The Jordan Harbinger Show - 1331: Your Boyfriend's Wrath Is Blocking Your Path | Feedback Friday
Episode Date: May 22, 2026Your boyfriend rages through walls, jobs, and landlords like a one-man wrecking crew. You've got coping tools—but is coping the goal? It's Feedback Friday! And in case you didn't already kn...ow 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/1331On This Week's Feedback Friday:If you want to skip Gabe's thoughts on Brazilian street muggings and the story of the weirdest yoga class of his life, you can take a Vinyasa and jump straight to 13 minutes and 30 seconds.Your marriage crisis got "counseled" by a pastor-and-wife duo who prescribed prayer and a Toblerone. You lost your church, your college friends, and years with your parents. Did the chocolate-and-scripture combo crack the case, or was something else doing the real work?Your sister credits a decentralized, unregulated form of Biblical Counseling with healing her postpartum spiral. Now you're depressed too, convinced misery stems from not obeying Scripture, and you're about to walk into a session built to challenge you on exactly that. Brace for impact?You're a Lutheran pastor with serious thoughts about charlatans slapping "pastor" on a business card. You refer congregants out, see a counselor yourself, and have a hot take coming on whether anyone should stay at a church serving judgment instead of compassion. Mic drop incoming?Recommendation of the Week: Hydrocolloid Roll — a cheaper, better-sticking, washable alternative to Band-Aids that you can cut to size for any scrape, blister, or zit.Your 6'4" disinherited wheat-heir "sweetheart" punches walls, rages at landlords, and has you one outburst from eviction. You've got Al-Anon, jiu jitsu, and Grand Master Carlos' mantra in your corner. Is that armor enough, or is the armor itself the problem?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: Lufthansa Allegris: Go to Lufthansa.com and search for "Allegris" to learn moreBetterHelp: 10% off first month: betterhelp.com/jordanChime: Open an account in two minutes: chime.com/jhsHiya: 50% off first order: hiyahealth.com/jordanAT&T: Get an iPhone 17 Pro for $0: att.com/iphone or visit an AT&T store for detailsCastbox: Find, organize, and subscribe to the world's best podcasts: castbox.fmSee 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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All it takes is a yes.
Welcome to Feedback Friday.
I'm your host, Jordan Harbinger.
As always, I'm here with Feedback Friday producer,
my bromad with a notepad, Gabriel Mizrahi.
On the Jordan Harbinger show, we decode the story.
stories, secrets, and skills are 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. And our mission
is to help you become a better informed, more critical thinker. During the week, we have long
formed conversations with a variety of amazing folks. Gold smugglers, Russian spies, astronauts, rocket
scientists. This week, we had Javier Leva on why we obey the psychology behind why people
fall for, I don't even know if you can call it pranks. They're so harmful phone calls and
scams. We also did a skeptical Sunday last Sunday on psychic detectives, which is about as real as
you might expect. On Fridays, though, we share stories, take listener letters, offer advice,
play obnoxious soundbites, and climb the favela caliber mountains of your most trying and
intimidating life conundress.
Hey guys, it's producer Jay's here. If you want to skip Gabe's thoughts on Brazilian street
muggins and the story of the weirdest yoga class of his life, you can take a vinyasa
and jump straight to third.
30 minutes and 30 seconds.
Namaste.
Speaking of which, Gabe, you're still in Rio?
Yep, still in Rio.
I'm heading to Florianopolis tomorrow, though.
I've heard good things.
It looks really stunning, actually.
Yeah, I'm really looking forward to it.
I already found a good yoga teacher through a friend of mine,
and I got this Airbnb on a country estate of some kind with a cat who lives there.
Okay.
Things are looking up.
That is so right up your alley.
All you need.
Also, as much as I've enjoyed it here in Rio, it will be.
be nice to not worry about being mugged for at least a week, maybe too. That's what everyone says about
Rio, including people from Rio that I know, but do you actually feel like you're in danger there,
or is it just you know that you are? Honestly, dude, I don't. Okay. I don't at all, but I can't tell
if I'm being naive or the danger's overstated or the danger is real, but people just don't mess
with me. I really have no idea. Maybe they see the yoga mat sticking out of my backpack and
they're like, eh, better leave that one alone. They see it to make it to make. They see it to
And Duka and they just go running for the hills. Exactly. It's that eco-friendly rubber really
checks people. But yeah, everyone I meet here keeps telling me not to use my phone when I'm on the
street or by the beach. And they're all like, watch your back. As anything could happen. People
roll up on motorcycles, grab phones. I assume they know better than I do. I just got here.
I am doing all those things. But I honestly, I just don't feel that edge that you feel in
dangerous cities at all. And I'm tired of having to keep an eye out all the time.
Yeah, I get that. You can't completely relax when you can't even leave your phone on the table
while you're eating or in your hand. It's nice to be able to turn off that part of your brain.
For sure. But I really did like it here. I think I learned more Portuguese in 10 days in Rio than I did in
like a month or more in Portugal. Or maybe just my Portuguese made a bigger leak here than it did there.
It's a good feeling. Is it because of the people, you think, or what?
I think it's the people, yeah. I'm finding them very friendly for the most part. Maybe I'm also more
open now after traveling a bunch. The accent is way easier to understand. They actually
open their mouth and enunciate. So it's a little bit easier to learn. And I've been meeting
Brazilians who don't speak English. So there's that. Yeah, there it is. The best way to learn.
Get some local friends, get a long-haired dictionary, nom's in. You'll be watching City of God
without subtitles in no time. Also, the yoga studio I've been going to the classes there are all
in Portuguese. So that has been a game changer. Oh yeah. Now you can order updog and down dog in any
restaurant. Exactly. My favorite dishes. Yeah. Hitting that duolingasana. You learn a lot of good words
in yoga. You learn, you know, like stretch, turn, lift your leg, right elbow, left knee, stuff like that.
But I'm also learning words that I will never use like butterfly and pretzel. I mean, I feel like
you might use those words. It's not that weird. I'm not really a pretzel guy. I guess that's
why I said that. Gabe, most people like joy, that's really the big difference here. Oh, yes. I have
heard about this. Phrases like warm pretzel, pretty butterfly. They come in handy for some people.
Yeah. And phrases like, can I get a good?
a prison cut for one.
Do not.
I always forget that.
Yeah.
It's okay.
I suppose you'll learn one day.
Oh, dude, the weirdest thing happened at Yorva the other day.
I wanted to tell you about this.
What happened?
You forgot to take a shirtless selfie afterwards and post it?
Much weirder than that.
So we were like 10 minutes into this class.
It was a heated class and we were still warming up.
It was very chill.
Not a hard class, not a crazy class whatsoever.
And all of a sudden, I just hear this pop.
Oh, and your leg?
No, not me, across the room.
Oh, no.
Actually, pop is not the right word.
It was worse than a pop.
It was like a snap.
Oh, like a loud snap.
Oh, that's, ouch.
Oh, no.
And then a man in the back row started crying, like sobbing and groaning.
It was so awful.
Yeah.
One of the worst sounds I think I've ever heard in real life.
So what did he just tear his ACL somehow?
I don't even understand what you could do.
That was my first thought because that can happen if you rotate your knee too far in a pose or you
force it into a weird position or whatever, but it was so loud. I was like, how does an ACL make that
sound? And it turned out he broke his, I don't know if it was his tibia or his femur, but he broke his
leg. Oh my God, in yoga. In yoga, dude. I have no idea how you do that, but he did it. Yeah, so he,
I don't know, he pushed his leg too far in a stretch or something. I mean, it seems like it shouldn't be
that easy to do that when you're not moving, but I don't know. I actually Googled it because I was
curious and they said it's extremely hard to do, but maybe he already had a stress fracture or he was
a young guy though, so I don't think he had osteoporosis, but it's possible it was just waiting to
happen or he already had an injury, but it was so intense. I felt so bad. It was really hard
to hear him moaning on the floor and just cry. It was also a little bit awkward as well
because the teacher went over to check on him and then class kind of stopped for about five minutes,
maybe longer and I was sitting there in the I think we were like in a twisting lunge or something and I was like do we sit down?
Do you stay in the pose and wait? Is that weird?
Yeah, that's weird.
Rubbing it in this guy's face.
What's the protocol here?
Oh, were you trying to do this, pal?
As your arm goes up a little bit higher and you bend your wrist back, was this, was this what you were aiming at when you broke your leg while standing in yoga?
That's funny.
I'm sure that was actually the last thing on his mind is he's like, hey, am I going to be able to walk again and do this?
and it's super embarrassing too.
I know, but really, what do you do?
Do you keep working out?
Do you walk over and chuck on the person?
Do you give them space?
Do you just sit there and hold good thoughts for them?
That's kind of did all those things.
You know what they need?
They need those Japanese guys
who bring out the barricades at the Olympics.
What is this?
I'm not familiar with this.
Oh, dude, you never see that.
Okay, so in Japan,
I want to say it was Japan during the Olympics.
You watch like power lifting or something.
An athlete gets injured.
They go down and they're like,
and everyone's like, oh my God. And then normally in every other country, the coaches run over and
there's medical personnel and stuff. And the audience just kind of like, dang, that guy got injured,
right? And then you're watching. In Japan, a whole crew of dudes comes out with basically like a folding
barricade, kind of like a folding table situation, but long. And they put it around the injured
person and all the staff. So nobody else can really see what's going on. Oh, like when they're
during construction on the four or five. Yeah, pretty much. Yeah.
Interesting. I've never heard of this.
Yeah, it's funny because they do this kind of, it's like an awkward shuffle because they're carrying this thing.
And they also, they don't like sprint in because other people are walking in that are more important, like medical personnel.
They set this thing up and it sounded like a South Park-ish kind of looking thing.
That's exactly what I was picturing like a 2D animation.
