The Diary Of A CEO with Steven Bartlett - E56: She Cheated On Me and Thats Not All - with Dr. Aria
Episode Date: November 9, 2020This is one of the most gripping, emotional and powerful conversations I've ever had. It may also be the reason I never get married. This week I sat down with previous guest and good friend of mine Dr... Aria. Dr Aria is a high performance psychologist and mindfulness specialist but he's not here to talk about that today. Dr Aria has been on a truly life changing journey over the past year and he's here to talk about that journey in the most honest and truthful way. Topics: - The Story - Processing the emotions - Adapting my opinion of marriage and monogamy - How I Lost an intrinsic part of who I was - My Ideal relationship structure - Why unhappiness stems from conformity - Finding new friends in a painful situation - Outro Special thanks to my good friend Dr. Aria, you can find him at: Instagram - @dr._aria Website - dr-aria.com Sponsor - https://uk.huel.com/
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Quick one, just wanted to say a big thank you to three people very quickly.
First people I want to say thank you to is all of you that listen to the show.
Never in my wildest dreams is all I can say.
Never in my wildest dreams did I think I'd start a podcast in my kitchen
and that it would expand all over the world as it has done.
And we've now opened our first studio in America,
thanks to my very helpful team led by Jack on the production side of things.
So thank you to Jack and the team for building out the new American studio.
And thirdly to Amazon Music who, when they heard that we were expanding to the United
States, and I'd be recording a lot more over in the States, they put a massive billboard
in Times Square for the show. So thank you so much, Amazon Music. Thank you to our team. And
thank you to all of you that listened to this show. Let's continue. you've made a great decision and i say this as impartially as i possibly can but this podcast is
it's really the reason why i started the diary of a ceo it's to hear these kinds of stories from
these kinds of people and i've got to be honest with you, I spent about a year asking this
person to come on this podcast and have a conversation with me. Today's guest is Dr.
Arya, and he's been on the podcast once before. He's a world-renowned high performance coach,
and he works with some of the world's most accomplished athletes, actors, and everyone
in between as they try and reach a mindset state that is conducive with success, with happiness,
and with overall fulfillment. But he's not here to talk about that today. He's here to talk about
something very, very different. Something uncomfortable. Something unimaginable.
So without further ado, I'm Stephen Bartlett, and this is the Diary of a CEO. I hope nobody is listening,
but if you are, then please keep this to yourself.
Sometimes in life, you have these unbelievable, somewhat cruel coincidences that occur that it's hard to make sense of and
last time you came on this podcast i would define it as for me anyway a pretty cruel coincidence
because we had a conversation um to do with life generally and and success and the mindset and
psychology and all the things that you're an expert on. And for whatever reason, that day, I decided that I wanted to spend 30 minutes talking about
marriage, cheating, love, and asking you these very personal questions about monogamy,
which I've never done before with any guest ever,
and which I really had no place or reason to ask you more than anyone else.
And it just feels to me
for what we're going to talk about in part today that that was a bit of a cruel coincidence and
you know one of the questions I asked you was um do you believe in monogamy and then I asked you
can you love someone and cheat on them and when I listened to that podcast back I now noticed um
why you laughed.
Because you laughed, yeah, and it wasn't a normal laugh.
It was like a real belly laugh, right?
Like a bit of a nervous belly laugh.
After we came off air on that podcast, you told me something.
And it even gives me goosebumps now thinking about what you said. And it gave the whole team in the room who overheard our conversation goosebumps as well.
So after our 30 minute conversation about marriage and monogamy and cheating and love, what did you say to me?
I told you a story.
Yeah.
And that was about two weeks earlier. I'd been traveling back from London home and I got out of the train station
and my wife picked me up and we got into the car and we had planned to go and have
a brunch at my favorite little spot.
They do amazing Cuervo's Rancho sauce.
I was very excited.
And she said, let's go straight home.
I've made sandwiches.
And she doesn't make great sandwiches.
So I said, no, no, I think the brunch is a better option.
And she said, no, there's something that I need to tell you.
And I said, is it bad?
And she said, yes.
And I said, is that about the marriage?
And she said, yes.
And then we began to drive back and I had the sinking feeling
in me and we're we drove for about five minutes in silence and then I went to put my hand on her
lap and she said don't don't touch me because you won't want to after I've told you what's happened. And that's whenever it drops.
And I remember that 10-minute drive back home then felt like an eternity.
I was just looking out the window.
And we got home.
We got into the house, into the kitchen.
And I was standing by the kitchen table, hands rested on it.
And I said, what's happened?
And she said, I've been having an affair with a man
from work and I remember just tears began to stream I didn't move completely it's motionless
tears began to stream and then she said and that's not all and she said I'm pregnant with this child
and in that moment, I felt like I lost a lot.
You know, I'd lost my wife. I'd lost the life we created. I'd lost the dog, our home, her,
my parents, her family, everything that I'd really held dear.
If someone said, what makes a meaningful life?
I would have described these things.
And it felt like they'd just been snatched away,
just came crumbling down like a house of cards.
And then fast forward two weeks,
and Steve decides to ask.
And I remember because the first thing,
no, no, it's fascinating, because the first thing, no, no, it's fascinating.
Because the first thing he asked was, you're married, right?
And I did this high-pitched laugh.
And I go, yes.
And then the conversation flowed on.
And it's themes I'd really thought about.
Can you love someone and cheat on them?
Does monogamy exist? Is it
natural? Are we set up to live a life where we're in one relationship with one person only? And so
over the past 18 months, it's been a process and some of these themes have been very real to me i just as i reflect on that
conversation and when i played it back um after you told me so we come off air we stood next to
the table in the microphones and you you explained to me what's happened yeah i'm for the first time
in my life completely speechless yeah and the thing that blew me away even more so than what
you'd said to me was your ability to be so calm
and rational and objective in the answers you gave and even when i listen back now although
there was that laugh which was a bit of an indication um you were able to speak about someone
betraying you or being deceitful with a level of calmness and apparent um emotional uh sort of
restraint that i i just admired so much from someone that was right in the middle of the
emotional hurricane and had just been victim of that act and um you said that you know about
the topic of monogamy how did that change your opinion and and also the subsequent 18 months of processing
on the topic of monogamy so as a quick aside i like that analogy and we touched upon it briefly
about the hurricane and and it's funny actually because a friend of mine showed me a book about
a week ago and it was different personality profiles depending on the day that you've been born on. And
whenever we looked mine up, there's a little meditation at
the end, a summary, and it said, the stillest part of the
hurricane is its centre. And that essentially has been a
philosophy that's guided my life, where sometimes there's a storm and it's horrendous and it's
raging but if you can cultivate that sense of stillness and calmness and clarity deep within
you no matter what life throws at you you will be okay because the second part of
whenever i was told that news and and the tears were streaming and I felt that sense of
loss and overwhelming sadness. There was a remarkable moment where in that instant,
and I can only describe it as a whisper, I heard a whisper within me as if it was resonating from
a heart that all will be well. Four words, all will be well forwards all will be well all will be well and
I knew even then I knew whenever you know this tumultuous emotion I knew everything's going to
be okay I will get through this I'm gonna have to walk through the desert and I'm gonna have to
endure a horrific amount of an emotional level but it's all going to be fine. How did you know that?
I think it's something that I've cultivated over 10-15 years, and that's why
I do what I do now, because I want to help other people to reach that stage. And it began on a
journey of Buddhist exploration and understanding the nature of life, And I came to this realization that life involves suffering.
There's no promise that it's going to be happy-go-lucky and really pleasant all the time.
Really horrific things happen in life. And on one level, there's no way that we can ever
rationally explain it away. Sometimes bad things happen, but it doesn't end there. It's a bit like that line that someone
once sent to me, whenever you're suffering, don't ask God, why am I suffering? Ask God,
where are you taking me? And so I've developed this ability to begin to view my life as though it's happening to someone else, as though the experience,
the thoughts, the emotions are something that I can almost take it back on and have perspective
and I can see it and I can feel it, but I know that my thoughts, that isn't just who I am. My
emotions isn't just who I am. That's a temporary experience.
And throughout my life, no matter what has happened, even whenever it's been brutal,
it's often shifted me in a new trajectory and there's been a new meaningful life ahead of me.
