The Jordan Harbinger Show - 900: Is Three a Crowd When Parents Swing Out Loud? | Feedback Friday
Episode Date: September 22, 2023Your openly swinging friends brought a third into their relationship, and you worry about how it's affecting their kids. Welcome to another Feedback Friday! And in case you didn't already kno...w it, Jordan Harbinger (@JordanHarbinger) and Gabriel Mizrahi (@GabeMizrahi) banter and take your comments and questions for Feedback Friday right here every week! If you want us to answer your question, register your feedback, or tell your story on one of our upcoming weekly Feedback Friday episodes, drop us a line at friday@jordanharbinger.com. Now let's dive in! On This Week's Feedback Friday, We Discuss: You're concerned about your friends' unconventional swinging throuple lifestyle and its potential impact on their children. How do you check in without seeming judgmental? Pregnancy-related fatigue has you struggling to balance your professional and personal life, and the guilt of underachievement is bringing you down. What do you do when life gets in the way of your own expectations? Your partner plans on ditching responsibility for his ballooning student debt because he's not optimistic he'll ever be able to pay off the predatory terms he agreed to when he was younger and ill-advised. While you morally agree with his stance, you wonder what your obligation would be if you remained together and it came time to merge accounts. [Thanks to certified financial planner David Gilmore for helping us with this one!] You filled in for your manager during her eight-week vacation, built strong connections within the company, and gained the respect of your colleagues while stepping up to the role. Now that she's back, how can you use this valuable experience to prove you're ready for more responsibilities (and a bigger paycheck)? [Thanks to executive coach and From Start-Up to Grown-Up author Alisa Cohn for helping us field this one!] Due to a previous marriage to an abusive alcoholic, your partner is intolerant of being around people who are even modestly intoxicated. How can you ask him for a little grace and freedom to celebrate your son's upcoming wedding without disrespecting his boundaries? 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 See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Welcome to Feedback Friday.
I'm your host, Jordan Harbinger.
As always, I'm here with Feedback Friday producer,
the Stevia Packet sweetening up this occasionally bitter cup of life conundra,
Gabriel Mizrahi.
Did you say Stevia?
Yeah, I prefer Stevia.
It's not Stevia?
Oh, I don't know.
That sounds like somebody's name that they made up for their kid.
Steve-e-ya.
Yeah, it's like, oh, we named our daughter Stevia because our dad is Stevie.
It just sounds dumb to me.
It's Stevia, isn't that?
Come on.
Wait, is it really Stevie?
Now I just feel dumb.
I think it's stevia.
I think it is stevia.
Whatever, it's stevia forever now.
On the Jordan Harbinger show, we decode the stories, secrets, and skills.
The world's most fascinating people.
Sounds like a European pronunciation.
Stevia.
We 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,
like somebody who mispronounces the name of a very simple artificial sweetener.
During the week, we have long-form conversations with a variety of amazing folks.
from hostage negotiators and Russian spies, four-star generals and rocket scientists, all the way through
to legendary Hollywood directors, but not right now because everybody's still on freaking strike
and no sign of that letting up, which has worked wonders for our guest list, by the way.
This week we had Forrest Galante back on the show. This guy is so incredible. Forrest Galante
goes and finds like extinct animals and things that we thought were never to be seen again.
This guy's just such a fascinating character. We also had my friend Jen Cohen on becoming
bold. She's a very successful person and how do I put this the right way? Because we are friends
and I don't want to offend her. It's because of her work ethic, but it's not because of her
giant level of guts. How's that? She just really goes for it and she's got some practical
takeaways and lessons on how to become a person who does that. And I thought that was pretty
interesting. She's punching above her weight as far as what she's achieved in many ways. And I wanted
to harness that a little bit. And we love her. On Fridays, though, we share stories. We take
listener letters offer advice, play obnoxious sound bites and mercilessly roast Gabriel for his
knowledge of obscure sex terms in foreign languages. Back to that, huh? Yeah, can't stop thinking about the word
frotage, Gabe, fraudage. Thanks for that. You are welcome. I'll just keep sprinkling those in from
time to time if you'd like. We'll just head every weird sex word in every weird language.
By the way, Jordan, I'm not sure if you notice, but this is episode 900. I did notice. And first of all,
that's amazing, really snuck up on me, as it always does. And it was a fun
surprise. You know, we put out three, four episodes a week. We're on this treadmill, do an episode
after episode. You forget how much stuff you're putting out until you look at the feed and you're like,
wow, we've done 900 episodes. We're almost at 1,000. This is wild. And when I look at my past show,
people are like, wow, you've done almost 900 hours of count. I'm like, yeah, in addition to the 700
that I did before we started from zero, it's just really something. So look, thank you all for sticking
with us getting to this incredible milestone.
It's going to be next level when we hit episode 1000.
It's one of those things we're like, yeah, we're going to do something special.
And then we're going to be like, oh, crap, this is next week.
And we're going to air a regular episode, nothing celebratory other than a note in the
intro.
But I can't wait for producer Bob to yell at us for hitting our character limit on the episode
titles when we have to move to four digits.
It's always like, ooh, that one doesn't fit with the end quote.
And I'm not putting it in without the quotes because my OCD grammar is not allowing me to do it.
But I guess champagne problems.
between the AI chatbot and the new newsletter.
I hope you guys are enjoying our deep library of past episodes.
So many amazing guests, so many gems in there.
It really is a body of work that I'm really proud of,
and I'm grateful to each and every one of you
for making it possible for us to do this.
All right, as always, fun ones, dozies.
Let's dive in.
Gabe, what is the first thing out of the mailbag?
Dear Jordan and Gabe,
my husband and I developed a friendship with another couple.
Let's call them Adam and Susie,
when our now teenage daughters became best friends in preschool.
Since then, we've celebrated countless holidays and milestones, spent hours together on the sidelines of sporting events,
and supported each other through the challenges of being working parents.
Then, a couple years ago, our friends abruptly began spending many weekends in a nearby city without their children.
We didn't give it much thought and gladly welcomed their daughter into her home while they were away.
Later, Susie told me that the purpose of these trips was to drink and visit strip clubs.
Okay.
Okay.
Yeah.
Boy, that escalated quickly.
I love that sound like so much.
I wasn't expecting that.
Neither did she, apparently, because she writes,
I was surprised as I knew these people to be devout Christians and frequent churchgoers.
Although their idea of a fun weekend vastly differs from mine,
my husband and I decided that their recreation was ultimately harmless
and chose to maintain the friendship and keep providing a comfortable space for their daughter.
A year later, though, they'd be able to be.
began having intense friendships with various couples.
These friends would often attend events where we were present,
and Adam and Susie were always very touchy and affectionate with their new companions.
We eventually arrived at the assumption that they are swingers.
Yes, that sounds like what it is.
Also, how are you a frequent churchgoer when you're spending weekends in another city?
And I can't imagine you show up to church at that point,
or do you just like, oh, yeah, we miss church again
because we were doing blow with prostitutes at a strip club.
in Reno again.
They have churches in Reno too, Jordan.
They could have just gone to a different parish.
But who stays up till 7 a.m.
after going to deja vu or whatever?
