The Dr. Hyman Show - A Roadmap To Creating Healthy Love And Relationships with Mia Lux
Episode Date: September 28, 2022This episode is brought to you by Rupa Health, BiOptimizers, and InsideTracker. Our relationships affect our health and happiness. The problem is that we’re never taught how to seek, create, nurture..., and assess our relationships the same way we do our careers and bank accounts. But the cost of bad relationships on ourselves and our society truly adds up. The relationships many of us grew up around and might consider “normal” are in fact dysfunctional, creating a negative cycle we often don’t even realize we’re in. So how can we find good love, create good relationships, and keep them? That’s what today’s conversation with Mia Lux is all about. Mia merges the playful and the profound—drawing on her experience as a start-up CEO, stand-up comedian, personal growth junkie, and recovering lawyer. For over 7 years, Mia has been an international host, comedian & facilitator, specializing in designing and facilitating top wellness/personal development experiences around the world. Now, Mia is channeling this in the name of love as the Co-Founder & CEO of La Vette, a radical new platform designed to rehumanize dating in the digital era. This episode is brought to you by Rupa Health, BiOptimizers, and InsideTracker. Rupa Health is a place where Functional Medicine practitioners can access more than 2,000 specialty lab tests from over 20 labs like DUTCH, Vibrant America, Genova, and Great Plains. You can check out a free, live demo with a Q&A or create an account at RupaHealth.com. Magnesium Breakthrough really stands out from the other magnesium supplements out there. BiOptimizers is offering my community 10% off, so just head over to magbreakthrough.com/hyman with code hyman10. InsideTracker is a personalized health and wellness platform like no other. Right now they’re offering my community 20% off at insidetracker.com/drhyman. Here are more details from our interview (audio version / Apple Subscriber version): How our relationships affect our health and happiness (6:01 / 2:25) Shifting away from dysfunctional relationships toward intentional relationships (7:49 / 5:04) Self-inquiry to support healthy love relationships (14:07 / 11:30) Identifying the unconscious beliefs driving us into relationships (19:05 / 15:37) Letting go of good love and conscious uncoupling (25:11 / 20:02) Scientific predictors of relationship success (27:18 / 23:52) Interpersonal skills to improve your dating life and relationships (31:59 / 26:37) Speaking your truth in relationships (38:47 / 33:40) Navigating the dangers of dating (40:18 / 36:10) The importance of vulnerability and authenticity in dating and relationships (48:17 / 45:35) Learn more about LaVette and try your first month free at lavette.love/drhyman.
Transcript
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Coming up on this episode of The Doctor's Pharmacy.
Not only were we not taught about what good love is and how to create it, we often had
bad role models.
So most of us, whether we mean to or not, are unconsciously replicating that normal
dysfunction.
Hey everyone, it's Dr. Mark.
Like many of you, I'm terrifically busy throughout the week.
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episode of The Doctor's Pharmacy. Welcome to The Doctor's Pharmacy. I'm Dr. Mark Hyman and that's
pharmacy with an F, a place for conversations that matter. And if you've ever wondered how to have a good relationship or struggle with relationships
or wondered how to find the right relationship, then you should listen to this podcast because
it's with someone who has spent a lot of time thinking about how love works and how it often
doesn't and how to get love, find love, keep love, and get the right love. So this is the podcast for you
and probably everybody on the planet actually. And it's with none other than Mia Lux, who is,
I call her my was-wife. We are happily unmarried and we are good friends. We had an amazing time
together, but we found our paths diverging in a beautiful way that
has led us exactly to where we need to be.
So we're going to get into it with Mia.
She's a playful and profound human.
She draws on her experience as a startup CEO, a stand-up comedian, personal growth junkie,
for sure I can tell you that's true, and a recovering lawyer.
For seven years, she has been an international host, a comedian, a facilitator.
She specialized in designing and facilitating top wellness and personal development experiences around the world.
It's been her delight to make the world's most powerful ideas more accessible by making them truly enjoyable.
If you're laughing, you're learning. And now Mia is channeling this in the name of love. And she's the co-founder and CEO of a company called LaVette, a radical new platform designed
to rehumanize dating in the digital era.
I mean, if anybody's been on an app and it's so weird, I mean, I tried it and it was like,
oh my God, I do not like this.
This is the thing you should be paying attention to.
So welcome, Mia.
Thanks, Mark.
Thanks for having me on here for this, I think, really interesting discussion about something that people often
trivialize, right? Love and relationships often get kind of relegated to the nice-to-have category
of life. But I think more and more, these conversations are becoming front and center.
You know, as a doctor, I can tell you relationships play a huge role in people's health. Good relationships actually help people be healthy and bad relationships can make people sick.
Whatever the relationship is. I mean, I had a patient once who was a 53-year-old woman who had
all these chronic issues and she lived with her mother who was like 80-something who was still
abusing her emotionally. And I said, you need a motherectomy. And so
whatever the relationships are we have, they influence us hugely. And they're a big part
of our health. And we now know through the science of, for example, sociogenomics,
how your relationships, good or bad, influence your gene expression for good or bad. If you have a
healthy relationship, it can activate all your healing systems. If you have a toxic relationship, it can activate all your disease pathways. So this is
real deep science now, but most of us don't know how to get to having good love. And that's what
you've been focused on for the last two years, building this company, Lovett. So tell us,
you know, why does healthy love matter? What's the cost of bad relationships
to non-society on individuals and even generations?
I mean, you nailed it with that connection
between relationships being such a contributor
to our overall health and not just physical health,
but of course our mental health and just our happiness.
And I think it was Warren Buffett who said
that the most important decision you'll ever make is who you choose to marry.
And if you look at the breakdown, I think Business Insider did a good breakdown on how who you marry is the most important financial decision of your life.
And I think we have for so long underplayed the impact of the relationships around us.
And so because of that, we haven't put as much intelligence or thought into the relationships we create or how we choose those relationships.
And I mean, before we even look at what healthy love looks like, I always laugh when I think,
when you think about how we approach every other area of our life, whether it's looking
for a job or whether you're going to buy a car, the amount of research we do, the amount
of effort we put into it.
If you're building a business, you create plans, you're intentional. But when it comes to choosing a romantic relationship, our approach is like,
oh, we'll just leave it up to luck, right? I'll just trial and error. I'll just kind of go out
there and see what happens. And so we have this extremely important area of our life,
which affects every single piece of our happiness. And we apply so little of our intelligence and intentionality to finding it and creating it.
So I think that has been kind of, I think, for the most part of romantic human history,
the baseline.
But you can see there is a massive shift now because people are looking around at what
is considered normal.
You're looking at normal relationships and going, this is dysfunctional.
