk vibes. And the book starts with
that because I do feel like the only reason I'm able to have a healthier relationship with Rade today
is because she's the only person in the world who's
experienced me after living three years as a monk. So she's the only person I've been with after
that experience. And anything that I'm trying to get right in my current relationship comes from
what I learned during that time. And so there's this beautiful experience that I had where on my first day when I became a monk or monk school,
that I see a 10 or 11-year-old teaching like six-year-olds how to meditate or they're doing a class
and I'm wondering what's going on and so I'm you know peaking and trying to figure it out
and then I go up to the teacher who's you know 10 or 11 years old And I'm like, what did you just teach them?
And he said, oh, that's their first day of school.
And I was like, amazing, what did you teach them?
And he said, well, what did you learn
on your first day of school?
And I was like, ABCs and one, two, three, maybe,
maybe I can't even remember.
And he said, well, I was teaching them how to breathe.
And I was like, what do you mean you're teaching them
how to breathe?
We just breathe.
And he said, well, think about it.
He said, the only thing that stays with you from the moment you're born to the moment you
die is your breath.
He goes, when you're happy, what changes, your breath.
When you're sad, what changes, your breath.
When you're ecstatic, what changes your breath.
When you're nervous, what changes your breath, because your breath is interconnected to every
emotion in life. So when you learn to navigate your breath, you your breath is interconnected to every emotion in life. So when you learn to
navigate your breath, you learn to navigate life. And I was just thinking that just blew my mind
at the time. And it still does today. And even now I think about how every emotion we say,
well, that's breathtaking. You just took my breath away. Like everything is related to the breath.
So similarly, everything is related to the self. So similarly, everything is related to the self.
So just as simple as it sounds of like
you should learn how to breathe,
that's how I feel when I say,
you should spend time alone.
It sounds really basic and obvious,
but there is a whole wisdom behind it.
And the reason I say it is because when you get into a relationship
and you don't know yourself, what ends up happening is 10 years later, you blame that person for taking away
who you were.
You argue with them three months later and saying, you made me lose who I was, but you never
lost who you were because you didn't know who you were in the first place.
So you adopted all of their behaviors, all of their beliefs, you accepted whatever love they gave you,
and then started to discover that it didn't live up.
So you could save yourself from so much pain
and so much suffering if you started out knowing
what love meant to you, how love felt to you,
what love looked like to you.
Yeah, I think, so I guess even going on that,
like how can people really think about that because I've thought about this a lot
Where I don't know how much people really understand what true love is like unconditional love is so rare
And I'm even someone that I just did a darkness retreat last week. Oh so cool. So cool
psychological
But in it I was like do I know unconditional love, like the love of the creator, yes, but
still sometimes love feels conditional.
So how can people really figure out what love is for them and how love feels?
Yeah.
I break it down into three key areas.
And I recommend everyone defines love
I think what was beautiful about ancient traditions and when you look at the word we only use one word to describe love
love and
What's fascinating about that word is someone could say I love you and it means they want to spend their life with you
And someone could say I love you and it means I want to spend one night with you. And someone could say, I love you, and it means I want to spend one night with you.
Like literally, it can be that extremely different.
And so the challenge is when someone says, I love you,
you don't stop to ask them,
hey, what do you mean?
Like, do you mean tonight?
Do you mean today?
I don't like it for the first time, I don't like it.
Yeah, I called on.
Yeah, what do you mean?
Jay, Jay told me to ask you what you mean.
And we don't do that.
And I'm not asking you to do that in that moment,
but it is interesting that when someone says I love you,
you accept their words,
but you're really accepting your meaning of love.
Right? If someone says I love you,
you're actually saying, oh, I think they mean what I mean
by love and now they love me. And then you say I love you, you're actually saying, oh, I think they mean what I mean by love and now they love me
And then you say I love you back, which means you're projecting your definition onto them
And you never had a conversation about what it meant
So for me, I've defined love and I share this in the book and I share exercises in eight rules of love of how to answer each section
I define love with three key areas
One is you like their personality.
It's the most obvious, basic form of love.
Is that I enjoy their company.
I enjoy being around them.
I genuinely appreciate spending time with them.
I maybe admire some qualities that they have.
Now that you could feel for a lot of people.
So that in itself is not love.
And I think that's the challenge, Chris,
to that the challenge we have is that we see attraction
as love or we accept validation as love.
So we're almost taking payments in attention
pretending that it's love.
Does that make sense?
And so the receipt doesn't say it's love.
The receipt says attention, but we got paid as if we were like,
oh no, no, but that person loves me because they give me attention.
They give me validation.
They complemented control.
So controlled.
It's like they're doing everything I want.
Exactly.
I love them.
I love that answer.
Only when they're like doing everything I want saying what I want, do I love them?
Yeah, or, yeah, or ownership.
They take care of everything I don't have to think about anything.
I accept that as love.
And so that in and of itself is not enough, but it is a pillar.
And I think what happens is, Christa, is that we want to accelerate attraction
or liking someone into love so fast that we don't want to do the unsexy, uncool, uninteresting work
of actually falling in love with someone or building love with someone.
The second part of my definition is that you respect their values.
Now this, I'll go deeper because everyone always is about respect.
What I mean by respecting their values is you don't want to change them. You actually respect why they live their life the way
they do and how they live the life the way they do. You're not trying to change or transform
what they care about. You love what they care about because you see it brings them joy.
In mind of my wife's relationship, it took me a while to understand. So my wife's number
one priority is her family.
Family is her biggest value.
And you've interviewed her and you guys know each other.
And my value is my purpose.
Like, it's very clearly my purpose.
Very clear.
Very clear.
And I've always known that, my wife's known that from day one,
and I've known her from day one, so it helps.
But my wife has never tried to make my number one value
family and I've never tried to make her number one value
purpose. It just won't work.
Her family is her purpose.
That's how she would say it.
And I would see my work as my purpose.
And so the point is that you have to respect each other's
value in order to truly have love.
And I find most people like someone's personality
and they don't respect their value.
So they're trying to change their values.
They're like, I want your value to be me.
I want your value to be my family.
I want your value to be travel.
I want your value to be this.
Like you're trying to control someone's values, not love.
And then the third and final step
of my definition of love that I share in the book
is wanting to help someone towards
their goals, wanting to support someone towards their goals.
That is real love.
Like, I may like a lot of people, I may respect what they value, but there's very few people
in the world that I'm going to say, I'm going to stand with you and I'm going to make
sure you get to where you want to go, whatever that may be.
That requires the greatest commitment to someone in saying,
not just like a friend, like, oh, I'll help you, I'll network and I'll connect, not that kind of thing.