And I knew even then she's going to be okay. She'll be okay. It's going to be a tough road for her too, but she'll be okay. And it's going to be a tough road for me too, but I will be okay she'll be okay it's going to be a tough road for her too but she'll be okay and it's going to be a tough road for me too but i will be okay anger so many people in that situation whether
rightly or wrongly just because of the way that they are yeah would have reacted with anger and
for some reason you were both calm in telling me you're calm now and this remarkable thing which i i think i
i struggle to understand a little bit is one of your first concerns was her well-being
versus your own why because i loved her and i was in the practice of, of placing her emotional wellbeing and
her happiness on the same level as mine, if not sometimes first and foremostly,
but at least on, on equal playing field. And, and I was just so in that habit and that was
the toughest thing to let go of.
The thing that I still struggle with today.
And I'm still, it's the one part that I realized the other day
that I still had a fear of upsetting her or of her not being okay.
And so that's something which just really developed and was so ing ingrained and it's interesting on the point of
anger if you said like your wife partner for 10 years married for five has an affair and is
pregnant with another man's child how will you react I would have said anger I would be furious
but it wasn't there at least not not initially. It was this overwhelming sense
of sadness. It was just that sense of loss of knowing that, again, that she's potentially
done something that she might regret for a long time. And I don't want anyone to go through that
experience where they feel like they fucked up hugely. Even if the future is positive in that moment my sense is there will be regret or at least shame
and so it was a sadness because i was connected to the loss the sense of loss of losing things
i held dear feels like you're living outside your body a little bit i guess that's what
self-awareness is or at least emotional awareness, because you're being able to see that situation, which is utterly horrific for anyone.
Yeah.
From, as you say, from like a bird's eye view, as if you've like, looking down on it.
And that's allowing you not to just feel your own emotions, but to feel empathy towards theirs.
Yeah.
And I think that's the path, in in my eyes that's the path to enlightenment
and i'm not saying that i am enlightened but i think we're all on that path and we're all
progressing through it and for me that's what awareness is it's being able to experience
internally your thoughts and your emotions and externally what's happened
as if it's happening to someone else you're like holding them out in front of you and analyzing them right so like but if you're not holding them out in front of you and it's happening to someone else. You're like holding them out in front of you and analyzing them, right?
But if you're not holding them out in front of you
and it's happening within you,
then you are just almost like a passenger on a roller coaster.
Whereas holding them out in front of you
kind of makes you the conductor or the roller coaster
or at least able to understand.
And if you can understand,
then you can address and you can overcome.
Totally, I love it.
Whenever you're holding it really close to you,'re fused with it anything that happens instantly will provoke
a reaction whether or not it's emotional or behavioral but when you hold it in front of
you there's a bit more space now you still experience it i'm not gonna lie to you it was
a brutal couple of months i cried every day uh for maybe three months, for hours, hours. I would
walk and I'd process what happened. And if you want, we can talk about that at some point,
about my process of moving through it. But yes, it was, I'm not going to say it wasn't
emotionally painful, but I wasn't defined by that pain. That was just a part that I was experiencing let's talk about
that so a lot of people experience grief in many forms and this somewhat feels like this the central
emotion you described it as a loss it feels like a form of grief yeah what was your process for
moving from you know finding out that it happened to where you are today where you're you know you've quote unquote processed it
i imagine as much as you might have been able to at this stage yeah some yeah what was your process
so where i think people often um catch themselves in a in a counterproductive cycle is whenever
they try and avoid experiencing what they're experiencing.
They try and shun it, lock it away,
put it in a box, disconnect from it, deny it,
and they just focus on the future
and where I'm going,
and they might try and rationalize it.
This happened because of X or because of Y,
and then they try and forge ahead.
And I think it comes back to bite them at some point.
The simplest truth is that we can only ever experience
one moment at a time. And I remind myself of that. I don't need to think about right now
the financial separation, the divorce, what it means about friends or family, or will I
meet someone again, or how long will it be, or what will my life friends or family or will I meet someone again or how long will it be or what
will my life look like or where am I going to live? So many different factors that could be
overwhelming. I just decided to deal with one moment at a time. All I need to do is deal with
this one moment and what is this one moment bringing me and accepting and welcoming, it
sounds strange, but welcoming whatever comes up and so whatever
emotion came up I didn't try and push it away or shunt it or deny it or negate it I let it I let
it sit and that's why I cried so much because there was so much sadness did you write down
the emotions you were experiencing so I didn't write down the emotions but what I did in the next step is so the first step was
awareness and accepting whatever emotions I felt and a lot and seeing that they come and then they
go you know that there'd be moments where I'd be laughing with my brother and then crying
a minute later and then talking about something else. The second step was reminding myself of reality, because I was so ingrained
in an internal model of what life looked like. I have a strong, stable marriage in which my partner
subconsciously, implicitly, I believe is faithful. We're meant
to be together. We're going to be together for the next 50, 60 years until one of us dies.
We're going to have children together. That was my internal model.
And I had to rip it apart. I had to take it down. I had to dismantle it.
And I had to remind myself of the reality of the situation. I had to accept it. I had to accept
it's over. It's not going to change. There's no going back. The final nail is in the coffin
and you need to take that on board. And'd also write any I'd write down reminders of
of what had happened and I also wrote down any insights I had about the situation that I could
remind myself of and I wrote down how I wanted to handle this process um I can actually read a few
out if you want please please I've got um so i i literally
would just write them down on my phone um and so afterwards i began to split them up into different
sections but this one was for the process hold yourself to the highest standard, choose actions that you can be proud of.
How you get through this process is more important than how quickly you get through this process.
Because for me, it was important that I still lived with personal integrity, that I didn't,
that I wasn't warped or changed or consumed with vengeance
or acted in ways that was out of spite or out of emotion.
I wanted to be able to look back on this in 12 months, 18 months time,
and still feel good about it, have a clear conscience,
still be able to put my head down and feel as though I handled that to the best of my ability.
With God, you can get through this.
You can become stronger,
wiser, more caring, more compassionate, and more loving. And that's another thing that actually
the deepest moments of suffering can actually be opportunities for growth. Even if you don't want
it, there's something there that you can learn and can grow from you don't need
anything from her anymore um and that and then different reminders you have nothing to feel bad
about you aren't responsible you have nothing to feel guilty about nothing because there were
moments where my mind would almost begin to in a way play a trick on me and begin to try and create reasons um to feel bad or to try and create shame and at those times while i would
accept what came up i decided not to pursue that line of thinking because that didn't fit whenever
i was calm and clear this came to me and so i'd write down whatever came to me whenever i was in a place of
wisdom then when the emotion hit and i'm not seen clearly and i've got on a clouded lens
this little baby became my best friend because i'd go back to it and i'd remind myself and then it
would reshift my mental paradigm i have this um before please do keep your phone open because i want to hear
the rest of this all right but i have this um analogy i make in moments where i experience
a very similar thing that i'm going to say one example yeah it's it's the closest i can come to
resonating with what your experience is i was dating this girl and i broke up with her and
three days later i find out that she's had sex with someone else
right and I can only the way that I described it was I'm flying on this plane and I'm the pilot
and then suddenly when I find when I when I look down and hear the news that she's just
slept with someone somebody else yeah it was like terrorist stormed the cockpit
and they chucked the fucking rational pilot out and they were threatening to crash the whole
fucking thing and my whole objective as the pilot is to get back into the cockpit before they crash
this plane into the side of a mountain because if they crash the plane i'm fucked and so yeah what
i wanted to do was lose my integrity yeah i wanted to crash the plane. I wanted to get her back, take revenge,
tell her she's a this, this, and a this, and a this, and a this.
And it was this,
because I've got to a place where I'm able to hold situations out in front of me
a little bit more than I ever was in the past.
I was at war with myself.
It was the terrorists on one end telling me to crash the plane
and the pilot saying, you've been here before.
