On Purpose with Jay Shetty - Quinlan Walther: Stop Chasing Love Just Because You’re Lonely! (Do THIS to Attract the RIGHT Relationship)
Episode Date: October 20, 2025Have you ever stayed in a relationship just to avoid being alone? Did staying make you feel better or worse over time? Today, Jay sits down with writer and relationship coach Quinlan Walther to explor...e what it truly means to build healthy, lasting relationships. Quinlan, known for her viral reflections on love and self-trust, explains the difference between wanting a relationship and being ready for one. She compares it to grocery shopping when you’re hungry, a reminder that desperation often drives us to make poor emotional choices. Together, they explore how self-awareness, emotional safety, and self-trust form the foundation for a genuine connection. Quinlan introduces her “Four C’s of Self-Trust”: curiosity, capacity, compassion, and commitment, a framework for strengthening one’s relationship with the self before seeking partnership. Jay and Quinlan confront the hard truths about modern love, how expectations, attachment wounds, and emotional burnout often distort our perception of what love should feel like. They explore the difference between chemistry and compatibility, reminding listeners that while excitement can spark a connection, it’s shared values and emotional maturity that sustain it. Quinlan emphasizes that relationships are not meant to fill our emptiness but to reflect our growth. Through stories and practical wisdom, she explains how the healthiest relationships allow space for vulnerability, accountability, and change, rather than perfection. Jay reflects on his own marriage, highlighting how communication, patience, and self-reflection create emotional safety and deepen love over time. In his interview, you'll learn: How to Know If You’re Ready for Love How to Build Self-Trust Before Dating How to Create Emotional Safety in Relationships How to Tell Chemistry from Compatibility How to Set Boundaries Without Guilt How to Heal After a Breakup How to Stop Repeating Unhealthy Patterns How to Grow Together Without Losing Yourself Real connection isn’t about finding someone to fix or complete us, it’s about growing into the version of ourselves that can give and receive love freely. Every heartbreak, disappointment, and moment of self-reflection brings us closer to understanding that love begins within. With Love and Gratitude, Jay Shetty Join over 750,000 people to receive my most transformative wisdom directly in your inbox every single week with my free newsletter. Subscribe here. Check out our Apple subscription to unlock bonus content of On Purpose! https://lnk.to/JayShettyPodcast What We Discuss: 00:00 Intro 01:24 Wanting vs. Being Ready for Love 04:07 The Four C’s of Self-Trust 06:41 Relationships Should Help You Grow 10:32 Building Stability and Emotional Safety 13:27 When Requests Become Unreasonable 15:15 Love Within Someone’s Capacity 17:57 Are You Exhausted From Dating? 22:05 Does the Spark Really Matter? 23:28 When Attraction Misleads You 25:16 Compatibility vs. Chemistry 27:52 How Black-and-White Thinking Hurts Love 31:10 Is Love Alone Ever Enough? 32:43 What True Commitment Looks Like 36:39 Learning to Show Up for Yourself 39:35 Healing Family Wounds and Finding Peace 42:19 Breaking the Criticism–Withdrawal Cycle 49:31 Your Partner Reflects How You Love Yourself 51:14 Dating is Discernment, Marriage is Devotion 55:16 Real Change Takes Time 58:10 Why Every Relationship Needs Boundaries 59:47 How to Set Healthy Boundaries 01:01:21 Stop Compromising Your Own Boundaries 01:02:42 Are Soulmates Real? 01:05:01 What Should Love Feel Like? 01:08:59 Do You Want a Partner or a Spouse? 01:13:11 How to Move On After a Breakup 01:16:47 You Are Not Hard to Love 01:19:32 The Lessons Hidden in a Heartbreak 01:21:40 Quinlan on Final Five Episode Resources: Quinlan Walther | Website Quinlan Walther | Instagram Quinlan Walther | TikTok Quinlan Walther | YouTubeSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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This is an I-Heart podcast.
I'm Radi Dvlucia and I'm the host of a really good cry podcast and I have the opportunity
to talk to Logan Yuri.
If you're out there trying to date right now, being ghosted on Hinge or want to create a
dating profile that gives you a solid chance of matching with someone you actually want to go
on a date with, then this episode with Hinge's Director of Relationship Science, Logan
Yuri is definitely for you.
Relationships do require work.
The best relationships are people who really work on them together.
Listen to a really good cry on the I Heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
Welcome to the U versus you podcast.
I'm Lex Barrero, inviting you to go beyond the titles and the accolades of the world's most successful entertainers.
Each week, we take off the Cape and get real about the inner battles, childhood stories, and the moments that shaped our guests.
Get inspired to become the best version of you.
Listen to U versus You podcast on the IHeart Radio app or wherever you get your podcast.
Hey, I'm Kurt Brown-Oller.
And I am Scotty Landis, and we host Bananas,
the podcast where we share the weirdest,
funniest, real news stories from all around the world.
And sometimes from our guest personal lives, too.
Like when Whitney Cummings recently revealed,
her origin story on the show.
There's no way I don't already have rabies.
This is probably just why my personalities like this.
I've been surviving rabies for the past 20 years.
New episodes of bananas drop every Tuesday in the Exactly Right Network.
Listen to bananas on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
We only obsess over people who aren't fully available to us.
The obsession can be mistaken for a spark, where there's something we're projecting onto someone that is so full on.
It feels like an obsession.
Hey, everyone.
Welcome back to On Purpose.
I'm your host, Jay Shetty, and I'm so excited to introduce you to someone that I'm a huge fan of.
I've been following her for a couple of years now, loving all of her content,
engage with it regularly and consistently.
And then when I was on tour this year, I actually had the opportunity to meet her.
And now we finally have her in the on-purpose studio.
I'm speaking about Quinlan Waltha, a writer and relationship coach,
transforming the way millions of people think about love.
Quinlan's viral videos on dating, self-trust and connection have reached millions of people worldwide.
If you don't follow her already, make sure you
do after this conversation. Quinlan is helping people break unhealthy patterns, build deeper
connections, and create relationships that feel safe, intentional, and fulfilling. Please welcome
to On Purpose, Quinlan, Walther, or Q. Q, I'm so glad to have you here. Jay, it's so good
to see you. Thank you for having me. Of course. I am so excited to dive in. I have so many things
to talk to you about. I know our audience is going to absolutely love this conversation because
they're constantly trying to figure out love and relationships and dating. I feel like
that's, aren't we all? Exactly. I feel like it's the need of the hour, which is such a
beautiful thing as well. And the first question I wanted to ask you is, what's the difference
between wanting a relationship and being ready for a relationship? One of my favorite ways to frame
this, which I think we can all relate to, is you shouldn't go grocery shopping when you're starting.
We don't tend to make the best choices. We grab the first thing.
we see, we grab all the things that we want that look exciting, right?
Ooh, that'll taste so good. I want this. I want that. Not necessarily what we need.
And that, in my opinion, applies to dating and relationships as well.
When you go out into the world, you start dating, you're looking for a relationship.
You want to have a pretty solid understanding of what it is that you're looking for.
You want to have a pretty solid understanding of how you love yourself, how you show up for
yourself, the life you want to create for yourself. The relationship, that would be an added bonus to that
life that you want to create, rather than feel like you're trying to fill a void. You end up
seeking connections from a place of desperation that can't be fulfilling because it's essentially
pouring into a bottomless pit of trying to fill this bottomless void. So in my opinion,
asking yourself those questions first, really spending time, understanding who you are,
what you want, how you can love yourself, how you can support yourself, how you can commit to
building a life you like and the relationship that could be a bonus. I also want to add the caveat
that it's not as if you have to go hide away, do all of those things, and then come out and find
the relationship. It can happen at pretty much the same time with the focus being on understanding
all the things I just said, who you are, what you want, et cetera, and not go looking for love
when you are metaphorically starving. I love that truth bomb. That's huge already, that idea that we're
constantly looking for love when we're starving rather than being really, really clear
and being in a healthy sense of hunger.
Like you have an appetite, but you're not starving because we all know that when you're
starving, you're so spot on.
I think about all, I was literally going through all the bad decisions I've made.
At the grocery store.
At the grocery store or what I eat when I'm starving.
I will pull up at a gas station.
I will buy two bags of chips.
Yep.
Aresi's bar.
Yeah, totally.
Like everything that you don't want to be having.
Right.
And then on the way home, you're regretting it.
And you love it while you're eating it.
100%.
It's the best while it's there, right?
And it's, oh, this is everything that I wanted.
And then 10 minutes later, you're probably hungry again.
You're probably crashed out from the sugar high.
You need a nap and you feel even more exhausted and still hungry after you're done.
Yeah.
I feel like that just directly applies to the kind of relationships, the kind of connections
that we choose when we're acting from that place of starvation, desperation, um, emptiness.
Yeah.
Yeah. And the hard part about that is that it's so real today to feel that way, to feel lonely, to feel desperate, to feel not chosen. What do we do with all those emotions then? Because we're used to running for the quick solve because those emotions are so heavy and hard to sit in. What do you do with all those emotions when you're not getting to just curb your craving by getting some fast food or fast love?
build self-trust self-trust is imperative for liking who you are understanding who you are
making decisions that align with who you really want to be and of course that pays off in our
relationships there there are four Cs when it comes to self-trust in my opinion first one is
curiosity are you curious about who you are why you do what you do the feelings that you feel
your motives and intentions behind the decisions that you make what you want
out of life. Is there curiosity? You can't trust yourself if you don't know yourself. And from curiosity
can come comprehension. So it's really important that you lead with curiosity. The second one is
capacity. So that's emotional flexibility, emotional stability. Like you just asked, what do we do
with these big emotions? You build the capacity to stay anchored in who you are, even when you feel
really sad, even when you feel really helpless or hopeless or overwhelmed, angry, frustrated. Can you
find an anchor in yourself that you can support yourself through all of those emotions,
that's capacity. The third one is compassion. Having humanity for who you are, having an
understanding that you are a flawed human who makes some poor decisions sometimes, right? And being
able to meet yourself with a softness with a warmth is imperative. Like, absolutely paramount.
