Sex With Emily - How To Not Die Alone w/ Logan Ury
Episode Date: March 24, 2021Logan Ury, the author of How to Not Die Alone and director of Relationship Science at Hinge, joins me to share her best tips for all things dating. Logan provides practical tips for avoiding dating bl...indspots, the drawbacks of unrealistic expectations, and algorithms to live by for finding a satisfying relationship.We discuss how ‘dealbreakers’ may be an excuse for avoiding connection, how attachment styles affect our dating outcomes, the paradox of choice in the dating world, and how to get out of the checklist mindset. She also breaks down the most common dating tendencies, shares strategies behind making the best decisions, explains why ‘the spark’ may be B.S., and even offers how-to advice for creating a powerful dating profile. Even if you’re not dating, you will learn techniques that will strengthen all your relationships.For even more sex advice, tips, and tricks visit sexwithemily.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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A great relationship is the culmination of good decisions.
Make good decisions.
You propel yourself into a great relationship.
Make bad decisions and you repeat the same bad patterns over and over.
Okay, so it's not that I'm totally screwed by my history.
It's not that I'll never find love.
It's that I've been making certain choices and if I can understand why and then make different
choices in the future, I can wind up on a different path.
Look into his eyes.
They're the eyes of a man obsessed by sex.
Eyes that block our sacred institutions.
Betrubize they call them in a fight on days.
You're listening to Sex with Emily.
I'm Dr. Emily, and I'm here to help you prioritize
your pleasure and liberate the conversation around sex.
Today, my guest is Logan Yuri, the author of How to Not Dialone
and Director of Relationship Science at Hinge, joins me
to share her best tips for
all things dating.
She uses her psychology and behavioral science background at Harvard and Google as a
current day dating coach.
We discussed the science of decision making and how it impacts your dating behavior.
This gets good, you guys.
Logan provides practical tips for avoiding dating blind spots, recognizing the
perils of unrealistic expectations, sound familiar, and learning the algorithms to live
by for finding a satisfying relationship. We discuss how deal-breakers may be an excuse
for avoiding connection, how attachment styles affect our dating outcomes, the paradox of
choice in the dating world, and how to get out of the
checklist mindset. She also breaks down the most common dating tendencies, hey how you maximizers
out there, share strategies behind making the best decisions, explains why the Spark may be BS,
and even offers how to advise for creating a powerful dating profile. Even if you're not dating
right now, you're going gonna find a lot of fascinating tips
that you can use in your day-to-day life,
in your professional life, your personal relationships.
I just love this book.
I've already bought it for so many friends,
so help you enjoy it.
All right, intentions with Emily for each episode
join me in setting an intention.
I do it, I encourage you to do the same.
So what do you wanna get out of this episode?
Well, my intention is to help you understand your dating blind spots so you can find a relationship that works for you.
Oh, I have an announcement. I'm doing a live virtual podcast on April 15th at 6 o'clock Pacific and you're all invited.
It's going to be a blast. I couldn't wait to tell you. So we all get to be together, and I can answer your questions live during the show.
So we'll be giving the audience a chance to determine what I talk about and even pull
a few people up to ask me some questions.
It's a really fun interactive show.
It's $10 to be the live podcast experience or pay $100 and get a one-on-one live meet-and-greet
with me. You can ask me anything.
To find out more information, go to looptlive.com.
That's L-O-O-P-E-D-L-I-V-E-D.com.
Just go to their upcoming experiences and scroll down.
I'll see you all there.
All right, enjoy the show. [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUT [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUT [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUT Your book, How to Not Dialome, the surprising science that will help you find love.
So you send the book to me and I came into my room last week and my sister was here and
she opened up and she put it on my bed and it was a Friday and my dog was on my bed
and then your book, how not to say, I'm like, Gab, are you trying to tell me something
for the weekend?
Like what?
I think that your book is a game changer.
Very nice.
You have so many practical tools and tips and it gives so much clarity.
Not even if you're in a relationship, you can learn so much because you are applying behavioral
science to dating, which is just brilliant.
So tell us about yourself first before I just devour your book here.
Yeah, well, thank you so much for the kind words.
I'm really glad you loved it.
Yeah, I've always had these two interests.
So on one hand, psychology and the science of decision-making
on the other hand, dating, sex and relationships.
And so for a long time,
I've been trying to figure out ways to combine the two.
And I've done that through matchmaking.
I've done that through onemaking, I've done that through
one-on-one dating coaching. Now I work at hinge and I do it by making changes to the app,
but I'm just so excited that I was able to do it through the medium of my book. And the whole
idea of the book is that it breaks down a great relationship into a series of decisions.
And the perspective of the book is that a great relationship
is the culmination of good decisions.
And make good decisions.
You propel yourself into a great relationship.
Make bad decisions and you repeat the same bad patterns
over and over and you wind up in no relationship
or in a not so great relationship.
And so I think it's really empowering for people
to understand, okay, so it's not that I'm totally screwed
by my history, it's not that I'll never find love,
it's that I've been making certain choices,
and if I can understand why,
and then make different choices in the future,
I can wind up on a different path.
It's exactly what it is.
I always say that dating is a skill set.
Dating is something that you need to practice.
It's like maybe you were a great data, you thought you were a great data years ago,
and then you haven't in a while.
What I love is that there's so much clarity in this that it's not that you have bad luck.
Maybe you are picking the wrong people, but you explain how to hack that.
You no longer are making those mistakes.
Tell me about what you label as a different kinds of
dateers, the three kinds of data.
Then we could start there.
You guys look for yourself in these descriptions.
Yeah. Yeah.
So that's really one of my favorite parts of the book.
Is this framework called the three dating tendencies.
And the story there is that as a dating coach, I had all these
different people coming to my office, showing up on Zoom.
And I noticed they're from
all different walks of life, but they seem to suffer from the same set of dating blind
spots.
So those are patterns of behavior, ways of thinking that are holding them back from finding
love, but that they can't identify in their own.