And then it's just rolls straight into church
with glitter stuck to your chest.
It's a fantastic image.
And I feel like Adam and Susie might do that.
Look, they're sitting in church during the week,
getting their freak on during the weekends.
It's interesting.
I'm with you.
It's totally their choice.
But it is, yeah, it's interesting.
Then recently, a new friend entered the picture.
Emma is a decades younger woman going through a divorce,
and she now spends all of Susie's days off at their house
and even stays entire weekends,
even though they don't have a spare bedroom.
Okay, interesting.
So this might answer my big question,
which is, do their children know about all this?
Yeah, I had the same thought,
but the daughter's a teenager now,
so of course, Emma stays for days at a time.
She's crashing in the parents' bedroom,
ostensibly, because there's no guest room with a futon.
So the daughter must have some clue what's going on.
If she doesn't, she's going to know soon, or she's a complete knucklehead and has her head in the sand.
They're not playing twister in the bedroom.
Well, they kind of are.
Well, they kind of are.
Just not the same kind of twist.
No, the kind you see on a 90s t-shirt.
But I'm imagining Emma's walking out of dad's bedroom in the morning wearing mom's robe,
and they're all eating cereal together in the morning, and I'm just wildly speculating here.
But I feel like that's the scene, unless they are being super stealth about it.
But a parent can't be more stealth than a teenager.
You're trying to sneak someone out of the house and the teenager.
teenagers like seeing them crawl out the window as they're waiting to crawl out
that same window and go out with their own friends, I don't think that's going to work.
Yeah, you're trying to outsmart the master.
So, like, you mean if Emma sets her alarm for like five in the morning and sneaks back into
the living room and pretends she just slept on the couch all night?
Right.
Says she's staying in a motel six nearby, but really she's just being Susie's big spoon.
Or Susie and Adams, I don't know, what's the bologna in their sandwich?
I don't understand the right metaphor here.
Yeah, the point is it sounds like they're not hiding this because you can't and has to be pretty
much out in the open. So maybe they don't think their kids understand, but I think they must. Anyway,
the letter goes on. Recently, Susie requested that Emma attend a small baby shower when the mom-to-be
and Emma had never met. I've also witnessed several intimate goodbye hugs between the two women and
saw them holding hands and giddily bantering like smitten teens while out on a walk with Adam.
There have also been social media posts with the ladies posing in positions that scream romance. A mutual
friend hosted a holiday gathering recently, and Susie simply assumed that Emma was invited and
stated, I think Emma's bringing wine, so.
They're really putting this Thruple thing out there. It's almost like they want people to know,
which tells me they probably don't care what people think. Right. And I guess more power to
him for that. Carry on. To be clear, I am not homophobic and believe that successful parenting can be
achieved in a variety of non-conventional ways. But we're concerned about how this might be
affecting their children.
Yeah.
That's fair.
It is fair.
That's really my only concern at this point, to be honest.
They can do whatever they want in their private life.
It sounds like it's all in the up and up.
I'm sure it's probably fun.
It's not my idea of fun.
Getting shuasted at the booby bungalow in Minneapolis or whatever.
Swiping right on fresh divorcees in the field app.
But whatever, to each his own, spice it up.
Did you say the booby bungal?
Yeah, the booby bungalow.
I already used deja vu, which is a real place, who didn't pay for the mention.
It's so good.
Yeah.
All right, carry out.
I'm sorry.
There's got to be a place called the booby bungle.
I'm going to Google it later.
But what their kids make of all this,
any strange messages that they're picking up,
that's tricky and not necessarily healthy.
So the letter goes on,
their oldest daughter, who's at my home frequently,
has suddenly become withdrawn and emotionally flat.
There it is.
That's my worry about this kind of stuff.
I'd like to be a support for her if she needs it,
but I feel that I can't properly do this
without more information about her parents' relationship.
and what their home life looks like.
I'd like to ask Susie and Adam for clarity
on their relationship with Emma,
but I don't know if that's out of bounds.
I now find myself avoiding encounters with my friends.
Our lives are very entwined,
and it would be nice to know what to expect from them going forward.
Should I ask my friends for clarification,
or just continue to speculate?
Signed, seeking clarity on this threple,
without causing a kerfuffle.
Right.
So you're walking a tricky line here.
These are your friends, first and foremost,
and the relationship you have with their daughter,
well, it's secondary.
And you have to be thoughtful about being there for her
without meddling too much in her parents' lives.
But then she's staying at your house a lot
and you're noticing these objectively worrisome signs.
You want to help,
and that's really hard when you don't know exactly what is going on.
This is a tough one, Jordan.
I'm a little confused here.
Yeah, it is a hard one.
I don't know if I totally agree with this thing you said
that you can't properly support their daughter
without more information about her parents,
what their home life looks like.
You have a pretty good idea of what's going on over there.
Could you be wrong?
Maybe, but I doubt it.
This sounds exactly like what you think it is.
So when you hang out with her daughter,
I think it's perfectly fine to say,
hey, you seem a little quiet,
are you good, everything okay,
and just invite her to talk.
And if she doesn't want to, I would just drop it.
But if she opens up, yeah, I would listen.
I would make it safe for her to share.
I would give her some space to talk about whatever she's going through,
whatever it is about her parents or school or just being a teenager or something else entirely.
I agree. I think it would be really nice for their daughter to hear that from somebody else.
I'm guessing she feels pretty comfortable with our friend here.
I mean, she's best friends with their daughter forever, right?
And it sounds like their house is a soft landing when her parents skip town to channel their inner
PD Pablo or whatever. So she might appreciate the opportunity to talk.
but I do think our friend here needs to be thoughtful about her agenda
because she's obviously very curious about what her friends are up to
and if their daughter does open up to her,
she might satisfy that curiosity.
It would be the most normal thing in the world to want to get the goss from their daughter
rather than asking her friends directly.
But I worry about that a little bit
because this conversation should really be about supporting their daughter,
giving her a chance to open up safely
and not trying to suss out all the sorted stuff that's going on in her house
so that she can finally be sure that they really are swingers.
Right.
I think her intentions here are good.
But I could also see her going,
and where does Emma sleep?
And what did you hear her say through the wall?
And how does she like her oatmeal in the morning?
I don't know.
It's just weird.
It's already awkward as hell for this teenager.
She's praying nobody's looking at mom's Instagram.
So to highlight that, it's like, all right.
Just eating popcorn while she pumps this poor girl for information
about her overly horny parents, totally.
But also, if she does confirm some of it,
things about her friends. What then? Does she sit on that information? Does she share it with her husband,
with her kids? Does she tell her friend, Susie? Like, so Maddie told me you and Emma are a thing.
