The Jordan Harbinger Show - 1266: Cutting off Creep Whose Manipulation Runs Deep | Feedback Friday
Episode Date: January 2, 2026A colleague made crude jokes, monopolized you at events, then possibly used you to make his ex jealous. How do you handle this creep? It's Feedback Friday!And 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!Full show notes and resources can be found here: jordanharbinger.com/1266On This Week's Feedback Friday:A professional acquaintance has been giving you mixed signals — complimenting your appearance, making wildly inappropriate sexual comments, and monopolizing your time at events. Then you learned he might've been using you to make his ex jealous. How do you confront a creep without burning your network?Your friend Mary — practically a grandmother figure — is spiraling after her husband's affair. The other woman is harassing her, possibly killed her dog, and Mary attempted suicide but refuses all help. You're still grieving your own dad. How do you support someone who won't let you in?Your boyfriend is the "best employee" at his job, yet his boss won't commit to a salary number after two months. Worse, he discovered he's been illegally denied sick pay since 2020 under New York law. Should he fight for what's owed and risk retaliation — or stay quiet and hope for the best?Recommendation of the Week: Bartender for MacYour father lost millions in 2008 and has spent 17 years chasing entrepreneurial pipe dreams while refusing therapy. He's 62, unemployed, and relying on you and your brother for hope he can't generate himself. Should you buy him a car for Uber — or is that just enabling the fantasy?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: Bombas: Go to bombas.com/jordan to get 20% off your first orderFitbod: 25% off: fitbod.me/jordanHomes.com: Find your home: homes.comAG1: Welcome kit: drinkag1.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 King of Aldlang Zinoffs, Gabriel Mizrahi.
Oh, good one. Killing the nicknames recently, I have to say.
Yeah, I thought you would like that one. You're not the only one who can spin a mean dad pun, bruh.
Clearly not. Do it a king of Old Long Sign-Offs? Is that how you pronounce? Yeah, either way.
Old Lange Zinoffs.
Old Lach Zinoffs?
Yeah. Anyway, on the Jordan Harbinger Show, we'd be to come.
the story, secrets, and skills are the world's most fascinating people, turn their wisdom into
practical advice you can use to impact your own life and those around you. And our mission is to
help you become a better informed, more critical thinker. During the week, we have long-form
conversations with a variety of amazing folks from organized crime figures, former jihadis,
investigative journalists, astronauts, hostage negotiators. This week we had Joe Loyah,
author of the memoir, The Man Who Outdrew his prison cell Confessions of a Bank robber. This dude has
a really fascinating story. He grew up with a violent, abusive father. When he was 16, there was a
severe beating going on in the house with his brother, and he ended up stabbing his dad in the neck.
And his life went sideways after that. He became a prolific bank robber. After he robbed his 24th
bank, he was arrested, served time in prison. But even from prison, he continued his criminal
behavior until he was eventually placed in solitary confinement, where he was alone for two years,
which sounds terrible. Relatable. Yeah, kind of like Gabriel in Japan with worse food.
And he was finally able to forgive his dad, find clarity and insight, eventually find redemption
through his writing.
So I had him on to share a bank robber's journey from stabbing his dad to finding peace, I guess
you would say.
And as you can imagine, there was a lot to talk about.
So this is a two-part show.
On Fridays, though, we take listener letters, offer advice, play the occasional obnoxious
soundbite and kick off the year right by plunging forward into the great dues-filled unknown.
By the way, a funny little note.
One of the most controversial things I got email for in 2025 was the, uh,
Palestine, Israel conflict, the Gaza thing, that got a lot of email. But it's barely first place to
people writing in about what we said about Zinn on a recent feedback Friday. Oh, yeah. People were
very upset that we thought it was tobacco and they're like, it's not tobacco. Yeah, I think we said it was
tobacco because it's like a nicotine pouch. And people are like, nicotine is not bad for you, which is
objectively not true. It's also super highly addictive. And a couple of other listeners pointed out,
because this was in Spotify comments, emails, different apps have different comments.
And a couple of listeners who saw those comments had a pretty astute observation, Gabe,
which was, imagine how strongly these people are struggling with something where they feel
the need to defend the habit and the substance in the comments.
You know what I mean?
And that's a really good point because the tobacco nicotine thing, oops, that's a misspeak.
It's not disinformation.
It's not hurting people.
The reaction was like, I'm unsubscribing because your take on Zin,
is totally unhinged and it's like, I don't know.
There's a reason this stuff is regulated.
It's a super addictive drug.
It promotes tumor growth.
Oh, it's not a carcinogen.
Okay, fine, but it promotes tumor growth.
Fine.
Like, steroids also do that.
They don't cause cancer.
They just help it grow.
Would you recommend your friends do steroids too?
At first I was kind of like,
these people are really sticklers for the minutia,
but I think the listeners who pointed this out in the comments are right.
It's when you're struggling so hard with something,
you feel the need to defend it like that. It's pretty intense. Like, it's not bad for me. You're really
talking to yourself when you post a comment like that, I think. A few other people also pointed out
that this guy must be going through some pretty intense stuff at work if he needs to turn to these
substances. And on the spectrum of addiction, was his addiction so severe that it spells the
end of their relationship? It sounded dicey, to be honest. It's not the worst addiction we've ever
heard about. It's something they could probably resolve. But a few people did point out that
Not only is this guy struggling, but there's something going on between the two of them that is making it hard to resolve.
And then a bunch of you chimed in with some really great resources for partners of people who have addictions, which we should have mentioned more on the show.
So thank you for that.
Yep, yep. Alon and things like that.
I thought it was funny that one of the top comments was, time to get a new girlfriend who's more supportive.
I was like, dang me all harsh.
Dude's drinking half a bottle of Jack Daniels per day.
And it's like, yeah, you need a new girlfriend.
That would solve one of the problems.
I think that's an interesting dynamic between the two of them, but I cannot say that I endorse that conclusion.
No.
Anyway, Gabe, what's the first thing out of the mailback?
Just a heads up before we dive into this next letter.
This one's a little racy.
There's some adult details in here, nothing too obscene, but just know that going in case you're listening with your kids in the car or whatever.
Dear Jordan and Gabe, I have a friend, let's call him Saul, who I have known for years, as we're part of the same tight-knit professional community, have similar values, and share.
complimentary personalities. But sometime back, our friendship took a turn when Saul began to give me
mixed signals. He gave compliments about my appearance, implied he could be my emergency contact,
and became so attached to me at events that people began to question me about what was happening
and would complain that he was monopolizing my attention. He told me I was his only female friend,
despite not liking women who have male friends. He also told me that while he was dating his ex,
Gemma, he had been questioned about whether we had been having an affair.
He wouldn't try to make plans to hang out with me solo, but we had been talking about going
on a sandboarding trip together, and when I asked what else we would do, he calmly said
that I would flash someone and made multiple statements to me making implications about his penis.
Boy, that escalated quickly.
Yeah, this guy's game tight.
No, there's something wrong with this guy.
What are you doing, man?
Clearly, that's weird.
You catch feelings for a friend, appear, whatever, okay, it happens.
There's a mature way to communicate that, see if the person feels the same way and go from there.
But I don't know, this is just bizarre.
I feel mean saying this, but whatever.
The guy sounds like a 12-year-old boy with a TBI trying to hit on the girl sitting next to him in algebra.
What's wrong with this guy?
Just wait because it gets worse.
Oh, of course it does.
One of the products I sell for my job is a popsicle that looks very dildo-esque.
They knew, but okay, here we go.
I'm already cringing.
Fast forward to an acquaintance's birthday party.
Out of nowhere, Saul starts talking about me masturbating with this product,
then tries to gaslight me, saying, I told him I did this.
Okay, so this isn't just inappropriate.
This is actually super creepy.
The guy needs to be put in his place and iced out, for sure.
I found this behavior to be inappropriate, creepy, rude, disrespectful, degrading, and bizarre.
It didn't help that earlier in the evening he had painted me as a creep, who was obsessed with him.
Of course he did. This freaking dude, come on.
The next morning, our friend Brian told me that Saul and Gemma went home together,
and Saul most likely had been giving me mixed messages just to make Gemma jealous,
as they began contacting each other again after an event where Saul and I had a private moment together
that Gemma had interrupted by yelling my name.
Okay, if that's true, this whole thing is so dumb. This is so high school.
