The Jordan Harbinger Show - 923: She's Losing Sleep Over a Dangerous Creep | Feedback Friday
Episode Date: November 17, 2023A stalker who suffers from schizophrenia has your neighbor in fear for her life, and law enforcement can't do much about it. 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! On This Week's Feedback Friday, We Discuss: A stalker who suffers from schizophrenia has your neighbor in constant fear for her life, and law enforcement can't (or won't) do much about it. How can you help her stay safe? After enduring multiple incidents of wildly inappropriate commentary and behavior from faculty members and students over the past few years, you made the heart-wrenching decision to resign from your teaching position. In retrospect, you're wondering: were you forced out, or did you overreact? Do you have legal recourse? [Thanks to school district in-house counsel Neil Rombardo for helping us with this one!] Your manipulative ex-wife made the weird choice to move in with the next-door neighbor after an acrimonious split, and it's really cramped the style of your new, otherwise healthy relationship. What gives, and what can you do to alleviate this awkwardly hostile situation? As a high-achieving people-pleaser, you're looking for a boss who won't squeeze you for maximum work at minimum pay. Your search has attracted the attention of "coaches" who promise to help you secure better employment, but how can you separate the straight shooters from the shysters? With so many podcasts, books, and other sources of information easily available these days, how do we sort through it all without getting overwhelmed? Have any questions, comments, or stories you'd like to share with us? Drop us a line at friday@jordanharbinger.com! Connect with Jordan on Twitter at @JordanHarbinger and Instagram at @jordanharbinger. Connect with Gabriel on Twitter at @GabeMizrahi and Instagram @gabrielmizrahi. Full show notes and resources can be found here: jordanharbinger.com/923 This Episode Is Brought To You By Our Fine Sponsors: jordanharbinger.com/deals Sign up for Six-Minute Networking...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 Ziplock bag, keeping this cache of killer counsel nice and fresh, Gabriel Mizrahi, got that yellow and blue-made green seal.
Wow. Those 90s Ziploc bags, is that what you're referring to? Yeah. That is a deep cut right there.
You know, it is a deep cut, but it's not as deep as deep as the holes. Some of our listeners have dug themselves into this week and every week on this show.
on the Jordan Harbinger show, we decode the stories, secrets, and skills of the world's most fascinating people,
and turn their wisdom into practical advice that you can use to impact your own life and those around you.
Our mission is to help you become a better informed, more critical thinker.
During the week, we have long-form conversations with a variety of amazing folks from organized crime figures,
cold case homicide investigators, astronauts, rocket scientists, and more.
This week we had Mitch Princeton.
This is two nerds, me and him, talking about popularity, popularity in what it does to our brain.
how it molds us as young people into the adults that we later become, of course,
and how we just kind of never really outgrow it, unfortunately.
We go into reality TV, status games, all kinds of interesting stuff.
And, wow, we had my friend Mossab Hassan Yusef,
aka the Green Prince, back on the show.
I did an episode with him years ago.
It was very popular.
And of course, now it is more relevant than ever.
Mossab is the son of one of the founders of Hamas.
and he later ended up working with Israel
and he's very outspoken against Hamas.
And it's a very controversial, very interesting episode.
If you haven't heard that,
you're definitely going to want to go back and listen to that.
I'm also going to be re-airing my episode with Mossab,
my original one, next week as well.
On Fridays, though, we take listener letters,
we offer advice and we give you, most of you, anyway,
even more reasons to be grateful that your life
is only mildly dysfunctional.
Because if we learn anything from doing,
the show, it's that this world be cray.
And before we dive in, Gabe, did I ever tell you about the time I forged?
Well, should I admit this?
I guess I will.
Forged some government documents.
I'm sorry, forged them?
It's not really what I did.
Or foraged for them?
Forged isn't quite the right word.
Maybe didn't quite file them in the spirit that they were intended to be used.
Wow.
What is this?
What did you do?
I basically crafted these documents to help somebody escape from Venezuela.
Yeah, that's forgery.
Yeah, it's, I mean, is it?
It's my signature.
It's more fraud than, really, just basically, I think.
You're like, is it forgery when I'm the one doing it?
I wrote these documents to help somebody escape from Venezuela.
He was a show fan, and he was like, I've got to get out of here.
Oh, wow.
I have skills, but I just can't leave.
And I was like, I can't really get you into the United States or anything like that.
So hopefully I didn't break any laws here.
But he just, he's like, that's fine.
I'll just vanish into Mexico, which is what he did.
And I think his plan was I'll come to the United States and get a job.
And as far as I know, that's what he has done.
I don't know.
No regrets.
I might get disbarred for this, but it'll be worth it.
That's what I was thinking at the time.
And I basically decided that the moral and right thing to do was break a code of ethics
that I felt was subordinate to saving this person's life.
Because it wasn't just like, oh, I want a job.
It was like, I am going to die here because of gang violence.
And also, I'm skilled and I have no opportunity here.
And I was like, all right.
I see.
So he was being targeted or something.
He was being targeted yet, and it's been a minute, but he was working for an oil company,
and I think that criminals were like, we're going to kidnap you and your family.
And he was like, damn.
But he couldn't wait for asylum, so you gave him his own little asylum.
Yeah.
And it was like, I can escape, but I'm not going to get very far because I don't have these certain letters.
And I was like, okay.
I see.
And so basically I invited him to a thing that didn't exist, and he was able to leave the country.
Wow.
Yeah.
Although now I think you can just sneak across the border, but I think back then maybe it wasn't as easy to do that.
So he basically had to have a reason to leave the country for some odd reason, and I gave him that.
Yeah, maybe it's a lot easier now.
I mean, you hear about all these Venezuelans coming up, just walking right in.
But I don't know, I never had to immigrate illegally, although I did go to jail in Serbia for a visa issue that was definitely not my fault.
But whatever.
Oh, another weird Balkan state story.
Oh, yeah.
So in Serbia, I was like, hey, don't I need a visa to work here?
And they were like, eh, cool, yeah, we should probably take care of that, the organization that was supposed to take care of that.
And they didn't.
And I'm like, we got to do this, we got to do this, we got to do this, we got to do this.
And finally they were like, yeah, we should do this because actually it was like six months overdue.
And they're like, we'll just show up to the police station, file the documents, and we're good to go.
And they were like, oh, hi, thanks for turning yourself in.
you've been AWOL in the country and you're here illegally.
No.
So step right into this jail cell and the judge will see you tomorrow.
That's amazing.
And I'm like, tomorrow, I got work tomorrow.
And also, there are two Roma prostitutes or sex workers in this jail cell chain smoking
with who I assume is their pimp, another guy, awake all night, chain smoking and talking in
not Serbian, probably, I don't know if Roma, I guess Roma have a different language or maybe
they were from another country and they were speaking Albanian, I really don't know.
So I just dealt with that all night, saw the judge in the morning, and he was like,
I hate doing this to students, but you got to pay this fine, but I'm going to like wave the criminal
element of this.
And I was just like, this is solid story.
Not the place out.
You don't want to go to prison in Serbia.
Let me tell you.
No, but all things considered, that's a pretty good story.
That ended well.
It ended real well.
I had some minor lung damage from chain smoking unfiltered cigarettes secondhand.
all night, but that's about it.
It's the worst thing that happened to you in a Serbian prison.
I think things went pretty well.
I mean, it was a holding cell,
so it's not like there were Balkan murderers in there
who were like, oh, where are you from?
Right.
If this is my company, I'm probably quite lucky
that these are the people that are in here with me.
I love it.
You could tell those women had had a hard life.
I felt grateful when I got out of there.
Let me tell you.
Well, speaking of hard lives, you want to dive in?
Yeah, let's do that.
What's the first thing out of the mailbag?
Hey, Jordan and Gabe.
My neighbor is being stalked and harassed by an old friend who is schizophrenic.
Oh, yikes.
Yeah, okay, so we got another Josh on our hands.
I think we do.
It's been a while since we've had a good psychosis story.
I think we're overdue.
Okay, here we go.
If you don't know, by the way, what we're talking about,
Gabe was low-key tortured, I mean, psychologically,
by his next-door neighbor with schizophrenia for, was it six months?
I felt like it was a long time.
It was.
Yeah.
Oh, dude.
By the way, I forgot to tell you this.
I have a Josh update.
Really?
All right.
You've been holding out on me the whole time.
Let me talk about my stupid visa jail experience.
No, I forgot.
So, okay, Josh came back to the apartment.
Really?
Your apartment?
No, that would be next level.