Yeah, the audience just can't see what's happening.
And they're just very calm, right?
They're like, and here are the injury guys.
They're not like, oh, my goodness.
They're just completely stoic and they set up these barricades.
This is to give the person privacy.
Yeah, it's very Japanese.
Somehow they give them privacy.
Maybe there's a dignity element because you're on the ground.
You're like, wah, because your leg is dislocated from your knee or something.
You know, you've just separated your hip socket or whatever, lifting a ton of weight or your shoulders.
So they just, yeah, I get it.
It's probably nice.
You're like, oh, not everybody's watching me.
It's not a camera in my face.
Like, hey, how you doing over there?
Nobody can take a photo of it.
That is Japan for you.
Yes.
Definitely, yeah.
I guess the yoga studio could use some of those.
I think so.
But it's weird because my Portuguese is still pretty.
pretty shaky, as you know, so I didn't go over there and check on him because I didn't know how to say,
like, are you okay, dude? Do you need me to call someone? Can I get you something? Actually, I guess I do know
how to say those things now that I think about it, but in the moment I froze and I didn't want to
overstep and then mess of my words. No, it makes sense. I think if you break your leg in your hometown
yoga studio, you don't really need slash want some gringo and a K-bonito hat in your face being like,
you bad, me call, ambulancee, come? Like, I love it. I love. I love.
that that's how you think I sound in Portuguese, but you are not wrong. That's how it sounds to them,
if it were, yeah. Leg, no, Funciona. I think the man wasn't enough pain. I was just going to leave him
alone. Yeah. Meanwhile, he's like, you know, oh, good, I'm glad you asked. And he tells you something and you're like,
hang on, I only understood half of what he said. Can you say that slower? Yeah, let me get my translator.
Make a Google translate. Say that again. I got to load this app that understands you. Yeah, look,
I remember living in other countries. You don't speak the language very well. It's not just not having the
words. It's like you don't really know how to participate in certain things. You see someone fall and
you go to help them up and they're talking to you and you're like, I don't really understand.
You don't know how to participate and you also don't know if you're truly welcome to. But if
this happened in America, I'm pretty sure I would have gone over there and at least tried to help.
Are you okay? What can I do? And instead, I just sat there quietly in child's pose and wished him
well in my head in English. So what had, did they cancel class and just cart him out?
No. Some people helped him limp out of the room and I guess he went to the hospital. And then
the teacher resumed class. And a few minutes later, we all seemed to forget that a guy just
snapped his leg in half in the beginning of yoga. It was kind of bizarre, actually. Yeah. Funny how that
works, but it's also like, I can't do anything about this and I'm already here and I already
paid for the class. So let's get down to business. Yeah. Now he has to just get a doctor, I guess.
It was funny because afterward the teacher was downstairs eating food from some kind of breakfast
spread in the lobby of the studio, which, by the way, another thing I love about doing yoga
in other countries, because in Europe and Brazil, I've noticed that they serve tea.
after class at a lot of studios and apparently also breakfast sometimes, which I've never seen.
That's way to make us look back. Take notes, core power. I've never had a snack there.
Literally, dude, can you imagine? Never. They charge you for water. So I was like,
yes. Hey, I popped out. I was like, hey, thanks for class. Hope that guy's okay. In Portuguese.
And she was like, yeah, but I'm teaching a handstand workshop at the Botafogo location next Saturday.
If you want to come and I just froze and just buffered for a few seconds. I think I know what she said, but I'm
not 100% sure. And then, you know, I just said like, okay, cool, thank you. And in my head,
I was like, okay, I'm going to go Google half those words later and decide if they apply to me
at all, which it turns out they kind of do, but I had other plans. And then I went to a cafe and I
prep the show. It's, oh man, I hope that guy's okay. Should be. Anyway, it's $20 a person. And it
starts at 1 p.m. That's like, that's literally what I was like, I hope that man survives.
And she was like, we'll never see him again. But you, on the other hand can make it to my handstand
workshop and bought a foco on Saturday morning.
You look like a man who needs to work on his inversions.
Am I right?
Gosh, who needs duolingo when you have emergencies happening around you all the time?
It is a trial by fire every single day.
Don't break your shin and yoga, man.
Your travel stories must continue.
I genuinely worry about what would happen to the show if you couldn't work out.
I feel like I think my performance on this podcast would go down if I couldn't be physical.
I would just, yeah, be kind of a mess.
It is not pretty when I can't work out.
No, same.
I've been thinking about that ever since.
that happened. I will be careful, I promise. I have this recurring nightmare where I can't use my
legs anymore and I have to redo my entire workout. Oh, interesting. Here's what's interesting about it. Before I started
working out, I had this dream or nightmare that I lost the use of my legs and it was like my life was just
over. Like I was so upset and sad and it was like I had to install wheelchair ramps and like I had to,
I was like embarrassed because I would go to do something for my kids or family and I was like the guy
who was in the, and then when I started working out, the dream totally changed. I would lose
the use of my legs and I would be like, all right, Chad, my trainer, I'd be like, we have to redo all
these exercises because I can't do leg stuff anymore. And I'm just going to get like a super
jacked upper body and be that guy who like walks in on his hands in the kid's class and everyone's
laughing and cheering. He's a handstand workshop. Yeah, I need a handstand workshop. But it's kind of
funny because the dream changed to this much more empowering version where my life merely changes
in a material way, but not for the worse. Whereas before it was like a massive
downgrade and I was just depressed about it.
And then I would wake up.
That says a lot about how far you've come.
And also, like, how important working out is to you.
Exactly.
Love that.
Exactly.
Like, I just feel like I can fix anything.
If I can lose 50 pounds of fat and get strong at age 40, I could survive not being able to
walk.
Like, it's just, you just change things.
It's 2026.
It's not the end anymore.
Yeah.
All right.
So all that to say, no pretzels for you, Butterfly.
Yeah.
Percibido, Mano.
All right.
Let's dive on in.
Gabe, what is the first thing out of the mailbag, Mono?
So about a month ago on episode 1313, we took a letter from a listener who was asking why we, well, mostly I, I guess on that one, steered another listener away from religious counseling.
The listener he was referring to just to remind everybody was this woman who had terminated a pregnancy unnecessarily because she was very afraid of having a special needs child.
She's religious.
She's a Christian.
She's struggling to talk to other people in her community about this.
And so when she wrote in, I said, I would look for a therapist who's outside.
of your community. And this guy wrote in asking why we would tell a listener to turn away from
her faith at precisely the moment she needed it most. And I clarified on that recent episode that I
was not suggesting she turned away from her faith at all, just that I wasn't sure she was going to
receive the true therapy she needed and also hopefully a more objective point of view from a pastor
at her church. Right. And that opened up a larger discussion about the risks of religious
counseling, how it can often have an agenda or be way less rigorous or not be carried out with the
same ethics and standards, as you know, clinical slash licensed psychotherapy. Yes. So after we took that
letter, I got three fascinating letters from listeners who all had very different experiences with
religious counseling. And so I wanted to share them because they're fascinating. And I think they're
also going to help round out the picture a little bit more and hopefully balance out some of our
own biases or limited experience in this domain. I love it. Three,
one deal on religious counseling today. So here's the first one. Hi guys, I just listened to episode 1313,
then listened to the OG episode, and honestly thought it was very balanced. Your response in this
latest episode got me thinking about a time in my own life when I was deeply connected to a faith
and faith community, and I sought a religious counselor's help. I grew up in a very conservative,
non-denominational Christian household in the 90s and early 2000s. I could spend hours exploring that
background, but when I was in my late 20s, I had a real awakening when I went off hormonal birth
control. Shout out to your episodes on that topic, by the way. That was the interview with Dr. Sarah Hill,
episodes 1031 and 1032. And I realized I made a mistake in marrying who I did right out of college.
The relationship was not abusive or anything extremely bad, just probably not the person I would have
chosen had my brain not been influenced by the birth control. I also had a real,
crisis of faith and questioned everything from the marriage to my desire for children to do I believe
what I say I do or is this just me trying to please my parents and pretending about everything?
During that period of about six months, my husband and I ended up quote unquote going to counseling,
which was just meeting with a pastor and his wife from our church. I don't want to say anything
negative about them because they are truly lovely people who genuinely care and are good examples of
what a pastor can be. I went into these meetings questioning the efficacy of figuring out what was going
on in my head and my marriage, but was genuinely open to changing my mind about the conclusion that I felt
was inevitably coming. What I found was that when I opened up about my questions, emotions,
doubts, etc., I received responses that seemed trite and condemning. For example, I shared that I had
deep misgivings about why I got married in the first place to this guy, even though there was
nothing objectively wrong with him. The response was that I should pray and maybe have some chocolate
because it's probably just my hormones taking over my emotions. Okay, yes, pray and maybe have some
chocolate. I believe that's the current gold standard therapy for an existential crisis. I'm just
trying to imagine how this conversation went down. Listen, guys, I don't know if I married the right person.
And they're like, we understand.
Three Hill Marys and two Toblerones.
Yeah, seriously.
Hey, I'm not sure if I believe in all this or if I'm just trying to please my parents.
That sounds like a 70% cacao problem to me.
Look, I hear you that they're lovely people.
I'm sure they were doing their best.
Yeah, probably more naive than nefarious based on what we're here.
I think so.
But still, it's crazy.
I asked if they ever had misgivings about who they married after the wedding.
Their response?
Absolutely never.
Not a thing.
This is God's will.
said with a weird smile and head nod.
This from a religious woman who also had a Bible verse to share for everything.
After about three or four of these conversations, both together and individually,
I felt like we weren't making any progress,
and it became clearer and clearer to me that this marriage was done,
and not what was best for either of us.
These counseling sessions just further showed me that my thoughts and actions
were aligning much more with who I was
versus what I had been pretending to be most of my life.