And so I categorize them into this thing called the three dating tendencies.
And each one suffers from unrealistic expectations.
And so first you have the romantic size.
I love this.
Okay.
Yay.
And the romantic size there is somebody who has unrealistic expectations of relationships.
So this is that friend of yours or maybe this is you who says, I love love.
I believe in a soulmate.
There's one person out there for me.
I don't want to use the dating apps.
They're not romantic.
And they're waiting for the meet queue.
They're waiting to go to the farmer's market and reach for the tomato at the same time as
the guy, and then suddenly they fall into happily ever after.
And the issue here is that the romanticizer thinks that once you're with the right person
a relationship's going to be effortless, and that's just not true.
Relationships require work, and even the best relationships
do require that constant effort and attention.
The second type is the maximizer.
And I'm a maximizer.
Many of the clients I work with are maximizers.
And these are people who have unrealistic expectations
of their partners.
And this is the one who says, I like my girlfriend,
but could I be 5% happier with somebody else? Or I like my girlfriend, but could I be 5% happier
with somebody else or my boyfriend's ambitious, but could I be someone with someone who's
5% hotter or 5% more interesting? And it's always what else is out there? How can I do
better? And they're constantly looking for the next best thing. And the thing about
the maximizer is they feel like I can research my way to the right answer. If only I can
see every possible option,
then I can make the perfect choice.
And so the issue with the maximizer,
as I'm sure you know, is that you can't date everyone.
You can't turn over every leaf.
At a certain point, you have to say,
this person is great, I'm going to commit to them,
and I'm going to make it work.
And it's not about finding the perfect person,
and then it's easy.
It's about finding somebody great, investing in them, and then building that relationship.
And then the last one is the hesitator.
And I have to tell you, hesitators are really having a hard time during the pandemic because
hesitators are the ones who say, well, the thing about the hesitators, they have unrealistic
expectations of themselves.
So there's the ones who say, I'll be ready to date when I lose 10 pounds.
I'll be ready to date when I have a more impressive job title.
And with the pandemic, that's given them a lot of excuses not to date.
And so for the hesitator, they think, I'm just, I'm not lovable yet.
I need to make all these changes to myself.
And then I'll be ready for somebody to love me, but they really underestimate two things.
And those are one, dating is a skill, and you need to get out there and get better at
it.
And if you're not dating, you're not getting better at dating.
And two, you need to figure out what type of person you want to be with.
And if you're just sitting at home, trying to, you know, improve yourself, but not actually
dating, then you're not figuring out what type of person makes you happy.
And so the advice really for the hesator is to don't wait date.
It's just to get out there, you'll make some mistakes.
You're imperfect.
The person that you're going to wind up with will be imperfect.
And don't sit around waiting to feel 100% ready because there's no such thing.
It's so true.
It's like you think about we get better relationships by being in relation to someone else.
You just really, you're not going to just by studying dating or studying sex. You got to get out there
of practice. That's how you learn. Did you find anything split by gender that there was more
men who were more likely to be maximizers or more women or romanticizers?
Yeah, it's an interesting question. And honestly, as I've been doing more
interviews for my book, one thing that's come up a few times that I actually feel really proud of is
I've done interviews with a bunch of young women in their 20s who are like, I liked your book because
you didn't say to women, pretend to be something you're not, play games, pull back, don't have sex
until this date. And they were like, I feel like every single piece of advice in your book is for everyone.
It's not very gendered.
And I was like, I didn't even realize that,
but that's how I feel.
A lot of this stuff is universal.
It's like, be a good person.
Have integrity.
Find somebody who's reliable.
Don't get distracted by the spark.
Give somebody a chance.
And I don't think that those gender rules are relevant.
Obviously, there are some differences.
And in the book, I talk about fertility and men can have kids way older and there are some things there that are
frustrating, but mostly I feel like men and women benefit from the same advice, which is be a good
person and know yourself and find somebody who's a good person who knows themselves. Exactly, Logan.
What I've found now after so many years of doing this is that it's really not about gender. Yeah. You're sleeping with your gender identity. It's behavior.
Yeah. I mean, I can say, I think in general, women probably have a slight more tendency to be
romanticizers and women are more likely to consume Disney movies and Disney princess stories in
romcoms. And so there is more of a story in women's head around the meat cute and the narrative and what am I going to tell my friends. And then I would
say men maybe tend to be maximizers a bit more, more focused on the research,
more focused on the quote unquote objective right decision. But in general,
the patterns that I described in the book are about human behavior versus gendered behavior.
I love the more we get away from that, we're all gonna really benefit
in the decisions we make in our life.
And so, let's talk about the process of,
because there was so much that struck me here,
of knowing when it's time,
like knowing when you found the person,
and I love that you actually have dad on,
this was at 37% rule.
Oh yeah, that's so great.
For anything, that's what I'm saying,
this is so applicable.
Let's talk about that.
How do you know when you're done?
Because I remember once, and I've always been someone
who wasn't really focused ironically,
focused on relationships or marriage.
It just wasn't my focus, but my mom,
I remember one time saying, I was like 30.
I said, mom, I just need to get out there
and date a little bit because I'm definitely a maximizer
and then my attachment style is like avoid it.
And I was like, I'm just gonna go out there and date.
And she's like, how much longer do you need to date?
And then she's like, you've already dated.
I'm like, I know, but it was about my own behavior.
So let's talk about how you know,
how you pretty much know when you've met the person
that you should maybe commit to.
Yeah, absolutely.
And so I do think many people are maximizers.
I think our culture creates really a feeling of maximizers because
I talk about this in the book, right? Before somebody goes on a trip, they're going to read every
Airbnb review, they're going to look at TripAdvisor, they're going to look on Yelp, and it's this feeling
of the right answer is out there. I just have to research my way through it, and people crave
this sense of certainty, and they feel like, you know, the objective right answer is only one
Google search away. But that's just not the case in dating and relationships. You can't date
all people. You don't know all possible outcomes. There is a point at which committing to somebody
is a leap of faith. And so the 37% role which I'd love to talk your listeners through is basically
something that I share with maximizers. And so maximizers are like, well, I've been dating my boyfriend for this many years and he
wants to get married, but I'm just not sure because I don't know what else is out there.