The behavior from the night before had already upset me,
but this news further devastated me as Saul knew that,
despite many years of therapy, I still had trust and insecurity issues around men due to my PTSD
from being sexually assaulted by a friend nine years ago. And the fact that I haven't been on a date
in eight years and the fact that I'm the only female in our young professionals group who
doesn't get asked out on dates. Wow. Okay, well, I'm so sorry to hear this. This is awful. I can hear
how hard it all is for you and my heart goes out to you. I can only imagine how much worse that
makes all this saw bullshit the fact that he knows all this and he still did and said all of this
stuff this dude man he's a p o s right i hate this guy yeah he really is i hesitate to connect up too many
dots who knows what's going through this creep's head sounds a little nuts honestly but this must be
factoring into his behavior somehow either emboldening him or giving him some weird satisfaction
or he's just so misattuned can't empathize with another person so doesn't realize how somebody who's
been assaulted and is struggling with dating would hear
some of the stuff that he's saying to her.
Yeah, I'm kind of done with this guy.
I wanted to confront Saul about everything, but didn't know how.
He has a very avoidant personality, and he once told me about an incident where a woman had
hurt and upset him, and he responded by telling her that she looked like an opossum's
anus.
What?
An opossum's anus.
Good.
Okay.
So what a oddly specific.
insult. I cannot tell if this guy is just like severely immature or legitimately off his rocker.
Yeah, I'm going to go with both. If I saw that scene in a movie, I would laugh. But it's such an
absurd thing for an adult to say to another adult. I'm picturing McLevin from Superbad saying
that for some reason. That's the image in my head. Yes, it's something straight out of one of those
Vince Vaughn wedding crusher type movies. How do you say something like that with a straight face,
though? That's my question. The fact that that's how he responded to someone,
and another adult who hurt his feelings.
And a woman specifically.
I think that's important.
Well, I think that's probably a relevant detail
because he's a regressed dickhead.
Yeah.
He's a real aunt eater's taint.
Am I right?
Yeah.
The dude is a legit gorilla gooch.
Wow, gooch.
I haven't heard that word in a minute.
So it's funny, I never used that word.
It sounds so crass to me,
but I was interviewing Shanna Swan.
This is like a scientist, doctor, whatever,
from a million episodes ago on endocrine disruptors.
And she was giving some sort of measure, like, well, people who have these endocrine
disrupting chemicals in their body, their perineum or whatever it's called, scientific,
like, their perineum has a shorter distance between, it's like something like that.
And I was like, can you explain what perineum is?
And she's like, taint, gooch.
And this is like a 75-year-old, you know, scientist.
And she's saying, gooch on my show.
I just lost my mind.
She brought it back, for sure.
Now we're going to bring it back.
Damn.
Anyway, just to state the obvious, this guy hates women.
He doesn't like women who have male friends.
This is in-cell shit.
This is a huge red flag.
Yeah, he's simultaneously attracted to her,
but he's also, like, projecting his attraction
and his shame onto her with all of this creepy sex toy stuff.
And he's sexually harassing her.
This guy has a nightmare of the dork variety.
That said, calling someone an impossible.
anus, it's never not going to make me laugh. Sorry, what a weirdo.
Saul had always told me about his brother Micah, and despite never having met him, I naively
messaged Micah on LinkedIn. Oh, no. I just introduced myself, said I wished I was interacting
with him under different circumstances, as I heard so many good things about him, and asked if he
could provide insight on how to handle conflict with Saul, as he had been cruel to me. I messaged him
because Saul had described Micah as very secure and rational, so I thought he could be able to
would be helpful. He also sounded interesting and unlike anyone I've ever met. And despite how close
they are, Micah clearly brings up some of Saul's insecurities. So I knew it would upset Saul that I was
talking to Micah. All right. I want to hear how this plays out, but that was not the best move,
I'm certain. I guess I can understand wanting another person's opinion, but this feels messy. I'm also
confused. Gabe, she suggested like she wants to upset Saul. That was part of the point. That's how
It reads to me. I'm not entirely sure that's what she knew it would upset him. Yeah, it sounds like she wanted to upset him, which confuses me. Saul is a person you confront. You either put him in his place or you block him and move on, and you know which way I'm leaning. This just feels like you're stirring the pot or you're kicking the hornet's nest, but like to what end? Why? Why are you doing this?
Unsurprisingly, Micah did not respond to me, but he did tell Saul about my message. Yeah, unsurprisingly. That was completely predictable and let me guess it made everything worse.
Saul called me, but I didn't answer as I was traveling for work. It was 1 a.m. back home by the time I was able to talk, so I recorded a voice message for him and sent it. He didn't respond and blocked me on social media. When we were at the same events, he pretended I didn't exist.
Great. Good riddance. You guys needed to sever this relationship. It's a mess, and he did you a favor.
After some time passed, Brian encouraged me to write Saul a letter and he would give it to him. I wrote him a five-page letter explaining what he did, but I,
I only focused on the behavior at the party, as I didn't know for sure that he was using me to make Jemma jealous, although it would be way too much of a coincidence as he was not the one who ended the relationship.
I also explained why I messaged Micah, apologized for doing so, and asked if we could talk about everything that had happened.
He did not respond to my letter, and he ignored the text I sent him for his birthday.
All right. I'm trying to hold off here because, you know, New Year resolution is not to be a giant dick in every feedback Friday.
But why are we texting this creep for his birthday?
I'm already feeling it's January 2nd and my New Year's resolution is in the absolute toilet.
You know what?
No regrets.
I'm fine with it.
You beat your previous record of...
That's true.
One percent better.
That's what they say, right?
You lasted until the Super Bowl.
Super Bowl 2025 is when you lasted last time.
But yeah, one day into the New Year is already popping off.
All right, all right.
Why are we texting this creep for his birthday?
It's a little inconsistent.
Yes.
Look, I'm on your team here.
What's consistent here is you are sending him
consistently mixed messages. But why?
Why are you doing this? And I have a theory, but why?
We'll get into that.
Yeah.
I've channeled my anger and my sadness into CrossFit
and my professional endeavors with success,
but the emotional stress of the situation with Saul
has negatively impact my physical and mental health.
Because our personal and professional lives are so intertwined,
we will keep seeing each other
and will eventually have to speak.
How do I approach this conflict without creating
a major gossip-worthy scene.
How do I find closure so the pain goes away,
but also so I can trust again
and not assume that a guy is only acting interested in me
because he's using me.
Signed, drawing up a treaty that's clean and hopefully speedy,
with this seedy dude who's giving me the hebi-jeebies
when I fear that every guy who comes around is sneaky.
All right, so much going on here.
Like I said, very sorry that someone
treated you this way, pulled all these shenanigans, you didn't deserve any of this.
I don't know what his deal is, but it's safe to say that he is definitely creepy.
He definitely has issues with women.
This is, in my opinion, not a safe friend or peer to have.
And I'm very sorry that he put you in so many uncomfortable and hurtful situations,
especially given your history.
I have very little sympathy for grown-ass adults in the professional world who act this way.
But clearly there's something wrong with him.
He needs help.
I hope he finds that help.
At the same time, the best thing you could have done for him and for yourself would have been to call out his behavior sooner, kind of like what you did in the letter and either give him a chance, like one chance, I'd say, to apologize and act, right?
Or just cut off all contact with him.
Block him like he did to you.
Ignore him at events like he did to you.
Just pretend he doesn't exist.
Who cares?
This is what he's doing to you right now because he is ashamed, most likely, as he should be.
And if he didn't respect that boundary or you found out he was being creepy and gross with other people in your community, notify the.
event organizers, the moderators, other members, however this group is run and just ask them
to step in and either check this dude or kick him out. That's it. You want to approach this conflict
without creating a major gossip-worthy scene. That is how you do it. What you don't do, in my opinion,
is message a family member of his you don't have a previous relationship with in some sort
of attempt to recruit allies or upset him and maybe make an interesting new friend in the process.
you don't write a five-page letter calling him out, which, you know, I definitely applaud,
but which probably would have been even more impactful had it come sooner, only to turn
around and send him a birthday text.
I just worry that undermined your position, maybe inadvertently enabled him to continue acting
like a bit of a maniac or at least avoid responsibility.
The most effective way to deal with somebody like this, the least dramatic way is to just
draw a hard boundary and actually stand by it and privately ask for help from other people
that you already know if you need it.
Now look, I'm being a little tough on you here maybe,
as I think you can tell, I am 100% on your side on this.
I hate this guy.
I hate the position he's put you in.
And I guess I want you to get curious about why
you found it hard to take consistent stance with this guy.
I imagine it can be a little hard
to know exactly how to handle a person like this.
I get that, but I also think that might be
why this Saul situation had to happen.
