The Jordan Harbinger Show - 699: Can An Open Marriage Be Anxiety-Free? | Feedback Friday
Episode Date: July 15, 2022Your wife and you agree that introducing BDSM and ethical non-monogamy into your marriage has brought you some of the happiest and closest times in your relationship. On the other side of the... coin, this new level of communication and honesty has made her more vulnerable than ever to the anxiety and depression she's suffered since childhood. Is there a way to get past the bad without giving up the good this lifestyle provides, or should you just go back to the way things were before? Welcome to Feedback Friday! And in case you didn't already know it, Jordan Harbinger (@JordanHarbinger) and Gabriel Mizrahi (@GabeMizrahi) banter and take your comments and questions for Feedback Friday right here every week! If you want us to answer your question, register your feedback, or tell your story on one of our upcoming weekly Feedback Friday episodes, drop us a line at friday@jordanharbinger.com. Now let's dive in! Full show notes and resources can be found here: jordanharbinger.com/699 On This Week's Feedback Friday, We Discuss: Opening your marriage and indulging in BDSM fantasies have brought you and your wife closer than ever, but there's a big downside: it sometimes triggers the anxiety and depression she's experienced since childhood. Is this lifestyle worth the trouble, or should you consider this a failed experiment and go back to the way things were before? Growing up without much in the way of money or luxury, you can't get past feeling guilty now that you have a well-paying job and can finally afford some of the nicer things you've missed out on -- especially when so many of your peers are in debt. Do you deserve to feel guilty for having it good when others don't? Your mother-in-law is a pathological liar. When she's not telling blatant untruths, she's omitting important details -- like your father-in-law's cancer. Worse, a lifetime spent with her seems to have rubbed off on your husband, who clearly has a problem with honesty. Is it possible to break this cycle and actually trust your family? You've decided to seek help for your addiction by going to rehab, but how do you break the news to your employers -- at a job you find fulfilling and don't want to lose -- that you'll need to be gone for six weeks? Your husband has never been emotionally available, and even warned you at the start of your relationship that he'd probably never be able to really open up to you. After a conversation with his sister, you discovered he was bullied as a child by his alcoholic father to the point of self-harm that landed him in the hospital. Do you patiently wait for him to tell you this huge secret, or do you confront him and disclose that you know this piece of his puzzle? 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... See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to Feedback Friday. I'm your host, Jordan Harbinger. As always, I'm here with Feedback
Friday producer, the Live, laugh, love sign hanging over this cozy hearth of crackling life advice,
Gabriel Mizrahi. Yeah, written in some cringe cottage core cursive font, obviously.
Yes, and like on wood. On the Jordan Harbinger show, we decode the stories, secrets, and skills
are the world's most fascinating people, and we turn their wisdom into practical advice
that you can use to impact your own life and those around you. We want to
want to help you see the Matrix when it comes to how these amazing people think and behave.
And our mission is to help you become a better informed, more critical thinker.
So you can get a much deeper understanding of how the world works and make sense of what's really
happening, even inside your own mind.
If you're new to the show on Fridays, that's today, we give advice to you, we answer
listener questions.
The rest of the week, we have long-form interviews and conversations with a variety of amazing
folks, from spies to CEOs, athletes, authors, thinkers, performers.
This week, we had YouTuber Peter Santinello on Explore.
subcultures. I love this guy. His videos are awesome. He explores different recently American
subcultures like Chicano culture. It goes to Detroit. He goes to all these sort of forgotten places
or maybe underrepresented places. You're doing one on Native American cowboys that's going to be
super interesting. Really good creator. And we talk about selling out. We talk about doing the
right thing when it comes to creating as opposed to just making money, doing whatever you can to
grift other people, as well as the process behind it, the economics behind it. Really interesting
episode. We also had Sam Harris from the vault on lying, among other topics. Sam Harris is always
somebody who's going to make you think. He's actually one of my favorite thinkers as well. I also write
every so often on the blog, my latest post, why you owe your friend's honesty. In this one, I talk about
why people in your life deserve your candid feedback, why being honest, even when it's uncomfortable,
is actually a form of love and kindness, and how honesty can transform your relationships. I also talk
about the limits of candor when it's important to, well, not be completely honest, which is something
a lot of these radical honesty folks don't really acknowledge. This is a great read if you're trying
to build more meaningful and authentic relationships at work in your personal life with your family.
You can find that article and all of our articles at jordanharbinger.com slash articles.
So make sure you've had a look and a listen to everything that we created for you here this week.
I just wanted to give you guys a heads up. Be sure to follow us on Apple Podcasts. I know you're
like I know how to use Apple. You have to click that plus button, that follow button, or you won't
get the episode numbers. So I've had some emails and some DMs that are like, oh, you always say,
go to episode 336 and check it out. And they're not numbered. They are numbered. But if you're
not officially following, which for some reason, some of you are not, even if you download every
show, I don't really get why or how that's a thing. But if you don't follow it, the numbers don't
show up. And then as soon as you do follow it and you refresh the feed, all the numbers show up.
No idea why Apple does that.
Doesn't make any sense.
It looks like a bug to me.
But there you have it.
So if you're like, where are the numbers?
It's really frustrating.
It's because you're not following the show.
And some apps decided not to show the numbers at all.
And I can't do anything about that because that's an app thing.
And people who code apps are not always uniform in what they do.
And maybe it's time to switch from an app that doesn't.
That's all I'm saying.
By the way, a little PSA here.
I've never been more thrilled to be wrong about something.
We did our Skeptical Sunday episode on Recycling.
And we were told by some experts, hey, never throw plastic bags in recycling bin. And that is true. That is true. They are not very recyclable. They do get in the machines. They're bad for all the reasons we mentioned. However, almost every grocery store across the United States has a drop-off site in a supposedly highly visible area out front. Some stores in rural areas that don't care about recycling, they might not have this. But 95% of all grocery stores give their recycled bags to a place called Trex, a company called Trex. And Trex uses sawd
and recycled stretch film, and they make some kind of building product with it.
And that is amazing.
If you look up NextTreks online, we can link to it in the show notes.
The cost of recycled stretch film has gone up significantly because companies like tracks,
they're in competition for it.
So it's great because that actually means that these bags are going to get used.
They can be recycled.
They just have to be recycled in a very specific way.
Thanks to show Binger Elena Lepley for the tip on this one.
Again, I'm very happy to be wrong.
I hope you're not just trashing all your plastic bags.
I hope you didn't just throw hundreds of them away after our recycling bit thinking,
oh man, I guess I can ever do anything with these.
You can get rid of them.
You can turn them into something new.
And that's wonderful.
So go to your local grocery store, target, whatever it is,
and ask where you can recycle plastic bags.