Oh, wait, wait wait that's just funny so normal normal is like means the sort of a uh the statistical number means what's the average right it's like the the the if you go to america it's normal to
be overweight that doesn't mean it's optimal right absolutely and it's normal to be like
unhappy in a marriage it's normal to stop having sex and in your long-term relationship. It's normal to bicker. It's normal to undermine each other. All these kinds of weird,
toxic baselines that we have normalized because listen, like our parents were doing the best they
could. Their parents were doing the best they could. And these were the role models and examples
of love we saw. I think it was interesting recently, you know, obviously the Amber Heard,
Johnny Depp trial was very, very publicized and really brought up, I think,
you know, a very clear example of the kind of toxicity that can exist in relationships.
But what's interesting is like that, that sort of kind of publicizing of toxicity was that everyone around was like, yeah, I've been in a relationship like that, or I've experienced behavior like that,
or I've exhibited behavior like that. And I think this is amazing movement now to be like, hey, just because dysfunction is normal doesn't mean we want to create it anymore.
There's a massive shift towards how do we create healthy love. And I love it. Hinge did a study
recently of its users, and they found that 91% of people want to date someone who goes to therapy.
97% want to date someone. No, and just by the way, therapy, let's talk about therapy as kind of like, as you and I know, there's many roads up the mountain, but therapy is being a symbol for
someone who's self-reflective, working on themselves, you know, dealing with their own
nonsense. And you can see there's a shift between prioritizing mental health and the kind of
qualities that make a partner, I'd say, healthy and connective and able to be in a more sustaining relationship.
So I do think we've had a really rubbish baseline. We're moving towards, I think,
far more intentional and healthy love. But like you said, I mean, none of us really had a roadmap,
right? And to start with, I would say I'm absolutely not what I call an expert on
relationships, but building Lovette, which like you'd mentioned, Lovette is this, what I call an expert on relationships, but building Levet, which like you'd mentioned, Levet is this, what I call a conscious response to the dysfunctional world
of dating. Like we've built every feature to essentially like counteract like the bad behavior
that goes on. And I've spoken to like so many incredible experts and we've been working with
their tried and true psychologies and, you know, coaching techniques. And what I realized was that
there are roadmaps out there. And I know you've seen this too. You've spoken to so many amazing
experts. There really are sound roadmaps of what creates predictable love, but we have not combined
that into the systems we use to find love. I see myself as a translator. No, I've gone out there
and I'm like, tell me how to do this. And I've gone and found incredible insights and like you
said, these roadmaps. And my job with building Livette has been to translate that awesome,
functional, romantic psychology into a technological platform that sets us up for
success versus the gross systems we have now. Yeah. I mean, it's true. We never learn the
things that are most important to have a happy life, how to have healthy relationships,
how to manage our money, how to deal with our health.
And I remember when we were together and married,
you said something to me once that was shocking.
And I just realized that it wasn't even something
that I thought was possible.
But you said, I want to have an exceptional love.
And I was like, wow.
Even to have that aspiration or belief because in my
experience all I saw in my family were really dysfunctional relationships my parents my mother
my stepfather my father and his wife my stepmother I mean it was just disaster and then I saw my
sister with her three husbands and me with my you know marriages, marriages and relationships. It's just like, I never thought, wow, maybe
there is a roadmap to having exceptional love. And you really helped me open my eyes to that.
And I think we really did, even though we're not together, we really did have an exceptional love.
We weren't quite awake in the ways we needed to, and we had to learn, we had to learn.
But that's part of what you're teaching everybody is how do we build the roadmap and
not just have another dating hype where you swipe and you like and it's all kind of weird and
fabricated, but have an authentic experience of somebody else in a way that brings out their
authentic personality, their beliefs, their values, you know, where you actually kind of look under the hood
before you buy the car. I mean, that doesn't even exist out there now in terms of a dating app or a
dating platform. So this is so powerful. It's so revolutionary. And just full disclosure, you know,
me as my husband, I'm her husband, but I believe so much in this that I invested in LeVette. So I want to
just have full financial disclosure, but I think it's such an important thing because healthy
relationships are so key to health and we have no freaking clue how to do that. Yeah. And if you
think about it, I'm sure most of the people who are listening to this podcast are self-reflective,
self-aware. They care about, you know, living a good life. They care about being happy and healthy and connected. And the joke about the more you work on yourself and the better you
become as a person, the harder dating on the apps feels because suddenly you're experiencing this
massive disconnect between cultivating real integrity and vulnerability in your life,
in your relationships, but then you're thrown out into this world. And I agree. I think you
and I had such a beautiful marriage. We both showed up with
such intentionality. And I hope you don't mind me sharing this, but I remember when we first met,
you had been working with my co-founder, Lauren Handel Zander on love and relationships.
And as part of that, she had taken you through what we call the three H's, the head, the heart,
the hoo-ha, the three voices you can kind of use to guide what you want. And you shared with me the beautiful list and vision you had created
for a relationship. You had been working on this idea of like getting super clear and super
intentional. And, you know, that even just beginning with something as simple as that
is really key. Because again, when people are falling into relationships unconsciously,
when they don't know, they can't recognize their own patterns and behaviors of what they've created in the
past that didn't work.
They don't really know what's important, what they're looking for.
We end up in like accidental relationships.
And then we wonder why it didn't work out, right?
And so this whole thing of intentional dating, like one of the things I've really learned
working with different coaches and psychologists around this area is that I think when it comes to healthy love and relationships, there's two parts to it which are really useful to look at.
The first part is, I think, the personal exploration.
Part of creating healthy love and looking for healthy love when you're dating, if you're with somebody, is understanding your role in it, right? And you touched on this in terms of, you know,
not only were we not taught about what good love is and how to create it,
we often had bad role models.
So most of us, whether we mean to or not,
are unconsciously replicating that normal dysfunction.
And no matter what we try, if we don't get curious
and take on our own nonsense, we will bring that into our relationships.
And so it's like one of the jokes is that we say with Lovett, part of finding love is really
finding yourself first. That's true. I mean, for me, after so many failed relationships,
I worked with Lauren and I literally went through a process of identifying all my traits,
all my patterns. What was my love operating system? What was my love software? And it was corrupted, like it had viruses. And it was guiding me in the wrong ways. It was leading
me to act in ways that weren't in integrity with myself. And I and I didn't really understand how
that software was programming me to pick the wrong people, or do the wrong things for the
wrong reasons. And, and I think we're all like that. And there's this weird thing that happens
where we end up in relationships
that are not like based on our true authentic healed self,
but based on dysfunctional patterns
that we learned as kids and that we're raised in.
And what I think LeVette does
is it helps take people through a process.
So it's not really just a dating app.
I think it's kind of a ninja stealth, like personal transformational. I call it like a bait and switch.
