The Dr. John Delony Show - I Think My Husband Is an Idiot (but I Don’t Want To)
Episode Date: February 26, 2025On today’s episode, we hear about: · A wife who thinks her husband is an idiot but wants a new perspective · A stay-at-home mom wondering how to get her husband to treat her ...as an equal · A woman seeking advice on how to be more disciplined Next Steps: 📞 Ask John a question! Call 844-693-3291 or send us a message. 📘 Get The Intentional Father by Jon Tyson. 📚 Building a Non-Anxious Life 📝 Anxiety Test 📚 Own Your Past, Change Your Future ❓ Questions for Humans Conversation Cards 💭 John's Free Guided Meditation 🤘🏼 The Dr. John Delony Show Merch Connect With Our Sponsors: 🌱 Get 10% off your first month of BetterHelp. 🔴 Get 15% off with code DELONY at BON CHARGE. 🌿 Get up to 40% off with code DELONY at Cozy Earth. 🔒 Get 20% off when you join DeleteMe. 😇 Go to Hallow for a 90-day free trial. 💤 Visit Helix Sleep for special offers! 🥤 Get 20% off with code DELONY at Organifi. 💪 Get 25% off your order at Thorne. 🏋️ Go to Trainwell to get started! Explore More From Ramsey Network: 🎙️ The Ramsey Show 💸 The Ramsey Show Highlights 🍸 Smart Money Happy Hour 💡 The Rachel Cruze Show 💰 George Kamel 🪑 Front Row Seat with Ken Coleman 📈 EntreLeadership Ramsey Solutions Privacy Policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I'm trying to see how to view men more positively when the ones around me are just either wimpy
or false puppies.
You've told yourself a story that your husband can't, and that's easier than dealing with
the truth is that he won't.
I thought things were going to look differently.
What's up?
What's going on?
What's going on?
This is John with the Dr. John Delaney Show.
So grateful that you are with us talking your mental and emotional health, your relationships,
your marriages, dating, whatever you got going on.
This is the state of the world.
Whatever you're working through, I've probably got an opinion on it, but more importantly,
here's my promise.
I'll sit with you.
And for the last two decades plus, I've been sitting with hurting people trying to figure
out what's the next right move.
And I'd be honored if you want to join us on this show.
Take calls from all over the planet.
Give me a buzz 1-844-693-3291 or go to johndeloney.com slash ask and we'd
love to have you on the show and call leave a message. Let us know what's going on in
your world and we'll see if we can get you on and Kelly's gone today because evidently
administrative tasks were more important than partying with us. So T-Money's running the ship and T-Money likes to drive fast.
So let's go out to Gulfport, M-I-S-S-I-S-I-P-P-I and talk to Kate.
What's up, Kate?
Hey, Don. How are you?
I'm so good. How about you?
Oh, I'm wonderful and enjoying a once-in-a-lifetime snow in South Mississippi.
Very cool, man. I don't think I've ever heard that sentence.
So that's awesome.
Yeah. Very cool.
What's up?
Never happened.
Yeah. So I need a big brother's perspective.
Got you.
How can I see men more positively?
Oh man.
Tell me more about that.
I think men are pretty great.
Yeah.
I'm kind of biased too though, so.
This is true.
Well, I have been married for the past seven years.
My husband and I have been together for 10 almost.
We've got two little boys, a one-year-old and a three-year-old, and we want to raise
them to be good, godly men.
But neither one of us really have had very strong male influences
in our life. My dad is still around, but he is not like emotionally there. And when I
was younger, he had made some kind of comment when we were on vacation, I think I have Asperger's.
I was like, okay, all right. And that was um, I mean, he's a brilliant man, just not emotionally there.
Um, my husband's dad died right before we got married and we just, we don't have very
many people in our lives that we can look up to.
So I'm trying to see how to view men more positively when the ones around me are just
either wimpy or soft puppies or harsh. It's just, it's hard to
to see more positively or even look out for people that we can look up to. That makes any sense.
Yeah, totally. Are you married to a good man? He is. He's a very good man.
So do you not look at him favorably?
He's a very good man. So do you not look at him favorably?
I wouldn't say unfavorably, but I don't think he's an amazing provider.
And a lot of that's because, you know, what he wants in life.
We're both involved in ministry, so we know that like financially things weren't always
going to be amazing. But it's like, he'll say he's going to do something and then it falls
through. Like he's been looking at other jobs that he won't apply for them and he
says that he will. Or it's just the follow through is not really there. But otherwise,
he's doing well. there. So sometimes over generalizations are true. They just are. Sometimes over generalizations,
stereotypes everyone call it, they protect us from having to deal with the reality in
our own house or in our own neighborhood or in our own families.
And so I guess what I would tell you is there are men who are idiots.
Yes.
And there are millions and millions of men
who grind every single day to do the best they can
with the tools they got.
Yeah. Right?
And so what I hear is two different things.
Number one...
So let's pretend your dad does have... he's high functioning autistic.
You said he's brilliant.
He said he was provider.
So... He said he was a provider.
So but he wasn't as emotionally available as you would have liked him to be.
So what I'm not going to do as an adult with my own kids is choose to hold one of my parents
responsible for a potential special need.
Right. Right.
Or when it comes to, I don't know, a dad passing away.
I'm not gonna assume negative about that guy.
He died, right?
Right.
And then I've got, it's easy to go,
oh man, I don't respect him. I don't like them. Whatever
It's harder to say my husband is not a person of character
Right, that's a much harder thing to say it's harder to say to depart to dig into the nuance of my dad
Which is he was really good at some things and awful at some other things. Both are true. Mm-hmm, right? So
It sounds like you got two things
going on. One, you don't like the situation that you don't like the life that you're living.
Or you might like parts of it, but you don't you thought was going to feel different. And
so it's easy to point your finger out at the world. And I'm just going to find this group.
The other side of that is you got to be really radically honest with your husband
or about your feelings and the reality that you find yourself with the man you married.
Tell me about him.
He is an amazing dad.
Okay.
Sorry, I'm getting emotional.
That's okay. Well, take a breath. I said a lot to you. Am I out to lunch?
No.
Okay.
No, I don't think you're out to lunch.
I think you're on the right track.
Um, it just got like you had mentioned it.
I thought things were going to look differently.
I thought our boys were going to have grandfathers to look up to and we have pillars of strength
and integrity to look up to and my husband does an amazing job doing that.
There's some things that he won't be able to teach them, which sounds silly, but...
Like what? Like, I don't build something or, um, it seems really silly, but I just, I want them
to know how to be well-rounded individuals and be able to fix the tractor as ridiculous
as it sounds or, um, fix something electrical.
When my husband loved him to death, he's very smart, but not handy, I guess would be the
word.