I'm dedicated. My life is dedicated to helping you get to your goals. And I know you're going to
help me back to mine. I still recommend everyone comes up with their own definition of love. I talk
about in the book how the Greeks, the ancient Greeks had seven different words for love.
the Greeks, the ancient Greeks had seven different words for love. They have family love, they have affection,
they have passionate love, they define it,
but today we just put it all into one.
And so if someone pays us a compliment,
they're kind, like, oh, they love me.
They're really great, they're wonderful people.
And we halo effect qualities.
So we take one quality that someone has
and we blow it up and go go they must be great at everything.
I think with love too, it's like in the social media world, you're like love you, love you, love you.
And I think it's a girl thing too, or like love you, love you, love you.
And it just kind of, I'm like that too.
I mean, we're all, it's like we do, and then I'm like, but I want to love everyone.
But how am I saying this to my husband and then like, person online?
But I think it's interesting listening to what you're saying, you could really see how clearly it's in or how important it is
to know yourself. Because if you don't know your values, if you don't know your goals,
you're going to get really lost within trying to find a definition. I'm curious what you
think about this and I don't even really have an answer. But for people that are dating,
what do you think about the spark? Like do you think it needs to be a spark when people
start or do you think it needs to be a spark when people start or do you think there needs to be butterflies?
Yeah, so I really looked into this because I've been fascinated by this a lot. And I've
also been friends with guys who feel the spark every week with a different person. So I've
had a teller guys that I've mentored and worked with who literally would come back to me
every week, every month. And they're like, I just felt the spark of the gym. You know, I just felt the spark of the bar.
I just, and they're just finding a new person
to have a spark with, is that similar with women?
Like, with women?
Yeah.
I think we romanticize things a little bit more.
Right.
And I think it's interesting,
because I'm sure men is that physical attraction,
you know, really like that testosterone
or maybe there's a biological component.
But I think for women, it's like the spark
and then the story, kind of the fantasy goes.
So I think they're very different in the way that they go,
but I don't think women feel the spark as much as the man.
Got it, okay, yeah, and that was my,
I wanted to get that sense,
because I have a similar sense.
Feaking for every single woman in honor.
Of course, and I'm not trying to make gender stereotypes either.
Of course.
I'm just saying from my experiences, speaking to people,
there's been a lot of people who ride Matt, a lot of men who feel that way. And so I was really interested
and I started looking into it. What the science showed, which I do find fascinating, was
that when you meet someone that you feel that spark with or chemistry, there is actually
something chemical happening. And what's happening is that your excitement level is high.
Ooh, that's a new person. But your stress level is high. Do they like me?
So you're experiencing excitement and stress at the same time. So you're like, they're hot.
Do they think I'm hot? Excitement stress. Yes. Oh my gosh. Like, are they coming over here? Excitement.
Oh no, what do I say? Stress. Oh no, I have their number. So exciting. Oh wait, they have a
message back in two hours, right?
So you're feeling excitement and stress.
And what ends up happening?
This really, really at least blew my mind
and it was very fascinating for me.
So you're feeling excitement and stress.
Now, as you get to know that person,
they give you a sense of comfort.
So what happens is the stress decreases.
Now you don't get that same spark anymore
because your stress levels have gone down around them
because they actually help calm you down
because you have a relationship now.
And then we think the spark just went away
but actually the stretch just went away.
So I just wanted to think about that for a second.
Anytime you've thought the spark went away, it didn't.
The stress went away of meeting someone new.
And actually, if your stress has gone away,
chances are that person's good for you
because they've helped calm you down
because now you feel safe around them.
When you're first attracted to someone
and you don't know whether they like you,
you feel unsafe, right?
Everyone knows what it feels like to go out in a limb
and text someone and wait a day to have it back. You feel unsafe, but that feels exciting. Whereas now two months later,
you feel safe with them. You lost the excitement. So it's not about whether you feel a spark or you
don't feel a spark, whether you feel a spark or you don't, it has to be followed up with skills
in a relationship. And I think that's where people go wrong. People think if we have the spark,
we don't need anything else.
And if I don't have the spark,
it doesn't matter how many skills this person has,
this can't work.
And I think it's both.
I think there's a need for chemistry, compatibility,
and connection.
And often we just take chemistry
and hope that that's gonna last.
And chemically, that's not gonna last.
And therefore, from a feeling point of view, it won't last.
And so I think the more we focus on compatibility and connection,
the healthier a relationship can be.
Now, if someone just says all I wanna feel is sparks,
then great, you should move from lots of three-month relationships consistently,
and that will fulfill
you. But if you're someone who's saying I want a long term relationship, please focus on the skills
and the tools because that's what's really needed. It's almost like the difference between saying
I'm really attracted to this apartment versus I'm attracted to it but I can also vision where
this could go. Right?
I have a vision for how this could be.
Yes.
On the flip side of that, do you think that people should marry their best friend?
Oh, that's a good question.
I've never been asked that before.
I don't think you can just marry your best friend.
Yeah, I mean, just being straight up.
Like, I don't think that that's again a good
enough reason because being friends and being in love are two very different things, just like being
friends and being in business are two very different things. When you add the energy of money or you
add the energy of love, there's different expectations, there's different commitments. If you don't talk to your
friend for a couple of weeks and you catch up, you feel like you had the best conversation ever.
In a relationship, your partner may need more attention than that. In your friendship,
you may be more forgiving because at the end of the day, you don't have to wake up next to that
person every single day and sleep next to them every night.
When you're in a relationship, you're seeing that person all the time.
It's different expectations.
So again, I think what we like to do is simplify and go, okay, well, if we got this part of our life,
right, we can get this part of our life, right?
And it doesn't work that way because you're always infusing a new energy
when you add an element to your relationship.
And it truly apprises in business.
It truly applies in love.
And I think a friendship can be a beautiful foundation
for a great relationship,
but I think assuming that it already is,
is where we go wrong.
Does that satisfy you or do you wanna dig into that?
No, I agree with you.
It's like, yeah, it's again, I think thinking about
how do people define it?
Because for some people, they might define
best friends as, you know, it might be something
where they want the comfort of that
and they actually don't want that sparky chemistry part.
So thinking about how people define it,
but I'm not exactly sure the truth.
I was thinking about this before,
and I think it's something that a lot of people in my
life have been experiencing is like the growing apart of being in a long-term relationship and
two people that come together at a different period in time in their life and then they find
themselves after however many years being like what the heck like we're so we've grown apart.
And there's like a beauty in that and then there's also can be really scary because you're like, okay, what are we going
to do?
Are we going to choose to go together?