Like, how come you never told me? I'm unclear about what she would actually do if she found out the
truth. Right. She needs to think through what position this might put her in because it could
complicate things even further. Also, if she does fish for information, the daughter could mention that
to her parents. And then that could be a different problem. Or they'll have a really good talk and the
daughter won't say anything to her parents, but then she might feel like she's caught between her
parents and our friend here, which is a whole other secret to deal with. Yeah, man, the lines here
are confusing. Who does she have allegiance to primarily? The friends, the kids, herself. Right. It's
almost easier not knowing and not talking about all this because then she's not entangled with all
these people, but I totally understand why she wants to know. And on some level, as their friend,
I feel like she, I don't know if deserves to know is the right word, but are we friends or are we not?
tell me what's the deal. Why is Emma always at your house? So actually, I don't think it's out of
bounds to ask them what is going on. You guys are extremely close. I think it's fine to say to them,
or maybe just to Susie, if it's more of a one-on-one thing, just to ask, you know, so I notice you've
been spending a lot of time with Emma. Is she kind of part of the family now? Like, what's the deal there?
Just put it out there. You could even say, so you guys are dating, right? Just so I understand.
I think she'll sense that you're non-judgmental about it. Honestly, to Jordan's point,
they might not mind that you ask.
In fact, based on what you said about how brazen they're being,
posting photos on Facebook and all that,
they might actually love that you ask.
Yeah, I was about to say,
I think it's very likely Adam and Susie are like,
well, I'm glad you asked.
Let me tell you everything about our crazy open slash polly slash swinger marriage.
Right.
Again, no judgment.
It actually sounds like a spicy, funny way to live.
I mean, these people are posting sexy thruple picks on Facebook.
They're holding hands in public.
Come on.
They're enjoying this.
Or at a minimum,
they're inviting these kinds of questions,
and they're throwing the flag out to see who maybe does something with that
or the people who act awkward about that.
So I'm with Gabe.
I think you just ask them.
And maybe you do that before talking to their daughter,
so you have as much information as possible,
whether they spill the beans or clam up either way,
that'll tell you a lot,
and then you'll have more data about what their daughter might be going through.
And in that conversation, if Susie's being pretty open,
I also think it would be fair to ask her whether her kids know how they're responding
to all this.
If she's like, oh, they have no idea what's going on, you might want to say,
are you sure?
Because Emma's spending entire weekends at your house.
She's sleeping in your room.
She's going to events with you guys.
Maddie is like 14.
Don't you think she at least wonders and maybe help her start to see that, which I think is important?
And if Susie's like, yeah, I know, but I don't know how to talk to the kids about this,
then maybe you can help her figure out how to broach the subject.
Or better yet at their age, how to keep slightly better boundaries so that this lifestyle
doesn't confuse the kids too much.
Although that's not really your job.
It's just something you could do as her friend if you wanted to.
Yeah, Gabe, I have a feeling that Adam and Susie are not the most attuned to their children.
They're regularly dropping off their kids at other people's houses for entire weekends.
They're carrying on with other people basically in front of their kids without acknowledging it, at least as far as we know.
So they're either underestimating what kids know, what teenagers know, or they just don't care.
And that's actually what I find problematic.
about this story. Not the lifestyle stuff is unconventional and potentially weird as that might be
to the outside observer, but the fact that mom and dad are in their own little bohemian free love
universe and maybe not really thinking about how their kids perceive them what questions they're
raising in their minds at an early age. And I don't mean questions like, is this a lifestyle that I
have to live? I just mean, if you're going to do this sort of unconventional stuff, I feel like
you have to be really open and they have to be totally fine asking questions and be on the same
page because otherwise they're just what hearing about it through their friends who are hearing
about it through their parents who are speculating about what you post on instagram that's not how you do
this or just growing up in the house with a weird icky feeling that there's something going on that
they don't fully understand yeah i agree completely the question is is that our friend here's job
to fix i definitely don't think it's her job to fix it and she can't it's not her marriage
but if she wants to be a friend of the daughter while she's coming to terms with all this i think
that's great. And it might be exactly the lifeline this confused teenager needs right now.
My advice, try to do right by everyone in this situation by approaching this topic openly,
respectfully, non-judgmentally, starting with Adam and Susie. Ideally, you help them navigate
this situation with the kids on their own, but there's a world where the kids will be confused
by all this, maybe even a little damaged. And that's sad. But that's not your problem.
That sounds cold. That's not how I'm trying to deliver this. But all you,
you can do is continue being a safe person for them as they grow up. But I think you do need to be
very thoughtful about not overstepping here or blurring the lines too much. Some boundaries might be
necessary. This might be a conversation you only fully have with Maddie when she's 17, 18 years
old. I also think you are well within your rights to help Adam and Susie see how other people are
perceiving them, their kids especially, because that's crucial for them to understand.
man, Gabe, just imagine growing up in this house.
It's like the 60s.
If it's not awkward yet, it's going to get awkward real soon.
Oh, my God, you just reminded me of something I completely forgot about.
So years ago, I went to this guy's house for a dinner party.
He was an older guy.
I think he was probably like 50, 55, something like that.
I assumed he was gay.
We were friends for a couple years.
But I knew he was married, and I knew he had kids who were like 12, 14, something like that.
And in the middle of this party, a man pops out of the guest room.
He's like wearing sweatpants and a t-shirt.
And he made himself a plate of food from the buffet and then like just slinks back into his room.
Nice.
And we're like, who is that guy?
And he's like, oh, that's my wife's friend.
He lives with us.
And then he just like goes back to talking to his guests or whatever.
And I locked eyes with somebody else at this party.
And we both just had to silently acknowledge that his wife is probably slash definitely
sleeping with this guy in their house,
or they're all sleeping together, who knows,
and I look at one of the kids
and she just looks at me,
and then she just looks away.
And I'm like, got it.
That makes sense.
That's kind of sad because the kid's like,
oh, do they know this is weird?
What do they think of us now?
Kids shouldn't have to manage that crap, man.
No, of course not, but they're old enough to understand.
I think that I just think that adults sometimes underestimate them
or they're so self-absorbed.
They don't realize that their kids have opinions about their life.
100%.
Yeah, this doesn't involve kids as far as I know.
But my friend Kim Selzer is a dating coach.
She and I, a long time ago, we were hanging out and went to go to get some sushi somewhere.
And I can't remember exactly how this happened.
But we walk in, she's an attractive woman.
And we walk into this place to get food.
And like the guy ringing us up is being super friendly.
And then this girl comes out, who's his girlfriend, you can tell they're working together.
And she's also being super friendly.
And we're like, oh, this is a really friendly place.
And they're asking us these personal questions.
kind of, and we're like, chatty, whatever.
And then the girl starts giving the guy
like this massage, and he's like, oh yeah, that feels good.
And we're like at the table right across from us
while we're waiting for our food.
And it was just very strange.
It was inappropriate for the people who worked there
to be doing this.
And they were like, do you guys, I forget the name of the place,
but they're like, do you guys go to McCallens on Tuesdays?
And I was like, what a weird question.
I've never heard of this place.
It's Tuesdays.
what? I see where this is going.
That's a weird reference that I've got
to Google because we're like, no, no, never heard of it.
They're like, oh, yeah, you should come. It's a good time.
And so I Google it, and of course, it's like a
Swingers night in McCallens every Tuesday.
It was like their code for throwing that out there
as if the massage in front of us wasn't enough
to kind of be like, oh, these people, they get their swang on.
Yeah, you kind of go like, okay.
I also learned a funny term from other friends of mine
who are sort of in this scene or whatever.