No, it's a total bait and switch because here's the thing. If you're single, you want to meet
people. But what we're seeing is that, I mean, A, the functionality in the apps is boring. It's
swiping, it's matching. It's far more a model of like social media where you're being driven by
dopamine hits. If you look at the economic sort of structure of those companies, they're not it's matching it's it's far more a model of like social media where you're being driven by dopamine
hits if you look at the economic sort of structure of those companies they're not really interested
in having you leave the platform and find somebody they're far more interested in you staying on
and essentially they've they've kind of gamified this feeling of like oh maybe it's the next person
oh maybe it's the next person oh if i pay for a boost i just need and so they've kind of they
work on that system whereas with levit i think I think part of what we were building is this idea that as you're looking for love, people in that moment are so open to working on themselves.
They're so open to learning new skills.
And in this first part of what it takes to create a healthy relationship, which is looking at the personal, giving people the correct tools to look at their lives and be like, oh, you know,
what is the pattern I've had in my past relationships? What is my accountability
for what I've created or what didn't work? How can I heal that? How can I get better? How can
I bring more awareness to it? And I know you and I, you know, when we were married, one of the
things I so loved about our relationship was that we would often bump up against this together.
Like one of us would have some kind of trigger or pain
and instead of falling into a cycle of like blame and this and that, we would often both step back
and go, huh. I go, I wonder what it is in me that's having me respond like this. And listen,
you and I would go work with people. One of the people we worked with, the Shelly Lefkoe,
we would find like, what's the belief underpinning this? I remember one of the beliefs I used to have
when we were married was if we spend time apart, it means that something's wrong.
And so every time you and I would be apart and we traveled a lot, I would kind of catastrophize and fall into a spiral and conflict and just create drama.
Because I had this belief because I saw with my parents, every time they took space, it was because something was wrong, right? And so like taking accountability for those parts of ourselves that can sabotage relationships or pick the wrong person really is the first step. And with Levet
again, we build it in with the workshops we run, the coaching we provide, you know, the different
sort of incredible virtual resources. Because as people are learning, we're like, hey, listen,
what a great time to do like a software refresh, right? Yeah. Yeah. Lauren often said, you know, you have a broken picker, you know, and I didn't
really know what that meant, but a lot of us have a broken picker. And part of the process of LeVette
is really to help fix the broken picker. How does it work like that? Yeah. Well, I mean, you've
experienced this. So I think, you know, when it comes to like, we say a picker, exactly that.
The picker, I think, is not so much the conscious
part of what we're picking, it's the unconscious beliefs driving us into relationships. And listen,
if anyone who's in the dating world who's a coach or like me has been immersed in it for the last
two years, you see this very quickly, which is that people say they want one thing,
and then you look at their track record with who they actually pick, and you're like,
huh, these things don't match up. And so even when we have like all the best conscious intentions, if you haven't done the unconscious work like to heal your beliefs or bad theories about love, a type of love feels familiar doesn't mean it's functional. And in my version of this, it's like, oh, familiar love felt like, you know, a type of controlling or familiar love felt like, you know, a kind of, you know, giving up of myself. Like there were aspects of my childhood, which I just replicated over and over again. So it's such a curious thing. And I know with you, you've been working on this a lot. So I actually love, if you'd share, what are some of the key
things you found helped to fix your picker? Well, I mean, it was complicated. I think
there were a lot of elements to it. But what I realized was that I had for many, many years a
sense of something empty or a lack or a hole in me. And I never could pinpoint what exactly it was.
And I went through a process with Lauren, actually, after we split up to really look at it.
How did I get my love software?
Where did it come from?
And intellectually, I knew my mother and her relationships and her story. But I really took diving really deep into the beliefs
I had about myself and about love. And what it really came to is my mother was born to deaf
parents. And anybody who's seen that movie, Coda won the Best Picture Oscar last year,
was children of deaf adults. Coda means children of deaf
adults. She was a child of deaf adults and as a little girl she was their
parent and so she learned that love was taking care of people who were broken
and they were beautiful loving kind people but there was something in her
that you know was trained to find and pick people she had to fix or take care
of and that was was what she did to me too. Not intentionally, but she then picked my father who was broken and
then she, he, you know, that didn't work out. And then she picked my stepfather who was broken.
That didn't really work out very well, but she stayed with him and was depressed and miserable
and then turned me into, she called that a parentified child. So that's what I thought
my job was. And, you know, it sort of helped me be who I am. I am a doctor. I kind of saved the world. I'm still trying to do that
with everything I'm doing. But the truth is that it also had a huge cost for me and it prevented
me from really feeling whole and complete myself. And even our relationship, I didn't really have
that healed. And I often felt scared of losing you
or scared of lack or not enough or and and that has really shifted as I've gone into that it really
helped me to let go that belief and and it wasn't really and different people get their different
ways for me it was it was partly really digging into the story and getting it the movie code
really helped me break open emotionally and it was was really somatic. Like I spent days on the floor just crying because I kind of finally got the
whole pattern and what that emptiness was. And it's just gone now. I just don't feel it. And I'm
not, I don't have that same kind of need or neediness. And that, that's really interesting.
Hey everyone, it's Dr. Mark. If I've learned one thing during my two decades in functional medicine, it's that we're all
unique.
No two people are alike, which means we can all benefit from personalized medicine.
But for most of the history of medicine, individualized healthcare just was not possible.
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discount code in your cart. And I think we all have different attachment styles, different ways of, you know, dealing
with love and relationships. Some are avoidant, some are, you know, anxious, some are secure.
And there's a whole theory about attachment theory and love. But for me, it was obviously
a very anxious attachment style because I was always afraid of like losing love. And I think
that that really has shifted in me dramatically by doing this love. And I think that, that really has shifted
in me dramatically by doing this work. And I think the underpinnings of LeVette are based on a lot of
the work, um, of Lauren and Hindel group and you and what you've done. And I think that really is
that DNA inside is what is going to help release people into a framework of loving that is actually
more whole, more integrated, more authentic to who they actually are, not operating unconsciously from all their old patterns or wounds.
Yeah, absolutely. And, you know, I know you and I, we both, after we, you know, just for anyone
who doesn't know the story of how Mark and I kind of separated, we did a beautiful conscious
uncoupling, you know, just because we realized that despite how much love we had together,
you know, I wanted to have kids and a family and we just were never in the right life phase together.
And, you know, that experience of having to let go of really good love in order to, you know, like you said, try find the correct lives for each other was for me also a very confronting process.
And then, you know, we both realized after the fact, like after we had gone through the conscious uncoupling process, that both of us had unprocessed trauma from childhood yeah yeah mine mine was completely repressed i had no memory
of it i had to go through you know very intense sort of ptsd treatments with incredible people
to actually uncover those memories and you know really looking back now same thing realizing that
my childhood abuse in so many ways dictated what love was available to me.