That would be extra scary.
I would not forget to tell you that.
Yeah, no, this was at the old place.
I actually meant to share this on Feedback Friday, but it slipped my mind.
Yeah, okay, because you've moved since then.
I don't live there anymore, as most of you know,
but I'm still friends with my neighbor, so they told me this.
So apparently, after he left,
a young woman moved into his unit
and then one night recently he came back
to his old unit and he punched the windows out.
Oh my gosh, just with his hand?
Yeah, like luckily the new tenant was out.
She was at dinner when it happened
and Josh ran away before the police could get there.
Oh my God.
Then she came home and she was like,
what just happened?
And the landlord had to tell her,
yeah, so there was a guy who lived here before
and he was schizophrenic, blah, blah, blah.
It's the whole thing.
So they didn't tell her that?
Apparently not.
Although I guess they just thought, oh, this is over.
Why tell her that?
Yeah.
It does feel a little shady.
I don't know if there's laws about disclosing that kind of thing,
but I feel like it got to let a tenant know if a potentially dangerous person is coming around.
I don't think it's required by law, but it might have been nice.
Yeah, they did.
But then again, they thought he was gone for good.
So I kind of get it.
Anyway.
Right.
She was totally freaked out and she demanded to break her lease because she couldn't live there anymore, obviously.
I would feel the same, especially as a single female.
I wouldn't want to be like, oh, yeah, I'll just wait for this guy to.
come back and then actually come in at night.
Right. So the landlord was like, yeah, of course, I understand, no problem.
And now a new person lives there. And the landlord told the new tenant the whole story in advance
this time. Yeah. I'd probably try to negotiate a break on the rent.
For sure. If somebody says schizophrenic, you're like, uh-huh. And what was that price you mentioned?
Given the Josh discount, that's what you need. Yes. The psychosis factor. And there's got to be some
number where a rational person will live in Santa Monica, California for an amazing price. But there's a
non-zero chance that a person who's mentally disturbed will climb through your window.
Just every few months, maybe they'll break the windows out and leave.
Yeah.
TBD.
I don't want to be cruel because Josh was actually more of a sad story and the guy was,
can we say harmless?
Because he sounds like he wasn't harmless, but he really was.
Until the punching out the windows thing, he was pretty much harmless.
But there is some deal you would take if maybe somebody climbs in and cuddles with you every two months.
Like, man, I wish I could afford to live in Santa Monica.
actually, you can.
I'm sure there are people who would take that deal.
Just got to roll the dice.
If you're new to the show and you haven't heard Gabe's Josh story, by the way, that was episode 705.
A little bit of nightmare fuel for you there.
Again, Josh was mostly harmless, but he was creepy.
And the plot twist at the end.
I think we might want to keep the music going for the rest of this letter.
Anyway, these stories are really sad.
Carry on.
He lives.
Good timing on that.
It wasn't me.
He leaves cryptic, creepy mess.
messages on our phone, often along the lines of paying the piper, paying for their sins, stuff like that.
So didn't Josh do something similar to you as well, leave you notes? Or did he put a sign up or
something on your door? Yes, he would leave me weird handwritten notes and he drew creepy
signs and left them in his window for me, yes. Oh, in his window, right? That makes more sense.
Otherwise, you could just take him down. So what was the one he put up right before he was
hospitalized? It was something about you being a pervert and watching him. I remember it was so
creepy because the words you used. I believe you're thinking of dead meat molester. Yes, dead meat
molester. That is a classic and I should work that into my roast at the top of the show. But that
would be really scary to come home and see that. And there was an arrow pointed at your door,
correct? Yes, with a diagram of the layout of the apartment building. Yes. Oh, yeah.
That was special. Man, I really wanted to keep that sign and frame it, but the landlord threw it out
when they cleaned out his apartment. Yeah, I don't think you want that hanging in your living room.
It's not a conversation piece. I mean, it is.
a conversation piece. It's just, you know, the wrong conversation. Yeah, it was basically
outsider arts, I suppose. Yeah, that's my argument. It could have been worth something one day.
You never know. I just feel like this is how a lot of horror movies starts. Someone brings some
creepy object home. Dot, dot, dot, dot, your cat goes missing. Dot, dot, dot, you're being haunted by
the spirit of Josh and he's punching out your windows. At least I would have a story to tell
in the show. You know, I would do it for you guys. But anyway, the letter goes on. He's now moved
not only her security cameras, but also the cameras of other neighbors that face her house.
There's a clear attempt to cut wires, and he always calls and leaves messages after he tamperes
with the cameras. Everyone's dogs are going crazy each night. Wow. Okay, so this guy is very aggressive.
That's creepy, man, moving the cameras around and then, oh, I'm going to move the neighbor's
cameras so that you can't catch me approaching your house. Also, how do you attempt but fail to cut a
wire. That is one of the easier tasks. I'm not a very handy guy, but cutting a wire,
relatively simple. Is he just like chewing through it with his mouth? And I don't know.
Yeah. Even if you have the wrong tool, you can still cut a wire unless you have no tool. So it's,
anyway, it sounds worse than Josh. Josh was at least mostly nice, like I said, from what I can
remember, right? He was just paranoid and out of his mind. Yeah, Josh was sweet. This guy sounds
scary. Yeah. The last time she believed she was in danger, she called the police and they took four hours
to respond. Yeah, that is very common. And when the police do come, there's not a lot they can do,
especially if the person is long gone. Wow. Luckily, she was able to obtain an emergency
protective order, but will this even really work with someone out of their mind? He shows up in
different cars and changes his look drastically and often. Wow, so this guy's resourceful. Yeah.
Very much the talented Mr. Ripley of psychotics, I have to say. Also, where does he get different cars?
I was wondering that. Is he renting the cars or is he like, hey, buddy, I need to swap cars with you because I'm going to go stalk someone. And someone's like, ah, what a coincidence. I'm going to go stalk someone. I'll use your car and you use my car. And I've got another buddy who's a stalker and we can just have a carpool. A little carpool stocking kibbutz or something.
Right, exactly, a little commune of cars you can use to stock your victims.
Just switching up his whole vibe week to week.
Well, the order of protection, that is a good piece of news.
That's one of the first things I would recommend, otherwise known as a restraining order.
It won't stop someone like this from coming around if he can't even understand that he's not allowed to
or he's just so compelled that he doesn't care.
But what it does mean is that, A, the police should theoretically respond to your call faster
because you're not just like, there's somebody outside.
and they're like, oh, it's the dogs again.
This person's crazy.
They have a restraining order against somebody,
and that person is there.
And B, if he ever is there when the cops do eventually show up,
they can arrest him right then.
It's violating the order of protection for him to be near you.
He'll go straight to jail and be charged.
It won't just be like, what are you doing, creeping around here at night?
Oh, just going for a walk.
It's like, no, you know you're not allowed to be here.
You're obviously up to no good.
You're going to jail.
This is a separate charge.
So definitely get the TRO, the order of protection.
So she goes on, I'm a stay-at-home parent,
and I'm having trouble feeling safe.
To top it all off, our backyards
butt up against dense woods.
I'm worried that if anything happens,
the cops will only be there to bag the bodies.
That was actually said by a cop
from a neighboring jurisdiction
about our police force.
Oh, that is terrifying.
So even another cop is like,
yeah, nothing these guys can do.
It's going to be too late.
What do you do?
It almost sounds like the other cops
in neighboring jurisdictions
think her local cops are useless
and that they only should.
show up after the worst has already happened.
And I've heard stuff like that from other cops.
You know, they'd go, oh, where'd you grow up?
And I'd be like, oh, Troy, Michigan.
And they're like, oh, the traffic cops.
Because the Detroit cops are like, yeah, we see homicides every week.
Meanwhile, the biggest thing that happened in Troy is like, oh, didn't somebody crash into
another car the other week?
Wow, that was pretty intense.
You know, it's just very basic stuff.
It sounds like there's a little bit of that going on, and maybe they're not wrong.
Maybe they're like, you're with the Keystone cops over there.
They're never going to help you.
So it sounds like a suburban slash almost.
rural location.
So that might also explain why it takes the police so long.
Maybe everything's really spread out and there's three officers in the whole town.
I don't know.
I think the phrase is when seconds count, the police are only minutes away or in this case
hours away.
So I'm a little bit worried about these people.
This is why people get firearms.
I'm not advising that necessarily, certainly not without actual training.
But when you have an unstable person coming around, the cops are saying they'll only be
there to bag your lifeless body.
if they can even find it in the dense woods.