And hopefully they'll end up in somebody's lovely home.
Or as somebody's lovely home, actually.
All right, Gabe, what's the first thing out of the mailbag?
Hey, Jordan and Gabe.
My wife and I have been married for seven and a half
years, together for nearly 10. We've always had a great relationship based on trust and communication
and have always enjoyed an amazing sex life. We also dabbled in opening our relationship and
some light BDSM before we were married, but ended up deciding that it wasn't for us.
My wife has depression and anxiety from childhood trauma and went through an abusive former marriage,
so she recently started seeking real help for those issues. Her therapist encouraged her to open
up to me about those matters in a way she never has, and it came out that she wanted to go all
in with me on BDSM and some ethical non-monogamy. Over the next few months, we began a 24-7
dominant submissive arrangement, engaged in some moderate impact and bondage play,
and opened our relationship to include the possibility of other sexual partners. It's brought
us some of the happiest and closest times in our relationship and in her life, by her description.
The problem is this new level of communication and honesty has made her much more vulnerable to anxiety and depression.
For example, if I talk to a woman too much of her text, she sees it as ignoring her and the whole thing goes off the deep end.
Or if one of us misunderstands the other about an emotional concern, she reacts like it's the end of our relationship.
She will then have an anxious or depressive response to the problem and we have to work together for sometimes weeks before the matter is finally resolved.
All of this has brought the possibility of great happiness, but also the danger of great pain.
I really don't want to give up this lifestyle because of the amazing good, but I also feel
that it might be a worthy sacrifice to protect our marriage overall.
What should I do? Signed, sighing audibly at the novelty of this ethical non-monogamy.
Hmm, interesting question for sure. Before we dive in, I just want to say,
we are not ethical non-monogamy experts by any means. I'm a married guy with two kids who barely
leaves the house. Gabe is a single guy who also barely leaves the house. Yeah, I'm just ethically
non-monogamous with my work, you know, juggling multiple projects over here. But like,
they all know about each other. So it's cool. Yeah, you're in an open relationship with your career.
I do have some thoughts on this. First of all, on the question, I have no idea about your career.
That's a big black box. So first of all, everything your wife is struggling with right now,
it's very common with non-monogamous relationships,
but it's especially common with people
who already wrestle with depression and anxiety,
who have childhood trauma, who have experienced abuse.
Your wife is bringing a lot to your relationship
before you even factor in the possibility
of you guys sleeping with other people.
As you know, non-monogamous relationships can be very intense,
they can bring up all kinds of feelings,
namely jealousy, of course,
but according to tons of experts,
They can also exacerbate existing mental health issues.
So if your wife is prone to depression and anxiety already,
if she grew up in a difficult home where she was, I don't know,
made to feel unloved or where her emotional needs were ignored,
or where she was hurt in some way,
you can imagine how knowing your husband is sleeping with other people
could tap into those very old wounds.
You could be casually texting another woman and suddenly she's spiraling.
You could misunderstand her about something relatively minor, and she could feel completely abandoned and want to jump ship.
The fact that she's responding so intensely to these relatively small misunderstandings,
that tells me that there's a lot of raw stuff going on beneath the surface for your wife.
And this arrangement you guys have, as fun and fulfilling as it might be sometimes,
it's also activating something very painful and complex, maybe even more complex than your wife realizes.
I think you need to recognize that this relationship model, A, it seems to be coming at a real cost,
and B, it will require a lot of maintenance on both of your parts to function well.
At a certain point, you and your wife will have to decide if her depression and anxiety and crises
are worth the fun of seeing other people.
Maybe they are.
That's for you to decide.
But frankly, this does not sound fun at all.
It sounds to me like the price you pay for seeing other people is hurting your wife or watching
your wife hurt herself. And you spent all this time trying to resolve things only for her to
get hurt all over again when you misunderstand something she said or you're texting a woman you met
on the field app or whatever. Go ahead and look it up. And then the cycle just keeps repeating.
But if you do decide to continue this arrangement, you guys are going to need a lot of support,
a ton of communication, and a well-functioning relationship. I am glad to hear that your wife is in
therapy. It sounds like she has a lot to talk about and I hope that that's helping. But I
I think you all need to be in couples therapy, in addition to that, the communication piece,
it seems to be especially challenging for you guys. And communication is probably the most important
thing in a non-monogamous relationship. Without it, you guys are probably going to keep missing
and misunderstanding each other. And if you're going to embark on these little side quests,
you could really use a space to work through all of the conflicts that come up, the way you take
care of each other when somebody gets hurt, all of that. Without those skills, I'm getting the sense
that an open relationship will just be a never-ending series of injuries that will make both of you
kind of miserable and eventually spell the end of the relationship, potentially.
It could, yeah, potentially. I do too. Just from a cost-benefit perspective, the cost seems
very high here. I might be biased, but it would be hard for me to enjoy an open relationship if my
partner were constantly being hurt. Yeah, seriously. Like, every time you take out your phone,
She spins out like, who are you texting?
You want to leave me now?
And it's like, I'm just checking to see if the leather face mask and matching ball gag
arrived from Amazon, babe.
No, thank you.
I'm all set on that kind of drama in my life.
Exactly.
So, yeah, I'm with you.
And if you stick with this arrangement, I think you guys need to find a way to keep meeting
each other's emotional needs while you explore with other people, if that's possible.
I think your wife needs to know that even if there are other women.
women in the mix, you're still available to her, you still love her. Maybe most importantly,
you're still prioritizing her. A lot of ethical non-monogamy experts talk about how important
that validation is. That and having clear rules. These are like two of the biggest things.
That could really help with the jealousy and with the fear of abandonment. But to Jordan's point,
if that fear of abandonment already exists, if your wife is already prone to depression and
anxiety, it's possible that she will always have that response. And that's where she needs to figure
out how to process her own feelings and get clear on whether she's really equipped to be a part of
this arrangement. I agree. I'm getting the sense that this is primarily her work to do, since she's
the one who's struggling more with it, but it's definitely something they can and should figure out
together. I also wonder if maybe she's more vulnerable right now because she's in therapy, right?
