The Dr. Hyman Show - What Makes Love Succeed or Fail? with John Gottman and Julie Schwartz Gottman

Episode Date: January 25, 2023

This episode is brought to you by Thrive Market, BiOptimizers, BON CHARGE, and Sunlighten. Research has revealed that by staying aware of how we interact with our partners and embracing specific patte...rns we are less likely to get divorced and more likely to be in a satisfying relationship many years from now. Today on The Doctor’s Farmacy, I’m excited to talk to two leading experts in the field of healthy relationships, Drs. Julie Schwartz Gottman and John Gottman, cofounders of the Gottman Institute.  Dr. John Gottman previously served as executive director of the Relationship Research Institute and is a professor emeritus of psychology at the University of Washington, where he founded the Love Lab. He is world-renowned for his work on marital stability and divorce prediction and has conducted forty years of groundbreaking research with thousands of couples. His work has earned him numerous major awards and he was named one of the top ten most influential therapists of the past quarter century. Dr. Julie Schwartz Gottman is president of the Gottman Institute and cofounder of Affective Software, Inc. A highly respected clinical psychologist, she was named Washington State Psychologist of the Year and received the 2021 Psychotherapy Networker Lifetime Achievement Award. This episode is brought to you by Thrive Market, BiOptimizers, BON CHARGE, and Sunlighten. Join Thrive Market today at thrivemarket.com/hyman to receive $80 off your first order. BiOptimizers is offering my community 10% off plus a special gift with purchase. Just head over to magbreakthrough.com/hyman with code hyman10. Right now, my community can go to boncharge.com/HYMAN and use coupon code HYMAN to save 20%. You can save up to $600 on your Sunlighten purchase at sunlighten.com/mark-hyman and mention my name, Dr. Hyman, to save. Here are more details from our interview (audio version / Apple Subscriber version): The top four relationship killers (5:18 / 3:20)  The keys to a successful relationship (6:25 / 4:00)  Love as a practice (27:09 / 22:50)  What makes for a great sex life (31:25 / 27:08)  How to have healthy conflict (35:11 / 30:52) Breaking out of reactivity and fight or flight (42:33 / 38:17)  The biggest predictor of divorce (48:32 / 44:10)  How contempt differs from criticism (50:57 / 46:42) The origins of contempt (53:13 / 48:55) Top relationship hacks (1:00:13 / 54:24)  Take the Free Gottman Relationship Quiz and download the Gottman Card Decks app. Get a copy of The Love Prescription: Seven Days to More Intimacy, Connection, and Joy here.

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 Coming up on this episode of The Doctor's Pharmacy. Not only is contempt our best predictor of divorce, but it also predicts how many infectious illnesses the recipient of contempt will have in the next 30 years. Hey everyone, it's Dr. Mark. Now time and again I've had my patients tell me they're too busy to eat as healthy as they'd like. And that's when I ask them how much time they spend on email or social media. I like to tell them if they have time to scroll, they have time to shop online for healthy foods. With Thrive Market, you can order all your favorite healthy pantry staples, snacks, household and body care goods, and so much more and have it delivered right to your door.
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Starting point is 00:01:59 tissue in your body to provide maximum health benefits from reducing stress to improving sleep and boosting your energy levels. Right now, in addition to the 10% discount you get by using the promo code HYMAN10, Bioptimizers is now offering you a special gift with purchase. Go to magbreakthrough.com forward slash HYMAN and use the code HYMAN10. That's magbreakthrough.com forward slash HYMAN with the code HYMAN10 at checkout to get your gift today. Now, this offer is only for a limited time. And now let's get back to this week's episode of The Doctor's Pharmacy. Welcome to The Doctor's Pharmacy. I'm Dr. Mark Hyman. This is a place for conversations that matter. And if you've ever struggled with a relationship, I think you're going to want to
Starting point is 00:02:42 tune in and listen carefully to this podcast because with two of the giants in the field of relationship, doctors John Gottman and Julie Schwartz Gottman, who are co-founders of the Gottman Institute. You might have heard of them. I certainly followed their work for many decades. Probably didn't pay close enough attention because I've been married three times. So I figure maybe I'm going to take extra careful notes right now. Dr. Gottman, Dr. John Gottman has served as the executive director in the past of the Relationship Research Institute. And as a professor of emeritus psychology at the University of Washington, where he co-founded something called the Love Lab. And we're going to talk about that, which is really fascinating. A place to study love and relationships,
Starting point is 00:03:26 which we don't really think much about, except after the fact. He's also learned so much about marital stability and he can predict divorce and has done 40 years of groundbreaking research with thousands of couples. He's won major awards. He's named one of the top 10 most influential therapists
Starting point is 00:03:43 of the last quarter century. Maybe I would say longer. And he's the author of lots of great books, bestselling books, including The Seven Principles for Making Marriage Work, What Makes Love Last, Eight Dates, and most recently, we're going to talk about today, The Love Prescription, Seven Days to More Intimacy, Connection, and Joy. Who doesn't want that? And of course, we have Dr. Julie Schwartz Gottman as well, who was the president of the Gottman Institute and co-founder of Affective Software. She's a highly respected clinical psychologist. She was named Washington State Psychologist of the Year and has done so much great work. Also co-authored many of those books.