You know, you just need to keep the plane in the air until you yeah yeah and and i and i'm so i'm going for a run
i'm like steve go to the gym go for a run yeah clear your head i'm at the gym the terrorists
that you know and i'm like i'm gonna finish i'm gonna finish that back in and then i come back
and back in yeah and the crazy conclusion to all of this was my friend called me and said a few things to me about um why she did what she did yeah my friend
said to me remember steve you rejected her she really really really likes you and she's done
this as a way to make herself feel better for the rejection that you gave her and it sounds like
such a pathetic thing to say but what it made me realize in that moment was much of the reason why the terrorists had stormed the cockpit was my ego was bruised and the thing that coached those
terrorists out the cockpit was my friend massaging my ego again and and letting me know that some of
those stories we sometimes tell ourselves when we get rejected about why we got rejected yeah
weren't true it's not because you're not enough.
It's in fact because of something you've done.
And that was the reason
why I managed to take control of the cockpit.
I did nothing.
I didn't punish her in any way,
didn't even mention it.
And it was, and so, yeah, but please.
Two things come to me there.
One is this emotion of anger.
So fascinatingly, 95% of the emotion for me was sadness. 5% was anger. And the anger struck early on. it was like my body was burning I haven't experienced
anger like that before it was it was almost like I was a flame I was uh just infused with rage
and I began and I really feel for my brother having to witness this but I was just moving up and down, shouting as loudly as I could, my wife, my house, my wife, my house.
And for five minutes, it was like a supernova. It just was just seething. And then it burnt out.
And I cried and I fell asleep. And the next day, and then the anger
didn't really come much. It would come now and again. But what I realized was the anger was
intimately attached to my ego. The anger came whenever I was attached to my ego. And I'm very
fortunate that I'm able to detach from my ego the majority of the time. But when I didn't, that's when it hurt.
Because it came about my wife, as if I own her,
as if there's ownership, as if it's a part of me.
I don't own her. She's free.
My house. I didn't even own the house.
The mortgage company did.
But as soon as we link it to ourselves and make
it about us, then it's a place of vulnerability because you're getting inflicted. It's like
getting stabbed in the heart. You feel that, but it's an illusion because we are not
our ego. You know, we can see our ego and have a relationship to our ego, but once we're fused
with it, we're in trouble. And the other part of it is that, because I don't want to come across
like a saint, like I didn't have dark thoughts or, you know, I wasn't angry and I just handled
it with grace the entire time. But I operate from a principle that the mind has a mind of its own. And I think we talked about it last time. But essentially, your mind will populate your head with thoughts automatically. You're
not asking for them. It'll just come up with judges, evaluations, assessments, predictions
about the future, past memories, imagined scenarios.
You know, if I said, okay, Steve, don't think about anything right now,
just for 10 seconds, have a complete blank mind.
And I'm going to say a word, but don't think about anything.
Okay.
So we'll just do it now.
Don't think about a thing.
Birthday.
Okay.
Right.
So even though you were attempting not to think about anything,
your mind came up with it automatically.
And from my perspective, we are not our thoughts.
We have thoughts.
Our mind comes up with thoughts, but that's not me.
I am the observer of the thought.
Now, why is that important? Because my mind would come up with really brutal thoughts.
What thoughts?
Like torturing the guy.
Really?
Yeah.
Getting in a car, finding him, pushing him in the back of the van
and doing this elaborate, elaborate of what I would do to him.
Absolutely.
Because my mind was thinking about seeking vengeance.
Justice.
Justice.
And it was like a Hollywood movie.
And somehow no one found out.
I went back along with it.
You know?
And so, yes, you can have those.
Or whenever I was in deep pain,
the thought of ending my life popped into my head.
I didn't have any intent.
I wasn't making any plans. I wasn't making any plans.
I didn't want to kill myself.
But my mind wanted a way out of the pain.
It was suffering and it wanted an end to it.
And what is one option?
Killing yourself.
And so when I've got a different relationship, though,
with these thoughts,
when I think about torturing someone,
or when my mind comes up with a thought of torturing someone,
or my mind comes up with a thought of taking my life,
there's no judgment.
I don't think, oh, that means I must want to do it,
or that means that I will do it or that means I'm
a bad person or that means that I'm evil it just means my mind I think what is my mind trying to do
it's it's trying to solve a solution and it's probably struggling to cope and it's trying to
find a way to make me feel better neo on this podcast who
came on this podcast talked about how the mind is actually you know people think we're in the
search of pleasure but the mind is programmed to avoid discomfort yeah so we're constantly in
trying to seek you know avoid it and that's why we procrastinate because we've got a big project
which is yeah we may not feel competent to complete or you know we're a bit there's a
feeling of discomfort around it so we go and wash the dishes or do the hoovering yeah um on the on the you mentioned wanting to torture this man
i know right so like a moment of the mind having what my mind did steve
you didn't want to your mind wanted to i'm a peace-loving kind of guy
but i wanted to know how do you feel about him
so it's really interesting i um do you feel about him?
So it's really interesting. I, um, the stage, the, the process went
awareness and acceptance, uh, how I wanted to handle the process. And then at some point I realized I needed to find forgiveness.
I'm quite a simple person, and I don't like having a lot of items or objects or physical possessions,
and I don't like having a lot of emotional baggage either.
I want to travel light.
I want to travel so lightly I could pass through the eye of a needle, so to speak.
And the weight of anger or resentment or the feelings of betrayal were weighing me down.
And I wanted to forgive her and I wanted to forgive him. And honestly, you could view it as ultimately selfish, because it's not going to impact their life, but it's going to make
mine a lot easier. And during lockdown, I was in California, and I was lucky because in Santa
Barbara, where I was staying, the mayor didn't close the beaches, because there's a lot of
families there, and he said, as long as you socially distance, it's fine. And I'd run along the beach and I had this process
where I would say out loud, I would imagine her and I'd say, I forgive you. I'm sending you my
love and I wish you all the best for the future. And I processed so much by that at that point,
because I've been able to understand and see her situation.
And in my mind, I have an idea of how it was created and why it unfolded.
And so there was compassion there.
And I was able to reach that really relatively quickly.
That was easy.
The hard part was with him, because I didn't know him.
I didn't know his personality, his background, who he was. He could be a great friend and an
excellent son or potentially a very loving partner.
But all I knew about him was that he was prepared to take certain actions.
And so whenever I tried it with him and I'd say, I forgive you,
it was like there was a knot and a wince and I'd be like,
and I would say, and I'm sending you my love.
And I'm like,
and I wish you all the best for the future.
You're still imagining pulling up in that van
and jumping out and blindfolding him,
dragging him in,
sticking something up his butt.
How'd you like me now?
And so, but I would just notice that. I don and how do you like me now uh and so but i would just notice that i don't do you know there's tension there and and actually i will say this was a year after i'd heard the news i didn't try and do
this initially i think it would have been uh premature to have attempted this whenever i
wasn't in a space where I had a lot more clarity
and groundedness and processed the emotion. The emotion wasn't being clouded at this point.
Now it was, what am I holding on to? And for a matter of weeks, five, six weeks, I was running
two, three times a week and I would just try that process. And then one day it was remarkable.
I was running along and I said, I forgive you.
And there was nothing.
And then I said, I'm sending you my love.
And I felt easy.
And I said, and I wish you all the best for the future.
And I could tell that I meant it for them, for their baby, you know, for them
together as a family. And I felt at peace. And it's a bit like that saying, my yoke is easy,
my burden is light. Now, genuinely, it sounds strange, but I don't really feel anything for
them. It's almost as if, you know, if you came to me and said,
I've got a friend called Mike and he's going through a really difficult time. He was involved
in a really complicated emotional relationship. Would you mind sending out positive thoughts to
him and saying a prayer for him? I'd say, sure. Like he hasn't ever done anything to me. I don't
have any connection with him. No problem. It sure. Like he hasn't ever done anything to me. I don't have any connection
with him. No problem. It's almost that sort of relationship now where they're just other people
on their journey. And I had that shared history with, with my wife, which I look upon fondly,
particularly the first eight years. We had a wonderful marriage for a long time,
but there's no emotional tinge there's
it's like an emotional umbilical cord and was imagining it as it's a letting go yeah it's a
letting go and so that was that was a part that for me because i think there comes a time where
you have to say okay i process it i've it, how long do I want to hold onto it
for now? And that's become my own choice. Do I want to carry this and let it define me, or do I
want to finally let it go and see it float down the river? And I think, you know, even you're
someone that has a remarkable ability to practice like self-awareness and you know, you have that
sort of like emotional awareness as well.