Okay.
Um, so the grief that you're putting on into the world is yours.
Yeah.
And the grief, you, you keep telling yourself a story.
And that story is, he's so amazing, he's so amazing,
he's so amazing, yet at the same time,
you're telling yourself another story,
which is he will never teach my boys
to be the men I want them to be.
Right.
And those two stories can't compete.
Right.
You're making yourself bananas, right?
Like you're trying to spin the record both directions and it just sounds like noise.
So do I lean more into this is what he can do for them?
They're going to be amazing because he can do this?
Well I just reject that he can't.
Okay.
The first time I ever went deer hunting was I was in my 30s.
And it's because my father-in-law berated me into it.
And it's become my singular obsessive passion over the last 15 years.
I watched my dad fix stuff growing up because we had no money.
He had to.
Yeah. And this weekend as I was building garden beds by myself, I grew up in the suburbs, dude,
outside of a major city. As I was building garden beds for our property outside of town in the woods,
this weekend I was thinking, huh, I got come a long way.
And by the way, I had my headphones on
and I was listening to an audio book
of a nerdy science book about marriage.
So both things are true.
You've told yourself a story that your husband can't
and that's easier than dealing with the truth
is that he won't.
Yeah.
Because I don't think you respect him.
Yes, if I'm honest, sometimes I do struggle with that.
Okay, tell me about that.
Don't put this on to the boys.
The boys can learn whatever you want to sign them up for.
Yeah.
Right?
Yeah. Right? Yeah. Like I mentioned earlier, just the follow through on things.
I feel like I was talking to him about it this last weekend.
I felt like I've been let down in a lot of different ways.
Be specific about a lot of different ways.
That feeling becomes a lot.
Be specific.
Are you frustrated with your financial situation?
Are you frustrated with you thought you wanted to live, do ministry and live in rural Mississippi,
and you hate it there? Did you think he was going to be a guy who exercised, knew how to fix,
like, did you think just men just knew how to do some stuff and he doesn't know how to do that stuff?
Like what, be specific. So for instance, like he's been looking at different jobs and he says he's been looking
and looking and looking, but he's never actually created a profile on Indeed or looked and
actually applied to anything.
He's just word of mouth.
Or like for my birthday years ago, I had told them that I, I wanted to build cabinets
above our washer and dryer and he said it was going to happen.
He was going to do it.
You promise it's going to happen.
And it's been three or four years that hasn't happened.
Um, just things like that with the follow through just isn't there.
And I, I don't want to be promised
something if you're not going to be able to follow through.
What's a deeper thing?
This isn't about cabinets.
This is not about him looking for a job.
It's even deeper than that.
Be totally honest.
What is it?
I guess I feel like my dad let me down.
Okay.
Like maybe on one hand I could count the amount of times he told me he loved me or he was proud
of me including my wedding.
I mean, I've just seen the marriage that my parents have and it's lasted but it's not
been wonderful.
What are you doing on a daily day-to-day basis
to contribute to that not being the same way?
Because I hear somebody who's just looking around
and saying all of my life is happening to me.
Where are you taking control and autonomy
and running with it?
So like when I went back to the store I had a struggle with depression so I started
going to counseling and I was put on Christmas a lot after I had my last kid because I had
postpartum. Okay. And I've been working to a lot of that stuff and I've been working out, eating better.
I've been trying to take care of my mental health
because I know that I can't take care of anybody else.
Okay.
I can only focus on me.
Can I tell you that I'm really proud of you for that?
Thank you.
It's good.
It's awesome.
And underneath all of that, you sound to me profoundly lonely in rural Mississippi.
Yeah.
Tell me about some girlfriends that you have that you go hang out with, you have coffee
with, that you go have beers with, that you just act silly with.
My coworker is a really good friend she's probably 30 years older
than me but we're crazy people at work and it's even funnier because we work
with intellectual disabled adults so they get a kick out of it but every day
at work is hilarious. But that's work. Do'm really into work. Do you all hang out outside of work?
Rarely.
Okay.
Rarely.
So I want that to be on your radar.
Okay.
And I'm trying to think of things that you can control.
Here's the bigger picture.
You're on a bullet train to recreate the marriage that you experienced in your house.
And it's because you've told yourself stories about your husband and then you hold him accountable
for those stories.
At the same time, and I don't say this lightly, he is a man who's currently lacking in integrity.
And if you don't own that, then you make yourself bananas when you're like, he's so great, he's so wonderful.
And I hate where we live.
We tried this life and I don't like it.
We don't have enough money for basic stuff.
like it. We don't have enough money for basic stuff. And what y'all, it sounds like the old pictures and words thing, you have a very clear picture of what quote unquote looking
for a job looks like. He evidently does too. And those pictures don't align. So he can
go have a bunch of cups of coffee and have some lunches with some guys and talk about jobs and you come home and you're just sobbing that your husband's a loser because
he won't apply for a job and he's thinking, I tried, I'm trying.
Or you have pictures of us not being in Mississippi anymore and he's trying to find a job that
will pay bills in rural Mississippi.
And so, what I think you need is to back all the way out.
Number one, let go of the all men are bad.
They're not.
Most men are doing the best they can.
They have limited tools and the world shifted on them.
Yeah.
Okay.
And I don't know anybody that if they could go back and coach their dad to do different
things wouldn't have a long list of things they could coach their dads on.
And it breaks my heart for you that that call is never going to come that he's proud of
you.
It's not going to come.
I think you got to grieve that and write him a letter.
Don't send it to him, but write it get this get that stuff out of your body
Okay. Yeah, because it just loops and loops and loops and loops and loops
and
You're taking small baby steps, which I love to see of making like being well inside your own head inside your own heart inside your
own house
You're taking action steps, which is amazing exercising going to see a counselor only just
hanging out with friends outside of work.
Okay.
But I want you and your husband to go sit down and have a honest to goodness conversation.
That is you telling him I don't like our life
and if the more specific you can be the better dollar amount geographic location career trajectory
do you know what I'm saying yeah because those are the realities I think y'all
are working around y'all are just looping and looping around those and
you're you're not
You're not being direct about them. But here's the bigger thing. His wife is drowning inside of y'all's house and
You have to be honest because I think you're drowning and he's looking at you waving your arms in the ocean thinks you're waving at him
I don't think he realizes how bad it is. Is that fair?
