The Dr. Hyman Show - How to Love Better: Emotional Healing, Attachment, and Real Relationship Skills with Yung Pueblo
Episode Date: April 23, 2025We all know emotional maturity is essential for a healthy relationship—but how do you actually get there? In this episode of The Dr. Hyman Show, I talk with Diego Perez, the #1 New York Times bests...elling author known as Yung Pueblo, about the small mindset shifts that can make a huge difference in how you show up for yourself and your partner. Drawing from his new book, How to Love Better, Diego shares how to stop repeating the same old patterns and start building relationships grounded in awareness, honesty, and real emotional growth. In this conversation, we explore: Why emotional maturity is the #1 skill for resolving conflict How letting go of control can lead to more trust, connection, and ease in your relationship How your old emotional patterns might be causing tension you don’t even realize Why owning your emotions can help you avoid blame and grow together Simple mindset shifts that can make love feel more secure, stable, and honest Check out the episode for a practical, compassionate guide to loving better. View Show Notes From This Episode Get Free Weekly Health Tips from Dr. Hyman https://drhyman.com/pages/picks?utm_campaign=shownotes&utm_medium=banner&utm_source=podcast Sign Up for Dr. Hyman’s Weekly Longevity Journal https://drhyman.com/pages/longevity?utm_campaign=shownotes&utm_medium=banner&utm_source=podcast This episode is brought to you by Sunlighten, Timeline Nutrition, Paleovalley, and LMNT. Visit sunlighten.com and save up to $1400 on your purchase with code HYMAN. Support essential mitochondrial health and save 10% on Mitopure. Visit timeline.com/drhyman to get 10% off today. Get nutrient-dense, whole foods. Head to paleovalley.com/hyman for 15% off your first purchase. Get a free LMNT Sample Pack with any order—just head to drinklmnt.com/hyman.
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Coming up on this episode of the Dr. Hyman show.
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Welcome to Dr. Hyman's show.
I'm Dr. Mark Hyman, and this is a place for conversations that matter.
And if you've ever struggled with love or want to learn how to love better, this is going
to be a great podcast because it's with an incredible man man young Pueblo as he's known on social media
His real name is Diego Perez
He's a meditator. That's a great way to describe yourself number one New York Times best-selling author who's widely known by his pen name young Pueblo
He sold over a million and a half books and had been translated 25 languages. He's got a huge audience online a billion
views per year of his content. And he
focused on self-healing, creating healthy relationships, the wisdom that comes when we
truly work on knowing ourselves. And his new book, How to Love Better is out now. And so check it
out. He and I get into a deep conversation about love, relationships, where we go wrong, how we can
straighten things out, and what we need to do to actually start to listen and
communicate in ways that work. We talk about emotional freedom, about self-love, boundaries,
impermanence, Buddhism, pretty much the gamut. And we end up in a place where I think you'll
find very helpful around maybe applying some of these principles to your own relationships
and to the challenges you find in love and war and all that comes after that.
So let's dive right into the podcast with young Pueblo or Diego press.
Should I call you young Pueblo or should I call you Diego?
Diego's just fine.
Okay, Diego.
Well, you're known as young Pueblo online.
And, you know, I followed you for years and, uh, found during difficult
moments in my life that your work was so inspirational
and helped me to see through dark periods.
And I really appreciate it.
I know millions out there has felt the same thing.
And I didn't really know you at the time.
I didn't have a relationship with you, but what you posted online and what you wrote
was so simple, so clear, and so elegant and rang so true at so many levels.
And now you've created this great new book,
How to Love Better, and I'm just excited you've done that
because I know you've used your own practices
as the way in which to sort of metabolize your life to create nuggets of wisdom or
Humanity yeah, and for others to learn from and that's such a beautiful skill. It's such an incredibly rare talent
It takes a lot to distill things in that way and that's what's one of your superpowers
So I think many of us have different superpowers. That's your superpower
Yeah, thank you so much. That means a lot coming from you.
I don't know if you know, but I'm a huge fan of yours.
I think you've, similarly, you've had a massive impact
on my life and my wife's life.
You've helped us get healthier, like fundamentally.
When I first started writing,
I was still breaking a lot of old patterns
with how I'm eating, how I'm treating my body,
how I'm exercising and just balancing all that out. I mean, from your podcasts to your books,
it's all been so helpful. The Ultra Wellness Center, I could just go on and on, but you've
helped us profoundly and I still have a ways to go with my own health journey, but do it way better
than before. So we're all in a journey. We're all in a journey of our health, of love, of pretty much
life. This is a of pretty much life.
This is a crash course in life.
It's, instead of my hope is that I hope I figure it out
by the time I die, just in time, you know?
And I think kind of a lot of, in a way,
it's kind of like what meditative practice is.
It's like preparation for death.
And it's preparation for life.
Obviously it's how to live better, but in some ways,
it's a way to navigate your own mind and,
and a lot of the meditative traditions, you know,
and I had the really incredible privilege of knowing some incredible meditation
teachers, like a 33rd Abbott of memory, who was the bond teacher of Zongchen,
which is a Buddhist meditation tradition. It's actually predates Buddhism.
He was the, he was the Dalai Lama's meditation teacher,
and he came from the bond tradition and a lot of their work is how do we navigate life,
but also how do we navigate this transition that happens
as we come closer to the end and do it in a way
that we become free.
The whole purpose of life is to get free, right?
Is to get free in your soul and your emotional life
and your relationships and your work, to be unencumbered.
And that's what sort of, I think is so striking and your work to be unencumbered.
And that's what sort of, I think it's so striking
about your work is that that's what it aims to do
is help us get free.
And in this book, How to Love Better,
the implication there is how do you have a better way
to love that lets you be free and happy and unencumbered
by a lot of the challenges we find in relationships.
So maybe you can kind of start off by sort of telling us about how, cause we talked about
a lot about your past history in the previous podcast.
I encourage people to go back and listen to that cause it was, it was a very good one.
We talked about your, how you got into this work and your meditative practice and where
you came from.
But I want to sort of explore more around love cause a lot of us struggle with love.
I certainly have was married three times, divorced three times, married fourth time,
this was a keeper.
I learned a lot, and I had to go through
this really dark night of the soul,
which actually talked about in the die-over
CEO hitman was cool as to that,
where I had to kind of come in to confront
the ways in which I was not free,
and that I had wounds and things that I hadn't dealt with
from my childhood that kept me from actually loving better
You know, it's interesting that you we started the conversation with the point of freedom because the last chapter in this book is love is freedom
It really ties together the sort of the full idea the full point of evolution of a human being
that we see a lot of the
sort of like saints and seers of the past the people that we look up to who are really highly cultivated who
take their mind to the zenith of
Unconditional love, you know where they can fully like love themselves and all beings completely, right?
They see no one as an enemy. All they can do is have compassion. They don't even live within frameworks of ego
They live within a framework of compassion. Kind of like the dilemma. Exactly.
And then what I try to do is try to point that when we are in relationships,
especially intimate relationships, this is almost like a microcosm where we get
to taste and practice small amounts of unconditional love, because even though we
want to love someone as well as possible, we still come in with our own attachments.
We still come in with, with our previous heartbreak, with our old pain.
And as long as we're cognizant of that, we can overcome that heaviness of the
mind that stops us from taking care of ourselves and the person in front of us.
Better.
We get to practice love.
We have to practice unconditional love in our relationships.
And a lot of that is just, we have to be aware, aware of like, where am I building
tension in the relationship?