To shine a light on these aspects of her personality
that might make her more vulnerable
to a dangerous person like this, that might make it hard sometimes for her to protect herself as well as she
can and to help her learn how to handle a person like this in the future, which I hope she never comes
across another opossum's anus like this, but I am sure it won't be the last difficult person
that she has to deal with in her life. No, you're right. And I'm also just remembering that she
began her letter by saying that Saul is avoidant. And I don't know if she's avoidant. Maybe there is a little
bit of avoidance, but she's also doing a dance that's compatible. In fact, didn't she say they have
complimentary personalities. So maybe to your point, this is how those puzzle pieces fit. Her second
question, how do I find closure so the pain goes away, but also so I can trust again and
not assume that a guy is only acting interested in me because he's using me. That's more complicated.
So there's a lot going on on that question. Let's try to parse it a little bit. First of all,
wanting to find closure so that the pain goes away. I think that is an interesting way to put
it closure, sure, great, I'm all for it. And if closure is what you want, then finessing Saul and the way
that Jordan pitched a moment ago would probably be the best way to do that. But I wonder if what you're
saying is that the distress of being harassed and manipulated by this weirdo, and then the distress of
having to stand up to him and put him in his place, that is hard for you to live with, which I get.
It's hard for most people, most normal people, anyway. But I do wonder if the difficulty of bearing that
distress, if that might have been the reason that you sent saw those mixed signals with the letter
and then the birthday text. I wonder if what you were really saying there was, hey, you really
hurt and grossed me out in all these ways. And then feeling the vulnerability and the pain of
telling another person how they wronged you, you wanted to maybe soften or transmute those
feelings by being kind. So the subtext of the birthday text might have been something like,
please tell me that we're okay. Please tell me that you're not the
a monster you've been acting like, let's pretend that we're cool, so I don't have to feel this
painful feeling of knowing that we're not.
Yeah, that makes sense.
Her inconsistency around Saul might be informed by a number of things, including her difficult
history with men, but one of those things might just be this fundamental ability to hang
in the awkwardness of being in conflict with another person.
Who, I want to remind her, was absolutely in the wrong?
Was absolutely in the wrong, which makes her struggle to stand.
by her position even more interesting. If she can't do it in a situation where he was the clear
aggressor, you know, imagine how much harder it would be in most of the other conflicts of life where
the math is often a lot messier. So this theory kind of casts the whole mica move in a new light
for me. I was framing that as stirring the pop, but maybe it was more like distributing the pain.
Yeah, good point, distributing the pain. I don't want to be in this alone. Can we both hate Saul?
Or can you tell me that you secretly hate Saul so I don't feel as alone in this? Also recruiting some
support because it was probably pretty nerve-wracking to feel like she had to hold this position on her own.
I can understand that. I still want to highlight that I do not think that was a good move, though.
No, it wasn't, but given what we're talking about, it's a move that I think I can understand to some degree.
And if these feelings ever arise again, next time she can go, okay, I'm feeling really activated by being
in conflict with someone, and I've seen this before. So let me sit with these feelings for a little while.
let me take them to the right people before I start looking for allies, maybe in the wrong places,
to dilute the distress. It's not that she can't look for allies in a situation like this. Like you said,
telling other people in the group about this guy might have been the exact right move. And also,
when you've been harassed by someone, it's absolutely okay to look for solidarity, to look for help.
Where it gets dicey is, are you looking for allies or are you looking for someone to help you
discharge some tough feelings? And or to accomplish some other end, like,
getting back at the person or riling them up, which kind of does sound like it was in the mix.
Exactly.
And as for trusting again and not assuming that a guy is only acting interested in you because he's using you, again, very big question.
And kind of a hard one to answer in just a few minutes.
I mean, we talk about this all the time.
This is going to be a process.
I think what makes your story complex is that Saul is a painful person to be around for sure.
But he was extra painful because what he did connected up with some very real trauma from your past,
which is really unfortunate.
And some of his behavior,
or maybe to be more precise,
the meaning you made out of his behavior,
like the idea that he was using you
to make his ex jealous,
which, by the way,
I'm not totally convinced as true.
I think this guy might have actually
really been into you.
I think so.
Yeah.
It's so insecure and messed up
that he didn't know how to communicate that.
But regardless,
it sounds like that interpretation
that he was just using you
feels true.
And that interpretation chimed
with some feelings
and some beliefs
you have about yourself.
Yeah.
And by the way, again, I agree.
I think Saul actually was interested in her, but he had a super dysfunctional and unhealthy way of acting on it.
Not that she would want this creepy dude's interest.
I just find it interesting that her read on all this was that she was just a pawn in some immature game with his ex and nothing more.
As opposed to a legitimate object of his interest inappropriately pursued.
Yes, exactly.
I'm just thinking about that thing she said, how she has some insecurity issues around men,
partly because she hasn't dated much and she doesn't get asked out in this group they have going.
Yeah, this was his way of asking her out, I think.
I think so.
Although it was mixed up with a lot of other weird stuff.
Anyway, this is a lot of life, right?
The thing that hurts us isn't really the thing that hurts us.
It's the earlier wound that thing touches or echoes.
Plus the stories we hold about ourselves, yeah.
Yes, the stories, the self-concepts, and the experiences that we have, and also the tools
we have to navigate all of this stuff.
Exactly.
So the best advice I could offer you here is I would get curious about what those stories and
concepts and wounds are.
you're clearly already on to a lot of them, but I'm assuming you've already done this to some degree
in therapy. I'm not sure if you're still there, but that's the place to do it. You already know about
one big wound, and I want to echo what Jordan said a moment ago. I'm so sorry to hear about this
assault by this friend that is terrible, and I'm sure it left you with a lot of difficult thoughts,
difficult feelings. One of them might be a fear that men are only interested in you because they're
using you, which honestly breaks my heart, but I understand it. And maybe that was the
result of the assault, or maybe it goes back even earlier than that, that would be something
useful to trace back as well. But I would also make room for the idea that these stories,
these beliefs, these feelings, they are not fixed. They can evolve. And the best way,
ultimately, is to create new experiences with people that show you that life can be different
from what happened before, that you can be different with different people, with different approaches.
Standing up to a creep and a bully in your professional group is one great way to do that,
to show yourself that you can withstand the distress, you can survive that, among other things,
and also pursuing men who are healthy and high functioning, who aren't super weird,
and allowing them to take an interest in you without putting too much stock in the fear
that they're only doing that because they must be up to something else. That's another way.
We obviously do not have full control over the plot of our lives, right?
Like, you can't will a great guy who doesn't push any of your buttons to come into your life tomorrow,
right?
you can't go back in time and handle Saul differently so you could have that experience.
What you do have more control over is how you generate new experiences and how you show up
in those experiences and how you meet yourself.
And that includes taking everything you learned from the Saul debacle, all the information
that it's kicked up about you, which is considerable and valuable and all these lessons
it's giving you and use that to hopefully seek out new relationships with more awareness,
more flexibility, more creativity, more courage.
So I know that's a little abstract,
but I really do believe that if you can do that,
then this bigger goal learning to trust again,
that is going to take care of itself.
Totally agree, Gabe.
Because like, how does a person learn to trust again?
How does anyone do anything big and conceptual like that?
I understand the question, but that's a huge idea.
If you break it down, it really just means like catching yourself,
assuming the worst about someone,
or speaking up along the way when something bothers you
or sharing some of this stuff with people who are safe,
whatever that looks like,
doing that in a way that gives you new data,
which, like you said, that's a process.
It's a process for everyone.
Okay, we went pretty deep on this one.
Let's go on beneath the surface.
Again, I'm sorry that Saul did a lot of this to you,
but given everything we're talking about,
in a way I'm happy you had to deal with him finally
because I think this dude has laid bare
some really important stuff for you.
Painful, absolutely, but very important.
And in that way,
this veritable opossum's anus, this preeminent platypus's perineum, he might actually be playing
a powerful role in your growth, which, like it or not, always turns out to be the case,
sending you a big hug and wishing you all the best. And now, we all know, the economy's
tighter than an opossum's anus these days, so don't miss out on the deals and discounts on the
products and services that support this show. We'll be right back. Thank you so much for listening
and supporting the show all the deals, discount codes, and ways to support the
this podcast are searchable and clickable on the website at jordan harbinger.com slash deals.
Please consider supporting those who support the show. Now, back to Feedback Friday.
Okay, next up. Dear Jordan and Gabe, I have a friend, let's call her Mary, who's in her 50s,
and married to a man who's barely 30. Her kids are roughly his age, so you can imagine the layers
before we even get to the actual problem. Wow, interesting. I guess younger spouse, weirdness with the kids.
People usually say that when the woman is younger, not the man.
I was actually just thinking the exact same thing.
It's somehow less weird for society when it's the man for reasons that I can't quite put my finger on,
but maybe slash probably, that's unfair.
So is she going to explain the layers?