Yeah, okay there
The greatest gift you can give him right now is honesty
Yeah
Sometimes when we sit down with our spouses and we make these plans they come with these but we have to live here and
You have this degree so we have to do this
And I think we're in a in a season in
the world that's changing so so so fast the world we live in right now will be
so different five years from now and in many ways that terrifies me because I
don't have a roadmap for it I don't like living without a roadmap but y'all have
to sit down and take your arm and wipe off everything. You have family land, so what? You have a degree in whatever,
so what? You don't know how to do a certain thing or certain things right now, but you
can learn them. Shoot, I don't mind telling you, I just asked Andrew, who's currently
running the video equipment right now, if this summer he can give me and my son welding lessons
because they left the welding class. I just asked him the other day to create a class for me
and my son and to give me a list of things I need to buy so I can be a welder. Like and I'm old
I'm an old man. I'm not old man, but like I'm getting there
So this idea that you can't learn if you get a master's degree in theology and wrestle with those abstract ideas, then for sure you can learn how to do some of these other things,
but you got to want to do it.
And I want you to have a picture.
I want my boys, when they walk across the graduation stage at the age of 18, to know
how to do these things.
That's actually a thing I went and did.
You and your husband need to go through John Tyson's book, The Intentional Father.
It is a faith-based book.
So if you're not a faith-based person,
I think the book is still extraordinary.
But if you are people of faith,
it's the best fathering book I've read.
But it gives a map for your kids gotta learn
how to do a whole bunch of stuff,
especially in the upcoming world they got.
They gotta learn how to raise chickens
and they gotta learn how to like dodge a punch
and they gotta learn how to code or whatever, like deal with AI like they got to do all of that stuff
it's a new world new planet but instead of just every day being like well they
can't do this they're never gonna be able to do that let's go all the way out
to the end to the finish line and reverse engineer it when they're 18 they
will cross age I want to know how to do these things husband I want you to know
how to do some of these things it would make me as your wife feel safer if you knew how to do some of these things. And some of these
things you're not going to know how to do. You have to learn how to do it. You have to
learn how to do it. One of the most humbling and it's turned into my favorite part of my
life is I know how to do a couple of things pretty good. There's a whole bunch of stuff
I don't know how to do. And so I love surrounding myself with other men and women who can teach me how to do new
things.
It's awesome.
It's just being a lifelong learner.
That's one thing he should have learned in grad school.
But all of this starts with you at home being very specific about, I don't like the world
we're creating even though we're surrounded by cool stuff.
Right?
I don't want to mistake my happiness for blessings as the old Kademan's call says.
I don't want to just continue to putt along like this.
So let's be honest.
Let's be specific.
And right now your husband's not doing what he says he's doing and you got to call him
out on the carpet on that because you love him.
And hopefully he's a person of character and he hears it.
And then he begins a person of character and he hears it.
And then he begins taking action steps. Thanks for the call, Kate. I'm really grateful for you.
We'll be right back. This show is sponsored by BetterHelp. You've probably heard people talk about different kinds of flags and friendships and romantic relationships. You got red flags and green flags and beige
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All right, we're back.
All right, Andrew.
Yo.
Our fearless YouTube leader.
You were just telling us during the break.
Walk me through what y'all are talking about.
So I've had that conversation with my wife,
just the other side of it,
of my dad taught me all of the construction skills
and running cows, all of how to change your oil
on breaks, all that.
And y'all had to, right?
It's very similar to my childhood, right?
Like you had to.
Yeah, we had to.
It was just a part of what we did.
Couldn't afford to take it everywhere else.
And now I work in an office
and with some really like fancy technology and yeah stuff my dad wouldn't understand.
But also we still have cars and we still have all the things that break. So my wife and I have had
the other side of this conversation of how do I transfer my father's skills to my sons?
I've got two sons now and that's, it's tough.
It's tough to think through that.
And it's, we're still learning that.
I actually just found that book that you were talking about.
I bought that.
So this is, that was a great call for me to hear as well.
Just that.
Something I've been wrestling with,
so thanks for sharing that.
Something I've been wrestling with, so thanks for sharing that. Something I've been wrestling with is this idea of masculine protect and provide.
And I see it on two sides of the teeter totter and I think everybody misses it.
I think there's the protecting the provide, the bros who are all about, you got to lift
weights and snap it to a slim gym and know how to use all your bow and arrows and guns
and all that, which is awesome.
And it provides paychecks and direct deposits.
And then I think they've got families and spouses
that are desperate for, hey, I want you to provide
laughter and joy in this house.
I want you to provide a stable, like personal presence here.
I want you to provide like stability and a hug and laughter
and help cook dinner, provide a trash taken out, right?
And so I think it's easy for men sometimes
to spend a lot of time on Instagram and whatever.
And then they hide from their families in the gyms.
They hide from their families at the shooting ranges.
They hide from their families at the bow and arrow places.
And there's the other side of that,
which is it's the modern world.
I don't have to do any of this stuff.
I'm providing a paycheck
and I know how to play video games and stuff like that.
And those guys need to get their butts out into the gym.
They need to go outside.
So it's a both and,
but I think what you mentioned, Andrew, which is I love is it's about sitting down inside your home and saying, what does
our family need right now? And so knowing you're, you grew up in a more traditional
blue collar world and I'm watching you like, like literally take classes and learn different
aspects of the internet's kind of stuff. Right? I grew up in a house that was, we did stuff
because we had to, I grew up with a, you work five jobs. I've been working since I was a little kid. That's just what you do and I
Learned how to have hard conversations with people, but I'm not a policeman
So I've got to learn how to do them differently and I'm doing so I think the whole thing is
What does it protect and provide mean in my house and in my neighborhood and it's gonna be different for everybody?
But you in this current world, you can't hit the teeter-totter on either side you got to do both if you're really good at
your MMA gym awesome you gotta learn how to hug your wife and if you're really good at your like
i know how to handle myself and i conceal great you also need to learn how to get on the floor
and play candy lane with your daughter you're gonna do both and the other side of that is true too
me and one of my colleagues he like he's like I've never mowed a lawn in my life
And I'm like that's not a good thing you gotta learn how to mow like you gotta learn how to do some of these things
right
I'm thinking of the time I was pushing George Campbell's
Tesla when it ran out of batteries like
Like that wasn't great right so I just think I think we're in a world you gotta do both
So anyway, thanks for the little diversion there.
Let's go out to Huntsville, Alabama and talk to Emily.
Hey, Emily, what's up?
Hi, John, thank you for having me on.
I really love listening to your show.
Well, thank you so much for joining us.
What's up?
I just had a question about my relationship with my husband.
It feels like he kind of treats me like the maid
in a lot of ways. And then like at the end of the day, he's kind of like baffled as
to why I'm not like diving into intimate time with like any kind of fervor and not
feeling very affectionate towards him.
And I know it's a two-sided issue that we've kind of created this dynamic
together, but we've been married for like 13 years and just have just
been through the wringer kind of.