Dog shows.
Have you heard about this?
Dog shows?
Dog shows.
What is that?
So I was like making fun of a friend of mine who's like in this swinger scene or whatever.
And I was like, oh, how do you sift through all these sort of older people?
Because when I think Swinger, I think like 50s or 60s stuck in the 70s or 60s in terms of the decade, like overweight now, like not the people that you want to be like, yeah, let's get it.
You know, just like in a dirty hot tub.
And they're like, yeah, we call those dog shows.
It's where all the older and unattractive people go to do their hookup parties.
And like the younger swinger generation doesn't want anything to do with them generally because it's like no thanks.
I'm 25. I'm hot.
I don't have to deal with this.
Wow.
That's brutal.
So dog shows are like sex parties with the older people?
Right.
With unattractive or older people.
They call it dog shows.
It's not my term.
I'm not being mean.
It's a thing that they use.
It's like an industry term.
Wow.
That's great.
So I don't know.
I don't think Adam, Susie, go to the dog show.
No, they're probably.
Still in that, because if they're getting an M.O., right, who's decades younger,
they've got one foot in the in crowd.
They're McCallons on Tuesdays, for sure.
Strictly McCallons on Tuesdays, exactly.
Or Saturdays and Sundays, apparently.
Jeez, how do we get into this topic?
You know what's better than a weekend getting crunked and filthy at a strip club?
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who support the show. Now, back to Feedback Friday. Okay, what's next? Dear Jordan and Gabe,
I'm a soon-to-be mom who's five months pregnant with my first child. My husband and I are super excited
and can't wait to be parents. The issue is that my ability to do my work as well as personal
projects has really changed during my pregnancy. In the past, I would take on new projects at work,
be the first to speak up during meetings, and always find new ways of improving our processes.
I got a lot of fulfillment out of these things, and out of being known as somebody who contributes
a lot to the team. I've also been writing a novel on the side, as well as learning the violin
for the past several years, which are true passions of mine. But since being pregnant, my mental
and physical capacity to keep up with all of these things has suffered.
I get tired from six hours in the office and need to go home early to rest.
I'm meeting all of my work obligations, but I'm not putting in the hours that I used to.
Usually, I can't even think about my novel because it's a heavy subject and it feels like too much.
I haven't picked up the violin in months.
I know that being pregnant is temporary, but being a parent is not.
I've tried to have compassion for myself and acknowledge that I'm working overtime to grow a whole new person,
but nothing that I tell myself works.
I just feel disappointed and a little guilty like I'm letting myself down.
I know that taking care of a young child will divert my attention for the foreseeable future,
so I don't see this issue resolving itself anytime soon.
You both seem like high achievers, so how do you handle it when life gets in the way of your own expectations?
Signed, neglecting my passions while I ration my energy for this baby I'm having.
This is a good question.
Obviously, it's something so many mothers deal.
with. I realize it's comical for two men on a podcast, one of whom is famously childless to give advice
to a pregnant woman. But yeah, let's see if we can help without sounding too ridiculous. So first of all,
I understand why this has been difficult for you. You're a high performer. You derive a lot of
gratification from being awesome at work and you got a lot of different talents. That's a lot to give up
even temporarily. But you know, the fact that you've cut your hours by 25% and you're still
meeting all of your work obligations, I think that's very impressive. And that tells me that even when
you're not putting in as much time as you used to, you're still very effective, which means you're
probably very efficient, focused, committed, all amazing qualities, and ones that don't go away
just because you have less energy these days. So look, I know that you've tried to have more grace for
yourself and it hasn't really worked. So I won't just tell you to, you know, like, be kind to yourself or whatever.
everyone's doing that to you. What I do want to invite you to consider is whether your ideas around
this period of your life are 100% true, whether they're serving you as well as they could.
You said that being pregnant is temporary, but being a parent is not. In other words, you're worried
that you'll never work on your novel or pick up the violin again, but you don't know that that's true.
I can almost guarantee you that's not true. There are so many parents out there, even working
parents who make time for their hobbies, their side projects, their passions, there are so many.
They might only be able to do them in shorter windows or it might take them longer to finish,
but that's okay. They get to a place where their kids don't need them 24-7. They have more energy,
they carve out the time and it totally works. Now look, Jen, my wife, her energy levels totally
changed during and after the pregnancy. You are in it for a few years with small kids.
That's what everyone says, I agree. But you just don't know how things are going to be once
your body goes to the changes that it's going to go through.
Whatever you're feeling right now, it's not going to be forever.
So I just want to quell that specific fear of yours right off the bat.
You've got a lot of control over that once your baby is a year, 18 months, two years old,
whatever, and hey, you might find that you have energy to write and play even sooner than that.
You just don't know.
The other thing that jumped out at me in your letter was the feeling of disappointment and
guilt like you're letting yourself down.
Now, this part I really get.
Because I'm like you.
I derive a lot of meaning from my work, my hobbies.
And if I couldn't do those, I think I'd feel the same way.
But I would also invite you to consider whether you should feel guilty and why.
I completely understand the disappointment, the sadness.
But guilt?
I don't know.
That speaks to something else.
It sounds like you feel like you've done something wrong or you failed to do something right.
You've let someone down.
You've let yourself down.
It almost feels like there are two of you.
the childless high achiever that puts in all the hours
and the underachieving pregnant woman
and those two halves of you,
they're in conflict somehow.
High achieving you is going,
you owe it to me to do everything you used to do
at the exact same level with the exact same commitment
or you are failing me.
And pregnant you is going,
okay, I want to, I'm trying,
but I literally can't right now.
I'm 3D printing a human.
Give me a freaking break here.
And that understandably causes a lot of distress.
But the thing is, they are both you,
And by allowing yourself to rest a little more these days, I'm not convinced that you're letting
yourself down.
Yeah, I agree.
In fact, you're taking care of yourself by listening to your body and allowing it to do its thing,
which let's remember is very intense.
I mean, pregnancy is just so wild.
And again, that's just what you need to do right now.
You might be surprised by how you feel once the baby comes, even more after the baby grows
up.
And I'm not saying kids aren't demanding.
And look, I know mothers have it way harder than fathers, generally speaking, because their
kids need them in a different way and they have a special bond with you. But I'm with Jordan. I would
really take a moment to explore who you're letting down here and whether it's even true that you're
letting yourself down because here's the thing. This exhaustion and these changing priorities,
they're happening whether you like it or not. So is there a way to make peace with them,
even just a little bit, and see what happens? You know, can you allow yourself to rest up for a few more
months and see if your guilt is actually warranted. Can you play the violin for 15, 20 minutes without
beating yourself up for not doing your usual hour and a half and see if you still enjoy it, which I think
you will. Sometimes I think we just need to like try things without having too many ideas about how
they should look or what they say about us. You know, maybe not playing violin as often will make you
love it more or maybe stepping away from the book for a few months. Maybe that's going to unlock some new
ideas. You just don't know. But if that's happening anyway, if you literally don't have the energy
to do these things, it might be worth trying to just roll with it a little bit more and see what happens.