So I'd love to talk a little bit about growing apart versus growing together.
Yeah, I have a whole section in the book called, you know, almost like you have to make
that choice to either elevate or separate.
And I think that couples that want to last the test of time. And first, actually,
let's take it back a little bit. First of all, I don't think length of time should be
used as a metric of success of a relationship. I think that's a really unhealthy way often
of gauging the success of a relationship. I knew someone who was married for like 14 years and then when they got
divorced, everyone was so shocked. But anyone who knew them closely knew that they were
struggling for 10 years already and so really it was a four year relationship, 10 years of pain
and then there was a divorce followed by that. And so I was like, oh my god, they were together for
14 years. I never thought that would happen to them. It's like, well, no, it wasn't 14 years.
It was four years and 10 years of pain. I never thought that would happen to them. And it's like, well, no, it wasn't 14 years.
It was four years, and 10 years of pain.
And so I think we have to start looking at how long
was an actual relationship and a connection
versus how long is a marriage or a partnership,
which are often wildly different.
Now if someone does want a long-term relationship with someone,
if that is your definition of love and
success in a relationship, you're going to have to grow together multiple times. And here's the hardest
part. You always grow at different times. So everyone grows at a different time, at a different pace,
in their own way. And it rarely happens that you're growing at the same time at the
same pace in the same way. So now you've got one of your partners going off on their journey.
So I'm someone who was very aware about my passion, my purpose, what I wanted to do in
the world. And when I met Radeys, she was extremely talented. she's always been extremely gifted, but she didn't necessarily
know what her purpose was or her passion was.
And so it's been really interesting for me watching her in that discovery.
And that requires patience on my part, it requires support.
And it requires openness because she has to find her own path.
Now she's had to do the same with me.
When she met me, she was already healthy, she ate well,
she worked out, she puts in the hours.
I was like staying up late to work.
I was, I love this, I love this J.
Yeah, I was like, I was staying up late to work.
I was, I love eating fried food.
I love like sugar.
I was addicted to sugar when I met her.
And so it's like, I was also learning
in a different part of my life,
just because I figured out my purpose and my mindset,
doesn't mean I figured out everything in life.
And so she had to be patient with me.
So Riley's giving me so many insights
on how to improve my health
and how to have better like work hygiene
and so many other things that I've gained from her.
And I think that the challenge that most people have is ego.
We don't want to learn from our partners because it almost makes us feel weak and it puts
them in a position of superiority, not realizing that when you can trade and I have a whole
section in this book, a chapter called your partner is your guru.
And it's this idea of if you really love someone, chances are they have something to teach
you.
And if they can teach you in a way that isn't preachy, isn't projecting and isn't critical.
And if we can be that for our partners, you can grow together endlessly.
Now, if you feel you've grown together, you've learned everything you possibly can from your partner, now there's no more learning to do. It's wonderful to grow
apart, but that should also be celebrated as a success. I think we often use words like
divorce, ended, like these words are so aggressive. Split. Split. Exactly. Yeah, it was over forever. Like these words are so aggressive,
and they put this paint, this picture of animosity,
of, you know, of enemy kind of feeling,
not realizing that someone could have a really healthy
as the famous book, like a conscious uncoupling,
like the idea of uncoupling is so much more of a healthier idea for people.
And I think that's the language we need to trade that, yes, you could have a wonderful relationship.
And you could have a wonderful afterlife from that relationship if you both wanted that.
And that doesn't mean the relationship failed. It did its part. It's like, you don't go to college for three years,
and if you don't become a professor, it's like, you don't go to college for three years
and if you don't become a professor,
it's like, no, you failed.
You failed, you should have become a professor.
No, it served its part.
Even for me, when I look at, I lived as a monk,
I didn't become a monk for the rest of my life.
It served its purpose.
And I think relationships have to be seen in that way
of like, did it serve its purpose?
And if it's done, it's done.
And let's not make people feel bad about that, you know?
Yeah, it's again, the happily ever after vibe.
You know, if you're not to get,
and everyone's like, wow, your parents are still together.
And it's like, what their miserable are, don't talk.
And they're not in communication.
And they're not engaging.
And they're not connected.
So it's like, what's the point?
Yeah.
But it was interesting, like just watching you in Radi, it not connected. So it's like, what's the point? Yeah. But it was interesting, like just watching you in Roddy,
it's so beautiful because it's like when you're talking
to one another, you are listening to each other
as if you are the guru.
There's an openness to being taught by each other
that I feel like sometimes can get lost in relationships.
And I don't know if it's because there is a point,
and the book is, it could be conscious loving by gay
Hendrix or it could be getting the love you want but it talks about how you sort
of make the person your parents and then you kind of project all the pain. So I'm
wondering if that's what happens with folks where they they are making the
person their parent and then when you're telling them what to do you're like no mom
so in this book I talk about how there are different relationship roles.
And we all slot into one of these.
And I have a test in the book that helps guide you to figure out what you are and what
your partner is.
And so these are the three roles.
Everyone who's listening, you can figure out which one you're in.
And if and when you get the book, you can do the test to make sure of it.
So the first is fixer.
The second is dependent. And the third is supporter. So some of us
are fixers. We get our value in a relationship by trying to fix the other person's problems. If
the person, we see them as broken and we think we can fix them and that makes us feel good. So we
like to find projects, we like to find people who need help. And we go and make a relationship with them
because we want to feel really powerful and strong
that we help them.
What ends up happening is that a few years down the line
we get exhausted and then we go,
oh, stop acting like a kid.
You don't do anything.
You're not really involved.
You're not engaged, but we set them up to be that way
because that's what we wanted in the beginning. The second is the dependent.
The dependent is someone who wants to be the child.
They walk into relationships looking for mom and dad.
They want the other person to fix everything.
They wanna find someone who's gonna take care
of all their needs, provide for everything they need,
take care of them mentally, emotionally,
maybe even financially, and we go there in like a little kid.
What ends up happening?
You drain the other person.
That doesn't end so well.
And the third one is the supporter.
The supporter goes,
real love and real support
is I'm going to help you
develop the skills you need to take care of yourself.
I'm not going to take care of you
What is care is care me saying to you? I'm going to take care of you or is real care
I'm going to help you learn the skills to take care of yourself
That's real love that's real care like I believe in you so much that I want you to have the tools and skills
And I'm gonna help you. I'm gonna guide you I'm gonna introduce you to things whatever you need so that I want you to have the tools and skills and I'm gonna help you, I'm gonna guide you,
I'm gonna introduce you to things,
whatever you need so that you feel safe,
whether I'm here or not, that's love.
