The Jefferson Fisher Podcast - What To Do When Someone Pulls Away
Episode Date: June 23, 2026After 33 years of marriage, a woman called in to ask what she should do when her husband won't hug her—and becomes angry when she asks. And y'all, that question opened the door to some really honest... conversations about hurt, loneliness, and what we do when the people closest to us don't show up the way we need them to. We also talk about how to deal with intentionally mean people, helping teenagers stand up to bullies, navigating estrangement with an adult child, rebuilding trust after addiction, and how to know whether something is truly wrong in a relationship or if you're simply questioning yourself. Leave me a voicemail to be featured on the show! https://www.jeffersonfisher.com/ask-jefferson Join me on Supercast for ad-free episodes, bonus content, and AMAs: https://jefferson.supercast.com/ Order The Next Conversation Workbook: https://www.jeffersonfisher.com/workbook Thank you to our sponsors: Cozy Earth. Upgrade Your Every Day. Get 20% off at cozyearth.com/jefferson or use code JEFFERSON at check out. Dose. Save 35% on your first month of subscription by going to dosedaily.co/JEFFERSON or entering JEFFERSON at checkout. BetterHelp. Click https://betterhelp.com/jeffersonfisher for a discount on your first month of therapy. Order my book, The Next Conversation, or listen to the full audiobook today. Like what you hear? Don’t forget to subscribe and leave a 5-star review! Suggest a topic or ask a question for me to answer on the show! Want a FREE communication tip each week? Click here to join my newsletter. Join My School of Communication Watch my podcast on YouTube Follow me on Instagram Follow me on TikTok Follow me on LinkedIn Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Welcome to another episode of the Jefferson Fisher podcast. Today I got to answer more questions from the community and y'all there were some doozies. We got to talk how to handle hard conversations head on. How do you prepare teens for conversations with bullies? How do you handle estrangement with an adult child? How do you handle people who are intentionally mean to you? And lastly, how do you handle people who continue to bring?
bring up the past even when it's painful.
If you'd like to call and leave a voicemail,
I'm going to put all the information down there in the show notes,
or if you'd like, you can leave a comment wherever you're listening,
because my plan is to answer those questions specifically on the next episode.
It's going to be fun.
I'm ready for it.
Let's get into it.
I have been married 33 years,
and I continually ask my husband to hug me,
and he doesn't.
And I had tried and tried.
and I would like to know how to get him,
to want to hug me and not be angry when he doesn't.
Thank you.
I'll give you a hug.
You deserve a hug.
Everybody deserves a hug.
I have a really hard time even imagining what that must feel like.
The person you're married to for 30 plus years,
and you have to,
beg him to give you a hug okay okay i got a all right i got to get my head in it here's something
that comes to mine if i go okay i got to pull pull this in practically okay what what tools can we
go here we're talking about a hug um is first there is a root in this
when somebody doesn't want to do something physically
usually because it's tied to something mentally much deeper. And I don't know. And where are some
things I don't know? I don't know if this is the way your husband has been for all time.
I don't know if there's a certain event that created a different path that said,
I don't feel safe hugging anymore. Like there's, there's, there's,
something deeper happening here than just not wanting to hug maybe i mean i i i know people who
aren't people people you know they they want they they want distance they're not huggers they're not
hand-chickers they might you know give you a a tap of the um they may pound give you a fist but that
that that's that's it this doesn't feel like that hearing it in your voice it doesn't feel like
that your voice sounds really defeated
And that breaks my heart.
And I don't like that.
So my thought is there has to be something deeper here happening.
If he's somebody that does not like physical touch, that's one element and that's to be respected.
But more likely, you would have already known that.
So my mind goes to, okay, what would call somebody not want to draw close physically?
I know when there are hidden emotions like anger and shame
because that closeness means vulnerability
and vulnerability means something scary
and that can be really overwhelming
and they would rather keep that distance
because there's something else deeper going on.
I don't know what that is.
I don't know that history.