If she's finally exploring all of this really difficult stuff that she's been through in her life,
she might be especially raw right now, which is actually a good thing. It means that she's doing the
work and she's delving into this difficult territory. But that might be a tricky time to also
decide to open up your relationship when you probably want to feel stable and secure as you process
all of this very intense stuff. Yeah, good point. You know, there's a lot of moving parts to this
marriage already. Yes. And on that note, I'm trying to, you know, look, you can also say baggage,
but moving parts is a little more fair. I suppose on that note, I want to point you to an interesting
book we found while we were doing some research. It's called polysecure attachment, trauma, and
consensual non-monogamy. We obviously haven't had a chance to read ourselves. I don't have a need
for it, but it sounds like it would be a great read for you guys right about now. We'll link to that
in the show notes. So talk to each other, seek out the support you need, and figure out if this
arrangement is really serving your needs and your best interests right now. This arrangement could work,
but when it works well, it's usually because both partners know that they're the priority for each
other. They've done a ton of work on themselves. They communicate exceptionally well. If you can't
do that, then seeing other people is going to be tricky at best. And that might mean that it's worth
giving this up in order to save your marriage. I don't think that's a failure on your part. I think
that's just you guys being honest with each other about what you need the most right now.
So don't beat yourselves up about this. Just do what needs to get done. And we're wishing you
the best of luck. Speaking of great deals on spanky things and ball gags, how about we hear from the
amazing sponsors that support this show. We'll be right back.
Thank you so much for listening to and supporting the show. Your support of our advertisers keeps us going.
To learn more and get links to all the discounts you heard, we put them all in one place. The new page is searchable. It should work great from your phone.
Jordan Harbinger.com slash deals. Of course, you can also search for any sponsor using the search box right there on the website at Jordanharbinger.com as well.
So please consider supporting those who support us. Now, back to Feedback Friday.
All right, what's next?
Dear Jordan and Gabe, I come from a modest family with two immigrant parents who worked tirelessly
to give my siblings and me a better life. We weren't blessed with a whole lot of money,
but my parents did their best to get us nice things, even if they were a little worn down sometimes.
Fast forward to today. I'm a working professional in my mid-20s, and I've always been very frugal
due to how I was raised. As a result, I hardly ever spend money on myself. I've recently landed
a fantastic new job using the tools I've learned from your show and six-minute networking,
by the way. This job comes with a huge increase in salary, making more than I ever thought possible
this early in my career. I decided to treat myself as a reward for landing the gig and bought
myself a brand new computer and gaming setup, but I've been feeling a lot of guilt about it. It's
the most I've ever spent on something like this, and while I can afford it, I still feel really bad
about it. On top of that, a lot of my friends are students or early in their careers, and when they
talk about their financial troubles, I feel so much shame that I can hardly eat.
even look them in the eyes. What should I do about this? Signed, my money don't jiggle,
jiggle, it scolds. Nice. Well, I appreciate you writing in about this, because I think everyone,
to some degree, has a complicated relationship with money. Whether they value it too much or too
little, whether they think they deserve it, or they just lucked into it, money is, it's charged,
no pun intended, and our feelings about it are informed by our culture, our needs, our childhood,
especially our childhood. So if you grew up in a modest family with two immigrant parents who
worked their butts off to give you a better life, yeah, it makes sense that you'd feel uneasy
about spending a ton of money on anything. The guilt you feel, that's probably a reflection of the
ideas you inherited around money and whether it's, quote unquote, okay to do better than your
parents did or to spend your money in a different way from how your parents would. So my first thought
is this? If you want to resolve the guilt, I would look at what is going on underneath the guilt.
So, for example, the new computer and gaming rig you bought, I would ask yourself, what about
that purchase makes you feel bad? Is it because you were taught that spending money on fun
stuff is frivolous and reckless? And if so, was this purchase actually frivolous and reckless?
Is it that you feel uneasy having things that other people don't have, especially your family?
Maybe there's an ethical component to this. Like, people shouldn't,
have nice things like this, or people should hang on to as much of their money as they can, and I feel
morally bad or wrong for doing it a different way. Like, you can have a great job and be successful,
but somebody else, maybe your mom and dad or your friends, they'll take a hit, like some kind
of emotional zero-sum game. What I'm getting at is this thing we call guilt, it doesn't just
arise in a vacuum. It's supported by a bunch of beliefs and feelings that create the guilt. So I would
look at all of those pieces and see if the assumptions you have, for example, that there's
something inherently wrong with treating yourself to something fun, or that your friends are
going to suffer if you do well, or that your mom and dad were 100% right about being frugal
in every respect to being. Look at each of those and see if they're actually true. Or,
maybe a better way to put it, is see if those ideas are serving you well if you actually
agree with them. At the same time, I would encourage you to find a balance between your
parents values and your own values, because I think you guys are both right. You just have different
needs. Your parents had to work really hard to raise you guys. They had to be super careful. Those
were their goals, those were their needs, and that's amazing. That's something to honor and be very
grateful for, but if their sacrifices helped you land this amazing new job, you might not have to
live the way they did. You might be able to enjoy your money more and your life more or spend it
on different things, and that is okay. But it doesn't mean that you should blow all of your money either,
of course, so I would find a way to balance these two approaches to money in a way that works for
you. You can buy yourself a new computer, and you can sock away X percent of your paycheck every
month. You can go on a nice trip, and you can make sure you're building up a down payment for a
house or whatever. If you can combine your parents' discipline with your appreciation,
I really do think you can enjoy your money without feeling so conflicted about it.
I like that advice a lot, Jordan.
I also think it's very interesting that his guilt crops up in the context of his relationships.
Like with those friends he mentioned who are still young and struggling with money,
it sounds to me like he feels more than just guilt.
It sounds like he feels shame.
Like, I am bad for having this money.
And that goes back to the values that you mentioned a moment ago.
When his parents raised him to be so frugal,
they might have also implied that there's something a little bit wrong with spending money,
even if they didn't say that explicitly.
It was just sort of part of the household.
And you can see why that would be.
It makes perfect sense.
But also, I appreciate that he's being so sensitive to other people's situations.
It would be just as bad.
It would actually be a lot worse if he were like, you know, lunch is on me, guys.
Then I'm going to the Apple store to drop six Gs on a new setup.
And then I'm going to Europe for six months.
Peace, you know, like then you're just a dick, right?
Right.
Slaps the credit card down on the table.
Yeah, that's a black, by the way.
Yeah.
But there's a difference between being thoughtful and attuned to your friends and being so embarrassed
by your success that you can't even look them in the eye.
I mean, that tells me that there's something else going on here.
So what I'm curious about is when exactly does your sensitivity to other people tip over into shame?
Why does it feel like you can't do well without maybe possibly hurting somebody else,
your friends, maybe your parents, whoever it is?
That's what you need to figure out.
Again, getting to the roots of this thing.
Right.
But you know, Gabe, this stuff can be really hard to shake.
Yeah.
It's possible that he'll always feel some degree of guilt or shame around money,
given the way that he grew up.
In fact, I have a little bit of this, too.
I think one of the best things I've done for myself is make sure I'm saving enough
for retirement by automatically socking money away each month.
And then the rest of the cash is mine as I see fit.
Now, I end up saving more just because it makes me feel better or investing it into the business.