One day I may die before you.
If you only feel safe when I'm alive next to you,
that's not love.
Love is I'm gonna protect you by helping you protect yourself.
That's safety.
Don't we want that for our kids? Don't we want that for our kids?
Don't we want that for our partners?
Like, if my kid, I don't have any kids,
but if I had kids and if they only felt safe
when I was in the room, that wouldn't be a win.
That would be a loss because you can't always be in the room.
So I think we do that with our partners.
So as support says, I'm here to help you develop the skills
you need to take care of yourself. And I'm ready to develop the skills you need to take care of yourself.
I'm ready to develop the skills I need, whatever you need to teach me,
to take care of myself.
I set that up because the fix is almost like the parent,
the dependence like the child, and then the supporter is the collaborative one.
The one who recognizes that the only person who can take care of me is me. And the only person who can take care of you is you. And so when I help you take care of yourself
and you help me take care of myself, that's real care, that's real love.
I'm Danny Shapiro, host of Family Secrets. It's hard to believe we're entering our eighth season.
And yet, we're constantly discovering new secrets. The depths of them, the variety of them
continues to be astonishing.
I can't wait to share 10 incredible stories with you,
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and the profoundly necessary excavation
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When I realized this is not just happening to me,
this is who and what I am. I needed her to help me.
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How can people watch when they're slipping into that?
Because that's kind of like people go into that unconsciously.
And I've seen in relationships with myself, I've seen in relationships with friends where
you don't even realize it's happening and then you're like, wait, whoa.
Is there a way that we can be more conscious about that journey so that, you know, because
it's an opportunity for healing,
that's why we do it to bring it up for healing.
So it's important that it comes up
and you could even work through it together,
but how can we work with that energy?
Yeah, so I think the first step
and the reason why I put it in the book
is this level of awareness, like even knowing.
So I'm a classic fixer.
I have that natural ability,
whenever anyone's working in coaching,
or like it's a natural element of wanting to help people
that way.
So I'm a classic fixer.
And for so many years in so many relationships,
I tried to solve all of my partner's problems.
Whoever I was with, I was just trying to fix their problems.
And I wanted to be the night in shining armor.
And I wanted to be the savior. And I wanted to be the night in shining armor. And I wanted to be the savior.
And I wanted to be that person,
only to realize they were never satisfied,
no matter how much of a savior I was,
because there was always more saving to do.
And they never really fully saw me
as a night in shining armor,
because now you think you're a night in shining armor,
but literally you're a person with a stretcher, right?
Like it's like, you wanna be this idolized version of a savior, but really you're a person with a stretcher, right? Like it's like, you wanna be this idealized version
of a savior, but really you're just in the emergency room
every day, and now there's no night in shining armor, right?
You're like a person who's battered their job
in the medical department, and so what ended up happening
was having tested it out, and I think people can relate
to that, and that's my experience.
I realized that being a fixer didn't set me,
the other person, or the relationship up for success.
It set us up for failure.
So how do you become vigilant of it,
which is your question?
The way you become vigilant of it
is when someone asks for help.
What's the first thing you say back?
If you're a partner asks for help
and you go, oh, I'll take care of that, don't worry.
And we do that at the start of relationships
because we again think,
oh, they're gonna think I'm so nice
and they're gonna think I'm so likable.
As opposed to that saying,
it's different if someone says,
oh, can you grab some milk when you're out
and you go, no, I'm not gonna do that.
You should do it.
Like, it's not that kind of thing.
But like, a good example is when,
when me and Rady first started dating,
like, Rady would also ask me and this this is gonna
I know so many people but I promise you it it works Rady would always say to me like how do you feel I look in this?
and
I would always be honest with her, but one of my favorite responses after I'd be honest with her is how do you feel you look in this?
and and she was like no you just tell me like do I look at her and I'm like I think you look beautiful
But I want to know how you feel you look in this.
And when we'd be out picking furniture for our apartment
or whatever it may be, we'd look at the piece of furniture
and be like, oh no, you just decide.
I'm like, no, what do you think?
Like what's your taste?
And so what I find is that when your partner
is trying to outsource something to you,
you may feel like doing it for them makes you more likable,
but actually you're setting themselves
and yourself up for always having to answer that question.
And when you rather say, well, what are your thoughts?
Like I wanna know what you really care about.
I wanna know what you believe in.
You actually are strengthening there in a voice.
So one way to be vigilant is when you're asked
for to solve a problem.
First, take a second on becoming the fixer.
If you're a classic dependent and you want someone else to solve your problems, that
can be a lot harder because you already don't feel you have the confidence to fix anything.
So actually, it can be really hard when you feel like the dependent, the anxiety is really
hard being independent because you want the other person to deal with it.
And now, if they're not dealing with it, you don't feel strong enough. What I'd say is that anyone who feels weak or has that self doubt, it comes from not a
lack of belief or a lack of quality. It comes from a lack of ability and abilities can
be trained and learned. And I always say this to people, if something makes you nervous,
if something makes you uncomfortable,
if something makes you scared,
you can't just believe in yourself.
And I think a lot of people talk about self-belief,
and really it's about self-respect,
and self-respect comes from doing hard things.
And so if you're dealing with something
that you don't feel you're good at, go and try and get decent at it, go and take a course, get
a coach, get a mentor, go out there and read a book about it, listen to this podcast,
right? Like when you're when you're searching for the answer, all of a sudden your skill
starts to develop and now the problem starts to feel easier to solve. And so as a dependent,
especially if you're single, start solving problems yourself and
guess what, you're going to feel so much self-respect.
And now yourself doubt goes away at the root.
And so those are two ways to be vigilant in this plenty more that I explained.
Yeah, I love those examples.
So I was talking to our community before you came.
And this is something that comes up quite a bit with women. And I think
a lot of our community are people that identify as women. And they're finding that in the
dating world or out in their relationships that they're growing, you know, perceived
to be growing more than their male partner, and that there's a discrepancy between the
growth rates. And I'm curious about how much you're seeing that trend,
where women are deeply interested
in personal growth, self-development,
all of these things.
And there, for me, is a part of that that's self-hate,
led, and actually not self-love.
But then there is that moment where they're doing
a lot more work personally than the men.
Are you seeing that as a trend?
And what would you suggest?
And I love the distinction you just made about the reason we work on ourselves too.
Like it's it's almost like.
And again, I know we're both not making broad generalizations.
We're trying to based on what we've experienced.
If society has set up women to doubt themselves, society has set up men to pretend
they're strong.
And they're both opposite sides of the same coin.
So men feel they have to be the protector, the savior, the provider.
To have the answers.
To have the answers.