So that's the first thing that comes to mind for me
is there's something else going on.
below the surface.
Second is a question.
And it's a question that I'm going to put,
that we're not trying to elicit a yes response,
which is hard.
I'm going to harder,
I want to elicit a no response.
So in my head,
this is the question I would ask
to have this conversation with your husband.
You said that without him being angry at you,
I mean, he'll do it.
He's angry about it.
Anger is usually tied to a lot more grief and sadness and shame.
Here's the question.
I can't believe.
This is the question.
Am I not worth a hug to you?
Am I not worth a hug to you?
You're going to learn a lot in that answer.
Am I not worth a hug to you?
I'm going to assume you've already had the conversation around couples therapy
or therapy or bigger conversations
other people around you
and this might not be something that's new at all
but you are tired of it.
So you have agency and you get to choose what you're going to do.
Is this something that you're wanting to live with?
Is this something that you've decided
I'm not going to be with anybody who's ashamed to hug me?
I'm not going to be with anybody that sees hugging me
as something to be upset about or a chore
or to ask for too much we're going to say
you get to choose that so i'm going to assume that's already taken place the third what i need you to know
right now is you are worth that hug and if you're listening to me anybody listening to are now
in the comments if this has hit your heartstrings like it's hit mine just tell her that she's
worth a hug you need to know it
And that might be the most important thing you do today is let her know that she's worth a hug.
It's worth the hug.
Thank you for the question.
Hello, this is Lisa.
I was just wondering, how do you handle people who are intentionally mean?
I tend to either be too nice or go completely overboard and go away to the other side, be rude.
And I don't want to be rude.
Thank you and have a great day.
Oh, that's a great question.
What do you do when somebody is intentionally trying to be mean?
First off, thank you for asking that.
And I hate that people have been mean to you.
Give me a list of who they are so I can, I don't know what I'm going to do.
I'm just going to keep a record of it.
That's what I'm going to do.
How do you handle people that are intentionally being mean?
Number one, ask them if they're intentionally being mean.
You'd be surprised what they say.
Maybe you're going to go, you know what, I already know.
I already know what they're going to say.
sometimes I know can be one of the most harmful things you can think in your mind instead of I wonder
I wonder why they're being made I wonder what's happening I wonder what's going on behind the surface there
that's a whole lot more telling but let's put that aside for right now if we're going to choose to
ask questions then do what you don't want to do what you told me is I don't want to be rude back
because I tend to go overboard and down really really rude so rather than serving it right back at
we're going to do something even more powerful.
We're going to use a question that is going to keep everything in their bucket.
So when they say something mean, I want you to envision it as if something has come out of their mouth and just fall into the floor.
And you get to choose to take five to seven seconds of nothing.
And you can look down as if you're not really sure if they're good with that.
you can look down and look back up at them as if is that what you're proud of saying you're good
with that you see this face of like did you sure that's what you want and if that five to second
passes and they don't say anything else that's where you get to say i need you to say that again to me
i need you to repeat that if dad doesn't feel comfortable for you then i'm going to encourage you to
ask a question of did you mean did you intend for that to that to feel that to feel comfortable for you
to sound as mean as it did? Did you mean for that to sound rude? Did you mean for that to sound upsetting?
Did you mean, or maybe we can go into the intended effect. Did you want that to hurt me? Did you
want that to upset me? And you'd be surprised about what they said. Maybe they're going to double down on it.
Maybe they're going to go, you know what, I mean, you know, you always just, and they're going to try and
adjust it or capitulate in some way. But if they do double down,
And they go, yes, you know what, I did want that to hurt you.
I did want that to be mean.
You get to take even more time and say, I thought so.
Thank you.
And you would leave it with them.
Don't take that home with you.
You leave it with them.
Because I would much rather you choose to do this,
then say something rude,
and then when you go home, you're regretting that you gave them that power.