And it's good to hear, I think for everybody listening to this,
that even your process from finding it out
to being emotionally unattached to the matter
to the point that you can forgive both of them
wasn't linear at all.
It was up, it was down, it was it was up it was down and it was long
and i think people sometimes um think that their experience of rejection or deceit or you know um
any of these things is uniquely bad because their process to recovery per se isn't linear and it's
long and it feels like the more i've talked about this
topic and the more people i've met and you know from hearing your experiences that in fact is the
only way out and i actually think realizing that that's the only way out will make your process
out of that deceit or betrayal feel normal and natural and okay and therefore acceptable and and i think that's a really
important point that you've made through the story you've told absolutely and each person's
journey will be unique and there will be peaks and troughs and it'll wax and wane and i'm very
aware that it's possible that my journey happened over a relatively short period of time because of
my history, my background. As a psychologist, as a high performance expert, this is the area that
I deal with. It's about developing emotional resilience. It's how would you help people to
cope with high stakes environments when they've lost a sense of balance in their life,
when they're struggling in their relationships, whenever they experience something in life which throws them,
how do you get back up? This is what I've been trained to do for 15 years.
Isn't it weird that life sent you this challenge?
Yeah.
When you think about your experience, isn't it? It must be a part of you that,
because I think I would, i would think to myself life is testing me to see if i can deal with the worst and still maintain the values and
principles that i espouse like yeah it it sounds this will sound really odd uh but i almost
felt at times i thought in a way i'm so lucky because I'm so lucky that I am where I am when this
happened. If this had happened 10 years ago, I would have been in a vastly different space.
Why? Because I struggled 10 years to cope with what life gave me on an emotional level,
and I would react out of the emotion. So I'd experience it and then I would
just react. And essentially that's when we make terrible decisions. That's how we crash the plane.
That's how we crash the plane. If you look at NASA astronauts, they prepare for the sequence
of events leading up to launch. And they run through that over a hundred times from putting on the kit
to traveling down to the launch space to what could go wrong and they rehearse that and they
run it through and it's a way of being able to stay calm whenever there is uncertainty or
turbulence or danger or threat because that's whenever that's the person you really want to be
whenever there's an emergency like we talked about in the podcast you want to be the person that
still has an air a pocket a space of clarity that isn't affected so that even though you're
experiencing all these emotions on a very physical level, deep down, you're still grounded. You can take it.
And so from where I was, I did feel as though I'm fortunate that life has thrown at me something that
in my mind was one of the worst things that I could experience. There's lots of worse things
without a shadow of a doubt, but it was a big one um and find a way to move through and incredibly it's informed
even even my work because in the last year
again whether it's coincidence or not I don't know the number of clients I've been working
with on relationship issues has gone up exponentially.
And if issues centered on a loss of connection, a loss of intimacy, betrayal, confusion, how do you
stay true to who you are in a relationship with someone else where you feel like there's a shift, or you wake up one day and you're in a space where you don't know how you got there, where you become like best friends living together rather
than the passionate lovers you were 10 years ago.
You talked there a second about the calm that astronauts are trained to develop and how
crucial that is to making good decisions. I saw this quote the other day and it said,
when emotions go up, intellect comes down. And I was thinking about just then, as you said that,
I was thinking, what are the factors that make somebody not calm?
And then I thought, and I kind of answered myself,
I thought, okay, so it's, we talked about the ego playing a big role.
And so I guess my conclusion there is the people who will struggle
to maintain their calm in situations like that,
that are so personally associated,
are those with the lowest self-esteem
and the most fragile ego and it feels like the work that you've described that you've done over
the last 10 years is really like building your self-esteem and really in some respects a separation
from ego um yeah you've nailed it one we know on a neuro level so we know from neuroimaging studies that when we experience
emotion, the prefrontal cortex, the part of the brain responsible for judgment, decision-making,
impulse control, planning, goes offline. It shuts down. So we don't have access to that creativity, the wisdom that we have usually.
And again, absolutely, I think the journey,
for me, the journey of life involves developing a robust sense of self.
A sense of self that is unshakable,
that is immovable,
that still experiences life and the whole gamut of emotions and the beauty
and loveliness of life and also the darkness and the destruction of life, but isn't impacted
on an essential level by it. And I think that's the journey. And that's the journey that I work
on with clients. No matter what the outwardly symptoms are, it could be weight gain,
it could be relationship dysfunction, it could be struggling to experience that sense of contentment
or fulfillment in life, even though I have everything that life says I should have. It
could be feeling like I'm lacking or I'm just not doing enough or I'm not being enough,
but it all comes back to that stronger sense of self
and this um you know horrific experience what has it done to your opinion of monogamy
because I'm sure I'm guessing from what you've said the way that you'd planned your life ahead
you thought when you you know when you went walked down the aisle and you said those words
till death do us part yeah you then planned the next 60 years of your life and how your life was
going to pan out and when you said those words at the end of the at the altar you were totally
convinced yeah totally convinced that this person was the person your soulmate um how do you feel
about all of those concepts now like soulmate and monogamy and
till death do us part? The experience led me to a position where I began to question
my deepest assumptions about monogamy, about marriage, about lifelong relationships.
And in the same way I began to take a step back and reflect and contemplate,
I became very aware that there is a social script for relationships.
And it generally goes, the conventional model is boy meets girl.
It's not even boy meets boy or girl meets girl.
There's a first date, a first kiss, a period of courting.
At some point, there will be sex, meeting the parents,
hopefully not at the same time, eventually.
Relationship becomes exclusive, and then engagement, marriage, children,
till death do us part.
And I realize that that is a social construction.
It's a conventional model based on assumptions that monogamy is natural,
that marriage is a human universal,
and that any structure other than the nuclear one is aberrant.
And so then I began to think, okay, well, what are the different elements? So on the one hand, we can take, and we touched upon it briefly, an evolutionary perspective. And we are apes.
It's not just that we've descended from apes. We are apes. We're one of the five, Homo sapiens are one of the five surviving species
of great apes, along with orangutans, bonobos, gorillas, and chimpanzees.
And yet, at some point, we separated from that psychologically. And actually, the fine print that distinguishes humans from
other great apes has been described by primatologists as wholly inadequate. It's a
fabrication. And at some stage, we began to see ourselves as special and unique and above nature and exempt from our primal history because we descended from hypersexual
ancestors. So if the homo lineage has been around for two million years, modern humans have been
around for 200,000 years and about 10,000 years ago there was a shift in going from hunter-gatherers to settled communities because of the advent of agriculture.
Now, up until 10,000 years ago, the data now suggests that we actually lived by fiercely egalitarian principles.
Everything was shared.
Food, shelter, water, child care and even sexual partners. Casual sexuality was the norm
for our prehistoric ancestors. For 95% of the collective experience of our lineage
that is what we experienced and it wasn't based on meaningless random relationships.
They were relationships that reinforced a social pattern that we needed to survive. It minimized
our risk and it reinforced social ties. But then with the advent of agriculture, we began to settle. We had land, we had domesticated animals, and for the first time, private property came into play. that the human female up until that point was on an equal playing field. They were as responsible
for the hunting and the cooking and making decisions about where they were going to settle.
And then it changed and the female became the property of the man, something that he had to
maintain and keep. And actually the reason that property came into play is because we weren't moving,
so it did matter what happened to our resources. We were accumulating,
and biological paternity for the first time became crucial.
And so on a natural evolutionary level, monogamy didn't exist we didn't live in long-term monogamous relationships
then we bring in marriage and if we fast forward about five and a half thousand years
in about 2350 bc and in mesopotamia we had the first marriage between the union between a man and a woman.
And over the next few hundred years, it spread.
The ancient Romans, Greeks, Hebrews, they began to adopt this widespread practice.
But marriage had a very different meaning across the ages. In the 5th century with Anglo-Saxons, it was about securing trade ties.
It was a diplomatic tool. In the 11th century, marriage was about financial, economic, and
political advantage. And as early as the 12th, religion became involved and Roman Catholicism tied it to
sacrament and it to being a sacred experience related to experiencing God.
Then about 500 years ago, Thomas Cranmer came up with the modern day marital vows that we
read out today, and he was the architect of English Protestantism.
And then up until 1858, divorce was rare. Marriage was something which was lifelong,
and it wasn't really questioned. But then it became a legal process that you could apply to do.
