On Purpose with Jay Shetty - Can People Really Change? 3 Signs Someone Will Change
Episode Date: October 11, 2024Have you ever struggled to change a habit? Do you think forcing someone to change ever works? Today, Jay dives deep into one of the most frequently asked questions: Can people really change? Drawing f...rom a mix of personal stories, scientific research, and spiritual wisdom, Jay sheds light on the complexities of human behavior, how change unfolds, and why it can often seem so elusive. One of the key insights Jay offers is the distinction between acknowledgment and accountability. Many people acknowledge they need to change, but accountability—taking full responsibility for how their actions impact others and making a concrete plan to improve—is much harder to achieve. Without this deeper level of self-awareness and commitment, lasting change remains out of reach. Jay provides practical advice for those navigating relationships with people who seem resistant to change. He outlines key signs to look for that indicate someone is truly ready to change, including self-awareness, accountability, and a genuine desire to improve. He also stresses the importance of patience and empathy, reminding listeners that change is often a gradual process, filled with setbacks and oscillations between old and new behaviors. In this episode, you'll learn: How to encourage change without forcing it How to help someone become self-aware How to support someone’s change process How to communicate about change in relationships How to accept that change must come from within Patience, empathy, and an understanding of the complexities of human behavior are key to supporting both ourselves and others in the pursuit of meaningful evolution. With Love and Gratitude, Jay Shetty What We Discuss: 00:00 Intro 01:37 Is There Someone In Your Life You Wish Would Change? 04:24 Core Personality Traits Are Difficult to Change 07:46 Signs that Someone is Likely to Change 08:25 #1: They Take Accountability and Has Self-Awareness 10:18 #2: They Must Have the Motivation to Change 14:19 Change Doesn’t Happen Right Away 16:59 Signs that Someone is Changing 18:57 How a Community Can Trigger Change 21:30 How Do You Start a Healthy Conversation with Your Partner?See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Our 20s are often seen as this golden decade, our time to be carefree, make mistakes and figure out
our lives. But what can psychology teach us about this time? I'm Gemma Spegg, the host of The
Psychology of Your 20s. Each week we take a deep dive into a unique aspect of our 20s, from career
anxiety, mental health, heartbreak, money and much more to explore the science behind our experiences.
The psychology of your 20s hosted by me, Gemma Spegg. Listen now on the iHeart Radio app,
Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hi, Jenica Lopez here with a new season of my Overcomfort podcast. What's Overcomfort
all about? It's about inspiring confidence in all of us
and choosing calling over comfort.
Every Tuesday, I'll be having real and honest conversations.
You'll hear it from me first
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Join me as I create a space where opening up
is not only okay, it's encouraged.
Listen to Overcomfort Podcast with Jenica Lopez
on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcast.
How do you feel about biscuits?
Hi, I'm Akilah Hughes, and I'm so excited about my new podcast, Rebel Spirit, where
I head back to my hometown in Kentucky and try to convince my high school to change their
racist mascot, the Rebels, into something everyone in the South loves, the biscuits.
I was a lady rebel.
Like, what does that even mean?
Go, go, go!
It's right here in black and white in print.
Are they lying?
It's bigger than a flag or mascot.
Listen to Rebel Spirit on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey everyone, it's Jay.
Most people know me as a podcast host,
entrepreneur, and author.
But did you know that I've been writing
a newsletter every single week for the last four years? It's called Weekly Wisdom. In
each newsletter I answer a question from one of my 700,000 readers. I give my best insights
and advice helping my readers find purposeful and spiritual solutions to their everyday problems.
My goal here isn't to tell you how to live your life,
but to guide you in the direction of your best possible future.
If you'd like to get my newsletter sent to your inbox every Thursday,
just go to jsheddynewsletter.com to sign up now.
That's jsheddynewsletter.com. A brand new newsletter comes out every week.
I can't wait for you to read it. A lot of us have to recognize that change is something that has to
come from within. They have to feel like this new life will be good for them, but they have to know
it in their language with their reasons.
They have to commit to that change.
Is someone telling you they're gonna change
or is someone showing you the signs
that they're ready to commit to change?
The number one health and wellness podcast.
Jay Shetty.
Jay Shetty.
The one, the only Jay Shetty.