I really do get why people keep weapons around.
It's terrifying.
So yes, protection order, which, by the way,
you don't need a lawyer to get.
You can do that yourself.
There's websites that will help you do that,
so don't worry about thinking it's going to be expensive.
And yeah, definitely consider going and taking some self-defense classes
with appropriate weapons that you keep secured well.
Also, he lives out of state.
Oh, forgot.
Come on, man.
muddles everything up with the court.
I also have a feeling this dude is a psychopath.
Yeah, maybe.
This seems calculated and meant to terrify.
Can someone be both schizophrenic and a psychopath?
How do we handle this guy and protect ourselves?
Signed, trying to nix this nutters creepy tricks when we live in the sticks.
Wow.
What a situation?
Well, Gabe is our resident schizophrenia expert.
You want to kick us off?
Sure.
Why not?
So, okay, first of all, I am so sorry that you and your neighbors are going through this.
It is truly terrifying.
It is very upsetting.
And yes, it is super sad.
And it's infuriating because this guy just does not operate by the same logic that you guys do.
He cannot be reasoned with.
So you can't appeal to him rationally, which I remember was just so maddening.
I remember with Josh, it was weird.
I would ping pong between rage and empathy.
You know, I was so angry at him for not getting the help he needed,
even though he really didn't even understand himself or the world enough to get that help.
But then I would also be compassionate because he was so troubled.
And that was confusing sometimes.
Like, can you even be angry with somebody whose whole life is just a nonstop torture fest?
It's hard.
It sounds like you're more in touch with your anger right now, which makes perfect sense.
But in general, dealing with a psychotic person puts you in touch with a lot of weird stuff.
It was interesting.
I also found that it can put you in touch with a kind of psychosis.
yourself, sometimes you start to wonder if you're the one who's crazy, which is another
weird layer to all of this. So I'm just very sorry for all of you, you especially as a stay-at-home
mom, and I kind of know how you feel. I didn't have a child at home, which would make everything
more intense, but I get it. It's horrible. So I think we, Jordan, we should probably talk practical
stuff first, which we've already started to do. Given that it sounds like you're more or less
on your own for a lot of the day, and he's messing with the cameras and all of that, you guys,
I think you need a basic security system, right? Protection on the doors, on the windows,
and some kind of alarm system. And I already know what Jordan is about to plug. So Jordan, you want to
jump in here? Yes, thank you for that. You need SimplySafe. Great protection. Fair price is easy to use.
SimplySafe is the right way to protect your home at half the size and double the range.
Wow, you are ready to go on that. Are you going to do a tagline for us? Or, uh...
Yeah, SimplySafe. When the cops only show up to bag the bodies. Learn more at simplysafe.com
slash Jordan. There it is. Done. Oh, and I know they won't love this part, but don't put the
simply safe sign outside your place. In fact, never put the alarm sign outside for the alarm that you
actually own. All you're doing is advertising which alarm you have so that burglars can figure out
ways around it. Because a lot of these alarm systems are really easy to bypass. You don't want that.
But if they don't know you have it or which one you have, they won't be able to know that until they
look inside your house or trigger it in some other way. So either get the sign for a different
alarm company or just skip the sign altogether. Also, I think Simply Safe offers a 30-day free trial
on certain packages. I can't remember for sure if they're still doing that. So you can try this out,
see if you like it. Sorry for shilling so hard, but for somebody in your shoes, I would say this is
clutch. Also, a 9mm might be a nice addition, depending on where your stance on guns is. My stance on
guns is, politics aside, obviously this isn't like some Second Amendment thing. But if you're
going to keep one in the house, especially with children around at all, teenagers included. You have
to lock it up. You have to keep it away from the kids. And I don't care if your kids are like well-trained
and super smart and very mature and 18 years old. Their dumb-ass friends are not. And the dumb-ass
friend that shows up drunk and is like, can I crash on your couch? That guy's a moron.
You have to protect yourselves and that person from themselves. So you have to secure your gun
and your weapons from those people. And you have to put in the time to train.
so you don't just end up hurting yourself
like a lot of people end up doing.
People who buy a gun and then never trained with it,
they're the ones who end up shooting themselves
literally by accident
and or shooting somebody in their house
because they don't know how to handle the gun.
Again, not advocating for weapon ownership necessarily.
You have to decide if you want to be a responsible gun owner
or a gun owner at all.
But in a situation like this,
where the cops are literally admitting
that they are useless in this situation
until the worst happens,
I can absolutely understand wanting to keep a gun, if only to scare someone off.
One last thing.
If you have any history of depression or you've had suicidal ideation,
strongly considered not actually keeping a firearm in the house because of that.
Because far more people end up killing themselves with weapons
because they shouldn't have them easily accessible if they have those depressive periods.
So this is only if it's like really right for you, should you do this.
Yeah, good caveat.
But about scaring somebody off of the gun,
my concern here is that I don't know if someone like this can be scared off.
Yeah, he might not understand that a gun being pointed at him means stay away.
We don't know what state this guy's in.
He might think these are reptilian alien overlords.
You know, who knows what this guy's thinking?
It might actually feed his delusion.
Like, these people are out to get me.
I need to keep holding them accountable.
I need to keep tabs on them.
It was like that with Josh.
I would see him in the courtyard and I would be like,
Josh, you can't bang on the breaker panel at 3 in the morning, bud.
I have to sleep.
And he'd be like, stop molesting me.
You know, I know you're controlling the lights and compromising my reputation with the neighbors,
blah, blah, blah, and I'd be like, cool, good talk.
Yeah, you can't have a reasonable exchange with some of these folks.
These aren't, like, trashy neighbors that don't respect your right to get a good night's sleep.
This is a person who's living in an alternate universe.
Reality.
Yeah.
So, fortunately, this is going to sound super callous.
You know, hollow points don't need to explain themselves to somebody breaking into your home.
at 3 a.m.
Oh, wow.
Again, not to be too callous about it, but...
Okay, Butch Cassidy.
Who is this?
What do you?
You sound like a character from Sin City.
Like, hollow points don't need to explain themselves.
Yeah, Batman voice.
I guess where I'm going with this is
it doesn't matter if the guy, like,
doesn't understand that the gun is pointed
to him as a warning.
When you pull a weapon on somebody,
you are pulling it to use that in that situation,
you're not doing it to like look to,
for look threatening.
Now, if you don't have to shoot somebody
and they run away, great,
but you don't have to be like,
oh, I pulled this out
and I had no intention of using it
and now this guy's approaching me
or attacking me.
You need to be ready to use that thing.
So, huge asterisk.
Check your state laws because I don't know.
But look, when you live up next to dense woods
and somebody's creeping around your house
and trying to cut the wires
in your video cameras
and leaving you threatening notes,
you probably should be ready to deploy force
in your defense if needed.
I know that's not going to be a popular opinion,
but come on, people.
Now, the gun thing worries me a little bit
because this could escalate
and that would be bad.
By the way, I would also get motion-activated
lights around your property or your unit.
If you can get a fence around your property,
if possible, that would be great.
Not one of those little ones.
I know it's going to be kind of ugly.
You can even rent cyclone fences.
Those are really ugly, like a construction ones.
But I think if you have a landlord,
they might understand, like, hey,
Someone's creeping around my property.
And if I have this in motion lights,
they're not going to be able to just run up to me.
They're going to be by the fence.
So it might be better to just stay indoors
with your incredibly effective
and really very affordable,
Simply Safe solution with live guard protection
exclusive to Simply Safe
awarded Best Home Security System of 2023
by US News and World Report
and just wait it out.
You know, just stay indoors and wait it out.
Oh, man.
You're killing the capitalism today.
Yeah, I mean, wait it out.
But then for how long?
Yeah.
If this goes on for years, do they just resign themselves to being targeted?
No, honestly, at some point, I would just consider moving.
I know that's awful because the other person wins.
I don't even know if that's an option for you.
Maybe it isn't, but you got to put that option on the table.
Also, if you do own this home, then you have to take care of yourselves.
If you're renting, okay, you let the landlord know.
The landlord should also be very concerned about this.
Yeah, good point.
My old landlord was on the phone with the police and the sheriff's office
and the Department of Mental Health constantly trying to get.
get them to intervene with Josh. Sometimes those agencies respond more quickly when a landlord is like
all 38 of my tenants are being terrorized and I pay taxes in the city and I need help. So that is
something else to consider. As for your other question, can someone be both schizophrenic and a
psychopath? We did some quick homework on that and it seems that yes, a person can be both,
although it's apparently pretty rare. I don't know. I'm not sure it really matters what this guy's
diagnosis is, right? I mean, he's harassing you. It's a problem. Something has to change. That said,
it is important to remember that most schizophrenic people, the vast majority, are not violent.