But automating this was good for me because then it's like, okay, at least I'm not being irresponsible if I buy something because it's already automatically going towards retirement.
So whenever I want to make any sort of medium or big purchase, I still have to wrap my head around it and be like, oh my God, the hotel's so expensive.
But I'm not thinking, would if I then lose the business and then I have to retire and I can't survive and I eat dog food out of a container?
You know, it's like I don't have to go down that path.
Right. Ramit Saiti teaches this stuff and it's really helpful if you've got money guilt.
He's got a podcast in a book called I Will Teach You to Be Rich.
We'll link to that in the show notes.
But listen, you should be really proud of yourself for putting in the work to land this great
job.
That is incredible.
Your parents sacrificed a lot to allow you to get to this point.
But it's not like success just dropped in your lap.
You earned it, man.
You are earning it.
And maybe remembering that from time to time will help you put the guilt into perspective.
And besides, the new call of duty is the shit.
So you definitely made the right purchase on the gaming rig.
Good luck. You can reach us Friday at Jordan Harbinger.com. Please keep your emails concise. Try to use a
descriptive subject line that makes our job a lot easier. If there's something you're going through
any big decision you're wrestling with, or you just need a new perspective on stuff, life, love, work,
what to do if you caught your spouse cheating, but they won't let you move on with your life.
Whatever's got you staying up at night lately, hit us up Friday at Jordan Harbinger.com. We're here
to help and we keep every email anonymous. And by the way, you don't have to think of those
creative names. That's Gabriel doing that. Some people,
People have DM me saying, I want to write in, but I can't think of a good name.
Don't worry.
We will handle that part.
I'm just imagining some poor sap who's got this burning question that his life is
waiting, like, hinging on it.
And he's like, I just can't get one that rhymes.
I just can't come up with a good pun.
How am I going to find out of prison?
Exactly.
Yeah, they're just sort of in purgatory waiting three years until the perfect name hits
them.
Gabriel's going to make that up.
I will say, though, I really love when you guys pitch your own, even if we don't
end up using them because it just like, I don't know, it just warms my heart when I see everybody
try to get in on the sign off name train. It's great. Yeah, we're into it. But don't let it stop
you from writing in in the first place. We're here. We got you. All right. Next step. Hi, Jordan and Gabe.
My mother-in-law of eight years is a pathological liar. Whether she's lying about how much she actually
spends shopping, the cancer diagnosis that she hid, even when we confronted her, the house that she's
renovating with her sons but has never told her husband about, or the fact that she's dislocated her
shoulder twice because of her other son's dog, it is exhausting. She continuously tells me what an
honest and well-liked person she is, but in reality, all our family does is compare her
lies when we meet to figure out the truth. The latest development is that my father-in-law has
cancer, and she's keeping that news from my husband and me. My own father was diagnosed with prostate
cancer when I was a teenager, so I'm well-versed in the symptoms, diagnosis, and treatment. But if I even
try and tell my husband that his mom isn't telling us the truth, he gets furious, saying that my father's
experience is not the same as his dad's. My husband has an interesting relationship with the truth as well.
For example, whenever he's unable to commit to someone's request for help, he lies as to why.
When he himself was very sick a few years ago, he kept that from his mother as well. He hid his
smoking from me for years by saying he was around other smokers at work. And when we came home one
year from visiting his family, he asked me to pay for half the expenses we incurred, which I would
have been fine with if his mother hadn't told me before we left that she had covered all of our
expenses as a gift to us. On top of all of that, my husband will now ask me to lie about something
arbitrary from time to time, which I refuse to do. For example, asking me to call a mechanic for a
quote and saying that it's me who wants it, or asking me not to mention that home his mother is
renovating to his dad. The list goes on and on. It is exhausting. How do you? How do you? How do you
I stopped this cycle and encourage my mother-in-law to share the important stuff with us,
signed a dutiful daughter-in-law disenchanted with this deceit.
Wow, this is a whole new type of mother-in-law, you Gabe?
Yeah, new mother-in-law just dropped.
Seriously, what a family.
Interesting timing on this question, too, since we just talked about lying with Sam Harris this week.
It sounds like lying.
Whether it's big stuff or small stuff, it's just kind of part of the family way.
It's just how we do things, right, Gabe?
There's got to be, it's got to be some interesting reasons that this woman's mother-in-law hides so much.
But the reality is all these lies are actually only hurting them.
I mean, okay, she doesn't want her husband to freak out that her son's dog keeps injuring her.
Maybe there's some valid reason for that.
But not telling your own son that his mother has cancer, then years later hiding the fact that his father has cancer,
that is deeply messed up.
Yeah.
That is tragic.
It is.
This woman is depriving her son of meaningful time with his father while he's still alive.
She's depriving her husband of the love and support that he needs.
She's creating all these fissures in the family around who knows what.
This whole thing is just incredibly sad and also weird.
But the thing that really jumps out at me is how this pattern of lying is carrying over into the son's life.
Because here's her husband repeating the exact same pattern, hiding his serious illness from his family, hiding his smoking,
lying about why he can't help certain people,
and then co-opting his wife into those just petty lies,
like with the mechanic and the property renovation.
My sense is that this family is profoundly avoidant,
deeply afraid of difficult conversations,
probably very concerned with managing people's feelings and perceptions.
And these lies, these lies are a way to control situations
to maintain the illusion of perfection,
of invulnerability, and also just to achieve their self-interested goals.
I also think there's some narcissism baked into this, too,
especially when she said that her mother-in-law keeps banging on, like,
what, I'm such an honest and well-liked person.
Okay, yeah, Debra, everyone knows you're super open,
and everything going on in your life is so great.
Everyone loves you.
It's just so transparently self-serving.
It's almost kind of hilarious.
Yeah.
Like, oh, we're so great.
Everyone just likes us.
We never lie about anything.
By the way, I paid for your honeymoon.
Like, what are you talking about?
The Deborah Doth protest too much, yeah.
Yes, exactly.
But then when she mentions that time that her husband asked her to pay for half the trip to visit his family,
that's in this whole petty lying thing became something else.
Because that is straight up gross.
Your husband isn't just lying to the mechanic or some annoying neighbor who needs a favor.
He's literally trying to squeeze money out of you, his wife, for something he didn't even pay for.
And that says a lot.
That's actually worrisome.
It is kind of worrisome.
But hold on.
I'm a little confused.
did he lie to get some more money out of his wife, or did his mother lie and she actually didn't
cover their travel expenses? It's kind of unclear. Okay, good point. So it sounds to me like he lied
to get money out of the wife is like a fake reimbursement, even though it was already paid for it. But
now I'm starting to get, right? Now we start to get why all the lying is exhausting. It's confusing.
