The Jordan Harbinger Show - 1240: Warned Not to Wed Wife, You Fear for Your Life | Feedback Friday
Episode Date: November 14, 2025You married her even after her father, her ex, and your friends warned you not to. Now she's threatening your life. Welcome to Feedback Friday!Full show notes and resources can be found here:... jordanharbinger.com/1240And in case you didn't already know it, Jordan Harbinger (@JordanHarbinger) and Gabriel Mizrahi (@GabeMizrahi) banter and take your comments and questions for Feedback Friday right here every week! If you want us to answer your question, register your feedback, or tell your story on one of our upcoming weekly Feedback Friday episodes, drop us a line at friday@jordanharbinger.com. Now let's dive in!On This Week's Feedback Friday:You fell hard for a woman with two kids, ignored warnings from her ex-husband and her own father, proposed anyway, and watched as disturbing behaviors escalated into actual death threats. Now you're stuck with a house you can't afford and guilt about abandoning her children. What should you do next?Your husband became a teacher to follow his passion for education, but now he's being physically assaulted by a student in his classroom — and the charter school administration is doing absolutely nothing to protect him. He's documenting everything, but should he sue, report to authorities, or just get out?Your late-70s parents refuse to sell their paid-off condo despite stairs they can barely climb and laundry facilities five minutes away. They cite property taxes and "hassle" as excuses while you watch them age in an increasingly dangerous environment. How do you convince them to move before it's too late?Recommendation of the Week: Anker Nano 3-in-1 Portable Charger/10,000mAh Power BankYou're 14 and caught COVID for the first time, but months later you're still exhausted — barely surviving high school while your perfectionism screams at you to keep achieving. Summer brought relief, but now school's back and so is the fatigue. Can you ever feel normal again, or is something deeper going on?Have any questions, comments, or stories you'd like to share with us? Drop us a line at friday@jordanharbinger.com!Connect with Jordan on Twitter at @JordanHarbinger and Instagram at @jordanharbinger.Connect with Gabriel on Twitter at @GabeMizrahi and Instagram @gabrielmizrahi.And if you're still game to support us, please leave a review here — even one sentence helps! Sign up for Six-Minute Networking — our free networking and relationship development mini course — at jordanharbinger.com/course!Subscribe to our once-a-week Wee Bit Wiser newsletter today and start filling your Wednesdays with wisdom!Do you even Reddit, bro? Join us at r/JordanHarbinger!This Episode Is Brought To You By Our Fine Sponsors: BetterHelp: 10% off first month: betterhelp.com/jordanBoll & Branch: 15% off first set of sheets: bollandbranch.com, code JORDANCovePure: $200 off: covepure.com/jordanLinkedIn Jobs: Post your job for free: linkedin.com/jordanSimpliSafe: 50% off + 1st month free: simplisafe.com/jordanSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Welcome to Feedback Friday. I'm your host, Jordan Harbinger. As always, I'm here with Feedback
Friday producer, the civilian and vermilion, Gabriel Mizrahi. On the Jordan Harbinger show,
we decode the stories, secrets and skills of the world's most fascinating people, and turn their
wisdom into practical advice that you can use to impact your own life and those around you.
Our mission is to help you become a better informed, more critical thinker, and during the
week we have long-form conversations with a variety of amazing folks, from organized crime
figures, rocket scientists, astronauts, and music moguls. This week we had Rezwan Verk on whether
or not we are living in a simulation. He's a former video game developer who explains how computers
could actually simulate our entire world and even us. He talks about whether we ourselves
might just be an actual simulation, not just in a simulation, we are the simulation. And this conversation
is very non-pothead Reddeter kind of way. Don't worry. You're not going to have to roll a blunt
beforehand in order to enjoy it. Gabe and I also interviewed Ken Burns,
legendary documentarian and historian. We talked about his new documentary, the American
Revolution about the world-changing impact of the founding of America. We also talked about
his unique philosophy of storytelling, how he stays committed to a subject for decades,
how he sees this particular moment in American history, and how his early experiences
drove him to dedicate his career to reviving the dead. A truly fascinating guy with a lot
to say. We had a great conversation with him. And finally, we did a
skeptical Sunday last Sunday on light pollution. On Fridays, though, we share stories, take listener
letters, offer advice, play obnoxious soundbites, and refuse to let Gabe live down his most humiliating
sartorial tragedy. We do. We do do that. Yes. Gabe, you're back in L.A. I'm home. What a weird
transition after all the hippie circles and Baltic cruises and German floor mattresses. Yeah,
it is a little surreal, but overall, so nice. I'm at my mom's house right now. As you can see,
I'm sleeping in my sister's old bedroom, which is now the guest room.
And it is so nice.
I did need a break after all the moving around.
You know how it is.
Yeah, I do know how it is.
There's nothing like coming home after being on the road for a while.
And that week, week and a half, we did on the East Coast for interviews.
When I came home and I got to see my wife and kids, I was like, oh, I miss this.
I can't even imagine five months away.
Well, I mean, I can because I've done years away before, but that was different.
It's funny, though.
It doesn't feel like five months somehow.
It feels shorter to you?
Yeah, I think so.
What about you?
I don't know.
I guess it feels like five months, but like so much life was packed into those five months that they kind of feel like a year.
Yes. So I don't know if it's time dilation. It kind of is. So if you ask me how long I was living in the former East Germany in the 90s, I would say 10 months because I know that it was 10 months.
But if you ask me how much development I had during that 10 months, I mean, every couple months was honestly like a year.
Because it was like the first three months. I didn't speak any German. I was really homesick. I kind of hated it.
it didn't match up to my expectation.
The second three months, I was learning German rapidly.
I was making friends rapidly.
I switched classes.
I did a whole bunch of stuff, found hobbies, really enjoyed, you know, what I was doing.
The last four months, it was like, I live here now.
I speak German conversationally.
I'm friends with all these people that call me all the time and I have girlfriends and stuff.
You know, it was just like completely.
And then I came back home and I was like, yeah, I've been gone for forever.
And people were like, oh yeah, you were gone.
Yeah, yeah.
How was that?
And I was like, dude, what did you do?
And they're like, you know, like, drove around and like hung out.
And I'm like, God, I didn't miss anything.
It's like interstellar, the movie.
You know how when they go to the other planet and the time is different so they can only
stay there for a few minutes because it's like years back home.
Yes.
Or vice versa.
I always forget.
Yeah.
It's kind of like that when you travel.
It is, but especially when you really sit somewhere and you're doing your own thing.
And also, I guess I'll never know the answer to this.
But since this was kind of pre-peak internet, like I had AOL, but I didn't have sky.
That didn't exist.
You couldn't do voiceover IP, or at least I don't think you could.
There was something called dial pad.
I'm not sure if that was working or existing.
But really, you couldn't do much with the internet, right?
Email.
I remember my host father was like, I got a mobile phone for you so you can text me and tell me where you are.
And I never took it.
He's like, take the damn phone.
I was like, I hate it.
I hate carrying it.
And it's funny because now, like, I would never leave home without my phone.
But he's like, can you take the freaking?
I remember he would be like, take the freaking phone and send me a text and stop calling me from pay phones.
and being like, yeah, I think I'm on these cross streets.
Like, just take the damn phone.
He's like, if I call this thing in my kitchen rings again, I'm going to be pissed off.
It's like, this is like back then, and you're just like, I don't need it.
Why do I need to call anybody from outside?
You know, it's just like, I never had, I just had a phone card.
I used it like once a week.
Now, though, I meet people abroad.
And I'm like, what are you doing?
They're like, oh, I'm studying abroad.
And I'm like, oh, okay, what do you think about it?
And they're like in the Czech Republic, talking with their friends on FaceTime and English,
posting crap.
up on their Instagram, answering DMs, having a call with their mom over breakfast.
And I'm like, it's not the same.
You're kind of on a weird extended vacation because you're maintaining all your friendships,
you're maintaining all your relationships.
And one of the things they told us on our exchange was to not forget about your friends back
home, but like, don't try.
They were kind of like that.
It sounds like a nexium orientation session.
Where are your family now?
Yeah.
Forget about them.
It really was kind of like that because it was like, don't try and maintain your relationships
with all your homeboys or your girls back in Michigan,
what you should be focused on is your life in Germany.
Like, you're not going home soon.
School drama is irrelevant to you.
Friend circle drama is irrelevant to you.
Your boyfriend, girlfriend, sorry, bro, irrelevant to you.
And it was like just the sooner you realize this,
the less you're going to be homesick,
the less you're going to feel like you're out of sync with everything,
and the more you're going to quicker you're going to adapt.
And it was easy for me because I was kind of like,
my girlfriend and I was just like, whatever, you're going to college.
and then my best friends, they were so bad at keeping in touch that I gave up really early
because I was like, these guys don't give a crap.
And honestly, when I came back, they were like, oh, hey, bro.
It made it easy to go to college because I was like, these guys don't give two shits.
Wow.
It was a little bit sad, but I also kind of get it.
They got into, like, drugs and stuff, and they were like really into selling them.
And I was like, guys, I want a future, so good luck.
Bye.
So when I came back and they weren't interested, my parents and I were like, it's fine.
And they ended up getting in major trouble for that later.