What I like to talk to them about is this concept called the secretary problem.
This is a sort of a mathematical riddle.
Here's how it goes.
Imagine that you're hiring a secretary and you know you have 100 possible candidates. You have to
interview them one at a time and each time after you go through a candidate, you
say yes or no. And so at what point do you choose your candidate? So let's say you
choose too early on, you don't know what else was out there. If you choose to
late, what if all the good candidates came before and there's nobody
good left. And so what they have found is that this is what you should do. This is the mathematically
correct solution. You talk to the first 37 people and after that you say who was the single best
person among that group. That person is now your benchmark. The next time that you find somebody who's as good or better than that person, you hire
them on the spot.
And so with dating, and this is an idea from the book Algorithms to Live By, they say,
well, who knows how many people you're going to date.
Can't come up with that number, but let's just say for arguments sake, you're going to
date from age 18 to 40.
Well, what's 37% into that age range?
It's 26.1.
So when you're around 26 years old,
you've already dated 37% of the people,
come up with the benchmark from that first 37%
and commit to the next person who you like
as much or more than that first group.
And when I say this to people,
they usually freak out and they say,
what have I'm way past 26?
What are you saying to me?
Am I behind?
And I'm like, you're not behind, but you've likely already dated somebody who'd make a great
partner.
The answer is not to keep researching.
It's to figure out who was the best person you dated in those years.
And now the next time you find someone who you like, realize how great they are, commit
to them and build that relationship versus letting all these great people go because you always have one foot out the door wondering what else is out there.
I mean, that is just so many people that we can, I know about and I've been there too.
I've been like, oh, what else is out there?
I'm not ready.
So let's talk about this though.
So when you said that, I can just hear everybody thinking, so today you mean I have to go back to my ex? Does that mean that I miss the best person? And like, how do
we get people? Yeah. You have so much great advice about how do we just get over the
exes already? How do we just get about? Oh, yeah. That's a great distinction, because
you're right. If somebody heard that they could say, do I go back to my ex? And no, because
if you think about that secretary problem, you don't go back and take the best person
from the 37%.
You say, this is the best that's out there.
And this gives me a sense of what to look for.
But in general, I feel very strongly that people should shut the door on their exes.
And people think, I'll keep my ex around.
I'll stay in touch with them.
It's no harm.
You know, they distract me and they help me.
And you know, I'll find somebody else.
People don't realize that making irreversible decisions actually makes us much happier than
making reversible ones.
So shutting the door in the acts, creating space for somebody new to come into your life.
That's often how people get into relationships because they don't realize how much mental
space their ex is taking up in their brain. Exactly it. And I love these things too in the book. Delete them. Get rid of it, unfollow them,
even unfollow on Venmo. Unfollow everywhere. And then I love you guys after, I just love how you
write the books. You're like, delete is number and then they point six. You're like delete it,
really delete it. Because I know you have it hidden. I know you have it hidden in your back pocket
somewhere. Like delete it, delete it.
Because it's so true, we just need that clean slate.
And I always say, I am really good friends with a lot of my exes
like my dearest friends, but it wasn't right away.
It was like a year after no talking or six months.
And we moved on and then we could go back to it.
That's not for everybody.
But if you're still hanging onto that kernel of the ex,
it really is holding you back.
It really is statistically speaking, but also emotionally, it's hard to get out there if
you're still bogged down by the X.
So decision making is really hard for me, and not just in dating, but I spent a lot of
time painstakingly going over things and researching, and the right decision, the wrong decision.
And I always know that you've got to take the decision,
you've got to commit to decision,
and you talk about how we're so worried about making
the objectively right decision or something,
but that doesn't really exist.
It's more about feeling good about your decision,
which is something we could all do.
But I know that I'm someone who has buyers remorse,
I regret things, so why did I get that jacket,
or why did I buy this thing?
And could I return it?
Yeah. And so can we talk about that whole process of how we can feel better about our
decisions in love and in life? Yeah, absolutely. And so one of my favorite frameworks that I
discuss in the book, and this is by a sociologist named Herbert Simon, is maximizers and
satisfiacers. And so we talked about maximizers. They are always trying to make the objective
right decision. They want to do all of the research. They are always trying to make the objective right decision.
They want to do all of the research.
They want to see the complete set and then choose the best among it.
The opposite is a satis-ficer.
So what a satis-ficer does is they have high,
they have expectations and they can be really high.
They can have high standards.
But when they find someone or something that satisfies those standards,
they commit to it.
And so in the book, I give an example of a maximizer who's buying an espresso machine,
and they read all the reviews on Amazon.
They go to Wirecutter.
They find that the number one possible espresso machine is the Breville.
And they order the Breville and they sit there and they drink their first cup of coffee
and they say, it's pretty good, but should I have gotten this other one because this tastes a tiny bit bitter
and they're always doubting it. They're always saying, what else could I have done?
And the satisfies are says, okay, Nespresso is a pretty good brand. I'll go to the Nespresso store
in my neighborhood. I'll buy a machine and they get home and they're satisfied
with the Nespresso machine and they feel good about their decision. And so in the end,
who's better off? The person who got the quote unquote best espresso machine and they feel good about their decision. And so in the end, who's better off the person who got the quote unquote best espresso
machine that wire cutter recommends or the person who's sitting there satisfied with
their purchase.
Right.
And that's why I really have tried since since learning this and writing the book to become
more of a satisfacer because what matters is how you feel about your decision.
It doesn't matter if you make the best possible decision.
It's do you feel satisfied and do you feel confident in what you've chosen?