And it was still relatively uncommon because it was expensive and a woman had to prove
aggravated adultery, bestiality, sodomy, cruelty. And then the divorce gates really opened up in
1969 when the Divorce Reform Act and marital breakdown could then be cited. So whenever we
begin to take a different lens and we see the journey that it's taken and then we ask, well, where are we today?
Since 1975, there's been a drop in marriages by about 30%.
More people are now opting to cohabit than they are to get married.
Divorce statistics in England and Wales are at 42%.
You could arguably say that the system is collapsing that it is beginning to
crumble and i don't even take a cultural lens yeah and if i'm talking too much just no i'm
fascinating jump in super fascinating so culturally um the spanish word esposas means wife and handcuffs.
We joke about the wife being the ball and chain.
A friend got married, got engaged last week,
and the talk amongst the boys was,
this is the beginning of the end of your sex life.
But women don't fare any better.
You know, 43% of American women report sexual dysfunction.
Viagra sales are increasing every year.
They're just record highs year upon year.
Born is through the fucking roof.
Not that I would know.
A friend told me. Yeah.
The porn industry takes in about 57 to 100 billion dollars worldwide.
A US report showed that Americans spend more at strip clubs than they do at Broadway, off-Broadway,
non-profit and regional theatres, the ballet, jazz and the opera collectively. We look at the church and there have been hundreds of
Roman Catholic priests admitting to thousands of sex crimes. In 2008, they paid up $436
million to victims of sexual abuse, a fifth were under the age of five. And these aren't, that's not to mention, the forgotten victims.
And we have to ask yourself,
one, how did we get here?
Two, how was that story constructed?
And three, is marriage giving us what we want?
And is it realistic?
And is it feasible?
So number three.
So where am I with that?
Yeah.
Yeah.
I'm still touring.
I'll be totally honest with you.
I can say it.
I can imagine.
Okay.
So I can imagine that on the one hand I can imagine being in a relationship
with, with a woman and, and being with that one woman for the rest of my life.
I can also imagine being with someone in a relationship and having more than one sexual partner.
But?
But if it was flipped around and someone asked me,
would you want your partners to be with other men?
I'd say, hell no.
Of course.
Like, it just seems that is not something, because I'm so strongly programmed against that,
even though that's potentially the biological heritage. I can't imagine being with someone
who's with other people. I wouldn't want to be in that situation. And I'm aware of the acute
hypocrisy contained within it.
Yeah. I think everyone feels the same way to some degree.
I think people that tell you otherwise are probably talking shit because they're playing
defense against not wanting to happen to them to some degree.
Right.
But yeah, it's a, and I think it's an ideal situation for yourself, but not for the person
you're with from your perspective.
I read this book a long time ago called The Mystery Method by one of the world's number one pickup artist.
And I don't know if this is true, but what he was saying was men are programmed in a way that seeks the woman to be faithful for them.
Because the risk, the evolutionary risk was if I impregnate you as my wife or no, if I if I'm committed to you as my wife and then you are you cheat on
me and get pregnant with someone else's child i will then spend my resources my energy my time
raising someone else's um child and then my genetics won't pass on that person's will and
essentially if you think about it from an evolutionary perspective i then wouldn't have
existed if i didn't have that concern about making sure my sperm was the one that reached the egg i
so you think about it from an evolutionary perspective you wouldn't exist if your ancestors
hadn't done a brilliant job of making sure their sperm hit the egg and one of the ways of doing
that was making sure it wasn't another guy their sperm hit the egg. And one of the ways of doing that was making sure
it wasn't another guy's sperm hitting the egg
by being territorial, by being whatever.
And on the other side, from the woman's perspective,
the book talks about how, you know,
if a woman got eight months pregnant tens of thousands of years ago,
she can no longer hunt and gather for herself.
So really she has to find a partner that isn't going
to abscond that isn't going to bounce especially once they've had sex and so the book kind of talks
about some of the the reasons why you know in society we typically think women are more in
search of a relationship and are trying to you know get a guy more than men are typically um is
because from an evolutionary perspective they would have died on the savannah
in Africa or whatever if the guy had sex with them, impregnated them at a time when we didn't
have birth control, got them eight months pregnant, and then bounced. And I don't know
how true that is, but it's something that I've believed because I've read this book
for some time. So that's the dominant traditional understanding of human sexuality.
Because whenever you look at other species, yes, it's about essentially an aggressive alpha male
than being with a female and knowing that their offspring has been continued through that lineage.
There's an alternative which has come out more recently where, I know there was a paper published
in Science in 2015 that actually showed that what separated humans from other great apes
was our social organisation. Yeah, about about 10 000 years ago we started living
next to water and in camps exactly yeah so and then we were a tribe essentially i've read about
that and up until that point though it's very possible that we had uh multiple sexual partners
but biological paternity was less of a concern because our structure was such that, so what we found out now is we didn't used to live with our close relatives. We actually created social ties with other
individuals. And so we're set up in such a way that the focus wasn't ever on individual survival,
it was on group survival, group identity, group welfare. And the reason is it's the group
that keeps you alive anyway.
And so it's very possible that then there was a shift
which happened actually with this advent of private property
because that's whenever paternity would matter.
Because there's some hunter-gatherer communities
that believe when multiple men
have sex with a female that it's the collectively because you have to think where does our
understanding of the sperm and the embryo come from that's very recent it's very recent biological
understanding our ancestors wouldn't have known that and And there are some beliefs where collectively the men contribute
to the production of the child. That actually it's almost like an amalgamation of the different
men that creates that child, and that child becomes part of the group as opposed to that
one person's child.
And this is the thing, just to challenge that thinking, say that there was one man in the group that was slightly better
and making sure he was the one
that inseminated the female.
Yeah.
His genes would pass on.
Yeah.
His genetics would pass on
as being slightly better for whatever reason
at inseminating a woman.
And therefore in the next round of,
you know, the next generation, he would have a slight advantage you know the next generation he would have a slight
advantage pretend that the kid of that man would have a slight genetic predisposition for being
good at that which would increase the probability that they would pass on again and again and again
and it seems like that that those genetics and that ability to be good at inseminating whether
it's through being territorial or being stronger or being more persuasive or being more of a peacock through generations
over the space of a million years from the chimps,
that would create a scenario
where we are programmed to be,
through our psychology and our behavior
and our peacocking, good at winning.
Even through slightly more malicious methods.
Yeah.
And then there's also the social
conditioning and the ideas of of marriage of monogamy of romanticism of what that means and
and i think what had really come particularly through my work with clients is seeing that
where people find themselves in trouble is when there's enmeshment whenever there's too much when there's too much closeness
when actually the identity of one person is submerged with the identity of the other
and there's no space did that happen to you in your marriage where you became more like her
it's incredible that you ask that. and a partner to help support the growth of this podcast so that we can take it all over the world, we can produce the video format, we can hire a big team, and we can make sure it gets out to as many
people as possible. And so here's what I did. I thought of a couple of companies that I really,
really love, and companies that I've used for many, many years and I've been an avid customer of.
And one of those companies, in fact the first company company I contacted was this one, Huel. And if
you don't know what Huel is, then you must have been living under a rock per se. But Huel has
been a huge part of my life for about four years. I first started drinking Huel four years ago when
I first moved to New York and I was running Social Chain. And the reason I did was because I was
frequently missing meals.
And if you know me personally, you'll know how true this is.
I will wake up in the morning and I'll rush through my day,
meeting, meeting, meeting, meeting, speaking on stage, flying somewhere.
And I'll get to about 9pm and I wouldn't have eaten a single thing.
And there's no, you know, nutritional expert in the world that will tell you that's a good thing.
And what then happened was I was binge eating at 9 or 10 o'clock. And when I say binge eating, I mean like two large Domino's pizzas to myself. And so then I discovered this thing called Huel about four years ago. And for
me, Huel is a nutritionally complete drink, which means that I don't have to spend hours preparing
food, which I wouldn't do anyway, hence why I was skipping meals. It means that I get all the good
stuff I need to perform and have a good diet, but can have it in like 20 seconds and as someone that values time so so
much Huel was a godsend I've been a customer for I think four years I've had my subscription with
Huel for four years so when I was looking for someone to sponsor the podcast I contacted the
CEO who's been on the podcast before Julian and has built this staggering company I sent him an
email I said listen Julian I would love you to sponsor my podcast because I can actually talk
about your product authentically and he said to me because you've had a subscription with Huel for
the last three four years and I know you're a customer he was up for doing it so I thank you
and every week on the podcast I'm going to talk about different things to do with Huel to do with
time saving to do with diet and nutrition and of course we're going to get Julian back on the podcast, I'm going to talk about different things to do with Huel, to do with time saving, to do with diet and nutrition.