But I digress.
The reason that travel feels so different pre-internet is because of that.
And I think you could probably do it now.
You just have to very consciously be like, all right, I'm off social media or I'm limiting
social media to when I'm super bored or like homesick only or like one hour a week,
whatever it is.
You can't carry around your mobile and be like dicking around on Instagram all the
time and answering all your DMs and texting all your friends constantly.
It's just it's not going to work.
You're going to be torn in different directions.
And that's without even getting into the impact it's going to have on learning the
local language. Totally, yeah, with also all the tools you have to translate and everything. Yeah.
It's fascinating. The technology allows you to be in multiple places at once, which was not
possible until recently. It's also not ideal for adapting to a new place, permanent, semi-permanently.
Right. You're sort of depriving yourself of the joy of doing a thing like this, but,
man, I don't know if you felt like this in Germany, but on these travels the last couple months,
I was like, I know I'm going to be home at some point in the fall, but it just kept receding.
Like, they just kept, I felt like Odysseus toward the end there. It was just like slowly making
my way back home, new things kept popping up and waylaying me. There would be like a cool
invitation to go here, come to New York and visit me, the interviews we did in New York, like,
an old friend wants to have lunch and I'll stay for another couple days, you know, just kept going
and going and I was like, I'm never actually going to go home. That's right. Distracted by the
siren song of podcasting. I became a bit of a lotus eater at a certain point, you know,
just lost in a dream of Finnish forests and forgetfulness. The Odyssey. Is that the story where he's
got a bag with all the winds in it. Yes, that's the one. He's supposed to let out the gentle wind so he can
get home. And then all the winds they escape or something and he's lost at sea for like a decade or
whatever. Yes, his men think that there's treasure in the bag, so they open it and then they let out
all the winds and they're lost again. Right. That's me inviting you to interview Bill Macy and Ken Burns
and be feedback Friday in a freaking hotel room and Manhattan. Totally. You are my mythical bag of
wind, my friend. I am a wind bag. I mean, you know, if the shoe fits. Indeed. All right. But this is
not the end of your travels. No, no, no, I'm just here for three weeks, and then I'm off to Japan.
Jealous slash ridiculous. Should be cool. I'm actually going, did I tell you this? I'm going with
Aaron Margolis for the first two weeks. Dr. Aaron Margolis? The fucking doctor. That's right. Man, I wish I could
meet up with you guys and quite jealous. I'm going to be... It's going to be fun, yeah. I'm going to be
busy in Patagonia. Boo-hoo. So Aaron is one of my... I don't know if you guys know this. Aaron is one of my oldest
friends. So it's going to be really special to be in Japan with her. And it's her first time in Japan. And
actually, I think it's her first time in Asia. So I'm very excited to see her mind get blown.
Time to take her to eat at 7-Eleven. We've already talked about that, actually. For people who are
grossed out by that, basically at a 7-Eleven in Japan, you can get a SIM card for your phone,
get your dry cleaning done, get a pretty darn good, decent meal, not like what you would get here,
like a hot dog with hair in it. You can get like a lottery ticket, a beer, a
memory card for your computer and milk. I mean, like, the stuff you can get at a 7-Eleven in Asia
is kind of like a CVS in America plus a dry cleaner, plus a grocery store, plus a ruster. It's just
insane. And it's still, it's all so tiny, like a gas station, it's just everything is in there,
everything. The other thing I love about 7-Elevens in Japan, one of the few places with a trash can.
So if you ever have, you know how you have to carry your trash with you in Japan?
I did not know about that. Yeah, they don't have trash cans anywhere because they don't want people
creating waste, like by bringing a ton of stuff with packaging or whatever, and then they don't
want people dropping it on the floor, I guess, or whatever. So there's just no trash cans wherever you go.
So you just put the trash in your pocket and go home. Yep. Ridiculous. Pretty much. Or maybe you
bring it to work and they have trash cans at work, but we're not there for work, so we don't have those.
Perks.
Perks. Free lunch and a trash can so you can drop your garbage. They don't advertise this, but I realized
it the last time I went. So whenever you have a bunch of wrappers in your pocket or coffee teacup or
whatever and you don't know what to do. You just pop in a 7-Eleven. It's so great.
That's, this is weird. Well, we're going to need some stories. You guys are going to do some
feedback Friday consults while you're there or what? That's all we're doing, actually. No kabuki,
no-sex shows. Just straight feedback Friday consoles for two weeks. Bummer, no sex shows.
That's what I like to hear. If you're going to Odysseus around the world with our star psychologist,
I want to know, I want to know it's a dues cruise. But, you know, throw in a sex show, bro.
So what's the plan? Tokyo, Hakone, Kyoto, Osaka, Osaka, and Mavis
and Mount Koya. That's the part with Aaron, and then we'll see. Yeah, that's awesome. After that,
I don't know, I might stay in Japan for a bit. I might hop somewhere else. I'm kind of making it up
as I go once again. Footloose and fancy free, man. Oh, and if anyone listening lives in any of these
cities, please email me or DM me on Instagram. I would love to meet up with you. We might also do
a listener meet up in Tokyo or Kyoto or Osaka if we have some show family in those cities. So, yeah,
if you're around, hit me up. I would love to meet you guys. Jen will also be in Japan for part of that.
Oh, yeah.
You guys can hang out.
I got to write her.
Yeah, absolutely.
And I will try to post a bunch and I'll, yeah, I'm going to tell you about all the funny
stuff that happens, you know.
Maybe I'll FaceTime you from a hot spring.
Yeah, there you go.
Thank you.
I never felt more like Penelope.
That's what is he's his wife, right?
On FaceTime.
That's hilarious.
Waving a burial shroud out of listener letters while you're off at sea.
Then unraveling it at night so you can delay having to bury a new co-host.
This is the weirdest Greek epic ever.
Speaking of crazy myths, we got some fun.
ones, we got some doozies. Let's dive in. What is the first thing out of the mailbag?
Happy Friday, Jordan, and Gabe. I was in a relationship with a beautiful lady about my age,
and she brought two wonderful kids into the mix. Let's call her Jessica. Okay, he chose this name,
Gabe. I don't want any flack. I knew you were going to jump on this. This is all him, I swear.
Jessica's don't at me. I wonder if you went with Jessica because he knows that it gets us into
trouble. I think people are doing it on purpose by now. It's kind of funny, actually. We enjoyed a
mostly happy life up until my eyes were open to some unusual disturbing behavior from her.
Ooh, man, the dues cruise is hitting choppy water already. This is the emotional equivalent of that
Baltic cruise you took a few weeks ago. Grab your dromamine, Papa. Let's get into this. Yeah,
double dose. I knew she came from a troubled past, a narcissistic father and ex-husband.
Her father married the lady he cheated on her mom with. Her mother was then remarried to a wonderful
man, who I looked up to. Her ex was a grandiose,
narcissist, cheated on her constantly, and caused many rifts with her, the kids, and the rest of the
family. It seemed she was following the same story as her mom, meeting a well-off kind man
after a troubled marriage. We hit it off almost immediately. For our first meetup, she offered to
come over to my house. I was honored that she trusted me so soon, but this also felt odd.
Yeah, interesting data point. I also met the kids within a few weeks, which felt a little
quick to me. I was joining them on an emotional journey after a divorce and saw much of the
impulsive, abusive behavior their father gave them. She didn't hold back on sharing everything about
the process. When he and I met, he said he liked me and said I should run. He went on to say that
she is manipulative and self-centered. Holy smokes, that must have been quite a conversation,
but it's also like, you're a terrible person, maybe spare me. You know what, though? This is alarming
even if you think he's lying and trying to poison the well now that they think about it. Because on the one hand, it's like,
okay, you're a grandiose narcissist who's divorcing this person. You'll say anything. But on the other hand,
well, I don't know. I think we can guess where the story's going. My family and friends didn't get good
vibes from her, and I ignored their feedback. I noticed strange behavior from her, including mood swings,
impulsive purchasing, blurting things out, picking a fight for the sake of making up, and so on.
This sounds like a Dr. Scott Lyons case study. Remember the addiction to drama?
on top of what it sounds like other mental health challenges.
He's episode 836, by the way.
He's a friend of mine.
His book is called addicted to drama.
And this is what people,
they pick fights for the sake of making up
is one of the things.
By the way, Gabriel, I know you're with me on this.
How annoying would that particular behavior be?
Like, I don't like fighting.
So to fight about something that's fake
so that you can get like positive attention from me,
oh my God, I would put up with that for once or twice
and then I'm out.
I am out.
It's hard for me to even write.
my head around being in a relationship with someone like that. Yeah. It's pretty disturbing. So he goes on,
all this felt odd, but given what she and her kids were going through, I gave her tons of grace and
support. Yeah, man, it's tough to hear about in retrospect. So I'm guessing you know this now,
but none of what you're describing is, it's not odd. It's more than that. These are red flags,
especially when you start looking at them all put together. But I get it. When you can't see something
clearly, it can sometimes just register as a little weird as opposed to like, terrifying and
good reason to run in the opposite direction as quickly as possible.
Before the holidays a few years ago, her friend called and suggested that I proposed to her
after a year and a half of dating.