I didn't seek any other therapy, which honestly, maybe I should have looking back,
but at the same time, I felt a lot of clarity and conviction in the steps I took to dissolve things,
even though it was hard.
I know I quote-unquote let down lots of people through this process.
I lost pretty much all of my friends from college and the church.
Took a few years to really repair my relationship with my parents,
and I was formally excommunicated by this church.
Man, that must have been very intense, very hard.
Sorry to hear that.
At the same time, it was liberating to finally express doubt in the face of extreme communal pressure and then to step out onto my own path.
I bet. Well done, my friend. It takes real courage. To be clear, I don't mean giving up your faith. I know people are going to hear it that way. I mean to ask tough questions when other people aren't and forge your own path. I just think that's so important.
But I don't think this is how everyone's story goes. I did see examples of couples and individuals who sought church counselors and then seemed to,
to stay in the fold, as it were. So just like with any sort of therapy, I suspect, there can be
good and bad gleaned from whatever path you take. It may help, it may muddy things a bit, it might
bring new things to light, but we shouldn't be afraid to raise our hands and say, hey, I need
help thinking through this thing, even if it is ugly and hard to face. But then to also be brave enough
to say, this path isn't working so well for me, let me try a different one. Amen to all that.
It did take my parents some time to accept that I wasn't on the same spirit.
spiritual path and to embrace my now husband. But seven plus years and two grandkids later,
our relationship is stronger than ever. That's great. I love to hear that. And then finds those
lessons she can carry forward and apply in her life down the road. Thank you, Amigos. Have a great weekend.
Signed, a gal who learned to be true when she bit off more, both doctrine and chocolate, than she could chew.
Great story. Gabe, these letters you're reading in this segment, I'm getting the sense that they're
mostly going to speak for themselves. I think so. I don't have a ton to add. I would actually kind of
love to let our listeners do the teaching on this one because this is all new information for us.
That sounds good to me. The only thing I want to say about this one is it is not easy to interrogate
the beliefs you grow up with, religious, political, cultural, whatever they are. But it's
incredibly important, if only to know that you are truly choosing your belief system. It sounds like
she made the right call here, certainly separating from a person who simply wasn't right for her.
and I'm happy that she did.
It sounds like that led to a lot of joy, a happier marriage, more integrity, this very full life.
And also an opportunity for her parents to get to know her as the person she is, not the person she was pretending to be for their sake, which I think is very powerful.
For sure, it's just really awesome to hear.
And the other thing I just have to say is I feel like these husband and wife pastor team, that is just a new breed of Lydia, man.
Totally, dude. Lidio and Lydia over here.
Yeah, they're doling out Bible version.
and thought terminating cliches like candy.
And what's interesting is that the whole know.
And then also doling out literal candy to fix deep-seated problems.
Exactly.
That will never not make me left.
I know they're decent people.
They probably thought she needed an aphrodisiac or something
because they have just an insanely simplistic view of relationships.
But I love that they were trying to solve her genuine spiritual and romantic crisis
with a flippanty Ruth.
That's just hilarious to me.
Adding these two to the Feedback Friday Pantheon as well.
Grandmaster Carlos, Lidio and Lydia.
Yeah.
Speaking of candy, you want to unwrap the next one?
Yep, let's do it right after a quick ad break.
You know it'll fix your marriage faster than a dime store chocolate bar?
The sweet deals and discounts on the fine products and services that support this show.
We'll be right back.
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All right.
What's next?
Hey, Jordan and Gabe.
One of my sisters, Katie, had a terrible postpartum experience when her first child was born two years ago.
And a friend's church offered biblical counseling, which is different from Christian counseling.
In case you don't know, Christian counseling is largely just like secular counseling, but the
practitioner happens to be a Christian. It's based on the same worldview. They go to the same
schools with the same philosophy and largely follow the same process, only diverging from standard
secular practice where it directly contradicts God's word. Gabe, is that true? I don't know. If she's
describing licensed therapists in America anyway who happen to be Christian, then I would be extremely
surprised if this were true. If they ignored professional duties and like best practices when something
a patient says or a topic that comes up goes against their faith, I mean, I'm sure it happens,
but I'm just shocked to hear this. Same here. That surprised me. But if this does happen a lot or a little,
that one little difference would change the quote unquote same process dramatically. Would it not?
I mean, if a patient talks about, I don't know, being gay, at that point does the therapist go,
okay, well, my training taught me to accept people and let the patient drive, but now this contradicts God's word, and I have to encourage abstinence and try to convince them that they're straight.
Again, I would be very surprised if most licensed Christian therapists would do that, but I guess it's possible that they might frame things in terms of ethics, or maybe they would invite certain concepts into session if the patient hopefully is open to that.
I really want to believe that they would still put the patient first, and they wouldn't lead with their agenda, though.
But who knows, I don't know.
I'm also puzzled by this because what is God's word? People disagree about that all the time.
Christian scholars in the same denomination, they disagree about this all the time. So what counts as a
contradiction? Doesn't that really just depend on the counselor's personal religious beliefs at that
point? Very good point. And what's the difference between a contradiction and attention?
When does a patient go against scripture and when are they like appropriately challenging it?
This is very complicated, man. I really want to hear the
rest of this story before I draw too many conclusions, so let's keep going. Fair enough. So she goes on.
Biblical counseling, the kind my sister sought out, is entirely different because its foundation
is the Bible, and it leans on what it says to guide the process, particularly regarding the nature
of mankind. Okay, so this is more like what Lydia and Lydia were doing, which is like, nope,
so word of God, next, next question. The fact that both Katie and her counselor started out in
full agreement on several basic truths, streamlined the process quite a bit. But Katie said the most
important thing was that she learned about the service from a mutual friend of the counselor,
so there was some automatic trust there, coupled with significant distance from her own
social network, which she wouldn't have had going anywhere else. Okay, I don't quite understand.
She wouldn't have had privacy and trust by going to a Christian therapist who is bound by
confidentiality? Of course she would have. I think she meant if she had gone to any
other biblical counselor because it would have been too close. So is that a feature or is that just a bug?
Interesting question. So she goes on. She doesn't think she would have ended up getting help anywhere
if it hadn't been for that recommendation. She was just so vulnerable and ashamed, irrationally,
of course, but that was the problem and we're all so glad she tried it. I see. I mean, that makes
some sense. So a lot of layers to this. The other big thing was that the counselor got right to the heart
of the problem, which only a biblical counselor knows and believes to do.
That's what's going on here.
Only a biblical counselor knows and believes it's important to get to the heart of a person's
problem.
Is that what she's saying?
I don't know if she meant in general or if she meant in contrast to these other more
mainstream Christian count, but either way.
Yeah, either way.
That's just not true.
I'm so confused.
I want to be open here.
I genuinely do.
I know we're doing this to learn.
But does our friend truly believe that only?
counselors who are approaching people through the lens of the Bible know and believe it's important to get to the root of a problem. Dr. Margolis from Stanford doesn't know and believe that she needs to get to the root of problems with her patients. This raises another question, which is how a biblical counselor defines the heart of a problem. Yeah. If a patient tells them, hey, I might be gay, is the heart of the problem that they're not straight or that their family might not accept them or they might be wrestling with shame about it or they might be in danger or just that, hey, they're doing something that's against the Bible. Boom.
Mike drop. See you next week. Or just never again. The problem is you're not living according to the
Bible. Bye. That worries me. And if they believe in getting to the heart of the matter, are they then
guiding the conversation very quickly to that heart in like a heavy-handed way with an agenda?
Well, sure. In a way that doesn't foreground the patient. Exactly. And in a way that might not
focus as much on like empathy, trust, the relationship. Although I'm guessing a biblical counselor would
probably say, hey, I empathize with my congregationists, but I'm here to solve a problem. And these
the tools that I have. Yeah, but then I would ask. Is that truly therapy? Katie said it was frustrating at
first because she just wanted the days to get easier, and when you start at the root, it takes a bit
longer to see the change. But of course, that's the only way for the change to last, and she and the
baby are doing great now. She says the counseling helped her immensely. Okay, I'm glad she feels
it was helpful. I genuinely am. I'm not minimizing anyone's growth through this kind of counseling.
I just have a lot of questions about whether this is actually therapy. As I see it, the whole question
of when to seek out what kind of help
rests on whether you believe the Bible is true.
If you believe the Bible is true,
talking to a biblical counselor
and following their advice
is a good way to put that belief into practice.
And from what I understand,
putting one's beliefs into practice
is a necessary component of happiness.
Putting one's beliefs into practice
is a necessary component of happiness.
Huh, uh, okay.
Another very interesting stance.
I mean, I know tons of people
who live passionately by their beliefs,
religious or otherwise, who are totally miserable, but whatever.
Yeah, fair point.
Also depends on the beliefs in question, I imagine, but okay, we digress.
Let's keep going.
I think people get the idea here, yeah.
If you do not believe the Bible is true, then I see no reason to go to a biblical counselor
at all outside of curiosity.
Of course, the big threat is that you take your problem to someone in your church, and they
mishandle it, and then your whole social life is potentially in ruins.
So I would never advise anyone to take a big leap there if they don't already have a strong, trusting relationship with someone who has proven themselves to be wise and discreet.
I think it's fairly common to not have that kind of relationship within your circle of acquaintances where the stakes are incredibly high.
Okay, but we do understand that bind is precisely why professional ethics and confidentiality exist, right?
the kind of confidentiality that only a licensed clinician has a professional duty to uphold.
But biblical counseling is a largely decentralized, unregulated, thank heavens, practice,
which makes it kind of a wild west.
Virtually anyone can call themselves a biblical counselor with or without wisdom or discretion.
Yeah, unregulated, thank heavens, which means it allows and probably even attracts charlatans and bad actors
and people who will mishandle your problem.