And, you know, you with your version and, you know,
I often say like you and I did the very best we could in terms of
intentionality, you know,
you and I would sit and do all the work to try and make it work with each
other. But in our case,
the work that needed to be done wasn't in the relationship between us.
It wasn't the interpersonal stuff. It wasn't
better communication. It wasn't any of that. What we actually each needed to do was to go
heal our childhood trauma. We just didn't know we had any. We were like, I'm fine.
Like you say, it's just a flesh wound. Like, I'm great. And, you know, so that's why this piece of
it, the personal piece of healing and figuring out who you are, you know, what beliefs you have, what you're looking for.
This is so key, right?
And then you think about the apps, right?
Where the apps go to you, hey, choose from all of humanity, overwhelming, you know, and choose based on symmetry.
Like how symmetrical is somebody's face?
And I laugh because like-
Mine isn't, right?
But not just that, but like how absurd it is that we think we can, you know, make a decision this
important on so little data and such poor data. And it's, you know, if you look at all the major
predictors of relationship success, right? And there've been enough studies on this. There was
one study that was done over like 40 something years with married people. And the predictors all boil down to the same thing.
It's like kindness, supporting each other, communication, a healthy active sex life,
forgiveness, compassion. All the factors boil down to these kinds of, I'd say, very internal
relationship skills and the ways you feel about each other.
There's no relationship study that goes, ah, it boils down to how good looking the people are.
What kind of a selfie they take.
These are just not the things that actually create good love.
But we're being asked to assess and choose based on this.
And so there's actually quite a striking study that shows that with, like 80% of women swipe on only 20% of men. Like there's a
massive skewing, there's a massive skewing mismatch in the algorithms because again, people are just
being asked to assess based on looks, right? And people just go, okay, good looking, good looking,
good looking, not good looking. But what's super interesting is that, you know, the other 80% of
men who are not being swiped on, if you put those men in a room with women and the women get to see how they behave, how they talk, who has integrity, who has like a sense of, you know, like, you know, mana or charisma, all these things you can't tell from a photo, then it all kind of balances out again.
So, you know, even just-
How did LeVette fix that?
Yeah.
And this was one of the big things that we went back and forth and back and forth about.
Again, I mean, trying to translate the amazing psychology that we see out there into a technological platform is like a fascinating process.
And in this case, we experimented and, you know, there are apps out there who completely remove visual data.
There's no pictures.
You have to
get to know each other. Yeah. But the reason why these apps haven't taken off or don't work is
because listen, three H's, right? Head, heart, and hoo-ha. And the hoo-ha is sexual attraction,
chemistry. We do want to be attracted to a person. So I realized, listen, if I remove all visual
data, that's not the way. I decided the better cure to this is to give you more information.
And so what we were playing with and what you can see now as well, like with video,
video, even a three to five second video gives you such a better sense for somebody, how
they feel, their energy, whether they're attractive to you than a photo.
And so you can see all the apps are
retrospectively scrambling to build video in, but because video is vulnerable, but video is
vulnerable. So if you don't have to put video up, you feel kind of like a weirdo being the one to
put it up. But LeVette is a hundred percent video. You will never see a photo of somebody. So even
your first interaction with somebody is like a three to five second video. And so we've pushed
everyone and made it a rule because just your ability to get a sense of someone's energy is
so much better. And even as I think about all the people out there who feel excluded by the apps in
the sense of what I hear over and over again is, I just don't do well on the apps. I do well in
real life. I just wish they could meet me. I just wish someone would jump on the phone with me.
That's the majority of people.
Your chance to then convey who you are is jumped.
And also the kinds of like, we have a whole structure on the kinds of questions we ask
people to answer in their videos, right?
So there's like a cute profile video, which is very quick.
But then the others, we actually ask you to share not just what's like good in your life,
but we ask you the question, what sucks about this area
of your life? And watching people share quite vulnerably on camera, like actually getting a
sense of like how they talk about difficult things or what's alive for them makes people
vulnerable. It makes it so attractive. And so, you know, really trying to create a world where
even though, yes, we are digitized, we're trying to create convenience. We want to give people the
best possible opportunity to be seen
and also to really get a sense of the people in front of them.
It's a really interesting balance to strike for sure.
It's so huge.
I mean, it's so different, right?
There's no place where one –
and then you can actually have engaged interactions with people
that are facilitated because often you get on FaceTime
or whatever Zoom with somebody after
you do an initial connection and it's kind of awkward. It's so awkward, yeah. And what do you
say? And how do you do it? And it's like, you kind of solve a lot of that, right?
Which actually goes to part two, right? So, we have the personal. We have like,
how do you create good love? It's looking at yourself, being willing to take your patterns on.
And then you have what I think is like the interpersonal. And there are, I mean, listen, again, there are so many incredible dating coaches out there who
have nailed the stuff. And I, again, feel so lucky to have spoken to matchmakers and dating experts
and psychologists who've been, you know, scrolling away at this for many, many years. And again,
what we're finding is that there are just some key interpersonal skills that if you learn this
and you cultivate this,
not only is your dating life improved, your picker improves, but your relationships improve.
And one of the key things is so simple, but it's just like knowing how to ask great questions.
And, you know, most people don't. And when you hear about how people say, oh, dating is boring,
dating is this, dating is that, I'm like, well, you don't know how to have a great date. And also to be fair, especially in the pandemic,
like the fear now of actually going and meeting a person in real life, like the stakes feel
started to feel really, really high. Right. So one of the things we do is we drive people to
video first. We call it a virtual vibe check. We say, listen, if you've connected with somebody
exactly said, like jump on a video call, but rather than being awkward, the way we do it is, like, I've built a database of, like, 3,000, 5,000 questions.
5,000 questions?
Yeah, like, deep rapport building questions across every area of life.
No.
I mean, because the point is-
Not like those cards we had that were, like, the divorce cards so this is so mark and i at some point in our marriage i think in the pandemic
we're like oh like let's let's get some of those relationship cards and use it as a tool
but these cards had some seriously like seriously confronting questions like what i remember was
they had the question um what do you least like about the way that i drive
and i'm like like that that question is not like,
that's going to set us up for- It should be called,
how do you start a fight questions? Absolutely. No, so I've gone through
a bit of these, but the questions we ask are really designed to help people drop in deeper,
right? And they're not confrontational. They're more about getting to the heart of somebody.
Because again, there's this idea that we're looking for similarity when we date. I think that's a
misconception. If you look at the data on this too, it is a misconception. Superficial similarity
doesn't actually necessarily mean you're going to have a good relationship. The type of similarity
you're actually looking for is a type, which is like, it's called meta values. And meta values is essentially like,
how do you feel about feelings?
How, like, what do you believe?
Like, how should anger be expressed?
Or how do you deal with things?
So this is all about your internal processing
and similarity there matters.