Her friend suggested you, I...
Are you thinking she told her friend to tell him to propose?
Yeah, that's exactly what I'm thinking.
Because that's so weird.
Like, would you ever do that for someone?
No, you would never be like, hey, you should propose to so-and-so.
That's just a weird high school.
That's like, you should ask out Jamie.
She likes you.
Why are you telling me this, Nina?
Why are you talking to me about this?
I was excited to propose.
I've never been engaged or married before.
I was all in on these three,
and I couldn't wait to spend the rest of my life with them.
When I asked Jessica's father for her hand in marriage,
he exploded at me for 20 minutes,
trying to convince me not to do this.
Oh, God.
Dude, her own father was telling you not to marry her,
screaming at you to run for the hills.
This is...
Do you know how bad you have to be
for your own parent to this?
tell your future spouse run, like run for the hills. Yeah, I mean, look, there are bad parents and
stuff, but like, this is insane. This is the second time somebody close to her has said this.
When the ex told him to get out and he ignored him, okay, I got it, you know. And I know her dad's
cut from the similar claws, so it's not inconceivable that everyone's ganged up on her and treats her poorly.
Right. But when two people in someone's life tell you not to get involved with them,
I think you at least got to go, huh, what's that all about? Maybe I'll slow things.
down just a little bit and see if there's anything to this. This is wild. My goodness. But I stood my
ground, told him I would love her forever and support her. He begrudgingly gave me his blessing.
I bought a big ring and took her on vacation for her first Christmas away from the kids. Her
ex had custody for that period. I planned to propose on Christmas Day, but after seeing how down
she was, I waited until the next day. After an elaborate dinner, I got down on one knee and she said,
sure, okay.
That's the reaction you went when you bust out the ring and propose.
Yeah.
Fine.
Will you merge your family with mine and spend the rest of your life with me?
All right.
That's for lunch.
Sure.
So this maybe supports the idea that she knew this was coming.
Yeah.
Zero surprise.
Like, okay, I obviously saw this coming because I thought it would happen earlier because
I told Jenny to call you two months ago.
That's not the full story, though, because even if you knew it was coming,
if you want to marry this person, you should still be happy, right?
But she was already down.
about something else because she's got mental health issues.
We spent the rest of the evening taking pictures and having a night out on the town,
and she was very indifferent about it and remained so for the rest of the trip.
Even buying a house with her was anticlimactic.
I typically got feedback from her that felt like you should have done these things long ago,
or what, should I be impressed, you want a cookie or something?
Something always felt wrong, living with her,
and her inconsistent, mixed signals and confusing behavior always left me in survival.
survival mode, and I was constantly emotionally exhausted.
Even if you can't read specific red flags correctly, that something feels wrong here kind of feeling,
you got to pay attention to that in life.
It could mean any number of things.
Doesn't always mean the situation is doomed, but if you're feeling that way, there's a reason,
and you got to slow down and listen to it.
Then, earlier this year, she nonchalantly told me, if you leave me, I will kill you.
What?
That's actually really scary.
How do you respond it?
Like, good to know.
Okay, noted.
Thank you, sweetie. What the hell?
It didn't feel like much. I asked her what she meant by that, and she said it was nothing.
Yeah, it didn't feel like much. If you leave me, I will kill you.
Yeah, no big deal. Just threatening your life if you don't stick with her.
And also, what's the context of that? Like, pass the mashed potatoes, aren't these delicious?
By the way, if you leave me, I will kill you. This is so weird.
It's like, girl, I just gave you a ring.
Yeah.
What else do you want?
Not planning on leaving you.
Kind of the opposite. By the way, you didn't care when I did make that promise earlier, but cool.
Later on, on a family vacation, we had just had the best day of the trip, fishing with the kids,
spending an afternoon on the beach, and finishing the day at the resort pool. The kids were swimming,
I had just gotten us a pair of cocktails, and I sat next to her. All of a sudden, out of the blue,
a seriously terrifying look came into her eyes. Her face turned white, and she said, in a terrifying
voice, if you leave me, I will kill you.
Sorry, I'm not supposed to laugh at these, but it is a horror movie. This is some bunny boiler-ish, man.
Until that point, I had pumped all my love and everything else I had into the three of them and would never, ever leave them.
I don't mean to be cruel, but this woman is nuts, man, straight up.
I started planning an exit, should things get worse.
Probably a good idea.
I discussed it with family and friends, and we put a strategy in place.
I bounced this plan off of two lawyers and mental health professionals, and all of them told me that I didn't know what kind of danger I was in,
that I was making the right choice to protect my life and my peace.
This is like domestic abuse stuff, right?
You just don't, you don't say that out of the blue
and then never do anything horrible.
My therapist asked me to read,
Stop Walking on Eggshells,
and it helped to validate my feelings
and identify her behavior as narcissism
and borderline personality disorder.
That tracks. Great book.
We plugged that on the show a bunch.
It's changed a lot of people's lives.
Holy smokes, though, this woman.
Damn.
For the next few weeks, her behavior intensified,
and I became more and more concerned.
She gave me a third equally intense threat out of the blue, and I knew it was time to get out of there.
My family and I picked a day in July of this year to make the getaway when she was taking the kids to her parents a few hours away.
Every time I thought about the kids, I would attempt to cancel, but then I remembered why we were where we were, and I stuck with the plan.
That whole week I was anxious and struggled to keep my composure. I could barely even eat.
Once I saw that they were at the house, I made the call and met my family at our house to pack my stuff.
I killed the internet to shut off the cameras.
Smart.
She still saw what was going on.
She had a redundant internet connection in the house.
Oh my God, dude.
This is...
So she had an internet connection, which you didn't even know about.
So not only was she creating a redundant internet connection for God knows what reason,
maybe this exact reason.
She was also proactively checking the cameras.
I forgot about that part.
Proactively checking the cameras in the house.
while she was away to see what you were up to, like deliberately.
Oh, my God.
She continued to call and text while we were packing.
Even the kids were calling.
Meaning she made the kids call, of course.
Pull on those heartstrings.
Once I got on the road and calmed down,
I called her with my work phone and recorded the conversation.
Her demeanor could best be described as the Sharon Stone interview scene from basic instinct.
And it was disturbing.
Don't make any rules, Nick.
I go with the flow.
I reflect back on her last marriage and wonder exactly how much did she contribute to the toxicity of that relationship.
Yeah.
Good question.
That guy sounds like a piece of work too, but I think it's very likely they were both a hot mess.
My God.
We were never married and didn't meet the standards of common law marriage in our state of Texas, so there was nothing to settle.
But we did buy that house together with all of my equity and savings, splitting the mortgage.
I make substantially more than her, so she reimbursed me for a third of the mortgage.
She and her parents are proposing that I allow her and the kids to stay in the house until April or May of next year.
New.
While I pay the mortgage and she pays the utilities.
Double new.
Neither of us can afford to live in the house on our own, so this poses a financial problem for me, as I just got laid off.
I'm staying with a buddy for cheap rent and am unable to move on.
I pled my case to her, and her stance is that I chose to leave and should bear the brunt of this as a result.
No.
Her mom and stepfather are extremely well off.
could support her and her kids, but are reluctant to do so.
Wonder why.
I told her that the money is not there to support her plan,
and we must act urgently to get her and the kids into a new place before the holidays.
She also works a mostly full-time job, not making much,
so I feel deep down that I'm putting them in a precarious situation,
and I feel much guilt over this.
After all, the kids and I had a wonderful relationship,
and I feel like a failure to them,
being the second man to walk out on them.
Oh, man, I have so many thoughts, but I'll hold off for now. This is very intense.
Looking back on the past four years, I now see so many red flags, the impulsive behavior,
her educating me about narcissistic behavior only to use the same tactics on me,
her trash talking me behind my back, my people and her father and ex warning me about her.
She also made it extremely difficult to have conversations about my needs and other difficult
but essential topics by shutting the conversation down, gaslighting me, or shaming me for bringing
things up while insert calamity of the week was going on. She often made me feel like I had narcissistic
tendencies. When I ask for feedback from family, friends, and my therapist, they say, yes, I do have
some of these qualities, as I'm an energetic, motivated person who loves to lead people, but that I don't
have the qualities that are damaging to other people. Dude, so much going on here. Am I right to feel this way?
Well, which way?
Unclear, I think he means guilty about leaving her and the kids to fend for themselves and
like angry at her for all of this.
I got it.
I mean, so his whole view of the relationship, probably, right?
Yes, I think so.
Am I handling this correctly?
What options do I have to settle the house before Q2 of next year that would leave both of us
in a comfortable situation?
Signed, trying my best to refill and stay on top of my bills when my ex threatened to kill
after I neglected to run for the hills.
I need a minute because that was a ride.
Not drama mean kicking in yet?
I got to take, I gotta pop another one.
I am sea sick.
All right, where to begin?
I'm very sorry that you went through all this.
This is awful.
Everything you've described sounds incredibly stressful, upsetting,
terrifying, destabilizing, sad.
I can't even imagine what the last few years have been like for you, man.
My heart is pounding over here.
I wasn't even in this relationship.
Man, the things you've been through.
But honestly, despite all of the disturbing stuff
your ex did, I kind of feel bad for her.