But okay.
To be fair, I don't think she disagrees with that.
But that's why these agencies exist, to protect patients from people like that.
And she might say to prevent counselors from helping people with the word of God.
And so that's a worthwhile trade-off?
Okay.
Presumably.
For my part, I'm religious and I've been struggling myself for some time, largely with motivation, depression,
apathy after some difficult stuff in my childhood. And the reason is that I don't obey the Bible.
I keep choosing my own way instead of his. I'm miserable because my actions don't align with my beliefs.
There's that idea again. The next time I take the plunge into counseling, it will be from one of
these folks, meaning a biblical counselor. And he or she will challenge me on that, and I'll hate it.
but if the Lord is gracious, which he is, I'll face it and repent, and he'll fix it.
Signed getting to the bottom of how my sister healed postpartum.
Oh, that's quite an ending.
Again, I don't know how much we should dig in today.
I mean, same, although clearly I can't help myself, but okay.
You're on one.
And she's also not asking for advice.
I know.
Kind of sharing, but yeah, this raises a lot of questions for me.
Look, despite my obvious beliefs
slash lack thereof, I want to be clear.
I really have no problem with people who seek
religious counseling and find good results.
I really don't.
As long as the results are truly beneficial
and the person is not being harmed in some way.
Dude, I'm in the same boat.
There's something to learn wherever you go.
I just, I keep thinking about the opportunity cost
of this kind of counseling.
The therapeutic experience that could have happened
with a different approach,
a different kind of training,
maybe more time, more space, more openness.
It's not the only thing that concerns me, but it's one of the things that concerns me.
Is that a kind of harm?
Good question.
I imagine our friend here would say, of course not.
This is the only true healing, and it's the only healing I'm interested in.
But that doesn't mean it doesn't come at a cost.
Gabe, you know what this kind of reminds me of?
I remember back when I was in college, I was like, oh, I want to find out more about Judaism.
And I didn't really know what Hasidic Jews were, which is like these ultra-Orthodox, a very specific sect of Judaism.
And you see them walking around with the curls and the fur hats that are kind of like this Russian
looking thing in the black clothes. These are the Hussedim, right? Black had Jews. Yeah. Black had Jews,
yes. And so that's what a lot of people think when they think Jews. They think all Jews are like
that. And they're like, you're not Jewish. You don't have the hat or whatever. That's what I were talking about. So I
remember this guy, Rabbi J, he used to give talks. And look, it was a nice guy. He meant well.
But like, I remember one person was like, hey, I want to know why bad things often seem to happen to good people. And he had
story of his sister had gotten murdered by someone, and it was this very emotional moment where
he was just really vulnerable. And like, there's a lot of crying, and we were all like, oh, God,
I didn't know he was going to go there. And I don't even think he even meant to go there. I think
he just asked the question, and then the story came out. It was upsetting and emotional. And I'll never
forget, this is the last time I did anything at this particular house where we all gathered with the rabbi.
He said the reason bad things happen to good people is they're actually not good people when behind closed doors.
So they've actually deserved whatever happened to them.
You just didn't know what they did that caused them to deserve it.
Okay.
You're sure that's what he said.
So he basically told this guy whose sister got murdered that she was actually secretly such a really bad person that God killed her or caused her to be killed.
Sorry, I thought the rabbi was telling this story about his own sister.
No, it was this like college student whose sister had recently been murdered.
Yes. And you're sure that's what the rabbi meant when he said that. I clarified. I was like, wait a minute. And so did a lot of people, by the way, who walked out and never came back. Because we were like, wait, let me get this straight. The example he gave was sometimes you find out that this person, they lost their job or something really bad happened to them. But what you don't know is that at home, he beats up his wife and kids. And you're like, or he got fired because that's a thing that happens to people. And it's not their fault when it doesn't mean they beat their wife. It was basically this crazy foul.
that the world is completely just, and that if something bad happens, they did something.
And people were like, what about kids who get cancer? He had this crazy, drawn-out spiritual
explanation for why maybe they had done something or whatever. And I didn't even stick
around for it, so I can't articulate it here. And it's also been 25 years. But I just remember
being like, what the actual F are you talking about? This is despicably ridiculous. By the way,
I'm not saying that this is what Jewish people believe. If you're Jewish, you're like,
oh my God, clarify this, we don't believe this.
Or if you're not Jewish, you're like, Jews believe this?
I'm not qualified to opine on that.
I had never heard this anywhere else before or since.
This might just actually be his cockamamiany interpretation of something in the literature
or not even in the literature.
I don't know.
If you're a rabbi, can you please write to me and tell me why bad things happen to good people?
Keep a 30,000 foot overview.
Tell me if it's this or something wildly different, okay?
because that to me was so crazy. I just never went back. I was like, I am out. This story you just told,
which sounds pretty absurd. I guess I have a couple of thoughts. One is people are flawed and they can say
whatever they want and they can interpret their doctrine however they want. And so if that's the way this guy
feels, that's the way this guy feels. It's not what I happen to know about Judaism. In fact,
this question of why bad things happen to good people is one of the most interesting questions that
gets explored in Judaism. I remember when I was in high school, I went to a Jewish liberal high school,
like pretty mainstream, but Jewish. And so we had to take Jewish studies and philosophy and stuff. And I
remember tackling that exact question. The little bit we studied when we were 16 years old was much
more nuanced and much more interesting than the take that you just shared with us. So I'm a little
bit surprised to hear it. But again, people from all faiths can say all sorts of things. I guess it really
comes down to the practitioners in question. It does. The reason I'm bringing this up is not to be like,
Jews believe this. It's to be like, wow, you could go to that guy for life advice and just find out
that you're a bad person and you deserve it. Yikes. Gabe, I think I'm finding what I often find
when I talk to people of faith, which is we're just talking to each other across an abyss.
And actually, it's not the faith that creates the abyss. It's all the beliefs and assumptions
around it. Our friend sees the world one way. She wants X set of things from life. And I see the
world another way. And I want X and Y and Z and ABC, whatever from life. I want somebody who calls
themselves a counselor to be able to make room for all of these things for a patient, and she
does it. Okay, so at a certain point, it's like, okay, we just exist in different realities,
and that's okay. I'll still come over and eat casual on Sunday. Like we've been saying,
advocating for conventional therapy is not about convincing someone not to believe what they believe.
To me, it's the opposite in many ways. It's about how big can we make the frame? Can we embark on
a journey that might take us to places we can anticipate, but which will be for.
fruitful and which will be rewarding and interesting instead of trying to get you to a specific answer or
outcome according to the Bible as I interpret it. Can your therapist help you grow even if you believe
something different from them? That just does not seem particularly controversial. No, but I think
we're hearing from somebody who is very committed to her beliefs, right? And that's obviously her
choice. I'm not super interested in trying to undo any of that. If she were asking for advice,
I would definitely want to explore why it's been hard for her to live in alignment with her beliefs,
what that says about the beliefs, and whether or not putting her beliefs into practice is actually
the source of her unhappiness for real. What I do want to invite her to consider, though, is when you
only seek out sources of help that align with those beliefs, when you say, I will only work with
people who believe what I believe, who pull from the same sources that I do, who work in this
way that I'm comfortable with. For better or for worse, you're already in an echo chamber.
Any reasonable person would have to admit that. So you might meet with a biblical counselor and get
something helpful from it, and if so, wonderful, that's not for me and Gabe to decide for you,
but in a world where you could theoretically find a Christian therapist, a licensed clinician,
who is also a Christian, and get the best of both worlds, so to speak, then I do wonder why
biblical counseling seems to be the only worthwhile path. So again, it's just a question,
what are you looking for, from whom and why? That's a question I would just keep making room for
as you seek out help. And now a quick break to pay some bills so we can keep fixing your life
week after week. We'll be right back.
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All right. Now for letter number three in this extended series, I think I'm going to
religious counseling, kingdom of heaven or bottomless pit. Jury is still out, I suppose. Take it away, Gabe.
Hi, Gabe and Jordan. Great episode today. The letter about whether you should have recommended a
Christian counselor brought up so many thoughts, and I wanted to offer a few comments regarding
the woman struggling after an abortion from the perspective of a Christian pastor. Bottom line,
you guys were spot on. I got to say, not the take I saw coming. I would have recommended the same thing.
Great.
abortion is a very sensitive issue and it's difficult because we don't know the woman's exact denomination
but i understand why she may be hesitant to speak with people in her church getting an outside voice
and a professional counselor is exactly the right thing to do as pastors we are not trained therapists
i don't pretend to be a licensed counselor and will refer people in a heartbeat if they go down that road
i expect the same of the chaplains that i supervise in the army it's the whole stay in your lane
thing. I think I give great life advice and I know scripture really well, how to apply it, and
the complexities of theology. But I am not a trained counselor. It is different, different education
and different skill set. Man, okay, this letter is giving me so much confidence in solid, responsible
religious counselors and honestly quite a bit of hope. Totally different from Lydia and Lydia. Yeah,
just a complete 180. I'm glad this guy wrote in. On top of that, not all pastors are the same,
Saying pastor is like saying salesman or businesswoman. It's generic. Is that businesswoman
running a Fortune 500 cutting-edge AI company? Or is she a businesswoman selling homemade candles at
the farmer's market? It's the same thing with Pastor. I'm Lutheran, and most of us in the mainline
have a master's degree from an accredited seminary. Many mainline seminaries, including mine,
do extensive psychological evaluations done by secular firms for new students. I also took one unit
of clinical pastoral education, working in a hospital under professional supervision.
My seminary required that.
That's kind of cool.
I like that.
That's one kind of pastor.
But lots of people, charlatans, hucksters, poorly trained people, etc., call themselves
pastor.
Yeah, I sense a bit of a theme.
Now, that's not to say that a trained pastor can't do awful things.
Some do.
