The Mel Robbins Podcast - The Most Eye-Opening Conversation on Marriage & Love You Will Ever Hear (From #1 Divorce Lawyer)
Episode Date: March 5, 2026Mel calls today’s episode one of the most moving, meaningful, and transformational conversations ever to happen on the podcast. She says it is THE most important relationship advice that she has e...ver heard and you will ever hear. Today’s guest, James Sexton, is a world-renowned authority on relationships, but coming from a perspective you may not expect. He’s the author of the bestselling book How to Stay in Love. But he’s also one of the top divorce attorneys in the world, which means for decades he's had a front-row seat to what makes marriages thrive – and the reason why marriages fall apart. He’s going to tell you most breakups don’t happen because of something catastrophic. They result from all the little mistakes over time that everyone misses. Today, he’ll teach you what those mistakes are and convince you that a few small changes are the secret to creating a lasting and loving relationship. And unlike most relationship advice you’ll hear, his advice isn’t theoretical. It’s built on what he’s seen thousands of couples do when it’s working… and when it’s not. You’ll learn: -How you can save (or strengthen) any marriage in 10 minutes a week -The #1 thing that leads to infidelity (it’s not what you think) and how to avoid it -How to tell if your marriage is over -The reason relationships and marriages fail -How to argue in a productive way -How to tell if you’re in the wrong relationship -The habits of all successful relationships If you’re single, this is what sets the foundation for a healthy relationship. If you’re in a relationship, this is what allows it to deepen, strengthen, and evolve with you. If you’re suffering from a breakup or a divorce, this will not only make you believe in love again, but it will also give you the road map to create it. This is one of the most important conversations that has been had on this podcast to date. Mel cannot wait for you and everybody that you love or have loved to experience it. For more resources related to today’s episode, click here for the podcast episode page. If you liked the episode, check out this one next with Mel and her husband Chris: How To Create Better Relationships: 6 Surprising Lessons From 28 Years Of Marriage Connect with Mel: Order Mel’s new product, Pure Genius Protein Get Mel’s newsletter, packed with tools, coaching, and inspiration. Get Mel’s #1 bestselling book, The Let Them Theory Watch the episodes on YouTube Follow Mel on Instagram The Mel Robbins Podcast Instagram Mel's TikTok Subscribe to SiriusXM Podcasts+ to listen to new episodes ad-free Disclaimer Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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Hey, it's your friend Mel, and welcome to the Mel Robbins podcast.
Have you ever gone to a funeral and noticed that as soon as you leave, you have this deep urgency.
You're like, I have to allow myself to live my life.
Or you go to a wedding and you are reminded of just how extraordinary it is to be in love.
These moments, it's as if the force of life is moving through you.
Well, that's going to happen to you as you listen to the conversation today.
It will have a transformational and profound effect on you.
Because you're about to hear the most important relationship advice.
Our expert today is going to talk about love in a way that you've never heard before.
He's also going to teach you the simple habits of successful relationships.
For me personally, this is one of the most impactful.
conversations I have ever had on this podcast. And I cannot wait for you and everybody that you love
to experience it. Hey, it's your friend Mel and welcome to the Mel Robbins podcast. I am so excited that
you're here. It's always an honor to be together. It's always an honor to spend time with you.
But today, I can't wait. And if you're a new listener or you're here because someone shared this
episode with you, I want to take a moment and personally welcome you to the Mel Robbins podcast family.
Today, you're going to learn the best relationship advice that you will ever hear.
Today's guest, James Sexton, is a world-renowned authority on relationships.
But coming from a perspective, you may not expect.
He's the author of the best-selling book, How to Stay in Love.
But he also happens to be one of the top divorce attorneys in the world.
Which means for decades, he has had a front row seat to the reason why marriages fall apart.
and he's going to tell you.
Most breakups don't happen because of something catastrophic.
They result from the little mistakes over time that everyone misses.
Today, he'll teach you what those mistakes are
and convince you that a few small changes are the secret
to creating, lasting, and loving relationships.
Without further ado, please help me welcome James Sexton to the Mel Robbins podcast.
James Sexton, welcome to the Mel Robbins podcast.
Great to be here.
I have so many questions for you, but where I want to start is this.
How could my life be different if I take everything to heart that you're about to teach me today?
And I apply it to my life and my relationship.
What could change?
Yeah, I mean, I think, you know, as a practicing divorce lawyer for 25 plus years, I have a really unique vantage point.
You know, a lot of relationship advice that people get and people give.
It's coming from a psychology background.
It's coming from a hypothetical theoretical background.
And again, it has tremendous value.
But it's not like in the trenches.
And it's not this really raw, candid version.
Because I think people lie to their therapists all the time.
But they don't lie to their lawyer.
Like your doctor and your lawyer are the two people you should never lie to under any
circumstances.
Everything we're doing is to protect you.
And everything we're saying is subject to privilege.
So you can tell us the raw, candid truth.
And I think that's created in me a unique perspective on, you know, if you wanted to figure out
how to keep your car in good shape, don't talk to the car salesman. All they do is deal with new cars.
Talk to the mechanic. Like, talk to the person who's seen every way a car can break down and we'll say
to you, hey, here's the stress points. Here's where I find this model of car tends to break.
And here's how you could shore that up and prevent it. So a lot of what I try to give people,
instead of like platitudes, like, oh, you need to maintain connection with your, like, what does that mean?
Like, I need to know what that means.
Like, if I'm trying to fix my relationship or keep my relationship on track and you say,
stay connected, okay, do you mean like a date night or more sex or should we go on vacation?
Or should I be asking different questions when we're having breakfast together?
Or should we be having breakfast together?
Like, what do you mean?
Like, I need practical things.
Because as a lawyer, you know, like, it doesn't matter what I know.
It matters what I can prove.
So I don't just have to think in these broad ways that maybe a researcher or a psychologist can.
I have to think, okay, what can demonstrate something?
What is evidence to support what it is that I'm putting out there?
So I think what you could walk out of this conversation with is a feeling of I have practical, specific things that I can now bring to my relationship that aren't complicated, that don't require me to buy anything.
They just require me to buy into a task or a routine.
And if you can bring that to the table after this conversation, I think you'll actually see
challenges in your relationship potentially improve.
Or if you're fortunate enough to be in a place where your relationship is strong,
you'll find yourself kind of maintaining that.
Because, you know, it's a whole lot easier to maintain fitness than to let it fall apart
and then try to get back on track.
Like, those first miles are so hard.
And that's really what the goal is, is to help people by learning from the mistakes I've now
seen thousands of people make, just keep their relationship in a good place.
I am so excited you're here because I don't want to make those mistakes.
And what's interesting about that example of fitness, as you said, it can be easier to maintain
it. I think it's almost equally easy to let it fall off as it is to maintain it.