Yeah. I can't even keep their BS straight and it's been like five minutes and it's a typed email.
So yeah, I get why you want to stop this cycle. Now we don't even know it's
going on. The problem is this pattern is very old. It's deeply ingrained, and I'm not sure if you,
as the daughter-in-law here, can really change your mother-in-law. Even if you did address this head-on
with Debbie, not her real name, folks, something tells me that she's going to get defensive.
It'll probably be pretty threatening for her to even consider that her lies are hurting the
family. How could that happen? This is a woman clinging to her lives, and if you try to take that
away from her, you would be taking away a huge piece of the architecture that props up her personality.
You're welcome to try? I would just be, I would be realistic about the results here that you expect.
My take, I think you're going to have more luck closer to home with your husband, because that's
your family. That's your business. And honestly, your husband is the piece of this story that I'm
actually most concerned about. Yeah, same here, because his lies directly affect you. They're
determining your quality of life, your relationships, your mental.
health. So if I were you, I would definitely worry less about your mother-in-law, more about your husband. And if you can
help your husband become friendlier with the truth, he might be able to help his mother-in-law eventually
do that too, but again, probably something he can handle better than you can. And the way to do that is to
try to really talk to him about all of this. I would sit down with your husband and tell him what you're
seeing with his family, the avoidance, the lying, the controlling information, you know, how you see
that showing up in him, like with his illness, with the smoking, when he makes things up to avoid
doing things for people. I would actually ask him why he feels the need to do that and try to do that
with as little judgment as possible. Just invite him to talk. Try to understand what's going on
underneath the impulse to lie rather than to just confront a situation head on. And then I would tell
him what it's like to be around those lies, to be on the other side of those lies and how it feels
to be lied to. You know, what it's like when he asks you to lie on his behalf, he might not fully
understand the position that he's putting you in there because he grew up with this kind of policy
of lying in his family. It might not even seem like a big deal to him. He could be so desensitized
to the lies that he doesn't even realize how toxic and exhausting they really are. And part of that
is helping him see how the lying is hurting him, especially with his father. That's probably a whole
conversation in and of itself, helping your husband come to terms with the fact that it sounds
like his father is actually really sick, no matter what his mother says, exploring why that's so
difficult for him to wrap his head around. Jordan, that detail, I just, I'm still struggling to wrap my
head around it. It just says so much about the effect of a family like this, right? This mother probably
shielded him from just so much information growing up. He can't even tolerate the idea that his father is
sick. And that is wild. It's really sad. And maybe that's another reason that this family lies to sort of
protect one another. Of course, they're not really protecting one another at all. They're making it even
harder to process difficult events, which again, super sad. Anyway, you might also want to bring up that
family trip to the whole reimbursement thing and not to be petty or to rehash old stuff, but just like,
hey, do you remember when you asked me to do that? I just want to understand, like, why did you
ask me to reimburse you when your mom gifted us the trip? I mean, we're married. Why would you lie to
get some more money out of me? I'm confused. Help me understand. So there's a lot for you guys to
talk about, but the most important thing you can do is work with your husband to understand the
roots of the impulse to lie. To Jordan's point, all of this deception is clearly serving some
kind of function. For your husband, it might be a fear of conflict, maybe a need to avoid being the bad
guy. I'm guessing he has some real anxiety about confronting the difficult facts of life. I also think
there's something going on for him around money, potentially assuming that Jordan's interpretation of that
whole thing was correct. Asking you to cough up half the expenses for that trip, lying to the
mechanic about a quote, those both seem connected to me somehow. It's possible that he has some paranoia
about how people are going to like get one over on him or that he's maybe going to end up without
money or something like that. Those are very primitive fears. And if your husband is going to get
better at this, he's going to have to dig into all of that. Agree 100%, Gabe. This problem might
have begun with his mother, but it is showing up in her son and his marriage to this woman. And
And that's the domain that she can control.
She might have to accept that her mother-in-law lives in her own reality.
I just don't see Deborah changing anytime soon, but she doesn't have to settle for that ethos
in her own family.
On top of being manipulative and creepy, it's just freaking exhausting.
Like, we tried to get it straight earlier in the question we couldn't even do it.
Imagine your whole life just has this layer of that around it.
It's, ugh, no thank you.
So I hope you get through to your husband.
This is going to be a hard transformation for him.
you're asking him to reconsider and rewrite decades of stuff by opening up about this.
But it's essential.
And it's going to be a huge load off for everybody involved once you finally get through this.
So good luck.
We're wishing you and your husband all the best.
By the way, we don't have any more sponsors for this episode, so there's no ad break.
Nah, that's a lie.
Just pulling a Debra.
We'll be right back.
Thanks again for listening and for supporting those who support this show.
Remember all the deals and discount codes at Jordan Harbinger.com slash
deals, and you can search for any sponsor using the search box on the website as well.
Please consider supporting those who support this show.
All right, back to Feedback Friday.
All right, what's next?
Dear Jordan and Gabriel, I'm a 20-year-old guy living in the Netherlands, and I study
physiotherapy, work in a physiotherapy practice as a trainer, and also put in some time
at a bookstore on the side.
My work is very meaningful to me.
The thing is, I've been struggling with addiction for the last two years.
I'm high-functioning.
I work out almost daily. I have two jobs, and school isn't suffering as a result.
But mentally, this is breaking me down. So bad that I've decided to go to rehab soon to completely
cut drugs out of my life. My question is, how should I tell my employers that I'll be gone
for six weeks? I get along with both of them, but still, I don't know where to start.
Signed, coming clean about getting clean without causing a scene.
This is a great question. So first of all, I am so glad to hear that you're seeking
help for your addiction. That's great news, man. I'm really proud that you've made a decision to get
clean and cut this stuff out of your life. Good for you, especially so early in your life. You know,
a lot of people wait until everything is ruined and relationships are irreparably destroyed and
careers and stuff. Meanwhile, he's like still a kid and he's like, okay, let me get this shit handled.
I know this is the start of an incredible new chapter. That said, I know going to rehab can be tricky
with employers. We wanted to run your situation by an expert, so we reached out to Joanna Tate.
certified HR professional and friend of the show. And Joanna's take was, since you have a pretty good
relationship with your employers, they might be very supportive of you going to rehab. And if they're
already aware that you have a substance abuse issue, I know it can be hard to keep an addiction
100% secret. They might not be entirely surprised to hear that you need some time off. Now,
Joanna wasn't sure about the leave of absence laws or company policies in the Netherlands,
but she did say that it's very likely your employers have a policy in place that would allow you to
take time off for what is literally a medical condition. In fact, Joanna did a quick Google search
and found that the Netherlands appears to be way ahead of the United States in that department. Surprise,
surprise. We did one too. We found the same. Europe probably has a lot of better privacy laws
and medical leave laws and employee rights and things like that just generally across the board.