I would much rather you be five,
years from now and say, I'm living a great life and I'm good and they still have to live with the words
that they chose and the words that I chose not to pick up. Because what they say, you do not have to
receive. You do not have to attend every argument you're invited to. So feel free to RSP, no. You can tell
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So I have a 15-year-old daughter who is a freshman in high school. The problem we're having is the boys in her gym class are making comments like during pickleball, if she misses the ball, well, you know, you should be used to that because it's like stirring with a wooden spoon in the kitchen, that kind of derogatory term. We've gotten nowhere with the gym teacher or the principal who both say they're taking care of it. But she's getting,
Bullback now, other comments in gym class.
So she's wondering, because I teach my girls with your content, what can she say to these boys other
than she's tried using your standard answers, is that the look you're going for?
What can she say to them to get them to back off?
Thank you very much.
Appreciate it.
Bye-bye.
She's 15.
15-year-old girls, 15-year-old boys.
that's rough.
That's just not, we've, having been 15,
that and of itself is a huge challenge,
just navigating middle school and high school
and dealing with all that,
let alone these not-headed boys
that say stupid things.
Yeah, so what, if she was calling me,
and I'm speaking to her,
first off, good mom, move,
to be able to be her support system.
like this. I know there are other people who wish that they had moms like you, who, you know,
supported them in this way. So I want to give you props for good mom move. What would I tell her?
All right. She's 15. Here's what I would tell her. In three years, you never have to see these boys
again for the rest of your life. So that's one, all right? It's very easy to think that high school is the
end-all-be-all, and then you get into college.
you realize high school was nothing, no, or maybe technical school, or maybe she didn't go to
college, it doesn't matter. You're going to get into your 20s and 30s and realize you were just
a kid and she's probably hardly going to remember it. Or maybe she does, and here's where she gets
to decide what she remembers it for, right? And what I wanted to be is she remembers it not for the time
that these boys are mean, but here's the time where she found her voice. Okay, that to me is
much more exciting. So let's say we're going to remember it for this. What I'm going to tell her
is number one, remember, these boys mean nothing.
In a few years, you'll never probably have to see them ever again.
So realize high school is very temporary, you, and what you stand for forever.
Okay, and you're going to do amazing things, and these boys can go kick rocks.
Right.
So I want her to have this sense of confidence of, do not give them the satisfaction of
putting them on any kind of pedestal are feeling like at any time of their life, they are
deserving of a microphone to be talking to you. Okay, don't, the only value you're going to give them
is the value you're going to give them. So we're going to choose, say, you don't have any worth
to me. It's not even the, not even worth the energy or the brain space for that, all right?
two
so it gets into some of the tools that
I know you've already taught her
and that's the power of questions
so
surprise you went with that
how did you want me to feel when you say that
how do you feel when you say something
like that? Did you mean
did you mean for that to sound
misogynistic? Did you mean
for that to sound
patronizing
did you mean for that to sound
absolutely idiotic.
Like,
this is where she gets to kind of use her voice to challenge it.
So I want her to have a big confidence in,
I am, I don't know her name,
but this is who I am,
and these boys are nothing, okay?
They don't get to say who I am or what worth I have.
Second of all, I want her to use her voice
in the power of questions of,
did you mean for that to sound?
Did you mean for that to sound? Is dumb?
is it i just heard it
use those questions of her advantage
and it's going to come really natural of what's going to feel right
of all the things that you've already already know
did you mean
are you okay
that's one i always really like are you okay
like that's a very easy way to kind of splash that cold water
on somebody the next i would encourage her
and this is ones i use all
often is asking them to repeat that. Yeah, I need you to say that again. I just want to make sure
that what you said was exactly as patronizing or misogynistic as I thought it was. I need you
to say that again. That's going to be very intimidating to a 15-year-old boy, I can assure you that.
Lastly, is also to have, instead of a very serious attitude about it, I would tell a
her to have a very almost playful attitude about it as if you care about them this much.