And of course, we're going to get Julian back on the podcast at some point.
Their company is doing unbelievable things in the UK.
If you've not seen and sort of kept up with the progress of Huel, I highly recommend you do because it's one of the most exciting companies we've seen in the UK in a long, long time.
And it's an absolute honour and a privilege to have them sponsoring The Diary of a CEO,
the perfect company
to be on this podcast
because, you know,
it's a company that is so in line
with some of my central values.
Did that happen to you
in your marriage
where you became more like her?
It's incredible that you ask that.
Whenever we first met,
she was the sensible one. She was very prudent, very pragmatic, very level-headed. She made very safe, sensible choices in life in general, and she was
known in that way. I was a bit more of a rogue. I was a little bit more mysterious. There was probably
a sort of, you know, hint of mischievous, of playfulness. And there's an idea in psychology that we seek in the other person a part of ourselves that we've lost.
And so there was almost that attraction there. It created that chemistry. It drew us in together.
I think she was looking for that excitement and in a way that safe danger, I was actually looking for stability and groundedness.
And over time, it connected us and brought us together. But over time, a remarkable thing
happened. And that is, just like you said, I began to become more like her. I became safer. And I actually lost an intrinsic part of who I was. I lost the
wild child that's in me. I lost the part that's a bit more dangerous, that's a bit more risky,
that doesn't always say something which is politically correct. And I became almost like a sanitized, clean version of who I was.
And that's not the man that she met.
And that's not the man that she fell in love with.
And on one level, it worked in terms of a stable love.
There was reliability.
There was dependability. there was relatability,
but it crushed the desire. There was a slow suffocation of that desire
over the last couple of years. And so I believe that one day she woke up and she sensed that loss of connection,
which I also sense too, and that loss of intimacy.
And she was scared.
And when the mind is scared, it comes up with thoughts.
Is this it?
Am I going to have to live like this for the next 10, 20 years? Will I ever
get that chemistry or that connection back? What if it never comes back? And when we're afraid
we're then seeking that part of ourselves that we've lost and so it's almost less about the
other person and more about us. It's less about turning about the other person and more about us it's less about turning away
from our partner and more about turning away from a part of ourselves it's less about finding
another person and more about finding another part of ourselves in which we feel alive and I
think the fair would have been wildly tempting wildly exciting It would have been all the things, it would have given her a
lot of the things that we had in the beginning that she missed. And suddenly it was back.
And even the structure of an affair is such that
you can't have the other person and the forbidden is erotic.
And it's set up in such a way that it just perpetually creates desire
because it has to be secretive.
It can't be long lasting for long periods of time.
There's continual space.
Now, if fire needs air, desire needs space.
And we found ourselves in this situation in which we're seeing each other every day. I used to be
traveling, I used to be working away a lot more, we'd have pockets where we'd be apart and in that
pocket even if you're away for a day or a couple of days there's a sense of loss on a very micro
level and then a sense of excitement of the person coming back and reimagining that life together.
And so going back to your point, I did.
I change.
And that's something which I've learned from.
I changed and I became like a squeaky clean version of me.
And she ironically ended up turning towards what she'd lost.
Is that something you regret?
I could feel regret in the way that I said it there.
Yes.
Yeah, being honest. If I could have changed on one level,
if I could have changed that,
if I'd been aware of that and I'd seen it coming, then I would have wanted to stay true to who I am. And that's the path I'm on now.
And I'd be curious to hear your thoughts, but I want to live in line with my truth.
And it's like John 8, 32, the truth will set you free.
And I believe that when we're living in line with our truth, it saves you.
And whenever we neglect our truth, it destroys you.
And so if I'd been able to stay truthful,
I think it would have been a very different trajectory.
Because the relationship worked on multiple levels.
And we had a wonderful time together for eight years.
But it's a little bit like putting a frog in boiling water.
It was in cold water and the desire is the frog.
It's alive.
You don't notice the heat.
There were unknown factors that
were at play and it was a dance it was both of us there's no it we're we both contribute to that
situation i think she wanted me to be that stable dependable reliable person without realizing that
on a subconscious level she actually was attracted to the man that i was and i wanted to make her happy and didn't
want her to be the kind of person that creates tension or or they're being too much grit but
actually tension is what creates fire at the same time and so the rough edges were a part of who i
was and i didn't need to get rid of them. It's so crazy. It's almost quite contradictory.
The typical narrative you hear about relationships is,
especially from, you know, dare I say it, women,
on movies and on Instagram is,
there's this conversation around, can I change him?
And it seems typically that people want to change,
or they hold out hope or they want to change their partner in some way to make
them more like the image they have of that person.
But in fact,
what you're describing is the thing that ends up saving the relationship is a
finding someone that you love for the way that they are and you're attracted
to for the way that they are.
But then both parties having a resilience to change to some degree,
because of that understanding that you formed your relationship on the basis of
this person being like this.
And then,
but then you say,
okay,
so over time people change.
And in fact,
in the last podcast we did,
there's a quote where you said change is the only constant. So both of you are going to change anyway. And you talk about the spiritual, psychological change that both parties go on. And again, this kind of draws it back to the conversation around monogamy is, you know, you're going to change anyway. Like you 10 years ago versus you now is probably a little bit more stable and a little bit more solid and a little bit more you know solid and a little bit more rational in your thinking um and because as you said in the last podcast change is a constant
how do you form a how can you guarantee that death will do you part when change might do you part
first and and this kind of brings us back to the conversation around monogamy which is
i guess it's my question to you is like like, if you, what do you suspect now,
if not marriage, is going to be the way that,
you know, when you meet someone,
what do you suspect?
What's your hypothesis on how that relationship
will be constructed?
For me personally?
Yeah.
I've got mine.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
But mine kind of, I can tell you mine if you want first. Yeah, yeah, yeah. But mine kind of...
I can tell you mine if you want first.
Yeah, yeah.
Okay, so mine kind of draws on something you said.
I think I'll just say, me too.
Yeah.
Safe.
Yeah, yeah.
We'll both go down together.
So it was interesting what you said there
about space being the air to a flame, right?
Yeah, yeah.
And for me, that's so critical.
Earlier on, when you were talking about marriage yeah one of the factors you you you were talking about was how where marriage came from as
a social construct and how it centers on like you know you know religion and god and all of these
things and one of the things that i think is also really important to understand is as a general
first principles rule if people are different and we all are
different every single human being on this earth is different then the solution should be different
like the the glove we fit is different we have different size feet and different size hands so
the solution to love or whatever that is as binary as it sounds should therefore be bespoke to who
you are and the life you're living in for me i, I live a life where I get my fulfillment out of the podcast and my work.
And it's such a big part of my wiring.
I can't change that.
It's the way that I am.
I'm different from my brother.
And he's only a couple of months older than me.
I'm completely different.
And so as it relates to love and me having a bespoke solution to when I meet someone
and I want to have kids or I want them to be my partner, the solution should also be bespoke solution to when I meet someone and I want to have kids or I want to you know want them to be my partner um the solution should also be bespoke yeah and so I look at
the situation that would be right for me and it is one that's really really reliant on space yeah
I love being on my own I'm happy there I love having time to myself to reflect to think
um to work on my projects.
Space is such a big thing for me.
So marriage and the idea of moving in with someone and then being, you know, on top of me seven days a week
for the next 60 years is something that I almost can't understand.
I'm not sure if I'm like psychologically fucked up
and that's why I can't deal with that.
But I love this idea, is the founder of fuel said on
this podcast of treating my relationship with my romantic partner in the same way that i treat my
relationship with my best friend me and my best friend seem to get on perfectly well and we and
i can't see a divorce ever coming you know what i mean yeah because we have that space and we have
the the middle ground that we meet upon which which is the relationship, but we have a fundamental amount of space,
which we both need.
