The Diary Of A CEO with Steven Bartlett - Moment 200: Love Expert Reveals Why 80% Of Modern Relationships Fail
Episode Date: February 14, 2025We give our best energy to work, but what about our relationships? In this moment, Esther Perel reveals how small moments of disconnection—like looking at your phone instead of your partner—can er...ode intimacy over time. Discover how to bring attention, creativity, and presence back into your relationships before it’s too late. Listen to the full episode here - Spotify- https://g2ul0.app.link//qmlJPkdxXQb Apple - https://g2ul0.app.link//TgMnzfgxXQb Watch the Episodes On Youtube - https://www.youtube.com/c/%20TheDiaryOfACEO/videos Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Our relationships, you know, I think we all certainly I think I have for much of my life.
And I say that because I look at my actions. So what I might say is different to how I
think I've behaved over the last, I don't know, 10, 15 years. We see them as kind of
an afterthought to everything else in many regards. So the amount of effort I put into
my businesses and to the podcast and to every little detail the creativity the thought the
brainstorming all of that
Relationships we kind of all just think they're just they just happen and if it doesn't happen perfectly then it's broken and I need to find
a new one
Yeah, that's a terrible way to think I
Mean and everybody knows it if you give the best of yourself at work,
if you bring the leftovers home, if when you come home, you say, I've given everything
I had now, I'm just putting my feet on the table. I just need to chill. I don't want
to make any effort. You know, slowly your relationship degrades, period. And then there's all kinds of ways it ends. None of them are particularly
joyful. And basically, if people were able to put a little bit of creativity, attention,
attention into their relationships, as they do with their customers or their guests,
relationships would be doing a lot better and my profession would be seeing
a lot less people.
I mean, there's no doubt.
And why are people so lazy, so complacent, so unimaginative with their relationships
at home?
I mean, I see so many people when you like here, you're not taking out your phone.
You're not, you're looking at me, you're paying attention on
occasion, you look for your questions and where we go, but basically you're with me.
But at home, if you do this or this-
Looking at my phone.
And then when the person tells you something really important, you go, uh-huh, uh-huh.
And you're kind of there, but not present.
And that's the beginning of a kind of modern loneliness,
actually, is that this idea that you
can share something really important to someone
who is half there, half there.
And I think that that's what's happening with a lot of younger
people these days is that they experience
a lot of half-dearness.
That begins to cultivate a real sense of loneliness that is to do not with, I'm physically alone,
that has to do with, do I matter?
Who hears me?
Who cares?
Who pays attention?
Who notices? who notices, you know, so I,
sometimes the advice is very banal. You know, it's to tell people,
put your freaking phone down, take an hour and put your phone down.
And I'm busy, but I'm busy.
Well, you will be busy and there won't be a relationship
sooner or later. There won't be a relationship. It's not difficult. You can wait, you can wait for the kids to grow up if there are kids
involved, things like that. But in the end, there isn't.
Just because someone was on their phone.
Well, it's not just on the phone. It's on the phone means I am continuously saying something
is more important than you. We come last. We're a cactus. We
don't need to be watered. We can survive in the desert. It's called, there's a term I've
been using for this that is I borrow from something else. It's called ambiguous loss.
Have you ever heard of this term? Ambiguous loss. Yeah. No. Ambiguous loss is a term that
was developed
by a colleague, Pauline Boss, a wonderful psychologist. When she talked about what happens
when you have some parent, for example, that has Alzheimer, they are physically present,
but they are psychologically gone. They're emotionally absent. And you can't really mourn
them because they're still physically
there, but you're caught in this in-between, in this ambiguous loss. On the other side,
you can have somebody who is deployed, hostage, miscarriage. They are emotionally very present,
but they are physically absent. In both cases, it's an ambiguous loss.
You can't, are they still there or are they gone?
Who knows?
When we live with this phone thing, when we are, because you've been at work, you've been
at the computer, you come home, you think, I'm so happy to finally let go of the computer,
you turn on the TV, you turn on the TV and then you turn on the phone at the same time.