And so they're trying so hard to present that facade,
that they don't want to be vulnerable
and they don't want to do the work.
Because if you have to show you have to do work, that means you're not done.
And they're scared that if I show a woman I need to do work, then maybe she won't respect
me and love me because isn't that what they want.
And regardless of gender, whatever you identify as, I think we all feel this about anyone.
You may be with someone and think, it's a corporate example, but it's true.
I was working with a CEO recently.
A CEO of an extremely successful company,
you know, very highly regarded,
achieved so much in the world.
And I've been working with him on his mental health.
And we're seeing a lot of progress.
So I said to him, at your next offsite,
I said to him, I want you to tell your
team, the journey you've been on with your mental health. That's all I want you to do.
Just share with them this journey that we've been on together, just with your direct
team, not the whole company or some press article, just the people you work with daily,
you'll see sweet, the sea level.
And he said to me, he said, Jay, I don't think I can do that. And I said, why?
He said, because they see me as the strong one. He said, they see me as the powerful one. They see me as the one who has it all together. If I tell them that, they won't see me that way.
If I tell them that, they won't see me that way. And I said to them, I said, what's more powerful than you sharing your truth? What's more strong or courageous than you being honest with
them about what you've been through? Isn't that what real strength is? But the challenges
that and so transferring that experience into relationships, a lot of people are feeling,
well, if I showed them that I'm vulnerable,
aren't they with me because I'm all sorted, right?
And so I think that's the issue.
And then of course, the other way around,
it's like, oh, while I'm working on myself,
I'm showing that I'm building myself up,
but then I'm scared myself doubt
will actually push a good person away.
If we have this conversation with the genders
that we were talking about, if women are feeling, oh no, but if I doubt myself too much, he good person away. If we have this conversation with the genders that we were talking about, if women are feeling,
oh no, but if I doubt myself too much, he'll run away.
And then he's thinking, well, if I show her that I doubt myself, then she'll run away.
And so we're at this tension.
And I think that requires that's why the tools in the book of like, why actually if both
people, regardless of gender, regardless of identification, if
both people have compassion for each other, have empathy for each other, understand that this is
another imperfect human. That's where we go beyond gender and beyond expectation and beyond all
of this and actually can deal with each other. But that only comes when you've gone through your own work of
when you've seen the deepest darkest parts of your own soul
you're comfortable when someone's exploring theirs
But if you haven't done that
it's very uncomfortable to watch someone else
The other thing I'd say is if you feel you're growing at a faster rate than your partner,
that should result in more compassion, more empathy, and more patience. That's actually a result
of more work. The result of more work is not more judgment, more critique, and more spotting of
weaknesses. That is not. And I think that's the challenge sometimes in early spiritual circles
or early self-development or personal growth.
You start thinking, oh, I can see everything clearly
and I can see all these faults.
And now we start to critique.
I've worked with so many couples where men and women
have come to me and said, my wife criticizes me daily.
My wife has changed my entire diet.
Rather has changed my entire diet,
my workout plan, and so much in my life,
and yet I've never felt criticized or judged.
And that's genius.
Like it's unbelievable the level of coaching
she's given me in an area of my life
that I was negligent about. And I've never felt criticized. I've only felt encouraged. And she's always
set the example because she's doing it regardless of whether I do it or not. So it's not like,
oh, you have to do this with me. Oh, look at me. Look what I'm doing. I look at all these
other guys are doing. Why don't you do this? Why don't you look like this? Like, how does that make
anyone change? Like, how does it make anyone's it, but that's the kind of stuff we say to the people
we supposedly love. And so for me, if you genuinely believe you're growing spiritually, that's more
compassion, more empathy, more love, not more criticism, judgment, and fault finding.
Yeah, that's what I'll see oftentimes where it's like, I'm becoming more spiritual, I'm doing the work,
and then the focus becomes everyone else's not.
And you know, it's like, then you turn everyone,
you're like, and I just realized that my mom's a narcissist
and they're codependent and all these things.
And then they turn in label everyone with everything.
It's just, it's kind of heartbreaking because you're like,
okay, that's again, you know, not the point.
It's kind of like part of the path.
Yeah, and hey, I'm compassionate to that person too, going back to this whole composite.
Like the reason I'm compassionate to the person that labels is because we're doing that for our own security in the beginning.
So when you can finally see and you're like, okay, and I'm not pointing at you for real, but...
Yes, you taught me.
Narcissist, like whatever, like when you start labeling people,
really you're doing it to show yourself,
I am learning, I know, I'm understanding.
So I also have compassion for that
because in the beginning, you have to protect yourself.
It's like when someone first makes a big shift in their life,
they have to cut other people out,
and they have to look at the difference
and be very black and white because they don't know how to do it otherwise.
If they don't cut that group of friends out, they won't be able to stop drinking.
If they don't cut that group of friends out, they won't be able to disconnect from Instagram
or whatever it may be.
And that's an early stage of change.
So we don't want to be, we don't want to hate them there, me either, because we understand
it.
But I think when you're all that person, you want to be aware of it,
so that you don't push people away.
Yeah, it's like, how is it leading you to more separation?
Yeah.
You know what I mean?
And it's like, let's be mindful of like,
what, again, it's always coming back.
What is more separation?
What is more separation?
In the book, it talks a little bit about purpose too.
Like, purpose as it relates to love and relationship.
So what is that correlation?
Because I think sometimes people think about them separately.
Yes, yeah.
Before we dive into that,
I wanted to touch on one more nuance
because you've, the questions you've asked
have been so great.
And I'm like, I want to make sure that we touch on that.
There's a nuance also of like,
when someone's starting their journey,
and I deeply mean this,
and it took me a while to learn this,
even as a coach in this space was
Not everyone's going to learn from the same books you read from the same podcast you listen to and from the same teachers and guides and coaches
that you found your truth through and
I often say to people I work with one of my favorite things I get to do is my podcast.
And I sit down with so many different people from so many different walks of life, some of the
manure scientists, some of the athletes, some of the actors, musicians, models, some of them are
philanthropists and professors. What I'm hoping is that that allows multiple different people
to come on their journey of personal growth.
Like I remember when I first sat down with Ray Dalio
who's become a dear friend at this point,
Ray Dalio is the founder of Bridgewater Associates,
highly sought after in the financial world,
if anyone has a partner or a friend
who's well known in finance, Ray Dalio is like,
and I didn't even, when I first met Ray,
I did not know that about him.
And it was really funny because all my investment
banker friends and hedge fund manager friends,
after that episode, they were like,
Jay, you're so cool, like we love you now.
I was like, what?