Where am I to attach because a lot of times we don't realize that
The attachments that we have in our minds literally, you know the craving for things to exist in a particular way
these attachments will manifest as
Control and that just sucks the life out of a relationship
So when you when you mean attachment you mean attachment from the Buddhist perspective
So when you when you mean attachment you mean attachment from the Buddhist perspective
Attachment theory not attachment disorders like anxious attachment or totally totally appreciate that but we're talking old-school attachment
2,600 years ago What does that mean? Like what does the Buddha mean with when he said yeah attachment is the root of all suffering?
So suffering is an interesting and big word
I think a lot of times people say you know that the Buddhist teaching is life is suffering or life is misery
These are big words
sometimes we don't necessarily relate to them a different way to translate dukkha that poly word dukkha is not just suffering but
dissatisfaction or stress
Yeah, now that's something we can relate to life is quite dissatisfying, you know, and I know that I know this firsthand because I grew up
Life is quite dissatisfying. You know, and I know this firsthand
because I grew up extremely poor.
That was very dissatisfying.
I now am not poor.
I'm not wealthy either, but I'm not poor anymore.
It's also very dissatisfying, right?
So being able to be cognizant of that doesn't help,
like it takes that tension away so that I'm not relying
and putting my happiness on what's happening externally.
That it's something that I'm building from within, but that suffering,
that attachment that we have, it creates a lot of dissatisfaction.
And it sort of just shows up in our life as us trying to force things to be in a
very particular way where we want the person that we love to do X, Y, and Z.
Why don't you X, Y, Z?
Exactly.
Or we want the good things that we really like
to always happen continuously, infinitely, and forever.
We never want our parents to die.
These situations are basically attachments
that try to fight the truth of impermanence.
Embracing impermanence is a direct opposite of attachment
because attachment wants things to be static,
but impermanence is the deep embrace
of life being dynamic, which is undeniable.
Well, that's the third noble truth, right?
So first one is life can be stressful or difficult slash suffering to suffering comes from our
beliefs and our conditioning and our conditioned mind that wants things to be a certain way,
which is attachment.
And the third is the end of suffering.
Well, the third is the there's a end of suffering, but the impermanence
is really what is causing so much stress
because things change all the time.
And I'm 65 and I know that
because I can tell you that life is constantly changing
and I have perspective,
which is actually the nicer thing that happens
as you get older, you realize,
oh, if I'm having a shitty moment right now,
it's not gonna be forever. Or if I'm having a fabulous moment right now, it's not gonna be forever.
Or if I'm having a fabulous moment,
I'm on the top of a mountain right now,
it's also not gonna be forever.
And not having your well-being, your happiness,
your joy, your ability to be present in life and engaged,
be conditioned by what and where and who you're with.
Right? That's kind of getting free
Yeah, and it's just when you deeply embrace that impermanence. It gives you an understanding that
There is a dissatisfactory nature to life and there's also the deeper understanding that who I am
It's not fundamentally real right this sense of self to construct. It's a construct
It's something that's coming together quite
rapidly because of mental and physical phenomenon that are just moving so fast that it creates the
illusion of I. And when you're able to let go of that and let go of your attachment to your opinions,
the attachments to your views, it helps you relax those attachments so that you can allow yourself
to evolve, allow your preferences to evolve, and it helps support the fact that your partner
or those who you're really close to,
they're gonna evolve too, they're gonna change.
You have no control over their preferences.
Even though the two of you may be highly committed
to each other and maybe together for decades,
you don't have any say over what your partner's hobbies are.
You don't really have a say
over what shows they're gonna like.
You don't have a say over the way
they want to design their life.
I think it's scary to think of freedom as a part of relationships because immediately
people think, oh, that means my partner's gonna cheat on me and do all these things.
That's not what we're talking about.
It's the freedom to evolve.
It's the freedom to grow whatever way best supports your happiness.
You mean your partner's not supposed to just act and do things in the way that you want
them to do No, I think a lot of times when we think about relationships. It's like we want we want our partners
Why don't you?
Yeah, like I don't want my partner to be my twin. I love the fact that she's different for me
Yeah, right town like tell me your views. Tell me what you think about the world
I'm glad in the moments that we actually get to disagree
I want to hear why because I do trust her wisdom, so I wanna hear more about your view.
So getting free is sort of the goal here.
That's like the last chapter.
It's deeply tied to the end of craving, right?
Because craving, that is taking a desire, right?
Some initial motivation, a goal or whatever,
but when you're forcing it into craving,
it's you're taking that desire
and connecting it with stress, with tension,
and you're very, very attached to it.
And the moment that you're able to undo craving,
let go of craving, approach life
with a much more balanced mind, equanimity,
having a balanced mind, that helps you, you know,
stop replicating all those attachments.
That sounds great.
How do you do that?
Yeah, to do that, you have to, I mean, the mind is,
you know this for a fact, right?
The mind is built from repetition
The body's built from repetition right you eat tons of unhealthy food eventually you get unhealthy you eat a bunch of healthy food
You're gonna be a little healthier the same thing with the mind when I go away to meditation courses
And I'm meditating for 30 45 days. I'm literally just taking myself to the mental gym, and I'm cultivating three quality
awareness non reaction and compassion.
So it takes time to be able to like literally design
and shape your mind.
It's not like the body.
In a way what you're saying is the meditation helps you
sort of be a witness and slow down the way
in which we normally operate, which is a thought,
emotion, action, but they're collapsed into one.
And what you're saying is you can separate those out
so that you can be aware of the thought.
You can even be aware of the trigger
that might happen in you.
And you can then slow that down.
You don't have to actually act from that.
You can then be non-reactive in a way that allows
for a greater freedom and love.
But it's also in your own life.
It's not just for, I mean, you get better at life,
you get better at love, right?
You get better at yourself, you get better at love.
So how do you do that?
Because I mean, most people listen to go,
that sounds good, but you know,
I don't really have 50 days to go into a meditation retreat.
So I mean, I don't, that's a lot of time in the gym.
Yeah, it's a lot of time in the gym, but either way, you still have to rely on repetition.
I think that's the difficulty with our society nowadays is that all these apps that we have access to in our phones,
all of them are trying to just make life easier, make everything faster, easier.
And they're very sort of connected towards increasing pleasure in the body.
We have to realize that our personal transformation
and resolving the issues in our relationships,
these are very gradual, slow things.
Like the best parts of life, they're quite slow
and they're related to the present moment.
And so it's almost working against the culture
that we're given, that we're being fed,
and embracing the fact that even if you don't meditate,
even if you don't even see a therapist,
you can be aware of what you're good at and what you're not good at.
I think one thing that became clear even before I started meditating was when I
started being with my wife, like I realized I'm not good at listening.
I need to bring my attention back every time my mind goes off somewhere and I'm
thinking about how to respond. Instead, let me calmly bring my attention back to
whatever it is that she's saying,
and through that you can train yourself.
And I think when we realize, you know,
what are you not good at?
You lack patience, then the next time
you have an opportunity to be patient,
put a little more effort into it.
So what you said there was really important,
I wanted to sort of double click on it,
because when most of us are in a conversation,
we're already rehearsing our response.
Already, already.
Before that person is. point is my retort
how that person is actually finished their sentence yeah and what you're
saying is you have to pause that if you want to be in relationship totally
otherwise you're just in relationship to yourself you're not in relationship with
the other person whether it's a friend or colleague or your partner or your
spouse your lover whatever it is whomever you're in proximity to,
especially if there's someone that you really care about,
there are going to be moments of disagreement.
The key way to solve arguments is totally related
on a specific type of compassion.