Right. She might always feel like she's not doing enough, but that doesn't mean she needs to feel
this huge conflict and guilt on top of it. So that's our advice. Try working with what's happening
rather than fighting it and try to enjoy this truly special phase that you're going through.
I know growing a child doesn't feel like an accomplishment, at least not when you've valued up until now,
but it really is, and it's exciting, and when the baby comes along, it's going to blow your mind.
Having a child might also change your lens on a lot of this stuff.
I know it did for me.
Things I thought were so important before.
I now see are just unimportant, and things I would have discounted before, like these small precious moments,
little trips to the park and the playground, not working every second of the day.
I now understand that those are actually the most important.
And I'm still chasing my big goals.
I'm still achieving at work.
But all of that is balanced by being a parent,
which I'm so grateful for that.
So make room for that too.
Your novel's not going anywhere.
The violin's not going anywhere.
They're there whenever you want to pick them back up
and take care of yourself.
We're sending you and the baby a hug.
You know, Gabriel, I totally get this.
Running a business is the same, you know, and having kids.
a lot of the older guys that I talk to
who also have businesses and also have kids
whenever I talk to them they're like
work will be there later work is going to always be there
my kids are moved out of the house and now I'm
starting a podcast network and doing video and blah blah blah
whatever like doing the line of vitamins
and they're doing all the stuff they've had on their list
writing books and all that stuff they're doing it now
I'm like man you're 55 or whatever do you wish you'd done it earlier
and they're like no absolutely not I took my kids to
all these hiking trips and everything.
They don't, it just doesn't matter, right?
All that time with your kids,
it's a tradeoff, but it's completely worth it and they never regret it.
So I think this is kind of the same thing.
You can reach us Friday at Jordan Harbinger.com.
Keep your emails concise.
Use descriptive subject lines.
It does make our job a whole lot easier.
If you're finding dead squirrels in your mailbox,
your stepdad's got your nudes,
or you're just not sure how to tell your friend
that you frottaged her husband.
Is that a verb?
Can you use it like that, Gabe?
Nope, but I love it.
Okay.
You've frittaged her husband in the closet, didn't you?
Whatever's got you staying up at night lately, you know, your trips to the strip club in Reno.
Hit us up Friday at Jordan Harbinger.com.
We're here to help and we keep every email anonymous.
Okay, next up.
Hi, Jordan and Gabe.
I'm a 32-year-old woman who started seeing a guy a few months ago.
He's intelligent, funny, caring, and kind and makes me want to be a better person.
I think we could be good partners for each other.
I make more money than he does and probably will for a long time based on our career trajectories.
This doesn't bother me.
What does give me pause is his Sally Mae student debt.
He's the first in his family to attend college and he wasn't advised well on the loans.
One of his aunts co-signed for him because his family doesn't have a lot of money.
I don't know the actual number, but he doesn't sound optimistic that he'll be able to pay it off in
the next decade, even while advancing in his company.
The plan that he nihilistically mentioned to me is paying enough of the loans off to get his aunt off the hook
and then never paying them again. Credit score be damned. I know this isn't smart or legal, but morally,
I agree with him. I feel strongly that businesses like Sally Mae are predatory towards students
who can't understand the gravity of potentially lifelong debt. If I commit to this person,
I would take on the debt down the road and have to pay it off with my own money. If we wanted to make big
purchases together, this will affect our chances. I would love to see him go to graduate school at some
point, but that also means more debt. I know this is part of a partnership, but it makes me nervous
to have this financial obligation looming, since I'm not incredibly well off either. It also makes me
mad that we would have to pay into something that neither of us believe in. But I'm lucky. I'm blessed
not to have student debt, and my parents raised me and my brother to avoid it at all costs. How would
you recommend financially and mentally approaching this debt if we become serious enough to want to merge
finances? Signed, prone to groan about these loans, because they might stop me from owning a home.
Man, another great question. And something so many people are asking these days, what with the
student loans being such a huge part of our society, and now the executive branch and the courts
going back and forth on whether to forgive this debt. So Gabe and I are the furthest thing from
personal finance experts. We usually don't even take questions about money on the show.
But we thought this was an important one, so we reached out to David Gilmore,
certified financial planner and friend of the show.
And the first thing David said was, before you decide on exactly what this debt's going
to mean for your relationship, your future prospects, you should check the laws in your state,
especially the bankruptcy laws.
Not saying your boyfriend necessarily should go down that route, but those laws will
determine so many angles to your situation.
What his options are, how they'll affect him, how they'll affect you.
Now, if your boyfriend ever decides to tackle his debt in a number,
new way, David said your boyfriend would want to speak to somebody familiar with debt counseling
in his state. And as a side note, debt counseling is different from debt consolidating or any debt
counselors who charge fees or collect interest or any of that other shady stuff. Those people,
from what I understand, they can be way more predatory than these student loan companies are at all.
And I just want to clarify that. We're talking about debt counseling. But maybe most relevant for you,
David said that your state will have specific rules about the treatment of assets and debts brought
into a marriage. And that is something you should definitely get a good handle on now because it's
possible that you wouldn't assume this debt or that you would, but in specific ways that you should
understand now before you pull the trigger on this. Now, about the whole credit score be damned
mentality, David was pretty emphatic on that point too. In his view, that philosophy could put your
boyfriend into a very bad and unintended future financially, much like the original decision to
take out these loans. His strong opinion in a situation like this, seek out good advice. If you guys get
married and his credit sucks, he hasn't really avoided any issues. It's just become that much harder
for you both to buy a home, get a car, whatever, and then I imagine everything's going to have to be
in your name since his name is going to be mud in the eyes of credit agencies. Now, if you want to
take that on yourself, that's fine, but you might find that unfair and burdensome and limiting
for that matter, and something to sit with and consider. As for your boyfriend going to grad school,
look, there are different angles on that. Maybe grad school would be a great path for your boyfriend,
but David's recommendation is to not fall victim to the sunk cost fallacy regarding higher
education. It's easy to buy into the idea of, well, I've come this far, or I've already spent
this much money I might agree, why not finish the whole thing and go all the way? But in here,
his view, and I agree with this, a degree should be viewed first and foremost as an investment.
And if that investment's going to increase your boyfriend's earning potential, then he should
consider doing grad school. If his career will not be improved by completing his degree,
then in his view, your boyfriend should think long and hard about sinking more into debt to
complete it. Why do that? Again, David would recommend that you work with a certified financial
planner to create a plan as CFPs are held to a fiduciary standard, meaning
they have to put their client's interest above their own.
So that's the very practical slash financial aspect to all this, and it's great advice.
The one that is closer to home here is how this debt figures into what sounds like a great
relationship.
And I got to say, I feel for you, because this is not a small thing.
Depending on where you live, this debt could really hamstring you guys financially,
psychologically.
But it sounds like you found a very special guy, and it would be ashamed to mess out on a great
relationship just because he was poorly advised when he was basically a kid. I also think that it's
very thoughtful of you to acknowledge that you're just luckier than he is in this department. Your
parents happen to steer you away from student loans, his didn't. And under different circumstances,
you might have ended up in the same boat. And I think that's just very important to appreciate as well.
But to return to one of David's points, your boyfriend's whole effit yolo philosophy about repaying the
debt, that is an issue.