Starting point is 00:04:19 And I took the relationship quiz that you both have online, and I got a perfect score with my partner. I think 22 out of 22. So I think that's a good sign. I think it's a good sign. She might not agree, but I think I got a good score. So welcome to the Doctors Pharmacy Podcast. It's so great to have you both. Thank you so much. Thank you, Mark. You know, most of us don't think about how to study love. We fall in love. We fall out of love. We have love in our lives, but we don't think about the science of love or relationship. And you both dedicated your lives to understanding the science of what makes love work, what makes it not work. You've researched over 3,000 couples in your love lab where you can watch a couple and know in 15 minutes with a 90% accuracy whether or not they're going to stay together, whether or not they get
Starting point is 00:05:16 divorced. And you've really been able to map out the core elements of what makes a relationship not work and also the keys to a successful relationship. Maybe some people are familiar with your past work in the four horsemen of the apocalypse of relationships, which are criticism, contempt, defensiveness, and stonewalling. And if those are present in your relationship, if you're contemptuous of your partner, if you're overly defensive, if you kind of create a wall and block people, or if you're over critical, those erode at the very fabric of love and relationship. And those are pretty clear. If people are experiencing those, it's pretty clear that those are happening. And those are big red flags of warning that you need to heed if you want to
Starting point is 00:05:59 heal your relationship. But your new book, your love prescription is really about the keys to a successful relationship. So what are those keys that you talk about? There's three of them that you've highlighted in the book that I think I want to start with because they really help us to sort of redirect our attention about love toward what works as opposed to what doesn't. Okay. Well, one of the most important is a dynamic called turning towards. And what turning towards means is when your partner makes a bid for connection, just saying your name or asking you a question, how do you respond? Well, there's three ways you can respond. You can turn away from your partner and ignore their request or their bid for interest. You can turn against them or you can turn towards them by just a small little comment. John and I can role play this
Starting point is 00:07:00 for you. Would you like that, Mark? Yeah. Yes, please. Okay. Okay. yes okay okay all right so honey look at that beautiful bird out there it's gorgeous i could see that for people just listening and don't see it he basically picked up his coffee turned his head the other direction, and had a sip, and it completely ignored what he had to say. Just my magnificent comment. Okay, let's try it again. Honey, look at that beautiful bird outside the window.
Starting point is 00:07:38 Be quiet. I'm trying to concentrate right now. God, give me a break. Okay, so that's turning against. It's responding to a partner's bid with hostility, right? That's what he was doing there. Okay. Now let's do it right.
Starting point is 00:07:57 Wow. Look at that beautiful bird out there. Whoa. Yeah. Isn't that neat? Yeah. That's all it takes yeah it's a little bit of validation yeah yeah yeah exactly mark i mean it's one of the simplest
Starting point is 00:08:15 things that couples can do and what we found in our love lab it was amazing in the research is that the couples who were successful six years down the road turned towards each other 86 percent of the time. Wow. 86 percent of the time. The ones who were not successful six years down the road, 33. Wow. 33 percent. So, you know, huge difference. That's how much difference that little one word or two word
Starting point is 00:08:47 answer can make, as well as really turning towards each other when you have a essential need, something important to you. Yeah, that's a really powerful framework of thinking about these micro moments. You know, we think of these big relationship commitments and these things that we have to do to make a relationship work. But you're talking about these sort of little micro relationship tools that help us in the moment put basically a savings in our emotional bank account. Right. You talk about the emotional bank account. Right. And a lot of us make withdrawals all the time through any of those four horsemen of the apocalypse and other techniques we use to degrade relationships and road relationships. But you're talking about this framework of putting emotional deposits in the bank account. What do you mean by that? What are those? How do we kind of get rich in our relationships. One of the things I wanted to point out about this turning toward emotional bank account idea is that when couples are in conflict, if they've turned toward each other
Starting point is 00:09:53 at a high level, the 86%, then they actually have more of a sense of humor when they disagree. They can laugh at themselves. They can laugh together. And that reduces physiological arousal during conflict. So you get a huge benefit from this, maintaining this emotional bank account. And so how does one go about making deposits in the emotional bank account? Turning towards is one way. So just validating your partner's experiencing, being interested in what they're saying, you know, like connecting with them in the moment about what they care about. Really simple things that don't take a lot of effort. But what are the other ways that people... Yeah, Julie says, oh, I just had a really disturbing dream about my mother. I can say,
Starting point is 00:10:41 oh, that's interesting. Or I can say, tell me the dream. I want to hear it. So by doing that and listening to it, I'm really turning toward in a much bigger way. And so that whole idea of turning toward is just the opportunity to connect is what's important. Yeah. Let me continue, Mark. You asked about other ways that couples can build that emotional bank account. Well, another really easy one is giving your partner a compliment, saying something that is affirming to your partner. For example, God, you were so funny last night. Or of course, there's always, you look so hot today, naturally. But you can also just say, I thank you so much for going and picking up the dry cleaning. You're really so kind to me sometimes. So, you know, it's looking for what your partner is doing right, not just what your partner is doing wrong.
Starting point is 00:11:51 And saying thank you and paying your partner a compliment. We do that a lot, right, during courtship. We'll always give compliments in those early months. But how about 20 years later? My partner doesn't need it. They know I love them. You know, it's no big deal. Wrong.
Starting point is 00:12:14 They don't. All of us have this little teeny seed of insecurity in us, most of us. And it helps to soothe that when our partner gives us some kindness, some positive affirmation. It makes a big difference. Yeah, that's a really helpful framework as most of us tend to be looking for what's wrong and pointing it out instead of looking for what's right. And when things happen that are right, we don't often take the time to acknowledge them, to appreciate them, to verbalize them. And what you're saying is that goes a long way towards building your emotional bank account with your partner so that when things do come up that are more challenging, you kind of have reserves to deal with it.