And all of this might seem calculated to you, but to him, it could just be his delusion, talking.
He's just living out this very weird, paranoid story. He's not even thinking about you specifically.
Moving the cameras, cutting the wires, I saw this with Josh. It is all part of a narrative
that feels incredibly real and is very intense, but it doesn't necessarily mean that he is
targeting you or that he has designs on you or he's going to become violent. I know that doesn't
make any of this okay, but it might help you breathe a little easier to just remember that he has
caught up in a delusion that involves your neighbor and he might not actually be dangerous to either
of you. In fact, a lot of the stuff I read during the Josh chapter, I remember it basically saying
that most schizophrenic people only become a danger to themselves. It's a fair point, Gabe, and you're
probably right, but if I were a stay-at-home parent and this guy were coming around and leaving
creepy messages. I'd be freaking out too, man. You would be losing your shit, of course. And I'd rather
she air on the side of caution. Totally. So in summary, I would keep your distance. Don't confront the
guy directly unless, of course, you absolutely have to. Lock the doors in the windows. Turn your
amazing and affordable security system on, whose name I won't mention again, but we all know it's the best
on the market, according to U.S. News & World Report. Keep calling the police, even if they're always late.
I would also call other agencies in your area, the sheriff's office, maybe the state police,
the Department of Mental Health, Adult Social Services, those can be more helpful than others,
and tell them what's happening. Document your conversations with these people. Try to get them to
intervene and be on the lookout for this guy. Who knows? Maybe he's harassing other people all over
town, and they're like, oh, we got another address where so-and-so's active. You never know.
Adult social services can be very helpful in getting people the services they need. Although,
you don't know where this guy lives or he lives at a state, I do wonder if they can do
anything, but call the other state department of social services. I mean, come on. If you ever do
run into this guy out in about, just stay calm, stay friendly, if that makes any sense, stay neutral,
assure him that he is safe. You're not going to harm him if it comes down to that. And then just
get your ass inside as soon as possible. I would also maybe get a dog, a big one that's bonded to
you and your kids and can protect you. And yeah, it might be fun for your child to grow up
with that. So those are your options. It's incredibly frustrating. I really hope this guy gets handled
soon. I have some empathy slash sympathy for this guy as well, of course. I mean, he's in a mental
crisis. I hope he gives up and goes somewhere else or gets handled by the appropriate authorities,
whatever. If he doesn't, again, I would consider moving away. Seriously consider that. You shouldn't
have to do that. But if things get more dangerous, it might be the only solution. You got to think about
your kids. Stay safe. We're sending you a big hug and wishing you the best. You know who else?
wants to get into your home, Gabriel.
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Now, back to Feedback Friday.
Okay, next up.
Hey, Jordan and Gabe.
I've been working as a school psychologist at the same charter school for over two years.
Alongside my main job, I coach three sports, supervise many clubs, and help out in any way I can.
At first, I felt appreciated and valued, but that changed quickly.
I was told that a 20-something can't tell seasoned professionals what to do.
A teacher told me I was triggering her because I share the same nationality as her abusive ex-husband.
And we are, quote-unquote, all the same.
Wow.
Okay.
I'm engaged to another employee at the school and a teacher asked me if I preferred to go down on him or for him to go down on me.
Wow.
These are just a few examples of the comments that I received.
Boy, that escalated quickly.
I sure did.
Yeah, that's an interesting work environment, to say the least.
The whole you're all the same comment, that is messed up.
That's not cool.
And saying that you're triggering her for being a certain ethnicity, that's concerning on so many different
levels. Somebody asking about your sex life. Okay, so as gross as that question is, it's awkward.
It almost strikes me as a colleague being a little too like chatty and buddy buddy and just misfiring.
Right. It could go either way. It all sounds very weird. Like either it was somebody who's really just
wildly inappropriate and did that to make you grossed out or it's somebody who's like, so I want to be
friends and the way you be friends is you get to rapport. So here's a question that's going to skip all
the basics and it's like, okay, no.
school year, I was set to be a chaperone on an international trip, which the school's vice-principal
led. Then, a student on one of the teams I coach inappropriately touched me. I reported it to the
vice principal, and the conversation ended with her saying that the culture I implemented on the
team made the student think that touching was okay. Essentially, she blamed me. Huh, that's weird. I mean,
I guess we don't know if you did create that kind of culture. Maybe if there's a lot of butt slapping
during games and then somebody slaps your butt
not in the game, it's like, is that
wildly inappropriate or just a little bit
uncalibrated? But I can't imagine
a coach creating a culture where a student,
presumably this is a guy, but who knows,
where a student thinks it's okay to like,
yeah, to slap a teacher's butt or whatever
at any time. That would have to be
a pretty extreme culture, I think,
and it's hard for me to imagine a female
coach encouraging players to do that sort of thing
in a high school. Although, what do
I know? I mean, I'm an indoor kid.
I was furious, so I filed an
official complaint. Not even a week later, I was kicked off of the trip by the vice principal and told it
it was because my report was inaccurate and I could not be trusted. Wow. This was also right around the time
I was admitted into the teachers union after almost a year-long fight with attorneys to get me in.
Okay. Curious timing. First of all, I didn't know he had to fight to get into the union. I thought it was
you're a teacher now. Here's your union. I'm guessing she means because she was the school psychologist and not a
teacher, so it was a little bit, but she plays all these different roles. So she, yeah, but is there a
relationship between those two things? Hard to say. Yeah. But could be. Could not be. Hard to know.
Could be a coincidence. We don't know. The principal and vice principal then wrote me up for being two
minutes late for calling out five minutes before the callout time and for the quote unquote tone of an
email I sent in response to the nitpicking backhanded tactics that they were using. Yeah.
Then they tried to fire me as a coach. This didn't work.
but I got the message.
They wanted me out.
My mental health started to deteriorate.
My hair started falling out and I couldn't sleep.
So I decided to resign.
It broke my heart to leave the students.
I want to confront them one last time
when I returned my laptop on my last day,
but I'm unsure if it's worth it.
I already contacted a therapist
to discuss my reaction to the situation.
That's great.
I'm glad you're doing that.
I'm really happy to hear
that you're going to talk about this.
Just to get this one out of the way.
I don't know if I would confront them in one big explosive Jerry McGuire moment when you return your laptop.
You're probably going to regret that.
And if you do decide to take some kind of action, which I'm guessing is where this whole story is going,
I don't know if you want that as part of the record.
So the letter ends, am I crazy?
Was this retaliation?
Since I genuinely believe I was forced out, is there anything legally I can do?
Signed burned, spurned, and concerned that I might have earned something in return.
Okay.
I'm sorry things went down this way.
At a minimum, this sounds like a very challenging work environment.
At a maximum, it sounds like there was something nefarious.
Did you just say nefarious?
Yeah, I don't know what I...
That sounds like a Disney villain.
It does.
Nefarious.
Yeah.
I think it's nefarious.
I think you're probably right.
I'm not even sure why that came out of my mouth like that, but either way.
I'm so glad you said that.
I'm going to tease you about that one for years.
Thank you so much.
Nefarious.
I've never said nefarious.
I don't understand why that happened.
It's nefarious, or is it?
Neneerius, it's like a whole thing. Either way, she's been going through a lot at this school,
and I'm sorry that this has been so hard. We wanted to run your story by an expert, so we reached out
to Neil Rombardo, in-house counsel for a large school district with approximately 8,000
employees, a subject matter expert that I never really thought was going to come in handy, but, hey,
perfect for the job. Presumably, Neil is also on the other side of the table in situations like yours,
but that does make him very familiar with the laws and the procedures. Neil started off with a general
disclaimer, as us lawyers love to do, which is that he's only hearing one side of the story,
which always concerns him for obvious reasons. Again, very lawyerly, I know, but it is a fair
point. None of what you are describing sounds normal or okay in any way. But in the interest
of fairness, we do have to keep in mind that these administrators, they might have been having
their own experience of you, and Neil only has your facts to go on, as do we. Now, about the incident
with that student who touched you inappropriately, Neil said he was also extremely concerned about
that part of the story because we don't know exactly what occurred. For example, did the student
voluntarily go to administration to minimize their role? How did this go down exactly? Hard to know,
but honestly, I can't imagine a scenario where a student touching a teacher is okay and just goes
completely unaddressed. So Neil did say you have some options there. First off, school district
employees, and this should apply to you at a charter school as well, they're usually protected by a
collective bargaining agreement.