And I just have a hard time broaching these subjects because he, he
doesn't get kind of sensitive and will feel
like I'm mad at him like when I'm not mad at him or if I'm just saying like
hey could you do this he's like why are you grumpy why and I'm I'm not grumpy so
I'm just kind of I'm not the best communicator either so I'm kind of just
stumped yeah so can I tell that, I don't know if this
will make you feel worse or make you feel better, but you found yourself in the 13-year
dance and you're not broke and there's nothing wrong with y'all. Okay? Okay. But there is
some paths out. It just means that both of y'all are going to have to decide we're going
to do things that are different.
Okay.
And that's frustrating and it's different
and it's uncomfortable,
but it's super manageable if y'all choose.
Or another way to say it a little less nerdy is,
tiny decision by tiny decision
y'all have chosen the life you have,
which means y'all can choose something
completely different if you want to. Okay. He is going to have a harder time. Here's why. He has a maid.
He has a live-in housekeeper that does everything for him. And occasionally she has sex with him.
Yes. He's kind of got what he wants. Yeah. You do not. So the impetus for change
and by the way, he doesn't have the life he thinks he has or he thinks he's got it about
as good as he's going to get it. And he doesn't understand how amazing his life could be too.
Yeah. With a wife who is not an employee, but was a full time
co-adventurer in this one wild life we all have.
Yeah.
Well, that's I mean the last couple conversations we've had
about just the state of things have been initiated by him
being unhappy.
Okay.
Tell me about it.
He's like, well, he's like, I just feel like you don't
like me at all. That's it. That's it. And I'm like, well, I don't really right now.
Cause I just had to pick up all of your dirty socks and you're watching tick tock while
I did the dishes and just like, and I understand that like there are going to be days that
he's like at a zero after he gets home from work. And I'm so appreciative that he does
go to work, but I've tried to like, say say like I don't really want to like make a list like you
have to do this every day but just like jump in let's do it together let's like
you know exist together instead of just you being off to the side until the end
of the night. So he's not on the phone. So the only person I can challenge here is you.
Is that okay?
Yeah, yeah.
Has over the last 13 years,
his experience at home been somewhat of a failure factory.
And here's what I mean.
If he decided one day to start doing the laundry,
would he do it quote-unquote, right?
Or he fold the stuff quote-unquote, right?
No, but I will say I have gotten better at not saying anything about it. Right. Well, so here's the dance
maybe one time seven years ago he tried and
And I'm just I'm making something up here okay. Right. They tried and he saw you undoing that the dishes where he'd
put them away because he put them in the wrong stack or on the wrong side and of
course he could have asked but he didn't he was trying to be helpful and what he
learned was I don't do this the quote unquote right way.
I'm gonna let her just do it. Right. I'm gonna opt out of that. And when he begins to drive home, he knows, here we go. I'm not gonna do home right. Now, I would challenge him if he was on the phone
that his job is to sit down with you
and you'll swipe the deck completely clear and say okay what kind of world do we want to live,
what kind of world we want to have in our house because we get to create it. How do we want this
house to feel every time one of us walks in the front door? Yeah. And I want you to put your phone
away the moment you get out of the office and don't pick it back up
Can we create that world yeah, and he's gonna look at you and say I just want you to like me
Will you show some interest in
Me romantically and you might say yes
But if you're always telling me how much you need sex how much you need this versus you want me
Because most wives who feel like they've been relegated to the maid role feels like they're really kind of a
Vehicle of interchangeable body parts that their husband uses just to get off
Yeah, need versus no, no, he wants me. He wants to be with me. Yeah. Where does he do
things that are good? Um, he's, I mean, he's a good provider. I don't have to work in it.
And I appreciate that so much. Um, he's very much like the fun dad. So he jokes with them and he'll, you
know, take them out four wheeling and, you know, tries to, you know, be very fun. And
he's, you know, the best brother and like a really great son. And it just feels like
he's, he's really good in all these areas. And if you were to talk to somebody in his office
they'd be like, oh my gosh, he's such a hard worker.
He's so nice.
And then I feel like he gets home and it's like, he just, I don't know, like, I don't
know if he just deflates or if he's just like, you know.
Are you happy to see him when he comes home?
No. And I want to be. I know, I know. And you happy to see him when he comes home? No.
Yeah.
And I wanna be.
I know, I know.
And I feel like that's so mean.
Don't blow by it.
Just sit on that for a second.
Yeah.
Cause I know it's both end,
but it's hard when everyone tells you
how great your husband is.
And it's like, that's not the guy I experienced at home.
Yeah. And it's like that's not the guy I experienced at home. Yeah.
And it's usually a mix of both.
He knows you don't want him to come home.
Yeah.
Or he knows you want him to come home but he knows you don't like it when he's there
because you're in, he's in your house.
Yeah.
And he's not doing your house the way you want house done.
And if he was on the phone, I would tell him it's not an excuse.
You got to plug in, dude.
Yeah.
But here's this weird place you'll find yourselves.
You're all going to have to decide.
We want to like each other again.
The Gottman's research, they're kind of the gurus on marriage research.
Beyond all things, fighting styles, the bull crap men are from Mars and women are like
all that stupid stuff is not real.
The one unifying factor in marriages that make it, they're just friends.
They're great, great, great friends.
Yeah.
You get what I'm saying?
And so y'all have to decide we want to be friends again.
Yeah, I guess does that just like mean me asking him to like sit down and
like just, I don't know. I'm so bad at talking to him.
Okay, I want to dig in right there.
Why?
I mean,
Do you have this Hollywood version of your house that if we have to say it, it makes
it less?
No.
I mean, I feel like I have pretty realistic expectations for the household.
So like, just like recent history, our son passed away two years ago.
And like, it was like right after we were so close and we've like, I mean, it was just
like the shock of everything.
We kind of bonded more than we had been before and then the following year, he kind of lost it because
I went to, you know, the support groups in therapy and our older kids were in therapy
and we were all getting help and he just didn't. And he was like, well, you're my wife, like,
you can help me. And I was like, I'm drowning.
I can't help.
I can't help anyone.
And so he got really mean for a really long time.
And what does really mean mean?
Like just yelling.
He never was like physical, but just like the littlest things would just like set him
off.
And so I feel like I still have like that flinch reflex.
Okay.
That's super fair.
Super fair.
So don't walk around saying, well, I'm just not good at talking.
You have a husband that went through a gnarly depression, probably still there.
Yeah.
I'd say most couples, I haven't looked at the data recently, but most couples don't
survive the loss of a child.
And here's why.
Because of the pace of their grief is different.
One person's like, all right, can we get on their life?
And the other person's like, whoa, whoa, whoa, realize what just happened.
And one person goes to counseling and gets on it and let's go.
And the other person just is buried for a while.
Yeah.