I'm going to take a quick break, but when we come back,
I ask Logan how she became a satisfacer.
So how did you, what was your journey of becoming? Because I decided that I want to become a satisfy certain.
Yeah.
So the first thing was really just understanding that
satisfycers are happier and so that it was something desirable.
Because I think a lot of times when people hear, oh, you want me to become a satisfycer,
it's like, you want me to settle, you want me to give up, you want me to drop my high expectations. This is what makes me a killer. This is what
makes me ambitious. You know, why do you want me to lose my edge? But it doesn't have
to do with that. It has to do with feeling less doubt and feeling more confident in your
decisions. And so one example of becoming a satisfacer is last year I bought a car for the first time.
And my husband and I decided on a Saturday that we were going to buy a car. Saturday night we signed up for guyco auto insurance because that was, you know,
we've been seeing the ads for years. Sunday we went to car max. We tried a bunch of
different cars, didn't like any of them. Monday we went to the Toyota dealership. And then
there was one car sort of that was a hybrid
in our price range that we liked and we bought that car and so we basically bought the biggest
purchase of our life so far in 48 hours and we feel great about it. We didn't feel like we had
to spend months suing research. We didn't feel like we had to weigh every single different used Toyota hybrid against each other.
We said, what matters to us are these things.
This car satisfies those things and we're going to buy it.
And we have been super happy with the car ever since.
And so part of it is actually just decreasing the amount
of time that you give yourself to make a decision.
So yeah, so a common one is people say,
oh, I have to find the
perfect flight. And I spend weeks researching flights and could it be 20% cheaper if I fly
into this airport? But it's like, is it really worth weeks of time to try to save, you know,
some a few dollars and maybe a few hours on the layover? No. So say to yourself, I'm going to give
myself two hours to make this decision. And then at the end of it, I'm going to make the best decision I can with the information
that I know.
Because you talk also about the importance of deadlines with these things too, that when
you have a deadline, you're more likely to just make the decision than you are. If you're
like, well, take your time, make a decision, especially if you're a procrastinator.
Oh, I love deadlines. When I think about the fact that I was able to write a book, it all had to do with deadlines because I'm
Extremely extroverted. I love to work with other people working alone is hard for me
And so writing a book is a very solo process. I'm also a procrastinator like many of us
And so I was like how can I make this solo endeavor more social?
And so what I did was I emailed a bunch of friends
and I said, would you be willing to host a book dinner for me?
I'll give you some money for the food.
You invite five people, I invite five people,
and then a few days before the dinner,
I'm gonna send you two chapters
and at the dinner we'll discuss the chapters.
And so what that did was it created accountability for me.
I had to send in the chapters before the dinner.
People were coming to help me.
I wanted to hit the deadline.
And instead of writing the book in a fury a month before the due date, I was actually able
to write the book consistently throughout the year because of these dinners.
And so I absolutely apply the lessons from behavioral science, the things I talk in the book
about how to overcome bad habits. I apply that to my own bad habits, especially when it came to writing the book.
Oh yeah. Well you did a great job with it, so it's really about accountability.
I know you're also a dating advisor for hinge. Director of Relationship Science.
People have these notions about dating apps. Oh, it's not organic or it's just for hookups
It's kind of like people say to me. Oh, well, I really want to lose weight
They're like well, I've done everything and I'm like well, have you looked at your nutrition?
Like no, I haven't done that but I work out every day
It's like you have to look at everything. No, I'm still eating Cheetos for lunch
I believe that getting into the apps in a smart way and in a way that you are prepared
with information and you just try it out, I think it's an important part of if you really
want to not dial on or you want to meet someone. So can you talk about what's going out with
the apps right now in some of the best practices?
Yeah, absolutely. And so I come at this from a couple different ways. So as a dating
coach, I was working with people one on one. And so somebody would come down and they would show me their profile and I would
give them feedback on their pictures or I would watch them swipe and I would say, why
did you say to know, know to that guy and the woman would say, well, he works at a big tech
company and I don't like anyone who works in tech. And I would just see the assumptions
that people made. I would see how people rushed through their messages. And I saw a lot
of the mistakes that people were making on apps.
I also was aware of some of my clients, especially some of my black female clients,
how much trouble they were having on the apps.
And so I really saw a lot of the ways that dating apps were turning us from relation shippers,
people looking for relationships into relation shoppers,
people who are treating a potential partner like a potential purchase.
And so I had a lot of skepticism of dating apps. Then I went to interview Justin MacLeod, who is the CEO of Hinge for my book.
And I was basically like, your tagline is designed to be deleted. And I just don't believe that.
What company that spends so much money trying to attract new customers,
what company is trying to get those people to delete their app?
And he was like, I promise you, this is real.
Ever since we changed our focus to be on relationships and deleting the app,
we've exploded.
And that's because even if you lose a customer because they got into relationship,
well, they're going to tell five of their friends,
hinges where you go to find that relationship. and they've been doing really well ever since.
And so that's why I decided to join them, because I was like, oh, this is the app that is
actually helping people not turn it into a game, not turn it into just a hook up, but actually,
it's where you go when you want to find someone. And so I do see a lot of flaws with the apps. I do
think that it makes people more superficial.
It makes people more focused on looks, height, income, age.
It really emphasizes those things.
But what we know is that meeting online
is the number one way that people
are getting into relationships these days.
And that's been true for the last few years.
That's especially true during the pandemic.
When you can't meet somebody out and about, you're not going to your cousin's wedding, you're not bumping into somebody at
a bar. And so the dating apps have become even more important because right now it's basically
the only safe way to meet somebody. And so when you're thinking about being on the apps,
here are a few tips. One is your profile really matters. This is your only chance to make a great
first impression. Sometimes people just rush through the process of making their profile
because they're like, all right, I'm going to do it. I downloaded the app. All right,
my six latest photos. This is going to be my profile. But no, you really want to spend
time having great photos that show difference sides of yourself that are flattering, that
are accurate. The other thing is you're dating up profiles, basically, you're opening line.