Hey everyone, welcome back to On Purpose.
Thank you for trusting me with your time and energy.
I don't take it for granted.
And I'm so grateful that you've chosen
to be with me here today.
It's been an incredible few weeks.
We've had everyone from Shawn Mendes
to Andrew Huberman on the podcast,
Nicole Lepera, incredible therapist and thinker, and so many more amazing guests yet to come.
I also hope you've been taking a look at my solo podcast because there have been some workshops that have really resonated with you recently.
But I'm guessing you're here today
because there's someone in your life that you wish
would change.
Maybe it's your partner.
Maybe it's a parent.
Maybe it's someone in your professional environment at work.
Maybe it's a sibling.
Either way, there's someone in your life that you're wishing, waiting and wanting for to
change.
And maybe you've tried already to help them change.
Maybe you've pushed them to change.
Maybe you even made the mistake of forcing them to change.
And you're sitting there right now going,
Jay, I just don't know if they're ever going to change.
Can people change? That's our question for today. That's
what you're thinking about and that's what I'm gonna guide you through over
the next 30 minutes or so to recognize what is change? What does it look like? Is
it possible? If you want to know if that person will ever change this episode's
for you, if you're struggling with someone because they're not changing this episode's for you.
And if you're someone who's just trying to figure it out,
this episode is for you.
Now, the first thing I want to do
is take a very factual look at change.
When we look at change in society,
change in community, change individually,
studies show that forming a habit can take anywhere from
18 to 254 days, with an average of 66 days to form a habit.
But that's not the kind of change you're talking about.
When we're asking this question, can people really change?
We're talking about something far more core or fundamental.
We're talking about something far more core or fundamental. We're talking about values.
We're talking about attitudes, behaviors, mindsets, right?
Maybe you want someone to change the way they appreciate you.
Maybe you want someone to change the way they think about care.
Maybe you want someone to change the way they talk to you,
communicate with you.
Maybe you want to change the way they talk to you, communicate with you. Maybe you want to change the way someone behaves with you.
Adapting to change study show can take around 90 days and seeing significant
change in society can take 30 years or more.
Notice the difference changing a habit averageaged 66 days, adapting to a
change 90 days, seeing norms set into society 30 years. So we've got to look at
the person and we've got to empathize and be compassionate and realize are they
trying to change a habit? Are they adapting to a change? Or really is it
that we're hoping that they change a norm in their life?
Now, I wanna give you an answer in short,
that of course people can change,
but different parts of them take longer to change,
and there are far more aspects
that are unchangeable than we believe.
And when I say unchangeable,
I don't mean that it's impossible or will never happen.
I mean that the waiting time may be so long
that it may feel like forever.
So one interesting study talks about this idea
of how it's actually quite hard over time
for people to change
core personality traits.
So people can change their personality,
but it's hard to change core personality traits.
Like if someone's an extrovert or an introvert,
it's hard to change.
Someone's not just gonna shift from one to the other.
If someone's a homebody or wants to travel the world,
that's not going to change
overnight. If someone is more likely to be open than closed, emotionally available, it's not
easy for someone who's emotionally disconnected or unavailable to suddenly become available
overnight. These are far more core personality traits that are much more difficult to see changes in.
Now, one study I looked at talked about
how hurtful behaviors such as lying, cheating, dismissing
or controlling, and this is from Psych Central,
they say are often habits
that turn into harmful behavior patterns.
And research from 2020 explains personality may be
shaped by an interaction between multiple sources, from genes to events and social relationships,
rather than only one source. The study goes on to say that personality development isn't linear
and change isn't either. So what's really interesting about that is
even when people change, we think of change as linear.
We think that if someone changes, everything changes.
When actually what happens in reality is that
even if someone changes, chances are they're gonna
oscillate back and forth to their former self.
So you're gonna constantly ask the question,
wait a minute, I thought you changed.
Wait a minute, I thought you understood. Wait a minute, I thought you understood.
Wait a minute, I thought you got the message.
And the truth is it's more likely
that someone's gonna oscillate back and forth
until they get there.
So behavior can be learned and unlearned,
but the amount of time it can take,
the levels it can go to in order for that to happen
can be very, very hard to go through.