In fact, my best friend moved in with me in lockdown for a month
and yeah, he started to piss me off.
Well, you breathe so fucking loud.
Do you know what I mean?
Like clean up after yourself.
How lowly do you chew?
We had an argument.
I remember we argued over something stupid stupid like a video game or something um so i going to conclude the point i know for me that space and the lack of being on top of each other is something that
would be a fundamental part of the relationship i have i'm willing to commit because i actually
can't see a world where i would allow them not to, or that I'd be happy with them not, even the word allow,
it's like permission,
right?
It's like such a asshole thing to say,
but I can't see a world where I would be okay with them not committing to me.
So I,
I'm going to have to concede that.
And I think I'll figure that out.
Hopefully if we can keep the sex good.
So space and commitment.
I hate the idea of marriage.
I don't think religion or the law have any and should have
any involvement on the topic of love i think they'd have a terrible track record religion with
homosexuality and and the you know the history it has on love and the law i don't see why a court
would have anything to do with how i feel about someone so i hate the idea of marriage some kind
of commitment that offers me space with the right person where we both understand that at
some point we might grow out of each other and when we do um that's fine and i'm going to conclude
with one point which you actually said in the last podcast which was when i asked you about monogamy
and about committing to someone for life you said to me um don't view it like that just ask yourself
the question every single day yeah today am i happy to spend today
this day with this person in this relationship if the answer is yes fine yeah if the answer is known
then there's something that needs to be addressed yeah thanks for sharing that don't use it
i've actually got a photographic memory where I started playing this on a word board.
What I know for me is there's definite similarities in that realistically,
I can't see myself being in a non-monogamous relationship.
And if I was with someone, that would be the person that I would be with.
In the past, though, in our last podcast, when you asked me about the definition of love,
that hasn't changed in that I believe that love is fostering that emotional and spiritual growth
of someone else. But what has changed is what I've realized. In order to distinguish, though, between a partner that you're with
and a partner that you have connection and chemistry and intimacy with,
there has to be that physical intimacy,
which is maintained and will wax and wane,
but which can still be a light because whenever it
dies it irrevocably shakes the foundation of the relationship and i don't think i put enough
importance on that i almost had like a zen-like view of marriage as opposed to appreciating and it was it was funny it was a um someone i was speaking to
and they were saying from a male perspective females want the new man during the day to be
kind sensitive loving and they want a neanderthal and tie them up in the evening and but do you know what it got me thinking because what if the same ingredients
that lead to a long-lasting loving relationship or monogamous marriage stability dependability
relatability safety protection caregiving what if these are the same ingredients that kill desire
because what i think is true is that and i should just speak for myself
what i potentially find attractive in the bedroom might be the things that I actually stand against during the day. There might be power and there might be dominance
and that doesn't match up with how I see myself during the day.
And so then you reach this conflict.
And I think what I began to do was I began to become the new man
and only the new man.
And actually what I want to do more often is to tap
more into both sides i mean there's no such thing as far too honest we talked about the importance
of living the truth i'm trying to lean into 100 and uh and there's this great philosopher called Usher who says, a lady in the streets and a freak in the bed.
And it's like,
I heard that lyric maybe eight years ago.
And I literally say it to my friends all the time when I'm talking about the
type of partner that I want.
And it's matching up exactly what you said,
the civility and the class with the lack of class and the freakishness and the and and
it's it's hard to find and maintain the balance um i found yeah and because sex can be really
a journey of somewhere that you go and so then there has to be that trust and that safety there and at times it
might be about letting go of responsibility and surrendering it might be about taking control and
being dominant but it's an understanding what it means to you and and at what times they should
unfold and and be allowed to live so that your imagination can live because when it doesn't and then it just
becomes an act or something that you should do or a way of having children then we begin to feel
lost and that's you know what's happened with a lot of clients i've seen and so going back to how
i would want to imagine the situation is yes it'd be a monogamous relationship with with another um
with with a woman and i would want to try and stay true to who i am and still keep keep that
whole version of me and that's what i've learned keeping and i've gone back to that the wonderful
thing is would i you know you ask me, do I regret it?
The reason also why I don't regret it because I'm not holding on to it
is because the changes have happened.
And I've trusted that it was meant to be.
And it was meant to unfold that way.
And I'm much more in tune with who I am now.
So I finally got my motorbike license.
And I bought my Triumph Bonnie yesterday amazing yeah um and i'm doing the
things which and i realized because i'm drawn to more of a sense of risk and danger and actual
activities where i have to be consumed within that moment and be present and i'm getting back
in touch with who i am and how i want to live my life and what i want to stand for and it's on me
to maintain that
with the next person I'm with. Another thing I learned was the space, because where we went
wrong is whenever we didn't have the space. And actually I realized I really enjoy living alone.
I love that freedom. My other relationships are very important to me with my brother and my best friends. And so I don't know yet what that will look like.
But it will definitely involve more space and and also that sense of adventure and
spontaneity, because that's what I enjoy, I want to travel, I want to see different
countries and I can set my life up where i'm doing that potentially with another person or still pursuing my passions and that is a safe relationships relationship
where that person knows that i love them and i'm there for them but i won't always be but then kids
in the same room fucks up this whole fantasy like do you know what i mean because then we'll deal
with that in podcast three but that's that's the bit where i'm like okay it's all wonderful and perfect i was
just thinking then my last three relationships they've all lived in another country and it's and
it's probably the reason why it works is because i can walk around here in my boxer shorts all day
just like drinking my heel you know eating my pot noodle whatever and um being myself and then we
come together when they come there or i go there we whatever and um being myself and then we come together
when they come there or i go there we feel wonderful love it great and then i go back
and have my you know my bachelor lifestyle you know um but yeah like i i think um kids is a is a
really a topic which we would be like intellectually dishonest if we did it didn't yeah address
because there'll be people listening to this that think okay well that's all well and good
but when you become a father or a mother you have to be there for your kids yes and there's not a
lot of science that says it's not good to be there for your kids right so yes and in the same way that
we can start to though make sure that we clarify between what the science says and then what the script is. development and situational success whenever they are brought up with a sensitive caregiver,
someone who is responsive to their needs, someone who hears them, can hold them,
give them safety, but also permission to be able to travel and come back,
and who's invested in that child. But I'm not aware of studies that say that the parents have
to be living in the same home in the one house 12 months of the year and be their lives to be
set up in a certain way. And I don't know what the answer is yet and I'm not at that stage yet,
but I would be curious whenever I am at that stage to begin exploring and it might not be
as radical as it's envisioned at a certain point in time but there might be enough space or enough
still spontaneity or adventure or playfulness even on an internal level or in the way that
you set your life up where both partners have that space and still are able to maintain that passion.
Isn't it crazy how much of life's misery and failure and
unhappiness stems from either trying to conform to the conventional way or the script, as you say,
or trying to fit into, or even sometimes answer an invalid question we talked a little bit about this
on the last podcast where i said you know i think so many people live their lives trying to answer
invalid questions like what number is orange is what i said last time and in the same way you got
you know the question are you in love presumes a yes just by asking it i'm forcing you to to say yes yeah or no i'm also presuming that
we've agreed upon the definition of in love which again is just a fucking maze because no one's ever
told me what that is no you're not born and they go okay god goes by the way if you ever feel this
that's love okay and you go okay got you right because i you know and the word is so loosely
i love peanut butter i love my dog i love my girlfriend i love my wife i love my mom and it's
like so what is it different type there's such a fucking confusing complex nuanced
thing love and we're forcing it into this yes or no yeah and people will like they'll ruin good
things because they they they feel pressured or they're unsure if this is it yeah and um i just i
just wanted to kind of leave that point there in a sense of the idea of, I know so many people listening to this will be unknowingly programmed by convention.
And it's the first principle thinking and the ability to potentially interrogate and then reject it
um that can literally save you in every facet it saved me like go to university get a job do this
and i i stopped going to school because i thought it was a load of shit dropped out of university
after one lecture started a business and i am as i've said on this podcast before i'm the happiest
person i know i've reached a level of success at a ridiculously young age.
I managed to like write a new story, write a new script for how life can be lived.
And people admire me and listen to this podcast basically only because, not because I'm smarter than anyone else or anything else.