It's what people respond to.
And so you want to put stuff on there that is specific, that is unique to you.
And so instead of saying, I like to cook, you could say every Sunday night, I make my Italian
grandmother's marinara sauce.
And then somebody can engage with you on Italy, on your grandma, on pasta, things like that.
So you really want to be specific, you want to avoid cliches.
I love the office, everybody loves the office.
I like traveling, everybody loves traveling.
And you really want to stand out, be specific, and create a lot of bait that somebody can
respond to and engage with you on it, so you can have a great conversation.
So good.
Is there anything just about photos?
Like certain photos you should include, not include?
Yeah, I do include some stuff about that in my book, but I also have done even more updated
research since being at hand.
Okay.
And so I'll talk about some of that updated research.
And so one of them is that this is not going to sound mind blowing, but you'd be surprised
how many people get this wrong.
And so your first photo should be a clear photo of your face, a headshot, something where
we can see you.
No filters, no sunglasses, no group photo where we can't tell who you are.
You know, the last thing you want is that bridesmaid photo where you're like, which
one of the women in sage green are you?
You know, at that point, who cares?
Exactly. Yeah, give me a break.
You want to have at least one photo that shows your full body.
That's something that people are looking for.
One where you're doing an activity you love is really helpful.
People love to see you in action.
I think people often look the most beautiful when they're presenting, when they're on stage,
when they're hiking, when they're really in the moment of their favorite activity.
And then you do want a group photo of some kind, whether it's with your family or with some friends,
because that shows people that you have an active social life.
They have a life.
Yeah, then you have a life.
And then things to avoid are selfies, mirror selfies, gym selfies, filters, sunglasses, smoking photos. Those are things that turn people
off and just don't lead to connection. And so really you want to think about the fact
that you're showing somebody different size of yourself. If you're really silly, then
show me at least one photo where you're wearing a goofy Halloween costume. Or if you're really
passionate about teaching, then show us a photo of you leading
a workshop because this is your chance to say this is who I am.
So this is this is really helpful. The other things that we're doing wrong on the apps
for example, well I know that you swiped left on your husband.
Yeah. So what was that about? Because you were not where you're at now. You were like,
oh he's not right for me. So you've lived you've lived. Oh my goodness. Yeah. Absolutely. And I really
try to be as open and self-deprecating in the book around, you know, my bad habits, my
anxious attachment style, my habit of chasing after people who weren't interested in me.
You know, I tell the story in the book of Burning Man Brian, the guy who, you know, I had
a Burning Man Brian, right? And it's really fun. Oh my God, I used to be
a burning man for years. I had a million burning man Brian. So maybe I was like
a burning man Brian too. Like I was always the one I have. I've been I've been
at all. But, but don't tell the story and we'll get into attachment
cells. Sure. I mean, it's yeah, yeah, exactly. It's all combined. And so my my
now husband and I we met in college when we were in 19, we had one
lunch together. We know this because we're a Facebook friends. Around seven years after
that, I saw him on Tinder. I remember exactly where I was. And I just said, he's not smiling,
he's wearing a backwards cap. He just kind of looks like a not happy bro, not for me.
And I just swiped left. Then I ended up having this lunch at Google
where we both worked, and I organized this alumni lunch, and he came, and I was talking
about how I was trying to learn the statistics programming language, and he said, I just
dropped out of a math PhD. Obviously, you know, we're very nerdy, and he said, I'll tutor
you in it. And so he started tutoring me in this language called R. But even though I was
drawn to him and I felt like there was a connection, I immediately wrote him off because of two things
he said. He said, I don't like people who go to Burning Man and I don't like international travel.
Meanwhile, I had gone to Burning Man for the, you know, fourth or fifth time and I had this amazing
whirlwind romance with this hot guy who looked
like Keanu Reeves, better looking younger brother.
And we just had this incredible week together.
And I was so sure that when we got back to San Francisco where we both lived that it
would turn into something.
And he wasn't interested.
I can say that now.
But at the time, you know, sometimes he was interested, sometimes he was not.
We would go to dinner. Would he text me? Would he not? And at the time, I was just so addicted
to the chase. I was like, anybody who's not interested in me must be better than me.
And I'm going to convince him to fall in love with me. And look, I'm going to add value
to your life. And I'm going to coach you on your career. And I'm going to buy you the
book, what color is your parachute? And I had all these ideas of how I was going to convince
him to love me. Anyway, it did not work because he wasn't interested and you can't force
somebody to love you. And so there was a really low point where he was making me so miserable
and I just said, enough is enough and I hired a dating coach. And when I hired her, we did
a bunch of exercises, but one of the exercises was how do you want your partner to make you feel?
And I wanted my partner to make me feel secured,
desirable, attractive, loved.
He didn't make me feel any of these things, this burning man brine.
He made me feel like I was always walking on eggshells and I never knew what would happen.
But I was like, wow, somebody in my life does make me feel this way.
This guy from work, this guy's Scott.
And so we went from the tutoring to talking on the phone
more to having lunch at work once a week,
to having lunch at work almost every day.
And eventually I just said, hey, I don't have plans
on Friday night, you should ask me out.
And it's almost the six year anniversary of that first date.
And we were together for a while.
We got married last summer.
And it's just been incredible because not only was that dating
coach able to help me see that Burning Man Bryan made me feel bad.
And I wanted to be with somebody who made me feel a different way.
But also, Scott and I have been to Burning Man multiple times.
We've gone on loss of international trips, right?
Those reasons that I wrote him off,
not only are those not that important of things
in the first place,
but people also change sometimes.
Like sometimes people just need to be exposed
to different more alternative ways of living
and then they open up to it.
And so, I think about who Scott was when we first met,
and now we live in a commune with 12 other people, right?
And I've read your New York Times,
because I was flown first.
I've so much to say about that too,
and your husband, your story that you wound up,
I mean, I lived in San Francisco for 20 years.