And we're talking a lot about relationships here today. If you aren't compassionate with yourself,
you'll be far less likely to be compassionate with the people around you and your significant other
and such. The changes we want to make don't typically happen from a place of rigidity, blame, shame,
judgment. They happen from a place of compassion and support and love. And then finally,
the fourth one is commitment. The fourth C is commitment. Your commitment, your devotion to being who
you want to be, making decisions that really align with that and building a life that feels so fulfilling,
so good from within. There's no way around it. You can have the first three if you don't have
the commitment to bringing who you want to be to fruition to building that life. Things go astray.
So you need that fourth one as well. I like the foursies. Yeah. And they feel like they take a lot
of time. I can't imagine doing that in a month for three months. And like you said, I think our idea
around doing work before dating, and you alluded to this in a healthy sense, we kind of at one point
started to believe we had to be complete before we met someone. And as someone I've been married now
for nine years and with my wife for 12, I thought I knew how I was when we met and that was a good
foundation. But I have discovered so much more about myself and grown so much more in the last 12 years
than what I thought. And so this idea that we have to be fully formed, fully complete, fully perfect
before we meet someone doesn't really add up. A, I would even say any of relationship will change.
you. Some, for the better, some isn't any change happening in the relationship. You probably
aren't actually showing up to it. And more to your point, when you enter a healthy, safe,
loving relationship, it's going to reflect back to you the parts of you that you haven't yet
seen, worked on, grown through, grown out of, grown around. But I believe you have to
be able to discern what is growth versus what is judgment.
or a lack of acceptance or an opportunity for growth anyway because Roddy could come to you
and say, Jay, I'm really noticing that you haven't been present with me and I miss you.
You know, I want more time with you.
If you don't have the awareness that that's probably coming from a place of love, from a desire
to improve your relationship, if you don't have a growth mindset, you'll get defensive,
you'll snap back, you won't listen, and you'll drive a wedge even further between the two of you.
So I think you need to practice some of those four Cs so that you have the awareness of what growth feels like, what it's like to meet yourself so that when you're in a relationship that is asking you to grow more, there's already a familiarity there.
I do think that's important.
It's so important, but what's so interesting about what you're saying, and I'm so glad you've gone in that direction, is you're saying relationships take growth and are almost for growth.
but we don't get into them wanting that.
We get into them wanting pleasure or joy or relief or companionship.
And what you just said is, well, no, it's about growth.
Talk to me about that difference between our expectation and why you think relationships
are actually about growth.
As you grow, as you know yourself like yourself, all the things we talked about,
you don't need as much from the relationship itself.
You aren't expecting the person that you're with to be a validation machine,
to meet you in every way, in every moment, all the time, so perfectly.
You can show up and actually allow the other person to meet you in this almost third entity.
There's you, the other person, and then the relationship that you create together.
And that means I get to bring my insecurities.
you get to bring your insecurities.
I get to bring my good stuff.
You get to bring your goods, right?
And we meet each other there.
And the point of a relationship is just to relate to another person, right?
To walk alongside them.
To be a source of love, encouragement, enthusiasm, and to grow individually in your own right.
But I agree with you that I think one of the biggest problems today with people or for people
who haven't really taken the time to try and meet themselves.
It is what can I get?
what can I get? I'm not getting enough. I need to get more. This isn't what I wanted with very
little consideration for the other person in this third entity that is the relationship.
It's something that I'm really grappling with as we're talking about it to try and help people
shift their perspective because we're not saying that it's growth that is growth that you
that brings you pain or stress or we're saying it's growth that inspires you to become better and
better and it may take you a second to make it inspiring for each other. So in the start, it may
rub you. So, for example, as you said, when Raleigh comes up to me at the beginning and says,
hey, I need you to do this or that, my ego is quite high and I go, well, why don't you do it for
yourself? And then it drives a wedge between us. And then over time, you respect and love so much
about this person that you start to go, well, wait a minute, maybe they're saying it from the right
place. Now I've grown to have the ability to recognize that everything she says is from a place
of love. And now maybe I'll be able to receive it. And the third time she says it, I'm almost
noticing I've been not present myself. And I can say, hey, I haven't been present. And now we're
not trying to live in a world where I am always fully present because that's never going to happen.
That's not realistic. But it goes from her saying it and me being triggered to her saying it
and me being aware. And then me noticing it even before she says it so that I'm actually able to
explain why I may not be present. Sometimes I'll say to Radhi, hey, you know what, the next
weeks really intense for me, I think I'm just going to be a bit less around because I've got
some things to focus on. And I just want you to know it's got nothing to do with you or I've just
got a lot on right now. And I find that that's really helpful for a relationship. And that's
emotional safety. Choosing a partner and building a relationship that is based in trust emotional
safety, your ability to see, hear Roddy's take and trust that she's coming from a loving place,
not from a critical place, not from a defensive place, that requires emotional stability,
that requires emotional safety.
So when you choose a partner, look at this in early dating.
What is the character of the person that you're seeing?
How do they treat their friends?
How do they treat their family?
Are they a person of integrity?
Are they typically kind and well-intentioned?
because that's going to bloom into a relationship with that same character, right?
Where someone gives you feedback.
This person that you're building a relationship with gives you feedback.
Can you trust that they're well-intentioned in their feedback?
What they're asking for or what they're reflecting back to you is for the greater good of your connection, right?
Or simply a request to love them better, to love them in the way that they want to be loved.
And assuming you want to be a person who does that, assuming you want to be a person who does that,
assuming you want to be a person who participates in the emotional safety and the stability,
then you're able to hear that underneath the request or the feedback, etc., rather than get
defensive. But it requires trust and it requires emotional safety. Absolutely.
Yeah, and how do you know the difference between someone's request being inherently good versus
unreasonable? Because I imagine when people are dating, they may hear quite often, hey, I don't think you're
present, or you missed my friend's birthday, or you missed my friend's birthday, or you miss.
this, you missed that, and you almost feel like they're not hearing you. How do you make sense
or decipher between someone's feedback being inherently good and for the relationship versus
just being an unreasonable request? If there's too much black and white thinking, if someone
comes to you and says, you skipped my friend's birthday, you didn't remember that important meeting
that I had last week, and you forgot to take out the trash, you must not love me. You don't care about
this relationship. And I won't stand for it. I won't have it. That's unreasonable. That's,
that's ego speaking. That's an insecurity. That's not kind. That's not a loving way to communicate or to
think. If someone can come to you and hold the nuance there, can see the color, hey, you've been
really stressed, right? You had a really busy week. You forgot about my meeting. You missed my friend's
birthday. You forgot to do the, you forgot to take out the trash like you said that you would. I know you've been
busy. Can I help support you in some way? And is there any way that you can make the event next week
with me? Be really important, right? So it's being able to hold, hey, this hurts. Hey, I see where you're
coming from. You're a human with finite capacity. And I don't expect you to be a superhero here.
And the relationship is important, right? There's so much color in there. So I think the straightforward
answer to your question is if it's black and white, if it's demanding, and if it really only
considers one perspective, one side, then you might want to consider a different approach.
Yeah, and that's really great awareness for ourselves as well, because we all want everyone
else to communicate with us in an emotionally intelligent way, but then when it comes to us sharing
our needs, and it's so interesting, when you were saying that, it resonates so deeply,
it makes so much sense, and then I go, where do people even learn all of this, right?
Like, we're doing this podcast so that people can learn and grow, but I'm listening to
to you going, I don't know anyone who naturally communicates that way because they didn't see
that in their home, they didn't have that through friends or family, they didn't have any
training, of course, and so we all do the other thing, which is you always choose yourself,
you never show up for me, you don't love me. We all do that version. And so sometimes you're
in a relationship with someone and you see that, but then you're like, but I've been with everyone
else and they're worse than you. So I guess this is it. You hear all the time love is
consideration, right? Love is an action. Love is consideration. Yes, but not consideration beyond
someone's capacity. People can only meet you as deeply as they've met themselves. They can only meet
you given whatever emotional resources they have available to them at any given time. And where we get
stuck is expecting someone to anticipate and meet our needs all the time, uncommunicated.
And then there's this devastating disappointment when they don't, when they don't show up the way
that we want them to.
That's not a lack of love.
That's dependency.
That's a parent-child dynamic, not having to ask, having all your needs tended to without
any forewarning or insight.
That's not an adult-adult partnership.
So you have to consider the kind of relationship you want to build and the partner you want to be is the other half of that because I'm assuming it's someone who is patient, who is willing to see the limited resources that someone has available at some time, right, can tolerate a certain amount of disappointment when you aren't met in the ways that you want to be met, someone who's loving and warm in their communication and their understanding.
when you know you want to be those things, then you can start practicing.
Even if it wasn't shown to you, you can take stock of where you aren't showing up in those
ways, where you can be a little bit better at showing up in those ways.
But I really, really think it starts with accountability first.
Take a look at your side of the street.
When you've taken a look at your side of the street, if you're in a relationship,
then bring it to a conversation, right?
Like, hey, let's co-create this thing together.
How can we do this together?
Yeah.
I think that's the way.