So Joanna's approach, and this is based on her experience again in the United States, is to go to the
HR representatives at your companies, or maybe just your bosses, if these companies are really small,
and speak to them privately and just basically say, hey, I'd like to apply for a medical leave.
Now, if you're super tight with your bosses, if you trust them, maybe you tell them what you're going
through, why you want to get treatment, that you want to come back in a couple months,
sober, healthy, ready to work, and you're asking for their support.
But if you don't want to go into more detail, you can absolutely keep it vague and just say,
I'll be needing some medical treatment and may need to be off work for a period of time.
What can I do to follow procedures for that?
I want to make sure that I take time off based on company policy and come back in good standing.
Something like that.
The HR rep would then give you a form to give to your doctor and give back.
The form will tell your employers and the disability insurance provider, possibly the government
in your case, that there's a serious medical condition, and explain how long you need to be away
from work. According to Joanna, all of this medical information must be kept confidential
according to federal law. Again, this is the United States, but I'm assuming the same is true
in the Netherlands. And that's about it. It can really be as straightforward as that. It sounds like
you have a lot of goodwill, a lot of legal protection, and cultural support on your side. So
I'm guessing this conversation is going to go pretty well. I think he's going to be okay too.
There's, yeah, everything is working in his favor. But we also wanted to make sure that you are set up well
to get the most out of treatment. So we reached out to Dr. Ruben Kodem, clinical psychologist specializing
in addiction and trauma, also front of the show. And Dr. Kodom's view is that rehab is obviously super
important, but aftercare is arguably more important. He said that people go into rehab and it can be
intense. There are lots of groups and therapy and activities and community and then you come out
and it can kind of feel like a therapy detox. It can almost feel like a withdrawal. So
His advice is work closely with your case manager at rehab to set up a strong aftercare plan
that includes some kind of outpatient program, whether that's an intensive outpatient program
or individual therapy or some combination of the two. Without that, Dr. Kodem said that rehab can
be like driving 100 miles an hour and then just slamming on the brakes. You want to smooth transition
back into regular life. As he put it, you don't want to have so much treatment that you're not living your
life and you don't want too little treatment to the point that you can't use all of these new
skills that you're developing to live your life effectively. The last thing Dr. Kodem said, and I thought
this was a really, really great insight, is to consider if maybe the busyness of your life,
you know, all these jobs, you have three different jobs, you're working in three different places,
your work is very meaningful to you, to see if maybe that is also impacting your addiction.
This might not be the case for you, but sometimes having too much to do, that can be a form of
emotional avoidance or running. Dr. Kodam said that he would be curious to know what slowing down
would look like and what that would mean for you. Obviously, sometimes we work a ton because,
you know, we have good financial reasons for that. But sometimes we work a ton because we just don't
want to deal with other parts of our life. And obviously sometimes it's both. Either way,
rehab will be a great place to explore all of that and to get to know yourself better and also to get
a better understanding of the relationship between your lifestyle and your career and this addiction.
That is a great insight. He sounds like a hardworking guy. His work is meaningful to him, but
Dr. Kodem is making a great point. Work can be a form of avoidance. I've definitely experienced that
myself. Sometimes it's even an addiction in and of itself. Another great thing to unpack in rehab
for sure. So yeah, talk to your employers, get the support you need, especially therapy. That'll be
a huge piece of your recovery and your life going forward, if you want to stay sane. And good luck, man.
We're rooting for you. Again, good for him, like 20 years old, realizing this is a problem and not
just a fun time. That takes a lot of self-awareness. And look at it this way. If you're afraid to go
and ask for help, your drug problem is almost certainly going to get worse and ruin your life at
some point if you don't handle it, but going to rehab, even if everyone finds out and there's a
black stain on your career, you're 20, so it doesn't even matter. It's like, it doesn't even
matter in the scheme of things, right? So this is a pretty easy choice, even if right now it might
seem awkward or potentially embarrassing, neither of which it should actually be. The costs are
even lower for him. Yeah. For sure. Yeah. All right. Next up. Hi, Jordan Agabe. I've been with my husband for
four years and at the beginning of our relationship, he told me that he wouldn't be able to open up to me.
This caught me off guard, but I said okay, thinking it was just because we didn't know each other very well yet.
As time passed, though, he never shared himself emotionally with me while I've shared all of the parts of
myself that he genuinely wants to know about. Sometimes he says it'll open up to me one day,
but other times he changes the subject. He's a master deflector. He's very intelligent and tries very hard to
convince me that this is just how he is, that he can't or doesn't know how to talk, even though he
communicates very well at work and is capable of using his words. Recently, while visiting his parents,
I vented to my sister-in-law about all of this and she told me that while my husband was in high
school, he was severely bullied by his dad for his physicality, not meeting his expectations, and a lot of other
stuff. Apparently it got so bad that it drove my husband to the point of self-harm. She didn't know the
details because their family never, ever speaks about this, but she said that it involved a trip to
the hospital, which immediately made me sad. That night, I told my husband I love him several times,
but now a few days later, I've grown angry at him for keeping so much of his life a secret.
It makes me feel like I'm incapable of carrying this thing for him, or that I'm untrustworthy.
I've been in a deep funk and he's picked up on it.
I haven't told him what I learned, but I have told him that I don't like his father
and that he's damaged all of his sons emotionally.
He admitted his dad isn't a great person and that he's an alcoholic,
but adamantly denies that he's toxic or responsible for the damage he's caused in their family.
It's like he's trying to protect him, so as not to disappoint him again or something like that.
Now I don't know how to broach this.
I'm afraid of his response, and the last thing I want is for my husband to shut down even more.
I've told him he should seek therapy over the years because he's very hard on himself.
He even says negative affirmations out loud to himself daily, but he outright refuses the idea of talking to somebody.
Do I patiently wait for my husband to tell me this huge secret?
Or do I confront him and let him know that I know this piece of his puzzle?
Signed, trying to abide this life on the outside.
Ah, I see what you did here, Gabe.
You kicked us off with a marriage that was too open, now you're wrapping us up with a marriage that's not open enough.
very clever.
Yeah. Symmetry, bra.
Well, this is a sad story.
You know, negative affirmations.
I'm not sure there is a such thing as that.
I think they just call that beating yourself up and negative self-talk.
That's a tough detail.
Yeah, it's a tough detail, exactly.
Your husband's father obviously did a real number on him.
It is a father.
I just can't imagine doing this to my son, but I also wasn't raised with a dad that did that to me.
So that's probably why it makes no sense to me.