So I'm in San Francisco, you know it,
just so you know, like I feel like I get your vibe.
No, but going back to this,
think about how he would have been discarded
because they just say, like maybe he's always just walk-d to this, think about how he would've been discarded because he can just say,
like maybe he's always just walk-drabbing,
like, oh, birdie man, people.
We all have opinions like that that we say.
Like, I didn't really mean that,
but people are hanging on to it.
They listen, so what you're talking about
is kind of a slow burn, a slow build with him.
Like, you got to spend time with him.
It wasn't the, you know, we have to get into your,
you know, fuck the spark.
Like, I love fuck the spark. Hashtag, do the hashtag,, you know, fuck the spark. Like, yeah, I love fuck the spark. I do have to have fucked the spark. Oh, yeah. Fuck the spark is my, my favorite
thing to, to chant. Yeah. My husband is absolutely the definition of a slow burn. And so the
idea is that when people talk to me about dates, sometimes they say, I met up with her,
she was great. We had a really good conversation, good date, not going
to see her again.
What are you talking about?
Oh, I just didn't feel the spark.
And so the spark has become this all-encompassing term to me, and I didn't feel that pang of instant
chemistry, I didn't feel the fireworks, and people let so many amazing potential partners
go because they have expectations of what a first date is supposed to feel like.
But it's just not true.
There's a lot of myths around the spark, right?
You think that the spark can't grow while we know that that's not true, right?
I knew my husband for eight years before we started dating and the spark absolutely grew
as I got to know him as I saw the different sides of him.
People think if I feel the spark must be a good thing.
Also not true.
Some people are just really sparky. Emily, you might be very sparky. You might give a
lot of people the feeling of the spark. And then they're, yeah, and then they're all like,
oh my god, Emily, we have a connection and you may have a connection, but it's actually
more, you give a lot of people that feeling versus is it a part of the dynamic? And so
for the average person is understanding that that person
might be very charismatic or attractive.
And they give a lot of people the spark.
It doesn't mean that the two of you are meant to be,
which is what I learned with Burning Man Bryan.
He was super sparky.
He gave lots of girls that Burning Man a spark,
but I got very confused.
I thought it was this magical thing just for us.
And then the last one is if we have the spark, then it must be meant to be.
And that's just not true.
A lot of divorce couples had the spark.
And it feels really good, but it doesn't necessarily mean that the relationship is viable.
And so the antidote to this idea of the spark is the slow burn.
And that's understanding that many of the best people in life, the best people to hire,
the best people to be friends with, the best roommates, the best romantic partners. Take time to open
up, take time to show you who you are. And Scott, my husband is absolutely one of those people. He
doesn't care what people think of him. He hasn't been on social media in four years. He's just not
obsessed with making a great first impression.
He's much more just living his life doing what he thinks he should do. And so part of that means
he's not very sparky, but he's an incredible partner. And once I could kind of unpeel,
once I could sort of peel the layers of the onion and see what was underneath, I realized what
a good person he was. And so people out there, you know, the spark feels great.
I totally get it.
But when you're thinking about who to be with,
you wanna be with that slow burn person,
who's reliable, who's dependable,
who's gonna be there with you for the good and the bad,
because that spark fades and then what do you have left?
Your sexual connection is gonna fade,
it's something you need to prioritize and work on,
but that initial spark of falling in love
and all those things,
that is going to change over time.
It absolutely is.
So people are protesting,
oh, but I tried it, I tried it,
I went out with this person a few times.
We're not saying that everybody,
you're going to be able to turn a relationship to,
but I guess what we're saying is,
and what you advocate for in the book
is just go on the second date,
which is something that I totally believe in.
We don't know.
And that was horrible.
And they were like toxic and abusive and said things that made you feel awful.
And if you're not sure, I've found that more so in my life, the relationships that have
worked for me and the friendships are slow burns.
They're just over time.
100%.
I'm just thinking about it sort of from a mathematical perspective.
It's like instead of going on a hundred first dates and writing each of those people off, you know, gone 51st dates
and then 52nd dates and you're much more likely to have one of those turn into something
because somebody's going to thaw out, somebody's going to show you who they are, somebody
is going to open up a little bit more. And ever since my book came out, I'm getting all
these emails that say,
I married a slow burn. I went on a date with a guy. I didn't really like him. I told my mom about him. My mom was like, he sounds great. Give another chance. And now we're married. And
even one of the girls who works with me, it's been so cool just to see her start giving people
more second chances. And I'm like, you are changing. You are changing
your bad behavior. This guy who you think is boring, he's actually very secure. And you're
just not used to that. But this is the guy who you want to choose.
Yeah. And that leads right into attachment styles, which I want to ask you about. We'll
be right back after this quick word from our sponsors. Stick around to find out which
attachment style you have and what that can tell you about your relationships.
A lot of us, you know, maybe this resonates dating somebody who's not available and
who you're constantly into the chase, you're into the drama of the relationship and we
mistake that for love, we mistake that for so.
And I love that you left the attachment cells in the book.
I know you said somewhere like you weren't gonna talk
about it in the book, I think it's so important.
It's so important.
Yeah, it's like the way you describe attachment cells,
I think is really gonna be helpful for everyone.
Yeah, and as you alluded to,
my publisher was like,
why do you have to keep this chapter in here?
Somebody can go read the book attached.
I was like, because it matters so much,
because it changed my life.
It changed my sister's life.
It changed my clients life.
It is one of the major keys that helps unlock
the relationship you want to be in.
And so you have to know about attachment styles.
Also for me, as a relationship scientist,
this is one of the best researched aspects of the whole field.
This is the real deal.
This is, it started. It started with developmental
psychology, with babies and their primary caregivers. It applies to your grown-up romantic relationships.