Now here's the reality I want to get through to you. You can't change anyone. You can only change
yourself. You can't force someone to change. You can't push someone to change. You can't beg someone to change. They will change when they want to change.
They will change when they feel a need to change. They will change when they're ready for change.
When it impacts them so badly that they're not changing, that's when they'll choose to change.
Changing someone else is not within your control and trying to find ways to do
it can be exhausting. So what I'd rather give you is signs that someone is likely to change,
because often what we do is we keep asking the question, can people change? And really,
it's the wrong question because people can change. But is the person person that you're with likely to change?
Is the person that you're talking about likely to change?
These are the signs that they're likely to change.
And that's a healthier, better, smarter question to ask
because what you're really asking when you ask,
can people change, is, is my person going to change?
Are they going to be different?
And there are certain signs
that point you in the right direction.
The first one is they own up and take accountability
and are self-aware about not only what change is required,
but why the change is required.
Sometimes someone will say to you, I know I need to change.
I know it isn't right.
And we get so happy in a later that they acknowledged it,
that we take that acknowledgement as accountability. There's a difference.
There is a difference between acknowledgement and accountability.
Acknowledgement is recognizing something.
Accountability is reconciling something. Let me say that again. Acknowledgement is
recognizing something. Accountability is reconciling something. When you're
accountable you actually have the ability to articulate what the problem
is, why it exists and how you're going to show up in the future. You're taking accountability for your actions,
your behaviors, and you're able to see the connection
between how you act and how it affects the other person.
I promise you that most people that you're talking to
are simply acknowledging the problem.
They're not actually taking accountability,
but because we don't know the difference, we assume they're the same thing.
Now, assuming they're the same thing isn't a great idea, because if you assume
that they're the same thing, then you think someone's taken accountability.
But no, accountability means I know how my actions affected you.
I know why my actions affected you.
I can articulate it and I know how my actions affect you. I know why my actions affected you. I can articulate it and I
know how my actions affect you and I know which actions I need to change and
by the way I know why I need to change them. I know why I am that way. Notice
the difference between acknowledgement and accountability. Now once someone's
taken accountability, they have to want to change.
They have to have the proper motivation to change because just because someone can articulate
and take accountability doesn't mean that they feel the need to change. They have to
feel that change is necessary. If you look at most humans, we only change when we believe something's necessary.
Right? If we think something's going to end, we change.
If we think something new is going to start, we change.
Right? We change when it happens.
Most people want to get promoted before they change their performance,
not realizing that you get a promotion because you changed your performance.
There's a reason why the famous phrase of you don't know what you've got
until it's gone, because we wait till we lose something
to know we should have changed.
That's how human behavior and the human mind works.
Is we constantly feel that until something's necessary,
until something is required of me, I won't do it.
Until I feel the pressure to, I won't do it.
What often we do is we try and put that pressure on that person to change. We try and force them to change, but we don't realize that if they change for us,
but they don't know why they're changing, they may actually feel regret.
I like to think about this through a scenario. If someone changes for you, then
that means that they didn't really go through the process within themselves. They haven't really
looked at the value and therefore they may actually be depressed about that change.
They may be down about that change. They may not wish that change ever happened to them.
I'll give you an example. Rathi and me, Radhi always told me that all she wanted
to do was live close to her family and I wanted that
for her because I love her family and I know how much
she loves them.
And then when I got the opportunity of course to move
across the world to change my career, change my life
and do what I get to do today, and Radhi and I were
already married and it was a hard change for Radhi.
And I said to Radhi that I didn't want her to move for me.
I wanted her to do it because she saw value in it and she could find it for herself.
Now she had to adapt to that change.
It was hard for her.
And I was trying my best to help her with that change.
I didn't want her to change and I didn't want her to feel pressured to change because I
realized that unless something comes from within,
unless something comes from that person,
they are never really gonna fully commit to it.
And that's what's really interesting.
Sometimes we're trying to get people
to change on the surface.
We're trying to get people to change in behavior for us.
And we don't realize that when they do that,
not only does it not stick,
when it doesn't come from within, it doesn't feel like it's meaningful to them. So they can't truly get behind that
change long term. And they may even feel like it's your fault. They may feel like it's a mistake.