The compassion to pull yourself out of your perspective
and see the perspective of another person.
That requires deep listening, selfless listening that requires me
Making sure that even though I feel heated in this moment
I am going to take the time to listen to
How the series of events move for you for you to end up feeling this way?
Because ultimately what tiknot han said is fundamentally true. He said love is understanding
So only through listening, clear communication,
and I come to a point where I fully understand you.
And when two people who are in our argument
take the time to not win,
but instead understand, the tension evaporates.
That's right.
That's so powerful.
And I think most of us don't even know how to do that.
We know how to do math.
We know how to work.
We know how to read.
We know how to do all the stupid stuff we learned in school,
which can be helpful.
Although I don't really use math that much anymore.
I do use reading and writing, but other than that, it's like the fundamentalized skills
we don't learn about how to be in relationship.
And that creates a lot of sort of unhappy people and bad relationships.
And understanding requires you to pause your own narrative.
It requires you to sort of stop.
And that's not easy to do for most people.
Like when you're triggered or you're in a conflict
or something's come up and you're like,
we just got a new dog and I'm very much like,
you gotta stick to the rules and the dog has to be trained.
And then you get free.
Cause when you train like your mind,
just like you train your dog,
then you can take your dog everywhere.
But if it's a brat and you can't take it anywhere,
then it's like no fun.
Yeah. I just met your dog.
And my wife is like, well, she's like, oh, he's so cute.
I'm like, yes, but you still have to correct him
and train him.
And so I found myself getting very agitated.
I think that's a, I I think that's a silly example,
but it's fundamental to sort of any communication.
And I'm curious how you think people
can actually get that skill.
Because it's not, we're so like in a hair trigger.
Like we literally, we have a thought,
we have an emotion, we have a reaction,
we have a reaction.
It feels lightning quick,
and it feels like your impulsiveness
Is the real you but that's an absolute illusion usually whatever you immediately react with the in the initial sort of impulse
Normally that will be something survivalist something defensive. It's something that
Gives you a sign into what your past looked like usually that impulsiveness
gives you a sign into what your past look like, usually that impulsiveness won't create new outcomes for you.
It'll just amplify whatever difficult outcome
has happened from before.
So I think the key way, no matter what,
whether you're training yourself through therapy,
whether you're training yourself through meditation,
whether you're just building self-awareness at home
on your own, it's by intentionally slowing down
and telling yourself, okay, I feel the impulsiveness
But I'm not going to make a major decision right now
I can feel how to my perspective is that I can't even see clearly
I need to be able to just take a moment to breathe so that I can see more options than just the red
The breathe is the key thing. Yeah, and I think for a meditator right for me, like I normally use my breath
I'll like anchor myself back in my breath
to bring me back to my body.
I'll be able to feel myself again.
And then that will help me not just get caught up
in the narratives that are just building tension
in the mind, but other people have other ways.
You know, there's so many different methods out there,
but I think something that helps you just slow down
in that moment so that you can see more options
and just this one initial reaction I think will
help you just make different decisions than what you've done before.
This is an incredible book called The Body Keeps Score and it's really about how childhood
traumas and wounds and stresses and beliefs we create out of those, the meaning we make
out of what happens to us.
Like as Gabor says, it's not what happens to us, it's the meaning we make and we're
meaning making machines and when we're meaning making machines.
And when we're kids, we create all these
sort of narratives about how life is
based on our little tiny universe
and the people around us and our parents
and the small, where we live in.
And that then shapes our whole life.
And unless you kind of understand
that you have to go back and excavate,
I call it soul archeology, you have to go back and excavate, I call it soul archeology,
you have to excavate the traumas, the wounds, the beliefs, the ways of being, the automatic
kind of triggers and kind of, you're going to stay in it. And whether you're 25 or 65,
it doesn't matter. You know, just because you're older, doesn't mean you're wiser.
And that's really true. And it's absolutely, you know, we're very largely shaped by what happened in our childhood.
But I think the Buddhist teaching shows us
that it even goes a step further
where it's not just what happened when you were young,
but any hard moment, any moment of big reaction,
when moments when you felt big heartbreak,
moments when you felt big loss,
moments of intense anger where you were defending yourself
when you were like 21 or something
You know
Whatever it could be all of that makes an imprint on a subconscious of your mind all of that literally shapes your mind
Which now shapes your perception shapes the way you're reacting
So all of it is really sort of being imprinted very heavily and I think there are always these moments when we can decide
Okay, I'm actually gonna take ownership over my evolution and I'm gonna actively redesign
the way that I perceive and react to reality
because the same way that, you know,
you can't just run for a marathon.
You have to train yourself.
You don't just learn a language overnight.
You have to train yourself.
So if you want to have peace, that requires training.
And how do we train ourselves?
Meditation, you mentioned, is a way
that you've found successful
But is that the only way or there other ways that people know I've seen people have I've seen people be really successful in a
Lot of different manners. I've seen people who like take their health seriously and start learning different ways to be able to like
Nourish their body. I've seen that relax their mind
I've also seen people who've had you know, really serious therapy practices also just transformed
the way they show up in daily life.
I've also seen people who, you know,
get a good psychiatrist, like help totally balance them out
so that they can breathe, so they can live.
So I've seen people take steps forward
through a variety of manners.
And I think it's good because like,
we don't have the same conditioning.
You know, I really enjoy going to these like long 10 day,
you know, 30, 45 day meditation courses. That's not for everybody. You know, I really enjoy going to these like long 10 day, you know, 30, 45 day meditation courses.
That's not for everybody.
You know, it's really, it's hard.
If it's for you, fantastic.
You should see the seven year olds in there
who've been meditating for like 50,000 hours in their life.
They start when one of my teachers, he's 76 now,
he started meditating when he was 24.
He's probably like, I did a rough calculation
for my own, right?
I've probably meditated like 12,000, 13,000 hours.
This guy's definitely meditated over 50,000 hours. His mind,
he's a weapon. Knees are still good,
but like you should see how peaceful he is and how sharp his,
his mind is incredibly sharp at 76 and he's just such a
peaceful leader. So I have a lot to learn.
So the fever are wondering and listening.
This sounds good.
And in this beautiful book, how to love better sort of a roadmap to kind of
thinking about these things.
What are some of the ways in which people can actually sort of stop to kind of
this is sort of powerful, impulsive narrative that comes up when you're under a
stress or in a relationship where things are in
Conflict you have to kind of pause you have to break it down. You have to take it in steps
You know and and it's not it's not easy for people now
It's very challenging and I think whether you're starting a relationship or whether you are in a really a long-term relationship
There's still these three qualities that are always really ever important.
So that's the first quality is kindness.
Usually when you're in proximity to somebody, whether it's a roommate, you know, your family
or your partner, whoever's closest to you, they're going to see the best of you and they're
going to see the worst of you.
I think a lot of times we sometimes because of the vulnerability, it's amazing that people
get to see all sides of us, but we forget the sweetness after a while We forget to bring in that gentleness and that kindness
So that element is really critical whenever there's good moments or tough moments
The other side of it is what I would talk about if you've been in a relationship for a day or a year or
And or 50 years it always matters gentleness kindness always matters the same thing with compassion
Like what I mentioned before the specific type of compassion where you're seeing outside of your own perspective,
the way to solve any argument
is to not just dwell in your own perspective.
Because if you create a situation where arguments arise
and you just want to win, you want to dominate,
that means the other person has to yield.
And if someone's yielding,
there's gonna be the buildup of resentment.