And that can help employees who believe they've been mistreated by their employers.
Unions and associations might even be able to help you in receiving a new assignment at a
different location or they can file a legal action on your behalf.
Second, government employees have due process rights in their public employment.
So according to Neal, a government employer must give notice of an issue related to an employee.
They must give the employee the right to respond.
And there must be substantial evidence before you,
they take an adverse action against an employee. Also, you might have a lawsuit here. I mean,
that was my first instinct. In my view, just based on what you've shared, this is where my head
went first, you might have a lawsuit here. Neil didn't opine on that, but he did tell us, and I
remember this from law school, there's a cause of action called constructive termination.
And constructive termination means that the employer's behavior makes it so the employee
cannot fulfill the functions of the job. And as a result, the employee is effectively terminated.
I also wonder if the fact that your fiance is also an employee of the school, if that gives
any complaint or lawsuits, maybe a little bit more weight, because when that teacher asked about your
sex life, they were talking about two school employees. Maybe his testimony is going to bolster your
case. Maybe you both have cases. About the comments about your race and sexual activity,
Neil said that such a claim would require the employer to know of this behavior and for an employer
to be aware of that behavior,
an administrator would need to have heard about it.
So it depends who said it to you and if it got reported.
Now, about whether all this amounts to retaliation,
Neil explained to us that for behavior to become retaliation,
the employer has to take an adverse action
based on the employee's protected activity.
Now, protected activity, that includes complaining
about discriminatory or harassing behavior,
reporting violations of the law, rules or procedures,
reporting things like fraud or abuse and participating in discrimination proceedings,
such as an investigation or a lawsuit.
So if you were like, hey, this student touched me and they were like,
ah, you filed a complaint, you suck, we're going to make sure that you can't teach and
you can't coach and you can't go on the international trip.
It's like, all right, well, that's starting to look like they don't want you to do your job.
And it's starting to look like the reason they don't want you to do your job is because
you filed that complaint, which if they wrote in writing that they don't want you to go on the
trip because you filed a complaint, that's pretty good. You should absolutely save that email
or document that conversation because that is really an amazing admission. Yeah, you filed a
complaint so we're going to take these other things away from you. Wow. I mean,
shooting yourself right in the foot. Also, retaliatory actions, they're not limited to things
like termination, demotion, non-promotion, non-selection. They're broadly defined to include
harassing behavior, significant changes to job duties or working conditions, and even threats
to take personnel actions, which honestly, it sounds to me like it does describe some of what
you shared in your letter. They're trying to get you fired from coaching because you filed
a complaint. Okay, well, that's the definition of retaliation. I'm hearing the same thing. So those
are the broad strokes from the legal side of things. The other angle to consider here is how you responded
to all of this dysfunction and harassment. And to be clear, it sounds, again, like some object
objectively messed up things went down during your time at the school.
So what I'm about to say is not about blaming you whatsoever.
But in dysfunctional workplaces,
I do think it's always useful to consider how we show up,
how we make things better or how we sometimes make them worse.
For example, my ears pricked up just a little bit
when you mentioned the tone of that email you sent.
Now, I don't know what the content of that email was.
I don't know what the tone of the email was.
Maybe you were just being very direct and honest
and the administration resented that you were appropriately
calling them out, so there was no way to win. But it's also possible that it was a little agro. Maybe it
wasn't the most diplomatic email, the most professional. So something to consider. Quick story,
I have a good friend who worked for a truly awful company where she experienced a ton of harassment
and manipulation. I mean, it was crazy. And there was no ambiguity. It was an objectively terrible place
and what they were doing was definitely illegal. And when she wrote management and email saying,
look, here are all the things that have happened recently. Here's how you responded. They retaliated
against her in a very real way. They cut her hours. They took away responsibilities. They restructured her
pay, all of that. So eventually she left and she talked to an attorney who heard her story and said,
this is the most clear-cut example of a hostile work environment I have ever seen. You 100% have a case.
And now she and like 12 other employees are suing and their case is very strong. But when she told me
about all this. She also told me, you know, yeah, like, looking back, I didn't handle certain
conversations as well as I could have. I got emotional in that meeting. I got kind of snarky one day.
I got bitter. I said some things I regret. Maybe we could have avoided some of this if I frame things
a little bit better. And that doesn't mean that she wasn't the victim or that her time there would
have been a walk in the park if she just articulated herself better. But she wanted to figure out her role
in what happened and see how she might have made things that much harder. And I thought that was
really admirable. And that is something you might want to do as well, just so you can at least
take something away from what sounds like an awful experience. Yeah, that's a fair point, Gabe,
because this might not be the last difficult school she works at. Right. And if she can find
something to take away from all this, all the better, otherwise the only lesson is, wow, that school
was a nightmare and the people were terrible. A few of the problems she ran into sound to me political,
and they also sound institutional. And those problems might exist to some degree at any school. So
it would be really great if she know how to navigate them better next time if they pop up.
Yeah, like how to write a difficult letter that comes across in the best way.
Yeah, exactly. Or how to diffuse a tense situation with a difficult administrator.
Yeah, or how to manage her stress a little better on her own so she doesn't suffer quite as much if
her workplace gets toxic. I mean, having your hair fall out, I've been there. That's a lot of
stress that causes that. Not good. Which is another great thing to talk about in therapy. Exactly.
I hope she never goes through any of this again. But if she does, it would be really awesome.
if she could protect her mental health.
Yeah, her mental health and her hair.
But all that to say, it sounds like they lost a great employee.
A good school psychologist is a real gift.
So go take your passion to a school where, you know,
they don't ask you about whether your fiancé likes over the pants,
HJs or whatever.
These people sound ridiculous.
Your best bet is to probably learn from this and just move on.
But if you feel like you deserve damages
and or your career has been thrown into reverse,
or you want the school to change,
call an attorney and or your union rep.
Tell them your story, see if they think you have a case.
Otherwise, keep moving forward,
get a job in a healthier environment, and good luck.
You can reach us Friday at Jordan Harbinger.com.
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Okay, next step.
Hi, Jordan and Gabe.
I'm 34 years old and about three years ago,
I ended my brief two-year marriage,
which was one of the best choices I have made.
Believe it or not, getting married did not solve any of the problems in our relationship.
Yeah.
Okay.
My ex was unjustifiably jealous and suspicious.
of infidelity, despite the fact that I only work with men and spent 95% of my free time with her.
She would fly off the handle screaming, throwing, and breaking things, including a coffee
table, and at one point locked herself in a room threatening to overdose.
Jeez, okay.
The good times were good, but her behavior left me walking on eggshells in anticipation of the next
whirlwind.
Well, yeah, that must have been quite a two years.
I'm sorry you went through that, both of you.
I'm getting strong BPD girlfriend from last week's episode vibes from this letter, and it's sad.
It really is.
I'm now living in the house we lived in, which I later bought her out of, and she has moved
into my next door neighbors.
Wow.
Okay.
So you get divorced, and she's like, well, we might be divorced, but you're still going to see
me get in the mail every evening.
I mean, that cannot be innocent.
I don't think so.
No, first of all, even if there was one house left in the whole city and it was next door to your ex, you'd be like, ooh, guess I'm moving to a different city.
Correct.
Right?
I mean, it's not like she just happened to fall for the guy next door.
And when they broke up, it just made sense to shack up together, right?
I mean, that does not make sense.
Well, okay, I think he's about to answer that because the next line of his letter is, the man is 85.
Okay.
And in her words, definitely a pervert.
Well, great.
So she's either shacking up with him because it's convenient and cheap and she desperately needs a place to stay, or she wants to stay close to you, and this is how she can do that, which sounds much likelier in terms of the explanation for why somebody would do this.
Oh, my God.
This is so creepy.
Either way you slice it.
It's a very sitcom family, except it's not funny at all.
No.
whatsoever.
Except the neighbor boyfriend is definitely a pervert and the woman is low-key stalking her ex-husband.
What a riot.
That's a terrible sitcom.
very cringy.
Although, now that I think about it, who knows if this old guy is even a pervert?
She's not probably a reliable narrator.
Also, he was definitely a pervert when she was married to our friend here.
But now that they're broken up and she wants to stay close to him, he's a boyfriend material.
Slash, you're like, what?
Yeah.
Anyway.
Wow.
The letter goes on.