Starting point is 00:13:00 And it also kind of enriches the relationship in real time. Yeah, there was a really interesting study done by two women robinson and price which they put observers in couples homes just to count the number of times people were nice to each other and consider it and they found that in unhappy couples they missed 50 of the positivity that was actually there. So that's an important thing. If you catch your partner doing something right and have that habit of mind, you're going to see that they're actually a lot nicer to you than you think they are. Yeah, that's so true. What if your partner doesn't do that? Like, you know, go, Hey, I just had this dream
Starting point is 00:13:45 or gosh, you know, I want to show you something I'm excited about today, or, you know, I had a really tough moment at work and your partner doesn't respond by turning toward you. How, how do you handle that in a relationship? Or maybe like, even when it's worse, when it's like negativity or turning against, you know, I think the best thing to do is to do what we call a soften startup. And what that means is to say what you feel about what and what your positive need is. So here's the way that might sound. Honey, you know, I've been feeling kind of invisible when I make a comment to start a conversation me know that you hear me. You can just say, uh-huh, you know, at least that tells me that you're involved, you're engaged, and that would make a big difference to me. And then your partner would respond by saying, hmm, good point.
Starting point is 00:14:57 Right. Yeah, and what if they say something nasty? Like in the book you say, you know, your partner wants to pick a fight. Like, oh, it wouldn't occur to you to make dinner tonight for once, would it? You know, that's kind of a passive aggressive, nasty way to communicate. Yeah, that's actually contempt that you were demonstrating there. It's sarcasm. It's got a cutting edge.
Starting point is 00:15:17 That's called contempt, one of our four horseman. So the way you might respond to that is to say, you know, Sally, that felt like an insult. Can you please say that in another way? That felt abusive if you would say that to your partner? That felt like an insult. Oh, like an insult. Yeah. Yeah. Not abuse. That felt like an insult. Would you please say that another way? So basically, you're saying what you felt. You're not incriminating the partner. For example, you know, your alternative might be to say something like, you're so mean. Why would you say that?
Starting point is 00:16:01 You're so mean. Boom. You know, there's the criticism. That's not going to help. That'll just threaten your partner further and create more conflict. So you let them know what you felt in response to that and what the positive need is. That's what you have to really focus in on. What the positive need of your partner is. Yeah. So in other words, a negative need in that situation would sound like this. That felt like an insult. Would you please stop doing that? Stop doing that is negative, right? It's stopping something. I
Starting point is 00:16:43 resent that. You flip that on its head. That's all you have to do. Flip it on its head. What would you like in its place? Well, you'd like your partner to ask for you to make dinner in a simple or kinder way. That's it. That's it, honey. I'd love it if you made dinner for us tonight. Right. Exactly. that's that's like hey honey i'd love it if you made dinner for us tonight right exactly there you are yeah that's it that's it right why don't you make dinner you jerk you never do anything around the house that's good when you're angry at the politician on tv yeah um you also think about a couple of other key things that are important to a successful relationship, like curiosity and shared fondness and admiration. Can you talk more about those qualities and practices around that?
Starting point is 00:17:34 John, why don't you talk about curiosity? That's a favorite of yours. Yeah. So staying curious about who your partner is and how your partner is changing is very powerful in a relationship. So asking these open-ended questions that take time to answer. I've noticed you kind of stressed out about your brother lately. What are you thinking about that? I know you're upset about it. So I'd like to hear more about what you're thinking about doing about your brother. And tell me more about what's going on and what's on your mind. So that kind of curiosity really winds up leading to a very interesting conversation,
Starting point is 00:18:22 where I can really listen to her and understand what she's worried about, what she's planning to do today. And I can kind of stay in touch with her worries and her concerns. Yeah, let me say a little more about that. You know, again, if you go back to when you first met during that dating period, well, you know, we tend to ask lots of questions like how come you chose the field of work? Or, you know, what brought you to Seattle? Was there a particular reason you came here? You know, et cetera.
Starting point is 00:18:57 So open-ended questions are questions that of course have a great big answer, not a one word answer like what's your favorite color purple? No, they're much bigger answers. And people think that after they've committed to one another, they're married, maybe they have kids, they're busy, they don't need to ask those questions anymore. They think they know the answers. But you know, Mark, just like all of us, we all evolve over time and change over time. And because of that, it's important to ask those big open-ended questions, sometimes as much as once a month or once every six months, once a year. John and I have this lovely ritual of connection where we go on an annual honeymoon every year. When our daughter turned eight and
Starting point is 00:19:55 went away to summer camp, we figured we should go to camp too. So we went to camp, this B&B up in Canada, fell in love with it. And we've gone there every year since, except for COVID. So each time we go, we take a deck of cards. Each one has an open-ended question on it. And we answer all those questions. And inevitably, the answers change year to year. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. That's a beautiful
Starting point is 00:20:27 framework for thinking about relationship, which is staying curious about who your partner is, what they care about, what matters to them, what changed over time. And I think, you know, the art of asking questions is much harder than people realize. And yet, you know, just think about yourself. Like when someone is curious about you, when they ask you questions about who you are, what matters to you, deeper questions, not like where do you live and where you're from and what's your job, but like really profound questions. You feel seen, you feel cared about, you feel loved in a way that is really important. And I think, you know, you're right in relationships. We tend to go, I know who my
Starting point is 00:21:04 partner is. I don't have to ask him any questions anymore. And that's, that's really the beginning of the end in the way, because you, you lose the current moment reality of your love and you you're stuck in some past story and don't evolve. So that's a really beautiful kind of, I would say principle in addition to turning toward somebody being very curious about where they're at. And I find this with my partner. Now I'm always curious about where she's at emotionally, what's going on in her work, what's going on in their relationships,
Starting point is 00:21:32 what she cares about, what she's interested in. And, and, and she's the same way with me. And I, you know, sort of,
Starting point is 00:21:38 I answered those questions. You have this quiz online. I don't, we can kind of put the link in the show notes to the quiz, which is a free quiz by 22 questions. And I was sort of surprised by a lot of the questions because they were about like, do you know who's upsetting your partner right now?