So it's much better to switch the framework from trying to win to trying to understand
And the last element is really growth when you come into a relationship
You have to understand that you're coming in with some past pain
Nobody has you know, walk through life without trauma like we all have and whether you call it trauma or not
You felt some type of pain some type of hurt that shapes your mind
so being aware that that will affect your patterns
and how you show up in a relationship that calls you in
to be able to embrace your growth
so that you can undo those heavy patterns
and you can build new ones that are actually
much more supportive of your own happiness
and your partners.
Yeah, I mean, there's a lot in there.
I mean, I think that the part about understanding
is really important.
And I think, again, I wanna double click on that because it's about curiosity.
Yeah, and remembering that your partner is not your enemy. Right. Like you got to remind yourself. Sometimes it feels like it feels like it's like I'm in danger. Like, but you're not you're okay. Like even if you lose the argument, even if you have to apologize, you're all good. Remind yourself that this person is one of the dopest people in your life. They're amazing. I think you're right. It's curiosity, which is about really understanding and also
vulnerability on the other side, being able to really share.
I'm not a place of, and then punch your finger, but from like,
what you're really feeling, I'm scared. I'm.
And we didn't, we didn't know this, right? When, when we got into the relationship.
So my wife and I got together super young. She was 18 and I was 19.
I would say the first six years of our relationship
were a giant blame game.
Like it was whenever I would feel tension in my mind,
my mind would try to figure out why it's her fault.
And she would do the same to me.
And we would just go back and forth, back and forth,
constantly trying to win, both of us losing all the time
until we started meditating and building.
Like when we went into meditating
because we wanted to work on ourselves as individuals.
So I went to meditating because I wanted to save myself.
Like I had so much sadness, so much anxiety that my mind just felt like it was like a thousand times.
Right. Just felt so heavy all the time.
I was shocked that I went into meditating to save myself.
I started building these qualities, patience, understanding, listening to myself better, accepting myself.
And then I come out of the meditation retreat and I turn to my wife and I'm realizing, oh,
these are the same qualities I need to bring into my relationship.
They're not just for me.
There's a total bridge there where I'm building them.
They're helping me these qualities, but they're absolutely useful in the moments where we're
having trouble.
It reminds me that almost the two schools of Buddhism, one is, you know,
they call it Theravada Buddhism or Hina Yana,
which is kind of a pejorative term is lesser vehicle or Mahayana,
which is greater vehicle. But the first one is, you know,
a lot of Southeast Asia is all about self-realization.
Whereas the Buddhist tradition of Tibetan Buddhism and some Chinese Buddhism
and is this tradition of compassion.
That's the Dalai Lama, right?
Right, may all others be free before I am,
and I can help them.
And then if you even get to the gates of enlightenment,
you gotta turn back,
because you gotta help everybody else.
Right?
That's the Bodhisattva path.
And so it's like, you actually realize
that salvation comes in that practice
of being willing to be curious and compassionate and kind
and loving for another, right? That's an element. That's what Buddhism is, just loving kindness.
They're deeply, deeply interrelated. Like even in both, you know, the Theravada and the Mahayana
tradition, like service is incredibly important. Like we have to be able to help others because if
you're doing the opposite and you're just being selfish then you're just pushing your freedom
further and further away. And it's really interesting I was on a pilgrimage in India and I
went to go see all the major sites of the Buddhist life and the person who was leading the group he
was telling us he's friends with all these different monks from all different traditions and he was telling us about a Vajrayana monk and was talking about how you know people will take the bodhisattva
path and they'll take those vows where they want to help others be free and then at some point
they make enough development that they you know they themselves become free and then they realize
oh there's no me and there's no them so So like it's an initial inspiration, a point of inspiration to help you, you know,
put the energy into cultivating yourself to that point where you can literally
see beyond the universe.
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You mentioned Vajrayana, that's like the diamond path. That's another level. That's like more Tibetan Buddhism. We won't get into all that, but it's a lot. If you want to know about how do I
have a better relationship? In summary, what you said was that, you know, you have to know yourself, you have to slow
down, you have to be aware of your mind, you have to be aware of your own emotional patterns,
where they came from.
And that's what I call like the soul archeology.
I had to go back and excavate why was I continually being in these relationships and choosing
people or being in relationships that just didn't work.
Some of them were great people.
It was just like, I just, it wasn't, it wasn't them, it was me.
When I realized that, I was like,
I'm not doing this ever again.
I don't care if I'm ever in a relationship again or not,
but I gotta figure this out.
And that really got me to a place
where I really had to go deep
and find out what those emotional wounds were,
that those patterns, those beliefs were.
And you talk a lot about this concept
of emotional release and freedom,
how holding on to suppressed emotions, like,
prevents you from being free in yourself.
And you think you're being right and you're you're righteous in your relationship
and you're telling you the truth with a capital T.
But most of the time, it's not.
No, you're just you're actually just cranking stress.
And so the question is, how do you kind of get to that place of emotional release
and actually get free from those destructive patterns
that you talk about.
I don't know if you're gonna like the answer.
Because it's devastatingly simple.
The answer is acceptance.
You have to accept.
And there are layers and it's really hard to accept.
Accept what?
Accept the difficulty, accept what hurt you,
accept what happened before.
Stop blaming your parents.
Oftentimes we're fighting ourselves. We're fighting ourselves
We're fighting the past the past that's long gone. That's not happening anymore
but we're the ones digging it back up because it's imprinted itself in the mind and we're
Reving it up. We're sort of feeling it over and over again
But I think in the acts like you know
the whole the Buddhist path just because we keep talking about it the whole Buddhist path is sort of centered around just
Observe it's you know, it's just a simple act of observing and through the act of observing there's unbinding
And I think that same quality that you find in meditating
People also find a lot of relief through different forms of therapy where it's like when you can finally accept what happened when you can finally talk
About it when you can finally feel it without running away. is a lot of relief but I think it's hard it's really hard but it's important especially in the relationship context because the things that you're running away from are going to show up as walls and blocks in your relationship so to be able to deeply just deal with what's happening inside you be able to accept it so that you can actually take a step forward.
That'll show up as you being able to support your partner's happiness better.
That's not an easy task. Like it's, it's like, but love is not easy, right?
It's the hardest practice, right? It's like, I think Rilke said, you know,
love is difficult, but it's sort of the all other tasks I'm butchering as quote,
but it's something like all other tasks are just preparation for love.
You know, it's like, and ultimately it's,
it's a place where we can either suffer or we can get free.
And then when you get free relationship, it doesn't mean you're, you know,
off gallivanting around. It means you're,
you're emotionally free and you're spiritually free and you're able to actually
engage in life in a way that doesn't come with all this friction and pain
and struggle and conflict and arguments and bickering.
And I think that's a really powerful thing.
And when you do end up in a situation,
then there's tools, right?
So let's say you and your wife are in a conflict,
like something has come up.
Like, what do you guys do?
I think one of the most useful things
is actually what happens before the conflict
It's the what we've been calling preventative communication
Where when we wake up in the morning?
No matter what we tell each other how we feel like where we are in our emotional range
You know we motion weather report. Yeah, exactly
Temperature check and we're just like, you know, I'm feeling a lot of heaviness moving through,
I'm feeling down, I'm still upset about
what happened yesterday at work, you know,
I'm feeling great, I slept really well, I feel amazing,
you know, whatever it is, however you feel,
we're just honest about it so that the person who
feels the heaviness, they admit it to themselves.
They're not walking around with that unconsciously
and you know, the other person also hears.