When news broke earlier this year that baby KJ, a newborn in Philadelphia,
had successfully received the world's first personalized gene editing treatment.
It represented a milestone for both researchers and patients.
But there's a gripping tale of discovery behind this accomplishment and its creators.
I'm Evan Ratliff, and together with biographer Walter Isaacson,
we're delving into the story of Nobel Prize winner Jennifer Dowdna,
the woman who's helped change the trajectory of humanity.
Listen to Aunt CRISPR, the story of Jennifer Dowdna with Walter Isaacson on the IHeart Radio
app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Welcome to the U versus you podcast.
I'm Lex Barrero, and every week we sit down with some of the biggest names in entertainment
to talk about the real stuff, the struggles, the doubts, and the breakthroughs that made them
who they are.
We go deep, exploring childhood trauma, family, overcoming loss, and the moments that shaped
their journey.
These honest conversations are meant to take the cape off our heroes
with the hope that their humanity inspires you to become a better you
and therefore set you free to live the life of your dreams.
Here's a sneak peek.
I'm trained to go compete.
I'm trained to be like harder.
But sometimes that mentality stops you from stopping
and smelling the flowers in your own garden.
Is it wrong to want more?
We migrated. Our family migrated here.
I'm like second generation.
Who will have a trauma being from a country,
You know, you get to States
New York,
and you listen to You versus you
as part of Michael Tutta Podcast Network,
available on the IHard Radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
I'm Radhi Dvlucia and I'm the host
of a really good cry podcast
and I have the opportunity to talk to
Logan Yuri.
Logan is a dating expert, a behavioral scientist,
a best-selling author,
and someone who is seriously changing
the way we think about love and dating.
In our conversation, we talk all things dating,
that Logan has studied and tested from what to put in your dating profile, the pictures
you should and shouldn't be using, to the conversation starters that actually work.
And the huge no-noes that people probably do not realize are reducing their chances of success
on apps. Whether you're single, dating, or just trying to be more intentional in love,
Logan offers the kind of clarity we all need.
Relationships do require work. And the best relationships are people who really work on them
together. They're so focused on, if I find the perfect person, then I'm
all have the perfect relationship, instead of understanding really that they can choose someone
great and then build that relationship together. They don't need to keep searching for perfection.
Listen to a really good cry on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your
podcast.
I feel so many people right now, I'm sure you hear it all the time, are burnt out and exhausted
with dating they're just tired of dating and they've either developed mindsets like there's no good
men left all the good men are taken oh you know well she's not quite right whatever it may be right
everyone has their version but people are exhausted with dating we talked about what happens when you
go out they're starving what do you do when you feel exhausted well you have two options
number one you can stop you cannot date that's an option you can not date that's an option
take a breather. It doesn't have to be a full-time job. It doesn't have to feel like a full-time
job. It's good to focus on other things. Or you can shift your expectations, not needing to walk
into every first date as if you're interviewing for your future spouse, the position of your future
spouse. Like such high stakes, such high pressure. Can you go in and try to have fun?
You know, can you change the energy that you want to bring to the room where you're just meeting
someone new. You're going to go grab some dinner. You're going to go grab coffee. You're going to go
grab drinks. Whatever it is. Can I enjoy myself? Can I have fun with it? And deciding the energy
you want to bring to the function typically allows you to enjoy the function more rather than
feeling like, okay, here we go again. Another disappointment, you know, another let down, another waste
of time. Don't do anything with that mentality, with that energy or attitude. So you can either
stop or shift your energy, shift your perspective. Yeah, I was speaking to a friend the other day
and she was saying, she goes, she said to me, I just wish men realized how long it takes a girl
to get ready. And she was like, I got ready. She was like, I looked real cute. And she was like,
he didn't say anything. She was like this guy that she went on a first date with. He said she didn't
say, I looked lovely. He didn't say it was nice to see me. He didn't say it was lovely. He was just like,
I didn't feel like he. What a bummer. Yeah. And she was so.
let down and she was just like, I really put effort into how I, you know, got ready. I was excited
about it. And it just felt like it wasn't just that he didn't notice her visually. She was like,
the conversation didn't go either. But I can imagine that that kind of feeling repetitively gets
tiring. Yeah. But at the same time, you're so right that it gets tiring when there's really high
stakes on it every time and it being perfect or being the one or being the moment. It's almost like
it's almost like you made it you made it harder for yourself by going out wanting it to be the night
yes whereas if you're just gone out and even if you did put in all that effort and everything but
you like that about yourself and if you had fun right i'm a girl i love getting right i love
my two hour long process of getting ready for an event and you know the music's playing the vibe
is good that's fun i enjoy that i enjoy that so i do it more i do it when when i when i
want to. It's a process that I want to engage in. I also think I'd like to start a petition to bring
back flirting in general. I think we've lost the art of flirting. Flirting is fun and not flirting
that has to lead to anything. You find someone attractive. There's a little bit of chemistry.
You share a five minute conversation. It's flirty and it's fun and it can end there. It can end there.
You show up to a first date. Can I tap into that? You know, the back and forth, the banter, the fun.
the chemistry with no strings attached just for the sake of connection and fun.
Yeah.
I don't know how we'll start that.
We're going to figure it out.
We'll start a petition.
Bring flaring back back.
Yes, bring back further.
Yeah, I feel like it's disappeared mostly because people aren't used to speaking in person
in the time that things are flirty.
So most of the flirting happens over message.
And then by the time you get in front of each other, you have to have a real conversation,
which is kind of like a hard shift to go from flirting on the phone
to, you know, through text to them being interesting in person.
Absolutely.
So, yeah.
Absolutely.
Do you, do you believe the spark is real and does it matter?
Absolutely.
Spark is real and it matters, but it changes and it fades and it grows in other, in other instances.
I think you need to feel an immediate attraction to someone that you are romantically interested in.
That doesn't mean you are flooded, overwhelmed.
like hot and sweaty can't can't catch your breath you're just doesn't have to be that but you do
need to think I'd like to be a little closer to them scooch my chair a little bit closer to you're
I just to figure out a way to talk to them you know but that's that's not to say that
connection and intimacy and attraction can't grow over time they absolutely do especially for
women especially for women but you you should find the person that you're dating
attractive and there should be a spark of yes i want to be physically closer to them but i also want to
know more about them there's some magic here there's some some something something to work with i think
there has to be but as you get to know a person as the novelty wears off that spark will change
and that's okay i don't think we need to discount anyone if there isn't some immediate firework
and we should prepare for that spark to change if you plan on on starting a long-term release
Yeah. When can the spark mislead us? How does it mislead us? When it feels like you're on a rollercoaster,
when you find yourself pining for someone, there's a, I like to say, we only obsess over people who
aren't fully available to us. And that spark can really be mistaken, or the obsession can be
mistaken for a spark, where there's something we're projecting onto someone that is so full on,
it feels like an obsession.
And there's this gap between who they are and who they could be, the relationship that
you could have and the relationship that you actually have.
And that gap in between is a reflection of who you would get to be and how you would get
to feel if the fantasy became a reality.
And that can feel like a spark, can feel like a deep overwhelming obsession.
Anyone who's been through this knows how all-consuming it can be.
But when we're projecting a fantasy onto someone, that spark can take us away into a whole other world.
Yeah, I fully agree.
And it's so hard because when you're doing that, you don't even know you're doing it.
No.
No.
Typically not at first.
If you experience it enough times, it'll be a pattern.
It's probably happened.
If it's happened once, it'll probably happen again unless you catch it because you shouldn't feel like you're falling off a cliff.
You shouldn't feel like a free fall of adrenaline and anxiety.
You should be excited to see someone, excited to be around them, to get to know them,
but it should not feel like the ground falls from underneath you when you're with them or not near them or uncertain about what's going to happen.
What's the difference between chemistry and compatibility and what's more important over time?
I think compatibility in terms of shared values and visions of the future.
People opt a mistake compatibility for similarity in all aspects, right?
I need to find someone who likes the same movies I like, listens to the same music, prefers to eat all the same foods that I do, goes to sleep with the same type.
You don't need an identical copy of you.
In fact, that would probably drive you crazy.
What I think compatibility really boils down to in a more important sense is how do you...
value your time, attention, and energy when it comes to the most important things in your
life. If you are someone who values family, you want children one day, you want to be married,
you want a long-term partnership with love, honesty, trust, all those things. You need to find
someone who values family, kids, being married, prioritizing the family above just their own
innate desires, right? Those values have to align. Otherwise, you're headed for a disaster.
Same thing with visions of the future. If you start dating someone who wants to live out of a van and
travel around the country and wants to kind of have this nomadic life and you want to live two
blocks away from your parents in Iowa and forever, and that's home for you, I love that for both
of you. You're probably not meant to be together. That'll be a really contentious relationship.
I like to say, don't order what's not on the menu when you meet someone.
If they say work is their most important priority, that's their top value.
Don't get into a relationship expecting to change that about someone.
It's not fair to them.
It's not fair to you.
That's compatibility.
Chemistry, in my opinion, boils down to the magic that you feel just being around someone.
it's almost palpable
there's
whether that's a quiet intimacy
like a soft intimacy
you're pulled towards each other
whether it's banter and wit
have a similar sense of humor
whether it is physical attraction
you just want to jump their bones
and you can't help but kiss them
and all the things
that to me is chemistry
and you want that
but chemistry won't build
the long term relationship
the long term partnership
that some people want.
Not everyone.
Some people don't, but...
I loved your distinction
between compatibility and similarity
because I think that's...
To me, that's the real hurdle for people
because I talk about this
where me and my wife
are just completely the opposite people
in terms of we don't have a lot in common
when it comes to likes and dislikes
and things like that.