This is truly backed by rigorous research. The idea is that people have different ways
of being attached. One of them is called anxiously attached. This is somebody who has a fear
of abandonment. They constantly want to reach out for connection and they want
to be reassured that things are great. This is the friend who texts you a bunch of times
who says, you know, did you land, why didn't you texted me? Did you get to the concert
where are you right? They're always afraid that somebody is going to pull away. And
so they're constantly reaching out to connect. And they can do this thing called protest behavior,
which is send somebody 30 texts, get angry at them,
and then turn their phone off,
and they can go into this red zone
where they're really just in fight or flight mode,
and they are just acting in this way
where they're not really thinking, they're just reacting.
Another type is somebody who's avoidant attached.
This is the person who has a fear of being smothered.
They think, if I get into relationship with somebody,
they're gonna take up so much space,
I'm gonna lose my independence.
And this is the friend who says, she's smothering me.
I need to pull away, I need to focus on work,
or maybe they even come up with something like,
oh, I'm gonna break up with her
because she pronounced the word picture, picture.
But who cares how you pronounce the word picture?
If that's an excuse you're using to pull away.
And so the avoidant person feels like relationships are when they get smothered and they constantly
have to defend their space.
And then the third kind is somebody who's securely attached.
And this is somebody who's sort of the relationship hero.
They are comfortable with intimacy, but they're comfortable with independence.
And so what ends up happening is that even though 50% of the population is secure,
those people get snatched up into relationships and they stay in them.
And so what you have out there, what you have on the dating apps is anxious people,
dating avoidant people. And so they reinforce each other's patterns. This is the anxious avoidant
loop, right? And so this is what happened with Burning Man Bryan. It's a quintessential story.
I am anxiously attached. And I think when I date somebody, they pull away and I chase after them.
And he thinks when I date somebody, they smother me and so I need to gain my own space. And so we're
dating each other, reinforcing each other's worst bad habits, and we're really hurting each other
in ourselves. But when you date somebody secure, which is what happened to me with Scott,
new patterns emerge.
And I tell the story in the book of how Scott did something
to bother me, I can't even remember,
probably something silly.
And I started texting him crazy angry things.
How could you do this?
What's going on?
Dada, da, da, da.
And I was like, I know it'll happen.
We'll get into a fight.
We'll text all these things.
And that's what happens.
And instead, he wrote back and said, sounds like this is something that we should discuss
in person.
And he wasn't gaslighting me, he wasn't saying this isn't real, he said, I can tell you're
upset and this is a conversation for in person.
And that was a critical moment because he broke my pattern, something different happened.
And instead of going down that path,
a new pattern emerged.
And so I have learned so much about how to be in relationships,
how to be secure, how to not get into that anxious attachment
red zone by being with somebody who is secure.
And so we can't all find secure partners,
but we can work on knowing our attachment style,
understanding our triggers, and doing our
best to actually stop ourselves from these really harmful patterns before they start.
It's great, but what would be a tip for avoidant attached people in dating?
I think one of the big things is just understanding your pattern. When you hear yourself saying,
this quality of hers is so annoying, and I just think I'm ready for something else. Say,
I know why I'm doing that.
I'm doing that to make an excuse to pull away.
And does that thing really matter?
Is that a pet peeve or is that a deal breaker?
And just understanding that although your brain may be focusing on one thing and you may
be telling yourself this isn't the right person, what actually might be going on is that
you're afraid of getting close to somebody.
So part one is just being aware of that.
And I think part two is understanding that being with a secure partner is a really great
thing.
And I have a lot of friends, especially male friends who are avoidant and they got into that anxious
attached loop.
And the only women they dated were women who would put time on their calendar and insist
on being with them and this and that.
And I said, you need to actually go after what you want and you need to figure out who you are and what you're looking for.
And actually, for avoided people being more proactive, helps them feel more in control and helps them feel more satisfied with their matches.
Right, exactly. And I guess two avoided people aren't necessarily attracted to each other and two anxious people probably wouldn't work either, right?
So it's sort of a, yeah, it doesn't work.
And then, but you can't change what I love is it takes work.
Just like everything takes work.
If you want to just get on a dating app or you want to just start dating, I mean, it's
all takes a little bit of work.
And I love that you have such great tips in here about to actually change your behavior.
You can recognize yourself in this book in so many places and start to make the change.
And I know you also work with people.
You also a dating coach.
So what are you seeing right now since the pandemic?
Is there anything with dating that you've noticed change?
Yeah, I mean, this is why working at Hinge has actually just been so lucky because my first
week at Hinge was basically the week that the world shuts down last year. And so all of my work there has been done in the shadow of the pandemic. And so I've done a
ton of research into video dating. How are people dating right now? And so I'll share a couple
of the big findings. And so obviously there's a lot of negatives, right? It's harder to meet up
in person. It takes a lot more work. You're not meeting people out and about,
but that being said, there have been some really cool
silver linings.
And so one of them is that people spent,
especially the first few months of the pandemic alone,
and thinking, this doesn't feel good,
and I want to make a change.
And it was that necessary jolt to the system
that people need in order to change their behavior.
Because we have habits, we stay on the same path, and it actually takes something pretty
dramatic to get us to change behavior.
And the pandemic was such a such a jolt to the system.
And so a lot of people spent time saying, I've been prioritizing my hobbies, I've been prioritizing
my friends, I've been prioritizing work, I don't want to die alone.
And I'm going to put more emphasis into dating.
People became more intentional.
People told us that they've broken bad dating habits.
They've stopped chasing after people
who aren't interested in them.
They've started being more upfront
about what they're looking for.
And people just don't want to waste time.
They really want to find someone.
And so it's been great to see that increased intentionality
in the community.
We saw it hinge at 27% decrease in ghosting.
Now it's fascinating.
That is fascinating.
Yeah.
Because, yeah, ghosting is a huge problem.
It makes people feel really bad.
It's so hurtful.
But if people are more empathetic, more kind, more intentional about who they're matching
with, then they're going to ghost each other less. And so that was really cool.
The slowing down, yeah.