You're like, you're like,
Kendall Jenner was on last week.
But it was like for them, Ray Dalio is like,
they're person.
And so when they hear Ray talk about meditation,
and Ray does meditate,
Ray's been meditating for years
and he credits meditation as being one
of the most successful parts of his success,
all the hedge fund managers and investment bank
is going, oh my God, I need to meditate, right?
And they could have heard about meditation
from me for like years and it didn't move them.
So people have to hear about it through a voice
that affects them and
not my voice doesn't affect everyone and that's okay. And you know, it doesn't work that
way. So I feel like when you're watching your partner not progress on the journey, it's
often because you're trying to get them to go on your journey, not theirs. And so if you
can open and broaden your mind and think, maybe they're not going to read the same book
as me. Maybe they need to listen to this episode of this podcast,
right? So anyway, I wanted to touch on that.
Yeah, I love that because it is,
and again, I said it before,
but it's like, I think for women,
there's like a communal aspect
to what we are and what we do,
even with Rade, it's so interesting hearing your guys' values
because it's so masculine, feminine,
if we're looking at just the archetypes of the energetic,
yours is purpose, focus, hers is family.
But it's like for women, we're like,
okay, we're doing this thing.
Come on everybody, join us, join us in this thing.
But again, there's that moment.
And I think a lot of women are going through this
where it's almost like personal growth,
self-development, work, fatigue.
Because we've just been inundated with so much of it.
And I just also want to be mindful
like how much is this personal growth work
or information supporting you and loving yourself more.
Yeah.
And that's the period of it.
You know, this needs to support you in a depth
of love for yourself and acceptance
that goes beyond really being concerned
about what everyone else is doing in their world too.
Yeah, that's so beautiful.
And I couldn't agree with you more.
And I deeply, I mean, I was raised by a mom
who did everything for me.
So, you know, I have a lot of,
I've had a lot of perspective on that from day one
where my mom woke me up, got me ready for school
and for my sister to made us breakfast,
dropped us to school, made us pack lunch,
went off to work all day.
She learned a new career so that she could be flexible for me and my sister.
So she quit her full-time job, took exams in a whole new career path so that she could
be self-employed to set up her own work from home situations so that she could pick us
up.
And she never did exams beyond 16 years old, like she didn't get to go to college or anything like that, but she did
all of that just for us. And then she'd pick us up from school, make dinner for us, help
us with our homework, and then we'd go to bed. And so I saw, I saw like superwoman, and at the
same time, I saw someone who, you know, didn't have enough time to love herself or didn't have
enough time to do things for herself. And that pains me now looking back because obviously as a
eight-year-old or as a 12-year-old, there's very little understanding you have of the full
picture or what you can do.
You're like, Mom, what's your self-care?
Yeah, exactly. I wish. I wish. I wish. And I do it now as much as I can, of course.
But at that time, I didn't have that. And I look at that and I'm like, wow, my mom gave everything for me and my sister to be to be set up. And I know
that I'm fueled by that love and I know that the love I try to give out in the world is my mom's
love that she filled me up with. Like, you know, the book, she's one third of the dedication of this
book because she literally taught me how to love endlessly. And so when I look at the
pressure that she had and the fact that she never made time for herself and she did set me up,
I really feel that and we'll go back to your purpose question afterwards and it's kind of linked
to this. But I do feel that the point of all of this work is to lead you to being happier, healthier, and more healed.
And the path to being happier, healthier, and more healed is not beautiful in the external sense.
It's difficult. And so just because your life looks tough or difficult,
it doesn't mean you're on the wrong path.
Chances are you're on the right path.
But I think what you brought up, Christa, which I love,
is that there's a spirit of self-love
that kind of underpins all of it.
And really, that comes from self forgiveness and grace. And that is a
cultivation in and of itself. And so actually what I would say, based on your thoughts,
which I appreciate, I agree with, most people's self development work should actually be
aimed at developing self forgiveness and grace because
that becomes a path to all of this because hey, whether you want to learn how to meditate
or whether you want to work out more or whether you want to eat healthy or whatever you want
to do, I promise you self forgiveness and grace are going to be a part of the process because
you're going to misaday at the gym. You're going to miss eating that healthy meal.
You're going to not want to meditate for three days in a row.
And the skill that helps you with all of that is self forgiveness and grace.
And so I encourage you all to make your personal growth journey about self forgiveness and grace
to assist what you said, which I would say.
Which I think.
I think that's the goal, you the goal for a lot of people is,
how can I change who I am?
How can I make myself different
instead of accepting where you're at?
Yeah, the purpose piece on relationships and purpose.
Yeah, the reason why I bring it up
is kind of related to this.
And it's the idea that Albert Einstein once said,
if you want to be happy, like focus on a goal, not a person or a thing.
And it's like the idea that I think a lot of people make people their purpose.
And when I've worked with people, especially people who have been in relationships for a
long time, maybe your partner was the entrepreneur, so you sacrificed your journey to help them.
Maybe your partner was the breadwinner, so you sacrificed your journey to help them. Maybe your partner
was the breadwinner, so you put everything you cared about aside and went all in for
them. That's fine for a bit, but when someone's done that for 10, 20, 30 years, what I found
is a lot of people come out in their 50s and then feel like they didn't achieve their
potential. So I've seen people who potentially look happily married
or in relationships for 10, 20, 30 years,
and then one person comes out and says,
we worked for your dreams, not mine.
And now they feel misled.
And so what I do in the book is I create a scenario-based support system
regardless of your financial position or where you are to help you make sense
of how do we decide? How do we consciously make an effort to decide how we both help each other
focus on our purpose of wherever our and again, it's a consciousness thing. What happened in these
relationships that I'm talking about is the person who was the breadwinner, they assumed their partner should help them and they never talked about it.
And so what ended up happening 30 years later, they hate each other. Well,
one of them hates the other one for saying, you took me away from my purpose.
And they're like, no, I didn't take you away. I was just taking care of the family and you were
helping me. And so it ends up being this awkward thing where it's like, we just never talked about it.
And so I feel like when you have a healthy conversation
and you're like, well, I think, you know,
if you can give me 12 months to experiment,
could you hold it down for 12 months?
Okay, we experiment, okay, I got some.
I can you do this?
And I think having that conversation up front
just saves you so much stress and hassle.
And I think we avoid that conversation
because we want to be the supportive partner.
We want to be the partner who sacrifices everything
because look, I look how much I love you.
And I think that just misleads us and the other person.
So I would encourage you all to make the pursuit of purpose
a healthy pursuit in your life.
And I call it a pursuit rather than finding your purpose
because the pressure of finding your purpose
again stops you from loving yourself
because you're like, I don't have it.