So she goes on, she used to work from my family and was practically a grandmother figure to my child.
She's always been kind, competent, and dependable.
Then everything fell apart.
Okay, so no detail on the layers.
Got it.
That's not what she's writing it about.
That was a prologue.
Too bad because now I'm going to speculate, but fine.
I'm assuming it's some combination of divorce, messiness, and general age weirdness.
All right, let's hear it.
Her husband had an affair, and the other woman in the situation has been doing her best
impression of a villain from a bad lifetime movie, harassment, nasty notes, the works.
When Mary discovered the affair, she completely unraveled.
She became fixated on the situation to the point of obsession.
She couldn't eat or sleep, lost her dramatic amount.
not await and entered a kind of shutdown state. At her lowest point, she told one person that she had
threatened her husband with a knife. Meaning, just to be clear, Mary threatened her husband.
Mary threatened her husband, that's right. With a knife, okay. I just want to make sure because she said
the other woman is a lifetime villain, and this sounds a little knifie. Yeah. Lifetime villain sounds
a little knify. She told me that she actually stabbed herself in the stomach in a suicide attempt.
She used the word suicide explicitly. Oh, my God. She refuses to involve the police,
refuses medical help, refuses therapy, she just spirals. Then things escalated again when her young
dog suddenly got sick recently. The vet confirmed it was poisoning and they had to put the dog down.
The next day, the other woman left Mary a voicemail that strongly implied she was responsible,
not directly admitting it, but enough to make your hair stand on end.
Wow, that is some bunny boiler stuff. So we got a Glenn Close on our hands here.
That's exactly the image that just fuffed into my mind.
This is terrifying.
Damn, what does this woman have against her?
She stole her husband.
Yeah, you would think it'd be the other way around, right?
Like, you stole my husband, I'm going to kill your dog.
Okay, so if she did this, this woman is insane and dangerous.
To add to the instability, Mary's husband also quit his job.
Now, neither of them are working, and Mary's mental health is worse than ever.
All she does is sleep, cry, and care for her elderly parents.
She's barely functioning.
This poor woman.
So just to clarify, Gabe, Mary and her husband,
neither are working and they still live together.
That's what it sounds like.
All right.
It's a little confusing.
So they're still tied to each other.
This is a mess.
Yeah, they're still involved, clearly, cohabitating at least.
Meanwhile, I work for a collective impact agency.
We coordinate services and community supports,
but we don't have a case manager of our own.
And I think that is exactly the kind of professional Mary needs right now.
My contribution to the situation is basically limited to moral support,
documentation and some very bleak humor to cope. I know I'm not Mary's therapist, crisis worker, or law enforcement authority, but she keeps reaching out to me and then rejecting any suggestion that might actually keep her safe.
Okay, yeah, that's tough. I'm trying to protect my own mental health. I recently lost my dad and have kids to raise, but it feels awful to watch a friend disintegrate and know the situation around her is objectively dangerous. Yeah, that is brutal to watch.
How do I navigate supporting someone who's in a genuine mental health crisis, refusing help,
potentially in danger from someone else, and unwilling to take even basic steps to protect
herself? Is there any middle ground between stepping in hard and stepping back completely?
Or is the only realistically safe path to draw a line and get outside agencies involved
whether Mary likes it or not? Signed, looking for a way in with my decompensating kin
and a healthy way to check in
without becoming this woman's live-in
when she will not let me in
but also won't begin
the work of getting out of this tailspin.
What a cluster.
Yeah, both Mary's situation
and that questionable side-off.
Yeah, I'm glad you volunteered at this time.
Both might require an intervention.
So first of all,
I'm very sorry you had to say goodbye to your dad recently.
That is really tough.
And I hope you're holding up okay.
To be grieving a parent
and to be worrying about a family friend like that,
this. It's a lot for one person to handle on. It's just got to be pretty overwhelming. I'm sorry for
Mary too, of course. It sounds like the affair threw her for a loop. She's unemployed. Her husband's
unemployed. Soon to be ex-husband, I guess, is unemployed. She's having a mentee be over there.
But to lose your financial stability and then your pet, possibly because the woman your husband got
involved with murdered it. Dude, devastating, man. It's this poor woman. She doesn't deserve any of this.
But she's also making it hard, impossible really, to truly help her. And I know, you know how
I feel about that.
There's only so much you can do.
There's only so much you can do.
She's literally saying, I won't involve the police.
I will not get medical help.
I will not go to therapy.
Okay.
It's just so hard because then she also keeps reaching out and talking about and then
she's like, okay, here's an idea.
And she's like, no, I don't want to do that.
Frankly, that's not fair.
It's not fair.
No, she's, it's maddening.
She's putting her in a very difficult position.
So look, if I were in your shoes, here's what I would do.
The next time she calls you to vent about all this, I would say, hey, listen, Mary,
I love you.
We go back a long way.
You are practically my child's grandmother.
you're kind, you're competent, you're dependable, and I'm so sorry you're going through all this.
Look, I'm on Team Mary all the way, and I've been asking myself, how can I actually help my friend here?
What does she really need?
What can I do?
And the truth is, I don't know.
I don't know what I can do.
Because you've shared some really painful things with me.
You tell me about all the ways you're hurting and how you've hurt yourself, and I'm more than happy to listen
and support you.
But when I try to offer ideas that can help, I notice you turn them down.
And that puts me in a confusing place.
Like, how can I really be there for Mary?
So I want to ask you, and I want you to really think about this, what would you like from me?
What would be most helpful?
Do you want to try things in a new way that will help you get through this chapter, or do you just want to talk?
Because I'll be honest.
If you're ready to open yourself up to help and pursue that help, I'm here to help you do that.
I work in collective impact.
This is what I do.
I'd be thrilled to get you the support you need.
But if you're not ready for that, then I'm going to have to pull back and let you figure this out in your own way, which is totally fair.
Honestly, it would break my heart to watch you continue to struggle, but this is
your life. You have to navigate it the way you want, and I can accept that. You say all of that lovingly.
You can't go wrong. It's going to feel scary, I think. It might feel cruel almost, but it's actually
the opposite, because what you're saying is, I care about you so much, I'm going to point out how
you are getting in your own way. Yeah, good point. I care about you so much. I'm going to let you
tell me if you really want my help, and then I'll be there. Exactly. So this is important for two reasons.
One, I think it's the only way to snap Mary out of this fog or at least try.
I don't know exactly why she's rejecting your solutions.
I think I can't imagine.
She's probably scared to open herself up to help, scared to confront a timeline where her marriage is over and she needs to go her own way.
She's probably embarrassed that she needs help.
She doesn't want to face all the feelings that have driven her to spiral out and attempt suicide, which I can understand to some degree.
She's probably also getting something out of just complaining about all this.
She's the victim here.
It's true.
and there might be something comforting about just complaining about it without doing anything about it,
whereas your ideas are forcing her to move into a new place, which is, okay, so what are you going to do about it?
What piece of this do you own?
So by asking her point blank how she wants to be supported, you might shock her in a good way into stepping into that reality.
And maybe you can make some room for that as well.
What do you think is holding you back from trying any of these ideas?
Like when I say to you, hey, I think you should talk to you.
to somebody, what happens to that when we hang up the phone? Where does that go?
Yeah, if she can go there, that could be helpful.
If she can't go there, then that's also good information.
The other reason I think this conversation is important is it's going to help you clarify
your responsibility here. If you're saying, I know I'm not her therapist, I know I'm not her
crisis worker, I know I'm not a cop, but I can't stand watching my friend fall apart,
which again, totally understand it is heartbreaking. But until Mary says, okay, I'm falling apart,
but I'm willing to talk to somebody.
I'm willing to see a doctor.
I'm willing to file a police report.
I'm going to go stay with my sister and pick myself back up.
Whatever it is, I'm afraid there's kind of nothing you can do to meaningfully help.
Saying this out loud to her, that's also a way of reminding yourself, I'm not Mary,
Mary's not me, I can only support her up to a point, and I can't keep trying to save someone
who doesn't actually want to be helped.
We come back to this theme over and over again, so I won't belabor the point, but remembering
this is really important.
And I think that is the middle ground between stepping in hard and stepping back completely.
I think so because she's not inserting herself into Mary's life and forcing her to do things she's not willing or ready to do.
But she's also not going, okay, you're on your own Mary. Like you're out of your mind. I give up. Bye.
Like, no. Right. She's being a good friend by standing nearby and going, what do you need? Where do you want me in your life? I'm here.
I will say, though, the one area where I would step in forcefully and intervene is if she's in immediate danger. So if she calls you and like,
She has a knife in her hand.
You call 911.
There's no question about that.