But from a values and vision point of view,
we respect, and we don't even have directly the same values and vision, but we respect each other so
much that it allows for a healthy relationship. So my purpose, my work is my number one priority
and my wife is her family. But I love when she spends time with her family and she loves seeing me
pursue my purpose and therefore there isn't conflict. Whereas if she said, Jay, you have to give up
for your purpose to be with my family or if I said, well, you've got to give up your family to spend
time with my purpose, that wouldn't work for us. And I find that to be a really common thing I hear
from people where the biggest mistake you can make in a relationship is one of you wants the other
person to change for them and the other person doesn't want you to change at all. And the truth is
you're both going to change, but not in the ways the other person wants you to. You're just going to
become who you are going to become. And it's so interesting to me that I meet so many people who
almost want their partner to play a very specific role in their life, not realizing that that
human is evolving, growing, and shifting themselves and is unlikely to do that.
There's a real opportunity to see beyond ourselves if we find that dynamic at play, where I need
them to show up in this way. They need to be just so. That's black and white thinking.
It's, right? It's limiting to you. It's limiting to the other person, and it's limiting to the
relationship. That's the, and that's hard to accept because if you're outsourcing all of your needs,
desires, and wants onto another person, you're going to be disappointed. And if you expect to be met
in all the ways you want to be met all the time, you're going to be disappointed. There has to be a
bit of accountability there. Where am I not taking care of myself? Where am I not pursuing what I
really want to spend my time, attention, and energy on. That's, there's probably a bit of that
that's lacking. Because if you expect someone else to do it for you, to change in all the
ways you want, that's a self-centered view. And you can at the very least consider how important
is everything that I'm asking for right now. Could I live without this and still be okay and
still be happy. Maybe it's a season. Maybe it's just a season. People think love is supposed to
carry them through decades and decades of relationship. Just love, just the feeling that it should
be peaceful and restful all of the time. Sometimes it's work. Some seasons are work where, hey,
I really want this. And they say, I really don't. And your top value is your commitment to each other,
then you're going to figure it out. And that's probably going to be a stormy season. But no one really
likes hearing that because it means we have to tolerate some disappointment and take some
accountability which doesn't always feel very good is love enough love the feeling or love the action
you tell me love the action is because love as an action is willingness willingness to find
the color the nuance the balance willingness to learn to love someone how they want to be loved
to show up and be loving when you feel the least loving?
You know, people say, I would die for my partner.
I love them more than anything in this world.
I would literally lay down and die for them.
Okay, but would you put your phone down when they're telling you about your day?
Do you take their hand when you're walking down the sidewalk with them?
Do you notice when they come home from work and their mood is a little off?
Do you take the time to stop and ask them about it,
to remember the little things that they tell you, to care,
That's love. That's love as an action. That's what keeps connection. Love is a feeling
will be fleeting if we don't follow it, follow it through, follow it up with action.
So there is a difference between love the feeling and love the action.
I think so. Do you? Yeah, no, I agree. I agree. No, I never thought about it like that. I think
love the action requires so much more emotional intelligence and maturity than love the feeling.
I think I was in love when I was 16
All the time
All the time
And I did not back that up with actions
I think going back to the piece about people changing
I think people change for people
Because they're so scared
That that person has so many options
So I'd rather change to be everything you want me to be
So that you don't leave me to find someone else
But in that process
I'll become someone I don't even recognize
Because I didn't want to
want to become that person at all. And now you'll leave me anyway because you can tell I'm not
really authentically that person. So it almost hurts twice, one in unbecoming yourself and then in losing
the other person anyway because you didn't become who they needed you to be. So many people today
feel like there's plenty of fish in the sea. There's so many options. What do you do when you meet
someone. You like them, but you can tell that they have some detachment because they have this
idea that there's plenty of fish in the sea. And you're trying to hold on to them. You can tell you're
trying to hold on to them, knowing that they might ultimately let you go anyway. Do you value commitment?
Do you value someone who also knows what they want? If you have a clear vision of the kind of
relationship you want, the way you want your relationship to feel. Consistent, reliable,
warm, fun, playful. When you understand that becomes a lot easier to discern who's for you and who's
not, someone who's still worried about all the other fish in the sea, who's easily distracted,
who catches, that catches their eye, that catches their eye, and you feel like you have to control
them. If it feels like you have to control them, it's not love. And you can't build a relationship,
a fulfilling relationship from that place.
So if you notice that they don't value the same things you do,
they don't value commitment in the same ways,
then they're probably not for you.
Because the last thing you want to do is chase after them,
try and convince them to want the same things that you want,
and please, I'll show you how good it'll be if you'll just choose me.
Then you end up losing yourself in the very ways that you're trying to avoid in the first place.
It's always hard.
I always find that we're willing to tolerate bad behavior from someone
we're really into versus someone we're kind of into. And so when we say we want reliability,
if the person were really into doesn't message back, we'll be patient. But if someone
were kind of into doesn't message back, we're like, oh, red flag. That was me. That was, I mean,
that was, that was a childhood wound of, am I lovable? Am I difficult to love? Who do I have to
become to get someone to choose me to pay attention to me? Right. So,
Oh, you kind of like me. You kind of are interested. You kind of pay enough attention. I'm going to get the other 50% of that attention from you. I'm going to earn it. I'm going to tolerate the hurt, the disrespect, because you're giving me a little bit of what I want and I'm going to prove it. And then I'd get into relationships, fully chosen, stable love, very good people, and I'd test them. No, you don't. I'm going to show you that I can rebel against it. I'm going to show you that I'm hard to love so that then I can come back and earn it again.
That is a childhood wound that doesn't heal until you take accountability for it.
It wasn't until I realized the pattern at play.
And I got sick of my own shit.
I got sick of the same hurt, the same anxiety, the same cycles.
Like, I don't want this.
And then I took accountability and realized that the stability and the love that I was looking for
was going to require me to make value-based decisions first and foremost and really show up
and support myself and soothe myself when I wanted to run or when I wanted to beg or when I
wanted to react, I had to learn to respond.
A little tidbit about me.
I was going to ask you, how bad did it have to get for you to take accountability?
I really lost myself.
chasing the feeling of being chosen had given up on dreams lost all confidence tolerated
just the worst possible behavior just was a shell of myself really and truly and when you
reach that that level and essentially rock bottom you either have to pull yourself out
or you realize how deep and dark it'll feel until you find the courage.
And you don't want to live like that.
I didn't want to live like that.
I knew that there was an option and I knew it was going to be hard
and I knew that it was going to take a hell of a lot of time,
attention, understanding patience for myself.
But one of the best things, one of the best things I've ever done.
A big piece of what actually got me into this work, quite frankly.
Tell me about that.
The pattern I was just talking about, you know, choose me, see me,
what can I do to earn your attention? That primarily came from my mother. And my mother died of cancer
back in 2019. And there was something about her death that was so devastating and yet so
healing because of the way we were able to repair before she passed. So we got to have these
conversations, peel back, we were so honest, so honest, and the safety and space it created
feeling seen and chosen and loved in such a way, even though it was the end. There was something
about that moment. And obviously the journey of grief that came after that, that changed me to
my core. And this was all happening around the same time. The feeling like I was at rock bottom,
the death of my mother. There was so much going on there where I realized that I was looking
for evidence to confirm or deny the beliefs that I had learned in this mother-daughter dynamic
growing up, that I was hard to love, that I was difficult to love, that I needed to fight to be
chosen. I was looking for evidence to confirm that everywhere. And it felt awful. It felt awful. It felt
awful. So there was a bit of the love and support and honesty that I was able to find in these
conversations with my mother. And then the work that I did after she passed to learn to show up
for myself and no longer tolerate those beliefs, no longer take those beliefs as fact.
And that was really where the work was. That's where the work came from.
first of all sorry for your loss because it sounds like a really difficult time through everything
that you just mentioned and at the same time my question is how useful was it to repair with her
and could more of us heal our relationships with our future partners by repairing our
relationships with our parents in any way?
If you have the option, if you have the option, it's worth a try, but you don't need to.
You don't need to.
And I was so blessed and so lucky to be able to, number one, have the time before she passed
because she was sick.
But for her to also have an open heart and an open mind to meet me there.
I know that that's that's not a luxury that everyone, everyone gets.
And that's really hard.
If anyone can relate to that, I just want to acknowledge how there's a grief in and of that,
you know, that you don't have a parent that will meet you in such a way.
You don't have a person of such importance that will meet you, meet you there.
But there absolutely is a process of a similar strategy.
I just explained that you can do on your own.
which is meeting yourself in the ways you wish that parent would meet you.
What do you wish they would say?
What do you wish they would validate about you?
Because my guess is what you wish they would validate about you
are the same things you bring into those romantic relationships.
I wish you would accept me.
I wish you would just love.
I wish you would look at me and say, I'm so proud of you.
I see you.
There's probably a few flavors of that that show up in your conflict with your romantic partner.