It's fundamentally, if you go back to where it started was because i for some reason was willing to
question the script and then had the as they call it fearlessness for me it wasn't for me the biggest
fear was fucking following the script clearly right but had the perceived fearlessness to say
well this doesn't make sense um yeah how does that resonate with you two things come to mind. One is that, like you said before, the solution, in my mind, will be bespoke.
Because we're trying to take a one-size-fits-all solution, a panacea, and apply it to everyone.
And we're all unique. And it's important, I think, for us each to begin to become aware of the emotional resistance we have to considering possibilities outside of
the conventional nuclear family unit and just begin to think about what that might mean and
where we might be able to see change. And the second part is to ask yourselves,
what do I think I have to have in order to be happy so in relationships often people think
marriage children in business it could be x revenue y setup z lifestyle
and then we can ask what will that give me? Why will it make me happy? Because below will
be the emotional need. So it could be in relationships, it could be because I want affection, physical
intimacy, a sense of belonging, stability. For something else it could be status, to
be accepted by others, not to be judged but isn't just a yeah isn't the actual truth based on that so on that
point of marriage people thinking that they think marriage will make them happy they've never
experienced marriage before right so where have they got that idea from it's i think the actual
the fundamental truth is because they told me it would make me happy. Yeah, we've been sold that story.
But what do people really want?
What are they wanting out of the marriage?
If you go deeper, there'll be an emotional need
that they're trying to meet through the marriage,
that they think the marriage will provide the solution to.
But like you're saying, it doesn't.
Well, it can, but it might not.
And so what people might actually want is
emotional connection or
companionship. You know, if you said describe the marriage, the ideal marriage to me, they might say,
well, we're happy and we're there for each other and I have a confidant or a best friend or I have
a lover. It's understanding those different parts. When we've broken that down and understand what
we're actually yearning for or searching for
we can then ask can i meet those needs in a slightly different way that doesn't necessarily
prescribe to the conventional model and that's first principles thinking in essence which is
exactly back to like the fundamental yeah yeah which is how yeah yeah and which is what i said
before is what i love about your mind
because you take it back to your first principles and then that's whenever you potentially become
you know i just make new things yeah yeah yeah that's it's such a i i wish the school taught
kids how to think in that way because the when i if the first principles just going back to the
university point for me where I want to be a,
I want to start a business and be a millionaire.
That's what my stupid ass brain was thinking at that point.
Right?
So this piece of paper,
who am I going to show that to if I'm self-employed?
Yeah,
that's a good point.
I don't want you to show it to myself.
Everyone else,
everyone else around me is sleeping on their desk and hung over.
And I'm going to have the same stamp that they all have
but that's actually probably going to work against me and i swear to god this isn't high i'll tell
you if it was hindsight bullshit i was thinking that i've got this vivid memory of my first day
at university and my last um of looking over and this girl bits up being sat on my right and she
was drunk and sleeping on the desk and i didn't get into a good university because i got expelled
from school so i didn't really take my exam seriously either.
Again, because of the same thinking.
But I remember thinking,
I'm going to go,
I'm going to get the same trophy as her.
Is that, how is that going to help me?
If we both show up and we're,
and I was just thinking,
and then you've got, it was boring as fuck.
Like they, I've been running businesses since I was 14.
Day one, they were like, make a poster.
I swear to God, the lesson,
my last lesson in my first year at university was make a poster I swear to god the lesson my last
lesson in my first year at university was make a poster and I thought this isn't gonna in terms of
the information part that's not gonna give me the information I need and it was that and I walked
out of there I walked into the business office and I spoke to the head of business at the university
and I said I'm gonna defer for it for a little while she said cool fill out this piece of paper
and you can defer I never even filled it out.
I never went back.
Turns out I actually hadn't properly registered
for university either, like I was meant to.
So I didn't really have to defer, to be honest.
And that was it.
And, you know, I want to move on
because we spent a long time talking about this topic.
You said earlier on that you spent lockdown in California.
Yes.
Which is, you know, I'm jealous.
You don't know. And it cuts both ways. You don't know what's going to happen in the next moment. We have a projection of the way that we think
our lives will unfold, and often we become tied to it and bound to it. And any deviation we can
see as a failure of some sort. But but actually sometimes life has other plans for us.
And when we don't know what's going to happen, I think it keeps that freshness.
You keep fresh eyes and you stay grateful for what you do have while you have it.
On the other hand, we don't know what's going to happen and it could all be taken away from us
at any point.
And I've got a good friend of mine and his father just had a stroke a couple of days ago.
And they now know the outcome is he won't be around.
Ten days ago I was walking in South Kent and five minutes after I passed and I was coming back,
there was barriers put up and a refuse collector had been walking out and a bus had knocked him down
and in an instant his life was over and I just imagined I could be completely wrong but I could
I imagined gosh he might have a family he might say goodbye to his wife and the kids in the morning
and he went off to work and he had no idea and she had no idea and and the things that were really that might have been niggling or
causing arguments don't matter now like none of that matters now and and I didn't see what was
going to happen coming and and I you know I lost on one level I I lost a lot. And it makes me really appreciate what I had.
But then on another level, that wasn't the end to the story.
And then it was as if life said, you're on this path, and I'm going to shunt you onto
a new trajectory.
And that's the path you're meant to be on.
This is where you're meant to be going.
And I believe that it's a part of my path. And it was meant to unfold this way. The universe is unfolding as it
should. And it's a lesson for me to continually trust. And that's why that voice came up in the
very beginning in my heart saying, all is well, because I know on a deep level that all is well.
It's just about trusting, sometimes letting go of our ideas and living
in this moment. I can think of a better ending.
Listen, I don't even, you know, thank you so much for so many reasons, because
what you've done today on one hand will probably be selfish, selfish as you move forward and
realize that the release of your truth and
talking about it and processing it with people is always liberating but on the other hand it's
incredibly selfless because there are so many people that are going to have less pain deal
with their pain better and understand themselves and hopefully be a little bit more self-aware
because you had the guts and the um and the you know the humility and lack of ego
to share what is an incredibly emotional um touching personal um experience and so thank
you so much it's helped me you know and i have no doubt that the hundreds of thousands of people
that listen to this it's going to help them in the same way um if people want to find you and they want to talk to you about this and i'm sure there will be a lot of them you know the
podcast was big back then it's much bigger now right um how do they find you what's the best
way to reach you so on instagram this is at dr dot underscore aria or my website which is dr-aria.com. And what kind of services do you offer people
that are going through you know various predicaments? So I do one-to-one coaching so
right now everything's done digitally but essentially it's identifying what aspect of
your life right now it's critical for you to resolve
and then helping you with the psychology and the mindset to be able to work through that or work
with that so it could be emotional resilience it could be sustainable weight loss it could be
relationships it could be taking your business to the next level in terms of how you view yourself as an entrepreneur.
It might be fears, loss of intimacy, imposter syndrome, whatever issues actually there for you.
I'll check if it's something that we can approach from a mindset point of view.
And that's where my expertise is and then help you on your journey as you then have a more empowered mindset so that
you're developing that robust sense of self and you're able to change and adapt and be fluid in
your journey and keep on growing essentially we have um we have such good conversations even off
the podcast we've met up i think last week or the week before and had just an open conversation about a bunch of things in life so i actually wanted to ask you i've never
asked a guest this before but is there anything that we've missed in terms of the topics that you
think are curious to the relationship we have or pertinent to the relationship we have or um
any sort of learnings that you've garnered from our conversations that you think we should be
sharing with people because I feel somewhat I feel those conversations are so rich
that I you know we talked about so much last time and even in our private conversations I just I
just wonder if there's anything else any sort of key topics that you I'm sure there will be like
I don't think we've exhausted our conversation.
We'll be back for a third episode.
Listen, thank you so much for your time.
I appreciate it.
I appreciate it so, so much.
More than I've, you know,
people, they give up so much time
and they fly to come and do the podcast.
But what you've given today,
I don't think you'll realize how selfless that act was
because of the value it will give to people.
And this is exactly why I do this podcast,
to hear these kinds of things
and to hopefully make myself better
and the listeners better for hearing it.
So thank you a million, million times over.
Thank you, Steve.
Thank you. Thanks for watching!