They may feel like it was the worst decision they made in the long term. And a lot of us
decision they made in the long term. And a lot of us have to recognize that change is something
that has to come from within.
They have to feel like this new life will be good for them,
but they have to know it in their language
with their reasons.
They have to commit to that change.
Is someone telling you they're gonna change
or is someone showing you the signs
that they're ready to commit to change?
Okay, I am so excited about this
because we've got the first ever merch drop
for On Purpose, it's finally here.
And for World Mental Health Day,
we're doing an exclusive limited edition drop
with all the proceeds going to the National Alliance on Mental Illness, NAMI.
So now you can wear your on-purpose merch, listen to the podcast,
and know that you too are having an impact.
I want to thank you so much in advance.
I can't wait to see all of your pictures wearing the merch,
their sweatshirts, ha-ha, t-shirts,
check it out on our website, jsheddeshop.com.
That's jsheddeshop.com.
And remember, 100% of the proceeds go to NAMI.
The Therapy for Black Girls podcast
is an NAACP and Webby Award-winning podcast
dedicated to all things mental health,
personal development,
and all the small decisions we can make to become the best possible versions of ourselves.
Here, we have the conversations that help Black women decipher how their past informed who they
are today and use that information to decide who they want to be moving forward. We chat about
things like how to establish routines that center self-care,
what burnout looks and feels like, and defining what aspects of our lives are making us happy
and what parts are holding us back. I'm your host, Dr. Joy Hardin-Bradford,
a licensed psychologist in Atlanta, Georgia, and I can't wait for you to join the conversation
every Wednesday. Listen to the Therapy for Black Girls podcast on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or
wherever you get your podcasts.
Take good care and we'll see you there.
Our twenties are seen as this golden decade, our time to be carefree, fall in love, make mistakes
and decide what we want from our life.
But what can psychology really teach us about this decade?
I'm Gemma Speck, the host of The Psychology of Your 20s.
Each week we take a deep dive into a unique aspect of our 20s from career anxiety, mental health, heartbreak,
money, friendships and much more to explore the science and the psychology
behind our experiences. Incredible guests, fascinating topics, important science and
a bit of my own personal experience. Audrey I honestly have no idea what's
going on with my life. Join me as we explore what our 20s are really all about, from the good, the bad, and the
ugly and listen along as we uncover how everything is psychology, including our 20s.
The psychology of your 20s hosted by me, Gemma Spegg, now streaming on the iHeart Radio app,
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A lot of the time people will say the right thing because they're people
pleasers, they don't want to lose you.
They want to say all the right things to hold on to you.
But they haven't committed to that change.
They haven't put steps into place.
They haven't had the awkward, uncomfortable conversations.
They haven't stepped up and done the things that are hard for them.
Is someone committing to change?
And often what we do is we just keep going mad,
we keep getting angry at them saying,
I wish you would just change,
you keep telling me you're gonna change,
but you don't change.
But they're not committing to that action.
One of the things I've been saying to a lot of people
I know recently is don't expect change to happen
in one therapy session.
What we're often hoping is that lifetimes of work
will become clear to someone through a couple of sessions of therapy.
What I mean by that is our wiring is so deep.
There are values that we've held on to
because of our childhood that don't just disappear
because someone else presents a better idea.
I'll give an example, a silly example.
If you've always put your cereal in the bowl
before your milk, by the way, that's the normal way,
no judgment, right?
And you start dating someone who puts milk in
before the cereal, you don't just switch to doing that.
Right, now that's a really silly example,
it's a really easy change, it doesn't make a difference.
But if you think about it,
there are things you think about first.
Sometimes some of you think about money
before you think about people
because that's how you were raised.
You're not gonna change that overnight
because you start dating someone
who thinks about people before money.
Even if it makes logical sense to that person, right?
People don't just change their values, their core belief systems overnight just because
someone else's sounds good, right?
If someone believes, I've been watching and I'm sure many of you have seen it monsters.
Now no matter what you believe, just taking this idea of even if someone's parents have
done harm to them, have done them wrong, if they love their parents
and feel positively towards them
because they feel somehow, you know,
whether it was they felt guilty,
they felt shameful that they had to feel that way,
that's how they were raised,
they're not suddenly just gonna see the light
because you made them aware of a few things.