Right? And if you're with someone who is safe and loving and patient romantically, you can have some of these conversations with them. Hey, I feel this way. You know, maybe it came from mom or dad. Maybe it didn't. But communicating that, sharing that. That's how we grow in relationship is by bringing these beliefs. Hey, what I'm feeling is this. What I'm hearing in this conversation. I heard you just say that you don't love me and you don't care about this relationship. And they look at you like, I don't.
just told you that I that I that I was going to be home two hours late what do you I didn't
what right that's and that's where the understanding and the healing and the reprogramming really
comes from but it takes a hell of a lot of vulnerability yeah that's not always comfortable but
it's always worth it yeah always have you ever looked at a piece of abstract art or music or
poetry and thought, that's just a bunch of pretentious nonsense? Well, that's exactly what
two bored Australian soldiers set out to prove during World War II. When they pulled off what
was either a bold literary hoax or a grand poetic experiment, publishing over a dozen
intentionally bad but highly acclaimed works of expressionist poetry under the name Earn Malley
in an incident that caused a media firestorm and even a criminal trial. The Earn Malley episode
made fools of believers and critics alike and still fascinates poetry.
poetry lovers to this day. We break down the truth, the lies, and the poetry in between on hoax,
a new podcast hosted by me, Lizzie Logan, and me, Dana Schwartz. Every episode, hoax explores an
audacious fraud or ruse from history, from forged artworks to the original fake news, to try and
answer why we believe. Listen to hoax on the IHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you
get your podcasts. Hi, I'm Kurt Brownhuler. And I am Scotty Landau. And I am Scotty Landis.
and we host Bananas, the Weird News Podcasts with wonderful guests like Whitney Cummings.
And tackle the truly tough questions.
Why is cool mom an insult, but mom is fine?
No.
I always say, Kurt's a fun dad.
Fun dad and cool mom.
That's cool for me.
We also dig into important life stuff, like why our last names would make the worst hyphen ever.
My last name is Cummings.
I have sympathy for nobody.
Yeah, mine's brown oler, but with an H.
so it looks like brown holer.
Okay, that's, okay, yours might be worse.
We can never get married.
Yeah.
Listen to this episode with Whitney Cummings
and check out new episodes of bananas
every Tuesday on the exactly right network.
Listen to bananas on the IHeart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
It may look different, but native culture is very alive.
My name is Nicole Garcia and on Burn Sage, Burn Bridges,
we aim to explore that culture.
It was a huge honor to become a television writer
because it does feel oddly, like, very traditional.
It feels like Bob Dylan going electric
that this is something we've been doing for a hundred of years.
You carry with you a sense of purpose and confidence.
That's Sierra Teller Ornelis,
who with Rutherford Falls became the first native showrunner
in television history.
On the podcast, Burn Sage, Burn Bridges,
we explore her story, along with other native stories,
such as the creation of the first Native Comic-Con
or the importance of reservation basketball.
Every day, Native people are striving to keep traditions alive
while navigating the modern world,
influencing and bringing our culture into the mainstream.
Listen to Burn Sage Burn Bridges on the IHeart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Yeah, one of my early experiences of love was I was overloved and then I was made to feel guilty
for not reciprocating back at that level.
And so when I first started dating my wife, I would do exactly the same.
I would over love and then guilt her for not loving me in the same amount back.
Scoreboard.
Totally.
And her reaction was very human.
and eventually helpful because I love her
and there were so many other things
that were so worthy of love that her reaction was just
she pulled away because she didn't understand
because at one point she'd be like,
well, I didn't ask for you to over-love me
and then she'd be like,
but I am loving you just not exactly perfectly
in the way that you're saying it.
And because I believed her
and because I believed there was truth to it,
I remember the moment the penny dropped for me
where I was like, oh my gosh, like this is exactly me of repeating a pattern.
No wonder no one wants to be.
And I saw my sister do the same.
And I just noticed how like that was how we were trained to love.
And I remember the moment I realized that and I could find all these other patterns
in how I loved my wife in an unhealthy way.
It just transformed our entire relationship because now there wasn't any of that.
And it's so funny because I felt so righteous in that.
at the time that I was like, I must be right. Of course I'm right. I'm the one who's doing
everything. Where did it turn? Your realization, when did it? Was it something she said?
Well, it was, it was her pulling away. And it was almost like it kind of made the scoreboard not
work. Because in my relationship with love, if someone did that to me, I just turned up how they
wanted me to turn up. But what was the thing that helped you realize that it was a personal pattern?
and the accountability of, oh shit, that's my stuff to own.
I think it ended up, because it was so long ago now,
I believe it was probably ended up being a conversation
where I think my wife said something to me like,
I just don't know what I could ever do to make you happy.
Like I'm like, I just don't know, like,
even if I did this and I did this and I did that,
I don't even know if it would ever be enough.
And I think when she said that,
to me, and I thought about it, I was like, yeah, I think she's right. I don't think it would have. Even
if she did all those things that I said I wanted or thought back, it would never be enough
because I'd just find something else. And when I also started to realize that when I went above
and beyond for her, it was never because she asked for it or wanted it or even one of the things
I went above and beyond for. So that was also self-inflicted. And actually, if I was more present
and aware, then maybe I'd meet her with where she wants and what she wants.
Almost like you, almost so like you could get love.
Correct, absolutely, that I felt I had to earn it.
And so you're giving a lot thinking that's how you get love,
not realizing love was in the every day and the little things and the beautiful things
and the, you know, the things that are there.
And then there was another conversation that we had.
This was a few years later that was really illuminating was I said to I feel like I'm always
planning our vacations and I do all the planning and the detail and everything and it's almost
like I don't feel like I get the break and she was like I'm more than happy to plan it but the
difference is she was like when you plan something I'll happily do whatever you plan but when
I plan something you'll have a hundred things you'll find wrong with it and you'll be unhappy
about it and that really hit me because I was like gosh she's so right like that's exactly what
I would do. I would be upset at the schedule and the timeline and everything because I have
a viewpoint on how it should be done. And therefore, she allows me to plan it because she knows
I'll be happier that way on both accounts. So it's so interesting how so much of it is self-inflicted
because I've found the more I take responsibility for how I need to change and the more she takes
responsibility for how she needs to change, the better our relationship gets rather than her telling me
how I need to change and me telling her how she needs to change. Well, and what a comment. I call it
the criticism and withdrawal loop.
One person says, I want more.
The other person says, why is nothing that I do ever enough?
And that can quickly spiral, taking your story, for example, hey, I always plan these things.
I would love it if you would plan the vacations more.
She could easily say, I threw out this idea last time and you shut me down and I tried
to throw out this idea before and you won't go for it.
Nothing I ever do is not.
Where do you want me to go with this?
And it turns into the spiral.
And then after that, there's a withdrawal.
Or the criticism gets louder.
I told you, you didn't plan this last vacation.
And you know what?
You haven't planned any date nights either.
It all falls on me.
What's really being communicated is, hey, can I share this mental load?
Can we share in the emotional labor here a little bit?
Can you show up and can you help?
Can I get some support?
Can I feel your connection, right?
that would mean a lot to me and I'm a little overwhelmed I feel like I can't quite find the right
words or the right thing and it feels like you don't accept me like you don't like nothing I do is
valued same same driving intention very different ways to approach the conversation yeah right
so our ability to understand why something is bothering us yeah and communicate that is paramount
And in addition, being able to listen in for the intention, even if your partner can't explicitly
communicate it, is also really important.
Maybe you and Roddy can give everyone a masterclass.
No, I think we both generally just, you know, it's been, I think for us generally,
they've been very healthy conversations because we both have a similar understanding of
not raising voices, not getting angry.
Like, we both have a good set of rules that I think we say.
set early on what we wanted conflict to look like or disagreements to look like.
Did you know to pick someone with such a temperament? Was it apparent when you first met each
other? Or was that something that was communicated or happened coincidentally?
I think I got lucky at the start and then became more conscious of as we got more serious
and have become even more grateful as years have gone by. And so I think there was a bit of luck
in the beginning and then then consciously developing it.
Naturally drawn to her temperament maybe.
For sure, for sure.
Yeah.
Yeah, there's definitely that.
There was a natural draw, but it was an unconscious experience in the beginning,
then became more conscious and focused and developed.
And I always think that it's like you can get a lot of things right without knowing,
but then once you know, it's good to focus on getting them better.
Yes.
But I wanted to ask you this question.
You say, one of my favorite things that you say, you said in a video that you can
tell how much you love yourself by the partner that you've chosen.
Tell me about that.
Well, I pose it as a question because if you hear someone say,
in the video I think you're referring to, how would you feel if someone said
that they can tell how much you love yourself by the partner that you've chosen?
Does that feel like a compliment or an insult?
and what that really distills down to,
I'm not passing a judgment on your relationship,
but the way you feel about that question
can offer a lot of insight.
Have you tolerated treatment
that really, really doesn't feel great?
It doesn't really feel loving.
It's not what someone would put up with
if they loved themselves.
Or, man, I've chosen a really patient, loving,
incredible person. You know, some part of me must like myself enough to choose someone who
loves me in such a way. It's really, really most, mostly about reflection. What is it that
we're choosing? And am I making decisions, building relationships, investing in relationships
that reflect love, love for myself, and back to the values? Do you know, am I making decision
based on my values or am I stagnant? Am I complacent? Am I participating in this this negative
dynamic as well? It's really about reflection and seeing what comes up for people. Yeah, it's a great
reflection. Such a great question. And it's a great way if you're dating right now to really
make the right shifts and changes. Absolutely. And if you're married and you feel like you made
the wrong decision, what would you do? If someone's listening to that and they're going,
Like I'm listening to you right now, Q, and that feels tough because my partner's not present.
I don't, I know they love me, but, you know, I'm not sure we, I think we lost it somewhere along the way.
What would you say to them?
I love that distinction too.
I say dating is, dating is about discernment, marriage is about devotion.
Not the other way around.