One time, and I would almost share this same advice, there was a girl who was asking me what
she should say to some other, another boy that was saying kind of stuff with her, which was
sounded really like he was kind of flirty. He just was flirting really bad, because boy.
are dumb. And I told her to say, ask the question, why are you so obsessed with me? And the mom came back
and told me that that was one of the best questions I ever could have given her because she did that
to the boy and he turned so red that he stopped talking to her for the rest of the year. So she could
try that. That being said, if it doesn't feel comfortable for it, absolutely don't push it. Here's the
thing. I want her to think and see that her, she has so much farther to go in life than this
little moment right here. And I know it's going to feel really big. And so here she gets to use her
voice, not in a way that is going to match fire with fire, but say, you are playing checkers.
I'm playing chess. All right. And when she gets to that level of confidence, amazing things
are going to happen. And I'm excited to see it. So you're going to have to let me know.
how it goes.
Thanks for the question.
Hi, Jefferson.
My adult son has cut me off from his life.
He has a six-year-old child that he has taken me away from.
How can I get him back or to respond to me reasonably to where we can have a relationship?
I've spoken in with many people who call in or email and they're dealing with a
And it's almost always this case where there's a parent and an adult child and there's some form of
estrangement where they don't talk anymore. And what's heartbreaking is not just the fact that that is your son.
You also are losing, not just him, but you're losing a grandchild too when he's taking that six-year-old and not letting you see him.
and and I need to tell you
there are way more people than you know
fighting this battle every day
and if that's you listening
just
I want you to show
Anne from Oklahoma some love
in the comments
wherever you are
even if it's just saying it out loud
or thinking out loud to yourself
because this is hard stuff y'all
and those who've been through it know
this is any estrangement
from a family member or a loved one
or even a deep friend is really, really hard.
And there's nothing I'm going to be able to tell you
that's just going to flip the switch.
I wish there was.
Believe me, I wish there was.
Here's what I can tell you.
There is one when I picked up, you said,
how for him to respond reasonably to you.
That's telling to me.
That says you do have a line of communication.
even though he's cut you off says, I don't want a relationship.
There is some kind of line of communication.
And when that happens,
there is a need,
usually from the person who's being cut off
to chase, pursue,
and it's exactly what causes the other person
to push away even more.
Mom, son,
there are control issues at play.
There are historical issues at play.
There are a lot of complexities to this.
If there is some measure of advice that I can give and recommend,
is the next time you have the chance,
in whichever way you all are communicating,
text message, voicemail,
most likely he's not answering your call.
So it's either in a voicemail or in a text.
The first thing out of your mouth has to be, I know.
And it sounds like this.
I know things are not how we want them to be.
I know I am not the mom you've wanted right now.
I know things are hard for us.
I know there's a big distance between us.
I know things are not going well.
You have to be able to call a spade a spade
and see it for exactly what it is,
rather than talk as if it's something else in your mind.
You're going to have to be able to face that reality.
I know that you and I have struggled for a long time now.
You got to put that out there.
You got to put that out there.
The next is I'm not.
Here is where you are sending the signal
that you don't want to go into anything
that could be a recurring theme.
I'm not asking for an apology.
I'm not trying to push you in any way.
I'm not, usually it's, we're asking something from them.
I'm not asking you to respond right now.
I'm not asking you to agree with me.
You're going to know what is going to be coming naturally for you,
okay, to say, I know, then.
I'm not asking for anything.
I'm not trying to push you, whatever that is.
The last part of it is I'm ready.
And I need you to hear me here.
It's not I'm ready to talk.
It's I'm ready to listen.
I'm ready to listen whenever you're ready to share.
It's not I'm ready to talk when you are.
Most likely there's been a lot of talking.
right just not a lot of listening because this is stuff that estrangement is not something that
happens usually in one cut let's say one fell swoop you know it's it's built up it's built up
it's it's in and over time it clogs your drain or you're not going to be able to it's it's not
going to be able to get out so when you're able to communicate to him
in a way that says, I know things aren't the way either one of us want them to be.