Hear me out.
This woman obviously had some very significant trauma, probably tied to the narcissistic father.
God knows what else.
You don't end up, you don't threaten to kill your fiance if he leaves you if you don't
have some serious wounds.
Personality disorders, if that's what's going on here, which it sure sounds like it is,
they're kind of all caused by trauma in one form or another, right?
Now, she obviously has a responsibility to address all this stuff.
It doesn't sound like she's doing that, but I do feel for her to some.
degree. I'm also aware, and you are too, which I'm glad to hear, that you chose this partner,
you stuck with her, you overlooked a lot of red flags, you participated in this relationship.
It's very clear that she brought a lot of dysfunction and chaos into your relationship.
But you also co-created this situation with her, if only by putting up with it and advancing
your relationship when there were some really darn good reasons to take a huge step back
or just get out entirely. And why you did that, that's now your work to do.
do. We just have to acknowledge that too. So, yeah, as you can tell, I think you're absolutely right
to feel this way about your ex. And getting out, as anxiety provoking as that was, I definitely
think that was the right move. It is super sad that you had to secretly pack your things and leave while
she was out of the house, that you didn't get to explain this to the kids and have a proper goodbye.
As much as I think your ex is a bit of a loony tune, that must have been painful for those kids.
But when a person with a track record of mental health issues is saying, if you leave me,
I will kill you. I don't know what other option you have. You have to leave. Agreed. I just, I don't think
it's out of the realm of possibility that she would have snapped and tried to stab you in the kitchen one night
or something. It sucks, but I get it. Yeah. Basically what I'm saying is your anger, your shock,
you're hurt and you're disgust, all of it. It all makes perfect sense to me. What I'm not so sure about,
well, it's complicated, but I'm not so sure about the guilt you feel about abandoning her kids.
like I said, I think it's pretty clear she's primarily responsible for blowing up the relationship
and depriving her kids of a solid stepdad because she wants the house. And these are her kids.
She needs to figure out how to support these kids. Yeah, with their father's help. I mean,
that's their responsibility. Once she made it impossible for you to safely stay, they're just
not your responsibility anymore. Yeah, but I'm also keeping in mind, like you just said,
he did choose to get involved with her, right? He went along with this accelerated timeline where
He met the kids very quickly and he developed a relationship with them and they went on vacations together.
He proposed to her.
I mean, their whole plan was to be a family.
I hear you.
He agreed to be their stepdad.
They were becoming a family.
Gabe, maybe I'm just super cynical.
Do we think maybe she escalated things super quickly because she wanted to put him in that position as fast as possible?
I mean, she is manipulative and crazy.
It's possible.
Anyway, given the stark facts here, all the ways that your ex failed to take care of herself, be a healthy partner, treat you well, make this
relationship successful, not threatened to murder you if you leave, et cetera. I don't think the
guilt is entirely warranted, man, but at the same time, I do get why you feel it. So my hope for you
is that this guilt starts to evolve a little bit. Maybe over time it'll become something closer to
sadness for those kids. I do think that's appropriate because it is sad. Their mom drove away the
best male presence that are probably ever going to have in their life. Their grandpa sucks, their dad sucks,
and you don't get to be in their lives anymore. But that's different from feeling entirely
responsible for them and for this whole debacle, which is what produces this guild. And now you're
putting yourself in a terrible position because of them. And that sense of responsibility, which might
go back quite a long way, might be one of the things that explains how he ended up in this relationship.
Generally speaking, I think we both feel that you're handling this correctly at this point,
mostly by getting out and protecting yourself. That had to be priority number one. And the way
that you've sought out friends and colleagues, lawyers, and a therapist, that is all terrific. I think
that's crucial. I'm glad you're surrounding yourself with this kind of counsel. Despite
everything we're saying about your ex, I do think you have a lot of important work to do now
on doing the full post-mortem on this relationship. Figuring out how you ended up here,
how your own history played a role in all of this, how you responded to your ex along the way,
why it was so hard to clock these signs and understand what they mean. The trauma that you have
been through in this relationship, because you have been through some stuff, all of that.
You haven't shared a ton about your own therapy here, but I would say that this processing
needs to be a big part of how you're quote-unquote handling this. As for the question of the
house, the best advice I can give you there is talk to a family lawyer slash divorce attorney,
talk to an accountant, get a real estate agent, let them guide you. I don't know what you owe your
ex and her kids legally speaking. It sounds like not much. If you still need to sell this house
and you're the only one in the deed, which I'm praying you are, then put it on the market
and keep moving forward. Again, I'm no divorce lawyer, but I'm pretty sure allowing them to live
there is a huge mistake. They could refuse to move out. Then you've got squatters or some sort of
weird forced tenant relationship that doesn't cover your costs. This is going to get a lot
messier. And I think that she's counting on that, honestly. And meanwhile, her parents could support
all of them, but they want him to let her live in the house he paid for practically rent free.
That's not right. Yes, this is a terrible situation for him. It's clear that the parents are like,
hey, we can get this sucker to subsidize their life and then we don't have to pay for them.
What do we care if he ends up on the hook for all their expenses because they live in his
house. They don't care about you, man. And it gives me no pleasure to point out that you are allowing
this to happen. There's just one more thing we need to talk about here, which is this narcissism piece.
Yeah, there's so much narcissism in this story. So much. I know that word gets thrown around a lot,
but his ex's dad has it. The ex has it. Our friend thinks she has it. And she's saying that he
has it. Everybody's on, everybody narcissizing. But he's going, my family, my friends, my therapist,
they're all saying I have some qualities that are narcissistic. I'm energetic. I'm motivated. I
love to lead people, but I'm not a capital N narcissist. Right. I'm not a malignant narcissist. So he feels
that his narcissism, if it exists, is more of the healthy variety, or it's at least like benign.
Benign, yeah, which, look, that could totally be the case. We only have his story to go on here,
of course, so there's that. But I'm not hearing anything that screams NPD in the letter.
I don't think I am either. And yet, as you keep pointing out, his stuff did intersect with her stuff,
right, in all sorts of ways. And I do wonder if some of his narcissism, which I want to
be very clear. I'm not talking about the narcissism that we all have, not like a malignant narcissism.
His narcissism might be more pronounced than in other people, even if it's not dangerous. And it might
have still played a role in their relationship. Interesting. How so? Well, I guess I'm speculating
and reading between the lines here, so I could be off. But it might have made him want to play the
savior for this woman and her kids. That sense of responsibility that we just talked about might
plug into this narcissism in some way, it might feed it. It might have made it very difficult for him
to consider giving up this source of gratification and validation if he were to leave. It might have been
hard for him to cut his losses sooner because, you know, like recognizing his flaws and mistakes
and getting involved with her might have been too wounding or too shameful. It might have made it
hard for him to hear her father and her ex when they told him to run. Even this leadership quality of
his, which is a virtue in so many ways, that might have given him, I don't know, maybe an inflate
sense of his own power to make this very difficult, untenable relationship ultimately succeed.
Until literally his life is threatened and he's like, actually, maybe I'm a little bit
above my pay grade here.
Which is kind of the ultimate narcissistic injury.
Yeah, I could see that.
So I tread lightly or I really do.
I'm not trying to pathologize qualities that might be mostly great, especially in, you know,
professional context.
But this narcissism exists in all of us.
And if we're talking about tendencies that are narcissistic, then these might be some
good ones to look at right now.
You know, now that we're talking about this, Gabe, he said something else early on that
I'm now hearing in a new way.
It was that part where he said, it seems she was following the same story as her mom,
meeting a well-off kind man after a troubled marriage.
Like, I'm the hero.
I'm Captain Savahoe over here.
Did you just say Captain Savahoe?
You never heard that?
It's like when you try and rescue someone.
And the other meme is you see somebody who's like actually crazy like on Reddit, like she's
jumping on the hood of a car and smashing the windshield with her bare fists and like the
top comment is always.
can fix her.
Wow.
Captain Savahoe on the dues cruise
over here.
That's right.
Yep.
That might explain a few things.
So I think it's pretty clear our friend here is kind.
He did a lot of kind things, especially for these kids, as far as we know.
And I'm guessing, look, I'll take his word for it that he is or he was well off.
I mean, he did have enough money to buy a house, although later he said he was having financial
problems, so I'm a little confused about that.
He did get laid off.
That can, you know, that stings.
That puts a dent in the pocketbook.
But is there something vaguely narcissistic about that narrative too?
Like she was going to do the same thing her mom did, get out of an awful relationship, and start one with me.
A great guy who's well off and super nice.
I don't know.
Yeah.
Fair question.
The detail stands out to me now, extra.
It's like his conceptualization of the relationship and the narrative that he, yeah, I could see that there's a glimmer of narcissism somewhere in there.
I'm also curious about how he heard some of the things she said.
Remember when he was like, I typically got feedback from her that felt like you should have done these things a long time ago.
or what should I be impressed, you want a cookie or something?
Yeah, good point.
Did those go through a narcissistic lens as well?
I don't know.
I don't know, but he's not saying that she actually said those things.
He's saying that it felt like that's what she was saying,
which, look, who knows?
Maybe she was saying those things.