And then eventually you look up two years, three years, five years later, it's like,
I don't know that dude anymore.
That sounds very accurate.
Okay.
What was your child's name?
Thomas.
How did he pass away?
He was six months old. It was positional asphyxiation
It was just like super crazy traumatic and I
Just he ended up the only reason we didn't get a divorce like when he did kind of lose his mind
It's because he ended up getting really, really sick.
And it was almost like his body was like, nope, like no more.
And his like, I mean, we went to every doctor, they couldn't tell us what was wrong with
him.
And still, it's a little bit of a mystery.
And I was like, just a couple weeks ago, I was like, that was like your God,
I mean your body and God saying like, sit down.
Yeah.
Like, you gotta stop.
And so I'm so thankful that that happened when it did,
because it was just like so toxic
and he's been much better since, you know,
all this past year has been better than
the previous.
So maybe we're at a place now where it's time for honesty and skill building.
Okay.
Here's what I mean.
I want you to, and you're thinking, God, I have to plan one more thing.
And what I would say is yes, because you painted me a picture of a husband that's drowning.
Yeah.
And you're thinking, God, there's so many life rafts out in this lake and I was able
to get on the life raft.
I got all our kids on the life raft.
You're right about all that stuff, but right this second is not the time for keeping score.
Right.
If you go back and look at the data that says that anxiety and often depression are quote
unquote women's illnesses because they're diagnosed so much more frequently.
And more sophisticated research has come out in the last few years that suggests, actually
Terry reals on this 20 years ago, that men often display anxiety and depression through
anger, through physical altercations, right?
He's kept on having what we thought were cardiac episodes
and we went to the cardiologist and he was like,
he's having panic attacks.
That's exactly right.
Which of course, he as like, I don't know,
he comes from a very macho family and they're wonderful
and they love him very much but they you know they
just have a very traditional like that's not something that would happen to a man right but
all collectively kind of brushed it off but i was like if the doctors here telling us you know
so think think think of it this way your husband's and i know this happened to you i'm not i'm not
excluding your experience i just want to shine light on his um right your husband's, and I know this happened to you, I'm not excluding your experience, I just want to shine light on his.
Your husband's son passed away.
In the story, he's probably told himself there was some level of prevention that could have
stopped that.
Putting a blanket in a different position, putting a pillow in a different position,
putting it stuffed animal, whatever happened.
And your husband leans over and looks in his toolkit for what to do next and there's nothing.
His toolkit is empty.
Because his parents, the ones who were supposed to put tools in that toolkit said, you shut
your mouth and move on with your day.
Yeah.
And so that tends to lead a more compassionate. Now that doesn't negate the fact that he started to treat you his way of getting through the
day is just to numb out.
He scrolls his life away.
And you because you're a person who's picking up the slack in the house.
I often have asked parents how did you especially when one parent picks up all the slack.
How did you make it in there?
Like we had to.
Yeah. Right. especially when one parent picks up all the slide, how did you make it in there? Like we had to.
Yeah. Right.
And so you've had to the last 24 months.
And I'm super grateful for you.
And when the lights come back on for him, he will be too.
But right now the world is his only connection to humanity
is through a sexual encounter with you.
That's it.
That's his only connection to intimacy.
And for you, I need you present socially
so that I can even get there in my head and my body.
You know, miss each other in the night.
And he just has gotten used to his socks
magically appearing in the drawer drawer because he's tuned out
I mean
So both of you have to sit down and again when y'all sit down
Giving you a chore and you're gonna be like god. I hate to have a chore, but we're here
I want you to plan a half day together and I want you to find some somebody to watch your boys
a half day together and I want you to find some somebody to watch your boys and I want you all to have a two-year since Thomas passed away here we are
and I think it's right and honest for you to say I love you and I want to
learn to like you again
to like you again.
Okay. And here's what I need and it is not sexy to say I need to not see your phone. I need you to not bring your last meeting home. I need you to practice
being likable in the side this house.
And then you turn around and say what are some things I can do?
You'll have to start there and ask him, are you willing to are you willing?
Yeah.
If you if you can imagine that conversation in your head, what do you see him doing?
Kind of following along until there's been like a request made of him.
Okay.
Like, like the, the phone thing is just, just for me, because I get distracted easily and
I just, just like the constant like TikTok, Instagram video,
real going drives me crazy.
So that would be like a big item for me,
but I feel like that's the hardest thing
for him to put down.
Yeah, but it's kind of like telling a smoker
to quit smoking, but there's nothing,
there's no other behavior to fill that gap.
Right.
And so it's like, I need this phone away and I need you to just chit chat.
I need you to just pull up a seat from the hours of 530 to six while I'm making dinner
and just talk to me.
And it will be boring and it'll be frustrating.
And I'll give you all the questions for humans cards.
You all can just get to know each other again.
And I know that sounds silly, but I've heard from couples all over the planet
about how these knuckleheaded little cards are reigniting their marriages
because they're learning about each other again.
That sounds awesome.
You get what I'm saying?
Like, it's real easy to get over existential,
and what we have to do is rebuild from the floor up.
And the floor up, it it's cool to like go into
a house and to check out paint colors. But before that, there's a bunch of dudes outside
laying concrete forms. Yeah. So they can just pour a foundation back. And that's where y'all
are. And I do think it's fair to start the meeting with, I'm not going to poke at you. I'm going to ask you not to disengage.
I'm on your team.
I love you more than life itself.
You're the father of my kids.
You're my husband for 15 years.
We've been through hell together the last two years.
And the things I put on the table are not a tax.
They're invitations.
Please stay present with me.
Okay. Okay.
Okay.
And what you're doing is you're just setting the ground rules for a conversation.
Okay.
I think I can do that.
Here's the alternative.
Everything just stays the same.
Seeming less and less like an option.
I know. I know.
I know.
And I've said it often on the show.
This is one of those moments where you are turning the music off.
You're turning the lights on.
The party's over for a while.
We're going to have to learn new dances.
We're going to have to get new records because this party is going to change now.
And it almost always takes one partner just saying, I'm done with with this but I want to rebuild something new with you and
The flexing and the macho and the just trying to numb it all away isn't working inside your own house
So circling back y'all aren't broken
You'll find an extraordinary event that you need to deal with.
And you're probably going to need some professional help to go through it.
And it might be him saying, or he, if he won't go see a therapist because of how he was raised
and all that, fine.
But you can tell them, if you really love me, I want you to come with me so we can learn
some new skills.
Because I do believe right now this is a skills issue.
There's a guy still trying to touch the ground after his boat sank.
I'm so sorry for little Thomas.
Thank you for sharing that with us.
Here's the words I want to guide you.
Clear boundaries, direct, honest, open connection, very specific.