They are flawed human beings like anyone else.
But some pastors don't have training, don't understand confidentiality.
don't understand their state's mandatory reporting laws and so on. There is a lot more to
pastoring than just loving God, which hopefully every pastor does. It drives me crazy and makes me
sad when I hear about abuse, coercion, manipulation, and the like done in the name of God.
So when I hear stories like the one Jordan shared about the pastor who told the husband what
the wife said in counseling, it drives me up the wall. And since you're going to read this letter on air,
I can't say what I said when I heard you tell that story.
Pastors can't drop F bombs, I guess.
I don't know.
But yeah, that's infuriating.
This is the pastor who, I think a woman had spoken with him and said, hey, I cheated
on my husband.
I want to know how to handle it.
And he was like, okay.
And then he went to the gym, saw the husband and just told the guy what happened.
He just told the guy what his wife told him and was like, yeah, she didn't follow the
rules of the Bible.
And the husband came home and was like, I'm divorcing you.
And she was like, oh, gosh.
She sued him, I think, for that.
Doing what that pastor did is pastoral misconduct. It's abusive and it is not Christian behavior.
I totally agree, but I'm not really in a position to make that call. Super helpful to hear from you, though.
Moreover, morality from Scripture is more complicated than simply citing a verse.
Christian ethics involves wrestling with the tenets of our faith and trying our best to apply them to modern life.
So this goes back to your point, Gabe, about what a contradiction is. What he's describing, it just sounds a lot more
like what you were advocating for.
Wrestling rather than reconciling.
Process over destination, yeah.
So this guy's on.
He's good.
I am pro-life, but I also acknowledge that there is no one specific verse about abortion in the Bible.
Yes, my belief that it's wrong is based on scripture.
But I also recognize that the nuances of modern life don't always lead us to black and white
understandings.
The woman who originally wrote in needs counseling.
She knows what her faith says about her decision to end the pregnancy.
and she needs to unpack that with a true counselor.
A good therapist meets you where you are, respects your beliefs, and then works from that basis.
A good therapist isn't going to try and convert her.
So it's simple.
See a counselor.
In fact, I was taught in seminary that all pastors should have counselors.
I have a counselor.
She's a great resource to me to talk about what I'm going through and to help me process.
So glad you have that support.
I hear pastors and chaplains carry a very heavy load.
I can only imagine.
So it's healthy that this woman from the first letter is struggling.
That was a major life event.
She shouldn't look for simple answers or an easy way out.
But what about a semi-sweet chocolate bar?
Should she look for that?
No, also two black and white.
Yeah, literally.
But I think this is exactly the place we were coming from, too, right?
She doesn't need her pastor to tell her that what she did was wrong.
Yeah.
Or even right, for that matter.
Yeah, she needs somebody who can listen to help her process, help her work through her conflicts,
having someone say, well, Jeremiah 1-5 says this, you should have kept the baby, now you need to repent.
Even if you believe that's true, I can't help but feel that just sort of short-circuits a much more
important process.
So he goes on, it's healthy to sit in discomfort, struggle with convictions, and ask questions.
I tell people in my congregation that I want them to always ask questions.
I believe so strongly in my faith that I know it can withstand questioning and emerge stronger.
It also allows me to better discern what is actually from God and what might just be my opinion, culture, or upbringing.
And one last thing. If that listener is only going to be met with judgment and not compassion from her church or faith community, it's time to move on and find a church that reflects the love of God that Jesus taught.
Damn, hot take. I don't disagree. Thanks for all you guys do.
Signed, a chaplain concerned about what happens when people don't take action to seek out the right interactions.
Wow. Well, this makes me feel way better about telling that woman to see a proper therapist.
It does, doesn't it? I felt it was right, but I don't come from this background. So I always wonder
if we're getting it wrong. I know. I always feel like, oh, am I pushing too hard on somebody who
believes things that are different? It just confirms everything we've been saying, which is that the
best version of both traditions is that they are compatible with each other. But also, that one is
more appropriate than the other when it comes to certain conflicts or certain experiences. So I know
I talked a bunch because I am lit up by the Holy Spirit.
on Feedback Friday. You are praying at Our Lady of the Dues Cruz today, my dude. I sit on the
elder board there. There's so much to respond to. I find it hard not to dig in, but our goal was to
mostly just let you guys share your experiences in this domain. This is a bit of a different
feedback Friday, as you probably have noticed by now. But I'm really grateful for this last letter.
I'm very grateful. What a nuanced and thoughtful take from a true expert, but also the other two
letters as well. They were honest. They were vulnerable and very eye-opening. And I'm happy to have some
additional voices in the mix to give us more data points to correct from my bias and frankly my
ignorance when it comes to religion in the spirit of doing what we were just talking about which is
making the frame as big as possible well that is actually a perfect transition so we'll hit the
wreck of the week and then we'll read this last letter which i found remarkable sounds good now for
the recommendation of the week i am addicted to lit filler so my recommendation of the week is
super simple. It's called hydro colloid roll. And it's this very basic thing on Amazon that's like
two bucks, three bucks. And it's basically a roll of tape that is almost like skin inconsistency and
sticky on one side and soft on the other. And my kids, they always get little cuts or they always
want band-aids. This stuff is so cheap, but it also sticks better. It can be washed. It's
reasonably waterproof. I put this on all my little cuticle cuts or paper cuts. Like, oh, I was working
on a RC car and I poked myself or I got a little, whatever, dry skin spot. I put this on there.
It's amazing. It'll stay on for days if you want it to. It peels off. It doesn't hurt. You don't get
the ripping of hair off like you would with a band-aid and you cut it to size. So I keep this.
I have it in the bathroom. I have it in my office. I have it in my night kit. I have it in the
kitchen for the kids. And again, each roll is like $2.50 for like 10 feet of this stuff.
And it's just better than Band-Aids in pretty much every conceivable way.
Band-Aids, blisters, anything, any kind of scrape.
So we'll link to it in the show notes.
Again, it's called Hydro-Colloid Roll.
I don't understand why they don't make Band-Aids out of this instead.
In fact, I found Band-Aids that were similar, and they were like two bucks each.
And this is an entire roll of this stuff for $2.50.
All right, y'all, you might cut your finger, but you know what won't cut a hole in your pocket?
The amazing deals and discounts on the fine products and services that support this show.
We'll be right back.
Thank you so much for listening to and supporting the podcast.
All of the deals, discounts, and ways to support the show are searchable and clickable on the website at Jordanharbinger.com slash deals.
Please consider supporting those who support the show.
And now for the rest of Feedback Friday.
All right.
What's next?
So just a heads up, this last letter is not part of the Holy Trilogy, like the letters that we just read, but it is part of the larger Deuse Crusade.
So the letter goes.
Hello, Jordan, and Gabe.
I'm 43 years old, and I live with my sweetheart, who's about one and a half years younger than me.
He and I have been together for three years.
We are not married.
We live in a rural area.
He is the estranged prodigal son of a millionaire wheat farmer who owns thousands of acres of 19th century pioneer settled land,
and he's been cut out of any role in his family's land, which they have farmed for five generations.
Wow.
Okay.
I can confidently say I've never heard that sentence before.
I know. It doesn't happen very often, does it? Every once in a while.
I love that Feedback Friday somehow keeps serving up the most unusual stories ever, and it's remarkable.
Always something new. So she goes on, the reasons he was cut out are complex, but suffice it to say that both son and father have been diagnosed with bipolar disorder.
Both are suspected to have borderline personality disorder as well. And my sweetheart reacted to his father's cold, harsh, verbally abusive, and critical parenting style by developing.
being lifelong oppositional defiant disorder and losing himself in drugs, alcohol, and madness
from the age of 12 to his mid-30s.
Jeez, that is a lot.
Both the disorders and the fact that she calls her boyfriend, sweetheart.
Yeah, so is that a Southern thing?
Because I was like, okay, she said that maybe three times already, and it's been 30 seconds.
I don't know.
It might be.
I've never heard this.
I guess it's cute.
I'm not sure.
My sweetheart sounds so old-timey that I thought, oh, how old is this person again? And you said 43.
Yeah, so I was like, oh, she's 78.
This is something you would see written on the back of a black and white photo in a GI's pocket in 1942.
Yes, it's in the helmet that was found in the trench.
Oh, look, it's sweet. I've just never really heard this term of endearment that many times in the, I don't know, the age of chat GPT, I guess you would call it.
It began with middle school marijuana use and car theft for funzies, then became rich kid cocaine use, then full-blown meth-addled insanity and living on the streets by his late 20s.
Oh my God. I don't want to judge too quickly, but you said the reasons he was cut out were complex.
Could part of the complexity be that he was an insane meth addict and living on the streets? I mean...
I can understand why Daddy might not want this kid near the family wheat.
Yes. Daddy sounds like a piece of work himself, but yeah, if your son is out of control like this,
Are you going to make him an SVP of harvesting or whatever?
I don't think so.
Your command of the family business, Jordan, is incredible.
I see you've really brushed off on your agriculture.
This guy weeds hard.
So she goes on.
Somewhere before the homelessness, my sweetheart had a daughter,
but he lost all parenting and visitation rights to her by the time she was three years old.
She's now 15 and lives in another state.
My God, this just gets crazier and crazier.
All these broken relationships and losses have really haunted my sweetheart.
his whole adult life, and he still ruminates on the relationship with his father and the loss of his
daughter on a regular basis. Through some combination of boys' wilderness reform schools,
expensive for-profit rehabs in three or four states, jail, dry cell torture, mental hospital stays,
AA 12-step work, and probably just aging out of crime. My sweetheart eventually got to a place where he
could more or less hold a job, keep housing, and stay off all drugs, except T.H.
which he is still heavily reliant on to cope with any type of mundane stress, anxiety, or trigger.