It's really whether or not you understand those little levers when you start to fall off.
Because just like fitness, there are probably areas in your relationship right now where you are falling off
and you don't even realize this is a major mistake that will land you in front of somebody like you, James.
Yeah. And falling feels like flying for a little while.
What do you mean?
Like it feels good, you know, like when things are sort of coasting, you kind of go, because there's
just so much coming at us in the world.
And so to go, all right, I got my person.
I got that lockdown.
I can worry about all this other stuff. The kids work, you know, what's going on in the world,
everything else. Because I have this. I'm good. I'm good. We have each other. We're wearing a
ring. We're doing the whole thing. Like we're in. We don't have to worry about that anymore.
And meanwhile, like, no, that's, that's that you got to water that plant. Like, that's a,
that's a relationship that when you were looking for it, it was so important. And when you found it,
you were so happy that you found it. You know, we make the mistake of thinking love is like
permanently gifted to us.
It's loaned. Like every marriage ends. It ends in death or divorce, but it ends. And it's one of those
weird things, like to say to someone, I hope it ends in death for you. Like, but it's the truth.
Like, I hope your marriage ends in death. Because the other way that it's going to end is divorce.
And the majority of marriages end in divorce. Over 50% end in divorce. So, and that's just the ones that
catastrophically failed. Like, think about how many people, you know, succeeded in marriage. But, you know,
meaning they didn't divorce, but they're unhappy.
They never really become the most authentic version of themselves.
They stay together for the kids or because they don't want to give away half their things.
What is that?
Another 10%, 20%, now you have something that fails 70% of the time.
And yet, we are like, let's do it.
We got to sign people up for this.
It's a great thing.
Even if someone says, I'm getting married, if you were to say, really, why?
It would be rude.
That's a rude question to ask.
But meanwhile, you're doing something that fails roughly 50 to 70% of the time.
it's not unreasonable to say why.
And I think the big issue is, and that's why I say, like, falling feels like flying for a little while until you hit the ground.
Because sometimes by the time you realize, oh, this marriage is not a good place anymore, it's real far gone.
And it's real hard to come back.
And that's why when people say, like, oh, what, you know, what's the number one cause of divorce?
It's like, disconnection is the number one cause of divorce.
But there's a whole bunch of other symptoms that come.
from disconnection that are easy to point to and say, well, that was the cause, but it wasn't the
cause. The cause was the disconnection. No single raindrop was responsible for the flood, but the flood's
nothing but little raindrops. Do you believe in marriage? I do. Yeah, I do. I mean, I think
I think that's an individual question. I like to look at relationships, romantic relationships,
as chapters in a long book. And I think like any chapter in a long book, you know, there's some chapters
that are tragic and some chapters that are sad and some chapters that are just filled with nothing
but joy. I think Orson Welles said that whether a story is a comedy or a tragedy depends on
when you end it. And I think a lot of relationship stories that we sell to people, rom-coms and
things like that, they're kind of the relationship equivalent of pornography. Like they're just a
stylized version of what actual relationships look like, you know, without any of the
complexity, like with just the good part. And I think marriage, I don't think I can learn everything
I need to know about myself from myself. I think I need someone who'll see my blind spots.
And I think I need that person to be someone I can be really fearless around. And I think,
like, at its core, marriage should boil down to four words that I think are potentially the
most beautiful words you could say to someone and mean, or have someone say.
say to you and know they're true. And that is, you're my favorite person. Like, what could be more
beautiful than being told and knowing, like, when this person says it, they mean it. You're my
favorite person. And to say to someone back, yeah, you're my favorite person. Like, what would be
better in the world than having that, you know? And so I like to think about kind of the end of
things and then reverse engineer. And to me, like at the end of your life, if you could look at
another person and say, you helped me become the most authentic version of myself, and you're
still my favorite person. That's the greatest wedding toast you could ever have. Like,
that's the greatest blessing you could have in your life. And I think it'd be the greatest
asset you could have in your life. But having represented cops, teachers,
firefighters, CEOs, elite athletes, celebrities, we are all equally terrible at this.
What do you wish every couple understood before they got married?
So two things, and they're contradictory. So I say that out front, because as soon as I say it,
I know it's going to sound like a contradiction. But I think you'll, as a long, long married person,
I think you'll agree. I think they make two contradictory mistakes. One is thinking that marrying this
person will change them. So, you know, he leaves his socks everywhere, but if we get married,
he'll stop doing that. Or he drinks too much, but if we get married to something, you know,
she's not very fiscally responsible, but if we get married, she'll, you know, shape up and get that
together. So thinking that if you marry somebody, they're going to become a better version of
themselves and they'll definitely change. This is not a great idea. Like, this is not, you're not
buying a depressed company that you're hoping the stock will go up, okay? But the contradictory thing is
also thinking this person will never change, that if we get married, that it'll prevent them from
change. Oh, I see exactly why these are the same thing. Right. Because it's the feeling of,
hey, you know, like this is so good. Like the sex is so good and our companionship is so good and our
conversation is so good and our whole vibe together is so good. Like if we get married, we're going to,
it's like building a wall around this thing and it's going to keep it amazing, you know, and this is what
we have to do. We'll shore up all the defenses against the world and we'll, if nothing will change,
we'll just be happy and having sex and having a great, just like we are right now forever.
And like, that's just ridiculous.
Like there's nothing, there's no way to have.
I mean, maybe when people died in their 30s and 40s, that was possible because you had a
short window of time.
But the truth is, like to say, hey, I'm going to be with somebody 30, 40, 50 years in this
very intense, intimate relationship.
And, you know, it'll never change.
Like, that's insane.
We're going to, our bodies change.
Our goals change.
that the pressures were to the society around us is constantly changing technology is changing so
how would you think that a contract we signed with the government about our relationship is going to
prevent it from eroding or having any of the like natural things that happen to our bodies to our
lives to every other relationship we have so is there a better question to ask yourself
knowing how much change is going to hit you you know what I'm saying like so if you
You could grab every young couple by the shoulders who's in that moment where they're like,
I think this is my person.
You're my favorite person now.
And I'm feeling the pressure or I really have always wanted to get married or all my friends
are getting married or I'm the only single one or I've been divorced for too long and I want
to try this.
Like, is there a question that you wish couples or people personally would just stop and ask
themselves the true question?
I think everything is what little things?
can we do to stay connected? And I don't think it's that hard. Like, I think you can dedicate 10 minutes a week
to the upkeep of a relationship and stay out of my office a lot of the time. I genuinely believe that
if you spent 10 minutes a week, just saying to your partner, what did I do this week? Tell me three
things I did this week that made you feel loved. I think you'd be surprised at the answer. Like, I think
you think you know the answer, but you'd be surprised. Like, I think if your husband, if he said to you,
what are three things I did this week that made you feel loved, the practical actual answers,
you might not be able to predict those. Like, he might not have been able to guess in advance what they
are because little things make us feel loved. And by the way, if you have, if you have courage,
and you go into this transaction saying, hey, we're going to not hear this defensively.