I'm in a healthy relationship now with a wonderful girl who moved in close to a year ago,
and we both have constant stress with my ex being next door.
Given my ex's unpredictable history, my girlfriend will occasionally get upset to the point of tears.
My ex hasn't made any contact, but we have started looking into a security system.
Good. I have a recommendation.
And now lock our cars at night in fear of her childish antics.
Is there anything else I can do?
Signed, avoiding a war and trying to ignore my crazy past that is now living next door.
Wow.
Oh, okay, that is not the word.
I thought you were going to rhyme with ignore.
There was a much better rhyme right there.
I know.
It occurred to me, but that felt like it would be in poor taste, so.
You're too refined, Gabe.
That's your problem.
That's what's holding you back in the sign-off department.
Such a weird situation.
And it definitely tracks with a person who was possessive, unstable, manipulative.
It just confirms that you were 100% right to end this relationship.
But, well, you haven't really completely left it.
Have you?
No.
Because here she is living next door.
This woman is ruthless, isn't she?
Truly without Ruth, this lady.
Yes.
No Ruth whatsoever.
So, practical things first.
Ruth must be an old word.
I've never heard.
It is, actually.
That's where the word ruthless comes from.
I mean, it had to come from somewhere.
Without Ruth.
Yes, Sons Ruth.
So practical things first, yes to the security system,
and might I recommend simply safe?
The incredibly effective and really very affordable home security,
solution with live guard protection awarded best home security system of 2023 by us news and world report
oh dude simply safe is getting their money's worth on that sponsorship today we should send them
this episode and be like you're welcome simply safe above and beyond please renew for 2024 also yes to
locking your cars at night yes to all that basic personal protection stuff lock your house doors
maybe get dead bolts if you don't have any already make sure your windows are secure all that i'm
surprised you don't already lock your car at night just shows you the difference between the
place where you live and the place where I live. Also, when you leave home or come back home,
keep your head on a dang swivel. I mean, keep your situational awareness high, all that George
Grant stuff we talk about here on the show. I would also be extra careful about your personal
information. For example, leaving sensitive information in your trash, bills, receipts, bank statements,
anything with a password on it? Because what's stopping her from digging through your trash and
finding out where you go to dinner or how much money you have or cracking your bank account password
or something. I don't know. I don't know if that's her style, but I guess given her history,
I would not put it past her. That's true. Me neither. So maybe shred sensitive documents. The shreders
real cheap on Amazon or throw sensitive stuff out in a dumpster a few blocks away, which is probably
illegal, but whatever. You called her approach childish antics, and I get it, but I'm afraid this is
more than childish antics. This is legit, crazy, low-key stalker stuff.
I mean, she moved in next door with an 85-year-old man to be close to you.
And you guys have to keep your guard up.
The other thing you can do, I'm on the fence about this one.
Talk to her directly.
Tell her this behavior is inappropriate and creepy and that she needs to move on.
Although typically the advice is don't engage.
And I don't really know if it's going to do anything.
Again, it just doesn't sound like a person who can be reasoned with.
Apparently a theme on today's episode.
People you can't talk to.
Yeah, for sure.
But who knows?
Maybe if she calms down a bit realizes she's not going to get you back.
She'll be able to take that in and see that this is not healthy for either of you.
Gabe, do we have any other ideas here?
I'm wondering if they can talk to the neighbor, the possible pervert guy.
I'm dying to know what the deal is there.
If he's somewhat normal and he's not totally senile and out of it or something,
maybe you can warn him about your ex and tell him what she's like.
Maybe he doesn't know the history.
I mean, maybe he overheard stuff in the driveway sometimes,
but he might hear the story and go, wait, she just moved in here because she
wants to keep tabs on you and she's unstable.
And I mean, part of me is like, is that really going to be news to this guy?
Because if he's living with her, he must know that she's a little out of her mind, but also
maybe not.
And if he hears that, maybe he'll break up with her.
If she can even be broken up with, watch, he'll break up with her and she'll move in
with a hoarder across the street.
It just becomes one big game of musical breakups in the neighborhood.
Exactly.
I don't know, man.
This is a really tough one.
It's kind of like the new Josh story from question one.
I just don't know if there's this easy solution here.
You unfortunately might have to make peace with your ex living next door.
As long as she isn't breaking the law or hurting you in some way,
unfortunately she is technically allowed to live there.
That is true.
But if you ever catch her doing anything dangerous or illegal or even vaguely threatening,
call the police immediately and report it because that might spook her and put her on notice
or it might be enough to check her a little bit.
And I would also, I would talk to the neighbor because,
he might go, yeah, it's been weird.
I didn't want to say anything to you,
but she takes your garbage
and spreads it all over the living room floor
and looks for important documents,
and I just didn't know how to bring this up to you.
I mean, you just never know.
Or he'll be like,
she's my girlfriend, you bastard, I heard what you did to her,
and then you know that that's not going to go anywhere.
I would consider talking with the guy.
Also, calling the police, if she does anything,
might give you a little more ammunition
to apply for a restraining order,
and to get one, you have to prove
that you have a reasonable fear of harm
or that there's an imminent danger of violence.
And if the court grants you won, then I'm pretty sure she can't live next door to you anymore.
Or you sell the house and move, which might be the right answer.
If her being next door is intolerable to you and your new gal,
if you guys want to build a life together in this house, I could see this being a major issue.
And I really, I feel for her.
Again, I hate that would mean that your ex won,
but you might have to cut your losses here just for your own safety and sanity.
Other than that, I wouldn't engage with her in any way.
Just ignore her.
She probably wants to provoke you.
She wants to be part of your life in some way.
even if that means making you scared or miserable.
So just don't give her the satisfaction.
I know that's easier said than done,
but my hope is she just gets bored or frustrated
and she eventually moves on.
And I am very sorry that you guys are going through this,
especially your new girlfriend who's completely innocent
in this whole situation, as are you from the sound of it.
This woman sounds like a real piece of work.
Hang in there, stay safe,
and I hope this resolves itself soon.
You know who else wants to awkwardly stare at you
through your kitchen window as you eat breakfast every morning, Gabriel.
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for this or what was the product that does that?
If you email me that, I will figure it out
for you. I'll email you the code. I don't mind.
It's important to use these codes for the sponsors.
So it really, I don't mind digging it up for you.
Thank you for supporting those who support the show.
It does keep us going and makes it possible to continue
creating these episodes week after week.
All right. Now back to Feedback Friday.
Okay, what's next?
Hey, Jordan and Gabe.
I'm a 28-year-old high school teacher,
and I was so passionate about teaching as an undergrad
and a young teacher.
I even earned a master's degree in education and am on my way to earning my national board certification.
My desire to be a great teacher earn me accolades, awards, and a lot of responsibility.
Very impressive. So so far you sound like an amazing teacher.
But I'm now seeing that the better I teach, the heavier my workload becomes.
I get asked to do more than other teachers with no additional compensation.
I'm a people pleaser and a high achiever, a classic recipe for teacher burnout.
Yeah, kind of the plight of the high performer in almost every environment, corporate or public, especially in your field, I imagine.
Because all the other teachers, many of them anyway, are going to be jaded, tired, burned out, or older with kids and have other stuff going on it.
Or they're just better at saying no.
And the administration's like, well, Miss Summer's amazing, and she's got a ton of energy, and she's always happy to go above and beyond.
Just give her that whole giant-ass project, and she'll handle it.
she'll knock it out of the park. In a traditional company, you'd theoretically be rewarded for your
effort, but in a school setting, and I'm guessing this was a public school, it can just lead to getting
taken advantage of. And I remember growing up, my mom had the same problem. She was a special ed teacher
in a public school, and it was like, you're doing this. And she's like, oh, crap, I'm too scared to say now.
I'm very sorry that this is happening. That is tough. After another stressful start to the school year,
I've decided that I need to try something else. I'd love to stay in education, but more behind the
scenes than in the classroom. Since I've searched online about job alternatives, I've been targeted
for a lot of, quote-unquote, teacher support ads. These ads could be anything from helpful
resources for struggling teachers to a course to help teachers transition out of the classroom and
into a new career. I see so many courses promising to get teachers interviews or resume reviewers
offering one-on-one sessions. I'm tempted to purchase a course or talk with a coach to get my foot in the
of a new career. But as a skeptical person, I'm hesitant to trust these promotions. How do I decipher
a good resource versus a scummy opportunist poaching burned out teachers? Is any of this legitimate
signed looking for a guide to help me decide where I should apply without being taken for a ride?