I mean, if her response to the proposal was any indication, I wouldn't be too surprised.
But it might also be good for him to reflect on how he interpreted those words and that behavior,
because I have to imagine that these statements also went through the lens of his beliefs,
his self-concepts, his life experience, and yes, perhaps this narcissism, and they either failed to
chime with what he believed to be true of himself, so he's like, no, I got to prove her wrong,
or they revealed some tender spots underneath this narcissism, and that might have equated to
what you want a cookie?
That description did strike me as a little, I don't know, editorialized somehow.
I mean, you know, the ego is a powerful editor, right?
So whether she really meant those things or not, maybe that motivated him to prove her wrong,
There's something in there for him to consider.
Solid theory.
Look, we can't know for sure.
I think maybe there's something to that.
All part of the post-relationship work that I think he needs to be doing.
We could talk about this for the rest of the episode.
This was a saga.
But I hope that gives you a few new angles here, man.
I think you did the right thing in getting out.
I think your read on all this is generally correct.
I also think you had to have this relationship in order to learn some crucial stuff about yourself.
And if you do, then you'll avoid a relationship like this again.
It only become a better leader in human being.
I'm sorry things went down this way.
I'm sorry that you lost your job.
I'm sorry about the house stress.
But I know you'll solve these more tactical problems one way or the other.
In the meantime, it's all learning.
Take care of yourself, bud, and good luck.
Gabe, I really think they're pushing guilt on him to get him to leave them the house, right?
Like, this is your fault for leaving me, so now you have to make it right.
It's like, no, you threaten to kill me.
I don't owe you anything.
Certainly not the ability to live in my house essentially rent-free with your kids.
I think this is a manipulative trick
because she knows he feels bad
she's like I'm just going to keep poking that
because I need a place to live
and this guy's going to pay for it
even though it's not good for him.
Sadly, you might be right.
Yeah, it really looks like that to me.
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Feedback Friday. What's next? Hi guys. My husband is a teacher working toward his certification. He didn't
get a degree in teaching. Instead, he did a post-education program to become a teacher after he didn't
like the jobs he was getting with a marketing degree. He's passionate about education and has poured
his heart into this career. But right now, he's being physically assaulted by a student in his
classroom. These aren't isolated incidents. They've happened multiple times. The student was kicked out
of three different schools last year. He did the right thing and reported it to the principal, but he was
basically told, tough luck. No action from the school, no support, nothing. It's like they expect
him to just absorb the hits and keep teaching. He feels as though he's not getting taken seriously.
If that's true, that is super uncool. That is wild. Sorry this kid is slowly escalating to shiving you in the
cafeteria, but you have testosterone, so you're on your own, my man? Seriously, I mean, women also have
testosterone, but I know what you're trying to say. Sorry, Mr. Thompson, but we all know bullets
hurt less when you're a dude. Maybe start taking, take Krav Maga that you can't use on a student
because you're not allowed to fight back, and focus on your lesson plan. Unbelievable. He works
at a charter school, so there's no union. The worst part is he's terrified that if he escalates this,
maybe by calling the police, he'll get fired. With no other schools hiring in our area in Michigan,
that could derail his entire certification process.
He's so close to finishing those required hours and years,
but at what cost to his safety?
It feels like he's trapped between protecting himself
and saving his dream job.
Are there any real strategies available to us?
Are there any legal protections
or ways to document this without blowing up his future?
Could you share any advice,
or even just point us toward resources for teachers
who are in this bind?
Signed, debating whether to dwell and quell,
yell and raise hell, or just wait for the bell without sounding the death now.
For a career, my guy loves well.
This is crazy, man.
It's crazy what teachers are expected to put up within this day and age and still teach.
Yeah, sorry, your pays crap.
We're going to allow this kid to assault you, something that would never be allowed,
literally anywhere else in society.
You can't do that.
Good point.
I didn't even think about that.
Imagine if you just went to an office job and there was a guy who would like punch you in
the face every fifth day and they're like, yeah, it's just part of the job.
Sorry.
Why?
You can literally face criminal consequences.
if you are an MMA fighter fighting another MMA fighter and you punch them or do something wrong
at the wrong time. That is still criminal assault. If you're a boxer and you bite someone or you
kick them, it's criminal assault. But if you do it in a school, it's, well, sorry. Yeah, no, she's a
tough cookie. You really got to watch out for her. She's a biter. She'll claw your eyes out. What
planet am I on? But it's also because they're children. But the problem is that putting this off
and not doing anything is also doing a disservice to this kid. He either needs to live with a
consequences of what he's doing to his teacher or he needs serious intervention, but instead they're
just letting him remain in the classroom and cause mayhem, so nobody's getting served. Exactly.
How did this kid even end up getting into this charter school? This is insane. Also, Gabe,
I wonder if the student's a girl? We don't know, right? That's interesting. Yeah, she's not
clarifying that, but I assumed it was a boy. I know just because of the violence, but also it's like,
if a male student assaults a teacher, it's like, of course that hurts. It's a man punching you.
But if it's a female student just slapping you,
it might just be like,
ah, she's annoying and she's out of control, huh?
It's possible.
Tough cookie, that one.
It's possible.
Objectively, if you're getting punched by another man,
even if they are a teenager,
or whatever, it still hurts.
It's hard to say.
I'm speculating, though, that it might be female.
Because whenever females assault men, even adults,
it's just kind of like,
oh, well, she slapped you,
doesn't give you the right to do anything.
And it's like, well, actually,
I still got assaulted and beat up.
It's true.
Anyway, we wanted to run your story by an expert,
so we reached out to Neil Rombardo, in-house counsel for a large school district with approximately
8,000 employees.
And the first thing Neil said was, he feels awful for your husband.
It is a really tough place to be.
The second thing he said was, and now you know that I'm not the only attorney who knows this is crucial,
he said your husband should absolutely document every single incident with this student
and every discussion he has with his administrator about it.
If the school fails to take steps to protect your husband, Neil said that he might have a lawsuit.
that was my first thought as well. Like, oh, you told your boss and they said tough luck. Well, that sounds like a juicy lawsuit.
But Neil's on his take is he always recommends against lawsuits because, yeah, you hear about people making large sums of money and the ads on TV, right?
But those are 1% of the cases in his experience. And as he puts it, litigation is a long, difficult process that takes an emotional toll on everybody except the lawyers who take large sums from plaintiffs.
And I totally concur. Instead, Neil said that your husband could use the documentation we were just talking.
about to report this charter school's issues to the Michigan Department of Education. From what he could
tell, that's the agency that oversees charters. Now, Neil recognizes that this could result in him
losing his job, but in his view, this school is ultimately failing him and this student by not
addressing these behavioral issues. And so the question for Neil is, does he really want to work at a
place that treats employees and students like this? Also, if he decides to report this to the
Michigan Department of Education, Neil said he would probably have whistleblower status.
And the cool thing about whistleblower status is it would protect his job.
Neil said that it's usually a simpler process to get reinstated as a whistleblower
and to even potentially get damages than it is to file a lawsuit.
Another thing Neil said you should consider is whether this student is a special education student
or a general education student.
And also, how old is this kid?
He said that if the child isn't special ed,
there are many strategies available to your husband.
For one thing, the school should have taught him proper holds to protect himself and the student,
which I'm guessing is different from Krav Maga,
like some special technique that's designed to like a little restraint.
You probably can't hammer fist the kid in the face.
I think that's a Kravagam.
I'm guessing that's probably not on the table.
Second, the student could receive what's called a functional behavioral assessment
to see what triggers this child.
And after the FBI, the school along with the teacher,
should set up a plan to address those triggers.
Neil said that's usually done with what's called a board certified behavioral analyst,
a BCBA.
If the student has extreme behaviors, they could be placed in a social intervention program,
which is like a class with more aides, more supports.
And criminal charges could be available, although Neil strongly discourages that unless things really escalate.
So we understand that this is a charter school, but Neil said that the law requires them
to support special education students the same way as traditional public schools.
But the thing is, if this student is in special ed, then the law ultimately favors the
students staying in the least restrictive environment. Now, if the child is general education,
Neil said that the school should provide what's called multi-tiered systems of support services to
address this kid's behaviors. And the school should also work with his kids' parents, by the way,
to address these issues with the student, both at home and in the classroom. So Neil said that
the student could also be moved to an alternative setting and or even expelled from school and have to
take homeschool classes. Also, if he is a general education student, then Neil said that criminal
charges would be more appropriate, but again, kind of depends on this kid's age. Bottom line, though,
Neil said that your husband's school should be providing these supports with him and not just leaving
it up to him to deal with the student on his own and fend for himself. That makes a ton of sense.