Like we're going to speak honestly and we're going to hear in a non-defensive way.
Then you can ask another question, which is, where did I miss the mark this week?
What are three things I could have done better this week?
What were three things I did this week that made you feel less than loved or less than seen?
You can have fun with it and say, what are three things I did this week that made you want to have sex with me?
Like what were three things this week that I did that turned you on?
By the way, the answer's bonkers.
Absolutely bonkers.
Like what?
As a heterosexual man, when I've asked,
that question, it's the weirdest things. It's like, oh, you were, the dogs came in from outside,
and you were, like, you know, kind of toweling them off and the way they were looking at you.
And, like, that made you want to have sex with me? Like, here are the dogs. I'm trying to
get eight-pack abs. And meanwhile, this is what makes you, like, feel. But it really, like,
the things that make us. I understand. Because I honestly, when you said, what makes you feel,
I was thinking to myself, well, Chris asked me that. While I was here working, he was with his friends,
skiing and he took our two dogs. And so he spent the day, you know, hiking up the mountain and
skiing down. The dogs were chasing him. He sent me photos. And I felt so loved that he remembered
me in the middle of that and sent me that in the middle of the day. And see, and you identify
what that really was, which it wasn't just a thing, it's what's underneath it. Yes.
Like that he thought, oh, this is so good. I want to share this with her. Yes.
And that's what I mean about you're my favorite person.
Like, all that is is just staying a little bit connected and conscious.
Like, what did that cost?
Nothing.
Cost nothing.
And we get so fixated on these grand gestures.
Like, you know, oh, love is about like these grand, I'm going to plan a birthday party.
I'm going to make it huge.
And listen, there's value in grand gestures.
But like day-to-day things like that, that's the thing.
And by the way, it works in both directions.
Like, I guarantee there's some little thing.
do that you may not even think is that big of a deal. But that's the thing that makes him feel
deeply connected, valued, seen, understood, safe, like emotionally. Like, even just the fact
that he's, you know, you know he loves the dogs as much as you. Because the shared connection
of things you love, like whether that's your children, whether it's companion animals,
whether it's an activity, whether it's a friend group, there's something about knowing like,
oh, this person feels this as deeply as I do.
This person feels this depth of love and connection for, I mean, animals for me is a big thing.
I'm a dog person.
But like, there's something so beautiful about sharing that with someone and knowing, oh, it's
okay, I'm away because this person loves the dogs as much as I do and panders to them as much
as I do and will send me photos and will, you know, do all the little things that I do when I'm
out so that, you know, I know that the dogs feel safe and loved.
To me, like that is so easy.
to just articulate to each other and remind each other.
Like, I don't think it takes the magic away to know that and to hear that.
Like, I think if Chris heard you say, do you know how special that made me feel?
Do you know how beautiful that was?
Like, do you know how much more that makes me love you and feel seen by you when you did that?
I think you'd be like, wow, I was just taking a picture of the dogs.
But meanwhile, like, it's not the thing.
It's what's underneath.
It's what it's emblematic of.
And I feel like so many of us have so many of those things.
But we don't say it.
And they're good and bad.
Like, if you're the kind of person like me, I like all the dishes out of the sink by the end of the day.
Like I'm very, and I like doing dishes because unlike the practice of law, there's like a middle and end and you're done.
And it's like, oh, everything is clean.
Whereas with cases, it's like I could work 24 hours a day and there'd still be more to do.
It's not about like leaving a sink full of dirty dishes.
It's about what are those symbolized?
That symbolizes you know that I like things a certain way and it's not that important to you.
You assume I'm going to take care of this thing and that, you know, you don't have to.
Like it's always the thing under the thing.
And if early on in a relationship when there's still all this abundance of goodwill and connection and optimism,
if that's when you say, hey, let's figure out how to keep this here with these little tiny practical discussions,
communications. Again, whether it's an email we send each other once a week with that list,
or whether it's we go for a walk and it's like our walk and talk once a week and we do this,
I think those kinds of practical little things are the way you stay connected, period.
Well, just to make sure as you were listening or you were watching here on YouTube that you
got just those two simple questions, the first one was, what are three ways that I made you feel
loved? Made you feel love. Yes. And the second one was, what are three ways where I missed
the mark. Yeah. That's it. And you might want to throw in, you know, here are three ways you made me feel
loved this week. Like just to, because again, I'm a believer in that positive reinforcement.
Absolutely. Well, you don't beat your dog into becoming well behaved. Yeah. You love them into it.
You reward good behavior. This is like basic, this is the basic stuff, but we don't do it. We start with,
this is what you did wrong. You know what I mean? You're like, ah. Right. And the entry point in the
conversation is so important because there's so many couples, for example, that, you know, there's
There's something I hear all the time, particularly for men, it's like, oh, we don't have as much sex as we used to.
We used to have so much.
Okay.
So if you walk into your wife and say, you know, we're just not having sex as much as we used to, you know the response.
Well, you're not here.
And when you're here, you're in a terrible mood.
Well, I'm in a terrible mood because we're going.
We're going nowhere good.
Like, no one's walking out of that conversation when let's have more sex.
Everyone's walking out of that conversation going, yeah, this is exactly why we're not having more sex.
Whereas, if you entered that conversation with, God, you know, I was driving down the street the other day.
I remember when we were first dating and we went away to that like cheap B&B, you know, that we didn't like have the money to afford.
And we were supposed to go to that.
And we ended up staying in bed the whole day.
Like, remember, God, I was just thinking about that day.
Like that was so, you know, like when we were so connected physically, I just love that about.
Okay, now?
Now you're like, let's book the hotel.
Let's book.
Right.
Like, because what am I doing?
I'm talking about something weird.
We did at some.
This was us and it's a version of us.
Let's visit it for a second.
Wasn't it great?
Well, here's what I love about that.
Here's what I love about that.
You can use nostalgia and going back to a better time as a reference point to remind both of you of what you miss and something that's underneath all these little things that have led to all this discontent and disconnection and what therapist Terry Real calls normal marital rage and hostility.
I think he called.
What's he call it?
Normal marital.
hostility. Yeah, it's called normal marital resentment. Yeah. That is just about the disconnection,
because I think the resentment comes from knowing deep down you started in a different place.
And I think for a lot of people, you just don't know how to get back. And you think since it
feels so off, what's right in front of your nose is what you're pointing out. Yeah.