I'm not asking you to do anything you're uncomfortable with.
I'm not trying to change your life.
I'm not trying to control.
I'm ready to listen and learn more.
Those are the kind of things that at least keep the door open.
Hear me.
That is not mean that the other person, that your son's going to say,
oh my gosh let me pick up the phone and call mom i know you wish it was so i wish it was so for you
but it's that's not the what's going to happen it's going to take repeated just finding ways to
leave the door open just leave the door open that's how low the standard is right now when you're
dealing with estrangement the standard doesn't become how can we create the greatest relationship
you are fighting for every breath in that moment you are truly treading water for as long
as you can to keep your head above it because you know if you stop that relationship is that the door
is going to close so if you want to continue that door open it can't be continuing to pursue and chase
when they are not ready and they've sent those signals and boundaries and signs that does not mean it's
not going to hurt it's going to hurt that's what i would recommend of knowing this is a this is a long play
this is going to take a lot of time and a lot of trust rebuilding.
And that often means that is going to take a lot of time and small steps.
And that's the opposite of what you want.
That's what you have.
All right.
All of my thoughts are with you.
Just continue to keep the door open.
Don't close it.
Thanks for the call.
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And now, let's keep going.
Hi, Jefferson.
This is Debbie from New York.
I've been sober for 13-plus years.
My children were in their teens when I got sober.
And despite my great success at living a sober life,
I don't have my daughter's respect or admiration.
or forgiveness.
She is in her adulthood now
and is working and employed gainfully
and still brings up things
from the past that are things I apologize for
and I still hurt from.
Any suggestions, how to move forward?
Thank you for sharing that.
That is, that's huge,
that you, even as a teen,
when they were in their teens,
you took back your life,
you got sober, you stayed sober,
that's incredible.
So I don't want to dismiss that in any way.
We now say, okay, what do we have?
What do we left with?
What do we do?
Just because you're sorry for it doesn't mean they still don't feel the hurt.
We know how that feels on the other end of it.
Just when somebody says, I'm so sorry,
doesn't mean all the pain just magically disappears like that.
What they're telling you is one,
if you continue to hear it,
then you haven't heard all of it.
So what I'd like to say is if I haven't heard the end of it,
then you haven't heard the heart of it,
meaning there is more pain, more depth, more duenance
that they haven't shared yet, okay?
That they don't feel like you've attuned to in some way.
And I know you might go, Jefferson, I've done all that I can.
Listen to me, if they were in the conversation with us right now,
most likely there would be some type of feeling that or need that is unmet i don't know what that is
and you don't know what that is either but i hear you saying they don't respect me they don't respect
it yet think one day they will so i don't want you to think that that's never ever going to
happen these are these are big things so as much time as it took for you to get sober
you need to give them that much time to see that you're not the same person who you were.
So you need to give that part of you, just as much time as you did the addicted part of you.
That's the time investment that you're in.
And my gut says you already know this.
But when it comes to your daughters, like that kind of conversation,
you're going to have to need to have a lot of tough skin without getting defensive.
that means you need to be a safe space
and when they share things that hurt you
because they sting,
you need to be able to take ownership of that
and you go, you know, you're right, I did do that.
If they say, you know what, you were gone all the time,
that's not the place where you go, no, I wasn't, I was there, I was present.
Were you as present as you could have been?
Maybe, maybe not.
Here's where, instead of fighting it,
you take ownership.
You say it's going to calm them down.
You know what, you're right. I did do that. I did. Or I didn't. Whatever it is, you're owning that part of it. The second part, once you've owned it, is you need to say, what else? What am I missing? What am I missing? What else is missing? Be able to get them to talk a little bit more if they can, if they're willing to, to be able to share something that's inside of them.
This is complex stuff.
Maybe they don't have even processed what that feels like yet.
I know this sounds like I'm team daughter.
I'm not.
I'm team repair.
Okay.
And that doesn't happen without you listening, without getting defensive.