So then think about dating, asking someone like,
oh, what's your favorite song?
Or like, what's your favorite food?
These are things
people ask, but this is not going to find you someone who has a deep compatibility and resonance
versus asking, how do you deal with a difficult situation? When you're triggered, how do you
manage your nervous system? You know, what is the struggle that you've had that you have overcome
are really proud about? What's something that's a little hard in your life right now? Like asking
these much deeper questions that will shake out if there is a resonance at this kind of like
meta values level, right? So that's a key thing, that interpersonal dynamic.
Now, you've done a lot of practice with this. After we split up, you went on a lot of dates.
So you were kind of doing field research.
I really was. I really was. And you mentioned to me that you had these like
five or six questions that you would ask and they were so transformation. I wonder if you'd share
what those questions are to give people a flavor of the kinds of things that could transform a date.
Absolutely. And again, this is like, the way I like to start with dates, and you're right, like I really, I came out of our marriage, I determined to really figure out like you were,
figure out my own patterns and do it better. But then also building Levette, I was like,
what an amazing chance to go on every single app at every single level, you know, go on dates and
really test the psychology behind what I'm building. So, one of the things I would do is
very quickly on a, well, first of all, for anyone who's single, and this is super, super,
super important. If you are single and you're stuck on the apps right now, there's a very
important dating flow, which is that if you connect with somebody and you're like text chatting,
don't wait more than like a couple of days of text chatting to say, Hey, listen,
let's jump on a video call. And the line I used to use, which is, which makes it really easy and
really kind of just cute and funny is, Hey, like I'd love to jump on a video call. And the line I used to use, which makes it really easy and really kind of just cute and funny is, hey, I'd love to jump on a video call and just see if
we both passed the psychopath test. Ha ha ha. Right? And no one says no to this. And if someone
says no, run. But then you can jump on a quick video call and this quick call will give you such
a sense of whether you have chemistry or not. And so on this call, you'll get a vibe. And then when you go on a first date, you're not wondering, do they look like their
pictures? Is there going to be any kind of spark? You already know that there's something there. So
you can ask and dive into these deeper questions with no fear. But the questions are, the best ones
I found is to start really positive and say, and this is from Elizabeth Gilbert. It's a question
she asked every person she met for a year. It's such a great question, which is just, what are you most excited about in your life right
now? And the reason this is such a great question is that anyone on a date at that point will light
up and share the thing they're most excited about. And a person can go from really boring
and two-dimensional to really interesting, attractive when they share what they really care about. So it's a way of diving in, but it's a pretty safe question to
ask, right? And then you can kind of crank up the intensity a little bit and ask somebody,
you know, like what is, like I said, what is a challenge in the last year that you have overcome?
And again, it gives someone else someone to share a little bit more vulnerably.
Another amazing question I love to ask is what's something about you i would never guess just by looking at you and this is when people
can share they can share their quirks like whenever i like things about me like i was a
pistol instructor i'm famous in sri lanka but only in sri lanka like little weird things little weird
things and i've i've heard some of the most amazing answers. Like recently I asked it and this guy said to me, he said, he was like, he was like,
when I was a kid, my sister and I were part of a circus every summer.
I'm like, what?
Like, yeah, we were like eight and six and we would go and juggle for the circus every
summer.
So you can learn the most strange things and it just, it opens up these kinds of conversations,
right?
But then the next thing is to ask people about like what they're aligned with and what they're
creating.
So like, what are you, what are you working towards in your life right now?
And this will give you a sense of their priorities, right?
And if those priorities align with you, is it about relationships?
Is it about family?
Is it about work?
And then it can just be something as simple as like, what's something you've achieved
in the last year that you're really proud of?
And again, these are not confrontational questions, but you'll find that they shift the
dynamic of any kind of, whether it's a romantic date or just in a friendship, it shifts the
dynamic from this kind of like superficial compatibility, familiarity to a deeper level
of communication. And so much of the interpersonal stuff that we teach in LeVette comes down to
asking great questions, but also being willing to share the truth. And I know you and I worked a lot on this. We had
so much help, especially from Lauren during our marriage about both of us are people pleasers.
We would keep the truth from each other because we didn't want to upset each other.
And it just creates such a, such an unhelpful cycle, right? Versus having to really learn how
to say the
truth up front whether you're dating or in a relationship and and really trusting really
trusting that the truth will shake out the correct outcome it might just blow up the relationship
because the person can't handle it or they're they're not able to contain that or it might
actually open up to much deeper relationship i mean listen, listen, on first dates, and I know a lot of
people give advice like don't share too much on the first date. I shared everything. I'm divorced.
I'm dealing with my childhood trauma right now. I'm having some struggles in some of my family
relationships. I don't share it as like a complaint, but I own it. And I'm very clear.
And I light my freak flag. I'm like, hey, listen, this is the truth of who I am.
And I see, can they hold it? Because there's no point me secretly managing all my secret dark
truths and then like bringing them out one by one, six months in, 12 months in. That's how
relationships get weird, right? And so, part of it, I'd be like, how do you systematize telling
the truth? How do you make it fun? How do you make it sexy? How do you make it like something that people are excited to do and that they want to share?
The apps right now, I mean, I don't know if you know the dating stats, but with digital
dating, I think what people are often not aware of is that people are not just managing
disappointment, right?
The disappointment is like ghosting, catfishingfishing lying all the stuff not working out
most people are also managing danger physical danger in terms of meeting a stranger internet
um 560 million dollars was lost to scams dating scams uh just last year in america do you remember
there was a guy impersonating you yeah in europe he was he and i when I was married to Mark, I would get these frantic, desperate messages from
women on Instagram going, your husband is cheating on you. Yeah, your husband. And they would send me
screenshots of like FaceTiming with Mark. I'm like, what is going on? And we realized that there
was a doppelganger, a guy who looked just like Mark, who was going on dating websites, pretending
to be him and scamming women out of money. And this is so common. So you have to understand that with dating,
this is crazy. It is terrible. And when you hear the stories one-to-one, like
thinking about this, this is the most vulnerable part of our lives. We're trying to open our
hearts. We're trying to be connected. We're hopeful. It should be one of the most exciting, juicy areas of our life. But so much of the time, because of
how the systems are set up, we're managing basic safety. So we can't even ask ourselves, do I like
this person? Is there chemistry? Because we're like, am I safe? Is this even a real person?
Is this a bot? Is this a scam? Especially if you're a woman, right?
Especially if you're a woman, right? Well, for women, men and women actually have it equally bad in different ways.
Because for men, there's an enormous amount of catfishing, bots, and scamming.
What's catfishing?
I'm a little bit slow.
Catfishing is like when somebody puts up – well, there's different types.
The worst type is when someone literally creates a profile, puts up pictures, and it's not them.