Well, we've been told it's supposed to be easy, too. I think that we're constantly barraged in
media with examples of just effortless love. And I think that there is an aspect of love that's utterly
effortless. Like love is an emotion, but love's a verb. What does that mean? Love's a verb. I mean,
love is an emotion. It's a feeling. But it's a verb. Like to love someone is to act with love for them.
Like it's a verb. It's a thing you do. So it's not just something you feel. It's something you act upon
and to act with love towards someone. And so the acting with love towards someone, loving someone,
actively the act of loving them requires a some understanding of them and their blind spots like
what would be wrong with sitting down with your partner at the start of a relationship and saying
look we're going to get in a fight some point it's probably going to be my fault i'm going to say
something stupid i say dumb things all the time so we're definitely going to have an argument at some
point when we do what kind of person are you do you like need a minute should i let it kind of like air out
because if I try to force the conversation, we're going to have a big argument.
Or are you the like, we cannot go to bed angry, we got to work this out, we have to talk about this
tonight.
Because the time to learn that is not when you're in a fight.
Like the time to learn that is when there's this abundance of connection and optimism between the two of you.
And then when that moment comes to have the presence of mind, when you have a conflict to go,
okay, we knew this was going to happen.
And this is how we talked about we're going to try to navigate this together.
Again, like, everything I'm proposing anybody do in their relationship is free.
And it usually doesn't take more than a few minutes.
And by the way, what you said about nostalgia, I think nostalgia is a powerful tool.
But it's not just nostalgia.
It's also framing because there are ways to effectively manipulate the emotional state of your spouse for their benefit.
Please tell us.
As a lawyer, my job is to manipulate people's emotional state.
That's my job.
Like I want the judge to like my client.
I want my client to feel safe.
I want the other side to feel scared.
I want the court reporter to like me.
I want the court officer to like me because they're going to go back in chambers with the judge.
And I want them to go, sex is a really good lawyer.
I don't want him to go, that sexton's so arrogant.
So I got to be real.
I want everyone, not everybody can help me, but damn near everybody can hurt me.
So I'm going to do my best in that courtroom to manipulate everyone's emotional state and have no one think I'm doing it.
Well, here's the other thing, though.
When you're doing it.
Yeah.
you're very authentically intentional.
100%.
Because that's what you actually want.
100%.
And by the way...
Because people hear the word manipulate,
but what you're actually being
is you're being super strategic
because you do want the court officer
to think you're an excellent lawyer.
Listen, I manipulate the screw
because I want the thing to be screwed into the wall.
Yes.
Like manipulation is not in and of itself
anything nefarious.
Yes.
Like what...
An example I've given before
is...
So I, you know, I'm a trial lawyer,
so I try to be like clean shape.
And I don't get to have that like, oops, I didn't know I was sexy stubble that's so popular.
So I have to, like, be clean-shaven.
But on the weekends, I like to not shave.
Like, it's a couple days off from it.
I don't have to be in court.
So it's great.
I don't wear a tie and I don't shave on the weekends.
By, like, the second day, by Sunday, I have, like, scruff and it's kind of coarse.
Yep.
And I was dating a woman who had very sensitive skin.
And any time I would, like, go to kiss her, she would go, like, oh, God, like, your beard's so scratchy.
And immediately in me, I went.
like in my head, like, you know, like, all right, so now I got to shave on the weekends too when I see you.
That relationship didn't work out. Not surprisingly, not for that reason, but it didn't work out.
My next relationship, she had the exact same issue. She had sensitive skin. But her response,
her way of handling it was, I would shave and she would invariably come up and go,
God, I love it when you're clean shaven. Like, it's like you remind me like John Hamm,
like with Don Draper and Mad Men. Dude, I would shave three times a day.
I would constantly, I would shave, and I'd be like, oh, I just shaved today.
And she'd be like, oh, my God, I love it.
Okay, what did she do?
What did she do but manipulate me in a positive way?
Like, all she was doing was saying, instead of framing it as something I'm doing wrong,
she framed it as, here's this opposite thing you do that, oh, I love it.
And now I want to please my partner.
I want my partner to feel good about me and think I'm sexy and think I'm.
So, of course, I'm going to want to move towards.
that and not pull away from it. So a lot of it is about framing. Nostalgia is a very powerful tool,
but it's really like how do we frame what it is we're trying to accomplish here? And really
focusing often on the things that are going well and that you like and tripling down on what they're
doing well. Because, I mean, let's be honest, the world is like constantly criticizing us.
And even constructive criticisms, criticism. And it doesn't feel great. And it doesn't feel great.
to have this person who's supposed to be your favorite person and you're their favorite person,
and they're criticizing you.
Like, everything is criticizing you.
Like, what's right in this connection very often is the cure for what's feeling wrong in it.
And criticism is rarely the path there.
If you really think about kind of all those little mistakes, kind of like a mechanic that can tell you
what's going to go wrong with the car, what do you feel are the list of,
mistakes that people make in long-term relationships that lead to divorce or lead to all the
problems that we may not realize. And I realize that you've already said that underneath it all
is disconnection. But what are those mistakes that we need to really know about? Yeah. I mean,
I think if you start with where are we when we meet and fall in love, we fall in love super fast.
I mean, we really connect with the person so instantaneously.
And then we fall apart the same way we go bankrupt,
which is very slowly and then all at once.
You know, it's like this little tiny, little bit,
little bit of whoop off the cliff.
And so I think it's the same thing with falling out of love.
And so the big relationship killers are infidelity,
financial impropriety, you know, outright deception.
Like, and that's huge.
Like, I would say a good 85% of the divorce
that I'm involved in, infidelity has some role in it.
Why do you think that is?
Because I think we have a human, the same reason why so many people want to get married.
We have a human desire to connect to another person.
I think we're social creatures.
This is something in us.
We want to connect with another person.
We need desperately to be interested and interesting.
And we want to feel loved.
We want physical connection with another person.
We want the attention that comes with physical connection.
You know, we want the, I think we, whether it's marriage and the early days of marriage or dating
or the early days of infidelity, it's not just the other person that we kind of fall for.
It's also who we feel like when we're with them.
You know, like you stand a little taller when someone sees you as so beautiful or so handsome.
Like you feel like a version of yourself.
Like, everyone I talked to in my office who's had affairs, very often they'll say, like, look, I love my spouse.
I never stopped loving my spouse.
But, like, my spouse doesn't find me beautiful or handsome anymore.
Like, nobody, you know, like, and I've stopped.
And then I met this person and, like, I'm fascinating to them.
They tell me how beautiful I am or how handsome I am.
And I actually feel that.
Like, I feel that way.
Because it's so lovely to be told, you know, you're so wonderful.
I'm enjoying being, and even just the two of us right now talking to each other, there's something
so beautiful about, like, oh, what you're saying is so interesting.