For people who don't know, THC is one of the active chemical compound in marijuana.
So some good news, finally. It sounds like he still has a dependency, I suppose, which is unfortunate.
But he's come a long way. Meth is not THC and THC is not life.
What a journey this guy has been on.
Yeah, novelesque. This sounds incredibly chaotic.
Meanwhile, I grew up poor, often in trailer parks, gradually put myself through a,
BA and MS over the course of 16 years while working retail and barista jobs, and never did drugs
harder than the occasional joint and a couple of mushroom trips in my early 20s. I was raised by a
violent six-foot-tall mom who had undiagnosed bipolar disorder and borderline personality disorder,
so I have a hyper-tuned ability to navigate people who have a lot in common with grenades and
landmines, though I myself was pretty emotionally chaotic and troubled in my younger years. I,
educational opportunities, a decent work ethic for self-examination, and a love of rational thinking
and Buddhist-type takes on life have helped me find my way to a pretty peaceful state. I'm also
fascinated by intelligent but troubled people. I used to teach college classes in a prison,
and my students were lifers. Fascinating. Wow. Okay. I met my sweetheart four years into his
California sobriety and comparative stability. Oh, okay. So,
for anybody listening from another country or place, maybe even a different state, California
sober or Cali sober, basically means you don't drink, you don't use hard drugs, but you still smoke
weed. So you're not really sober. Just one of our states, many iconic exports. So she goes on.
I knew it was going to be a wild ride. I could tell from his stories and my observations of his current
state that he had come a long way, but still had a long way to go in catching up on many lost years
of emotional and social development. Still, I was not
quite prepared for the reality of a testosterone-pumped male version of my mother,
who, in many ways, still has the entitled rich boy attitude of a fifth-generation millionaire
wheat farming air. By this I mean that the rich don't have to learn the interpersonal skills
of being considerate of other people's feelings because money can ensure all their basic
needs are met, regardless of what they do to other people. Jordan, it is so funny to me that this guy
has lost all of the trappings of his wealth
and his claim to the family fortune,
but like none of the entitlement.
I guess it's the last thing to go.
In fact, it wouldn't surprise me
if he's compensated for losing those things
by ramping up the entitlement.
I feel like we've all seen examples of this, right?
Because your ego wants to compensate somehow
and then you don't have any money,
you don't have any achievements,
you've essentially done nothing but ruin your life,
so you ramp up the one thing you can,
which is being an asshole, unfortunately.
But yeah, it's like,
Hey, bro, maybe don't talk to your girlfriend like she's a peasant standing in the way of your Lamborghini
when she's paying for your THC cookies and listening to you complain about not being able to pay child support
to the kid you can't see. I don't know, just a thought.
This sounds like a hard guy to humble.
I guess it just goes to show how stubborn this conditioning is.
In his head, he's the temporarily inconvenienced wheat prints.
It's just, it's interesting to see how he's leaning on this.
My sweetheart blindsides everybody he knows with his mood swings when he's in a
great mood, he is charismatic and funny, but when he's suddenly triggered by any little irritation
or perceived criticism, he can immediately morph into the most verbally abusive and oppositionally
defiant six-foot-four boy you ever did see. I have never witnessed him being physically
violent toward anyone, but when he can't regulate his emotions, he will punch holes through the walls,
break dishes, go peel out in his car in a rage, say incredibly rude and theatrically extreme,
things to people and that oppositional defiance rears its head if anyone dares suggest anything to him.
He has mild rageouts at least once or twice a week and usually a pretty big one on a monthly basis or so.
He is an equal opportunity verbal abuser. It can be me, his mother, his boss, anyone, whoever happens to be
in his proximity. That's a little bit scary and not encouraging. When we were first together, I took it very hard.
pride, felt scared, unloved, abused, and so on.
Yeah, it's abusive and super hurtful.
This is terrifying that he would do this to you.
Frankly, you're still there.
That's something else we have thoughts on.
Gabe, what did Dexter call his need to kill people?
The dark passenger?
Yes, the dark.
This dude has a dark passenger.
He's unhinged.
He clearly has trauma, compassion, and all of that to a degree.
But my God, these rage spirals are happening once or twice a week.
possibly every two or three days she has to deal with something like this.
Yeah, now this guy is out of control.
Being in a relationship with somebody like this, I have no words.
I don't know how you do it or why you do it for that matter, but we'll get to that.
Gabe, you know what this reminds me of?
On the way to the Disney cruise a few weeks ago, there was a kid in the airport in San Jose.
And I don't know what happened, but his mom put something on the TSA scanner from him.
He wanted to do it.
This is like a 12-year-old boy, by the way.
and he got so angry that he took a bag off the scanner
and he slammed it on the ground and he started screaming
and I was like, oh, I must have missed the context
of what happened here.
So then he goes through the scanner,
the family goes through the scanner,
his mom's like, don't act like that right now.
And the dad says something like that too.
They go to the gate and I hear, as I approach my gate,
this screaming.
And I'm like, is that the same kid?
This is like 10 minutes later
because I get coffee and everything
and get snacks for my kids at the airport
because it's early.
And I still hear the screen.
screaming. So we get to the gate and this kid is still on one. And I'm like, wow, something really bad
must have happened. That bag thing triggered him and whatnot. During the plane ride, I take off my
headphones because my ears start to hurt from the pressure and I hear yelling and screaming. And I'm like,
wait, has that been going on most of the time? And Jen's like, yeah, I think there's a kid in the back
having, it's the same kid. And it's just unbelievable. And I'm like, wait, this kid gets triggered by
something and he screams for literally hours. That's the child version of this guy, right? It was
absolutely nuts. This kid would fight with his sister. He was like screaming on the plane. And the parents were
just, I felt bad for them because of course you're like, hey, get your kid in order. But you're also like,
there's something wrong with this person. This is not normal. Who knows if it's his wiring or there's
something going on at home. I don't know. There were other kids and they were perfectly fine. And the
sister was like, hey, he keeps taking my iPad. And then he would row at her and like go to bite her face and
yell. And I'm like, no, you live with a rabbit animal. This kid's going to prison. So she goes on.
started living together a mere four months into our relationship and became fairly financially
interdependent as we both work seasonal and or freelance jobs that come with peak seasons and layoff
periods and we have no financial support from our families and no real savings or safety not built
up. Sorry, but the fact that this dude is picking apples and driving a snowplow or whatever for a few
months at a time, while also acting like a Saudi prince on vacation in Macau is absurd to me. I can't
not tell if it's funny or tragic, really? It's both. I mean, if you met this guy picking
honey crisps in Wisconsin, you would probably laugh at him. But if you're his girlfriend, this is a
Dostoevsky novel. Yes, exactly. She goes on, this could lead a person in my situation to feel
trapped, but I found some constructive ways to protect and empower myself. Al-Anon, some counseling,
a class on codependency, and nearly two years of regular jiu-jitsu practice where Grandmaster Carlos's
mantra to, quote, be so strong that nothing can disturb your peace of mind, unquote, is becoming
wired into my muscle memory. Grandmaster Carlos, filing that away under amazing feedback Friday
characters. One thing, though, that comes to mind, I know a lot of jujitsu and martial arts guys,
because everyone's into it, especially around here. One of the main teachings of any martial art
is get away from the conflict. Not be so strong, nothing to disturb your peace of mind, not know how to
handle every situation. It's get out of there. It's not, here's how you handle a blade. It's
get away from the blade. You shouldn't even be at the place where the blade is, right? All of this
martial art stuff is like, this is the last resort. So you're following Grandmaster Carlos's
mantra to be so strong, nothing could disturb your peace of mind, while also just subjecting
yourself repeatedly to the stuff that you have to resist. I wouldn't say you're exactly
following the advice to a T, but maybe ask him. I'm increasingly unperturbed and resilient
when my sweetheart has meltdowns.
I gotta say this sweetheart thing, a little unsettling, given the direction this letter's heading.
It's like you're compensating by how much of a POS this guy is by just laying on the sweetheart thing ridiculously thick.
Why?
I see through his predictable way of behaving now, and I've gotten pretty good at setting boundaries and removing myself physically when he's losing his shit.
So I'm pretty okay these days.
I've learned to take a very hands off, let him spin his own wheels approach.
My refusal to participate in his worst behaviors has seemed to shorten their.
duration in the moments they happen.
Man, I honestly don't know what to make of this.
Like, bravo for finding all these ways of coping with the chaos, for sure.
Amazing.
But I'm also hearing this.
And I'm just thinking, are you merely desensitized to this level of crazy?
Why are you still here?
It's crazy to me.
But I'm also increasingly aware of how persistent his mental health struggles are, of how
he self-medicates by sucking on nicotine and THC vapes like baby bottles, instead of doing
any kind of therapy or truly deep 12-step work, or engaging with nutrition and exercise to
mitigate mental health symptoms. The smell of cotton candy vape fumes is how I will viscerally remember
this stage of my life. Yeah, this is vivid. She's going to be at a machine gun Kelly concert
in three years standing behind some emo tweens vaping Cloud Mist and have a Vietnam-style flashback
to Tyler the unhinged ex-wheat air, punching a hole in the wall of their Airbnb, and peeing
out of the driveway in his Accura and Tegra.
That was vivid, bro.
Yeah, this is very much the Madeline soaked in tea of the oppositional defiant world.
I have no idea what that means.
It's fine.
I feel like I need to know it a Madeline soaked in tea.
Okay.
No, it's fine.
One of those references that I would be more embarrassed to explain how I know about it
than to leave it alone.
Yeah, no one knows, Gabe.
Maybe a Madeline is a canap.
Anyway, all right, so...