Actually, it's very hard for people to admit
that their parents have flaws, that there are challenges, that there are,
you know, difficulties there. And you see that in the Menendez
brothers, who struggle to recognize certain challenges.
Now, whatever, whatever happened in that scenario, you get the
point I'm making that it's not easy to acknowledge things that
are so counterintuitive to the way you've been raised.
Right? If your parents were savers, not spenders, you're not suddenly going to realize that actually spending money meaningfully is better for you.
It takes a lot of healing. It takes a lot of work. It takes a lot of unearthing.
And so one therapy session or a couple of therapy sessions or a month of therapy or coaching or whatever maybe won't make the change. Now, by the way, you're all chipping away, but I think when we want
someone to change, we're just hoping, wishing, wanting, waiting that they're just going to change.
Now, signs that someone's changing is they start to course correct. When they say something to you
that they realize is their old voice, they call it out. They say, wait a minute, I just realized that was my old voice speaking.
They start to recognize how the smallest actions
are a representation of their old self. And really that's what it is.
You have to think about it as a transformation from an
old to new self, right? And if someone's transforming from their old to new self, right?
And if someone's transforming from their old to new self,
they will go between their old and new self often.
It's not like you transition once.
It's almost like saying, I'm gonna quit eating sugar.
It's not like you never eat sugar again, right?
If you're like, I'm gonna be healthy now and work out,
it doesn't mean you're never gonna miss a workout again.
And sometimes we hold people to really crazy,
high standards. That doesn't make sense. Right.
We want them to never ever oscillate. We want them to never ever fall back.
The other way we know signs of change is,
are we trying to change? Are we trying to make a difference? Right? Are we willing
to change as well? Are we able to do the same work that we're expecting this person to do? Are we
willing to do that same work for ourselves and for this relationship? A lot of the time it's really
easy to point out where everyone else needs to change, but it's really hard to be conscious of
where we need to change.
And I think for a lot of us,
we're trying to mold someone into being more like us.
We want them to think like us,
we want them to talk like us.
Now there may be certain value to that,
like you may have some really great skills
and you may have some really great attributes,
but are you willing to change
to some of their better attributes?
Are you aware of their better attributes? Are you able to identify their better attributes?
Or have you lost connection with them? There's a lot to be said for community and change.
I find that if you're the only person reminding this person of the positive benefits of change,
it's hard to change. We often need, when we hear that phrase of we are
the five people we spend the most time with, it's so true that someone will not change unless the
people around them change. I've met so many people over the years who are part of a community who
thinks in a very old-fashioned way. They're not going to suddenly upgrade to a modern way of
thinking. I'll give an example. Like in my Indian community back at home,
it's not normal for a husband and wife
to travel separately so often.
So me and Riley travel separately a lot.
And sometimes I'm at an event and she's not.
Sometimes she's at an event and I'm not.
And people will always be like, is everything okay?
Because in that world, even if you're arguing in the car
before you pull up to the wedding event,
even if you argue on the way home
from the birthday party, because you came and left together,
it's seen as positive.
Right, let me just explain that again.
People always ask me and Radhi, is everything okay?
Because we often don't show up to the same events together
because we're both busy.
And people would rather argue on the way to a wedding
or fight on the way back just to show that they came
and left together in order to prove to society
that they have a healthy relationship
than actually having a healthy relationship.
And so the perception in that society is togetherness,
i.e. arriving and leaving together
is the sign of a healthy relationship.
Now that perception doesn't change overnight.
That's a deep seeded belief as ridiculous as it sounds that that is what a successful
relationship is.
And so people live up to that falsehood and people live up to that fake level of quality
of a relationship rather than one with good communication and respect and boundaries and permission
to be who we are. So that's just not going to change overnight. Like someone's not going
to change their view overnight of what's seen as a healthy marriage, as a healthy relationship.
And I think this hits very closely to why I partnered up with Match and what I really found was I wanted to create a space
where people could connect based on their values and this was really really important to me because
I feel that everything I'm saying here is because we don't realize that our core values
have such a big impact in terms of long term success.
If you ignore core values, you're thinking in the next five months.
If you take on core values, you're living in the next five years.
And for anyone who's interested and invested in building a long term,
long lasting, powerful relationship, this mindset is huge.