Great question. So first of all, I love that you're being proactive. I love that you're open to
finding the resources that you need. And if this is really the transition you want to make,
then I'm confident that you'll make it because you're clearly bright and driven and you're
hardworking. So yes, you are right to have some healthy skepticism about these resources.
Like any field, there are great coaches, and there are mediocre coaches, and there are a ton of
bad coaches. Also, the fact that you're finding a lot of them through advertising, you're smart to
clock that as a worrisome sign. Not that marketing is bad automatically or whatever, but these
coaching services, their products, right?
And they're finding potential clients like you
at a moment of interest and possible desperation
when you're panic, Googling,
how do I get out of the classroom,
or how do I deal with burnout at 11.30 p.m. on a Tuesday night.
That's a great moment for a marketer to go,
hey, sad teacher, we have the answer.
Just pay us $3,000 and we're going to fix your life for you.
And that's where advertised coaching
can get kind of suss, in my opinion,
because those coaches are often better at marketing
than they are at actual coaching.
In fact, in my experience,
some of the best coaches are so focused on coaching
that they're actually terrible marketers.
I agree with that.
Or they don't even need marketing
because their word of mouth referral base
is shoveling new clients to them almost nonstop.
When I ran a training company,
my old podcast was the marketing base.
We didn't run Google or Facebook ads
because we just didn't need to.
We were sold out months in advance
and we really didn't need it.
So our marketing, when we finally started,
It was terrible because we're like, what do we do?
Just tell people we have this product or service, and people are like, oh, you sweet summer
child, no, you need an ad copy.
So here are a few things to look for.
First of all, good coaches need to have solid credentials and meaningful experience.
Ideally, they have not spent their entire career just being coaches.
They've had some experience before they started coaching, like they were an executive or they
were running a company or they were consulting.
They're not some 29-year-old communications major who never.
had a real job and didn't want one.
So they're like,
oh, I'll just tell other people what to do.
And I know I'm being flippant about this,
but I've hired a lot of coaches
and some of the bad ones.
I was like, how did Dave get his background in coaching?
And it's like, well, he used to be a real estate agent
and then he started taking classes on how to coach.
And I'm like, that's why he sucks.
He's never done anything that I'm doing.
And this is all just rehashed self-help material
that he got from the website that teaches people how to coach.
This is terrible.
I want my money back.
So, look, it's not a hard.
and fast rule. There are truly
excellent coaches who pretty much have always been
coaches, but those folks tend to have gone through
rigorous training. They have great results.
They got their hands dirty with their clients in a way
that almost makes them partners to them.
Good coaches, by the way, of course, also have a track
record of success with those clients.
So they can point to concrete wins,
either in terms of salary or milestones or
skill sets. They're not just, you know, bringing out
your full potential or making you the best
you can be. Another
green flag, if you ask to talk to a couple of their clients, they're usually pretty eager to connect you
with people that they've helped succeed. And if the only clients they can point to are the testimonials on
their website, that's not an automatic run, but it is a little something to keep an eye on because that's just
marketing. Again, when I ran my training company, if somebody was like, can I talk to a former
client? Or if they were on the fence, I might be like, hey, do you want to talk to a former client?
I knew the sale was in the bag because I'd help them talk to a former client. And the client would be like,
this is amazing, you've got to do it.
And it would be a real dialogue that I was not a part of.
I was not on those calls.
I just trusted the clients to do a good job, and they did it for free.
Right.
A lot of scammy coaches straight up fake testimonials on websites as well.
They write them themselves or now they're going to have chat GPT do it
and they add a stock photo headshot and nobody ever knows.
It's so shady.
I've actually found my headshot as a testimonial on their website and I was like, yeah,
I've never used this software.
They just grabbed it and it looks like a candidate.
shot of me and no, I'd never heard of this company. So you do have to be a little careful of
website testimonials. Another thing to look for in a coach, whether they have a meaningful
philosophy or approach, some kind of curriculum or a method. They don't need to have, you know,
17 frameworks for success or whatever. In fact, that kind of thing can be its own sort of
pseudoscience BS. But they should have some kind of approach, whether it's the tools they use to
measure success or the way they assess your skills and help you figure out where you want to go.
If a coach is like, well, we're going to have 30 sessions together and we're just going to feel
our way through this and create a vision board for you. Just run at that point. If they're like,
okay, our first session, we're going to figure out what your strengths are and what's holding you
back. In our second session, we're going to use this framework I developed for figuring out your
pain points and what your next career move should look like. In the third session, we're going to
come up with a detailed roadmap for the next 12 months of your job search. That kind of thing,
that's encouraging. Another thing to look for, they've worked with other clients who had similar
issues or similar goals or similar struggles, although that's not essential, it does help.
So hopefully, in your case, they worked with teachers, good teachers who landed at the interesting
teaching jobs that they wanted.
And then there are a bunch of red flags to look out for.
For example, they seem distracted or distant when you talk or they're flaky and unresponsive.
Or my favorite pet peeve, they only take calls when they're driving.
Wait, have you actually worked with a coach who did that?
Yeah.
And it was just kind of...
Wait, somebody actually was coaching you
while they were on the 4 or 5?
Right. So here's the thing.
If you're doing a call because you're driving
and it's like, sorry, the traffic is bad,
we're going to have to do half the call while I'm driving,
that's fine.
Right.
But if you're planning these calls while you're driving
because you might as well make some money
while you're doing your commute,
that's nonsense because you're going to be partially distracted.
You're certainly not going to be taking notes.
That's my next point.
They're not taking detailed notes.
during your sessions is another red flag, so they repeat themselves.
Oh, that drives me crazy.
Yeah, look, if people repeat themselves to hammer things home or make things memorable,
different.
Yeah, repetition.
Mm-hmm.
But if somebody repeatedly forgets where they've left off last time, so they go through the same
thing again because they were driving and they're like, oh, that was you I was talking to.
Oh, man, I don't take any notes and I was on my way to Waffle House.
Sorry, we just wasted 40 minutes of your 60-minute session rehashing the same stuff as last week.
that is not a good sign. Many poor coaches also make up for a lack of relevant curriculum
by giving unrelated or irrelevant assignments with no ability to explain why something is important
or needs to be done or how it'll help you get where you want to go or outline how it fits into
the bigger picture. And I know some of these red flags because when I started as a coach in 2007
or whatever year it was, not only did I meet tons of coaches who did all of this, and worse, by the way,
but I ended up borrowing many of their bad habits until I had a bunch of other training and years of
experience to round things out. So unfortunately, I made a lot of mistakes on other people's dime.
Thankfully, I was damn cheap at the time, and rightfully so. In fact, one of my first clients
when I was doing phone coaching, I'm like probably 2006, 2007. His name was Alex Schechter,
great guy. He paid us a retainer.
And he's like, first thing I'm going to do is pay you a retainer.
I was like, wow, that's great.
Money up front. And he's like, and you need to raise your price because you're so cheap
that I'm skeptical that this is going to be any good, but it's so far really good.
You need to charge more so people take you more seriously.
I thought that was kind of an interesting point.
But I did a lot of stuff like, I don't know how to solve this guy's actual issues.
So I'm going to go download a bunch of workbook exercises and then just run him through
these workbook exercises.
and they were not that relevant to what the guy was asking me.
And I could tell the client was like not stoked on the training.
And I felt really bad about that.
But then I took other coaching classes years later and I was like,
this guy's literally going through some crappy workbook that he got from his coach's coach.
And we're going through this Strengths Finders 2.0 book, which is good.
But I'm like, I'm not asking you about career stuff.
Why am I taking a personality test to see what job I should be in?
This is not relevant to anything I've been asking you.
Also, don't let coaches make you commit right off the bat to large programs.
It does take time to get results, but some coaches, they want ridiculous one-year commitments
from the jump to the tune of tens of thousands of dollars.
Screw that noise.
Overall, you'll know when you're talking to someone legit.
You can just kind of feel it.
I'm not one for being like, follow your intuition.
But good coaches and con men, of course, as well, unfortunately.
They have a calm air of confidence.
They've seen this movie before.
They're not all high on their own.
own farts and their excitement is on your behalf, it's not hypey excitement to get you to follow
their excitement and then commit to them financially or otherwise. If you sense that you're in
good hands, if you feel like they take you seriously, if you feel understood, if you feel like
they're smart and present and genuinely invested in your results, those are good signs.