Starting point is 00:21:52 Do you know like what things are making them happy? Do you know, like, it's like, how well do you know the current reality and state of the, you know, emotional, intellectual, spiritual life of your partner? And, and I was like, Oh, that's fascinating that those are the qualities of relationship that determine success or failure in love. And I was like, Oh, I get it. You know? Yeah. And you know, Mark, one thing we can offer your listeners is a free gift. If you go to the app store and type in yeah to the function gotman card decks you can download a free app that is filled with questions like that oh okay yeah well i know what
Starting point is 00:22:36 i'm doing right as soon as this podcast is over because i always think i have great questions but i think you know some of us it's hard to think about those questions and things that open up our relationships. And, you know, like I, I, um, like the other night I said to my partner, I said, so tell me something I don't know about you. And, you know, and it was, this is a great question. She's like, ah, I have to think about that. And so we had a really beautiful set of sort of an hour long conversation, but just a simple, like opening kind of invitation to, to show your partner one that you care, that you're interested in who they are. And then you're, you're, you're, you're not in a fixed view of that relationship. That's a really beautiful framework. Hey everyone. It's Dr. Mark here. A lot of people don't realize that our exposure to light has a
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Starting point is 00:25:31 There's another key that you talk about for successful relationships, which is shared fondness and admiration. Can you talk more about that one? That seems obvious, but I think there's more to it than meets the eye. Yeah, I think your partner really wants to know what you love about them, why you love them, what you admire about them. The qualities of affection and respect are so essential in a relationship that if you really think about that and give your partner feedback, you know, positive feedback about that. Just saying something like, you know, that teacher conference we had last night, you know, you were just great. I love the way you handled yourself.
Starting point is 00:26:14 And, you know, I was just too intimidated by the teacher to say anything. But you took over and I really appreciate that. And that's communicating respect as well as affection. Yeah. Yeah. And when your partner shows up for you, acknowledging it, right? Like, you know, I was just sort of at a moment the other day with a family member, it was a little tough and I sort of shared it with my partner. And then she immediately called me and she immediately wanted to talk about it and asked me how I was doing and helped me think about it. And I was just so moved by that. And I later on said, just really thank you for caring so much that you would take the time out of your workday to call me and talk about this, which isn't easy.
Starting point is 00:26:55 And I was like, wow, that's really remarkable. And it's those simple things that are really critical to relationships. Yeah, So beautiful. Um, so, um, the other thing you talk about is how love isn't a feeling as so much as it is a practice. Like it's obviously a feeling, but it's more of an action. Um, so how do we, how do we think of love as a practice or as an action? I mean, John Mayer has a great song, Love is a Verb, right? Love is a Verb. And I love that song. How do you think about that in terms of your work with couples? Oh, gosh. Well, especially in our work with couples, we see couples who have stopped showing each other that they love each other. They don't show it at all. They continue to coexist, cohabit, maybe parent the kids together, do the chores together, do the checklist, dividing it up. But nobody really knows how the other person feels. There's no sign of love other than
Starting point is 00:28:13 cohabiting. You know, we think about falling in love. We think about Walt Disney love. You know, we think about, oh my gosh, it's that feeling that, you know, leaves stars in the sky and the moon is brighter and, you know, there it is. That's the feeling. But what do you do with the feeling? You have to do something with it. Emotion is something that is harbored inside of you, right? It's inside of you. And unless your partner is a mind reader, they're not going to see it, right? They're not going to see it. They're not going to know it. And so, you know, I love the way the Dalai Lama talks about compassion, about care, about kindness. There are a million billion ways of showing love, from words to actions to affection, touch, little gifts,
Starting point is 00:29:20 just acts of kindness that are so important. Let me give you an example. When I, for example, come home from work and I'm absolutely exhausted and it's my turn to do the dishes, sometimes John will say, honey, you look so tired. Why don't you go just sit down and read and I'll do the dishes? Well, now, you know, that may seem trivial, but it isn't. It's an act of love. What's it composed of? It's composed of him perceiving me, knowing how I feel, perceiving me accurately, knowing, kind of anticipating what it will be like for me to have to take on a task. There's the empathy, right? And taking over that task in order to spare me more work. So that is an act of kindness. It's a little sacrifice, teeny little sacrifice, right? He's giving up a little corner of his time to do something that I ordinarily do.
Starting point is 00:30:38 That's a little sacrifice, but it's an act of love. So that's what love looks like. It's giving appreciation. It's turning towards your partner, especially when they're hurting. It should be the first thing you do is turn towards your partner and try to share that with them so it's not such a heavy load for them. All of those actions are acts of love. And many of us, after we've been married or committed a long time, may hear the words, but if there aren't actions with those words, the words are meaningless. Right.