I'm enjoying talking to you.
Like, that's such a lovely exchange.
So it's a natural human, like, if you think about, like, the seven deadly sins, you know,
all they really are is like seven very normal human things taken to the wrong level.
Like, we want to eat.
Okay, gluttony.
We need intimate connection with another person.
Lust.
You know, we get angry when someone hurts us, wrath.
Like, if you look at those things, all it is is a normal human thing weaponized.
So I think that's where we, you know, we lose the plot in that we just forget.
Like, the most common thing, again, is just that disconnection.
And that disconnection can be in the form of, I'm disconnected from the me you made me feel like.
Yes.
Which is a me problem, by the way, which typically, by the way, I'm sure you see this, is that
when you have a relationship where there's been infidelity and the person who's cheating is being,
is feeling seen and feeling like they can stand taller and feeling like they're interesting,
the person who's being cheated on is like, well, I wanted that too in our relationship,
you asshole. Like, I was missing that too. And so you can see that the disconnection and the lack of
feeling cared about is happening for both of them. It's happening for both of them.
It's happening for both of them and there were all of these moments where you had like a last clear chance to steer out of that.
But there's like an opportunity for people if they'd communicated early on.
Like, hey, I'm not feeling like I feel like my eye is wandering.
I don't want my eye to want.
Like I want to be good at this job, right?
Like when you marry someone, you're signing on for a job.
Like it's wonderful.
It's bliss.
But it's also a job.
It's got a job description.
You know, like, I'm, and by the way, it's an insane job description.
Like, you're going to be my best friend, best co-parent, best roommate, best travel partner.
Like, wow, really?
Like, that's a big list.
You found one person that can do all of that.
We've convinced people that, no, no, this is your person, and they should be the best at everything.
And if they're not, by the way, maybe your soulmates out there and you miss the boat and you
got to go find that person because life is supposed to be like a hallmark movie, you know.
I feel like anybody that's in a relationship right now is leaning in.
it's easy to feel like roommates. It's easy to fall into a lull. There's other people all around you.
You actually have a chapter in your book, How to Stay in Love, Chapter 19. If we were designing
an infidelity generating machine, it would be Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, social media.
This is page 114. If you're vaguely unhappy with your relationship or marriage, and especially
if you're more than vaguely unhappy with it, stay away from social media.
The vast majority of what you'll find there is unhappiness.
Masked is happiness.
It will fuck with your head, your heart, and your relationship.
And you talk all about how social media is a single greatest breeding ground ever for infidelity.
Nothing that has come before, not swingers clubs, key parties, chat rooms, workplace temptation,
Ashley, Madison, Tinder, grinder.
No, no, no, no, not even porn.
Comes within a thousand miles.
Yeah, I stand by that.
Why?
Because it's just a perfect storm of attacks on the institution of a monogamous marriage.
Like, a, a innocuous reason you should be using this technology.
Oh, meaning you've got to cover.
You're like, I have it all the time for work or whatever.
I wanted it for work, or I wanted to see what this person's up to, or, oh, the Facebook group of blah, blah, blah is, you know, for our kids' thing.
Or, like, there's a million reasons you'd be on your phone that are totally innocuous.
Right. Unlike a strip club. Unlike a strip club. Or if, for example, I think that one of the women at my, one of the moms at my son's soccer practice is attractive.
If the only entry point I have for talking to her would be walking up to her at practice, it's not as threatening because you can't really do that without if.
But now, while we follow each other on social media, because we both are part of that group
that is a group chat, that, you know, and now I also see her vacation pictures.
And now I might innocuously say to her, oh, I saw you guys went to Tulum.
Where did you stay?
We're thinking about going.
And now I'm talking to you.
And I'm talking to you, by the way, privately.
Like, I'm in your DMs.
We're talking.
So it's not only like, it's not like approaching you at the soccer game.
It's like approaching you alone in a restaurant.
Like, and we're just the two of us talking and no one's.
can see what we're saying. You're just creating this perfect storm for people. And by the way,
the performative self. Like, all anyone posts is the best pictures of themselves. And when,
and when are you on your phone looking at social media? Is it when you're having like the greatest
day or the greatest moment? No, you're on the subway. You're on the toilet. You're bored.
Right? You're just bored. You're living your gag reel. And you're looking at everyone's greatest
hits. And you're supposed to walk out of that transaction, feeling deeper connected into your real life
relationship? No, it's a total distraction, but it's a distraction that is going to create all kinds
of enticements and connections that really are not going to be good for your marriage, and you have
total plausible deniability if your spouse has any question about why are you on your phone.
There's a million reasons we'd all be on our phone. So yeah, it's a perfect storm. Like,
as divorce lawyers, we owe the people who made these platforms a debt of tremendous gratitude
because they have given us job security. So if you're in a committed partnership,
Yeah.
What is the kind of ground rules around social media for yourself and for your partner?
I like how you framed that question because I think a lot of this has to do with what are you doing?
Yes.
Because I think most people who are married would like to have a happy marriage.
So just like most people would like to be in good shape.
The question is not what do you want?
It's what are you willing to trade for it?
Like, what are you willing to give up in exchange for that thing?
So I think the first question we have to ask ourselves is, am I using this technology in a way that if my spouse was standing here, I would use it differently?
Like, would I be following these people if my spouse was watching who I follow?
I'm not suggesting we have to monitor each other's social media.
That's, I think, a very personal decision couples have to make.
But I think the best entry point is yourself, right?
because I have much more control over myself than anything else.
So I think starting with, would I be having this communication with this person in this specific
way if my spouse was part of the conversation?
And sometimes it's very obvious that the answer is no.
Like I genuinely think the cure for the entry points of infidelity is monitoring your own behavior.
Like if my spouse was standing next to me, would I be talking to this person this way?
Would I be looking at them this way?
would my body language be what it is if my spouse was standing here?
And if the answer is no, okay, then just notice that.
Notice that.
I'm not saying you have to do it differently, but notice that.
Because you realize, hey, this is a problem.
Like, I know I keep bringing things back to, like, food and fitness.
But, you know, like, I can't, I can control my food environment better than my brain.
Like, if there's potato chips around, I'm eating them.
So I know, okay, I can't have that in the house.
Or if I have it in the house, it's with the understanding.
saying, oh yeah, I'm going to annihilate those potato chips at some point in one sitting, you know,
and that's okay. Like, listen, life is to be enjoyed. But if you, it goes, discipline is trading
what you want now for what you want most. And so what do I want most? I want a long-term satisfying
relationship. I want to be happy in this relationship. I want my partner to be happy in this
relationship. I want both of us to feel fulfilled. I want both of us to feel loved. Like,
that's what I want. James, I am so grateful that you're here.
I have so many more questions.
I could listen to you all day, but I want to hit the pause.