I don't know what it is.
I don't have it.
I don't know what it is.
And all I'm saying is,
hey, just have stuff you care about.
And don't let go of it.
That's all I'm saying.
Have something you care about
and you don't let go of it.
It could be as something as simple as
going for a coffee with your friend every week. It could be as simple as helping out at
a homeless shelter or a soup kitchen. It could be as simple as working on your creative pursuits of art or sport or whatever it may be, but just don't give it up because you think now
you have to grow out of it. And I think that's in the book, I really give step-by-step focuses on how,
no matter what your situation is,
how you both don't have to sacrifice,
but there's a way of figuring it out.
Yeah, that's huge.
I think also, too, it's what I found during that.
And I've learned this over time,
just even watching my parents or other relationships,
so much can be remedied or supported by talking about it.
You know, even with a lot of my women friends are the breadwinners, like I think almost
more than half now are breadwinners.
And it's like there's a dynamic, there's a power play happening within the relationship
where they're the breadwinners, you know, the husband or partner or boyfriend might not
be.
And so there's this like power struggle, but there's not an actual conversation of like, hey, if I'm
making more money, what's your contribution? Or how are we going to work with this energy?
How are you feeling about, you know, there's so much can be remedied by communication.
It's so wild.
Yeah. And I guess that's why we've always had communication communication communication, but the challenge is that we want to talk about
how people behave or their actions,
but we don't want to talk about our intentions.
So we'd rather talk about it.
You did that wrong.
You should be doing this.
So I expected this from you,
rather than this is what I'm feeling,
this is what I'm thinking.
How are you thinking about it?
And that's because we're scared
that if we say it out loud, the other person doesn't have the humility to hear it.
We're scared that if I tell my partner, hey, I'm the breadwinner, I really need your support
that they don't have the humility or the lack of ego to say, yeah, I think you're right. That's what we should do.
And that's why what we have to realize is it doesn't have to be about winning and losing.
The reason why ego gets involved is because we want to win. And the way I see in
relationships is, if I win and you lose, we both lose because we both are on the same team.
And if you win and I lose, then we both lose because both are on the same team. And if you win and I lose, then
we both lose because we're on the same team. So we have two choices. We either win together
or we lose together. There's no third option. Whereas we think there's a third option
of I won and you lost. You both lost. And so my encouragement is in a relationship, if you're genuinely committed to working it out with someone, first of all, bring up conversation in a non-confrontational,
non-aggressive way. Talk about things when they're not heated. We wait till things are
heated to say how we really feel, rather than doing it when it's cool and just saying,
hey, you know, like I'll often
ask, right, they'll be like, and this is when we're not, I'm not having a fight or not
in a, in a disagreement. I'll say, is this going, is this relationship going in the direction
you want it to go? But that, that question has to be asked in a safe space because what
I don't want her to think is, Jay thinks it's going in the wrong direction, which is not
what I'm saying. I'm asking a question because if we're both going her to think is, Jay thinks it's going in the wrong direction, which is not what I'm saying.
I'm asking a question because if we're both gonna be in this,
I wanna know if it's going in the direction you want,
and I want it to go in a certain direction,
and then I want a safe space to say,
hey, you know what, it's not quite going in the direction I want.
Here's why, but it's like it needs to be a safe space
where I don't feel that person's going to destroy me for raising a concern. And I think we've created conversations and communication where
anything that's uncomfortable to talk about or anything that's difficult to talk about,
you never talk about it. We saw our parents do that, we saw families do that, we saw friends do that.
And now we only talk about uncomfortable things when we're screaming at the top of our lungs.
And that pushes the other person apart. So I think humility, I think, presenting things properly,
I mean, there's this beautiful research that shows that when you get feedback to someone,
if you're walking together in the same direction, the other person's more likely to digest it,
if you're sitting at a round table instead of opposite each other, it's less confrontational.
It's creating less animosity. But if you're sitting opposite each other at a table, it feels like I'm against you. It doesn't feel like we're together.
And so the idea of can you create that environment externally and internally, that if I really want this person in my life, we're going to solve this together. If I really want them in my life,
it can't be about getting one up on them. Like that can't be where we go.
Yeah, and conscious loving, they say that most arguments when they're unconscious are a fight
for the victim position. So you're like, who's the victim? When me and Lindsay have a confrontation
or even me and my husband,
it's, we'll usually go to the beach.
And if I have something that I want to talk about
or she does, it's like, you'll kind of massage
the first part of the conversation to be like normal.
And then you'll bring it up.
Because it's like, okay, we're regulating
and our nervous systems together.
And it's nice to have the walking in the same direction
because not only is it like that symbol of we're walking together, but it almost gives your eyes and your body a little bit of a break.
To just be, okay, I'm looking ahead, I'm not, we're not face to face. Like there's a face-off
element. And so being in nature and finding the right environment is really important,
you know, being outside, being at the park, kind of breaking the pattern of potentially being in the home
or being in the bedroom or being on all these things, I think is so nice.
Absolutely. Yeah, and I love that you do that. And it's such a valuable skill.
And I think learning how to fight, I talk about in the book about fight styles.
And the reason why I brought up fight styles is I was a huge fan of, you know,
Gary Chapman's five love languages, and I think that's beautiful.
But I was looking at all the Gottmann Institute research shows that learning how to fight,
learning how to deal with conflict is core to a long-lasting relationship.
And if you look at our weakest skill in a relationship, it's communicating during conflict.
Why do people struggle in a relationship
because we don't know how to talk about hard things.
We don't know how to have a conversation
about things we disagree on.
We do, like literally you can ruin the whole night
because you disagreed about what to watch or what to eat.
Like everything can go because we don't know
how to talk about things that we could debate on.
And so I created this and inside the book,
there's a test that you can do that helps you figure out
what your fight style is and there are three fight styles.
You are venting, hiding and exploding.
Venting is, I want to talk it out
and I want to talk about it right now.
Let's solve this, let's figure it out.
Hiding is, I need a break, I need to go somewhere by myself,
I need to let myself emotionally regulate, and then I'll come back when I'm ready.
And exploding is like, you know, like maybe I'm like, I just burst into tears, I like just like,
I need to blame you, I need to just like be aggressive, maybe even, it can be aggressive,
and it can just be like, I just feel, I just don't add a control anything hiding is like
At least I know where to go away venting is like but sometimes we explode and we all experience all of these three obviously
But I hope you find your one and it's important to know that because otherwise
You're a kickboxer and your partner's doing MMA and it doesn't you know you can't fight accordingly and so
In our case, I'm a
Venter I want to talk about I want to talk about it.