Say that again.
dating is about discernment not devotion devotion devotion is to be saved for marriage or long-term
relationships long-term partnerships that's important as you're making decisions but what i would say
to someone who's realizing that maybe their relationship dynamic is not as loving as they would
want it to be first things first take a look at your side of the street that doesn't mean that doesn't
mean it's your fault. This is not a blame game. But if you envision the kind of relationship you want
with your husband, with your wife, with your partner, what does it consist of and how can you
add more of that now? How can you be the first to add, to try? How can you show up as the partner
you want to be? Where is the appreciation for the ways that they are making effort? It's really
easy to get sucked into the, into a disappointment spiral. Like, you go down the rabbit
hole and all you can see are the things that they aren't doing, the things are doing wrong,
the ways that they aren't showing up. Pull yourself out of that. If you want your relationship
to work, you have to pull yourself out of that. Even if you choose to leave, don't choose to
leave in the bottom of the disappointment spiral. Anyway, you clean up your side of the street and go
first. Great advice, yeah. That's what I would say. The follow up to that is have a conversation,
with your spouse. Hey, I want more of this because I love you. I feel really distant. I feel
really lonely. We both have a lot going on. Can we come up with a plan to reconnect? What do you
want more of? Here's what I want more of. Can we get on board? It doesn't have to be so humdrum,
you know, negative, oh, we have to fix this. It can be an exciting thing if you want it to be.
And if you come with the right energy, and if it is the right person, then they'll at least try to meet you there.
Yeah.
What's the difference between keeping someone accountable and trying to change them?
I don't think you can keep people accountable.
I don't really believe that it's possible.
Or hold someone accountable?
If you're with someone who's really lacking consistency, they're not really following through on their word,
and you're thinking, I need a little bit more.
They're not taking initiative.
I can't trust them to do what they say that they're going to do.
You can bring that up.
This is what I'm noticing.
I'm finding it hard to rely on you because you haven't done the things that you said that you're going to do.
I mean, can we talk about this?
And if they say, I want to be a more consistent, reliable person,
thank you for bringing that to my attention.
Great.
Now, they want to make that change.
You've brought it to light.
It is on them to make the change.
You can lovingly, hey, again, this thing didn't get done, but the buck stops there.
You can't be breathing down their neck.
You definitely don't want to meet them with criticism or constant disappointment.
People don't actually change from that place.
So if they want to make the change themselves, great, beautiful, the onus is on them.
You can be loving and supportive in the process, but I don't believe that we can really hold people accountable and we definitely can't force them to change.
I fully agree.
And I think the hardest part of it is you know how hard it is to change yourself.
So even when someone says they want to change themselves, you've got to realize how hard that is.
You may have your partner say to you, yeah, I really do want to work out and get in the gym more.
And then they're never in the gym.
They're always watching sport.
They're hanging out, whatever it is.
You know how hard that is to do.
And so it's such a interesting dynamic because we almost think change should be really easy for other people,
knowing that it's really hard for ourselves.
And then when they don't change,
we're upset or disappointed in them.
And if you just thought for a second
about how hard it is to change yourself
and build good habits yourself,
I think you'd have more empathy and compassion
for someone else.
That's how I see it, at least.
We tend to judge ourselves by our intentions,
and we tend to judge others
by their actions or their follow-through
or the result of their thing, right?
So I'm meant to go to the gym
five days this week. I really only made it once, but I intended to. I had a lot going on. My
intentions were good. I tried. They don't go to the gym five times a week. They only go once,
and suddenly it's a reflection of their character, right? They're unreliable. They lack
discipline. They aren't motivated. Hold on here. Let's find the color amongst all this black and white
thinking. I totally agree. Yeah, yeah, yeah. It's the toughest one I see. I always just feel like
and that's why I love that you said start on your side of the street because I think a lot of
relationship language and podcasting and conversations right now are all about how do you spot
if someone's good and I'm just like it's a dangerous game to play because in that scenario
you're always the detective and the secret agent and the other person's always the villain in
some way and while that can be true in in certain cases where there's extremes the reality is
most of us are all flawed and making mistakes at the same time.
And if you want a peaceful, emotionally intelligent person, right, with all of these traits
that are wonderful, I love that for you, you have to be the other half of that relationship.
Right?
You also want to be patient and calm, slow to conflict, kind with your words, even when you're
frustrated.
You can handle some disappointment.
and you want to be the other half of that loving relationship.
It's not going to come from focusing on all the red flags you need to look out for
and all the things, the specific ways they need to show up to prove to you that they are who they say that they are.
Focus on your side of the street.
Focus on being the other half of this relationship that you want so badly,
rather than trying to figure out the quick fixes to avoid all of the bad fish in the sea.
It's a waste of time, in my opinion.
You said in one of your videos, the only people who are upset with your boundaries are the very same people who directly benefit from you not having any. I love that. Can you explain? Someone who loves you wants you to have boundaries. Someone who loves you wants there to be limits on what you will and won't tolerate what you have capacity for or don't have capacity for. That is necessary.
someone who loves you, and better yet, someone you want in your life, we can argue all day,
do they love me or do they not? If they're disrespecting your boundaries, you probably don't
want them to have much access to you energetically, emotionally. At the end of the day,
boundaries aren't designed to keep people out. They aren't designed to hurt anyone's feelings.
They're designed to maintain your finite amount of energy and attention, right? I can't say,
yes to everything. I can't say yes to everything and still show up in the ways that I want
to show up, keep the character and integrity that I really like about myself. There's no way to do
that. Someone who loves me is going to encourage that and respect that. And the people who benefit
from you not having it, the people who want to take more from you, who want more and more, who are more
self-centered, they won't care. They won't care if it's good for you or bad for you or not.
They're more focused on themselves, and that's disrespectful.
That's not loving, and that's not someone who should have an infinite amount of access to you.
How do you set an effective boundary?
Because I think we've got used to the language, but we don't really know how to do it.
We think that a boundary protects you from other people, but really a boundary is something that protects you from yourself and your natural triggers or ways of behavior.
So how do we set a behavior that protects us rather than trying to keep other people out?
A boundary is, I will or won't, blank, if blank.
I will or won't blank if blank.
So that means it is all within your control.
I won't participate in this conversation if you yell at me again.
I won't.
I'm going to have to walk away.
Yeah, and you're not saying that to them.
You need to know that as well.
Right.
Yeah, yeah.
And either or, right?
I don't want to participate in a relationship with someone who lies to me.
I won't.
I will not.
You need to know that for yourself.
Absolutely.
You can share these things with other people.
Back to the conversation with difficult parents,
contentious relationships with your parents.
You know, I really value our relationship.
But I won't stay if you keep talking to me that way.
If you keep bringing up that issue, I'm going to walk away.
I will blank if blank is a boundary not you can't blank blank blank blank not you better not
it's not a threat it's a rule for yourself and your boundaries are for you to respect and that's the
hardest part right I feel like we compromise our own boundaries so we say things like I won't
participate in this conversation if you lie to me but then we continue to participate because
it's not really a boundary. It's hoping they won't lie to you. We're saying it hoping you'll stop
lying if I threaten you. Yes. But you just said it's not a threat. It's a boundary if we recognize
I have to leave now. So if you're lying, I now have to walk away, but we don't want to do that
because we're hoping they change. Yes. So it's like a secret hidden hope as opposed to a boundary.
The manipulation that you just kind of described, like I'm going to say that I won't tolerate it.
But then if you actually do it, then I will sit. Because what I'm really trying to
to get is you to show up for me and trying to get you to love me so I'm going to mix in this
threat. That's, that's, that's a hell of a lot of manipulation. Rather than having your own
back, like really respecting yourself enough to say, I will not tolerate this. My self-respect
is not worth the emotional turmoil that comes from allowing this kind of behavior. That's really
hard. That's really hard. You have to choose your self-respect over your desire to be chosen or your
desire to not be alone. That's paramount. Absolutely. Is there such a thing as the one or a
soulmate? The one is the one that you choose. The one is the person whose natural essence compliments
yours in a way that makes love and growth a little bit easier. A little bit, right? It's a little
bit. Sometimes it's still hard. But ideally, you choose well. You use discernment in the beginning.
You admire someone's integrity. You really respect them. You really cherish them. You like them.
She's often an overlooked one.
You know, he's this tall and makes this much money, so he'll be the one.
Well, okay, but do you like the guy?
It's really important.
And then you build the relationship from there, respecting the other person, respecting
yourself, and again, creating this third entity.
One thing I also think is overlooked when it comes to choosing the one and being the one.
This works for both sides.
you need to be your partner, your person's biggest fan.
I mean that with my whole heart.
You need to be your partner's biggest fan.
And if you can't, then you either need to check in on your insecurities.
You either need to pay attention or you've chosen the wrong person.
If you don't want their dreams to come true, if you don't want them to succeed, if you don't want them to be, if you don't want them to be,
their happiest, best self, do not promise to spend a lifetime with them. I really, really think
that that's important and not talked about enough. I don't hear that very much. We talk about the
conflict stuff, right? We talk about how to handle boundaries and how to do all of that, but you want
someone in your corner. You want someone in your corner on your worst days, on your best days,
and you want to feel like you're on the same team. And I deeply believe you need to be your
your person's biggest fan, and that contributes to them being the one and building the right
relationship.
Hey, sis, what if I could promise you you never had to listen to a condescending finance
bro?
Tell you how to manage your money again.
Welcome to Brown ambition.
This is the hard part when you pay down those credit cards.
If you haven't gotten to the bottom of why you were racking up credit or turning to credit cards,
you may just recreate the same problem a year from now.
When you do feel like you are bleeding from these high interest rates,
I would start shopping for a debt consolidation loan,
starting with your local credit union,
shopping around online,
looking for some online lenders because they tend to have fewer fees
and be more affordable.
Listen, I am not here to judge.
It is so expensive in these streets.
I 100% can see how in just a few months
you can have this much credit card debt when it weighs on you.