Yeah.
Or even if she's making vague threats to hurt herself or hurt somebody else, you call the police.
And or you call her husband or you call some of her family members.
You make sure that they know that Mary is not doing well and they need to keep an eye on her.
I think the insight that our friend here is looking for is, how do I love someone without compromising myself?
How do I protect somebody without taking away her agency?
It's tricky.
That's always the tricky balancing act, yeah?
So kind of like question one, again.
It's more of an ongoing question than a firm stance, which means accepting that Mary might really struggle for a while or possibly worse.
And part of the reason that your script, Jordan, is a good idea is that if Mary does continue to spin out and something bad happens, then our friend here doesn't have to feel like she didn't really give it a shot when she could have.
It's easier to bear the guilt of the sadness or any regret or whatever might come up if she knew she showed up for Mary in the right way now.
So a good theme to start the year on, I think, because this is something I wrestle with pretty consistently and it shows up in everybody's life in one form or another.
I'm so sorry that Mary's going through it. I'm sorry you're hurting and dealing with all of this on top of it.
But you know, your grief about your dad, your responsibilities in your own life, they deserve your energy first and foremost because you are ultimately responsible for you.
And I hope that helps you keep an eye on the priorities here.
Sending you, Mary, and your whole family a big hug and wishing you all the best.
You can reach us Friday at Jordan Harbinger.com.
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companion to the show. Jordan Harbinger.com slash news is where you can find it. Okay, what's next?
Hey guys, my boyfriend has been at his place of employment for a decade. He's the best employee.
Those are the boss's words, and very valued. Then, recently, he asked to be paid a salary instead of
an hourly rate so he could have a steady paycheck. His boss agreed to this two months ago,
but has yet to decide on a number.
Wait, wait, wait. He's so valued he's the best in play. Hey, can I get a steady paycheck? No, you're not valued like that. We value you with mere words around here. Sorry, did you want money with that? That's going to be tough. Let's get into all that in a moment. Meanwhile, my boyfriend discovered that per New York state law, he was supposed to be getting paid sick leave since 2020. He was never made aware of his eligibility for it, has gone into work sick many times, and didn't take any time off when our son was born.
He pointed this out to the boss, but the boss doesn't think it's true and refuses to make it right.
But also like, oh, that can't be true. If only there were some way to quickly get answers to questions like this.
The Department of Labor, speaking of answers to questions like this, recommended filing for wage theft and gave him the paperwork and information for a free lawyer.
The problem is he's trying to solidify the salary that they discussed.
He wants to continue working there, but it's a small business.
and even though there are laws against retaliation,
he's afraid of what would happen if he dropped a dime on the company
to the Department of Labor.
Reporting this would also mean that his fellow employees get what they are owed.
I have to imagine that's part of the boss's concern here.
Should my boyfriend keep his mouth shut and accept his salary?
Or should he fight for what is right
and risk an uncomfortable relationship with the boss?
When standing up for himself might be a gaff,
but this boss is also legitimately screwing over this.
stuff. Good question. Tricky situation. We wanted to run all this by an expert, preferably also
somebody with a real job. So we reached out to Joanna Tate, friend of the show, and HR professional
for over 20 years. And the first thing Joanna explained to us was whether a job is paid on an hourly
basis or as a set salary, that isn't just something a boss arbitrarily decides. This is actually
news to me. The Federal Fair Labor Standards Act, the FLSA, it uses a set of standards basically
to determine whether a job should be paid on an hourly basis, aka,
non-exempt or on a salary basis, which is called exempt, jobs that are paid on an hourly basis.
They're generally jobs that are more hands-on or they're task-based.
They tend to follow a set of processes, defined tasks, they don't have a high level of independent
decision-making.
So think customer service reps, warehouse workers, admin assistants, retail workers, repair
tax, food service folks, medical assistance.
Like, you get the idea.
Okay.
Also, Joanna said that overtime pay is required for these.
positions, usually any work time over 40 hours per week or in a couple states like California,
any work time over 8 to 10 hours in a day. Salaried jobs, on the other hand, those are jobs that
involve managerial responsibilities, independent judgment, specialized professional knowledge that
require education and training. So like accountants, analysts, project managers, IT professionals,
executives, engineers, jobs like that. So Joanna said that your boyfriend can hold the job description
up against the FLSA exemptions tests and ask,
does this role make independent decisions?
Does it supervise?
Is it professional level work?
Does it meet salary rules?
If not, then it must be hourly.
I know this is kind of weird.
It's news to me, too.
I never really thought about this,
but I've always wondered about it.
Why classify somebody as salaried
when you can just pay them hourly?
I never totally got it.
Joanna also told us that employers
generally take on less risk
by classifying a job as hourly
because the FLSA has pretty strict criteria.
So if a role is misclassified as salary but should have been hourly,
the employer would owe back pay for all the missed overtime payments,
plus some fees, some penalties,
whereas paying employees on an hourly basis with overtime,
that almost never creates an HR compliance risk.
But then if your boyfriend's job meets the standards to be paid on a salaried basis,
then it would be easier for his employer to pay the same rate every pay period.
So if the job qualifies as exempt, meaning he should be paid a salary,
then Joanna couldn't say why the boss would be holding back on making that move.
I don't know. She obviously can't know for sure, but this scenario you've described,
plus this boss is total indifference to New York state law in Joanna's view that makes him seem avoidant.
So here's Joanna's advice.
If your boyfriend gets an agreement from his boss to move to a salary, he needs to get that in writing.
I would also add that when he had that conversation with his boss about moving to a salary,
we're not entirely clear on how that conversation went down, but he should have probably come to an agreement
or at least begun the discussion about what he actually wanted to be making.
He should have gone into that meeting with a number and gotten the boss to agree to it,
if not in the meeting then shortly afterward.
Not eight weeks later, we still don't have an answer.
So either use the hourly rate he was making to translate to a salary
or use it as an opportunity to get a little bump or something like that.
I hate to say this and I'm speculating a bit, I know,
but this is often how bosses manage to exploit people.
When the employee is like, yeah, I want a salary.
so you get back to me on what number that is and when I can expect it, and the boss is like, cool,
I'm going to do absolutely nothing with this particular request until I am forced to.
After that, Joanna said that he needs to ensure that the change is made to his next paycheck or on the effective date,
but then your boyfriend can work 30 hours or 100 hours each week and still get the same pay,
which he obviously has to be okay with.
Now, in terms of sick pay, Joanna looked into New York State law a little bit,
and what she found was that almost all private sector workers are eligible for sickly.
leave beginning in 2020, regardless of whether they are hourly or salary. So the only business is not
required to basically, apparently, are businesses that employ four or fewer people and have a net
income of a million dollars or less within the previous tax year. So we are all getting the impression
that your boyfriend's company has more than four people since you mentioned his fellow employees.
So we're going to assume that the company qualifies under this law. And by the way, we're going to link to
the relevant New York laws around paid sick leave in the show notes for you. So you guys can
read that for yourselves. The challenge is your boyfriend likes his job and apparently the boss is
very happy with him or at least says he's happy with him, but he has some good indications that his boss
will also resist doing the right thing here. And if your boyfriend complains or pushes for this the
wrong way, yeah, it could cause a rift and everything else that comes with that in the workplace, right?
Awkwardness, hostility, possible retaliation, whether it's fewer development opportunities or
like a write-up or suddenly his schedule changes, he's working nights, even though retaliation
is also clearly illegal and it might compromise this salary discussion.
Which again, that's another reason he should have locked in that number ASAP and gotten it in writing.
Yeah, good point. And Joanna said that the fact that his boss is doing this, that is concerning.
Whether he's just uninformed or he's purposely being non-compliant.
Because like, what else is he overlooking, accidentally or on purpose, right?
That creates noncompliance. How might he try to cover his own ass if it turns out that he's broken the law?
How is his treatment or his decision-making going to change if he feels threatened or embarrassed or just confused about the law?
These are risks.
Right.
So Joanna's advice to your boyfriend is this.
Document the conversation he had with his boss, the date, what was discussed, all that.
Keep copies of his pay stubs and any evidence that he went to work sick.
Emails, text messages, whatever it is.
She would also encourage him to have a conversation with that free lawyer that the Department of Labor referred him to and find out what his options are, how things might go down, how he would be,
protected or not if he reported the issue. And if your boyfriend ultimately decides to file a claim,
Joanna said that he should probably be prepared to leave this job afterward for obvious reasons.