Yeah, a couple more things, you know, huge rise in video dating. I mean, I'm sure you've
talked to lots of the people about, you know, digital get downs and, you know, sexy
things over video, but that was more stuff that couples did. It wasn't a huge part of modern
dating, but now I think video dating is really here to stay.
Yeah, I think so too.
I've, yeah.
One of my favorite stories is a close friend of mine, amazing guy, huge catch, but has been
single for the 10 years I've known him and he just went from bad relationships to bad relationship,
first date, first date, first date, but with the pandemic, knowing how hard it was to meet people
and that he couldn't just assume the next best thing was out there. He met a woman, she joined his pod pretty quickly, and he really just committed to her and gave her
a chance, and they just adopted a puppy, they just moved in together, and I'm like, oh, this is your
relationship, this is going to work, and it took not being able to go on all these first dates,
and not being able to have sex with lots of random people for you to commit to somebody and make it work.
Exactly.
It's like that you don't have as much,
it's the paradox of choice, right?
You don't have as many people,
you can't keep swiping and running essentially.
Swiping and going to this town or traveling
or whatever you do to distract yourself,
we really had to do all the slowing down.
I've recognized a lot of that in myself as well.
I really wasn't prioritizing dating either
the last two years because it was so friggin busy, but I've been saying that for a while. I was like, okay, I really
have to slow it down. No one who am I? So I hope everyone did that work during the pandemic.
I think that people are also really hard on themselves. I hear from someone in my listeners
like, I don't know how to date or I'm a bad date or no one ever calls me back or, you
know, but like, you got to keep going because it's, you practice like, like, it is like
a muscle, right? So what would be your tip for people who haven't, who are, but like, you gotta keep going because it's, you practice like, like, it is like a muscle, right?
So what would be your tip for people who haven't,
who are kind of rusty, haven't been out there?
First of all, I just say, I have a lot of empathy for that.
I think we all of our social skills have gotten a little rusty.
Yes.
I've definitely had that thing where I go on a socially distance hike
with somebody and after an hour, I'm like, I'm exhausted.
I'm talking to someone for an hour can feel really different.
Like, we are just rusty.
And so in general, I'd say be compassionate with yourself.
Everyone is feeling this, this photo,
this fear of dating again.
And so, you know, just be, be compassionate with yourself
and take it slow.
And there's no, there's no exact timeline.
You're gonna let it take however long it needs
to get back out there.
I would say step one is really being self-aware and so whether it's figuring out your dating
blind spots and your dating tendency, saying, what are my bad habits and my two-picky and
my not picky enough, really understanding that, yes, part of it is effort, you have to show
up and you have to go on dates, but if you just keep repeating the same patterns over and
over again, you're never gonna see a different outcome.
And so ask your best friend, you know, why do you think I'm single?
What do you think I'm doing wrong and give them space to give you feedback?
And then the second thing is just go into these dates with an open mind.
You don't have to go into a first date and say, are you my future husband or you my future
wife or you good enough for me?
Go into it and say, let's have a connection, let's have an experience.
I'm going to go in the second day with you and just get out of
that evaluative, the mindset, the checklist mindset and just be in the
experiential mindset. Be there to connect with another person, get curious
and see what they're all about. And that will take the pressure off you and
you're more likely to have a good time and actually enjoy that person's
company.
Such good stuff, Logan. And then, you know, you talk about hinge,
I know that you are working there.
This was not even at all about that.
You won't discreet, but, but,
but people love hinge because it actually gives you
the opportunity to interact in different ways, right?
Like, there's a lot of different entry points
rather than you're not just swiping.
Yeah, that's a big differentiator.
Hinge is the whole thing is that it's not swiping.
It's not about, it's not a game.
It's not how many people can like me.
A couple of things that are cool about Hinge.
One is, you have this profile with photos, you can have photo captions, which kind of
turned it into a meme.
You have to answer these prompts, things like my ideal plus one to a wedding date, or if
you really knew me, dot, dot dot dot dot things like that. And so you have to actually look
at somebody's profile and either like or comment on a specific part of it, right? Instead
of just swiping and that helps lead to good conversation. Hinge also has this cool thing
called We Men where after we have connected people and it seems like maybe they've gone
on a date, we send them a message, you know, did you go out with this person? Is this
a type of person you'd like to go out with again?
And that really helps hinge figure out,
okay, how can we match you with more people?
Are we doing a good job of creating connections?
And so there's really an emphasis on
are these matches turning into dates and into relationships?
First is just how many people can we get
spending as many minutes as possible on the app?
Such great features for the app.
And thank you so much Logan Yuri for being here.
I'm going to ask you the five quicky questions we ask all of our guests.
Let's do it.
All right.
What is your biggest turn on?
Good listener.
Biggest turn off.
Somebody who's a tool, like somebody who cares too much about what other people think
about.
What makes good sex?
Knowing your own body.
Something you tell your younger self about sex in relationships.
If you aren't comfortable, leave.
What's the number one thing you wish everyone knew about sex?
Oh, I love this question.
Yeah, same thing.
You know, get to know your own body and communicate and learn to ask for what you want.
Love it.
Thank you so much.
How can people find you?
Yeah, Emily, first of all, thank you for having me.
This was so fun.
You're so good at what you do.
Thank you, Logan.
You are too.
I mean, your book is delightful.
It's insightful.
It's going to really impact people and get them on a track that even if you're in a relationship,
I think it's going to be such a great tool for so many. So thank you for your book. I'm excited.
So people can of course buy my book, how to not die alone, wherever great books are sold.
On my website, LoganHairy.com, I have that three dating tendencies quiz. People can sign
up for my newsletter and then I'm on Instagram and Twitter at LoganHairy.
Thank you for being here Logan. You are fabulous. Yeah. Thank you, Emily.
That's it for today's episode. See you on Friday.
Thanks for listening to Sex with Emily. Be sure to like, subscribe, and give us a review
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