Here are some things.
And always begin with I.
I feel like I'm competing with the phone.
I would like us to have a phone free house from the hours of 5 till 10pm.
Will you honor me enough by that?
And go from there.
Thank you for the call.
We'll be right back.
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All right, let's go out to Minneapolis, Minnesota and talk to Paige.
Hey, Paige, what's up?
Hi, Dr. John.
Um, I am wondering how do I develop self-discipline and stop
abandoning healthy habits?
Ooh, good question.
I feel like it should be just as easy as well, just do it.
But I'm 35 years old and haven't been able to just do it yet.
Oh man.
Tell me what you've tried that hasn't worked?
I, you know, I've read as many books out there as I can think of. And, you know, I'm tend to be a reader and then have a
really hard time implementing things. Even just things like
drinking water every day or exercise or budgeting or anything
that requires consistency in life to create a healthy
life.
So I'm going to give you, I'm going to give you a crazy thing here.
Okay.
Yeah.
I think we've entered into a world where, and if you go back and listen to my show over
the last few years, I've been hyper intentional about it.
And it's one of those things that I'm hoping
people will go, like in 10 years. Okay. So I'm giving you the secret right now.
All right.
I think we have all reached information overload.
Yeah.
We don't need to read a lot more new books. I'm going to write a book on marriage, I think.
So everyone needs to buy that book later on when it comes out. But other than that, I think we're pretty much,
I think we got the info.
Yep. And I've heard you say that.
That's why I even mentioned it.
It's because I've heard you say that and...
So that's why this show is about real people.
Okay. So number one, you have to stop.
You have to stop looking at certain behaviors
as productive behaviors and you have to look at at certain behaviors as productive behaviors, and you
have to look at them for what they are.
They are numbing and avoidant behaviors.
Some people smoke weed.
You read books.
For sure.
Some people look at pornography.
You listen to podcasts.
Yep.
Okay. podcast. Okay, all of it is a way to keep space from actually dealing with the hardest part of
habit building, which is identity.
What is the story I'm telling about myself? And I think the stories you tell yourself are that you're not very good at a lot of
stuff.
Yeah, I think I'm really good at a lot of stuff.
Okay.
But yes, I'm not good at other stuff.
What are they?
What are the books you keep reading trying to quote unquote fix?
Except for my books obviously because they're amazing. I've read your books. I've read
you know a lot of the the big ones out there like Atomic Habits and the that one about hurt you know the relentless that well the one about
stopping hurrying and John Mark Comer's book yeah excellent book yeah the
ruthless elimination of her yeah yeah thank you really ruthless um really good
books I I want if you could snap your fingers,
what behavior would you change in your life?
Exercise.
Being a person who keeps my body healthy.
What does not keeping your body healthy get you?
What does not keeping your body healthy get you? Less mental load, less things on my plate.
Okay.
It's just another thing to think about, another thing to do when there's already so many things
to think about and do.
Okay. How do you move it from your chore list to your want list?
I know it's an identity change.
But beneath identity is the self-worth.
Why don't you think you're worth an hour every day just to feel good.
And why have you outsourced how you feel to a number on a scale or a pant size
or a number of hours in a gym?
I don't, I don't think I do that. Dr. John. Okay. I really, I really,
cause I've sat with that question. I've listened to everything you've
like, I listened to lots of podcasts. I listen to podcasts. And I don't, I could be wrong, you know, maybe if we dig deeper, but I, I,
I do believe I'm worthy of being well. I love myself. I think I'm a great person.
Good. Hey, high five to you. Nobody calls me what shows that. That's awesome. Okay, great.
So how can I help?
Where are you stuck?
What precipitated this call right now?
What habits did you abandon that you're like, gosh, again?
The thing that precipitated this call
is I was reading back through journals from my life.
And I have a whole lot of Januaries
that are well documented
My wife's favorite person on the planet is January John. She loves that guy
She loves it. She says he's the best guy who's ever lived one time January John made it all one time all the way to April
It was amazing. Yeah. Yep
So yeah, I and I, I would look at the different, the different things
I was stuck on when I was 20. And they're the exact same things I'm stuck on now. The
same things that I want to develop in my life when I was 20 are the same things now. And
there's just a whole lot of January's that talk a lot about that. And, um, I don't know, I worked really hard in the last few years
on my mental health and anxiety.
That's required cutting a lot of things out,
like caffeine and busyness and political articles.
So I've had tremendous growth in those areas,
the things that cut things out.
Okay, but what are you adding in?
What are you going towards?
I'm actually listening to more audiobooks.
Here's an example.
You and I sound very similar.
So last year I did something I've never done before
because every January has always been about restriction,
what I'm cutting out.
Yeah.
Last year I made a change. I will go to ten punk
rocker metal shows and get in ten mosh pits. That was the thing I put on my
January last year. I will go to the Comedy Club 25 times in the year. That
means once every other week. Yeah. Okay. I began putting in because to do that
meant I had to go to sleep earlier. That to do that meant I had to go to sleep earlier.
That to do that meant I had to spend my money differently.
To do that meant I had to exercise and be super intentional about it and I had to be
okay with 15 or 30 minute exercise sessions because I had this other thing that was a
bigger priority last year.
And two weird things happen. I put on more weight than I have in a long time and I had maybe the best year I've had
in ages.
And so what I've had to address this year is the story that I told myself that life
would be good at scale number X was maybe false.
Because I got my blood work done
and my blood work's pretty good too.
Do you get what I'm saying?
So what I had to do is go address some of those,
what are the cornerstone stories you've been telling
yourself every January for the last 30 years?
That it won't feel good until I have done these things?
Yeah, except it's cognitively dissonant because you feel good.
You like yourself.
I do.
You've done a lot of work.
And so that's where I think the master stroke of Atomic Habits is the identity call out.
Who do you want to be? The master stroke of atomic habits is the identity call out.
Who do you want to be?
And if it's I'm a guy who doesn't fill in the blank, that's fine.
And a couple of like virtue issues, value issues, fine.
Right.
But if your list is just I'm a person who doesn't.
It's just a scarcity way of living.
It's just a scarcity way of living. So what's a thing you'd love to add into your life?
I want to spend more time with my siblings and their families.
Are they around you or do you have to travel?
About an hour.
So what must be true for that?
Probably stop listening to as many podcasts as you can get out of the house.
Okay.
I, I, Scott Galloway talks about this, that maybe the most important advice for 20 to
35 year olds right now is get out of your home.
Be at home as, as little as possible.
Do you know how cold it is here right now?
I know, it's negative everything.
But life is happening outside of that screen
and life is happening outside of that house.
Yeah.
You get what I'm saying?
Yep.