So whenever my partner tells me that she's
not feeling great i'm like great amazing thank you for giving me that information because now i know
either to give you your space to support you whatever it is that you need but i'm i'm walking
around with that information through the day so that i don't make it harder for you and so that
i know like if you need your time to yourself it's all good because it's natural to have ups and downs but I think having those moments where we so we'll do it once in the morning and then once sometime in the middle of the afternoon and it's just so valuable because you you understand and you feel within yourself emotions change the storm doesn't last and you're cognizant that you're walking around with something heavy because there are times where if you're not aware of where you are in your own emotional range
The mind will just take that heaviness and just try to throw more cannon fodder at it
Projected a fuel at it. It'll make it bigger. You'll try to get into an argument
you'll like, you know try to project it in some manner and
When we started practicing just that clear communication in a very sort of laid back manner
It's not like us sitting down formally and having a check-in. It's super passive in like a few minutes, really
it's literally and but that alone probably has decreased our arguments by really 60 70 percent because
Now we took away that ammunition, you know
The mind isn't just like trying to just make whatever tension is there bigger
We already know that the tension's moving through
and we know if we get snippy at each other
or something like that, it's like,
oh, I already know that this person doesn't feel good.
Give them their space and I'll give them a little extra leeway
and let go of the little thing.
Let's say there's something bigger than what.
That's when we have to sit down and we talk.
You know, we talk and we-
We take turns, you both go back and forth.
We both listen selflessly.
I do my best in the moments where when she's sharing her perspective, reminding
myself that like, I don't need to hang on to my view, I can just fully listen.
I'm safe.
I don't need to see her as my enemy.
And in the act of that going back and forth, both people giving each other that
ability to listen selflessly over time,
even if it's like, you know, 20 minutes, an hour,
we figure out, oh, there is a bridge here between us.
Like I'm seeing what happened to you.
And when we could both see each other,
it does ultimately melt away.
And still there are times where like, you know,
one of us has to apologize and all that,
but what we found pretty consistently,
even if I said something to her,
usually the person who feels aggrieved
also throws some fire onto it as well.
It makes the argument even bigger.
So oftentimes both of us end up apologizing in some way
because both of us owned up to some mistake.
Yeah, I find curiosity one of the most powerful tools.
If your partner's upset or they're angry about something
or they're mad at whatever's going on, and're like, you know what the, you know,
I don't deserve that and they're wrong and whatever you can have,
whatever narrative, but if you stop you go, gee, what's going on for you?
Like, I'm really curious. Like, this seems like a big thing.
Like, tell me what you're really feeling and then listen and then not
actually respond by giving your point of view
or your perspective or your solution,
but actually just kind of helping them to be gotten.
And it's like, all you have to do
is then reflect back what they're saying.
It's a really powerful technique,
and I don't know why people don't use it,
but it's like, you get to both go,
you both get to have turns, you don't have to people don't use it, but it's like you get to both go, you both get to have turns,
you don't have to actually agree on anything,
you could both have totally different world views
on whatever, but at the end of the day,
you've actually come to start with your premise
of understanding, of curiosity,
of seeking to understand rather than being understood,
and in that process, you actually free the other person
to kind of relax and not feel, you know,
because often we're in our amygdala, right?
Which is our primitive reptile brain
when we get into these situations with our partners.
It's like, how do you get out of that?
Well, you get out of that by feeling safe,
by feeling you're in a safe environment, a safe space
with someone who cares about you and loves you,
who's curious about you,
wants to know how you're feeling,
doesn't want to challenge you, make you wrong.
Because even if you think they're wrong,
like I got with my wife, she's like,
she really doesn't like rules.
And so I get why she's struggling with the doc.
But for me, I'm like, this is important.
So how do I kind of understand
what's really underneath that for her?
Why didn't she, why does she like that?
Why does this come for her?
How does her reality been shaped so that she feels that way?
And why does she have these beliefs?
And just getting curious together,
sometimes it allows your partner to go,
well, I don't know why I believe that or what.
That's not actually how I, my values,
but it's actually my beliefs.
And our beliefs and our values are often
at war with each other, right?
We have certain values, but then we have these beliefs
that often are interrupting our values.
You know, and I think I like how you explained
that beautifully, and I feel like the thing
that has been newly added, I think even in the past
like two years for my wife and I is trying to make sure
that the both of us are living in our individual energy.
If I'm irritable and I'm trying to figure out some
way for my wife to join me in that irritability, she just says no and she just stays in her own
energy and vice versa. And I think it's been really valuable in difficult moments because like a lot
of life is just problem solving. You know, like I feel like once my wife and I spent a lot of time
cultivating a better relationship between the two of us, after that, you know, there's still like, you know, family members getting sick, like this
problem happens over here, this problem happens over there, and we're just solving problems
together. That's what like the last two decades, you know, the last like decade and a half has been
for us. It's hard, but I think the key thing is when I feel that either her or anyone else is trying
to get me to join them in their attention, I just remember like actually I don't want to feel like that. I want to live in
my own energy and it's been really useful because there are times where you
know we want to pick a fight with each other but whoever is more grounded if
they just remain in their groundedness it actually helps the whole process be a
lot more efficient because you have no one to fight. You're just
there sitting in your own stress and then the other person helps you
see yourself a little more clearly.
Yeah, and then it goes away.
It's like the other trick is like,
if both triggered, one of you is probably
a little bit less triggered.
Instead of like, you know, check in and be aware and go,
okay, well, there's only one crazy person
allowed in the room at a time.
So let's like not both be crazy
because that's not gonna go well. And it's not easy but it it's how do you hit the pause button? Yeah on your reactivity?
Totally totally and it's really helpful
I think like I think recognizing the moments where I'm like I can have a little more balance for the two of us and you know
She can do the same. I think it's it's a gift that we give to each other
You know where it's like I rather lean in my own piece and then eventually instead of inviting you into my anger
I'm inviting you into my piece. Yeah, that's beautifully said
When you guys are in this in like in a place of conflict and you both feel activated
How do you navigate that moment you you take space until you both can come back to you?
You know, I've noticed that the arguments they just flow
like Take space until you both can come back to you. You know, i've noticed that the arguments they just flow like
Just a little more slowly like we'll talk we're both heated
And then in the middle of talking there's little bits of pausing or we're still both sitting in our chairs still both, you know
Riddling with tension in the body, but we're we're being a little more measured about
Am I trying to resolve the argument or am I trying to make it
bigger? And that's something that, you know, when we were in our twenties, it was just like, make the
argument bigger and bigger. And now we just let the argument take the time that it needs. And if we
need to talk about it another day or hours later, fine, let's pull off. But now it's usually just,
it doesn't all need to be resolved in this immediate moment. Especially if we both can't see clearly,
then we're not gonna do that well.
Take a break.
Someone once said to me,
you can either be right or in relationship.
Yeah.
And I think a lot of us are very attached to being right.
How do we give up this incredible desire to be right,
which is connected to the illusion of eye
that you referred to earlier.
This kind of false illusion. I want you to kind of dive a little bit more into this whole idea, the illusion of I that you referred to earlier this kind of
False illusion. I want you to kind of dive a little bit more into this whole idea this illusion of I
and how we give up this sort of identity where we have to
Be in our ego and be bright I think one of the key things is that you have to work with the universe instead of against our universe is one of motion
Our universe is one of impermanence. That means that the whole
universe is this giant river that's just flowing and rushing forward. And if we
try to stay static, if we try to stay attached, then that river is just going to
knock us down. It's going to be, life is going to be very difficult. But when we
embrace change, that means that we're also embracing the own fluctuation of
our identity. You know, who I was 10 years ago is long gone.