It's really easy to just like stick your head in the sand.
nice and dark in the sand. Even if it's scary, it's not going to go away just because you're
avoiding it. And in fact, it may get even worse. For more judgment-free money advice, listen to
Brown Ambition on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast. I just think
the process and the journey is so delicious. That's where all the good stuff is. You just can't live
and die by the end result. It's scary putting yourself out there, especially when it's something
you really care about and something that you hope is your passion in life and you want people to like it.
Let's get delicious and put ourselves out there.
I'm Simone Boyce, host of The Bright Side,
and those were my recent guests, comedian Phoebe Robinson and writer Aaron Foster.
On this show, I'm talking to the brightest minds in entertainment, health, wellness, and pop culture.
And every week, we're going places in our communities, our careers, and ourselves.
It's not about being perfect.
It's about going on a journey and discovering the bright side of becoming.
Few people know that better than soccer legend Ashlyn Harris.
It's the journey.
It's the people. It's the failures. It's the heartache. It's the little moment.
These are our moments to laugh, learn, and exhale. So join me every Monday. And let's find the
bright side together. Listen to the bright side on the IHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
The Super Secret Festi Club podcast season four is here. And we're locked in.
That means more juicy cheesement. Terrible love advice. Evil spells to
cast on your ex.
No, no, no, we're not doing that this season.
Oh.
Well, this season, we're leveling up.
Each episode will feature a special bestie,
and you're not going to want to miss it.
Get in here!
Today, we have a very special guest with us.
Our new super secret bestie
is The diva of the people.
The diva of the people.
I'm just like, text your ex.
My theory is that if you need to figure out that the stove is hot,
go and touch it.
Go and figure it out for yourself.
Okay.
That's us.
What is the heck?
That's us.
My name is Curley.
And I'm Maya.
In each episode, we'll talk about love, friendship, heart breaks, men, and, of course, our favorite secrets.
Listen to the Super Secret Bestie Club as a part of the Mycultura podcast network available on the IHeartRadio app, Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcast.
When you were saying that, it was reminding me of wedding vows.
And I was thinking about how we spend so long planning a wedding and not building a marriage
and just the discrepancy between the two, even how long you'll take to write your vows.
But then to live up to those vows takes a whole different set of skills.
And we don't really put that much effort into building those skills and working on those parts.
Maintaining those skills.
Maintaining those skills.
How do you know if you're in love with someone or just the idea of them?
How do you know if you're in love with someone or just the idea of them?
Is there a difference between how you wish they would be and how they actually are?
How wide is that gap?
How much of the relationship do you actually enjoy?
way versus how much time are you spending trying to change them, trying to change the dynamic.
I like to say, if you allow your person to be exactly who they want to be, without molding them,
without controlling them, without micromanaging them, but you allow them to show up just as they are,
does that help you feel more or less like the person you want to be?
Does that feel more or less like the kind of relationship you want to be in?
And it doesn't mean it's perfect.
It doesn't mean it's all the time.
But if you, it doesn't mean that they won't change.
It doesn't mean you can't change.
But if you really allow them to be, if you accept them for exactly who they are,
does that help or hinder what you want love to feel like?
That's one question to ask.
Yeah, that's a great question.
I love that question.
It's such an important question because that is who you're with 90% of the time.
And that is what you'll experience.
and yeah, if you're in love with the idea of them,
then you're absolutely right.
Your answer to that question will be no,
because I want them to be a bit more this, a bit more that, a bit more this.
And do you need a bit more?
Is that bit more that you're missing really, really important to you?
If it is, by all means, do what you got to do.
But I think a lot of times we fool ourselves into thinking
that the little bits that we're missing are make or breaks.
And we forget that loving someone is such an honor.
And this is more so geared towards long-term relationships, marriages of sorts.
But it's a real honor to be able to love someone through several seasons of their life.
To be able to be their support system, to be the smiling face that picks them up on a day when they feel shitty,
to be there when they lose someone that they love or they lose an opportunity.
or they hit their highest high to sit with them on a Sunday night on the couch every Sunday
for years and years and a row.
I mean, it's an honor to love someone and to be there.
And sometimes I just think we need to reframe the way that we view the person we're with
as a whole human all on their own that we get the honor to love.
and that tends to clear out a lot of the little bits that we aren't getting.
Yeah, that's beautiful.
You look at that person and you think, my God, I really do love them.
Look at the way that they do the dishes or tie their shoes.
I love the way that they drive and the way they dance to music.
I love to watch them get ready and do their morning routine or whatever.
Like you just look at that human and remember that it's an honor to love them.
And maybe that'll clear out some of the bits that you're missing.
Yeah.
What do you wish people lost themselves before they got married?
Do I want to be a partner or do I want a spouse?
And the difference there is when you want to be a partner,
when you want to be someone's support system,
when you want to be the co-creator of the marriage that you're about to step into, the life that
you're going to build. There's accountability and responsibility in that. And it really allows
you to focus on what you can control, which is how you show up. Now, assuming you're walking to
walking to that altar, and you know this person pretty damn well, and you've spent a good
long time seeing who they are, understanding their heart, really caring for them, all of that,
you're going to have to remember that sometimes the best you can do is show up as the partner
you want to be, that you want to be. Even if your seasons are misaligned, Matthew McConaughey
has this great bit in a podcast that he did, or he says, sometimes you're walking and they're running,
and sometimes you're running and they're walking
and you just have to make sure
that one doesn't get too far ahead of the other
and I love that
I love him yes
yeah yeah I love that too
I think that's well said
yeah absolutely and I think it's about how you communicate
when you are that I I've always thought
about it as sometimes me and my wife
are driving to the same event but we're driving
separately she's going to get there early
and I'm going to be late and so I'm on the phone
I'm like hey I'm going to be late
and she's like well I'm going to be early
and I'm like, okay, well, do you want to wait for me because you want to go in together
or do you want to go in without me and I'll follow you in there?
And she's like, no, I want to wait for you to go in there together.
And it's like you're both driving separately, but you're talking to each other the whole time
about where you're at.
And that's that conversation that calms you both down rather than you have no idea what time
that person's getting there.
One of the challenges I find is that everyone wants their, a lot of what I hear is people
want their partner to talk to them more emotionally and tell them more.
and there's a lot of people who don't want to do that or don't know how to do that
or don't feel the need for it and the person who wants to talk kind of gets a bit
annoyed and frustrated and upset that their partner won't talk what's your advice in that
scenario what's the loving thing to do you know and that that probably requires both sides
of the aisle to adjust a little bit you're not going to get perfect words all the time
It's not going to happen.
And you're going to have to give imperfect words a lot of the time.
You're going to have to try it.
My aunt and uncle are in their mid-70s, early 70s.
They've been married for 25, 30 or something like that.
And we were just having a conversation the other night.
I was asking my uncle, John, I said, what is your secret to the, what's the magic?
How has this happened?
They're probably the happiest couple I know.
Incredible.
And he said, she tells me what she wants to hear.
and I repeat it back to her.
And he meant, Jay, he meant it with his full chest.
I've seen them do it.
My Aunt Beth will say, I need you to tell me that this is going to be okay.
You hear me.
You've got my back and you've got it covered.
And he will recite it right back to her word for word.
And they say, okay, I love you.
And leave it there.
And some people will think, but if I have to say it, if I have to tell them what to say,
it doesn't matter.
It erodes the value and this, that, and the other.
If your person is asking to be loved in a specific way,
put your stuff aside and show up to the best of your ability.
It will not be perfect all the time.
It sure is hell won't.
But do the loving thing.
And that is typically to show up in the ways that your partner is explicitly asking you to.
If you want bonus points, anticipate some of those needs, right?
Pay attention and try to do it without having to be asked.
But don't knock the direct communication and then choosing...
the loving thing to do.
Yeah, yeah.
How do you start to trust yourself again when someone breaks up with you
that you thought you were going to be with for a long time?
Well, step one, grieve.
Yeah, there's an acute phase of heartbreak
where you don't have to do anything right or well.
You can just be.
That's step number one,
especially if it's a breakup after a long relationship.
The next step is reflection.
You know, right now the story might be, they left me, they didn't love me, all those years
were wasted, how could I have done that?
I should have known, right?
I must be disposable.
It's a lot.
That's harsh.
There's more color in that story.
So what were some of the red flags or some of the, even just the disconnection, the things that
weren't working. Take some accountability in that. You know, I didn't communicate as well as I
really wish that I would have. Or you know what? I stayed way too long because I tried to communicate
and that person wasn't meeting me. That was really difficult. Take some accountability around
how you may have contributed, what you want in your relationship moving forward, and more so
focusing on who you want to be now that that chapter has closed. Because I can tell you one thing,
person who is for you is the person who wants to be with you.
If they aren't willing to try, they're definitely not your person.
And I think that most things, most relationships can be worked out if two people are willing, if you want it to, barring some extreme cases.
But if they're not willing, they're not your person.
Now, when it comes to moving on specifically, I always say stop trying.
Because we think that if, okay, if I just do all of these steps, I'd have to do this in the morning and this at night and this is my evening routine and then I'll wake up someday and I'll be moved on as if it's a destination.
I say, imagine yourself tomorrow morning you wake up and you get what you wanted.
You want to move on.
You want to trust yourself again.
If you knew for certain that you would wake up tomorrow and that was your reality, what would you do with yourself?
Oh, that's such a good question.
What would you think about? How would you spend your time? What would you invest your energy into? Who would you spend your time with? What would you think about? What would you talk about? And then just start to do some of those things. Bring the grief with you. It's probably not going to happen as fast as you want it to, but you want a direction. You want a clearer vision of where you're going so that you can head in that direction. Yeah, so good. That's such a good answer because, yeah, all the little tips and tricks to try and move on quick, it doesn't process like that.