I want instead of, I want you to build a life worth living,
a life that you love, a life that you wanna have.
And that's family, and that's your faith practice
tethering into something bigger than you.
That's your work, and that's the purpose.
Like, why are you here?
What do you wanna do?
And from that, like I think,
you've probably heard me talk about my conversation with my dear friend
Sal DeStefano from Mind Pump guys. Like dude, if you go to the gym and work out because
you think you're gross, if you go to the gym and think that you'll be happier at some number
on a scale, you're going to quit every time. If you go exercise because you're worth exercising
because you feel good so you can go to the comedy clubs, you can go see your family,
you can go to these other things, you'll go see your family, you can go to these other things.
You'll do that forever.
And you'll have weeks where you go an hour every day and you crush it and you'll
have weeks where you go 15 minutes and you just get it through because I got to
go to the next thing.
But that's a part of who you are because it's got a big, it's serving a purpose.
Do you get that switch?
Yeah, I think so.
That's harder than you giving me a magic formula.
So much harder.
Here's the magic formula.
And this is the worst thing I can tell you because you know this and you've done it every
time.
We only change what we measure. Our feelings are almost always wrong. And
well, I'll say that they're not always almost always wrong. They almost always don't give
us the clearest and most correct information. And you have to have some sort of accountability.
And you know those things and they're really annoying.
They're really annoying.
And if you want to change the nitty-gritty habit.
Heberman has talked about some really important neuroscience that's come out in the last few
years which like actually has been around for a while, but he's calling it to the forefront. If you do things that you especially don't want to do,
you actually grow part of your brain that allows that same behavior to be easier to do next time.
And so here's what that means. You just have to do stuff sometimes that you really, really don't want to do.
And January John loves hearing that.
February John does not like hearing that.
And I also made peace.
I quit hating February John.
I just quit hating that guy.
I quit being annoyed by him.
I quit looking in the mirror every morning and being like, you're gross, you're disgusting.
And from that foundation, I found it infinitely easier to hang on to habits that I want to
hang on to and be really hold loosely on the nights that I just go to bed.
Or the mornings when I sleep in and wrestle with my son in the morning or get into a poking
contest or like a bickering contest with my daughter before school.
We both go to work annoyed and I could have just gone worked out.
Like it is, I'm stupid and I'm on to the next day.
Will you put on the calendar?
I will see one live music event every month this year.
I'll see a minimum of 12 live music events.
And that means either I have to go by myself or I have to do something even weirder and
ask somebody at work or a friend to go with me.
Yeah.
Yeah. Yeah. My sister and I just decided that we're going to, the one that's an hour away,
that we're going to put on our calendar every other week to see each other. I think that's
here. I go there. We meet halfway. That's incredible. But here's what I want you to
do. It's easy to put that calendar, that date on the calendar and then get surprised by
it every day before that date.
What I want you to do is you put that date on the calendar, which is important.
It's like you're trading for a marathon, not because I got to train for a marathon, but
I'm a person who runs.
I run all the time.
So here's, I'm going to choose to be a little bit less healthy because running marathons
come at a cost.
I'm going to be a little less healthy so that I can accomplish this goal.
You have an awesome new goal.
I want to see my sister in person every other week because my identity is I'm a person who
hangs out with my family.
And instead of every Friday going, oh gosh, tomorrow I drive to whatever.
I want you to begin to reverse engineer that Saturday all the way back to the previous
Sunday.
What must be true for this week? I'm'm gonna need to do my laundry earlier this week I'm a person
who takes care of their body so I'm gonna need to get all four exercises and
exercise sessions in before that day
do you get what I'm saying yeah yeah and my guess is when you begin to reverse engineer and plan some of those things, amazing.
And then if you only get three one week, okay, fine, you'll live.
Because I'm a person who's pretty compassionate to myself because I'm doing about as good
as I can do right now.
I like that.
I have an incredible new partner that I'm going to hook you up with, okay?
It's this amazing company called Trainwell and it's a personal trainer in like on your
phone in an app.
You can connect with them and they give you workouts and here's what's amazing.
Like for the Thanksgiving holiday when I was trying out to see if this was somebody I wanted to
partner up with, I just said, hey, I'm going to be staying at a place in the woods and
so I'm only going to have a couple of dumbbells and a kettlebell and some exercise bands.
Trainer, sweet, here's your workout for the week.
Boom.
Next week, I'm back in my regular gym, but I only can do three weeks, three days of heavy
lifting this week because I can do something my regular gym, but I only can do three weeks three days of heavy lifting this week So I could do something like great boom done. So they work directly with you and they give you feedback every day
Well, cool, but it's on your phone. So there's nowhere to go and you know, they're gonna text you
How was it? They're gonna give you a photo of a photo. I mean a video chat
How was it if I give that to you for three months for free? Will you use it?
Yeah, if you're not, that's okay.
No, I can do three months.
I've done three months before giving up before.
All right, how about this?
Do you want to wait until you're about to give up and then start?
No.
Okay.
No, I want to start when we get off the phone.
Excellent.
All right, hang on the phone.
I'm going to hook you up with my friends at Trainwell.
T-R-A-I-N-W-E-L-L.
It's awesome.
It's probably the coolest innovation I've seen.
And I'm a lifelong exerciser, but I've loved what they've brought to my life.
Even if sometimes I know my trainer Nate is gonna text me like,
where are you man? I'm right here. Right? I don't want to. I don't feel like it.
But my feelings don't get a vote all the time because my feelings are wrong a lot.
Sometimes I just feel like Cheetos and that's usually a never good idea.
But here... Well it's annoying but it's just necessary.
Alright so and here's the thing.
Here's your magic wand roadmap, okay?
When you get off this call,
take out a piece of notebook paper
or a piece of printer paper or whatever,
but I want you to write this down.
If you've got a journal,
you sound like you're a journaler,
write this stuff in the journal.
Number one, write five things you're grateful for.
Start with the words I am grateful for.
That's number one. Number one, write five things you're grateful for. Start with the words I am grateful for. That's number one.
Number two, I want you to write down four or five identity statements for 2025.
I'm a person who.
In 2025, I'm a person who.
Under each one of those things, I want you to write three or four behaviors that you
got to lock into.
And just commit to yourself on those behaviors because I'm a person who and the very bottom,
actually not the very bottom, I want you then to go into your bathroom and look yourself in the mirror and I want you to say 10 times, I love this girl.
I want you to look yourself dead in the eyes. I love this girl. I want you to look yourself dead in the eyes. I love this girl. You get what
I'm saying?
Yep.
Okay.
Yep.
If you miss a workout, who cares? Doesn't matter. If you go see your sister and you
haven't got your laundry done and I'm a person who takes care of all my household stuff before
I go out, all right, fine. Next week, I'm going to tweak my schedule so I can get that laundry done.