And the answer to I'm underwater on these loans and I'll never be able to pay them off just cannot be.
So I'm going to bail on them and just tank my financial future in the process.
She used the word nihilistic, which I thought was interesting.
It's a great $5 word.
I think that's a mindset that comes from a lot of anger and a lot of helplessness.
Right.
And I get it because these loans are infuriating.
But now we're not just talking about dollars and cents.
We're talking about values and not just values around money, but around how to respond to difficult situations.
how to take care of yourself, how to be adaptive, how to think about the future.
Those really matter in a serious relationship.
So my thought here is just make sure that you're factoring those qualities into your decision
about this guy too.
I'm not saying they're necessarily deal breakers.
They might not even matter that much to you, and that is totally fine.
But the screw my credit thing is something I would try to help him look at and change
now before he compromises himself any further.
Because how he responds to your help will tell you a lot about whether
you guys are truly debatable. Look, my heart goes out to this guy for being one of the literally
tens of millions of people in this country who have student loan debt. It can be oppressive. It can be
shady as hell. It can be pretty awful for a lot of folks. And I'm still not sure where I stand
on the loan forgiveness thing. I'm not sure that's even a real solution to the problem because it
doesn't address the cause at all, but I digress. Anyway, here he is, and many other people are as well.
And like Gabe said, the way he responds to this debt, the attitude he leads with.
For me, that's what would determine whether this person is truly the right fit.
And we're rooting for you guys.
We're wishing you and your boyfriend the best.
Big thanks to David Gilmore for his wisdom here.
Man, Gabe, I am very glad Sally May is not one of our sponsors because that would be a hell
of an awkward ad pivot.
Speaking of which, you know who won't put you into lifelong crippling debt, the amazing
sponsors who support this show.
We'll be right back.
If you like this episode of Feedback Friday and you found our advice valuable,
I invite you to do what other smart and considerate listeners do,
which is take a moment and support our amazing sponsors.
To learn more and get links to all the discounts and deals to support the show,
all on one page, Jordan Harbinger.com slash deals.
You can also search for any sponsor using the AI chatbot on the website as well,
or even email me, Jordan at Jordan Harbinger.com.
If you're super lazy, I'll dig that damn code up for you.
Thank you so much for supporting those who support the show.
Now, back to Feedback Friday.
Okay, next up.
Dear Jordan and Gabe,
my manager at work is the lead for all of our projects,
which include leadership updates,
solving problems for our customers,
and assigning different jobs to the junior members of the team, including me.
She went on vacation for eight weeks,
and before she left,
she decided to make me the sole lead for those responsibilities
on top of what I was already doing.
At first, it was very stressful,
and I needed a lot of help from my job,
skip level, but after the first two weeks, I found my footing and started to excel.
The other members of my team saw me as the lead during this time and gave me positive
feedback. I also got feedback from our leadership that I've been doing a great job in this new
role, and I created a lot of relationships with members at a very high level in my organization.
In a few weeks, my manager is coming back. Now I'm asking myself, should I trust her and give back
my new responsibilities? Should I push to keep this role, especially with a
motion cycle coming up? Would it be a betrayal to even bring up the suggestion? What would you do
with this opportunity coming to an end? Signed, a guy in the zone, loath to give up the throne.
Well, first of all, congrats on stepping up in such an amazing way. Your boss obviously chose you
for this role because you have a lot to offer. And look what you did with it. You learned, you grew,
kicked some butt, you got noticed for it. Good on you. That's really exciting. I haven't had a real
job in a really long time. So we wanted to run all this by an expert, and we reached out to
Alyssa Cohn, startup, investor, and author of the book from startup to grown up. And it was
funny, the first thing Alyssa said was, in her two decades of experience as an executive
coach, she has observed a few truisms, and one of them is, winners always want the ball.
So she wanted to congratulate you on taking the ball, getting through some initial growing
pains, and turning it into a win for yourself. Not only that, but building relationships at a new
level and earning the respect of your peers.
Alyssa had the same reaction as us.
It's an incredible accomplishment.
No matter what happens next, those relationships and the skills to build them, those are
assets that will help you build a great career.
So Alyssa's take is, rather than thinking about this in a binary way, should you keep
the role?
Should you let it go?
Try opening up to a bigger picture and think about how to leverage this incredible experience
that you've had.
It sounds like everything's in order for your manager to come back, thank you for your
service, and resume her place as the leader of the team.
Alyssa's feeling is that it would look pretty bad for you to try to lobby with the leaders you've
connected with to undermine her and try and take her role. You asked us if you should trust her and give
back your new responsibilities and to that Alyssa would say, well, she trusted you to take on these
responsibilities with the assumption that she would resume them once she returned. And Alyssa's
recommendation is, do not betray that trust. That said, there's plenty you can do to prepare for her
return and once she gets back.
Alyssa suggested you spend the time before and right after she returns to set up some one-on-ones
with the leaders higher up in your company.
Let them know how much you've enjoyed the manager role, what specifically you've learned,
then ask them what feedback they have for you.
Hopefully, they'll share what they saw you do right, what they valued about you, and then
ask for a suggestion or two about what you can improve so that you'll continue to grow.
Then, since you've enjoyed this role so much, let them know you'd be interested in more opportunities
like this and you'd love for them to be on the lookout for you. And if they have suggestions about
where to look or how to land a promotion that would maybe utilize these new skills, you'd love to
hear them. Then ask them how they'd like to keep in touch, even if you don't have the same day-to-day
contact. Alyssa also said that you can have a similar conversation with your manager when she gets
back. Share what you've learned, what you and the team accomplished while she was away, let her know
the status of key projects or any risks or concerns she needs to know about. And then, Alyssa said to ask her if
you can follow up with a career conversation.
In that chat, let her know what you've enjoyed, what you've learned, the feedback you got
from leadership, tell her you'd like to be on track to getting promoted, and you'd like her
support and mentorship to get there, and then just continue to follow up with her and all your new
mentors to help you thrive.
I would also go back and read an old article we wrote, we turned that into a deep dive about
the best way to land a promotion.
That's going to be really good for you right now.
We'll link to them in the show notes for you.
Alyssa also had one final thought.
Remember that how you handle this
will be another data point for everyone
about your reputation.
As she put it,
this is a really good moment to be gracious
as well as ambitious.
That'll stand you in good stead with everyone in the company
and will ultimately help you get you
where you want to go faster.
And I could not agree with her more.
You don't have to go full succession to rise up here.
You don't have to get all backstabby and Machiavellian.
Being true to your word, being collaborative,
putting the team's needs first,
that is going to serve you so much better.
Trust me.
So go run with Alyssa's advice,
make your boss's transition back as seamless as possible,
and good luck.
And big thanks to Alyssa for her wisdom here.
We're going to link to Alyssa's book
and her podcast from Startup to Grownup in the show notes,
along with her five scripts for delicate conversations, PDF.
Highly recommend them all.
Okay, what's next?
Dear Jordan and Gabe,
my partner of 15 years was previously married
to an alcoholic woman who emotionally,
verbally, and occasionally physically abused him.
Yikes.