They look nothing like that. And then on the kind of like softer end, it's like these days there's so many
filters and Photoshop and this, that the person puts up all these amazing photos, but when you
meet in real life, they actually don't look anything like their photos. It's all filtered.
It's all this, it's all that. So this kind of vast misrepresentation about how we look, which is why
again, I love video because even if someone puts a little bit of a filter on, you still have an idea of what they look like and
how they sound. It's a much more accurate representation, right? But if you think about
managing the danger of dating, this makes so much sense why people feel afraid of going out there
and joining the apps and joining the sites because how do you keep an open heart when there's so much danger
and there's so much, I guess, not just emotional harm,
but sometimes physical financial harm?
Yeah, so let's kind of dive deep into a little bit of a topic
that takes us kind of past the initial connection.
So, you know, one, you actually have an authentic experience.
You get a deeper sense of somebody.
It's a really unique way to actually think about dating. But then you have to figure out how do you deal with your own
stuff from your past and how do you create healthy love? Because those are things we
don't know how to do. And I think Lovett plays a role in helping you do that. So can you talk
about that piece of it? Because it's not like, oh, just, you know, you make the connection,
God, see you later. There's a more of an engaged process that Livette provides that allows people to actually deal with all their past crap and heal it and then figure out what actually is healthy love.
I think the first thing is this.
What we expect of people in Livette, and I always say, look, Livette is not for everyone.
Everyone is not in Livette.
That's what Tinder is.
That's what Bumble is.
That's what Hinge is.
Like, Have fun. This is a very specific community of people who are self-aware, who are building
something better for themselves, looking to create whatever version of exceptional love they want.
And so because we are so much of people, I just want to explain that there's a very intense
vetting process to get in. We are the only dating system that actually backgrounds chicks people.
We have a certified third-party provider.
So we make sure that every single person that comes in
is exactly who they say they are.
And we have eyes on them because of their video profile.
So I don't think you can expect people
to do this kind of work on healing themselves,
sharing openly, unless you create a container of safety.
So the very first thing we did with Levet
was to make sure that we have a process and
an application onboarding process that creates that container of safety so that everyone
who gets in the door is a good fit.
So we start there.
But then the world itself is speaking to this point of now what?
How do you make this better?
Think about how you used to meet people before the internet, right? Friends of friends,
colleagues, at kind of like you join a running group or, you know, it was always in a socialized
context. And the reason why that works so well was because if someone ends up in the same room
as you somewhere, you usually have something or many things in common in the terms of like,
if you end up at a yoga class together, you have similar values around health and lifestyle, right? If you end up in a workspace together,
there's something that you both care about that's driven you into the same lane.
But we don't have that so much anymore. And our friend groups, especially if you're in your 30s,
40s, 50s, 60s, most people are partnered. So kind of trying to meet through socialization
has become harder and harder and harder. But the other thing is the shared experiences.
If you're part of a group, you're having these shared experiences together.
So we were like, okay, how do we replicate this kind of more natural model of falling
in love and having chemistry?
How do you replicate that digitally?
And so we played around with this a lot.
And what we did was we actually, we created six incredible virtual spaces.
Like we have a digital speakeasy, a digital temple, a digital gym, a digital playroom.
And these amazing spaces, we throw workshops and we throw these kinds of amazing group experiences
where we'll bring in like you, we'll bring you into the gym to talk about nutrition.
We'll bring in a meditation expert to teach meditation in the temple. And so people have
the chance to go in and actually have these kinds of shared experiences. And everyone they're interacting with in that group is a vetted, qualified, values-aligned single.
And so as you're actually learning the skills, like we're bringing in people to teach you about healing your trauma or how to communicate better or how to know what you want.
We're bringing in all these experts that I've been so blessed to work with over the last couple of years.
We bring them in to teach our members. But while that's, of course, really helpful, as you're learning and growing and
healing, you're doing it in a group of people who are also looking for the same thing. So think
about that. Think about your chances of meeting someone who's compatible with you, like values,
meta-values aligned compatible. And think about how easy it is to start a conversation.
Wow, how did you find that workshop? What did you get out of it?
And our job is to facilitate it,
like we're putting people into little groups,
into this, into that.
And so in terms of,
I really do think we can find love
and find ourselves at the same time.
And we have to have the right kinds of structures
and systems to do it.
Yeah, it's amazing.
And so really, it's really kind of coaching,
dating, therapy, kind of all mixed in together, right? So you don't feel like a weirdo having to share because like everybody's doing it. And I've learned this, like I've built, you know, multiple kinds of exclusive communities
and hosted many events with the point is to get people connected.
And again, setting the permissions is key.
And I just see this, like all the members that are coming into our site, they are people
who are, they have options.
They are, they want good love, but they're stuck in a system that doesn't allow or create that.
And so we're speaking very specifically to the kinds of people who are just sick of dealing
with being stuck on the surface and sick of all the kind of antisocial behaviors that
our digital dating culture has normalized and really willing to be like, okay, let's
go back to a healthy social baseline, learn and grow and do it with other amazing people. And then like, oh my gosh,
who knows who I might meet while I'm doing it. It's so much more fun. It's so much more fun.
Yeah. It's so much more fun. And the vulnerability part is important because I think
I realized that I held back a lot of things that I was afraid about or anxious about or didn't want to share because I thought it would cause love to leave or to disappear or to go away.
And what I found is the more authentic I am, the more vulnerable I am, the more I tell the truth, the opposite happens.
It's sort of a magic trick.
It's like telling the truth is kind
of a magic trick. And we're really trained how to lie in this culture. And what underpins Lovette
and what you're doing, Mia, is like ending the lying part of love. So can you talk about that?
Absolutely. I mean, I call it like a retraining because I think you are so bang on with that.
We have been trained and socialized
to lie. Um, whether it's a belief that there's something that's in us that's unacceptable or,
you know, we're managing what we think the other person wants. We're living in romantic scarcity.
So we're afraid, oh gosh, this person doesn't choose me. Then, you know, there's no one for
me or even worse, like most people have this kind of, they care what people think. And so they try to get every single date to like them, which is ridiculous, right? Because not everyone's
going to like you. And so we get stuck in these dysfunctional thinkers. So retraining people
is such a big part of what we're trying to do with Livette. And that starts at the
onboarding process where we were very clear. We're like, listen in this club, in the social club,
no liars,
no scams.
Oh my,
like we were building a culture of telling the truth and,
you know,
and rewarding people for doing so.
And I think,
I think what I've seen,
just like you were saying is that most people,
if given the opportunity and they know they're not gonna be punished for it,
would like to actually share who they are.
You know,
the amount of people who go dating and don't even say they're divorced because
they're afraid that if they say they're divorced, the person won't want to date them, right?
Like these are the kinds of even just base level things.