But she also said that speaking up and making this right, it really is the right thing to do for him,
for his coworkers, even for the business. When he does it, that's up to him. But honestly,
my take, your boyfriend needs to do the math on what's more valuable to him. The sick pay, the
stolen wages, or this job that he loves and the new salary that he might enjoy, there's a way to put
a dollar value on that. If the boss owes him like 30K, I would confront the boss and get the money and find
a new job. But I don't know if it's like 5K and he loves his job, it's a different story.
I think he can also get the other employees together to approach this boss as a group and say,
hey, listen, we looked at the law. We're not sure how closely you've read it, but here's what it says
about we're supposed to be paid like this sick leave works like that. You need to make this right.
Non-confrontationally, ideally at first, and give him a chance to do the right thing,
which honestly, he should already be doing. And I wouldn't.
not be surprised if he already knew about this, but just for the sake of the relationship,
maybe give him one shot, and that'll also take some of the heat off of your boyfriend.
True, but the boss is probably still going to figure out that he got everyone together,
and that's, you know, not going to be good for you.
If your boyfriend can secure this new salary, get it implemented, and then get the boss
to adjust the sick leave stuff right after, I think that's the ideal outcome.
But whether that's possible with this guy, I just don't know.
But if the boss is like, okay, I'll think about it, and then does nothing, there's your
answer. We're rooting for your boyfriend, and good luck. You know, it's a great use of all your
reclaimed stolen wages, Gabriel, the fine products and services that support this show. We'll be right
back. If you like this episode of Feedback Friday and find our advice valuable, I invite you to do what
other smart and considerate listeners do, which is take a moment and support the amazing sponsors
who make this show possible. They're all searchable and clickable on the website at jordanharbinger.com
slash deals. You can also email our team, Jordan atjordanherbanger.com. Someone here will dig up a code for
you. It is that important that you support those who support the show. All right, back to
Feedback Friday. And now for the recommendation of the week. I'm addicted to lip filler.
Nice, Gabriel, thank you. My recommendation of the week is bartender for Mac. It's an award-winning
app for MacOS that for more than 10 years has superpowered your menu bar. But I love this thing,
because if you have a Mac, that top thing by the clock, that's the menu bar, it has all these
little icons. And you're like, what is this? And it's like this thing you use. And it's like this thing you
use once a year for your power supply that you don't need up there, and it's in the way,
and it's cluttered, you can hide that with bartender, and you can cover other things up there,
you can rearrange things that are up there, you can unclutter it, and then you just click the
little sunglasses or the bowtie, whatever your bartender icon is, and then they all appear.
And then there's stuff that you never want to see because you never need it, for some reason.
There's a menu bar icon for all kinds of crap.
I will literally never use in my entire life, and I permanently hide those.
And so my menu bar is nice and clean.
It doesn't have a zillion things.
Now it's useful, right?
Because if I want to click on my password manager, it's like the only thing up there.
If I want to switch Wi-Fi networks, it's the only thing up there.
I just find it so useful.
And I think it's like 20 bucks a year or something, and they update it regularly.
It's just a worthwhile upgrade if you're a Mac user.
It's called Bartender, and we'll link to it in the show notes.
They're not a sponsor or anything.
Again, recommendations of the week are always just things we like.
And speaking of things, we like to talk to you on Reddit.
I'm not allowed to anymore.
I called someone a Muppet.
on Reddit and I got a permanent ban for harassment. So they are thin-skinned up in there. However,
we do have a sub-reddit for the show that is now moderated by Gabriel and Bob. I read it all the time.
If I really have something to say, somebody will say it for me. Somebody who's definitely not me,
because making another account would be against their terms of service. But somebody would reply
there, I am no longer a moderator there. Again, I read everything and there's a fun discussions in there.
I would say I miss Reddit, but I can still read everything. So I guess I really don't. But you can
join most of us. You are the definition of a lurker now. Yes, I'm a lurker. I'm the chief lurker,
and you can find most of us on that subreddits, the Jordan Harbinger subreddit. Ironically,
missing Jordan Harbinger. All right, next up. Dear Ernie and Bert. I hate that's becoming a thing,
but okay. Whose fault is that? You could have booked a room with two beds in St. Louis,
bra, who wouldn't be in this situation? I mean, it was the publicist's fault and the hotel.
Who doesn't have any rollaways and yours for deciding to join the trip at the last minute? And
And you took a photo and you posted it.
Which you consented to and laughed about multiple times.
Fair.
Immaterial, though.
Kind of material, actually.
Why don't you just read the letter, Bert?
Okay.
During the financial crisis of 2008, my father, who was starting an asset management company for wealthy individuals,
lost millions of dollars of his client's money as well as his source of income as a result of market manipulations,
not through any direct fault of his own.
I am sorry to hear that.
Market manipulations.
Someone else did something weird in the market.
He made some bets, but maybe like people shorted certain stocks that he put his client's money into.
Yeah, that's possible, but I don't know because I'm very curious what the details are on that.
I suspect that's not what the letter's about, but are they talking about the mortgage-backed security financial crisis?
Like, oh, I wouldn't have lost all the money if it weren't for this massive economic downturn,
which I should have calculated the risk of when managing people.
money. I'm not a finance expert by any means, but there were a lot of interesting players in the market at that
time, and like short sellers can put out reports that tank certain stocks or whatever, and they can,
so to speak, manipulate the market in a way that is not always entirely fair or legit. But then usually
when you're managing money, you have like risk diversified. You're not like, oh, I had everything,
the AI sector. And then when this report came out that AI was a bunch of BS, it tanked all my
investments. Okay, well, you were not doing your job correctly. Actually, it is a big part of the story,
so you might want to hang on to that observation. Also, 2008 was a crazy time. It was crazy.
He goes on. In the following months, he divorced my mom, married another woman, and moved with her
and her two kids from Europe to South America. Neither he nor his new wife has had a stable source of
income since, as they've been living primarily off of the rental income from an apartment my father bought
before supposedly going bankrupt.
Ever since then, my father has been determined
to make it work in the financial markets,
always looking for the next idea
that would help him find an edge
and earn back what he had lost.
But it never worked.
Instead, he only lost more of his own money
and that of other people who believed in his new strategies,
including my brother and me.
Oh, man, this is a tough story.
I'm sorry to hear this.
That's got to put a strain on your relationship.
He tried to get a job at a bank once, but failed the final interview round and never attempted
it again. The last 15 years have gone like this. Approximately once a year, my father gets a new
idea for how to fix his life, coding a program for investors that would provide buy or sell signals
based on a custom mix of indicators, selling food via food delivery apps, driving for Uber, just to name
a few. He gets all excited about it, does his research, reads books, learns a new coding language,
and then something happens that makes him abandon his plan.
Sometimes it's some drama in the family,
his new wife's children getting kicked out of school,
his neighbors poisoning his cat, etc.
Sometimes it's some shiny new project,
like moving to a different part of the country
or completing a spiritual program and a local religion.
Sometimes the market conditions just change,
making his idea irrelevant.
This cycle has repeated itself countless times,
each time diminishing his self-respect
and strengthening his belief that everything he touches is doomed to fail.
Wow, yeah, that's a tough cycle.
I want to say so much more, but I'm biting my tongue.
My father is a highly intelligent man,
and he knows a lot about financial markets,
so it's understandable that he's been trying to apply this knowledge
to find an income source
instead of looking for a low-paying job.
But he's also not very in touch with his emotions.
I think he never fully forgave himself for losing his client's money,
and every failed project since
has just added insult to injury.
Sounds like it.
That's so hard.
The burden your dad must carry around.
Very difficult.
At the same time, from my perspective,
he never truly took responsibility
for getting his life back on track,
constantly hiding behind distractions,
ultimately leading to self-sabotage.
I suggested therapy multiple times,
even offering to pay for it,
but he never took me up on that offer.
So that's very telling, isn't it?
Yeah, he doesn't want to look
at this stuff really, does he? Yeah, and it's too painful or he doesn't think it's productive, maybe.
However, something changed around his recent 62nd birthday. I think he's now realizing that he'll
have to face the music soon, as his rental income is not sufficient to cover his expenses anymore.
My brother and I have been covering the difference. He's also noticing some age-related health issues,
so in his words, even if he wanted to, he wouldn't be able to do jobs that involve physical
labor or even long periods of concentration anymore. On the one hand, it feels like he's finally
accepting reality as it is, instead of deceiving himself into thinking that he only needs a couple more
months to make his next idea work. On the other hand, I'm afraid that he's giving up and will just
keep deteriorating with each passing year. As a son, I feel like I should believe in my father,
even if he doesn't believe in himself. But all of my past experience, as well as money I have lost as a
result would indicate otherwise. Yeah, dude, this is so intense, but man, well said, you have a very
good handle on all of this. What should I do? Should I encourage my dad to dust himself off and pursue
his investment program idea, knowing that he has a ton of unprocessed issues that will keep dragging him
down? Should I encourage him to find a normal job, knowing it would mean giving up on his hope of
earning back what he lost and settling for a life of unfulfilled potential? How far should I go to help him?