About a year and a half ago, he raged verbally at his boss,
and got fired, which made for a hard winter when the farmhand jobs he relies on only higher in spring
and during late summer harvest. Then, just last week, he raged at our landlord, who was making a
reasonable request of us, and he also went to our landlord's house a couple days later and yelled
at our landlord's wife over the incident. Luckily for us, it's a small town, and our landlord's wife
loves me, so I was able to do some rooted in Alononon principles damage control, basically explaining
to the landlords, what is and isn't within my control, and what I personally am able to do as a tenant
to comply with their reasonable requests. What a chat that must have been. Sorry I'm dating a man-child,
and he came here to yell at you after your husband, who owns the property we live in,
asked him to do something totally reasonable. Unbelievable. You ever take care of your side of the street
so good? You narrowly avoid being homeless? Yeah. This is a great ad for Alonon. I will say that.
Truly. I told them that I could not predict or promise how my sweetheart will behave, and they made
it clear that if any verbal raging happens again, at least one of us will be evicted.
I don't blame them at all. Life's too short. Nobody needs this crap.
I made it clear to my sweetheart and my landlord that from now on, any tenant landlord communications
will go through me and not through my sweetheart.
Yeah. Okay. The sweetheart thing, it's out of hand, officially. This is more out of hand than
sweetheart's meltdowns.
I believe we're all on the same page about this, but I'm also aware that my sweetheart
is a completely unpredictable wildcard. I understand that I'm taking a certain amount
of risk by being willing to be his partner. Yeah. Yes, you are. And I'm doing some long,
hard assessment of all of that. Yeah, good. Sorry, not sorry at all. You need to reassess everything.
This person is a mess, a giant mess. And he makes messes for you that you have to clean up.
My sweetheart can't really be communicated with about anything serious.
The only way I can get him to listen to information I need to give him
is if I wait several hours or even a full day
until he is completely calm
and then leave a letter for him before he gets home from work
when I am leaving for evening jujitsu class.
He gets to read my diplomatically worded honesty
and have his own private space to get angry about it if he wants.
By the time I get home, he's calmed down
and usually takes it upon himself to acknowledge what I have communicated.
It would be easier if I could talk to him like a normal person, but I don't think that's possible
with him. And this has proven to be the least stressful and least exhausting way for me to assert
what I need to assert with him.
So you have to manage him and carefully orchestrate the circumstances for him to have
a perfectly reasonable conversation about his behavior. Man, this all sounds exhausting and
definitely not worth it at all.
I genuinely love him and would prefer not to easily.
give up on our relationship, though at some point I am willing to make that decision if this proves to be
too much. This isn't too much? But for now, I'm looking for some short-term ideas for how to get even
better at drawing boundaries, how to de-escalate conflict, stuff like that. How can I do that? Signed,
starting to breathe hard, because I'm finding this feet hard when it comes to my tricky sweetheart.
You rhymed hard with hard, Kanye? Nice. Yeah, you're right. Breathe hard, feet hard.
Blame, isn't it? That was not my finest work.
It's too late now. It's on tape.
I think when I came over that sign-off, I was probably experiencing some secondhand post-traumatic stress from this letter, and I just lost my ear for rhymes.
So what this listener is doing is lighting a fire in her home. She's allowing an arsonist into her home and then going, hey, guys, do you have any tips on fireproofing the house?
Literally.
Yeah.
Not literally, but...
Figuratively, literally.
Exactly.
That's figuratively literally.
Yeah.
Do you guys have a good wreck on a fire retardant blanket?
Any smoke alarms you like?
I just, I'm trying to figure this out.
The answer could be much simpler.
Yeah, I agree.
Does that cover it?
Can we, have we done it?
We've done some good work here.
Good luck with this guy.
No, so, man, I need to take the deepest of breaths here because...
I'll do it with you, man.
This is intense.
Okay.
So I'm very sorry that you find yourself in this situation with your boyfriend.
I think you can already tell.
how I feel about this. I know that your boyfriend would not act this way. He wouldn't be this way
if some terrible stuff hadn't happened in his childhood. You didn't tell us much about that. I don't
know if you really needed to. His dad obviously did a number on him. God knows what else happened
in this guy's home growing up. The family in general, perhaps amplified by extreme wealth. The
most screwed up people I know are all rich. So you just don't turn to drugs and crime and rage at people
and have these crazy mood swings and meltdowns
if you're not in a lot of pain.
So my heart goes out to your boyfriend in a lot of ways,
to the young kid inside him that hasn't addressed
his trauma and hasn't healed.
But more importantly, my heart goes out to you
for the similarly formative experiences,
namely the mom you had who sounds extremely challenging
these wounds that conditioned you to understand
and choose and stick with a person like your boyfriend
at steep cost to yourself.
I don't really have words to express how sorry I am about that as well.
My impression of you, based on your letter, you're a high functioning, very self-aware,
very resourceful, very driven person with some very profound wounds.
And I'm impressed by the fact that you've sought out these ideas and these supports to get
better and achieve and survive this relationship and that you've put them into practice.
I really am, okay?
But I'm also very concerned for obvious reasons about some of the choices that have required
you to manage things in that way, namely just the choice to be with a guy like this. So it's
interesting. I find myself in a weird position. This is a letter so extreme that I feel pretty
comfortable saying, hey, you need to seriously reevaluate your relationship with your boyfriend.
I would strongly advise you to end this. That's my take. That's my advice. We could talk about
short-term ideas for how to draw boundaries and de-escalate conflict, but you already seem to be
doing that very well. You're actually doing it too well, candidly, okay? And I don't believe
That's what you need right now.
But I also hear you saying that you understand you're taking a certain amount of risk by sticking with this guy.
I'm glad to hear that you realize that.
And you're in the process of assessing all that, which I hope is true.
And that you genuinely love this guy and you would prefer not to, as you said, easily give up on the relationship.
And that at some point, if this ever got to be too much, you'd be willing to make that call.
The problem is her capacity for this chaos is significantly higher than most people's and not
entirely in a good way. Clearly. Again, probably because of the mom she had, all the challenges
that came with her childhood. So her sense of what is even just acceptable or tolerable at all
is wildly miscalibrated. But then only she can decide what she's able and willing to put up with
and what's actually too much. Or what actually constitutes a serious risk. Yeah. So I don't know if
telling her to break up, but this guy is really all that helpful. If her experience of this relationship
is very different from ours. So instead, I guess I would just ask you a few questions.
My main one is, what is it really about this guy that's so meaningful and compelling to you?
I'm struck by the fact that the only two positive things you said about him is that he's funny and charismatic sometimes,
when he's not being an absolute nightmare and or putting you or others in danger.
How do you define risk?
How do you define too much?
Do you only want to go by your own internal barometer for this stuff, or do you maybe want to factor in some external benchmarks?
I also wanted to ask you whether all this managing and diplomacy is slowly improving things or if it's just kind of minimizing the fallout.
Does your boyfriend seem to be getting better in any way?
Is he learning and growing and engaging with his life, with his work, with his family, or with you in a different way?
Or is he just doing the same thing over and over, and the only thing that's getting better is how you pull the strings and patch things up, which that's kind of what I'm hearing.
I don't think she said one thing that suggests he's growing at all or is even interested in that.
those are exactly the right questions jordan and to those i would add one fundamental one i guess it's
another version of your first question which is what are you getting out of the situation yeah
by which i mean in this dynamic you've created with your boyfriend where he essentially melts down
lashes out creates messes drives people away undermines himself at every turn seemingly and then you
generally clean up those messes manage his moods calm him down know when to engage when to
retreat, patch things up. In that dance, you guys seem to do over and over again, what does that
give you? What feeling or what experience does that leave you with? And why? So when I ask you why,
what I mean is, A, how did your childhood, probably this mom, whatever other early experiences you had,
how did they prime you for this relationship? I think those are important forensics to do,
although really they're only half the equation. The other is why exactly does that feeling or
experience continue to be so important to you now. So let me just be a little bit more specific
because I know that can be abstract. You and your boyfriend clearly have this dynamic we just
described. I imagine that managing this guy, keeping things on an even keel, calming him down,
winning him over, challenging him, but not challenging him too much, all of that,
smoothing things over with the people like the landlord and his wife, everything that comes
with this process. I imagine that feels, among other things, pretty gratifying.
But what is gratifying about it, really?
Is it the feeling of rupture followed by repair or what seems like repair?
To be honest, I'm not totally clear on how meaningful these conversations are.
But it sounds like it's a lot of chaos and a lot of instability followed by calm and like a return to baseline.
And then it's like, okay, we're good again.
I did it.
And crucially, that process happens in large part because of the way you architected it or the way you managed it.
Good observation.
I do think that's crucial.
So I can imagine that that experience might leave you feeling like, yes, great, I'm good at this, I'm in control, I'm needed, I succeeded, that feels good, that's gratification, right? And maybe also relief, pride, comfort, familiarity, a sense of mastery, I'm sure it's a lot of things. Part of that package might also be another feeling or conflict. For example, you might feel very gratified and you also might feel a little ashamed like, oh, I feel really good when I can calm my
my sweetheart down, but I also feel kind of icky that I'm chasing that feeling or that I'm
chasing it from him. Or maybe you're very proud of how you handle these moments, but also maybe
there's some anger in there. Like, I'm proud that I can handle this crisis, but I'm furious at my
boyfriend for forcing me to. I think those conflicts are very meaningful. They contain very rich
data about how all of this developed and most importantly, what it is bringing up for you now.
So what you're getting at is, once she takes stock of all that stuff, it would be helpful to go,
why is it so important to feel, I don't know, you name it, relieved, comforted, like she achieved
something, like she kind of knows how to win at this game called Unstable Boyfriend. What does that give
her? And then what does that leave her with? This is a sit-and-nancy relationship.