Starting point is 00:31:21 You can say I love you, but if you don't behave that way, it doesn't count. That's right. one of my favorite studies uh is the largest study ever done on what makes for a great sex life oh okay give it to us john people in 24 countries uh christiana north norther was the was the lead investigator, and Pepper Schwartz and James Witte did this study. And, you know, when I bought their book, I thought they were going to be talking about what these people do in the bedroom that made the difference. And it turned out there was about a dozen things that people do have a great sex life. And it's things like saying I love you every day and meaning it, holding hands,
Starting point is 00:32:07 even in public, cuddling with one another on a regular basis, giving compliments, having a weekly date, you know, nothing that took place in the bedroom. It was really about affection, respect, and kindness that made the difference between having a great sex life and having a terrible sex life. That was amazing. Well, that's what builds intimacy, right? Or all those little things you talk about the small bites, right? The little small bites, small things often that we can do. And this is sort of what you're talking about. It's just like the little things, little gestures of holding your partner's hand or giving them a compliment or doing something like that that actually makes a difference. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:32:49 Let me say one more thing about it. As we move through time, with every moment, we have a thousand different choices of what to do with that moment and the next and the next. When we choose to honor our partner in some way, to take that moment, give it to our partner in some way, that's love. That's love. If you're always making other choices but never choosing to attend to your partner,
Starting point is 00:33:28 connect with your partner, how is that love? Yeah. Yeah. It's just like keeping it current is what you're talking about. Not riding on the fact that you had an attraction 20 years ago. Yeah. Also,
Starting point is 00:33:42 Mark, you know, one, one thing that people sometimes believe is, uh, gosh, if I go out and work harder, if I go out and spend 16 hours a day at work and make more money and bring home more money instead of eight hours or 10 hours a day, then my partner will really feel loved by me. Well, actually, most of the time, that's not true, right? Because where are you during that extra eight hours? You're away from your partner. You're in the office. You're somewhere else,
Starting point is 00:34:22 right? You're not with your partner. You're not connecting. And the only way that connection comes out of that is through a crisp, you know, $10 bill. Well, how loving is that compared to a compliment or a big hug? Not fair. Yeah. Yeah, so true. You know, These little things are so important in a relationship, and I think that's what you're highlighting, is that there's little simple practices of keeping love current and alive, whether it's physical touch or with these small acts of paying attention or whether it's turning toward or whether it's creating an opportunity
Starting point is 00:35:00 for inquiry and curiosity and questions. These are really simple things that I think most of us don't learn as we enter in relationships and we expect it just to go okay. One of the things that we don't also learn is how to have healthy conflict. And I think, you know, you've done a lot of research about how couples can engage in challenging conversations, how they can, quote, fight better, how we can deal with some of the phenomena that we get when we're activated, like this physiological flooding. Can you talk about your research around how we can do this better and where things often go wrong when we start to
Starting point is 00:35:38 have a challenging or sensitive conversation with our partner? Yeah. One of the things we found was that when people are unhappy with their relationship, they tend to blame their partner for the problems. And so they kind of point their finger at their partner and say, no, here's what's wrong with you. And if you fix these things, we'll have a happy relationship. As far as I can tell, I'm pretty much perfect. But you're defective. So as soon as you do that, instead of pointing your finger at yourself and saying, here's what I'm feeling and here's my positive need. Here's my recipe for success with me. But you really blame the other person.
Starting point is 00:36:21 You start with criticism. Then it's got to be, the person's got to respond feeling attacked and getting defensive or counterattacking. So instead of pointing a finger at your partner, point it at yourself and say, listen, you know, I want to talk about something. I'm kind of unhappy about, you know, the amount of fun we're having right now in the relationship. And I, I'm not having a lot of fun and we're so busy. You know, is there some way we can just enjoy life more and just, you know,
Starting point is 00:36:57 not work so hard and have time with each other, you know, on a weekend, say, you know, maybe we can take a, you know, one of those ferries in Seattle and just see where it goes. Let's do more of that. Is that, is that, would that be okay with you? So, you know, you're really, you know, not blaming the other person. You're really sort of, you know, asking for help to solve a problem that you both have. And then it's much easier for your partner to say, what a great idea. I didn't know you felt that way. I guess we have gotten busy, you know, let's make a plan. Yeah, I think that's really important. I think I've learned is like, you know,
Starting point is 00:37:37 if you're in a relationship, you either it's us against them or me against you. And what I found is that, you know, if you if you can you know understand that whatever comes up as a conflict or as a stress or as something that it can be an opportunity to actually look at it together as a team as something that's like a third entity outside of you because it's like if it's just relational it's really hard but you know we're all going to get triggered wrong things are going to come up we're all going to have our past haunt us in some way but if if there's a sort of a framework in the relationship to kind of be partners for each other and for the us the third entity of the relationship then you can kind of externalize whatever the issues are and actually solve them together. Yeah, our friend Dan Weil, who died a couple of years ago now,
Starting point is 00:38:27 called it solving the moment instead of trying to solve the whole relationship. Sort of, how do we collaborate in this moment? The problem is like a soccer ball that we're kicking around between us, you know, rather than the problem being her or me, but it's a problem we have together, then we solve the moment and figure out how to collaborate with one another to deal with this problem. Yeah, there's another important piece to this as well, which is it's really important to understand what's beneath your partner's position on an issue. What's the subtext? What's the subtext?
Starting point is 00:39:13 And that subtext can be very deep. So it really helps if one person acts as a listener, the other as a speaker, and the listener simply asks the partner some deeper questions about that person's position and just listens, doesn't bring up their own point of view, just listens until they have a much better understanding. And those questions might include things like, are there any values or ethical guidelines that are part of your position? Is there some history or childhood background that's a part of your position on this issue? What makes this so important to you? What's your ideal dream here? If you could have things in any way you wanted them to be, what would they look like? And is there an underlying purpose here for having things
Starting point is 00:40:18 look the way you would like them to be? So asking those big questions that really helps you kind of get down in the kind of subterranean regions beneath your partner's position, you come out of that exploration with much more understanding and almost always more compassion. And both people need to take a turn as speakers. Yeah. This just reminds me of Stephen Covey's principle of seek first to understand and then be understood. And so we don't actually have a very good culture for active listening. We don't get curious.