The experience left him with a profound aversion to alcohol consumption.
When we first got together, he said he was fine if I had a single drink now and then.
Since I've only ever been a social drinker, that was fine with me.
But as the years passed, his position on drinking has become more and more hardline.
He becomes visibly agitated and sometimes leaves a social situation abruptly and rudely.
if we're around people who are even just a little tipsy.
His disdain has cost us friendships many times.
Once, for example, we went on a vacation
with some responsible, mature friends to a resort,
and he made everyone uncomfortable
when the other couple began vacation drinking.
I spent the entire time trying to soothe him
and assuring our friends that he would be okay
and they could enjoy themselves, but it was exhausting.
So I began only drinking at events where he wasn't present.
One time I went on a winery tour with several friends, and after sipping many small samples at a few wineries, I was accidentally and thoroughly hammered.
My husband picked me up, found me hugging the toilet, carried me out, took me home, and put me to bed, a scenario that I know caused him flashbacks to his ex-wife.
I was pretty mortified and felt terrible, and after I slept it off, we had one of our worst arguments ever.
He gave me no grace for my mistake and had zero empathy for my embarrassment.
Since then, I only have one drink two or three times a year, and never when he's around.
It feels like I'm hiding it for my partner, which doesn't feel great.
He's also made my two fully grown sons feel uncomfortable about enjoying adult beverages.
I've asked my partner to seek therapy for his trauma, but he doesn't seem motivated to work on the issue.
Later this year, my oldest son is getting married in India to a lovely Indian woman.
We'll be spending a month with my son's future in-laws who are heavy social drinkers,
and I'm worried that my partner will make them and the other guests uncomfortable.
I'd love to be able to enjoy myself at the wedding, and it would definitely help me loosen up for my speech.
Other than this issue, my partner is a loving and respectful man, and our relationship is solid.
but as a 50-year-old adult who's been responsible my whole life and doesn't have a drinking problem,
I'd like to have the freedom to get a little tipsy at these events.
Would I be disrespecting my partner's trauma if I imbibe at the wedding?
How can I ask him for a little grace and freedom to celebrate at the wedding
without causing him emotional harm, damaging our relationship, or causing a scene?
And how can I help him survive the whole experience without him harming our otherwise wonderful relationship with my son?
and my future daughter-in-law and her parents,
signed trying to imbibe and fit in with this tribe
when it doesn't jive with my husband's past life.
Ooh, yeah, this is an interesting conundrum.
So, look, your partner obviously went through something really tragic with his ex.
It's even given him this sort of allergic reaction to drinking.
And I mean allergic reaction is understanding things.
I think, you're right.
It sounds like he has some kind of post-traumatic response to alcohol consumption.
And look, I feel for the guy.
I don't think he'd be such a hard ass about the booze
if he didn't go through something very serious with this woman.
And it's sad for both of you.
It's sad that he's so triggered by drinking
and that you can't enjoy it even in moderation.
And that said, I'm 100% on your team here.
Your partner has some unresolved stuff around alcohol.
And he's not doing much slash anything to understand it better.
It sounds to me like he's just going around with this belief
like, no one should drink alcohol around me.
It's too upsetting instead of asking himself, why is alcohol so upsetting to me?
And is it fair to expect my partner and my friends and the other people in our groups to not drink so that I can feel okay?
Which is what he should be doing, in my opinion.
He should be exploring this.
And which is especially unreasonable when they're going on a resort vacation with a bunch of adults or to a wedding where people obviously want to drink.
I mean, it's one thing if he's like, look, I don't want us to drink in the house.
If that's okay, I don't like the energy or whatever.
but to impose that on other people in situations that he is choosing to put himself in,
where drinking is very much par for the course, that seems unreasonable,
and it seems, frankly, kind of irrational.
Yeah, right.
Well, don't go on vacation with other adults at an all-inclusive resort that includes alcohol,
or don't go to a wedding, ever.
I mean, even people in recovery learn how to operate in situations where alcohol is going to be served,
or they stay away from those places because they really are triggers,
but they don't go around demanding that everybody not drink because they don't like it.
And this guy, her partner, he's not even in recovery.
Exactly.
He has even less licensed to act this way because it's not like he's an addict and he's falling
off the wagon whenever he smells Pino Noir on his wife.
It just freaks him out.
So to answer your first question, would you be disrespecting your partner's trauma if
you drink at the wedding or anywhere really?
My feeling is, no, you wouldn't.
In my view, you owe it to your partner to be thoughtful about his history.
to be sensitive to his feelings, to be supportive when he feels triggered,
but you don't owe it to him to radically constrict and reconstruct your life
in order to spare him certain feelings.
Feelings, let's remember that got created by a very dysfunctional relationship
that he himself chose to be in to some degree.
Right, not feelings you created that you need to manage because you're a chaotic mess
and had spent 20 years, you know, ruining his life or whatever.
And look, if it sounded like you had a little bit of a problem with the booze,
I'd probably have a different answer.
Then I'd say, hey, maybe your partner has a point.
Also, maybe your partner has a pattern.
But that's not the case.
You had one night where you accidentally drank too much,
and the rest of the time, you've been extremely responsible.
So if you want to make progress here,
you need to have some very honest talks with your partner.
I would start by validating his feelings around alcohol.
I would make him feel understood.
I would tell him you appreciate the mark his ex made on him,
how hard it must be to see other people enjoy alcohol
without feeling like things are about to get super chaotic.
And maybe there's a phase of this
where you just let him talk about how hard that is for him.
And then, when the moment is right,
I would say something along the lines of,
look, the last thing I want to do is upset you,
but your stance on alcohol,
which I can understand,
it's now getting in the way of me enjoying my life
in a responsible way.
I'm not an addict.
I barely drink now outside of that night at the wineries,
which was a genuine accident.
I'm super disciplined, I'm moderate,
and I want to have a drink now and again.
But I now feel like I have to hide this from you,
and I see you holding this against my kids,
and I feel like I'm cutting myself off
from having certain experiences
and enjoying certain events,
like the wedding coming up,
in order to protect you.
And I don't feel that that's fair,
to me or the people in our life.
Our relationship is solid,
you're loving, you're respectful,
we have a great partnership,
but we need to come to some agreement
on this drinking thing.
Something like that.
You guys need to talk this out.
Basically, he needs to feel
that you understand
why this is so hard for him
that you're not at risk
of hurting him with the booze,
and you need him to recognize
that he has some unresolved stuff
from his ex
that he's bringing into your relationship,
that he's being overly rigid
in his expectations for you
and for your friends.
And if you guys can do that,
then you might have a shot
at changing this.
If you can't,
well, then you're either
going to have to make peace
with his stance and cave in, or press the issue and drink however you want, which it's going to
become a real fissure in your relationship.
I would also specifically bring up the wedding that you want to drink in moderation there and that
you're concerned that he's going to make your son's in-laws a bit uncomfortable.
I really feel like that is something you guys want to get out ahead of now.
Yeah, for sure.
I think rather than bringing it up on the plane and landing in Mumbai ready to tear each other's
hair off.
Exactly.