100%. And it's not just like, how do I know how to win at the game? It's almost like, why do I
know how to play this game already? And the answers might start to feel recursive. Like, I want to
feel gratified because I like feeling gratified or I want to experience this relief because
the chaos is so unpleasant. At that point, your understanding of your relationship will either become
nonsensical and confusing and you will be lost in this chaos again and again, or you will get to a
point where you go, oh, okay, I seem to be operating according to some model, I seem to be playing
out some kind of script that has its own logic, its own urgency, its own mysterious needs. And so
the answer resides, I think, in understanding and acknowledging that script. And then,
and this is crucial, with more conscious awareness deciding whether you still want to play it out,
whether playing it out truly serves your needs, your goals, your best interests, including, by the way,
your safety, which, by the way, I think you're also in the process of getting clear on.
So what you're getting at is this is ultimately about her mom.
Look, there's an easy take on her story, which is she got together with her mother and her boyfriend
got together with the father he didn't have.
Damn, yeah, facts.
I'm also confident that there's a lot more to it than that.
but the roots of this dynamic seem fairly clear to me.
Pink Freud has entered the chat.
This is the dark side of your mom, Brian.
Yes, exactly.
Their respective traumas seem to have created the ideal sockets for their puzzle pieces to fit into.
This is not news to our friend.
She clearly understands that her mom did a number on her.
The parallels are almost one to one.
She was raised by an unstable giant.
She's partnered now with an unstable giant.
Exactly.
Different objects, but same eggshells, probably.
What she might not fully understand is why that's been hard to rewrite, let alone heal,
and how that has created this extremely powerful template that she seems to have recreated with
the wheat prints over here.
Or, depending on how you look at it, that the wheat prints has created with her.
They're doing this together.
I'm sure most of this is unconscious.
It's hard to know who's creating what or whatever.
How much of it is actually creating versus just falling into something that feels oddly familiar,
but what I am sure of is this is not an accident.
No, these two people didn't just happen to meet and fall in love and stick together with this particular form of crazy.
Gabe, a lot of people will say like, oh, there's a metaphysical element to this.
What are the odds these two people happen to meet?
I met tons of crazy women.
I just went out with them once and cut the date short and never called them again because I was like, no, thank you.
These people, when these puzzle pieces fit together like we were explaining before, they feel something.
They don't go, oh, they're crazy and this is going to be dramatic and I can't deal with that.
or even, wow, that's exactly what I've been looking for.
They go, there's something familiar about this, right?
I like it.
It's interesting to me.
And they end up in this situation because these patterns are something that they're probably
unaware of.
Look, my quick theory a moment ago about this being gratifying, that might not be the right
one or there might be more to it.
Maybe there are other things this relationship is giving you.
Maybe the moments of love and connection with this guy, which I'm not fully clear on, but if they
exist, maybe those are so compelling to you that the moments of chaos and pain seem
worthwhile, although I have a very hard time imagining how that could be the case. But I'm sure there's a
lot going on here, but this is the kind of stuff you have to dig into. Frankly, I think you're already
at least halfway there, but it's time to really take stock of this. It's interesting, Gabe. Like I said,
I'm very proud of her for seeking out all this insight and support and wisdom. It's kind of one of her
superpowers, although another way to look at superpowers is that they are adaptations to trauma. So there's
that. But again, it's interesting. The kind of analysis you're proposing, Gabe, I could be wrong about
this, but my sense is that can be hard to do in, I don't know, say, Alonon. Okay, I love Alonon. I'm a huge
fan of what they do there. I hype it on the show all the time, but I don't know how much
psychodynamic work a person can do there or how much talking and processing over a long
period of time. I think that's what therapy is for. So I'm very proud of you for all your
self-examination and your hard work. I really am. But if you haven't had the opportunity to work
with someone and it's doable for you right now, I would highly recommend it. The only way to get
better, but in your case especially, it's a very powerful way to get better. I feel like we could
just talk about this letter for hours. This is just nuts. Truly, dude, we didn't even get to talk
about the fact that she used to teach college classes to people in prison for life. I'm still
fascinated by that detail. Yeah, I forgot about that. Like she said, she's clearly drawn to
intelligent but troubled people, and I love that she sees that so clearly. My general feeling about
that is, I don't think you need to work to get rid of that quality necessarily, although
interestingly, it might fade as you come to understand why that quality developed in the first
place, but you do have to make sure that you're deploying that quality effectively and
responsibly. That you're using it rather than it using you and ending up in potentially dangerous
situations. Exactly. And that's the process of making the unconscious conscious, I think. There's a
world where she becomes an educator or a mental health practitioner or a writer and she turns these wounds
and interests into kind of a calling. I think that would be beautiful and poetic. Or she just
lets them be and doesn't feed them any more than she has to, which is also progress.
But the awareness she brings to it, the agency, to say, these are the kind of experiences I want to have,
this is the kind of person I want to be, that's the key. And that, like everything good in life,
is a process. But I just have to say, because I can't end this segment without keeping it real.
I do not understand why you would want to stay in this relationship. It's one thing if you meet a
troubled person who's demonstrably getting better and exhibits all these great qualities, lots of promise,
they're on a path. It's a completely different thing if you've shacked up with a troubled person who's
just creating chaos over and over again for pretty much no reason and isn't even truly working
on himself. So I'm actually worried about you. I think you deserve a lot better. And I think
your sensitivity and your curiosity and interpersonal skills would be so much better spent elsewhere
instead of on this candidly unstable and damaging manchild who hasn't come to terms with his trauma
or his life circumstances. I'm sorry to say this, but whether you realize it or not,
this guy's just a drain on your life. He might be a victim to some degree, but he's 42 years old.
He just does not really have an excuse for how reckless and hurtful he's being to you, to himself,
to everyone he comes across. Wow. Yes. Well said, Jordan. Thank you for keeping it real.
I also just want to point out that her subjective experience of this relationship might be that
it's not too much for me to handle, or the risk really is not that high. I'm okay.
But what would happen if the landlord evicted both of them? And then she has an eviction on her record because he went ham on the wife and they don't want that person on their property, understandably. And she stays with him or she breaks up with him. But now she has an eviction on a record because she was associated with a person like this. This is not just about the emotional chaos, which is significant. There are also some very real practical risks that I don't know if she's fully appreciating.
I agree. That said, this letter was fire, and that was a ride.
This is a tasty burger.
So I hope that gives you some new angles, friend. Please stay safe. Take good care of yourself.
We're sending you a big hug, and we're wishing you all the best.
A few months ago, we mentioned a quote in our newsletter that I love.
It's okay to have beliefs. Just don't believe in them. And I can't say I live by that 100%,
but of course I try to. I at least try not to believe too hard.
The whole strong ideas loosely held concept.
We've been walking an interesting line today in all the letters, I suppose, between embracing
people's beliefs and also challenging them to see beyond them, to make room for other
helpful ones, to develop a clearer relationship with them, or to at least not let the things
they do believe in appropriately to get in the way of other important experiences, learning,
growing, collaborating with good people.
And I feel like that's one of our central tasks in life.
That's the dance.
so I'm sure we'll be coming back to this theme many more times over the years.
It's a very rich topic, so many ways to heal and grow in this life, and so many candy bars to eat.
Go back and check out our episodes with Javier Leva on Scams and the Psychology of Scams
and our Skeptical Sunday on Psychic Detectives, if you haven't heard those yet.
The best things that have happened in my life and business have come through my network,
the circle of people I know like and trust.
I'm teaching you how to build something similar for yourself in our six-minute networking course.
The course is free.
There's no catch.
There's no shenanigans.
It's not schmoozy.
you can find it on the think-ifick platform at six-minute networking.com.
The drills take a few minutes today.
Dig that well before you get thirsty.
Build relationships before you need them.
Again, six-minute networking.com.
Show notes and transcripts on the website.
Advertisers, deals, ways to support the show, all at Jordan Harbinger.
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My team is Jen Harbinger, Jace, Sanderson, Robert Fogarty,
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Our advice and opinions are our own, and I am a lawyer, but I am not your lawyer.
Consult a qualified professional before implementing anything you hear on the show.
Remember, we rise by lifting others.
Share the show with those you love.
If you found the episode useful, please do 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.
What if the safest way to send a secret is something anyone can hear, but no one can trace?
You're about to hear a preview where former CIA officer Andrew Bustamante pulls back the curtain on a hidden world where global conflicts are quietly connected.
There's actually 161 active conflicts around the world right now, where bullets are being fired and explosions are going off.
When you look at each of those conflicts, it's not just one group against another group in the same country or even across a state boundary.
It's multiple countries engaged in supporting one side or another side, proximate.
conflicts. Right now in the United States, we're focused on Israel, we're focused on Ukraine and Afghanistan, and Russia, and then sometimes we're focused on something else.
When people think World War III, the common misconception is that a nuclear weapon must be used.
If you're waiting for a nuclear weapon to go off, that's not going to be World War III.
It's a whole different evolving landscape, and that's what we need to understand.
And I don't think our chances of a nuclear weapon going off are getting less each year.
I actually think they're getting to be more each year, but I don't know why people think it's going to look like a thermonuclear weapon being launched from a missile silo and going off in the middle of a first world country.
That's not what it's going to look like.
Israel's M.O. is to do incredibly brazen acts of violence and take public credit for it and then air footage and everything else because they know that there's a fear-mongering element that deters its enemies even further.
Whereas China goes in and just breaks everything and they don't really care if they get caught and Russia doesn't want to get caught.
The United States also doesn't want to get caught, which is why the United States denies everything.
It seems to me like we have more indicators that we are in a world war rather than we are not in a world war.
To hear more on why Cold War tech still outsmarts modern surveillance and why Andrew Bustamante
believes World War III may already be happening, check out episode 1220 of The Jordan Harbinger Show.
This episode of The Jordan Harbinger Show is sponsored by CastBox, a free podcast app for iOS and Android users.
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This episode is sponsored in part by Everything Everywhere Daily. You've heard the phrase
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