So those are your options, friend. I'm very sorry your husband is going through this. It must be
very scary to regularly be assaulted by a student and to have your principal just throw their hands up,
like, well, sorry, nothing we can do about it. Maybe bring a bat to school. Oh, by the way, you can't
use it. It's insane. It's ridiculous. I hope your husband finds a way forward here, or just decides to
leave and finds another job that will allow him to finish his certification. He sounds very passionate
about education, and the system really needs people like him, so we are rooting for him. I hope
he stays safe, and we're wishing you all the best. Gabe, it's insane to me that this kid gets
kicked out of multiple schools, and they're just like, well, you put up with it, because you don't
really have any leverage. It's like, how about I sue the shit out of all you guys? How's that sound,
pal. Unbelievable. You can reach us Friday at Jordan Harbinger.com. Keep your emails concise. Try to use
descriptive subject lines. That makes our job a whole lot easier. If you're finding dead squirrels
in your mailbox, your stepdad's got your nudes, your neighbors or eaves dropping on your
therapy sessions through the wall, or your ex has just dropped the bomb that she secretly felt
coerced into sleeping together during your marriage. Whatever's got you staying up at night lately,
hit us up Friday atjordanharbinger.com. We're here to help and we keep every email anonymous.
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All right, next up.
Dear Jordan and Gabe, my parents are in their late 70s,
and I'm trying to convince them to sell their paid-off condo
and purchase a smaller, more accessible house.
While financially it makes sense, selling the condo would give them more than enough capital to buy a new smaller home outright,
they are incredibly resistant to the idea.
Their main concerns seem to be the quote-unquote hassle of selling and the prospect of having to pay more in property tax
as their condo retains a lower appraisal value.
However, the condo presents several growing problems that will only worsen with age.
One of them is stairs.
They currently have to walk up three flights of stairs to reach their unit,
and then another internal flight of stairs to access the second floor of their condo.
This is already a significant struggle for them.
Their laundry facilities are coin operated and located in a common area that's a five-minute
walk from their unit.
This is becoming increasingly difficult to manage.
I'm worried about their long-term well-being and safety in this environment.
As they continue to age, these physical challenges will become insurmountable,
potentially leading to falls or isolation.
Also big factors, yeah.
My brother and I have brought this up to my parents a few times, but it was met with the property tax and hassle excuse.
I offered to help, mentioned to them that I have a real estate agent and offered my knowledge since I recently purchased a house with my wife.
My mom's usual response is, I'll think about it, but no action is taken afterwards, and I have to bring it up again.
We haven't had a formal sit down with the family, so that might help.
But this feels like an endless cycle.
What should we say?
How do we approach this if we do?
Any advice on how to address their fears about the selling process or property taxes?
Do you have any suggestions, psychological approaches, or practical ideas on how to navigate this conversation
and help them see the benefits of making this move now before it becomes an emergency?
Signed, trying to be fair and not sink into despair when my parents declare that they don't need my care,
even though I'm prepared for the day they're so impaired that they won't climb the stairs,
which is a timeline I cannot.
not bear. Good question. Filing this one under how to convince well-meaning but frustrating family
members to do what they should be doing anyway. So tough. This general category of letter is really tough.
Exactly. I think whenever you encounter this kind of resistance or avoidance, it's always because
underneath there's fear. Fear of change, fear of the unknown, fear of it not working out.
Fear of it. They're going to do it and it's going to go sideways, exactly. Exactly. If you're going to
make real progress here, I think it's going to be by getting to that route, helping them acknowledge it,
making them feel safe to trust you to help them through it. So there's two basic approaches here.
Approach one is you gently bring this up over and over in different ways until your parents
finally realize that this is the right solution, that you're going to take care of them,
that they can do this. And if that works, amazing. Problem is, there's no guarantee they will.
I know how parents like this are, right? Okay? They're probably saying, yeah, we'll think about it,
but they're not thinking about it. They're just hoping you won't bring it up again and that it will
just never be a problem, which is ridiculous. That's not going to serve anybody. Approach two,
you turn up the heat. Maybe you go dark Jordan, well, you know, little gray Jordan. It's funny,
back when I worked in sales, I got really into sales techniques and I learned about this idea.
Anybody who's worked in sales is going to know what I'm talking about. I think it was called,
it's like take them through the pain or take them to the pain or something like that.
The idea is basically get the customer, get the potential customer, to see how bad things are
and or how bad things are going to get if they don't buy your product.
So you walk them through that nightmare, vividly, step by step, and you get them into a kind of
low-grade fear spiral, or maybe not so low-grade, and then you hand them the solution,
which is your product or service.
Like, ta-da, fear-solved.
Like, it's manipulative, it's self-serving, it works in sales really well, and when it's
legit, so if this is a real thing, like you're not just making up some reason for them to be
afraid, when the customer really will be in a world of pain if they don't buy your product
or service, it's great for everyone.
Then it's just good salesmanship.
When they won't, it's gross and manipulative and not cool, but that's a whole other topic,
the ethics thing.
So you could take your parents to the pain.
And what that means in this context is you just got to paint a very vivid picture for them
of what's going to happen if they stay in this condo as they age.
Financially, physically, emotionally, what is it going to be like for them to have to live
there as they slow down?
What is it going to be like for you to have to help them?
How hard is it going to be to climb those stairs?
You want to go to the bathroom?
Cool.
I hope you don't mind getting a full body workout on the way up those stairs or back down.
How taxing is it going to be to do the laundry so far away?
Oh, you wanted clean clothes?
All right.
Get your shoes on.
Get your jacket on.
It's snowy and icy out there.
Make sure you got quarters.
Oh, you got to go to the bank and get them.
Okay.
Have fun with that.
It's a whole day activity now to do your freaking laundry.
Wow.
How awful is it to break your hip in the stairwell at 87 and no one finds you for three hours
and maybe you have to go to the hospital and then you have to
have hip replacement surgery, and, you know, how quickly do old people decline and simply die
when that happens? How much money are you going to have to give up when you finally decide to
sell? Oh, the market's down. Oh, well, you can't walk, so you have to sell now. Sorry,
or if they have to do a quick sale because somebody's really down and out, or they need the money?
I mean, this is all just, you've got to bring them through this and they're going to realize
that they're staying in a comfortable spot, and it's way worse than where they should be.
How guilty are they going to feel about putting all this on you? How much harder is it going to be to
adjust to a new home in another five or ten years. Think about that. The fact that they're hurting you
by not letting you be a good son and help them right now, how they're going to call you and say,
you were right, I wish we'd listen to you. Why didn't you get through to us back then?
I'm starting to see why you were so good at sales back then. This is brutal. I would also do this
all over like months and months of time, and it was just like brutal. And then I'd bring them back up and
feel good. Yeah, there's a lot to it. Anyway, any pain point you can think of, bring it in.
Embrace your inner sales, dark Jordan, gray Jordan, take your sweet aging parents to the pain.
I mean, yeah, shamelessly coerce them into doing the right thing.
That is, that is an option.
Yeah, shamelessly coerce them into doing the right thing.
Exactly.
Look, is this kind of manipulative?
Yes.
I mean, it depends, right?
Is getting someone to do something that's in their own best interest manipulative?
I don't know.
Oh, good point.
That's interesting.
All of this is potentially true.
You know, if they won't listen to reason, you might have to motivate them with fear.
Or both, hopefully.
Or both.
Yeah, first the pain, then the love.
I would try to work both angles.
I would also definitely do the group conversation you haven't tried yet.
I'm always a big fan of that.
I think it'll be a lot harder for your parents to ignore the reality here.
If their kids and siblings and nephews and nieces are going, this is crazy.
You have to find a new place.
We're all going to make sure it goes smoothly.
Everyone's going to help you move.
This is a brilliant idea.
Look at all these voices that think you should do this.
I would also turn this into baby steps as much as possible.
So when you go to your parents and you say, I want you guys to downsize,
I want you to move homes, that is very big. That's abstract and that's very scary. But if you go,
hey, I don't need you to make any decisions right now, but why don't we just go look at a few
condos this Sunday? I'll pick you up. We'll have a fun day. We'll grab lunch. Let's just see if
anything looks good to us. You know, that's harder for them to say no to. Totally. And if they do say
no, then it's easier for you to say, okay, but mom, dad, you're not even open to talking about this.
I'm just asking you to spend a few hours with me looking at condos. Does that seem fair?
And then when they see a place that they like, they'll be able to imagine this move a lot more
clearly. It won't be give up your home you know and love for the unknown. It'll be, let's get you
into that place you're really excited about. Bingo. I feel like this is also a sales technique closing by a
thousand tiny steps. So my parents didn't really want to move. I didn't have to do this, take them to
the pain, crazy thing. Well, I kind of did, actually. They didn't want to move. We asked it over and over
and over. We told them all the benefits. You're going to be close to us. You're going to be close to the kids.
You'll see the grandkids every day. It'll be great. California. There's no winter. Yada.
Yada from Michigan, right? And it married it for months and months and months. Then it was,
oh, look how big the kids are getting. It's so fast. They're only going to be young once.
They see the other grandma and grandpa every day and they're so close. Wow, do they remember? Are they
going to remember you when you come to visit for Christmas? Winter's coming up. Are you ready to
deal with that nightmare all over again? Dad, do you need a new snowblower? Because I know that at your
age, it's really hard to shovel the driveway every single day. Should I hire a snowplow service for you guys?
a landscaper, you got a big lawn, somebody gonna cut that, you shouldn't be doing that yourself,
you're gonna get sunburned again. Why don't you come here for just a few months and see how you
like just skipping winter entirely and then all of a sudden they were like, we're moving.
Oh, another thing I did was I was like, guys, can you do me a favor since you're not moving?