I want to talk about it now.
And rather, she's a hider.
She wants to go and reflect on it.
And in the beginning of our relationship,
I often said to Rade, I felt she didn't love me
because she didn't want to talk about it right now.
I was like, you obviously don't care
because we just had a big argument.
And if you need to walk away from this space,
that means you don't care.
That means you're not invested.
That's just not true.
Her way of investing is taking out time.
My way of taking investment is showing I want to talk.
And so I think knowing your fight style
and being aware of it and being aware of your partner's
fight style, I realized, rather you needed two days.
I wanted it now. So we're talking
one day. Let's meet in the middle. Let's give you some time, but let's not leave me an
anxiety. Let's create a space where we can safely connect. And so when we communicate about
our fight styles, when we communicate our relationship roles, when we communicate about
all these things, we start getting tools and skills and abilities.
When we don't talk about any of these things,
we just create the story in our head.
You're not here, that means you don't care.
You're late, that means you don't care.
You never turn up, that means you don't care.
But those are just stories that we're creating
without letting that person tell us their story.
And we never know what their story is after many years.
I'm so excited about the book. I'm so excited. Last question from me. What is one hope that you have
for people when reading it? Or when having it? My hope for people when reading it is that it's not about completing the book.
It's not about finishing a book.
I think a lot of people today,
it's like, I can finish your book, I can finish your book,
I listen to it.
What?
That kind of, of course.
Yeah, it is such a funny concept.
Yeah, and my hope is that you use it as a consistent guide,
a consistent companion, a consistent workbook, there's activities,
there's exercises, there's tests, there's quizzes, there's just a lot of material, it's not
meant to be read just to finish it.
It's there to help you at any point in your life when you're struggling and you flick to
a page and go, talk to me.
I want people to have a slower, longer, deeper love.
And so I hope that your process of moving through the book is slower, longer, and deeper,
because that will lead to that type of love.
So grateful you're here.
Thank you so much for that.
This was beautiful.
You asked me so many, you're such a brilliant interviewer.
You asked me so many questions I haven't yet talked about.
I haven't been asked.
I really hope everyone has been listening.
Like I really hope this serves you.
I want you to have a beautiful love story in your life.
I want you to have the most fulfilling, powerful, abundant love
in your life.
But I want you to have the skills in order to create it.
I don't want you to hope and wish and wait and want for it.
And so, Christa, thank you so much for sharing this
with your community and your audience.
And I'm so grateful to you.
So, thank you.
We love you guys.
We'll see you.
Thank you. days, I do a secret Santa gift exchange with my team. And I get so caught up in finding
the perfect gift for my secret Santa, I always forget that someone else is doing the same
for me. If only we could treat all our relationships this way, if we could give with such enthusiasm without thinking about what we'll get back. And that's
what the next seven minutes are about. Relationships, expectations, and where we can get into trouble.
I'm Jay Shetty. Welcome to the Daily J. Let's start with a few mindful breaths to get centered in this moment.
Breathing in and breathing out.
Expanding with the inhale, releasing with the exhale.
Settling in to right now and sinking into right here.
When people think of monasteries, love is not the first thing that comes to mind, but
believe it or not, the biggest lessons I've learned about relationships came from my time as a monk.
The ashram works like a big extended family. We're taught to love and look after each
other, lend a hand whenever possible, wasn't getting all my giving back.
So finally, I went to one of my teachers for advice.
I'm upset, I said.
I feel like I'm giving out a lot of love, but I don't feel like it's being returned
in kind.
I'm caring and looking out for others, but they don't do like it's being returned in kind. I'm caring and looking out for others,
but they don't do the same for me.
I don't get it."
Then he said something that forever changed my relationship
with relationships.
Love is like a circle.
You assume the love you will receive will come from the person you gave it to,
but it doesn't always come from that person. The problem he told me lies in our expectations.
We tend to think of relationships as transactions. You scratch my back, I'll scratch yours.
relationships as transactions. Use scratch my back, I'll scratch yours.
We keep scorecards in our minds.
We go tip for tat.
But loving relationships don't always work that way.
Or at least they shouldn't.
A tip for them doesn't always equal a tat for you.
You know, this makes me think of my mom.
Caring, loving
always bare for me
In fact, if she had her way, we'd be facetiming all day long
And don't get me wrong, I love my mom. I'm eternally grateful for her and I try to show it
But even if I don't pick up her call or give it the same attention back,
her approach to me doesn't change. She never expects anything in return.
I think we could all use that lesson to focus on what we're giving out, let go of the
scorecard, scratch your back without worrying about the itch on ours, and give without expectations.
We should give love purely to give love.
No other reason.
It's as simple as that.
And let's reflect on that now.
Begin by thinking about how you tend to view relationships.
Do you look for reciprocation?
Do you keep a tally?
Who has shown you kindness or consideration without expecting something equal in return.
How could you be that person for someone else?
For everyone else?
See what happens if you let go of your expectations and join into the feedback loop of love.
So for today's meditation,
we're going to do a loving kindness practice
to work on giving with no agenda.
Start by getting comfortable.
Feel free to close your eyes if you want
and bring your attention to your breath.
The natural flow of air in and out.
Now let's send some love. Bring to mind someone that's easy to feel kindness towards.
It could be a family member, a friend, even a pet.
Think of their positive qualities.
And just send them love.
Simple as that.
You can silently repeat these phrases if it helps.
May you be happy.
May you be happy. May you be healthy. May you be peaceful. Nothing in it for you.
Now extend this out a bit and include a group of people, or even the whole world. May you be happy.
May you be healthy.
May you be peaceful.
This practice of sending love can help open our hearts and a famous quote by Catherine
Hepburn sums it up well.
Love has nothing to do with what you're expecting to get. Only with what you're expecting to give,
which is everything. Thank you for trying something new with me. Go ahead and share this message with someone else who could use a little love today.
I love you all, and I can't wait to connect once again tomorrow. Thousands of inspiring and thought provoking quotes and now I'm passing that knowledge onto you and my new daily
Podcast Icedees daily game in less than five minutes
I'll break down why these words matter and reveal personal stories and show them in action in my life
Listen to Icedees daily game every week day on the I heart radio app Apple podcast or wherever you get your podcast
and start your morning with me.
Hi, I'm Ellie Kemper and I'm Scott Eckerd and we're here to talk to you about the things
we love on our new podcast born to love.
I can tell you about something I love this week's got foam rollers for my own mind.
You're not talking pool noodle. Oh my gosh, no, thank you for terrifying.
A new podcast from Will Ferrell's Big Money Players Network.
On the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.