Should I buy him a car so he can earn money driving for Uber?
Should I try to coach him myself?
If he were an executive coaching client of mine, I'm sure I could help him,
but it takes a huge toll on my energy, which I need for my own life and job.
How and where do I draw a boundary here that doesn't drag my own life into my father's chaos?
Signs supporting my begetter, who's always been a go-getter,
in earning back this cheddar without becoming his abettor,
in a scheme that could leave him a debtor
because he is still fettered by this ancient scarlet letter.
Wow, nicely done.
That sign-off more than made up for the if he won on Q2.
Thanks.
I did some penance with that one.
So I find this story quite fascinating, Gabe.
I think it's really fascinating.
There's a lot in here.
It's also an interesting set of questions that he's asking.
He is, yeah.
This is a tough one, though.
Yeah, it's very tough.
There's so much going on here.
All right, let's start by appreciating what a sad predicament your father is in.
and what a predicament he's put you and your brother in.
What happened with him in the fund in 2008?
That is tragic, especially if it's true that it wasn't his fault,
losing millions of dollars from people that you presumably know,
and then losing your whole livelihood and your identity,
and probably your confidence and your mojo.
That is really traumatizing.
Not to get super dark here,
but there's a reason you hear about people committing suicide
after stuff like this.
The pressure and the shame and the guild is just like immense, right?
And you're going to destroy his marriage.
everything. So in a big way, I feel for your dad here, he's been through something really painful.
And the fact that he's still around, he's still playing with new ideas, even though he's not being
totally realistic. That alone is kind of impressive. And I'm happy that he's been able to survive this.
That does say something about your dad. On the other hand, the way he's survived this, it's interesting.
It sounds like he's kept hanging on through some combination of repression and fantasy.
Right. The pillars propping him up based on what he's shared with.
us are basically, I don't want to feel the guilt and the shame and the vulnerability around what I did
slash what happened to me. And I'm going to turn it all around with this next big idea. It's going to
fix everything. He's perpetually running away from this painful past, but he's also perpetually
running towards some fantastical future that never really arrives. Yeah. He's fleeing both,
but spinning his wheels and never quite getting anywhere. That, I have to say, must be incredibly
stressful to live with and scary. Can you imagine? I'm speculating a little bit, but I get the sense
that his dad lives in basically a constant state of anxiety, embarrassment, frustration, and he's
working very hard to stuff those feelings down or convert them into excitement and inspiration,
but like in a very abstract way, if his refusal to go to therapy is any indication, of course.
But until he's willing to go to therapy or at least go near this stuff with somebody...
Until he's willing to go there. Yeah, I don't think there's any meaningful way out of this predicament
he's in. There's no healing. There's no learning. But growth aside, on a very practical level,
I'm not sure he'd be able to extract whatever lessons he'd need to extract from that experience
to be the kind of entrepreneur he imagines himself to be.
That might be part of the fantasy too.
Like if I can just launch this new product, I won't have to face all of that.
I can just keep moving forward.
Not an issue.
Yeah.
It sounds kind of like gambler's fallacy, right?
Like I just need to win this one and everything's right again.
There's so much as writing on the next big idea, his safety, his power, his stability, his identity.
And his exemption from this kind of work.
His very sense of self, I would say, which again, the way his dad is going about this, the way he's relating to his past and apparently making his predicament partly his kids' responsibility. I think it's unfair. I think it's misguided. It's a little gross to me. But I have some empathy for this guy because he's not totally equipped and he's terrified. And this must feel like the only way to get back to who he was. And to be fair, he's a smart cookie. Like he's not totally delusional. He actually is very bright, but he can't quite make it happen.
That's true. So, no, I definitely would not encourage your dad to dust himself off and pursue this investment
program idea, knowing that he has a ton of unprocessed stuff that will just keep dragging him down.
Not to mention a highly questionable track record. He lost more people's money, including you and your
brothers. That was even more recently than the 2008. So, sorry, I'm being blunt here, but it does not
sound like your dad is somebody that anybody should trust with their money. So I don't think you'd be
doing him any favors by encouraging him. And I don't know if encouraging him would even make much of a
difference. The only thing that's going to make a difference at this point is if your dad were willing
to go back in order to move forward. If he were willing to talk about how his past is informing how he's
living his life now, if he showed a genuine curiosity about this tricky pattern of his to get
excited about an idea, then to lose steam or to get distracted or find some excuse to not follow
through on it. I understand that must be really hard. Yeah, I think it probably feels fatal to him.
That's the sense I get. But if he can't feel this stuff, talk about it with somebody,
weave it into his strategy from now on, what is going to change? You can't avoid looking at the
past and where you are in the present and then just magically hope for better results in the future.
You can't make him do that work. He has to want to do that, and I'm not getting the sense that he does.
Now, if he needs some kind of additional income, which it definitely sounds like he does,
then yes, I would gently encourage him to find a normal job.
And yeah, that probably means giving up on his hope of being an entrepreneur and earning back
what he lost and settling for a life of unfulfilled potential.
But given the facts here, I don't know if that's necessarily a bad thing.
Because, and this is a very intense thing to acknowledge, but I think it's important
for you and your brother to recognize it.
He's not going to earn back what he lost at this point, not in terms of the dollars and cents,
not in terms of the identity, certainly not with this approach at this stage of his life.
It's also an interesting question whether his dad would be settling for a life of unfulfilled potential.
I mean, I get why he's saying that because, like I just said, he's bright.
He's really actually very clever this guy and apparently very knowledgeable about the markets.
He's teaching himself how to code new languages, multiple languages.
Like, this is an impressive dude in a lot of ways.
But what does potential mean when you get down to it?
It's something I've been asking myself recently.
If he really has the potential, then he needs to be able to capitalize on it and apply it in the world.
That ability to make good on your potential is part of the potential.
If he can't do that, then that potential might be less like untapped talent and more like a pipe dream.
It's an interesting point.
When is it untapped talent and when is it just an idea in your head about who you are and what you deserve?
That is a very intense question.
You know what?
This is exactly what I was talking about on last week's episode when I was describing some of the stuff that these travel.
have brought up, you know, like coming to terms with what you're actually capable of,
the answer to the question you just asked can be very wounding.
Yeah, and that wound, that's precisely what he's avoiding by indulging the fantasy
and refusing to open up about this.
Now, about buying him a car so he can earn money driving for Uber, I don't know, man,
this is an alarm fireworks going off around me here.
On one hand, I want to say, sure, if that gives him a steady source of income, a system he can
plug into and buying him a car is feasible for you, that could be a nice way to set
him up, why not? Although, I don't know if you should do that yourself. That should be something
you and your brother discussed together, maybe. On the other hand, if you guys are the ones going
to him like, Dad, here's what you got to do. You got to drive for Uber. You're going to do it five
days a week and you'll be good. I would definitely hit pause because you might be tempted to just
give your dad the solution and shove him into this gig when you don't have any indication that
he's going to follow through and stick with it. It is decidedly unglomerous. It's not as cool
as starting a new program and dominating the financial market and making millions of dollars, okay?
could see him driving it for a month and then giving up because he hates it or he thinks he's above
it or he wants to focus on one of his entrepreneurial ideas. Yeah. And then he'll be in the exact same
place, but like with a free Nissan Ultima. Right. My fear is he sells the Ultima to pay an engineer
in Freak in Slovakia to code a janky version of his app that will just never see the light of day.
Now, if he comes to you and he goes, okay, I've given this a lot of thought, I've come to the
conclusion that I can't make these ideas happen. I've decided to drive for Uber. I'm going to make
some money, have a reliable gig, but I need a car. That is a different story, okay? But even if you did
this, I would buy the car yourself and let him borrow it or lease it to him for nothing or whatever.
That way, if his plan falls apart, you can take it back or you can sell it and that prevents your
dad from selling it and going, well, it's a gift. You can't tell me what to do with it or some
nonsense like that. But regardless, I would still advise you to proceed with caution. I would want you to
have some real assurances that he would honor the agreement to keep the job. But man, that would be
a different story. So the difference there is, is he living in the same reality as his sons, basically?
Yeah, which means coming to terms with what he's actually capable of and what is actually
possible at this point in his life. And I don't know if that's going to happen. It sounds like it might
be possible as he's getting older, but it's also possible he will always cling on some level to the
fantasy for the rest of his life. Gabe, I don't watch Shark Tank and I haven't for years,
but you've seen the show, right? Of course. You remember those people that come in and they have
light up buttons that go on your jeans that are really lame? And they're like, I have two
mortgages on my house and I just need to get this over the finish line. And then everyone's like,
oh my God, all the sharks are like, no, I've got to put this business out of its misery.