93% of match members say that shared core values
are a crucial indicator of relationship success.
And if I'm completely honest,
most people have never even looked at these ideas.
Most people have never even had the opportunity,
the time, the space, the energy,
given these thoughts,
a moment of thought.
Most people have never even had the option to say,
okay, well, let me just take a look at this for a second.
Like, how do I feel about this?
What are my beliefs about this?
Most people have never even done that.
So when you're in a relationship with someone,
you're actually going through the process
of making someone aware of the process
they need to go through.
It's not even like, you know, are you ready to change?
Do you know you need to change?
It's almost like you've got to start from scratch
with yourself and the other person of like,
are we even living the life we want?
Do you know what your values are?
Are we conscious?
So the question isn't, do you know you need to change?
You know you're wrong, right?
You know there's parts of you that just met.
Like, that's not the conversation.
The conversation is, hey, are we,
do we know where this relationship's going?
Do we know what choices we've made?
Are we aware of what this unfolds like?
Have we talked about our past and how it's affected us?
Do we know how our core values and beliefs,
what kind of foundation they are?
It's almost like rather than criticizing someone
for their bad taste in interior design,
you're actually talking about like,
hey, should we both get educated
on the foundations of relationships?
Should we both become really aware of where we're going
and what's going on?
I really want you to reflect on this
because sometimes I think we're starting
the wrong
conversation because we were actually expecting people to be more emotionally mature than anyone
in the world has actually had the opportunity to be. And you may be the person in your relationship
has to start the healthy conversation that has to start the useful conversation. I really hope that
these tips help you in this person you want to change. Remember, they won't
change for you, they won't change for me, they won't change for anyone, they'll only change for
themselves. And you can't make them change. However, you can open them to the idea of
re-evaluating their beliefs to become self-aware, to understand where their current choices will
take them, to help them understand where their current trauma
and upbringing will guide them.
And you can help them become more aware
through self-reflection, but you can't tell them it,
force them to it.
And if you do, I promise you,
it won't be the change you're really looking for.
So I hope this helps, I hope this serves you.
I want you to remember I'm always rooting for you,
I'm forever in your corner.
And I'm so grateful that you trust in me
with your time and energy to join me here today.
I wish you all the best in your relationships.
People can change, but they don't change for me,
they don't change for you, they change for themselves.
They need to feel accountable,
they need to be committed to it,
they need time, they need patience.
And ultimately you need to realize
that there are parts of them that may never change.
And that doesn't mean they can't love you and you can't love them,
and they can't respect you and you can't respect them.
Often what we want people to change isn't integral to them loving us,
it's just because we want to feel a certain way.
Thank you for listening.
I'll see you again on the next episode of On Purpose.
I appreciate you deeply.
Take care.
If you love this episode, you'll really enjoy my episode with Selena Gomez
on befriending your inner critic and how to speak to yourself with more compassion.
My fears are only going to continue to show me what I'm capable of.
The more that I face my fears, the more that I feel I'm gaining strength and gaining wisdom
and I just want to keep doing that.
Want to know how to leverage culture to build a successful business?
Then Butternomics is the podcast for you.
I'm your host, Brandon Butler, founder and CEO of Butter ATL.
On Butternomics, we go deep with today's most influential entrepreneurs, innovators and
business leaders to peel back the layers on how they use culture as a driving force in their business.
Butternomics will give you what you need to take your game to the next level.
Listen to Butternomics on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your
podcasts.
I'm Eva Longoria.
And I'm Maite Gomez-Rejón.
We're so excited to introduce you to our new podcast, Hungry for History.
On every episode, we're exploring some of our favorite dishes, ingredients, beverages
from our Mexican culture.
We'll share personal memories and family stories, decode culinary customs, and even provide
a recipe or two for you to try at home.
Listen to Hungry for History on the iHeart radioio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hello, from Wonder Media Network, I'm Jenny Kaplan, host of Womanica, a daily podcast that
introduces you to the fascinating lives of women history has forgotten. We've always been intrigued
by stories of disappearances. Whether it's a fraudster from the 17th century who kept evading the authorities, or a novelist
who taunted the Nazis and faked her own death, we all want to know.
What happened next?
To find out, listen to a manica on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.