Starting point is 00:41:01 We don't pause our own internal narrative. We don't stop the reactivity in our own minds that wants to justify, explain, defend, or accuse the person who we're talking to, who we love. And that's a very tough thing to learn. It's like, think about like weightlifting. You know, if you want to like lift weights, you can't start with like doing, you know, 200 pounds pounds you got to start with 10 pounds and and i think in the same way this is like a very tough practice what you're saying sounds simple but to actually have a conversation with someone when you're activated when they're emotional is really challenging and i think that that's a skill that you can learn and it means
Starting point is 00:41:42 pausing all of your own internal narrative, all of your own projections, all of your own justification, all of your own reasons. And what you said is just so important because what you highlighted, I think, deserves underscoring, which is that something underneath is causing the external reaction. So something in your partner's psyche, emotional history, their beliefs, whatever it is, is actually triggering them. And you can relate to the thing up here, or you can actually get to the real issues which are under there. And I think that's a really tough thing for couples. But if couples can master that, then all of a sudden there's like this just profound understanding and intimacy that gets created in that process. Yeah, that's exactly right, Mark. You said it really well. You know, you mentioned something else that I think is very important to include here,
Starting point is 00:42:37 and that's reactivity. So what we found in our research is that two people could be sitting across from each other having a conflict conversation. And because John was measuring heart rate, you know, other physiological results, they could look as calm as can be. And yet their heart rate, one of their heart rates might be over 100 beats a minute. And, you know, what that means is that person is experiencing their partner as a saber tooth tiger about to attack them, right? And so they've gone into fight or flight, or freeze. And when that happens, your whole body is activated, Your breathing is more shallow and rapid. Your blood pressure goes up. Your heart rate goes up. Your body is a mess and the blood in your brain that normally would be nourishing the parts of your brain that make decisions, that listen well, that think creatively,
Starting point is 00:43:45 that part is drained of a lot of blood. It's all going back into the part of the brain that helps you run away or fight. That's fight or flight. And you need that part of your brain to be able to problem solve. So what do you do in that time when you feel so activated that you can't even think straight? You don't know what your partner is saying. It's time to say to your partner, let's take a break. I'll be back in one hour and we'll continue the conversation. So you take a break, but important, you say when you'll come back.
Starting point is 00:44:28 So your partner doesn't feel abandoned. And then what do you do during the break? Don't think about the fight. Don't think about it. Don't think about the best thing to say. Because if you keep thinking about it. Don't amass your arguments, right? Yeah, that's right. You'll stay activated and that's a problem. So try to do something
Starting point is 00:44:54 self-soothing. You can meditate, do yoga, take a walk, read a book, do your email, probably don't watch any murder mysteries, read some magazines, anything that gets your mind off the fight so that your body has a chance to metabolize the stress hormones that have flooded your circulatory system during that fight or flight. Yeah, one of the things we discovered is that 80% of domestic violence occurs because people don't have a way of taking a break. And they want to keep talking about it, even though they're so physiologically flooded, that they can't think straight. And they repeat themselves. And that doesn't, that doesn't work. They repeat themselves louder and louder,
Starting point is 00:45:44 and get more and more angry. So taking a break. Your partner's not deaf, right? Yeah, very important. That's fascinating. And you're talking about a state which happens to us where we get triggered into our reptile brain and we get this physiological arousal that causes us to run or to want to engage in a fight. And, and what you're saying is when that happens, we need to recognize it. We need to pause and we need to go away until we calm down and then come back
Starting point is 00:46:14 in a regulated state and have a deeper conversation. Right. Very powerful. And be sure to tell the partner when you're coming back so that partner doesn't feel shut down, hopeless, despairing, that you'll never get to that problem conversation again. Tell them when you're coming back to talk. A lot of times it's helpful for people to just buy pulse oximeters that they wear on their shoulders during an important conversation so they can tell if they are physiologically fluid. A lot of people don't know.
Starting point is 00:46:51 If your heart rate goes up, you have to stop. Yeah. It's powerful. I think part of the practice too, though, is being able to comfortably sit with whatever is happening. And I think through meditation think, you know, through meditation and various mindfulness practices, you know, we can learn to observe the biological reactions
Starting point is 00:47:13 that are happening in our bodies and not engage with them as real. And that's a practice, but I've noticed myself, like I'll get in a relationship conversation and then I'll feel activated. But I can I can notice it and I know this is happening. OK, I'm going to breathe. I'm going to calm down and I'm going to be present despite this flooding, you call it. And then it calms down. But it's a hard thing to do in the moment. Right. You know, it takes practice. It takes kind of a discipline like meditation,
Starting point is 00:47:55 practice, or mindfulness to be able to do that. And a lot of people can't do that. And that's really okay. You know, it's all right. Our bodies are built to sense attack and to respond accordingly. So until we can learn how to do that self-calming very quickly, best to take a break. Yeah, for sure. And so, you know, you talk, I want to sort of come back to the four horsemen of the apocalypse. Then I want to talk about your love maps, because I think that's an important part of what you've been sharing in your new book. You talk about contempt being the most important predictor of divorce. I'd love to hear more about it, what the research shows, and how it affects our both physical and mental health. Because I think I've experienced that before in a relationship and it was the worst. And it's like when your partner is disgusted with you
Starting point is 00:48:50 or has contempt for you or sarcastic towards you, it's kind of one of the worst forms of kind of relationship trauma, I would say. And can you talk about what that is and why it's so common and how do we handle it and what do we do about it? Yeah, contempt is kind of a universal thing. And can you talk about what that is and why it's so common and how do we handle it and what do we do about it? Yeah. Contempt is kind of a universal thing. Everywhere on the planet, there are ways in which people are scornful and act superior to other people.