I mean, I say, look, I'm divorced three times.
I'm a relationship expert now.
I have a lot of experience.
A lot of practice, a lot of experience.
Absolutely, right?
So, you know, so building a culture where it's language the
whole way through, we have, we have a series of what we call LeVette agreements. Everyone has to
click. Like I agree. I agree. And these are agreements around integrity. These are agreements
around participation. These are agreements around how one shows up in the experience of the social
club. And I think that's the key is like, we're not a dating site. I explained it. We're not a
dating site. We are a vetted virtual social club for singles. It's like being part of a really amazing high-end
community. It just so happens that everyone in there is single and looking, right? And so again,
putting us back into a safe, socialized context so that we can learn as a community and set our
values as a community and say, listen, in this community, in the Live At Social Club,
we value honesty and integrity. And so we expect our members to be
honest and open. Even with, for instance, ghosting, one of the big pain points of dating is that
people just will disappear out of a conversation or they've dated you for a couple months and they
just suddenly don't reply. It's a super painful process of being abandoned, right? But if you ask
yourself, why do people
ghost and i have asked other people i and i asked myself too because i committed i would never ghost
and i did i started ghosting towards the end like a few months into dating and it's because we're so
conflict diverse and i and i had started i had made a real effort to say hey listen thanks that
was a really great date but it's not for me. But like one out of 10 times, the person would blow up at
me and send me abuse. Listen, 30% of people on the dating apps report being verbally abused.
10% of people who are on the dating apps report threats of physical violence, right?
Wow.
There's a lot of abuse on these systems because it's anonymous. There's no accountability.
And so people become afraid to tell the truth because of these behaviors. And so
it's easier
to disappear than to have that difficult conversation, right? So this is a big pain
point for people. We solved it by automating it. Like you just click at any point, you can click
open connection, close connection. And as Levitt, we send the message to the person. We're like an
intermediary to help those conversations. And we also ask that everyone makes a choice. Like if
you go on a video date with somebody, you have to tell them where you stand. We say clarity is
kindness, but the way you do it is by clicking, interested in more, I just want to be friends,
or I'm done talking. And each person gets to make their selection and we navigate that relationship
for each person. So we realize that like, listen, we want to make sure everyone is respecting each
person's time, but we also understand that navigating those difficult situations and having those,
writing the messages and dealing with it can be hard for people. So it's part of our retraining
is like create the habit of being clear, but we'll help you. We'll help you on the way.
I mean, kind of what's interesting about what you've created is that typical dating apps are
you swipe or you click or whatever, and you'd meet and then you're done. and then you kind of figure it out and you're on your own like just figure it
out good luck see you later you know that's not what you've created it's something quite different
it's almost like holding your hand to get to the place of healthy love so how do you help people
get to healthy love with levette absolutely because i mean i mean honestly if i if if i had that i would i think i
would have solved a lot of heartache for many years so how did you create that what is that
what is that experience like well it's by working with incredible experts so so how i see the social
club is like we are while we yes we are there as a site and we have companion app people come in
they want to meet each other you get introductions members. You can go find people in the gallery. There's all the like
dating stuff that's there. But like I said, the core piece of it is that we have live virtual
workshops and we have an incredible virtual date system, which are all designed to be supportive.
So you can come in and do, you know, like learn from some of the world's best teachers on love
and healing and sex and have that learning
experience. So the actual functionality centers around these conversations around what do we need
to heal? How can we heal it? For instance, we're in beta right now. We have applications open,
but we've been running a beta inside. Tomorrow, we have an amazing second part of a workshop around how to create safety
in sex and why safety and sex are so important.
And her name is Genevieve.
She's amazing.
She comes in, she teaches and she's amazing.
And she comes in and teaches why safety is the most important part of creating a thriving
sex life.
And this, this workshop, we're like, we have like whatever, like a hundred and something
betas.
We have like 40 people in there.
Like people are like, teach me.
And then the fun thing is you're learning these skills, which are so foundational
to how to have a good relationship or to understand yourself. But you're learning them with people who
are looking for the same thing as you. Everyone you're interacting with there is single and on
the same page. So it's like combining the best world. Like as you're dating and learning and growing, you're also being socialized in, I'd say,
a values aligned community.
So, which is why it's so hard to explain to people what we've built with LaVette because
it is such a comprehensive platform.
It's not an app.
Like it's not like, oh, a dating app or a dating site.
It is a comprehensive intentional dating platform, which is, it's a bold move, but like, you know,
you and I talk about this, like I believe in love and I know you believe in love too.
I believe in exceptional love. I believe that it's possible to create exceptional love,
but with the systems we have, it doesn't enable it. And I think the greatest mythology we have
in modern day about romantic love is that it just happens to us. It's just luck. And if it stops working, bad luck versus no. We know
that there are predictable ways to find good love and to continue to create good love that puts the
power back in our court. And so rather than just kind of waiting around, hoping Prince or Princess
Charming is going to like show up, we go, huh, all right, let me work on myself and figure out
what my patterns are, do some healing. Let me learn the requisite relationship skills, the communication skills, how to ask great
questions, how to navigate conflict, how to have great sex.
Let me learn all the interpersonal skills and really take this on.
You take on up-leveling your career or buying a kitchen appliance.
Take it on with the intelligence and intentionality that we show every other area of our life,
considering how important love is, it deserves that kind and intentionality that we show every other area of our life, considering how important love is.
It deserves that kind of intentionality.
Completely.
And, you know, one of the things we often think about is we have to find the right love and find the right person.
But the truth is we kind of have to be the right person. And that's really the first step of Lovett's process is to actually help you look at yourself because you don't want to end up in the same cycle of dysfunctional relationships that
most of us end up in.
You want to figure out how to actually break that pattern and heal that.
So just can you talk a few minutes about that part of Lovett?
Because that's not typical dating app stuff.
It's basically, you know, something really more around personal growth and more around
looking at your own patterns and healing what actually keeps you in a state of being disconnected
from the possibility of even having good luck. Absolutely. And it starts with awareness.
The first thing is the awareness of, like you said, your patterns. How we integrated and
systematized it in Livette is using Lauren's, her 3H system. So every member who
comes into the platform, the first thing we get them to do is to go through this 3Hs exercise.
And it's such a simple thing, but it helps so much because it asks you to go back through every
relationship you've ever had and kind of rate where did these relationships land when it comes
to your head, which is everything that makes sense on paper. Are you values aligned for the future? Are you in the
right sort of like life or age bracket? Do you live in the right places? Do you care about the
same things? Do you have the same kind of whatever kind of, I say like cultural or intellectual
compatibility? And then the heart is like trust and love and kindness. And the hoo-ha of course
is like what kind of sexual connection do you want? And so going back through your relationships and actually reflecting on like,
huh, what were my relationships based on? And Lauren always says is this usually one
error we sell out in, like usually we're strong in a couple and maybe we sell out on another.