Or not talking about it at all and then having to calm him down every time.
somebody orders a kingfisher, then you're going to have a scene.
Is that like an Indian beer?
I think so.
I'm pretty sure, yeah.
It just sounds like such a drag.
It is.
Plus they're there for a month.
That's going to be a real problem.
Oh, we're here for a month.
We're going to be with all the in-laws and everybody at the event.
Nobody order wine.
Nobody order a beer.
Tom's going to go ballistic.
Okay.
Cool.
We'll just do this for four weeks.
I also think it's fair to say,
look, this alcohol policy could compromise our otherwise wonderful relationship with my son
and my future daughter-in-law and her parents,
I don't want to meet these people
with a ton of judgment or discomfort.
So can we please talk about this?
Can we figure this out now?
Honestly, if he can't even engage with her on this,
I might suggest he just don't go to the wedding.
And I know that seems harsh
and it's going to look weird.
But if this guy literally can't be around people
who are drinking without lecturing them
or having a meltdown,
then he should just not be at a wedding.
Especially an Indian wedding.
Good point.
Don't those things go for like three, four days?
Yeah, they're epic. They're huge events.
And people let loose. I mean, if he can't relax and let people get their drink on without lecturing them about the dangers of ethanol, it's just not the right place for him. This is a cultural thing.
which is why your partner should again really be exploring this in therapy because this isn't
ultimately about the alcohol it's about being abused by an addict for many years and being afraid
that he's somehow going to be exposed to the same mistreatment and to jordan's point the same chaos
all over again which is clearly not the case now but again that's the logic of what sounds like
some form of PTSD right so maybe when you guys talk you could say look i know it's hard to talk to
somebody about what happened with your ex. But this concerns me. I see you getting stuck with
these feelings and with these beliefs about alcohol. They're making it hard for you to enjoy your life.
They're making it hard for both of us to stay close with our friends. You're just not addressing
this stuff. And I need you to know that there's a better way. Right. He's basically outsourcing the
work he needs to do to her by telling her what she can and can't do so that he doesn't have to change.
Exactly. Which is actually what I find the most interesting thing about this story, Gabe, the way
she's cramping around his wounds
when he's the one who needs to work through this.
This is something we're dealing with as a society right now
as we talk more and more about trauma.
There seems to be this agreement now
that we need to just tiptoe
around everybody's pressure points
and accommodate their triggers
so we don't upset them.
And don't get me wrong,
obviously I think that's appropriate up to a point.
I'm not saying we should be callous or cruel.
We should all be thoughtful about people's pasts
and their feelings,
but the idea that she might be disrespecting her partner's past experience,
I'm just not sure that's a thing.
She can disrespect his right to an opinion.
She can disrespect his feelings.
She can disrespect his needs by refusing to even consider them.
But I don't think that she can disrespect what her husband went through with his ex,
because that's his experience.
That might not have been completely his fault,
but he needs to take responsibility for the vulnerabilities that that experience left him with
and not drag them into his new relationship
in a way that compromises the quality of her life.
Right.
So I guess what I'm saying is
this is a really fascinating example
of what happens when we expect people
to overly accommodate our histories
instead of working on those histories ourselves.
That's his work to do.
Man, that is so well put.
And her work is to learn how to tell him
how this alcohol thing is impacting her
and her relationships and their family
without invalidating what he went through.
Exactly.
If they can each take responsibility for that,
I really do think there's a way forward.
And good luck.
Man, going to India for a wedding, it sounds amazing.
I got invited to a wedding in Goa
and I couldn't go,
and I regret not making that happen.
Oh, man, it's so funny.
A good friend of mine got married in Goa several years ago,
and it was one of the greatest trips of my life.
The wedding was so much fun.
It was like redefined weddings for me.
A bunch of us ended up traveling around India
before the wedding after the wedding.
Oh, and at the wedding, a guy fell out of a window at the hotel.
I should not laugh.
That's terrible.
Is he okay?
Yes, he's fine.
It happened in my room, actually.
Okay, you left that part out.
A guy fell out of the window, I mean, of my hotel room.
A bunch of us were hanging out.
There were probably 20 people in my hotel room.
We were just chilling.
I was across the room.
He was sitting on the window sill.
I literally looked up at one moment.
I see him laughing with his friends, and then he leans backwards too much.
And the next second he was just gone.
I can't believe that.
What floor were you on?
Luckily, my room was on the second floor, so it wasn't that far of a fall.
But it was a little scary.
Wow.
I don't know if that story really helps our case here.
I feel like that's the exact scenario our friend here's partner is worried about.
Like, no, no, no, booze is fine.
He needs to work around youth thing and it's cultural and he needs to work on his own stuff.
By the way, that guy who fell out the window drunk, don't ever, don't, yeah.
In India where you will be heading in a few months to go into it.
Yeah, I realize that now.
Maybe don't play your partner this episode.
No, just give them the choice.
voice bits, the advice, given the part where he said he needs to work through it, and that's it.
Stop, stop before the story. Wow. Just stay away from windows while you're in India, man.
What about exposure therapy? Like, maybe she just drinks every single day up until the wedding,
so he gets used to it. I like it. Yeah? Maybe I'll stick to podcasting instead of therapy.
All right. Hope you all enjoyed that. I want to thank everybody who wrote in this week and everybody
who listened. Thank you so much. Go back and check out episodes with Forrest Galante and Jen Cohen,
if you haven't done so yet.
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Here's a trailer from my interview
with Academy Award winner Matthew McConaughey.
All right, all right, all right.
Did you just kind of like walk down
and get a coffee one day?
And everyone's like,
oh, hey, guy I see here regularly.
And then the next time it was like,
that's the guy from a time to kill.
It wasn't coffee.
it was a tuna sandwich and it inverted. I mean, it went from 400 people in the promenade,
395, minding their own business, five of them looking at me, to 395 were staring at me,
five weren't. The world became a mirror. Notice right there immediately, oh, I don't meet
strangers anymore. Who am I when I'm being told I can kind of be whoever I want to be?
And I was 23, 24. I checked out, went to a monastery for a couple of weeks, went on a solo backpacking
trip through Peru for 22 days. I needed some quiet time to hear my own.
self-think and have a little Socratic dialogue with the M and the A.
There's a real sobriety that comes when you lose a father.
What I mean by sobriety is that there's a drunkenness we have in reverence for things in life.
There's a drunkenness we have in looking down upon things in life, but maybe we should.
The sobriety is that everything I looked down upon rose up to eye level.
Everything I was revering on earth rose down to eye level.
You know, you can engineer green lights for your future by the choices and responsibilities you take today.
they can give you more freedom tomorrow, but you don't do the work.
You don't get the freedom.
It's one of my favorite stories I've ever heard and told.
And I'm the subject in the middle of it, and I'm the one with the egg on my face throughout it.
The joke is on me.
I look back at a minute and I'll just laugh my ass off.
Oh, my gosh, it was hilarious.
For more, including how Matthew McConaughey makes life-altering career decisions,
check out episode 455 of the Jordan Harbinger Show.
This episode is sponsored in part by Something You Should Know podcast.
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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.
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Look for the bright yellow light bulb and start listening.
You can thank me later.