I want you to think of the phrases that get the most upset, right?
That they're going to push back on.
that's typically where the truth lies where the most pain is felt.
And so how do we do that?
I want you to communicate with ownership.
I want you not to get defensive.
And I want you to continue to push of,
what would it look like for me to gain your trust?
What would it look like for me to be the mom you wish I was?
Use that phrase, what would it look like?
What would it look like for me?
What would it mean for you if I were to do this or do that or admit to this or admit to that?
That's what it's going to paint that picture for you when you can use that phrase.
What would it look like for me?
That is going to help open them up a little bit more to have those really harsh, hard,
just really wide open conversations that are going to feel really raw.
but I know that
the same way that you're putting all that energy
and have been to stay sober,
you have all the more energy
to bring those girls back
and have the relationship you've always wanted.
Thank you for the call.
In the past relationship,
I often noticed changes in his behavior
that made me feel uncomfortable.
When I try to bring it up,
he would tell me
were just in my head and had nothing to do with him.
My question is, how can I tell if something is just in my head or if something is actually
not okay in the relationship?
And how do you communicate with someone who keeps dismissing your feelings instead of
addressing the issue?
for context, I tend to question myself a lot in those situations.
And I'm not sure if I'm overthinking or if I'm just not being heard.
I really appreciate your perspective.
Thank you.
Meg, that's an awesome question.
That's so good.
What do you do when somebody is dismissing your feelings?
What do you do when you're afraid that is this,
really just all in my head? When somebody says, you're just making this up, you're just crazy,
this is all in your head. How do you handle that? Number one, the first words out of your mouth when
somebody says, you're just making this up in your mind. This is all in your head. You say,
I get to decide that. I get to decide that. Nobody gets to decide if this is just all made up in
your head. Nobody gets to decide that other than you. Because you know who, who, who, who,
says the stuff of you're making it all up in your head that's the person who is trying to distract you
that's the very person who might also be trying to mislead you because rather than accepting the
ownership and validating and affirming the very fears and needs that you have they are pushing that
back on you in a way to avoid that accountability or to be connected to you in some way. So first off,
I want you to be equipped with the phrase and the mindset of, I get to decide that.
I get to decide that.
And that's a very empowering phrase, not to just say out loud, but also to think, to say,
there's a difference between where you stop and I begin, right?
So that's that first thing of I get to decide that.
Number two, how do you get it out of your head if you feel like you're really, these racing thoughts?
is to literally get it out of your head.
I want you to get a pen and a paper
and write out the very things you're afraid of.
Write them all out.
You need to see them stone cold.
You need to see them black and white out of your head.
And so the first question to ask is,
what's the story I'm telling myself?
Number two is, what do I know to be true?
So in one column, you have,
what's the story I'm telling myself?
What are all the things that are in your head
that you feel like you're overthinking?
in some sense. The next column is, what do I know to be true? What do I know to be true? Now, if there is an
issue there, you go, I'm just really not sure what the truth is. That's when you get to have that
conversation with somebody who says that they are in this relationship with you to say, I need to
discuss something that's really important to me and I need to know some things, like where we
stand where I'm at, where you're at, so that we can find each other in this conversation.
But you first have to get it out of your head. What's the story I'm telling myself? Get it out.
Next is, what do I know to be true? And that truth is something that you get to choose.
Nobody gets to choose that for you. Remember? Number one is I get to decide that. They also don't
get to choose your truth. That's yours and yours alone. Okay? Number three,
If somebody is dismissing your feelings in some sense,
I want you to understand that when they are dismissing the feelings,
it's usually because one or two reasons.
One, they don't have the capacity for it,
or two, they deeply are feeling too dismissive of it.
So big feelings might make them shut down.
Big feelings might feel very scary to them.
Or there could certainly be shame involved where they don't want to accept the harm and feelings or pain or anxiety that they're causing you.
So whenever you feel like somebody is dismissing your feelings, I want you to be able to vocalize, vocalize that.