You're watching here, you're watching there, and there's a person next to you.
And most likely, they often do the same thing in the end too.
And gradually, there is less and less of a thread of conversation, of connection, of
joy, of sex, of intimacy, all of what, you know, that becomes ambiguous loss.
Somebody is there, but they're not really present. Is there a difference between me and the sofa?
It's comfy. It's routine. You sit on me. But comfy and routine do not give us joy
You sit on me. But comfy and routine do not give us joy or meaning or relevance
or connection. And that's what we still seem to want. So it means saying to people,
it's actually not very, very complicated. What did people do for centuries? They took walks. That's one of the few times you can't
click. So take a walk. Don't sit. Don't try to do, you know, take a walk around the block
and just be in motion. Then you're parallel, you know, it's not face to face. It's side
by side. And you can talk about the day. If you, instead of just saying, stop, stop, stop,
you just said, let's go for a walk.
It's London, but still, you can, you know,
and you do half an hour walk.
It will, you'll come back to me
and you tell me what it will do.
But it's amazing how these small interventions
that are playful, creative,
not digging, change the dynamic of the relationship.
Because she is only pursuing you
in part because of how much you are withdrawing.
You change, she change.
If you wanna change the other, change yourself.
Once you understood the figure eight and how we create the other, you understand that if you do something else sooner or later, they do something else too.
So if you want to change the other, change you. This is part of the question you asked me, right?
What are some of the essentials understandings of working with relational systems? This is true at work, in companies, this is true in intimate
relationships, this is not just for romantic love, this is foundations of relational systems.
Feedback loop, it's called in cybernetics.
So many busy couples can feel the spark in their relationship waning away slowly but work isn't necessarily
the first place you look. Like pulling out the phone at dinner isn't necessarily the
place people look because that seems so small. So they aim at bigger things. They'll say,
I don't know, something bigger. But do you believe, are you saying that you believe a
lot of it, much of it often starts
with those small moments of disconnection where the person basically ends up becoming the sofa.
The Godmans call them bids for connection. Bids for connection.
Bids. You know, it's the little things, it's the difference between turning towards someone
or turning away. You know, when you read something, there's a classic example they give,
you read something, do you actually say, hey, did you read this, there's a classic example they give. Do you read something?
Do you actually say, hey, did you read this?
Let me send you this article.
That's a bid for connection.
It's not a big declaration, but it says, we're in this together.
When I see something that's interesting
that I think you would like to read as well, I share it with you.
I'm thinking of you.
I know you exist even if I'm not with you.
Do you know what my partner said to me something about a year ago?
And we stayed with me because I thought, that's such a strange thing to say.
She said to me, when we were in conflict resolution,
so we were talking about things,
she said, you know, when I send you things on Instagram,
in Instagram DMs, like, I'll be out here now in New York,
so if she sees
something interesting on Instagram, she sends it to me. She goes, you've stopped acknowledging it.
I used to just like double tap on it or make a comment back. She goes, you've stopped.
You stopped acknowledging it. And I thought, why does that matter? Why does it like,
you send me something I watch the funny video. I crack on with my day.
Because it's like, when you receive a birthday gift, do you think?
Yeah.
When you buy a birthday gift, is it important to give it?
Yeah.
Okay, that's the reason.
I mean, how would she know that you watched it if there is no acknowledgement?
And the acknowledgement is not about the video or the DM.
The acknowledgement is not about the video or the DM. The acknowledgement
is we share something.
Well, it's even worse because it says seen on Instagram. So it says that I've seen it.
Yes, but the scene that means that I have seen the video, the acknowledgement is we
are part of a thread. We're connected. She's absolutely right. So in that sense, when people lose the spark, it is a lot of these small details
that people say so much in the beginning.
You know, all the positive stuff that people lose,
and it's actually only more important with time
rather than less important with time.
The death of a relationship
is when people take each other for granted.
And when you stop acknowledging those things, it is part of the mechanisms of taking for
granted.