Can you really organize all your files in the basement? Because when you guys are like 90 and I have
to take a bunch of time off of work and away from my family and fly back to Michigan
and do all of this by myself, it'll just be a little bit easy.
And they were like, oh, let's just do this now piecemeal.
And it took months for them to clean out everything and donate everything and organize everything,
but they did it themselves.
There was an avalanche of guilt and pain and persuasion.
And now they're like, oh, we're so glad he moved out here.
It's like, Jesus.
You totally took them to the pain.
Hell yeah.
Well played, Papa.
But look, even if you use these salesy techniques, I would keep meeting your parents with a ton
of love, patience, empathy.
This is obviously very hard for them.
Like you said, it's ultimately about fear, and fear is paralyzing.
So while you take them to the pain, I would also keep reassuring them that you know how hard this is.
You appreciate that they're trusting you to guide them.
You're not going to let things go sideways.
You know this is going to be the right move for everybody.
So they don't just feel pressured.
They also feel supported.
Your parents are super lucky to have you looking out for them.
I hope they can take in your advice.
And good luck.
You know what's more fun than falling down a couple flights of stairs, Gabriel?
Enjoying the deals and discounts on the fine products and services that support this show.
We'll be right back.
And now for the recommendation of the week.
I am addicted to lit filler.
I recommended a battery a long time ago, but it was kind of big.
Not everybody wanted to spend, I think, a couple hundred bucks on a battery.
There's another one I love, and I have multiple of, and it's by Anchor.
We'll link to it in the show notes, of course.
It's got a plug on it, so it's not just a battery.
It's a charger.
It's got a USBC outlet on it so you can plug in your phone.
But what I really love about this is it has a little lanyard on it,
so you can carry it on your wrist if you need to or hang it on something. And that lanyard is also
a built-in USBC cable. So you don't have to have a separate cable you can if you want to, and it can
charge two things at once while it's plugged in, and then it's a battery when it's not plugged in.
I use it constantly. It is a great product. It's on sale right now. Again, I'll link it in the show
notes. There's multiple colors. I got one for my parents. I just, I'm in love with this thing.
It is so handy to have. And when I first got a separate battery, I was like, I'm
never going to use this. And it's been one of the things that I just use constantly, especially when
I'm on the go. If I'm not home all day, I just use this thing every time I travel, every time I'm in a
hotel. I can't kind of live without this thing. So highly recommend looking at it. Damn. I'm going to
need one of these, I think, from the travels. And they're like 35 bucks. Like, this is not a heavy lift.
This is such an easy grab one or grab one for you and one for your spouse or whatever, one for your
friend. It's such a great product. I highly recommend these. I can't overstate that. So go
grab one of those. Also, in case you don't know, there's a subreddit for our show if you want to jump
into discussions with other listeners about specific episodes. If there's an episode you like, an episode
you hated, well, you can keep that to yourself. But anyway, there's a lot of fun conversations
going on on the Jordan Harbinger subreddit. So if you're a redditor, come join us. All right, what's next?
Hey, Jordan and Gabe. I'm 14 years old, and early this year, I caught COVID for the first time.
My family managed to avoid it until we all caught it in one fell swoop. The worst of the symptoms
lasted about two days, but the fatigue has lasted for months. The fatigue was so bad I could barely
function some days. And on better days, all I wanted to do was lay down and let the earth slowly reclaim me.
Brutal. In summary, long COVID is a bitch. Then symptoms of anxiety and depression came about,
making functioning all the more impossible. I had anxiety about whether I would be able to survive
the day. The thought was always in the back of my head, and it spiked when my fatigue was particularly
bad. But when I rested, I felt depressed that I wasn't able to accomplish anything that day.
I'm a perfectionist, and I'm used to achieving expectations that others and I place on myself.
Fatigue made failing these expectations common, and I would spiral.
Tough cycle, yeah.
By the end of the school year, I got a therapist. During summer break, I was able to recover a bit.
I established a routine that helped with my lack of motivation and depression, and because the days were
generally easy, my anxiety went down.
My parents, who were also affected with long COVID, gave me tips that helped me start to recover.
Then the new school years started, and so did a wave of fatigue.
It's not as bad as last time because I have tools to keep the anxiety and depression at bay.
I'm proud to say that anxiety has not been a problem so far.
But I'm struggling to find a new normal.
The schoolwork isn't hard, so we can cross that off the list.
My guess is that I'm putting too much energy into my social life.
I've tried to be better about acting how I feel, like acting to be.
tired when I'm tired, but I don't want to shut down. I like my friends. They're the only reason
school is bearable. I'm just so exhausted. How do I manage my fatigue? How do I go from just barely
surviving life to enjoying it again? Can I ever go back to normal? And Gabe, if you could do the
honors of the longest sign-off possible, that would make my day. I'm really not loving this becoming a thing.
The sign-off's about to be longer than her COVID. Yeah, I'm going to take a COVID nap while you read this,
get some ziz. I got to be refreshed for my response. See you guys in 40 minutes.
Signed, a teen who's keen to be an absolute machine, but is now chugging caffeine and
clinging to a routine because even the vaccine couldn't shake these symptoms that are mean,
obscene, and unforeseen. How can I succeed in this in-between without going missing from the
scene while I'm catching these zes? All because of this damn spike protein.
Okay, I'm back. I had the weirdest dream while I was over here, snoozing Gabe. I dream.
that you kept the sign off short and I had to run back early to answer the question. All right. So
interesting story. First of all, I'm sorry you've been dealing with long COVID. I understand it's
pretty rare. It's like six or seven percent of people get it, but it's definitely, this is a real
thing. I was initially like a psychosomatic, but a lot of people that I'm friends with that are not
susceptible to just being highly suggestible people, they have it. And they say it's really debilitating.
These are go-getters, overachievers, and they're like, I just can't do anything anymore. So my
heart goes out to you. Yeah, that sucks. Interesting that the whole family has long COVID, though.
I was wondering about that. Like, are they all somehow genetically predisposed or something to having it,
or are they all dealing with the recovery in a similar way? I don't know. They just don't know a lot
about this stuff. But it sounds like her parents have recovered from it because they gave her tips for
getting better. Right. Okay, that apparently helped. I actually did some quick research on this.
The science is far from settled, but there are several studies that suggest there is some genetic or
familial predisposition, and that could influence the risk of developing long COVID, but a lot of
the studies are preliminary. I have to imagine that lifestyle and environment play big roles as well.
It's not just genes. I read that similar baseline health, diet, immune system traits, shared
exposure history, viral load, all of that probably affects whether a family is going to get
long COVID. So it seems like this comes down to genes plus environment, plus exposure, plus, you know,
random luck. In any event, I am very sorry it's been so rough for you guys.
but I'm very happy to hear you've made so much progress.
You're taking care of yourself, you're creating balance, that is great.
So what I find interesting about your letter is how much conflict you're in about all this.
When you're fatigued, you know you need to rest.
But when you rest, you beat yourself up for not accomplishing as much.
And when you don't accomplish as much, you feel like you're failing your own high standards.
But when you think about easing up on those high standards, you spiral.
You suspect you're putting too much energy into your social life.
But when you think about taking time for yourself,
you're worried that you're going to lose your friendships, which are the only thing that makes school bearable.
Yeah, good point. She's really at odds with herself in so many different ways.
She is, and I think she knows that. Like she said, I've tried to be better about acting how I feel,
like acting tired when I'm tired, but I don't want to shut down. So, look, I don't want to minimize
the very real physical symptoms of long COVID. I hear you that you're exhausted. Those friends
I mentioned, they talk about constantly being fatigued. They need to take naps every day. They
can't work out as hard as they used to. They can't do whatever it was they were doing before,
you know, playing golf every day. I don't know.
At the same time, I think we need to separate out whatever physical symptoms you're going through
from the thoughts and feelings that they're bringing up.
Because if the reality is that you're tired and need rest, then you need to be tired and rest.
If you're lying down, but in your head, you're going, oh, I'm failing, I'm bad.
You know, you're disappointing everyone.
You're lazy.
Whatever thoughts come up, you're creating attention where there just really doesn't necessarily
need to be one.
And actually, it's possible that this whole long COVID thing is an opportunity to look at
these parts of your personality that are creating so much distress. It's an interesting question.
Is the problem that you have long COVID and you need to slow down and take care of yourself?
Or is the problem that you can't allow yourself to slow down and take care of yourself without
worrying that you should be doing something different? I've got to let you answer that for yourself.
Yeah, that is an excellent question. The other reason I think you need to separate the physical
stuff and the mental stuff is, I mean, look, I'm not your therapist. I only know you from this letter,
but I wouldn't be surprised if you were prone to some anxiety and depression before you got COVID.
And the long COVID stuff might just be a new source of anxiety and depression,
or perhaps it's exacerbating some stuff that was already there, but maybe just beneath the surface.
I think that's extremely likely. And again, that's a function of her thoughts, right?
Like she said, I had anxiety about whether I'd be able to survive the day.
The thought was always in the back of my head, and it spiked when my fatigue was particularly bad.