So look for the green flags, listen to your intuition, look out for the red flags, and you'll
either find a good coach or you'll realize that you don't even need any of these people in the
first place. Yeah, I was going to say, I think given her credentials and her knowledge and her work
ethic and all these wonderful qualities she told us about, I really do wonder if she needs a career
coach to make a transition. I mean, if I interviewed this teacher and she told me these stories,
like I outworked everybody and they always gave me all the world. I mean, I'm hiring this person,
even if she doesn't want to be in the classroom anymore. It just sounds awesome. So all of this is great
advice for finding a coach in general, of course, not just in the teaching world. But I just want to
throw one more thing into the mix here before we close out, which is if leaving the classroom is the right
move for you, great, more power to you. I get it. But you did mention that you're a people pleaser and you're a
high achiever and that has led to real burnout. So I just want to ask you whether the answer is truly to leave
the classroom or to learn how to draw better boundaries with your colleagues so that people are not
dumping all of their work on you or you're not being taken advantage of and not compensated for that work.
or maybe the right answer is finding a school that appreciates and respects you more
and again compensates you for all of this amazing work that you've volunteered to do
because you love teaching and you're really passionate about it.
And it makes me kind of sad that these people might be ruining what sounds like an amazing calling.
If you are truly not interested in being in the classroom anymore, that is fine.
But the point still stands.
Wherever you end up going, because you're so good at what you do and you work hard,
I have a feeling more work is always going to fall to you.
So developing these boundaries and learning to say no sometimes
and also maybe encouraging your peers to work as hard as you do
to spread the work around a little bit,
those will be great skills wherever you end up.
True.
One more thing she could work on with a coach,
although she might not even need a coach for that, just in practice.
So I hope that this helps.
You sound like a fantastic teacher.
Your students are lucky to have you.
I hate that the system or whatever,
maybe just this school,
is driving a talented person like you out of the classroom.
But education do be like that sometimes.
My mom had this very similar issues, and this is in the 70s and the 80s, and probably even earlier.
We hear it all the time.
Hang in there, find the coach you need, avoid the ones you definitely don't need, and good luck.
Okay, next up.
Dear Jordan and Gabe, the Jordan Harbinger Show is one of the podcasts that I never miss.
I have other podcasts I listen to as well and over 450 books on my two read list.
Wow.
I feel quite overwhelmed by the amount of knowledge and information to gather.
out there. I don't know how to manage all of it. I'm a father of three with a full-time job,
and even when I retire and my kids are out of the home, I imagine that this issue will remain the
same. How do you guys sort out what you read and listen to? Signed, the drowning disciple.
It's a good question, and I can totally relate. So first of all, you have to make peace with the fact
that you are just never going to consume as much information or acquire all of the knowledge that you
want. No one can. It's literally infinite. Your time is finite. It's just not possible.
It doesn't mean you failed or that you're prioritizing the wrong things that you won't be successful.
Sure, it's fun to learn a lot and get into a ton of different content, but it's just not
realistic. So my first recommendation is let go of that reading list of 450 books. That's an obscene
number of books. Most people aren't going to do that in a decade. Let go the idea, at least that you're
going to get to all of them. I don't mean you have to delete it. It's just one thing.
to have a list of books to choose from when you need a new read, but if you're beating yourself
up for not reading all 450 of those books, that needs to stop because it's never going to happen.
More to the point, it shouldn't happen. As you can tell, I love learning as much as you do. It's one of
my main hobbies. I'm that dude on vacation, reading the Atlantic and catching up on that stuff
or freaking reading Reddit over breakfast on some obscure topic that I'm in a rabbit hole on. I get it.
But reading everything constantly until you die, it's just not the point of life.
The things you want to learn, in my view, they're there to enrich your life, to equip you better,
to give you tools or ideas or stories that'll help you live better.
But if you're spending all your time trying to consume this stuff, then you're not giving yourself
much room to put them into practice and, you know, actually enjoy your life.
And you're right.
When you theoretically have more time in the future, you still won't be able to get to all of your reading.
and I hope that's the case because it means you'll have a lot of life to live.
So my take on this is make peace with the limits of your time and attention,
be more deliberate about what you consume.
If there's a specific niche or theme or a question you want to learn more about
and it's actually going to make your life richer in some way,
either by making you a better person or a better parent or helping you in your career,
then I'd focus on those books or podcasts.
But if they're just interesting, if they're just a way,
to satisfy your brain's urge for more content, if they're ultimately just going to take you away
from your family and your friends and your hobbies and you're not going to capitalize in what
you learn in some meaningful way, then I would prioritize something more important. Now, if you really
enjoy this stuff, that's one thing. I hope that this podcast falls into that category, but if it's
just another obligation, I think you can safely cut it. So a big part of this is getting very clear
on what matters to you and what impacts you actually want to have on your life. So for me,
obviously I need to read the books and ideas that inform this show. So that's pretty clear
because it's related to my career. I also prioritize learning Mandarin because I like it. It's
useful in a concrete way. I use it with my family. It brings us closer together. It allows me to
travel and have more interesting conversations with people. I teach my kids. So that's great.
So I make time for that. But reading every single New Yorker article about particle physics and
congressional malfeasance or whatever, not worth it for me. Some of the stuff is fascinating and well
written, fun, sure, but it's not worth it. So that's what it's about for me. Priorities, values,
goals, discipline, and frankly, a healthy dose of self-forgiveness. But look, if any of this leads
you to stop listening to this show, then you've obviously made a huge mistake and you need to
restructure your entire life to listen to all three or four episodes we put out every single week,
never give up on this show, even if it means neglecting your partner and ignoring your kids,
because I've got to feed my kids, you know what I'm saying? Yeah, those simply safe solutions
will not buy themselves. That's right.
And thanks for hitting the Simplsafe plug for the 19th time today.
Simplysafe.com slash Jordan.
Gabe, you're a real one.
Thanks for the reminder.
Yeah, I don't know.
I just feel like they got short shrift today.
Indeed.
I just want to get that name in there one more time.
Hope you all enjoyed that.
I want to thank everyone who wrote in this week and everybody who listened.
Thank you so much.
Go back and check out the episodes with Mitch Princeton on popularity
and Mossab Hassan Yusef, the Green Prince,
on the Hamas Israel Conflict.
Both great episodes here for you this week.
The best things that have happened in my life and business have come through my
network, the circle of people that I know, like, and trust. And I'm teaching you how to do the same
thing for yourself in our six-minute networking course. It's 100% free. It's not gross. It's not
schmoozy. You can find it on the think-ific platform at Jordan Harbinger.com slash course.
The drills are designed to take just a few minutes per day. I wish I knew this stuff 20 years ago.
Dig the well before you get thirsty folks. Build relationships before you need them. You can find that
at Jordan Harbinger.com slash course. We got a lot of email. We mentioned teachers in an ad before about this,
about how teachers think they don't need networking
because I've heard that a lot from teachers
and public servants.
And people who are high up in those areas,
they were like, networking is everything.
Why are these people burying their heads in the sand?
So don't be that.
Jordan Harbinger.com slash course.
And if you haven't signed up yet,
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slash news. Show notes and transcripts at Jordan Harbinger.com. Advertisers, deals, discounts, and ways to support the show,
all at Jordan Harbinger.com slash deals. I'm at Jordan Harbinger on Twitter and Instagram. You can also
connect with me on LinkedIn. Gabe's over there on Instagram, Gabriel Mizrahi, or on Twitter at Gabe
Mizrahi. This show is created in association with Podcast 1. My team is Jen Harbinger, Jace Sanderson,
Robert Fogart, Ian Baird, Millio Campo, and of course Gabriel Mizrahi. Our advice and opinions are
our own, and I'm a lawyer, but I'm not your lawyer. Do your own research before implementing
anything you hear on the show. Did O'Neill Rombardo? Remember, we rise by lifting others. Share the
show with those you love, and if you found this episode useful, please share it with somebody else
who could use the advice we gave here today. In the meantime, I hope you apply what you hear on the show
so you can live what you learn, and we'll see you next time. Hamas is an Islamic movement.
My father is one of the founding members of Hamas. Hamas for us was everything, to the point where
it became an army.
It's a monster.
I agreed to work with Israel,
with a hidden agenda to be a double agent.
The level of pressure that I had to go through,
my heart stopped for approximately 30 seconds.
Most of the human beings cannot make it back.
I was tortured mentally and physically.
Everybody in the city knew that I'm a dead man.
For more, including what it was like growing up
one of the first families of which many consider a terrorist group and why Masab considers it
the greatest school of his life. Check out episode 407 on the Jordan Harbinger show.
This episode is sponsored in part by Something You Should Know podcast. Finding a new great
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