Because if you're like me, I just want to send this to my husband, Chris.
I want to send this to every one of my kids.
I'm sure there are people in your life that are coming to mine.
And I want to give you a chance to share this extraordinary conversation with people that you love.
So take a listen to our amazing sponsors while they share a few words.
Do not go anywhere.
Because James Sexton, he's just getting started.
And coming up, he's going to tell you the three specific things you need to do.
if you're in a relationship that's starting to have a downward spiral,
there's so much more we're going to cover.
Stay with us.
Welcome back.
It's your friend Mel Robbins,
and today you and I are going to spend time with the incredible James Sexton,
who is sharing the best relationship advice that you're ever going to hear.
So, James, the next thing I want to talk about is this.
Let's say that you're at that point in your relationship where,
as the person who's here with us right now is listening and having a panic attack,
because you realize you're in that phase of the relationship
that every long-term relationship goes through.
You've had the fairy tale.
Yeah.
Now you're in maintenance.
Now you're noticing the resentment is hitting.
You're disconnected.
You're not having sex.
You're annoyed at your favorite person all the time.
You're wondering if there's somebody better.
You wish it wasn't this way,
but it's starting to feel like, will we ever get back?
What are some of the things that you should do immediately?
Yeah.
I mean, I think in 25 years of practicing matrimonial law,
what I'd say to you is you're where most people are who are married.
Like, that's where you are.
You're where most people are.
And you probably got there by this succession of small choices
that created this, what I would call, like a downward spot.
spiral where, you know, well, why should I do that? You don't do that. Well, why should I do that? She
doesn't do that. Well, why should. And the good news is, wherever you are, whether that started just
recently or whether you are down in the valley, right? Like, it has just been, I don't remember
what it was like and what it felt like when we were in that great place. You can reverse that
spiral. It works the same. It works the same in the opposite direction. How is the same way
that it went wrong.
Small. Small actions.
Like, start small.
Start with leave a note.
Leave a note.
You're leaving in the morning for work, leave a note.
It was really fun hanging out with you last night.
I married the prettiest girl in the world.
Or, you know, hey, thanks for, you know,
thanks for taking care of that, you know,
thing for me yesterday and calling the cable company.
It really means a lot when my big, strong man,
does things like that.
Whatever.
Like some little courtesy or,
kindness. Cost nothing, takes five seconds to do. You know what you also did? Because you're really good
at manipulating and being strategic. You reminded me in that note of how I felt when we first met.
Yeah. Yeah. Prettyest girl in the world. Strongest guy. Best person on the planet. And why not?
Why not? Like that's so easy throughout the day. Like I tell a lot of my male friends,
if you text your wife in the middle of the day with a song that was like a song important to you
and you send a link to that song and you go, I heard this song in the coffee shop today and I thought of you,
like that's an incredible feeling.
Like it's an intoxicating, wonderful feeling.
Like, and it doesn't take much to just bring someone back to that place.
And by the way, the person's initial reaction might be what inspired that?
Like, because if you're down far enough in the valley, you kind of go like,
But it's not hard to just say, you know what?
I just, I feel like I have to do a better job of like telling you these things.
I think of it a lot, but I sometimes don't say it out bad.
Like, who would not want to hear that?
Like, how much would it take and how much would it cost?
Nothing.
We cost nothing.
To write your spouse an email, here's 10 things I love about you.
10 things.
And by the way, it's not just for them.
Like, they'll love reading that.
But also, like, it's for you.
Like, remind yourself, why did you choose this person?
Like, there's still so much beauty in this person.
There's still so much beauty in you.
Like, why wouldn't you take a moment and just enjoy the warmth of that?
Like, it's right there.
It's, like, no one's going to advertise this to you because it's free.
You don't need to buy a book to learn it.
You don't need to take a course.
There's nothing I can sell you here.
Like, this is just, you have it.
It's right there.
It's right in front of you.
You have to actively steer away from it at some point.
And again, and it's never too late to change that cycle.
I'm thinking about the person who hears that.
Yeah.
The writing the email of 10 things.
And I think we can get so sequestered in our corners that your immediate reaction is either
I can't think of 10 or why aren't they writing it to me.
Yeah.
Or what if they don't respond?
Yeah.
So those are three separate great questions.
And I think I would answer them separately.
So the first one is, what if I can't think of 10 things I love about this person, then maybe
you should consider getting divorced?
What?
I mean, if you're telling me you're married to a person and you can't think of 10 things
you love about them, there are 8 billion people in the world.
Maybe you're married to the wrong one.
Like, sometimes happily ever after means happily ever after separately.
Like, I'm divorced.
My ex-wife is one of my favorite people.
She's amazing.
I love her very much.
There are a lot of people I love that I wouldn't want to be married to.
Actually, all of them.
All of them, right?
Because it's a very specific kind of relationship.
If you're telling me, I can't think of 10 things.
This person I chose out of 8 billion other options to be my most intimate partner in life,
I can't think of 10 things I love about that person.
Maybe you should consider a divorce because that's an insane reason.
And by the way, okay, maybe you've grown so far apart.
My ex-wife has been remarried for 15 years to an amazing guy who's absolutely nothing like
me personality-wise and perfect for her.
And I have to tell you, I love her.
I love him.
We're like a weird family.
But the truth is, like God bless.
Like, God bless.
She found the lid for her pot.
Amazing.
Amazing.
I'm so glad.
I have to tell you 10 things I love about my ex-wife.
She can tell you 10 things she loves about me.
Like, I can tell you 10 things I love about almost anyone in my life.
if you're in a place where you're looking at your spouse and going,
I can't even think of 10 things,
then I think go to therapy and really try to answer that question.
And then try to answer the question,
why would I be married to a person I can't think of 10 things I love about them?
So that's question number one.
Yes.
Question number two is, what if they don't do it back for me?
Yeah.
What if it has, okay, that's where it's scary.
But what's scarier than that is, well, we just won't even try.
Like, I understand so well as a human being.
how vulnerable it feels to express need.
And it's hard for me.
I don't know if it is for you,
but it's hard for me being that kind of person
to say, I really need help.
I can't do this myself.
And it's humbling.
It's getting easier as I age.
It's one of the things I actually like best about aging
is that it's okay for me to say,
like, oh, I need some help with this,
or I'm not so good at that.
Are you good at that?
Can you help me with that?
And maybe there's things I'll be able to help you with,
which by the way, at its best is what marriage is.
So true.
You know, it's about like, hey, how can we become like complementary pieces to each other and to create this beautiful whole together?
So I think that's an amazing opportunity is to really say to yourself like, hey, I'm going to try.
I'm going to try.
And it's brave to try.
And it's scary.
But, like, if you're not scared, it's not brave.