I'm sure it makes sense to dads who were raised that way to also treat your kids like
crap and hope that they, that makes them better people. I can't follow the logic, but I guess
I sort of can. Your husband was clearly abused as a child. He was driven a pretty serious self-harm.
He was deprived of this space to process his feelings, and now he's internalized all this anger.
He's tearing himself down and he either doesn't realize how bad his father is or he's in denial
about it, both of which are common with the children of abused parents. It can be very painful,
even as an adult to acknowledge just how damaging they were. And to make all of this harder,
he won't talk to you or a therapist about it. So yeah, this is, this is tough. The first thing I want to
share is that your husband's reluctance to talk about all this, I think it's primarily a reflection
of him and not of you. He grew up in a family that wasn't emotionally safe. He was tormented for who he was.
He probably never had a secure relationship with his parents or anyone else at a young age.
nobody talked about things openly.
So, of course, your husband struggles to open up.
For you, it's just, you know, tell me about your childhood.
Tell me about how you're feeling.
Let me help you.
But for him, that conversation is probably terrifying
because it means being vulnerable,
and vulnerability equals weakness and danger to him.
So when you ask your husband to open up to you,
you're asking him to overcome decades of trauma and conditioning,
to take a chance that probably feels fatally risky.
which, let's acknowledge, that's heartbreaking.
Now, that doesn't mean it's not difficult or hurtful for you.
It is.
I get that.
I just think it's important to recognize that your husband isn't trying to do this to you.
He's trying to protect himself.
You are collateral damage.
So what can you do about it?
Well, that's tricky, because your husband doesn't want to go near this stuff, obviously.
And it's not clear to me that he fully appreciates what a toll all of this is taking on you
and on your marriage, because you're walking.
on eggshells around him too. You're afraid to hurt him or provoke him, and you don't want him to
shut down even further. So if you're going to make inroads here, I think you're going to have to
help your husband see how this lack of intimacy is affecting him and you and your relationship.
And I would do that before asking him to open up more. Instead, I would just tell him what it's like
to be married to somebody who doesn't want to share these parts of himself. Resist the urge to
blame him or get mad at him. In fact, you might even want to say, I know how hard this is for you. And I get
it. I really do. But I'm your wife. I'm your friend. I want to be there for you. And when you don't
talk about how you're feeling, it makes me feel like we're just not as close as I thought. And it makes
me feel like you don't think I can be there for you or you don't trust me. And that's why I've been
down lately. Do you see what I mean? Maybe you can help him appreciate the position he's putting you in here.
You might also want to help him see that the way he's been dealing, it's not great for him either.
Maybe you can say that you see him berating himself, you see him isolating himself, and you're concerned.
Ask him how he feels these days, what his day-to-day experience is.
If he pulls back the curtain a little bit, even if he's just like, I don't know, I have a lot of my mind, I'm kind of tired.
Even that's something to work with.
Draw him out.
Ask him why he's tired.
Ask him what's going on.
Keep asking him questions.
listen carefully, validate his feelings, and as much as you can, try to get it what's happening
beneath the surface here. If you can do that, you might be able to slowly get your husband
to start opening up, but it'll probably take some time because this isn't something he'll be
able to do tomorrow. You just have to be that safe person for him to talk to, and it could take
weeks or even months to build that trust, even though y'all are already married. Gabe, what's your
take on this big secret he's got? Should she just wait for him to tell her?
about the self-harm stuff, or should she tell him that she already knows?
Ooh, yeah, that is a tough one.
You know, my gut is telling me that she should hold back for the moment on that
and try to engage with him exactly the way you just described,
because if she earns his trust and he decides to open up one day about the self-harm,
that would be a huge breakthrough in their relationship.
And it would probably mean a lot more for him to volunteer that information on his own.
But if she tries to talk to him for like six months, nine months, there's no progress,
then I might consider bringing it up, but I'm torn because it's such a delicate thing.
She has to come across as supportive and loving and not as like nosy and overbearing.
And I talked to your sister-in-law and she told me that this terrible thing that happened to you,
and now I'm going to tell you that I know it's just very sensitive.
The timing has to be right.
Now, look, if you guys start talking in a real way, he starts to open up, he might go,
you know, wow, this is really nice.
I didn't realize how hard this has been for you.
I'm sorry about that.
Let me work on this.
And if he sees that he can open up to you and nothing terrible happens, maybe you can convince him
to do that with a therapist, which would be a game changer.
That would be my goal.
But it's also possible that you try to talk to your husband and he's just like, look,
I am not interested in talking about this stuff.
I'm sorry, you're upset, but this is my stuff.
This is my life.
And that's that.
I don't want to talk about this anymore.
And if that's his response, then at a certain point, you are going to have to respect that.
And then the question becomes, what level of intimacy can you accept with your husband?
Can you live with this feeling of being on the outside, of not being able to get deep with him?
And that's your work to do.
And if you could do that work with a therapist of your own, I bet that would be really helpful.
Because I know that your husband is the one who's struggling here, but is also taking a toll on you,
and there's sort of a decision for you to make down the line if nothing ever changes.
Took the words right out of my mouth, Gabe.
I get the sense that a lot of energy in this marriage is being directed toward her husband,
even if he doesn't seem to want her help.
And she gets lost in the shuffle sometimes.
I mean, yes, he has a lot to unpack and resolve,
but there's so much happening for her, too.
So I do hope you get the support you need,
and I hope your husband gets to a place where he's ready to talk.
And we're rooting for you guys.
I mean, this is not easy.
This story is, it's sad.
You know, it's sad because it's like,
who knows what his dad went through,
took it out on him.
Now it's affecting the marriage.
Who knows if there's kids in this that are starting to get,
there's weird stuff happen around there.
They got a later on, I mean, it's just,
it's amazing.
how one person can get damaged in a family and it just trickles down on everybody else whether
they want it or not it's just uh it's kind of horrifying it is but i want to believe in the possibility of
change for sure i get the sense that this guy is like i have an image of him as a very zipped up guy
and i think he's probably trying so hard to keep all of this on the inside he's beating himself up he's
like yelling mean stuff at himself in the mirror every morning it's just heartbreaking yeah
but i also think that when you're in that position deep down even if you're not really
touch with it, you want to unburden yourself so badly. You want to talk to somebody who can be there
for you. That wish is in every single one of us. So it's obviously in her husband. The question is,
can she help him get to the point where he's willing to acknowledge that. And I really want to
believe that he can't. Hope you all enjoyed that. I want to thank everyone who wrote in this week and everyone
who listened. Thank you so much. And don't forget to check out the episodes we had with Peter Santonello
and Sam Harris. If you haven't yet, want to know how I managed to book all of these amazing folks for the
show. It's all about software, systems, and tiny habits that I do every single day in just a few
minutes. Our six-minute networking course is free over there on the think-giff platform at
Jordan Harbinger.com slash course. I'm teaching you how to dig that well before you get thirsty,
build those relationships before you need them. Again, it's free and it's stuff I wish I knew 20 years
ago. It's been absolutely crucial in my business and personal life. Jordan Harbinger.com
slash course. Also, by way of promo, Lau, Y-86, got to give them a shout out for this
video he did on the Xinjiang police file hack. So y'all are probably aware there's a genocide essentially
going on in Western China with the Uyghur population. No surprise to most of you. We're going to be doing a show
on this with somebody who's an activist for that. No surprise the Communist Party over there is trying
to get rid of people that have a religion, aren't necessarily thrilled to be part of mainland China,
have a different language and culture, et cetera. Well, the trolls are out in force, right? They're saying it's
never happening. There's no proof, even though there's tons of photographic evidence.