So clearly her thoughts do have a lot to do with this. And there's probably some very helpful,
cognitive, behavioral type stuff she could do to look at some of those thoughts and how they arise
and what she does with them and how they lead to further negative thoughts and how all of that
is feeding this difficult cycle. But you know what I'm about to say. I think so. What's the root of those
thoughts, right? If it's true that she ran a little depressive or a little anxious before, or at the
very least, she was predisposed to respond to a very big setback like COVID in a certain way,
if I were her, I would want to get to that stuff. And I can't help but feel that it's somehow
tied into this perfectionism thing, because perfectionism is just really the tip of the iceberg.
Underneath that is a lot of other stuff, a real anxiety about being less than perfect,
being seen as less than perfect, which almost always reflects a shame about struggling or falling
short. And that usually goes back quite a long way to early experiences, primary relationships,
where you know, you probably were not allowed to struggle and fail or rest or just like need,
you know, need to rest, need to play, need to not produce all the time.
And to be able to do that with adults who could make some room for you to go through those
phases and bear that anxiety with you and help you work through some of these experiences
in a way that makes them survivable.
And the whole concept of your sense of self-worth being tied to being perfect.
That's a big piece of it too.
which is kind of a consequence of these more primitive experiences. And there's a lot more nuance to all of that,
I'm sure. This perfectionism thing shows up differently in every person, in every family. So I'm taking
some very big guesses and I'm kind of like summing you up in broad terms, but that's kind of the
shape of it. And so in the spirit of Jordan's question a moment ago, here's another one you
might want to explore. Is your problem the fatigue, or is your problem the relationship with
achieving that dealing with the fatigue is now laying bare? Bingo.
I'm sure she'd say it's both, but clearly it's more the latter.
Yeah.
I would also love to know more about what school is bringing up for her because so much of her story revolves around that environment specifically.
Yes, this got bad in school last year.
But then during summer break, the days were easier.
Her anxiety went down.
Then school starts back up again and suddenly she's tired again.
She's tired again, but the schoolwork is not that hard.
So she doesn't think that's the culprit.
And now she has tools to keep the anxiety and depression at bay, which, okay, I'm going to nitpick a tiny bit and possibly read something.
into that sentence that might or might not be there. But keeping anxiety and depression at bay,
is that really working on the anxiety and depression? Or is that just kind of like pushing some
difficult feelings away? It does kind of sound like the latter. I understand that her routine,
her mindsets, they're helpful. I think we all try to stay one or two steps ahead of depression
and anxiety. But you're right. This does sound like willing the difficult thoughts and feelings
away or maybe keeping herself so busy that they don't affect her as much, as opposed to figuring
out why they are arising in the first place and then learning how to work through those feelings.
I guess it depends on what she means by tools, right? If the tools are, I'm learning how to bear
this anxiety and this depression better, and I now know how to talk about them with my therapist,
with my parents, you know, I have a journaling practice, I play a sport to keep my mood up. That I get.
That's great. If the tools are, I bury myself in four hours of homework every night and I go
to a party with my friends every weekend so I can take my mind off of my worries, that's something
else. Yeah, I would argue those aren't really tools. Those are avoidance strategies. Right. So we'll let her
decide what is going on here and if this approach is truly helpful. It's just an interesting phrase that
jumped out that made me wonder and it's kind of part of the school context. No, but you're on to something
because her main theory for why she's tired again is that she's putting too much energy into her
social life. I mean, she's a teenager. And now that we're digging into this, I do wonder what those
relationships or the way she's going about those relationships are doing for her. I love that
she has so many friends, I'm glad she's not isolated, but maybe what feels so costly about pulling back
from her friendships is that she'd be losing something important to her, a source of stability,
maybe, a comfort, confirmation that she's not, you know, debilitated by the whole thing.
And also a system that could maybe absorb some of her anxiety or alleviate some of her depression.
Exactly, none of which is inherently bad, but it sounds like she needs to be more intentional
about where she puts her energy while she recovers from this thing. So it's an interesting question
why she's spending so much of it on other people.
And why exactly school is so unbearable without these friends?
Because like, okay, it's high school.
We all know high school.
It sucks a lot of the time.
And your friends are a huge piece of it.
But is school particularly unbearable for her because of the perfectionism thing?
Because of these feelings, because of this COVID stuff.
If she worked on some of those things, would it feel less costly to pull back and prioritize herself more?
Yep.
Another good question.
I also just want to remind her, high school is insane.
they make you get up at 6 a.m. or whatever every day. You stay there for like eight hours or seven hours,
whatever. You have sports. You have homework. You have projects. You have the rest of your life. It's actually
crazy. And they design it for old administrators who want to go home at 2.30 and then like have
their whole day ahead of them because they don't have a problem getting up at five. It's just nuts. It doesn't
make any sense. It doesn't run along the teenager sleep schedule, physical schedule at all. And then
they pile a bunch of crap on top of you. Some of the fatigue is probably tied to that. I remember being just
delirious and then being like, you're going to let me drive in this condition? It's like, yeah,
you have to. It's so true. That's already difficult. I'm having flashbacks to high school now. We had
to be there at 7.30 in the morning. And there were days when I probably should not have been driving.
Yeah. And it's like, okay, you've had four hours of sleep five days in a row and worked
eight, nine, ten, eleven hours on homework, sports, and or school. And it's like, yep,
here are the car keys, drive your SUV down some icy roads in Michigan to school. It's insane.
It's so stupid.
And then add on top of that, COVID.
Oh, and you have debilitating COVID fatigue.
Yeah, like, of course your body would be begging for three months of rest.
Yes.
Look, I know it's hard to separate the physical stuff from the psychological stuff.
They're so intertwined.
But I would keep working on both sides of this equation.
On the medical front, keep following the long COVID recovery playbook.
They say that you have to prioritize rest and recovery.
They say don't overdo it.
But also that you have to challenge yourself within your limitations,
customize your pace.
And if you're not getting better,
I would definitely talk to your parents about going to a post.
post-COVID specialty clinic, look into long-COVID rehab, ask your doctors about any new
interventions, they're understanding this stuff more and more. I actually have a buddy who has long
COVID. He runs a pro bono, aka free group for people. He has meetings, I think, every month or something
like that. Email me. We'll get that information to you. And that, of course, goes for anybody
else who's dealing with this as well. But my hunch is that the mental emotional stuff is where
you're going to make the most progress. You're not just recovering from long COVID. You're
recovering from some patterns and qualities that long COVID has revealed.
If you really look at them, not just recreate them in other ways or keep them at bay,
this whole difficult period could have some really big upsides.
Sending you a big hug, wishing you a long nap, and all the best.
Go back and check out Rezwan Verk, Ken Burns, and our skeptical Sunday on light pollution.
If you haven't heard those yet, the best things that have happened in my life and business
have come through my network.
It is the circle of people I know like and trust.
I'm teaching you how to build those same things for yourself in our six-minute networking
course. It's free. It's not gross. It's not schmoozy. It's on the think-iffic platform at six-minute
networking.com. Build those relationships before you need them. Dig that well before you get thirsty.
Six-minute networking.com. Show notes on the website, advertisers, deals, discounts, ways to support
the show, all at Jordan Harbinger.com slash deals. I'm at Jordan Harbinger on Twitter and
Instagram. You can also connect with me on LinkedIn. Gabe's on Instagram at Gabriel Mizrahi.
This show is created in association with Podcast One. My team is Jen Harbinger, Jace, Sanderson, Robert
Fogarty, Ian Baird, Tadas Adlascus, and of course, Gabriel Mizrahi. Our advice and opinions are our own,
and I'm a lawyer, but not your lawyer. Do your own research before implementing anything you hear on the show.
Did O'Neill Rombardo. Remember, we rise by lifting others. Share the show with those you love.
If you found the episode useful, please share it with somebody else who could use the advice we gave here today.
In the meantime, I hope you apply what you hear on the show so you can live what you learn,
and we'll see you next time. Are you addicted to drama? Check out this preview of the Jordan Harbinger
show with psychologist Dr. Scott Lyons.
Do you vent constantly?
Do you find yourself changing the stories?
Do you find that wherever you go, there's always something that's wrong or happening?
Do you find yourself believing the other shoe will always drop?
That no matter how good things are, something bad is going to happen.
Do you find yourself crisis hopping?
If you're in it, you will have no idea that that's what you're doing.
And it takes a lot of time for those addicted to drama to,
recognized to even be aware of the pattern is happening.
Our primal needs as a kid is to be seen and heard, to feel safe.
And so you will go to whatever extremes and tensed
shouting is needed to pierce through the chaos of a family household
to be seen and heard, even if it's burning down the house.
A wave of an emotion, it lasts 30 to 90 seconds.
Anything after that is the story we're feeding to maintain it.
We're trying to keep that emotion active.
We're feeding off the emotion as opposed to processing or metabolizing it.
We're not letting it go because there's some belief system if we let it go, we'll be victims.
If we let it go, we won't be safe.
Whatever it is why we won't let go of the emotion.
Even a small trauma can feel like death because we feel helpless.
And if we don't have the resilience capacity to know that someone will help us,
there are tools out there to help us.
If we don't inherently know that, it feels like we're going to drown.
In that moment, it feels like death.
Learn to recognize and heal from drama addiction on episode 836
with Dr. Scott Lyons on the Jordan Harbinger Show.
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