And I love the idea of what would your life look like if you'd already moved on because that's
what you're waiting for.
You're waiting for that anyway.
You're waiting for the day.
You've moved on and you can say, I'm over it and I'm ready for whatever.
What is it?
What does that look like and start mirroring that today?
That's brilliant.
You want the thing.
I just want to move on.
What does that even mean to you?
Like, let's define it.
That gives you something to move towards, which is so important.
And moving on doesn't even necessarily mean that you don't care.
You might still care.
You might care about that person for the rest of your life.
Yes.
But you want to build whatever your next chapter is to be as enjoyable and intentional as possible.
Yes.
And that gives you somewhere to go.
Yes.
And most of that I was coaching someone earlier this year and they were going through a breakup.
And the first month they broke up, they talked about it every day.
The second month after they broke up, they talked about every other day.
The third month, they talked about it every other day.
The third month, they talked about it every three days.
The fourth month, they talked about it once a week.
And then the fifth month, they thought about it once a month.
And I had to remind them of that because to them, every reminder was as sharp as remembering it every day.
And I like people to think about it like that.
You're not trying to get to a point where tomorrow you don't think about it at all.
You're just thinking about it less because your life looks like how you want to
to be and what it would be like if you were free. And I've always thought about that mindset,
even when I've had, even when you think about physical pain, if you want to wake up tomorrow
and you've had surgery or you're hurt or whatever and you want to be completely healed, it will
never happen. You'll only ever be 1% better if you did all the right things. And as soon as you
accept that all I need to do is be 1% better today, all of a sudden you see that progress. But when
you're looking to be 100% better and you aren't, now you feel 99% behind. And it just becomes so,
amplified and that's what it feels like to be wanting to heal from a breakup and you're constantly
feeling on why haven't I healed yet? That's that 90%. And oftentimes there are beliefs, almost
identities that we find ourselves trying to, finding ourselves wrestling with when a breakup happens.
No one will choose me. I'm never good enough. Nothing that I do is good enough. No one will stay.
It was all my fault or it was all their fault. How could they, and we find these these absolutes that
are really, really difficult to do anything productive with, truly.
I mean, it doesn't make you feel better emotionally.
You can't really move yourself forward from there.
And that's what I say about just be malleable with the story for a while, for the first
month, for the first, add a maybe, add a question mark to the end of that.
Like, I'm difficult to love, question mark.
Just just don't wrestle.
with the absolutes, give yourself time and space to consider another narrative, because I promise
you there's color. There's nuance in that. They didn't leave because you're hard to love.
Someone choosing not to love you is not a reflection of how lovable or unlovable you are.
So you know that. Don't wrestle with the absolute. Give yourself time and space.
Would be another piece of advice. I like the question mark. That's good. Yeah. It's true. It's true.
it's totally true it's totally true i love that q have you ever had your heartbroken many times in many
different ways yeah and it's i have a i have an interesting relationship with grief now and in part of course
my mom is is a big part of that but losing relationships and growing through heartbreak has always been a
catalyst for me. And I don't say that as, like, I'm so high and mighty and this is so
impressive. No, it's usually quite ugly and it's usually quite messy to really look at
yourself and put the pieces back together and try to move on. But I've always come out the other
side liking myself more, accepting uglier parts of myself that I don't think I accepted
previously. Because you got to take a real look at why you did what you did.
how you showed up, the people that you chose.
And sometimes that means accepting, like, man, I've been, I haven't been making the best choices.
And you have to love that.
You have to accept that.
And it expands your capacity in a way that allows for the emotional flexibility we were talking about earlier.
Where the deepest heartbreak, losing my mom, losing people that I thought I would spend their
rest of my life with. Losing that makes everything else a little bit easier to process.
If I can survive that, I can survive a lot. A lot. And I've been there through all of that.
I've picked myself back up. I've built a support system of people who remind me of that
when I forget, right? But I really learned to like myself. I really learned to trust myself.
and I really learned that there can be beauty in the mess if you stay put and go through it
long enough to find the bigger story, the bigger meaning, the bigger narrative.
Q, we end every episode of On Purpose with a final five.
These five questions have to be answered in one word to one sentence maximum.
And so Q, these are your final five.
The first question is, what is the best love advice you've ever heard or received?
do the loving thing comma and choose appreciation
I love it you can do that that's fine comments are fine that was that was very well done
second question what is the worst love advice you've ever heard or received
match their energy two wrongs don't make a right that's the reality you don't
matching someone's energy means you're handing over your power your power is in how you
respond. Your power is in your intention. Are you going to add more negativity to a situation
you don't already like? Maybe you can choose how you want to respond rather than matching someone's
energy. And even more so, maybe your love, your decision to meet them in a way that they can't
seem to meet themselves in that moment is exactly what they need. Love that. I always say to people,
you don't mess up your living room just because someone messy is coming over.
Yes.
That's well said.
You just don't do that.
It's like I'm not going to match that energy because then I'm going to start walking over my rugs with my dirty shoes.
Right.
Why would I do that just because someone's coming over?
It's like, no, they're messy person.
That's fine.
That's their mind and their space.
And I'm not going to messy up my mind because we're interacting.
It's a very inauthentic way to move through the world.
to build relationships.
Absolutely.
Question number three,
what did you used to believe to be true
about love and romance that you don't anymore?
I used to believe that love the feeling was enough.
It's fantastical.
It's alluring, right?
That someone will show up
and your whole life will be better.
Everything you'll be whisked away by their love
and live happily ever after.
That's not a story that you will.
really want. You know, you want to build a relationship intentionally. You want to choose to give
love and to build love and to build this relationship. And sometimes it takes those shitty moments,
those really tough moments to remind you how much you value the really good moments. And I think
if love was just a feeling, we would miss a lot of that. Love is consideration, the action,
and the willingness to continue showing up and creating more of it.
Mm-hmm.
Love that.
Question number four.
What's something that you used to value that you don't value anymore?
Being understood.
People can really only meet you as deeply as they've met themselves,
which means that some people simply won't have the ability to understand you,
and that's okay.
You don't need to fight.
To be heard, to be seen, to be approved of.
Sometimes it's just okay to say, we don't agree.
I don't think you understand.
And let it be.
Love that.
Okay, fifth and final question,
we ask this to every guest who's ever been on the show.
If you could create one law that everyone in the world had to follow,
what would it be?
To live within your integrity.
to decide for each person individually.
Like, what is right to you?
What kind of person do you want to be?
What is true for you?
Your truth?
What kind of person do you strive to be so much so
that it feels in your bones, in your heart, just right?
I wish it was a law that everyone had to figure out
what that meant to them.
And then they had to act on it.
consistently because I really believe that most, if not all of us would choose to be good people
would choose to make value-based decisions, kind decisions, loving decisions, not fear-based,
hurtful, destructive decisions.
I really believe that if we were all living within integrity, if we had the courage to
understand that for ourselves, that we would do a lot of good.
Yeah, I love that.
That would be your law.
Thank you. Thank you so much.
Everyone has been listening and watching whether you're walking your dog, whether you're driving to or from work, whether you're cooking.
I'm so grateful that you joined us.
Please make sure that you follow Quinlan Welfare on social media across platforms.
And I want to know what resonated with you.
I want to know what connected with you.
So tag us both.
Take the clips, post him.
Let us know what resonated, what really got through to you.
Share this with a friend who may be going to go.
through a breakup issue, maybe moving in with someone, maybe a friend's getting married soon.
This could be one of those episodes that I think you can listen to, your friends and family can
listen to and connect with no matter where they are on their love and romance journey.
And again, Q, thank you so much for showing up so authentically.
It was so great to just go back and forth with you and dissect so many different themes and
topics.
I'm so grateful to spend time with you and I can't wait to have you back.
Thank you, Jay.
Such a pleasure.
Thanks so much.
Hey, everyone.
If you love that conversation, go and check on my episode with you.
the world's leading therapist, Lorry Gottlieb, where she answers the biggest questions
that people ask in therapy when it comes to love, relationships, heartbreak, and dating.
If you're trying to figure out that space right now, you won't want to miss this conversation.
If it's a romantic relationship, hold hands. It's really hard to argue. It actually calms your
nervous systems. Just hold hands as you're having the conversation. It's so lovely.
It's important that we just reassure people that they're not alone, and there is help out there.
The Good Stuff podcast, season two, takes a deep look into One Tribe Foundation, a non-profit fighting suicide in the veteran community.
September is National Suicide Prevention Month, so join host Jacob and Ashley Schick as they bring you to the front lines of One Tribe's mission.
One Tribe, save my life twice.
Welcome to Season 2 of the Good Stuff.
Listen to the Good Stuff podcast on the Iheart radio app, Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcast.
The risks they took would be unthinkable to any doctor today.
But odds are, someone you know is alive because of them.
Welcome to the Wild West of American Medicine.
I'm Chris Pine, and this is Cardiac Cowboys,
a podcast that tells the gripping true story
behind the birth of open heart surgery
and the Maverick surgeons who made it happen.
Listen to the Cardiac Cowboys podcast starting February 6th
on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Jonathan Goldstein, and on the new season of heavyweight...
And so I pointed the gun at him and said, this isn't a joke.
A man who robbed a bank when he was 14 years old.
And a centenarian rediscovers a love lost 80 years ago.
How can a 101-year-old woman fall in love again?
Listen to heavyweight on the iHeart radio app, Apple Podcast,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
This is an IHeart podcast.