well, well, well, there's been a major police file hack and leak. And it shows training directives
on how the guards are supposed to operate in the camp. It's got photos. It's got maps. It's got
procedures. It shows you the warning shots they're supposed to take. And then after that,
they're supposed to shoot to kill. It shows what the camps are for. It shows the locations of some of
these things. There's over 10,000 documents. They've been authenticated by a ton of different parties.
There's reports on them from various news outlets from BBC to Deutsche Vela and other news outlets
here in the United States. I'm going to link to the video in the show notes. It's called
Xinjiang police file hack, why China is terrified. He does a breakdown of the whole hack, the whole
leak, and what it means. And if you are paying attention to the news and all about this
Uigh or genocide, this is kind of a must watch, because it does give you a lot of ammo,
especially if you are hearing from trolls online and what you might call the 50-cent army of
Chinese nationalists or just troll bots saying it's all fake. This will show you plenty of proof
that it is absolutely not fake and is absolutely real and is absolutely one of the most horrific
human rights atrocities that's going on right now in the world today that's being covered up by
the Communist Party. And again, remember, when we talk about China and bad things that the Communist
Party does, it's not the Chinese people. It is the Chinese Communist Party because the biggest
victims of the Chinese Communist Party are not even the Uyghurs. They are the people of China, period.
The whole country is being victimized by this government. So anyway, that's just a little something
to watch, I wouldn't say it's light fare, but it certainly is interesting. And again, you can find
that linked in the show notes, or you can just search for Lao Y-86 Xinjiang police files, why China is
terrified. And it'll pop right up there on the YouTube's. A link to the show notes for the episode can be found
at Jordan Harbinger.com. Transcripts are in the show notes. Advertisers at Jordan Harbinger.com
slash deals. I'm at Jordan Harbinger on both Twitter and Instagram. You can also connect with me on
LinkedIn. I always enjoyed talking with you there as well. You can find Gabe on Twitter at
Gabe Mizrahi or on Instagram at Gabriel Mizrahi. This show is created in association with
podcast one. My team is Jen Harbinger, Jace Sanderson, Robert Fogart, Ian Baird, Millio Campo, Josh Ballard,
and of course Gabriel Mizrahi. Our advice and opinions are our own. I am a lawyer, but I am not
your lawyer. Do your own research before implementing anything you hear on the show. Dr. Kodem's
input is general psychological information based on research and clinical experience. It's intended
to be general and informational in nature. It does not represent
or indicate an established clinical or professional relationship with those inquiring for guidance.
Basically, he's a doctor, but not your doctor.
Remember, we rise by lifting others.
So share the show with those you love, and if you found the episode useful,
please share it with somebody else who can use the advice we gave here today.
In the meantime, do your best to apply what you hear on the show so you can live what you listen,
and we'll see you next time.
If you're looking for another episode of the Jordan Harbinger Show to sink your teeth into,
here's a preview of my conversation with Danny Trejo,
An ex-con turned icon featured in over 350 films and TV shows.
You've seen him everywhere in machete, Breaking Bad, Desperado, and much, much more.
He's never been through acting school, which doesn't matter when you're a legend slash icon.
Before becoming such a prolific star, Danny Trejo was a drug-addicted criminal hooked on heroin at age 12,
who spent more than a decade in and out of prisons.
Here's a quick preview.
Once you start doing robberies, and you're...
you're using heroin, the robberies become addictive.
You don't know whether you're doing robberies to support your drug habit
or doing drugs to support your robbery habit.
I read you robbed a store with a hand grenade.
This was later on.
This was like we did a robbery and we ended up with this hang grenade.
So I tried it and it was very simple.
You know, when you hold a hang grenade and you got your hand on the pin
and you ask somebody for some money, they think twice.
Prison, there's only two kinds of people in prison.
There's predators and they're prey.
That's it.
And you've got to decide every damn morning, what are you going to be?
And I know a lot of people that decide I'm brave.
I don't care because I'm tired.
I know a lot of people that took an elevator off the fifth tier.
There's no elevator.
I know a lot of people that cut their wrists.
I've seen guys with all the muscles in the world get stabbed by a short Mexican,
in tennis shoes with a big knife.
You know, fighting.
I don't fight you.
That's prison.
prison has a taste.
Put one of those fake pennies, the lead one, in your mouth, and keep it there.
That's the taste of pusher.
That's the taste of anxiety.
That's the taste of fear.
That's the taste of everything.
You feel it.
You know, that's what you're going to walk around with.
And when you finally lose that taste, you've decided whether you're going to be predator
or prey.
That's the only way you can lose it.
For more, including how Danny Trejo, walked onto a Hollywood movie.
movie set as a drug counselor and left as a bona fide actor, and how Danny Trejo has managed sobriety
for over 50 years and continues to help others maintain theirs, check out episode 398 of the
Jordan Harbinger Show. This episode is sponsored in part by Something You Should Know podcast.
Finding a new great podcast shouldn't be this hard, so let me save you some time. If you like the
Jordan Harbinger show, you'll probably like Something You Should Know with Mike Carruthers. It's one of
those shows that makes you smarter in a practical, useful way. Same curiosity vibe we go for here,
just in a fast-focused format,
Mike brings on top experts and asks the exact questions
that you'd want to ask,
and the topics are all over the place in the best way.
Recently, they've covered things like
why we care so much what other people think,
the benefits of laughter,
why sports fans get so invested,
and what makes people like you or not,
the through line is always the same.
Smart ideas you can actually use in real life.
Something you should know has been featured
in Apple's shows we love,
and it's got thousands of five-star reviews
because it's consistently interesting.
So if you want another show that scratches
that I want to understand how people in the world really work itch, search for something
you should know wherever you get your podcasts. Look for the bright yellow light bulb and start listening.
You can thank me later.