Who I am right now is also in, you know, it's in transition.
And ultimately who you think you are, like, it's going to be gone.
It's going to disappear, you know, either through evolution or through your own
death, but when you're embracing your growth, just not going to stay the same.
And I think that's the same thing for relationships.
You know, who we are, like who my wife was
even two years ago, I mean, we had this beautiful argument
that highlighted it the other day, right?
Where my wife two years ago, she was exhausted
from all the travel, you know, we had had,
she also works as my manager and she like has been,
you know, critical part of the business and with
With everything but we were traveling so much for work that she was exhausted
She felt like it was affecting our health and I was like I was like cool. I was like I don't want you to get hurt
I was like definitely I can do more trips on my own, you know do speaking events on my own and all that stuff
and
So I ended up changing a little bit of the way that I would talk about things.
So I'd be like, oh, I have to go to Boston.
And then I said that the other day and she was like,
oh, what about me?
Like, I can't come.
And I was like, oh, I was like, you know,
I changed the language for you because two years ago,
you were like, we're traveling way too much.
And I started changing the way, you know,
I have to go to Austin because I don't
want it. I don't want you to feel obligated to come because I know that that makes you
unhealthy. And I was actually, I changed my language because of what you asked me to do.
It was a nice moment because two things, it showed us that it's valuable to ask, like,
how do you like your happiness to be supported? It's not going to be the same thing it was
two years ago. And also, you know, in that moment, like I felt her tension because she felt like legitimately
left out.
And I was like, Oh no, I actually did this because of you.
And then it just like helped the realization that like, Oh, I totally want her around me.
It was a nice moment where, you know, it reminds me like what she wanted as support two years
ago isn't necessarily valid.
Like I need to check in and make sure that in terms of like our actions,
our language and whatnot, that I'm actually being supportive.
Yeah. And what you said else is important because you have to allow your partner to evolve and
change just as you evolve and you're you were living in the past reality of what she said two
years ago and she had moved on or maybe she's ready to travel.
She's been stuck in the middle of nowhere in the Massachusetts for too long. And she's like, let me get to a city.
Yeah. Yeah.
I want some good Chinese concrete.
You know, one of the things that I think people have a hard time with is we often
have broken pickers, meaning we pick people based on our conditioning, our past,
our beliefs, our traumas.
And so I certainly had one.
That was the biggest thing I had to fix,
was fix my broken picker.
And meaning, you know, how did I know
how to be in a relationship without choosing someone
who wasn't the right person for me?
And that wasn't actually just in relation with me
because it was sort of dealing with some wound I had and
trying to fix that. Yeah. And you talk about sort of red flags that people should look out for and
you also talk about green flags, which is kind of interesting. So can you kind of break that down?
What are the red flag flags and the biggest red flags people have? And what are the,
what are the green flags? I think one of the biggest red flags is a lack of humility. When
someone has a lack of humility.
When someone has a lack of humility in terms of like they think they know everything, they
think all their opinions are right, that means that they also carry a very static sense of
identity.
If that static sense of static sense of identity is there, that means that they're a highly
attached person.
So they're not going to have the flexibility it takes to be able to grow together.
I think that's that's something definitely to watch out for. not going to have the flexibility it takes to be able to grow together.
I think that's something definitely to watch out for.
A green flag is the inverse.
Someone who appreciates learning, someone who understands that when you go into a relationship,
I may love you and I may feel strongly for you, but I'm not necessarily going to know
how to care for you.
I have to learn that over time.
I have to learn that by literally asking you,
how can I support your happiness?
And I think the other thing in terms of-
How do you wanna be loved?
Not how I think you should be loved.
Exactly, exactly.
This is how I wanna be loved.
So I'm gonna do that to you.
Yeah.
That doesn't often go well.
I feel like my wife,
the way that she feels loved
is when I'm taking care of the compost.
But the way I feel loved-
Acts of service.
Is by being hugged.
Right, touching.
Yeah, this is a fun love language. Yeah, totally, totally, love like the way I service by being hugged right now So touching yeah love languages, right?
It totally totally love languages and I tell my wife like the the flip side. It's like a my corny dad joke
It's like I'm touch sensitive. Like when you don't touch me I get sensitive
And and she's just you know, that just doesn't matter to her
It's like not as important
But I think we have to learn that we have to ask and not think that the person is just gonna read our minds
That's powerful.
One of the things that I think is challenging
for people in relationships is honesty.
And I don't mean like lying, truly lying about like,
oh, I'm having an affair, I'm not telling you.
That's kind of betrayal, that's clearly bad.
The small lies, like not telling someone
how you actually are feeling
or kind of omitting things that may be bothering you or not being
Transparent about who you are and what's happening for you in the moment
Can you talk about about how important sort of honesty is and what what your framework is around honesty and relationship?
Yeah, I think it's it helps to understand that this honesty creates distance
Right this honesty within yourself.esty creates distance, right?
Dishonesty within yourself. It creates distance between you and yourself. That means you're not appreciating your emotional history You're not appreciating, you know your wounds and your patterns
You're just sort of trying to distance yourself away from the things that you feel in relationship when you're dishonest
It creates distance between you and your partner and that could be about the small things or the big things
I think understanding that connection is fed by honesty dishonest, it creates distance between you and your partner. And that could be about the small things or the big things.
I think understanding that connection is fed by honesty.
Like this is what allows this connection to continue because you have to feed the connection and you feed it by just being honest, even if it's something small or
something large, like whether you like this TV show or not, or like how you
really feel about ex, you know, family member, you know, whatever it could be, like serious things to small things.
I think when you're approaching honesty without judgment and without fear,
cause a lot of times honesty scares us.
We're always like afraid that the home is going to break.
But once the people pleasing is the kind of inverse of honesty, right?
Yeah.
But, but having a good understanding that especially when you're approaching a
relationship, not from a place of expectations and attachment, but but having a good understanding that especially when you're approaching a relationship Not from a place of expectations and attachment but a place of commitment where you know that you two are highly committed to each other
willingly
so and you support each other's happiness because
There's clear information about it and you're choosing to act on it to support your partner then it's a lot safer to be honest
I think that's such a subtle thing. We don't really think about it and I I
remember one of my, you know, childhood wounds was I had a rage, a holic father,
and I had to learn how to ease him or please him or people please him in order to not get
the wrath and the rage coming at me, which was scary because he was very loud, very deep voice, big chest and kind of scary guy.
And so I learned that people pleasing was how do you navigate the world? What it led me to do was to
not actually say what was true for me in the moment in relationships. And that was very destructive.
It's how people pleasing sounds like a nice, a nice thing, but it's actually a lie. It's a flat out lie. And for me,
that was, that was a big thing that I had to kind of realize was that honesty,
I was going to be 100% transparent,
honest about everything in my relationship, whatever relationship I got into.
And it's been,
it's been pretty remarkable to see how powerful that is as a force for
understanding as a force for connection as a force for understanding, as a force for connection, as a force for intimacy, as a force for love. And that most of us don't
even realize we're doing. We don't realize we're not being fully transparent and honest.
And I think it's important. And I think we don't learn how to do that. So how do you
help people think about that?
I mean, in How to Love Better, which is a great book,
everybody should get a copy of it, it's out now.
What is the way to get through that place?
Yeah, thank you so much for sharing that part of your story.
I didn't know that I can feel like how much you've overcome
and how much that's shaped you.