Because I like coming home on Sundays after being with my sister
and everything's ready to rock and roll for the Monday.
And I'm going to go to concerts.
I'm going to go to 12 concerts this year.
I got to find the money for that.
So I'm a person who's going to work some overtime.
Because I'm a person who loves to go see live music
more than I like sitting at home watching
TV.
I'm just going to begin to build it in.
And for anyone who's trying to change identity habits, there is seasons of doing stuff that
you don't want to do.
That's a cornerstone of any sort of behavior change.
I don't want to do it.
It's uncomfortable.
I'm going to choose my heart.
I'm going to go do it anyway.
There is a season of that.
Actually, there's a long time of that.
I don't want to, but I'm going to.
You're on the right path, dude, it's awesome.
It's an honor to talk to you.
This is January John to January Page.
Actually, let's do this call back in February
because I wanna see where you are
and we'll keep working through this thing.
Hopefully, February John doesn't show up this year.
And January, John goes into February.
Hey, everybody hang with us.
I've got a wild new segment coming up
right after this break.
We'll be right back.
Okay, good folks.
Lent is just around the corner.
And if you haven't heard of Lent,
it's a practice that goes back centuries.
It's when Christians all over the world
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It's about getting rid of the things or habits in your life
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So whether you grew up in the Christian tradition
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That's hallow.com slash deloney for three months of hallow absolutely free.
All right, we are back.
So, um,
as y'all know one of my favorite events that I'm a part of is the money and marriage event that me and my friend Rachel Cruz put
on that's a weekend a weekend long retreat retreat we do a couple times a year.
At a recent Money in Marriage we take live questions from the audience, we also give
them an opportunity to write down questions that we answer live and this year we got some
questions, a huge stack of questions, that some of them were so gnarly, they were so
personal, they were so intense.
We just didn't get through them all.
And so, but they're too important.
Like as we went through them,
they were so, so heavy and so important.
And so what I want to do is have a start a segment
at the end of the show where I answer these questions
that were, that people left.
These are real people who wrote in these questions
and handed it in on a card.
We took it out of a anonymous question box
and whew, there's some doozy.
So here's today's, not tonight's, but here's today's.
Last night, my husband admitted to a pornography addiction
that's been going on for four years.
I'm utterly heartbroken and shocked.
Where do we go from here?
Whew, right? from here. Right? I don't know anybody who's been married for a long time hasn't had their
partner sit down and say, Hey, here's something that's going on. We're about to go bankrupt.
I have $50,000 in credit card debt. You thought I got a degree. I didn't. I'm about to lose
my job. I've been struggling with pornography.
I'm having an emotional fair, fill in the blank.
And you sit in that moment.
A couple of things to do right away.
Number one is regardless of what is said, and this is going to sound controversial and I'm not regardless of what you're told a good default response is thank you for
sharing if you can summon those words thank you for sharing you force
yourself into what I would call a position of maturity that doesn't mean you're not going to grieve like crazy
That doesn't mean you're going to get enraged angry want to smash stuff do smashed
I doesn't it doesn't do any it doesn't do any of that away. What it might do is stim
Your next emotional response and sometimes emotional responses are punches sometimes emotional responses are'm leaving, sometimes it's saying really ugly things that you can't get
back.
Sometimes emotional responses are you immediately try to take that pain away.
You try you go into peacekeeper mode and try to solve it real quick.
I'm so sorry or an emotional response might be oh my gosh, you've been like in this case,
you've been addicted to pornography because I'm not beautiful anymore.
I haven't been around or or or
That's not the time for the solution
When somebody sits down and puts this upon you not by your hand, but in your lap boom
I've had this ongoing addiction and pornography for years
Thank you for sharing. The second thing is almost always 99.9% of the time the solution
will not come in this first day or two or three or four or five. These are moments for
revelation for heartbreak as you as mentioned here, for shock, for lack
of better terms, this is about survival now.
If you can hear it, thank you for sharing.
Tell me everything.
Tell me everything.
You just listen.
I'd advise you to write things down, things that you feel, things that you want to say,
get them out of your body, but write them down.
Don't lob them onto somebody else, but write them down.
And then over the next 24, 48, 72 hours, two, three, four days, you begin to, the fog begins
to clear on the next right step.
And it's not the next right step towards solution every time.
It's the next right step towards dealing with the smoke and ash that was your marriage,
the smoke and ash that was your reality.
That's now very, very different.
Sometimes it's, I need to go stay with a friend for a couple of days.
Sometimes it's, I need you to go stay with a friend for a couple of days.
Sometimes it's, I don't want to see a laptop open.
I'm cutting off the internet for the next 10 days. I need to do a
thing right now that's pretty drastic and if you don't want to be around that
fine but I need you to step out. Sometimes it is we're gonna go to dinner
tonight and I need to hear every single lurid detail. I want to know all of it.
Sometimes it's we're gonna sit down today and we're gonna go through your
search history. I want to know. Sometimes's fill in the blank, but it gives you 24 48 72 hours
The next thing is you have to
Have somebody or a small group of people you can talk to
Secrets will kill you and grief demands a witness
Sometimes it's a therapist. Sometimes it's a counselor
Sometimes it is a close group of girlfriends.
And if a husband says, I've been addicted to pornography for four years, you can't tell
anybody.
Nope, you just threw a grenade, you handed me a grenade, you can't say, here's a grenade,
just hold it.
I'm not going to do that.
Now, I'm not going to go parade it around.
I'm not going to be ridiculous.
I'm not going to go smear you.
I'm not going to do that.
I'm not going to get down in the mud like that.
But this is a lot for me to hold when I'm utterly heartbroken and shocked
as the author writes here.
So I'm gonna find somebody.
So the response, shooom, shell shocked.
Thank you for sharing.
And I know that sounds crazy.
Try it next time somebody tells you something insane,
something heavy, something that just blew your world up.
Thank you for sharing.
Calmness contagious.
your world up. Thank you for sharing. Calmness contagious. Then I'm going to begin to write some of this stuff down. I'm going to begin to exhale.
I'm going to find somebody that I can talk to that I trust one or two or three or four
people and then we will go from there. To the person who wrote this, you're not alone.
Lots of homes all over the place are destroyed by pornography.
And if you are struggling with pornography and you need to sit down with your partner,
today is as good a day as any.
Secrets will kill you and it will destroy your marriage.
Let's start there.
That wraps up today's show.
Now we're going to leave on a heavy note, I guess, with some of these marriage questions,
man.
There's some gnarly ones here on the stack that we'll go through.
Thanks for being with us.
Stay in school, don't do drugs.
Love y'all.
Bye.