Starting point is 00:49:17 The French are very good at it. The British do it in their parliament. Contempt is something that happens everywhere on the planet. But it has no place in a love relationship. And one of the things we found was not only is contempt our best predictor of divorce, but it also predicts how many infectious illnesses the recipient of contempt will have in the next 30 years. And the two researchers, Kiko Glaser and her husband, Ron Glaser, took small bits of blood from couples while they were having a conflict discussion.
Starting point is 00:49:53 And if you measure the amount of cortisol and adrenaline in their blood, that predicted whether they would stay together or divorce 10 years later. Wow. And what creates that secretion of adrenaline cortisol? It's contempt. It's criticism. It's defensiveness. It's stonewalling. It's those four horsemen of the apocalypse, particularly contempt, that lead to the secretion of these stress hormones and degrade the immune system.
Starting point is 00:50:27 Even in a half an hour conversation, the immune system doesn't function as well. Natural killer cells are not as effective. T cells and B cells are not as effective at dealing with an antigen. And so you can actually observe the decline of the immune system as people are talking to one another. So we know what makes people get sick are these four horsemen, particularly contempt. May I add a little bit? Let me define contempt because, you know, people use that word, but they're not sure what it is. So, you know, we know criticism. Criticism is saying that something is wrong with your partner, to your partner. You're so lazy,
Starting point is 00:51:14 you know, you're so dumb, you're, you know, you wouldn't even think to help me, would you, you know, and so on. But contempt is like criticism, but it's said from a place on high. It's said from a place of superiority. So it's looking down on the partner and being shamed by the partner. That's typically the response, either defensiveness or shame, where you feel terrible about yourself, right? So you almost feel like your partner loathes you. They're disgusted. It is the worst feeling. And let me say, Mark, that in all of my clinical work, what I've seen is that contempt truly is emotional abuse.
Starting point is 00:52:08 It is abusive. And it can have the same effects as physical abuse in terms of how that person feels about themselves. You know, it's not going break a bone. It's not gonna, you know, leave a bruise externally, but internally, whole nother matter. It's really it it breaks your heart to hear somebody treat you with contempt. Right. Yeah. Especially someone you love or you think you're supposed to be out for your best interest, right? Yeah, especially someone you love or you think you're supposed to be out for your best interest, right? Yeah, that's right. Yeah, that's so true.
Starting point is 00:52:49 That's very disrespectful. Right. Very, yeah. Yeah, I think respect is like a thing that often gets diminished in long-term relationships. And I, you know, what do they say? What do they say? Familiarity breeds contempt. But I don't know if that's true. I mean, it seems like a kind of a common belief in our culture but i i think you know it can actually go the opposite way the more you
Starting point is 00:53:10 know someone the more you can love them so why why does contempt arise in a relationship what are the sort of origins of it is it just that people are jerks or they're like well because not everybody relates to conflict or unhappiness in relationship with contempt. Let's talk about those origins. You know, one, of course, is when an individual as a child was treated with contempt, right? So they had contempt all the time. That was their model for disapproval. Their parents' disappointment in them, anger, annoyance,
Starting point is 00:53:48 disapproval. So they picked up, you know, that was normalized in their life as kids. And so they think that language is fine. And they spew it out in their other relationships as well. So that's one source of it. Another source is when somebody feels really, really inferior. Something has made them feel inferior, whether they did poor school or, I don't know, they got fired from jobs. They failed in a lot of relationships. They feel inferior themselves to other people. But that is accompanied by shame. They feel ashamed. But they don't want anybody to see that they're inferior.
Starting point is 00:54:41 So they act superior instead. They act superior to make sure nobody sees that they're inferior. Yeah. So it's their own lack of self-worth and self-esteem that, you know, it's like, you know, we saw that with our last president would put people down to make himself feel better. And I don't think that's a great strategy for building a relationship. Sometimes contempt also comes from people hurting so much that they want to hurt back. You know, they want to strike. Don't let the other person know how deeply hurt they are. They want to make that person hurt as much as they hurt. So it may come out of that as well. Sometimes it's just a bad habit.
Starting point is 00:55:35 Sometimes it's also desperation. It's head. And so, you know, they escalate to the harshest expression to say, wake up, hear me. But unfortunately, it sabotages the partner hearing them because it just shoves the partner away. It makes the partner want to escape because it's so painful to the partner. Yeah. So we often try to get what we want and we do it in the wrong way and we end up getting the opposite. That's right. Exactly. You got it. You got it. That's right. So I want to sort of touch on this concept of love maps. You talked about creating love maps for couples and what is that? Can you share why you use it in your therapy and why it's so important? Yeah, one of the things that we discovered is that some people really know their partner very well.
Starting point is 00:56:52 They may ask open-ended questions or they may just listen very well when their partner is speaking and remember what their partner says. So they have kind of an internal roadmap of their partner's life, their partner's inner life, what stresses their partner out, what they're upset about, what they're happy about, what they're joyful about, what they're thinking about, what's on their mind. And a lot of times when people don't have a love map, they don't have that map. They just haven't learned that it's important.