And so it starts that reflective process of like, okay, where have I come from? What have I done in
the past? And then we get people to create their three H's, their intention list. So they write down what are the must-haves
for each of these categories? What are the deal breakers for each of these categories? What are
the nice-to-haves? And just that simple exercise of sitting down and getting really intentional
helps people to map out what does actually work for them.
And I always say to people as well, like, it's not about someone being like the classic for women is, oh, he's got to be six foot something. Like, does he? Or do you just want to feel
deeply attracted to him? Does she really have to have like, you know, blonde hair? Or do you
want to feel sexually drawn to her? And getting people to kind of stop looking for the superficial
similarities, superficial characteristics, and dig into this kind of stop looking for the superficial similarities,
superficial characteristics, and dig into this idea of like, how do you want the relationship
to feel? Like all the stuff they say about what makes relationships work, how do you resolve
conflict? And so that exercise gets them to really dream up a relationship or, you know,
whether you want one relationship or many, it's up to you, a lover, a husband, a wife,
you get to choose, but the idea of they map that out.
And the cool thing is every time you go on a video date in Levent, so every time you connect
with somebody and you do a little, we call it a virtual vibe check, afterwards, there's like a
reflection form that pops up and you write, where did this person land on each one? And you write
your notes and it populates as a self-reflective date tracker. So you have your own personal
history of every date you've gone on. So you can be, yeah, be in this kind of like self-reflective date tracker. So you have your own personal history of every date you've gone on. So you can be in this kind of self-informed reflective practice as you're dating.
And as you do that reflection, it becomes very obvious. Most people get very clear like,
ah, I'm still stuck here. I'm still stuck there. And with that awareness, then you know what should
I be working on? So if like, okay, well, I have, like you said, like, maybe I have some kind of anxious attachment style.
Well, I should definitely attend that workshop on, like, how to deal with attachment styles, right?
So, we encourage people to create their own map of where they've been, what they want, where they want to go, and to always be in that kind of critically engaged process.
Yeah, that's such a refreshing thing because, you know know getting in and out of relationships is hard
getting to find a relationship that works as hard we don't really have any guideposts we don't
really have any frameworks in society we we have this romanticized notion of what love is and
actually when you break it down and you you kind of deal with yourself and you deal with
the the process of figuring out what's in your
way and then figure out how to actually have an authentic relationship, to be in integrity,
to be vulnerable, to tell the truth, all the things that actually make a relationship great,
it actually becomes quite different. And I found that for myself, like as I started to heal those
things that were in my way, it's just easy. Like it's just, it's just easy. Now sometimes, you know,
you've got to find someone you're compatible with. That's true. But it's, it's, uh, I mean,
we had, you know, we wanted different things in life, but that's okay. Like that sometimes,
sometimes in relationship lasts, whatever they do a week, a month, a year, a lifetime, it's okay.
But I think the, the question is, how do you have a relationship that is, is actually raising you up
instead of taking you down? Because from my perspective as a doctor, and then, you know, in the functional medicine framework,
you know, there's obviously what you eat, there's stress, there's exercise, there's sleep,
but relationships are one of the key foundational parts of health. And, you know, I just spent a lot
of time in the blue zones in Ikaria and sardinia and what was striking to me
there was the power of these relationships that they formed over their lifetime with their friends
with their community with their partners i mean i mean there was one in icaria there's one couple
he was 97 she was 87 you know and they were just so happy and in love and i'm like this is wild
and like and and uh it was just, such a beautiful thing to see their connection
and their depth of their love together.
And the way that, I mean, they still, I mean, he's 97, she's 87.
They're still farming their entire hillside farm, which is like this Steve.
And, and, uh, and that, you know, that was so inspiring to me.
And, and I think it is part of why they live so long.
And so from my perspective as a doctor, learning how to actually deal with your
own stuff to heal, not just your physical health, but your emotional, psychological, spiritual health
is such a key foundational part of healing. So I'm just thrilled that you created this with Lauren.
I'm thrilled that this is launched. I'm thrilled that people can participate now. And I think that what's so cool
even is the name of the website,
which is lavet.love.
There's now like a kind of a URL,
it's.love.
So it's L-A-V-E-T-T-E.love.
You can apply now.
It's in beta.
It's really kind of cool.
You should go check it out.
The website's fantastic.
And I don't know if you want to share anything else about it
or how to make people learn more
or where they can get more connected to it.
But tell us a little bit more
about how you would like people to enter this.
Yeah, absolutely.
Because, you know, listen, I always say,
if you're single,
there's a pretty good chance you're suffering.
And so I always say with your single,
no, the stereotype about dating is it sucks and it's hard.
So if you're single, I hear you. If you have single people that you love, send them. We're
doing a, it's a free month trial. So because we're preloading, we're essentially getting our first
group of amazing applicants ready to go. This is a really amazing chance to come and be part
of something that could really change the face of dating. It's really making a stand for quality of good love. And I really deeply understand the frustration and pain of what it
feels like to want to have high quality human connection, to be ready for it, to be excited
about it, and to be stuck in a system that is punishing and sets you up for failure.
So if you're single, you know someone you love is single, yeah, absolutely. Go to
levette.love and you can start the application process there and learn more about us. Thanks Mark for having me on here.
Yeah, thanks for creating it. It's been so good to chat to you.
Yeah, it's pretty great. Well, thank you for all your support,
not just for Levette, but something I so love about you is not just your expertise in physical
health, but really how you understand the relationship between the social factors and
the emotional factors and really being an advocate for healthy relationships and love.
Yeah.
Love is medicine.
That's what I always say.
Love is medicine.
I call it the love diet.
And so if you've listened to this podcast and you really loved it and you know anybody
who's struggling in relationship, which might only be one or two people in your whole life.
You might want to share with them and all your social channels. Leave a comment and tell us how you've
struggled with dating apps, with love, what you want to learn, what's worked, what hasn't worked.
We'd love to hear from you. Subscribe wherever you get your podcasts and we'll see you next week
on The Doctor's Pharmacy. Hey everybody, it's Dr. Hyman. Thanks for tuning into The Doctor's Pharmacy.
Hey everybody, it's Dr. Hyman. Thanks for tuning into The Doctor's Pharmacy.
I hope you're loving this podcast.
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longer. Hi, everyone. I hope you enjoyed this week's episode. Just a reminder that this podcast
is for educational purposes only. This podcast is not a substitute for professional care by a doctor or other
qualified medical professional. This podcast is provided on the understanding that it does not
constitute medical or other professional advice or services. If you're looking for help in your
journey, seek out a qualified medical practitioner. If you're looking for a functional medicine
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changes, especially when it comes to your health.