Like, it's only brave if you're scared and you do it anyway.
So I think that most of us, if love is on the line, if our marriage is on the line.
line, like, we can be brave. Like, you believed in Santa Claus for seven years. You can believe in
yourself for 15 minutes, you know, like just just really like, you know, five, four, three, two, one,
like go, you know, like just do the thing, you know? So I think try. And at least that way you'll
know where you stand. Because if you've now made a concerted effort where you've tried a few times
to really reach out to this person in a consistent way and create some connection between,
and it's been rebuffed every time, then I think you're going to have a much clear
understanding of where you're really at in that relationship. And that might guide you in a direction
like my office. I believe some marriages need to end. I genuinely do. I've seen some people very
successfully divorce, many of which then go on to find love that is more deep and connected for them
and real joy. They're better people and they're better parents after their divorce. And I
think we do the world a disservice to view all divorces as failures. I don't believe it's a failure.
I don't believe my divorce was a failure. It produced two amazing children that are now amazing adults.
I became a better man by virtue of my connection to her. I'd like to think she would say the same about herself.
She went on to find tremendous love in her life. I have too. There's tremendous value in connecting well,
disconnecting bravely and maturely if you can do it. What did you learn about yourself and about
relationships by going through your own divorce? My divorce was, you know, very boring because we're both
very reasonable people who concede the possibility of our own error. And we fell in love as like
teenagers, basically. We met in college and we got married at 22 and had a kid at 24. So we were
babies. What I learned is that, you know, that there are a lot of people in the world that I love
that I wouldn't be appropriately married to. I also learned that the job,
of a husband and of an ex-husband are two different things. I'm a really good ex-husband. I'm a really
good father. I'm not a great husband. Like, I don't have the patience. I don't have some of the
skills that I think are really good in a husband. Like, I think a husband is very comfortable sort of,
like, accommodating their will to that of the other and their patient in some important ways. And,
like, as an ex-husband and a co-parent, I was great at it. Like, I was consistent, reliable, dependable,
good communicator. I'm a good dad. Like, I put my kids first. I always, like, you know, still even as
adults, I love them and I make time for them and they're always, you know, my priority. And I always,
you know, as an ex-husband, like, had a tremendous love and respect for my co-parent. I always,
every mother's day would make sure my kids, you know, had gifts for her. Every birthday, every
Christmas, I'd make sure they had things for their mom. Then when she got remarried, I sat down with her
new husband at the time and said, like, okay, I'm going to, like, do you want to get her birth,
Day gift for the boys now? Because I don't want them empty-handed. Like, they're going to feel
self-conscious, but I also don't want to overstep. Like, I'm going to still do Mother's Day,
because that's what she is to me for my sons. But maybe you'll get the boys' Christmas gifts
with her. And like, we had this discussion. He was a divorced guy himself. So we were like,
it was this really lovely, like, oh, how are we going to shape-shift this dynamic? So I learned a lot
about how you can disconnect in like a very beautiful way and have a non-traditional kind of family
that, you know, is joyful.
I learned a lot about how divorces don't have to always be the kinds of things that I was handling
even at that time. I was already a divorceler at that time.
And I really thought divorce was always this knock-down, drag-out battle that you need someone
like me.
And you don't always need, like, you can do it with a scalpel.
You don't always need a chainsaw.
Like, I'm kind of a chainsaw.
And so it was really lovely for me to learn.
Because, you know, if you think about divorce, the ones you hear about, like if I go to a cocktail party, I don't go to a lot of cocktail parties.
But if I went to a cocktail party and so he said, what do you do for a living?
And I saw, I'm a divorce lawyer.
And they go, oh, my God, you must have stories.
And I said, oh, my God, if I got one, there was this couple and they got married when they were quite young.
And then, you know, the Venn diagram of their interests kind of didn't intersect as much.
And they grew in different directions.
And then they amicably divided, you know, their property.
And they continued to co-parent their children that they both love a whole lot.
You'd be like, that is the most boring story ever.
Like, I've talked more about my divorce in this conversation than I probably have in the last five years because it's not that interesting.
I actually think it's super interesting because it shows that there is a different possibility in terms of how you can conduct yourself.
Right, right.
Both during it, during the marriage, at the end of the marriage, during the divorce.
Yeah.
And it's all about normalizing.
Like, so much of what I think has gone right in our culture in the last 10 years is normalizing certain things, like normalizing therapy.
normalizing mental health issues.
We need to normalize pre-ups.
We need to normalize what a civil divorce can look like,
what a cooperative co-parenting relationship can look like.
It does not have to be,
because the kind of people that talk about their divorce constantly
are people who were terribly wounded by it.
I understand.
It became a formative trauma in their lives,
and it became something that everything comes back to.
I get that.
I've seen a lot of people who've been victimized by that kind of a divorce.
But that has now become culturally what we think divorce looks like.
And that is the unbelievable minority of divorces.
Wait a minute.
So the minority of divorces are the high conflicts.
People are destroyed for years after.
What is the majority?
The majority is to people that at some point were deeply connected to each other,
lost the connection, and now have usually children in common.
or extended family in common and they need to end the relationship, but they don't hate each other.
Or if they're angry at each other, their love for their children is much greater than their dislike of each other.
Like I always tell people, a divorce is like a table. It's got four legs. There's you and your lawyer and the other side and their lawyer.
All you need is one of those legs to be off. It doesn't matter how nice and straight the other legs are. That table's falling down.
Like one irrational person or one person with like bad faith intentions is going to make this into something much uglier than it needs to be.
I want to finish up the topic of the signs.
Yeah.
And really giving the person listening the just resources or the awareness so that if there's a chance for this to spiral back up, you can.
you know, based on all your experience, what are the signs that you are headed for a breakup or for
divorce, the ones that you actually see, like, because I bet you go to a party or you can walk into a
room and you can literally be like, in a year, five years, they're in trouble.
What you have to do first is look at your baseline.
So like, look at what it was you did when you were still connected to each other.
Like, how did you interact with each other? How often did you have physical intimacy? How often did you spend time together just the two of you? What did you do separately and what did you do together? Because until you look at your baseline, you won't know how far you've drifted from your baseline. Relationships change. People change, their bodies, everything changes. But the question is, is, did it change by default or by design? Have you ever thought or talked about as a couple why it's changed? And are we both okay with that? Or is it something that one or
both of us feel like, hey, we might have lost something in that process.
So I think, again, baseline is a really important thing to be thinking about.
Then one of the first things I observe when I'm seeing the cracks in a couple,
like when I walk into a room or I'm watching, you know, one of those housewife shows,
and I'm like, oh, they're definitely getting divorced.
And they're definitely getting divorced.
Like, I often tell people, to me, the surest indicator of a divorce is not anything anyone says.
It's a sound.