Honesty, like it's an invitation to get closer together
And and it's and I think you know, we have to be really careful because we often
Human beings are inclined towards black and white thinking where it's like if i'm going to do this
I'm going to do it 100 and there's no other way but
You know honesty is especially important in those intimate relationships that you're very clear, you know your best friend your parents or
You know your, whoever it is. But then that doesn't necessarily mean
that every time someone says something that you don't like,
you don't have to get into a fight with them about it
or anything like that.
You don't have to fight every battle.
In our most important relationships,
honesty is the thing that keeps feeding energy
into that relationship.
And without it, we just grow apart.
We just grow apart over time,
or walls develop where we can't even see each other clearly.
I think the other golden rule,
you didn't really talk about it so much yet,
but it's this idea of don't think things personally, right?
Yeah, yeah.
Your partner needs to go off and do something,
or if you're like, look, babe,
I just wanna have some time with myself,
I wanna go to Boston by myself and just you know, have my own time
It's not a reflection on her
And I think you know, when you take these personally it kind of it kind of blows up a relationship
I'm really grateful that my like my wife and I we we both really enjoy meditating
Separately as individuals right when we go away to these long meditation courses for like 30 45 days
We're totally
silent.
We don't have our phones.
We don't have our laptops.
We're not in the same room.
You know, we're like, I wonder you don't
answer my texts.
I'll disappear for like 45 days.
I'll turn my phone back on.
It's like tons of texts.
So we'll be totally apart.
And what's, what's awesome is like not only
we're experiencing that in our own solitude,
in ourselves, we're cultivating ourselves during that time at the mental gym
Like we talked about when we come out what ends up happening is that so much old conditioning is erased
Like you'll come out, you know after 45 days of meditating
Your mind just becomes so much lighter and all these old patterns that were hardened
Become soft over time because they haven't been replicated
old patterns that were hardened become soft over time because they haven't been replicated. So you have much more choices and you come out and you feel like you're a new version
of yourself and a lot of your old preferences down to like simple things like the type of
food that you like, the TV shows you like to watch, the books you like to read. You're
like, Oh, I don't know if I even like this stuff anymore. Sometimes I'll finish those
long courses and I'll listen to the playlist that I was listening to before. And I'm like, no, this is not working at all. You know, it's not,
I don't even want to hear this type of music right now. But that means that we push ourselves
forward in our evolution as individuals. But that means that I get a chance to re-meet who my wife
is. And because we're not exactly the same, we're discovering ourselves as individuals and we're
discovering each other again, because so much old conditioning gets deleted.
And part of that is me not being attached
to who she was before.
What she likes now is way different
from what she liked when she was 25.
And I think it's honestly, it's pretty cool.
Like we still, we love being next to each other
and we love doing life together,
but she keeps changing and that's part of the fun.
So control, alt, delete is kind of a key part
of relationships, huh?
Yeah, let it go.
That's amazing.
In terms of self-love, which is a sort of talking
about love, loving your partner,
but self-love is a core part of having love together
with somebody else, right?
Totally, you need a degree of balance
because the self-love is what
helps you stay energized, rejuvenate yourself, it helps you cultivate yourself and you don't want to
like get lost in a relationship. You don't want to like become your partner's twin. I think having a
degree of that self-love is what ultimately helps you not burn out and have the energy to also support
your partner and yourself.
Because like, if you just make your whole life about this one person giving, giving,
giving, you're eventually going to either burn out or get really, really resentful.
So I think having a balance of the two is really important.
I mean, watching literally like, you know, watching my wife over time, take the health
issues that she had and overcome them figure out solutions
You know by reading your books by like doing other things like trying to figure out how she could make herself healthier
I watched this whole journey go down, you know
the same time when I was like writing inward and writing clarity and connection and
As I saw her get more and more serious about her health. I was like dang
I should do something too, you know, like I should really put some more energy into it, but
that was her own journey.
And I think it was, you know, I ended up being inspired by it too.
So I was a little, I was a little slower, but
how do we elevate each other?
Yeah.
Right.
Yeah.
Rather than take each other down.
Right.
Yeah, absolutely.
And I think, um, that's what we're here to do.
We're, we're here to inspire each other.
I think it's relationships are a long road.
It's difficult to be in front of that mirror all the time because
You get to see in your relationship like what you're good at and what you're not good at
It's very evident and then you have an opportunity like do you choose to accept the challenge?
Do you choose to accept the fact that you know relationships aren't easy?
Like literally befriending the challenge of relationships is what helps you have a long-term relationship
Especially if your your partner is not like abusive and they're a good person
Yeah, you know, they want to be their best as well. You still have to accept the challenge of
relationships because
It's just not gonna be easy all the time
Oh, yeah
it isn't and and I think one of the things that tricks that the tricks quote tricks that helped me is to
Help and I said this right up in the beginning of our relationship with my wife. I said And I think one of the things that tricks, quote tricks that helped me is to help.
And I said this right up in the beginning of our relationship
with my wife, I said, there's you, there's me,
and there's us.
It's a third entity.
A friend of mine, Annie Lala, she's a health and love coach
and she talks about giving it a name.
We haven't done that, but each of you have to care
for yourselves individually.
We all have to do that. We have to care for each other and we have to care for yourselves individually. We all have to do that. We have to care for each other
and we have to care for the relationship,
which has its own needs, right?
And I think we often lose focus of that.
It's like me, I, you, instead of this other place
where we can kind of anchor ourselves
as a sort of a North Star to serve.
And I think that's a powerful framing for a relationship.
It's really helped me a lot.
Yeah, and it's helpful too,
because sometimes we get bogged down
in the mundane-ness of life where it's like,
we're just focusing on doing our taxes together,
paying the bills, getting the kids to school,
solving one problem after another,
and we forget to talk about,
what do you think about this universe?
Tell me more of your views like what like listen meaning of life
Thinking about you know, like sort of bringing that earlier energy and that curiosity and keeping that like flame alit
so because your partner is like a whole universe in and of themselves and you two get to like move together like willingly choose to
be two rivers that flow alongside each other and
together like willingly choose to be two rivers that flow alongside each other and you know you got to keep getting to know each other over and over again
because you're always changing whether you talk about it or not. That's the
curiosity piece. One of the things I think is foundational you talk about in
the book is emotional maturity. It's not an easy thing to get because most of us
are basically like 25, 35, 55, 65 year old people walking around with an eight year old inside of us that's running the show.
And so developing that maturity is not something we learn
or trade in that we have any cultural
or educational frameworks for.
And yet it's like the most fundamental thing
to actually being happy is actually becoming an adult.
A lot of us stay anchored in our past because of wounds or childhood,
or just because like we want to be that one year old who did whatever they
wanted. And it's not, it's, it's, it's a,
it's a really a challenging thing.
And we're to actually have a relationship with someone that is going to work.
You have to have two emotionally mature people. How do you,
how do you help people under that? And how does,
so what are the clues that there's emotionally
maturity that hurts relationships?
Emotional maturity, it's, it's such a big word and it can be defined in a lot of
ways. I think it's ultimately, you know, the, the piece that you can have when
you're feeling your own emotions and having the ability to resolve difficulties
between you and another person where you actually want to resolve difficulties between you and another person
where you actually want to resolve difficulty
as opposed to making it bigger.
And I think emotional maturity is actually
like a large set of skills.
It's not like one thing, but it's a word that shows
that you can listen, that you can let go,
that you have self-awareness, that you can see
other perspectives outside of your own,
that you have a compassionate framework as opposed to an
egoic one.
And it's a lot of these things coming together so that you can handle down
moments without just leaving.