Like, they just choke slam that guy on the show because we're putting this thing out of its
misery. We are giving you the real. We're not fluffing you up like your entire family has done,
like other people have done giving you this false hope while still saying no in some ways.
Like a bank gave you a loan, but they should not have done that. They should have said this is a
terrible idea. Don't do it. You're right. It's so cringe, right? Because like Lori Grenier or somebody
will turn to the girls he's with who are modeling the buttons and be like, would you wear this
on a date? And they can just see the look on their face like, sorry, Uncle Jim. Terrible. Yeah.
and the guys like just crushed because,
but it's like the lamest thing ever.
This is kind of that situation, right?
It's like, oh, yeah, I'm going to come up with this program and da-da-da-da.
And it's like, okay, you're not, though.
That's not real.
There are Silicon Valley companies that are trying to come up with this kind of stuff
slash aren't trying because it's not a realistic thing to do.
You're not going to figure this out while you're farting around at Chipotle on your laptop.
It's not happening.
Anyway, maybe he'll get more realistic as he gets older.
I don't know.
So until you really feel that he's acknowledging this stuff, I wouldn't be too eager to step in and save him, certainly not at your own financial expense.
I think the real theme of your letter, and it's such a rich question, is how to come to terms with apparent's limitations, right?
And how to make sense of their psychology and how to love them without compromising yourself, which is a bit of a theme on today's episode.
For sure. These are really big questions.
We could talk forever about them. And they're so wrapped up also in your own feelings, I imagine about your life and yourself and the world.
world. This is your dad. This is the person who generally teaches you what it looks like to go out
into the world and be effective and be powerful and risk failure and survive failure and make an impact.
There's probably a whole other letter behind this letter about watching your dad go through all of
this for so long as meant for you, has brought up for you. I just want to acknowledge that.
But really, the bind you're in, I think it's summed up by this one line in your letter when you said,
as a son, I feel like I should believe in my father even if he doesn't believe in himself.
Yeah, that kind of broke my heart.
It's a devastating line. And I have to say, I'm very moved by it. There's so much in there
about parents and children, especially about fathers and sons, I think, and what we owe our loved ones.
But for our purposes today, I'll just say, I would really sit with this assumption and see if
it's true, because to be honest, here's another tough pill to swallow. I'm not sure that you
should believe in your father, even if he doesn't believe in himself.
I think that's his job.
I completely agree.
I also think that it's his job to have a relationship with his goals and his talents that allows for this kind of doubt and adversity.
In other words, for him to develop the capacity to bear the injury of struggling and to either learn from his failures and keep going in a new way or adjust his plans and his expectations accordingly.
That's not just your dad's job.
It's all of our jobs, but it's our job for ourselves.
Nobody can do that for us.
Yeah, it's not his job to prop up his dad.
It's not. So one question is, is it really true that you should believe in him when he doesn't believe in himself? If all the evidence is pointing to the fact that he isn't capable of actually making these dreams a reality, then there's a good reason to not believe in him. Or maybe another way to put it is, the thing I would believe in is not necessarily your father's ability to become a hedge fund manager or a tech entrepreneur or whatever, but in his potential to face the music, as you put it, to step into a more honest understanding of himself and of the world.
and to take the best possible care of himself and act responsibly within his limitations,
so that you can accept him as that guy.
I think it's likely that he'll never be the finance God he wants to be,
but he might be able to become somebody better, which is himself, your dad, warts and all.
That is something worth believing in.
But maybe the even more helpful question for you is,
if it does feel true that you should believe in your father when he doesn't believe in himself,
why is that?
Right.
Well, I'm going to guess that withdrawing that belief in his dad, that would also be very hard for him in a very different way.
I think so. That's a good point.
I think he's already lost most of his confidence in his dad, which, as you're saying, Gabe, that's probably appropriate.
But there's still a part of him that feels obligated to keep supplying his dad with that confidence and that motivation, which might be more like inflating him when he deflates.
And I think that what you're getting at is, where does that responsibility come from?
Because it must go back a long way.
And what would happen if he put that responsibility down?
The more we talk about this, the more I realize we're talking about two parallel griefs, right?
His dad is contending with the grief of having lost millions of dollars, losing his career, his identity, his power, his standing, and this ongoing grief of not being able to reinvent himself.
And like you said, he's avoiding that grief in a variety of ways.
And our friend here is contending with the grief of accepting his father for who he is, in addition to the strength.
of needing to make sure that his old man is okay, which I completely understand. Whether his father can
really go through that grief, whether his father can come to terms with who he is, what he's capable of,
our friend and his brother might be able to place some supporting role in that, but that's largely
not under their control. Whether our friend himself can go through his own grief around his dad,
that is under his control. And as we come back to time and time again, I would spend more
time attending to that process and working through the implications of it for you, than
trying to manage your fathers.
Could not agree more, Gabe.
And so on that note,
no, I probably wouldn't try to coach him yourself
because it doesn't sound like he's really asking for that help
or that he'd even know what to do with it.
So here too, it might be worth considering
whether the impulse to step in
and coach him is a way of also propping him up,
doing this work for him,
maybe avoiding some work in yourself
by trying to get him to change.
The best thing you can do, in my view,
and you're already on to this,
is to love your father, support your father, accept your father, without compromising yourself
financially, emotionally, practically. And again, that is a process. It might require constant vigilance
and assessment. But I think you're learning more and more what's a healthy and wise investment
in your father and what isn't. So the next step is to embrace that and to enforce that while still
showing your dad that you are there for him in the ways that are fair and that are actually helpful
if he wants it. And sure, there might be.
come a point where you and your brother need to step in and take care of them if he's truly on the
brink of disaster. There's some grief and acceptance in that too, but I wouldn't bail him out
prematurely. I wouldn't deprive him of the opportunity to step up and take care of himself. He's
62. He's not 92. He can still pivot to other options and hold down a job that'll keep a roof over
his head. And maybe the best thing you can do is help him turn that corner. I'm sorry you're
dealing with all this. I can only imagine how intense and sad it's got to be, but you're also handling
this was so much thoughtfulness, so much insight, so much self-awareness. And I know that's going to
lead you to the right stance with your dad. Sending you, your brother, your whole family, a big hug,
and wishing you all the best. Go back and check out our double episode with Joe Loyah and our
skeptical Sunday on near-death experiences if you haven't done so yet. The best things that have
happened in my life and business have come through my network. It's the circle of people I know
like and trust. You've heard me shill it before and I'll shill it again. Six-minute networking.com.
It's free. It's not schmoozy. And there's no shenanigans. I don't need your credit card.
number. It's on the thinkific platform over at six-minute networking.com. Dig the well before
your thirsty folks. Advertisers, discounts, ways to support the show on the website 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, Tata Sadlowskis,
and of course Gabriel Mizrahi. Our advice and opinions are our own. Yeah, I'm a lawyer, but I'm not
your lawyer, so consult a professional before implementing anything you hear on the show.
Ditto Joanna Tate.
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, happy New Year.
I hope you apply what you hear on the show so you can live what you learn, and we'll see
you lots more here in 2026.
What if the person charming your lonely aunt isn't after love, but her home, her will,
and her life savings?
In this preview, Javier Lava reveals how modern romance scams have evolved.
into full-blown identity takeovers hiding in plain sight.
A lot of con artists, they are very generous at first.
They're the types of people that are going to pick up the tab when you go to dinner.
They're buying you stuff.
They're very generous.
And they're doing that.
It sounds like they're fattening you up for when they need that favor.
When they need that favor, when they need that loan, you wouldn't question it because
this guy is so generous.
Why wouldn't I trust him with money?
From a distance, we're thinking about the...
romance games like how could anybody fall for these things right but the closer you look into it
and put yourself in the shoes of the victim you realize that when you're in the center of the
cyclone it all makes a lot more sense another thing is when somebody smothers you and just consumes
all of your time that's a warning sign too because what they're doing is that they're cutting you
off from your surroundings they create the urgency so that you could make stupid decisions and you
kind of bypass your reasoning. Don't forget your friends and don't forget your family. Their opinion
counts and you should take it. Honestly, when you start seeing all these signs, you recognize
that maybe this is a situation where you got to create personal space. You have to create boundaries.
Most victims of any con artists, they feel so ashamed that they don't want to tell their story
because they've been violated. Their trust and they're no longer trusting people to hear how
Predators turn affection into control, listen to episode 1195 of the Jordan Harbinger Show.
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