Starting point is 00:57:32 They haven't acquired the habit of asking these questions and remembering the answers. And so, you know, part of that app that I told you about earlier that your listeners can download for free, it has 100 questions you can ask a man, 100 questions you can ask a woman about their erotic world. You know, what turns them on and what turns them off? And, you know, a lot of times people don't know. They haven't asked. So, you know, when you tell people about building a love map and you give them some of the questions as examples, they just go ahead and do it. And their life changes automatically because now you know what's inside your partner. Now you have an appreciation for what your partner is going through.
Starting point is 00:58:15 So it's really one way of building love. It's part of that practice to build that love map and update it periodically, especially on a date. And the app that you say, that the app store helps you to kind of create that love map? Yes, exactly. And what's the app called again? It's just type Gottman Card Decks.
Starting point is 00:58:38 That's amazing. That's amazing. So we talked about the ways that relationships can be built, the way they can break down. You know, you kind of learn so much about relationships. And so if people are struggling, what's a way to kind of improve relationships in a very short time, like a week or less? Like, how do you work on creating these sort of connections that are meaningful with your partner? Read the book.
Starting point is 00:59:03 Read the book, The Love Prescription. Seven days, right? Seven days. So it gives the book, yeah, the book gives you, you know, a little thing to do differently every day for a week. And it only takes, you know, a few minutes, 10 minutes, maybe something like that, that you do every day that probably is something a little new, a little different in the relationship. So it would be an interesting experiment to see how you feel about the relationship before the week begins, and then follow the prescription at the end of the week, see how you feel. Did it make any difference?
Starting point is 00:59:46 Even the slightest bit of difference? Which particular hint of something different, which thing that was different, made the most difference? It's what worked, what didn't work. Exactly. It's so beautiful. It's what worked, what didn't work. Yeah. Exactly. Yeah. It's so beautiful. It's so beautiful. I want to sort of finish by asking a couple last few last questions.
Starting point is 01:00:11 One is, you know, what's, what's your number one relationship hack? I mean, you, you, you've learned so much about how people work together or don't. If you kind of, kind of are asked, what is that one relationship hack that's so powerful? What is it? Ask your partner what they dream about. And not nighttime dreams. I'm talking about longings, yearnings. What do they yearn for? What do they dream of doing, accomplishing,, experiencing what's their dream, and then do everything you
Starting point is 01:00:49 can to help support that dream coming true. Yeah, that's a great one. My relationship with that, when your partner is upset, the world should stop and you should listen. So don't walk away when you see your partner upset. Just make it your priority to say, what's going on, baby? What's on your heart? What's on your mind? Talk to me. I'm listening.
Starting point is 01:01:18 I'm taking notes. And be ready to listen even if you don't like what they're going to say. Right. That's right. And take notes. That's what helps me. That's beautiful. Now, you've been married And take notes. That's what helps me. That's beautiful. Now you've been married over 35 years. That's a long time. And you've managed to create a healthy, current, happy relationship. What are your tricks? What are your hacks? What are your learnings from all this decades of research and being in an actual relationship together?
Starting point is 01:01:47 So let me tell you, Mark, in our first two years before we did, you know, the research theory, before we did the interventions. Oh, my God. We fought all the time. You know, major, major conflicts. I was constantly walking out the door. He was walking upstairs. You know, I mean, it was just a mess. So, you know, what we did is we adapted into our relationship the things we were learning in the lab.
Starting point is 01:02:19 And we practiced them religiously. We practiced them as much as we can. That doesn't mean we're gurus. That doesn't mean we do things perfectly. We make mistakes constantly all the time. But we're making repairs also. We're coming back. We're saying, I'm sorry, let me say that a different way. Or, oh my God, I was in such a bad mood. You know, how was that for you? You know, et cetera. So we're constantly, you know, we're all human beings and we're all in the same soup, right? But these methods or experiences that couples have that we saw in our lab,
Starting point is 01:03:05 the way they deal with conflict, the way they sustain their friendship, the way they create a deeper sense of meaning and purpose. Those are all things that we try to practice as consistently as possible. And so far, it's worth. So far. I like that so far i love that well thank you both so much for your dedication to studying love because most of us are lost and wandering around in the dark and you're shedding light on what it takes to actually build an authentic deep real connection with a partner and keep it that way over time.
Starting point is 01:03:45 And I think definitely everybody has to go get your book, the new book called The Love Prescription, Seven Days to More Intimacy, Connection and Joy. I think everybody definitely needs to check out the Gottman card deck on the App Store, which is my first task after I did a podcast with you. And you can go online and get their free Gottman relationship quiz. How well do you know your partner? Which has the most amazing questions on it. Like, I know the names of the people who've been irritating my partner lately.
Starting point is 01:04:16 Like, that's a really interesting question. Or, you know, I can tell you the relatives that my partner doesn't like. Or I can tell you some of their life dreams. And these are really revealing questions. And I think they tell you a lot about your knowledge of who you're with. And I think often we don't even know the people we're with and we take it for granted.
Starting point is 01:04:33 So thank you so much for creating this wealth of knowledge, this really research-backed inquiry into love that allows us to actually use that roadmap for improving love in our lives and actually keeping the love we have and improving it over time. So thank you both so much for your dedication and work in this field for so many decades. Great questions, Mark. Thank you.
Starting point is 01:04:53 Thank you. That's my job. It was great. Thanks so much. And for those of you listening, if you've ever struggled in a relationship, which I know probably doesn't really relate to most of you. But for those of you who have, please share this with your friends and family on social media. We think everybody needs to hear this message. Leave comments.
Starting point is 01:05:17 Have you found your way through all the corridors of love to a better and riper, happier love? Because there's lessons that we still have to learn from each other. And 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. I hope you're loving this podcast.
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