Cause I think that's one thing that's that our culture has almost like
insidiously, like the way media has affected our, you know, our minds where we see like a lot of romantic comedies and what you see in a
romantic comedies, normally two people meet, they resolve one problem together,
one issue, and then they're happily ever after.
You never see the part that happens after.
And, but what happens after is constant ups and downs, constant ups and downs.
And you know, you're in a situation that isn't quite as healthy.
If you're just moving
from one down moment to another down moment
to another down moment.
Then you have to really reassess,
is this the right place for me?
Should I be in this relationship?
But having ups and downs, very normal.
That you can still very much so be in a healthy relationship.
Yeah, it's key, it's so key.
And I think it's a constant work. I wonder if some people thinking, in listening to this are thinking that, well, it's key, it's so key. And I think it's a constant, it's a constant work.
I wonder if some people thinking in listening to this
or thinking that, well, this sounds great,
but this is a lot of navel gazing.
And how does this help the world
and all the problems we're having in the world?
And you know, it's, and I think this is,
this is fundamental because, you know, in order to actually,
and we saw-
Yeah, society is built in the home.
Yeah.
We see, we saw this in the sixties, you know, or we had out to like change the world and fix him but no one had dealt with their shit
Yeah, and and there was a lot of really dysfunctional communes and dysfunctional things that were just when you don't deal with your shit
You end up recreating the thing that you were fighting again. Yeah, like fundamental you look look at history over and over and over again
That's what happened like groups of people
They've come together around particular values that are very good values
they sometimes win and they get power and then
Power is like a magnet it pulls out the roughest parts of the ego all the stuff that you haven't healed
All those deepest wounds and then all of a sudden you're you know doing the evil stuff that you were once fighting against
so that to me I I'm really honestly grateful to have been born in this time period
because this is one of the few time periods where you can still work to make the world a better place
but simultaneously change yourself, simultaneously, fundamentally at the root
help deal with the potential evils that are lying dormant in your mind and helping undo that conditioning. And I think it's beautiful. Like we live in a time where there are millions
of people who are seeing therapists, millions of people meditating, millions of people actively
cultivating themselves in all these different modalities.
You're doing psychedelic assisted therapy, right?
Exactly. And it's no wonder to me that, you know, we had this like self love and wellness
movement that I think really started getting big. And it's been going on for a long time, but when it started exploding on social
media in like 2014, 2015, it's no surprise that, you know, so many people were talking about self
love and developing themselves and overcoming and, you know, old wounds. And now we're taking a look
at our relationship and how we can have relationships that are growth oriented, where two people can keep evolving together.
And I think this is something that's critical because this will help us honestly rear children
that are not as traumatized.
You can't create a perfect life for a person, but you can create a place that's just less
harmful.
This is very important.
And you have kids?
Not yet.
Not yet. Well, that's the incubator. Yeah, yeah is really important. And you have kids? Not yet.
Not yet, oh.
Well, that's the incubator.
Yeah, yeah, that's when the real test will come.
Yeah, wow.
I mean, I think you're right.
I think people have to understand
that the world is made of individuals,
and the individuals have beliefs,
and individuals have points of view.
And what we're seeing today is this total disconnection
from each other, this total lack ability
to talk to each other,
this total lack of understanding, total lack ability to talk to each other. It's total lack of understanding,
this lack ability to connect.
And so what you're talking about in a sense,
how to love better,
is not just about how to be in a relationship better,
but it's how to be in relationship
to everyone in the world better
and everything that's going on.
So I had a certain sort of very sort of set of beliefs
as I was younger, very progressive, So, I had a certain sort of very sort of set of beliefs
as I was younger, very progressive, and I didn't wanna talk to anybody who thought otherwise.
It wasn't really a conscious thought that I didn't,
but I realized I gravitated towards people
who thought like me, who felt like me,
who were like me, who had the same beliefs
and the same worldviews.
The ego, ego, love, similarity.
Yeah, and what I found was like
by actually developing and cultivating relationships
with people who had very different views and beliefs
that I've grown, that I've learned,
that I've actually been able to actually humanize
the other, right?
Because we always like to otherize everything.
And this was happening in the world today.
We're otherizing everybody.
You're Republican, you're Democrat, you're pro-life,
you're pro-choice, you're whatever it is.
You're like Jewish or Muslim.
It's like, it's endless.
And curiosity sort of gets lost in any kind of relational way
of navigating through this gets lost.
And it's really about this massive conflict
we're seeing today.
And I mean, we saw in the Oval Office the other day,
which was astounding to me that we have world leaders
who are literally bickering and fighting with each other
and nobody's stopping for a minute to listen,
to slow down, to understand.
There were valid perspectives on both sides,
but nobody was even listening.
They were talking over each other.
And I'm referring to the president Zelensky from Ukraine, who was in the Oval Office with President Trump
and JD Vance. And, you know, I'm not, I don't care if you're Republican or Democrat, just
like that in of itself, you know, wasn't how we want to demonstrate to the world our leaders
behaving. And in a sense, you're sort of these leaders who are under stress, who are dealing with difficult things,
who have a lot to deal with.
They weren't able to actually listen to each other.
And the first step is really to listen and to understand.
And you might not agree.
You might have different perspectives.
You might want to solve a problem a different way.
But at least if you start to build on a foundation
of understanding, you don't end up in a situation like that.
And I think in a way your book is sort of the antidote
to that, right?
How to love better, how to communicate better,
how to be in a relationship better, right?
It's funny because the past, I think the past year,
my favorite sentence has been, tell me more.
And that's just something so simple
where I've been honestly retraining my mind because I used to love to debate
Right, like it used to really love my opinions and now I'm realizing that oh my opinions are very ephemeral
Like they're very subject to change. They're also like I don't know everything. So why do I think I know everything like and
Now whenever I feel the reaction of hearing someone say something that I don't agree with,
I feel the impulsiveness of, oh, that's wrong.
But I've been retraining myself to say, tell me more.
You know, if it feels important, sure, let's talk.
I don't want to debate.
I'd rather discuss.
Like I don't I don't like this like whole like, you know, there has to be a winner type
thing.
But if I don't feel like I need to debate or prove anything or anything like that, I
just say, tell me more.
Like I'm, I'm genuinely curious. Like how did you get to this belief? Like how did this evolve? Like, you know,
without judgment, without condescension, because that's the other thing you get is like people looking down on each other.
But honestly, tell me more is dope, man.
It's been so helpful to just, and it's honestly opened up a lot of learning because I don't know everything and especially in the field of politics, like left and right.
I'm always telling people like left and right.
It's not, it's not really taking us that far.
We need to go up.
Yeah.
My friend Rick Warren said I'm not left-wing or right wing.
I'm for the whole bird.
Otherwise you fly around in circles.
Swinger, right? Wing, I'm for the whole bird,
otherwise you fly around in circles.
Right?
Well, Diego, Young Pueblo,
it's been amazing to have you on the podcast again.
Everybody definitely check out your book,
How to Love Better.
They can find you on social media.
Where is the best place to find you online?
Definitely on Instagram,
youngpueblo, Y-U-N-G, underscore P-U-E, B-ue Bielo and I'm also on subs that I've been really enjoying
writing longer articles there and you can find my book in
the bookstores and on Amazon. Yeah. Yeah. I would highly
recommend them. I they've they've really impacted me and
they were they were kind of like medicine or a sav at a
tough moment in my life. So I really appreciate you and all you've done
to bring a little bit of understanding,
a little bit of compassion,
a little bit of love to the world,
the world that is in desperate need of that.
So thanks for being on the podcast.
Yeah, thank you so much.
Thank you, Mark, appreciate it.
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