So let me give you one of the quickest ways, to me, one of the fastest ways to be able to share that thought.
Instead of that you never, you always, I want you to break it down into what they call in therapy are when you, I feel statements.
When you do this, I feel this.
Instead of you're dismissing my feelings, I want you to say, when you walk out in the middle of me sharing something important,
I feel like you don't care about what I talk about,
and my feelings don't matter to you.
You hear how you're taking it away from the defense of you
to a more controlled I, when you, I feel.
So that to me is a very first basic building block
because what you gave me was a lot of information
and what you're dealing with is not easy.
But I need you to know that you're not crazy.
All right?
I can't even say that
nobody gets to say that
aside from you. That's yours and yours alone.
All right? Thank you for the call.
When I was a young person,
I was in trouble, ended up in prison,
lost my kids, spent many years there, got out,
got a college degree, got my kids back,
moved forward with my life.
I'm almost 70 now.
The problem is that often people in my family
bring up my path
and it's
upsetting to me
I just don't know how to address it with them
and tell them that I don't want to hear it
anymore. It's over.
First off,
congratulations to you. Holy smokes.
What a story.
I know you just barely
hit the surface of that. What a story.
I can just only imagine
just the mountain that you had to climb.
The obstacles, the diversity,
of the obstacles, I mean, as diversity, adversity,
unless you're black, then.
Sorry.
Let me try it again.
Holy smokes, congratulations, first off.
What a story, a testimony to say,
look at what all I've been through and more,
and to now,
be at the age you are and overcome so much.
Because I know you just hit the highlights.
I mean, there's so much more depth I can tell to what you just said.
How do we deal with people who keep bringing up the past when it's not part of your present?
Here's the first thing I want you to consider.
We don't get today without all of that.
We don't get this without all of that.
You don't have your present personality.
all of that, that pain, those troubles, that period, that is part of you. You don't get you today
without all of that, all right, because it's led you to who you are today. So I want to put that there.
That doesn't take away from the fact that, yeah, I don't enjoy talking about it. I don't enjoy
being reminded about it. I understand that's separate. I just, I want to make sure that you know
deep in your heart that you don't get this without all of that. That's, that's,
that's part of you.
And I want you to take that as a strength rather than something to hide.
I want you to be, you don't have to be proud about it,
but you do own it because you get to live it.
And I think that's your honor and your privilege and your blessing to be able to say,
yes and.
You want to look at my past?
Yes, but let me tell you about my victory.
Look at where I am today.
That's incredible.
Okay, not everybody gets to tell that kind of story.
Now, let's move to two.
Man, it doesn't feel good to bring up when somebody keeps talking about it.
I don't blame you.
I don't blame me.
If I were you, I would not like it either.
So do we do.
It's going to require a separate conversation.
Not when it's happening.
We're going to get through it.
It's a separate conversation with that individual.
Okay.
And that conversation needs to sound like,
I need you to stop bringing up this. Be very specific about it because the past is part of you.
You need to be very specific if there's an element that really bothers you because it's easy to talk about stories or life because that's probably some of their life too.
And it overlaps and it's difficult because it bleeds into everything.
So the more specific you can be, the better is going to help them.
to say when you bring this up,
it really has a negative impact on me.
Okay?
I need you to not bring that up anymore.
So this is, let's put it in a boundary phrase.
All right, let's move to, so number two is you need to talk about it with them in a separate conversation.
So let's go into three of how do you have that conversation.
We're going to put up a very quick, easy, simple boundary.
And it goes, it would go like this.
I need you to not.
bring up, let's just call it my past for right now. I need you to not bring up that moment in my
past. If you continue to mention it, I'm not going to be able to come to this family function or
I'm going to need to take a step away. You need to decide for you. I can't decide it for you. You
need to decide what's going to be the consequence of them continuing to bring it up. It could be harsh.
It could be easy. Whatever it is, you need to say that. Thanks for the question.