And it's this sound.
It's just that, like,
like when the other person's talking and there's just this like, oh, like what? Yeah, what? Yeah, okay.
Like, why are you bothering me with what you're saying? Or that like kind of eye rolling. Like,
it's just those subtle discourtesies and disrespects. It's the tone. It's the body language.
Like, that's a huge piece. So I would, when you're looking at signs, look at how you physically relate to
each other. I mean, you've seen couples, I'm sure.
Where it's like, why are they married?
Even when they touch each other, it's like, you know, when you're first together, like you touch your skin.
And it's like an electric bolt through you of like, oh my God, this person touched me.
It's like, oh my God, our legs touched.
Like it's just that.
I mean, and thank God that passes or we just never get anything done, you know.
But it's supposed to sort of pass and become like still something comfortable and connected
because all that person, maybe you don't like holding hands.
That's okay.
But maybe they're trying to connect with you.
So do you want to connect with them?
And if it's that I don't like sweaty hands, okay, so put your arm around me.
Like, you know, lean in and do something.
Like, meet each other halfway.
There's a lot of these little tiny physical and verbal disconnections.
Like, even just the act of when your spouse is talking to you, if you are on your goddamn phone.
Like that to me, like watching couples sitting there, one of them is talking and the other one is sort of going through the phone.
and you see them doing that, what?
Yeah, uh-huh, uh-huh.
Like, all I'm saying to you is you're not important.
You're not important.
You're not as important as this.
And then what do you meet that with?
Very often people meet it with like,
they'll either keep going and condone that behavior,
or they'll stop and go, well, I'll let you finish.
Go ahead, no, no, finish what you're doing on the phone.
And now that feels accusatory because that person's like,
well, no, I was trying to look at this thing.
They weren't trying maybe to insult you.
The two things I say that everybody accuses me of being unromantic,
that I actually think are two very romantic sentiments is one, marriage is a job.
It has a set of roles and responsibilities.
You signed up for it.
You didn't have to take it.
There were other positions available and you chose this one and you can quit if you want to.
You know, and you can go get a different one if you want to.
So it's a lot like a job.
And it's a job that theoretically you want to be good at because you want happiness, right, in this exchange.
James, you are incredible.
And I bet you're thinking the same thing.
James is not only incredible, the timing is incredible. This is exactly what you needed to hear. It's what
you needed to be reminded of. It's so hopeful. It's simple. And I'm sure you're thinking of your
favorite person. And here's what I want you to do. I want you to share this episode with them
because this is something that will make your relationship better. It's something that's going
to expand love in your life. So go ahead and share this. Take a minute to listen to our sponsors
and don't go anywhere because we will be right back. Stay with us. You know, for the past two years,
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to hear from the incredible James Sexton. Thank you for sharing this with people that you love.
So, James, let's get back into this.
Is there something that you recommend in the middle of an argument to just defuse it or diffuse yourself?
I think the worst time to learn how to fight is when you're in a fight.
I think in advance there should be some, you know, it's almost like what's a safe word?
Like there should be a word that we've agreed in advance is we're ejecting from this conversation and we'll continue it at another time.
Like we both know where the other one lives.
You know, like we'll find each other.
So like if you have like, you know, a phrase, like how about them Mets?
Like something that just has nothing to do with any discussion you're having, that should be the phrase that, like, I don't think this is productive.
And I think we're going down a road that's dangerous.
And you should agree on it in advance.
And you should make a commitment to each other that, listen, I'm not saying that that ejects us out of this conversation for good.
Because that would be a great way to just, you know, it's like a like you get a hall pass in the conversation.
We'll never bring it up again.
Right.
What we're saying is, listen, this will be deferred for 24 hours or this will be deferred for a max.
of X number of hours or days or whatever it might be.
Because the corners you back yourself into, you've got to figure out ways to get out of.
I mean, think about the commitments you've made to this person.
I'm going to love you, you, you, and only you for eternity.
And you can't make the commitment of, hey, listen, if we're in an argument and one of us
feels like this isn't productive or we're feeling really hurt, we're going to say this phrase,
and that phrase will mean we have to call a time out.
And two, you know, you can't really love someone.
And more importantly, like, you can't really feel someone's love until you show them a really
honest and vulnerable version of yourself.
Like, I'm a great performer in a courtroom, you know, and I can present however I need to
present.
But if in my relationship, I am playing the character of like the best version of myself,
and I don't let this person see any of my soft spots or any of my vulnerabilities or any of
the shit I need to work on, any of the things I get wrong, the things I'm afraid of,
I'll never feel their love. Like, I'm depriving myself because I'll always have in my head,
oh, no, no, if they knew me, they wouldn't love me. They love me because they bought the character
I'm selling them. So I'm depriving myself by not showing this person these weak, difficult,
challenging parts of myself. But here's the thing. If someone is brave enough to show you those
things in a fight, if you weaponize those things, that is a despicable and almost irreparable
thing to do to someone. Because really what is divorce at its worst, but intimacy weaponized.
Because intimacy is not sex. Intimacy is the ability to be completely yourself with another person,
like your honest, authentic self with another person. And so to take the vulnerability and the
soft spots that a person has shown you in good faith so they could feel connected to you and you
guys could trust each other and each feel like you can show each other the soft spots to in a fight
in a moment of anger to weaponize that is a really, really awful kind of betrayal.
So I would always tell people like have some ground rules, like no low blows.
Like listen, I like the UFC. I like a good fight. I've trained Brazilian jiu-jitsu for 20 years.
Like most of my best friends have broken my nose at some point.
I'm telling you, like, have a fair fight.
Like, if you have to have a fight, have an ability to call a time out and keep it a fair
fight.
There's a couple of sentences you have somewhere in the back of your head that you know,
if you said them out loud to him, you would reduce him to a pile of tears in the corner.
Yes.
And he knows those sentences, too, about you.
He has some sentences he could say that are all of your scaredest, most vulnerable
pieces of you. And I know that because you love each other and you've been together a really long time
and you can't love someone for that duration with that depth and with that much affection
without having been vulnerable to that person. Or shitty to them. Right. But the truth is,
is having knowledge of what that is, having that ammunition is an incredible responsibility.
And it's something, it's like having the nuclear codes of the relationship. And like keep them locked,
like don't use them because just like nuclear weapons like you get to use them once and then the
whole world blows up so like don't do i've seen people who in a moment of anger let that fly and
you can't take that back you can't you can't bring that in you know and so really give more
thought in advance to when we disconnect we do we disconnect like as a parent you know who do you
love more than your kids. And when they're in middle school, you're telling me you didn't want to
kill them? Like, I tell my sons all the time. I'm like, I never disliked anyone as much as I
dislike both of you in middle school. And by the way, I know you disliked yourself more than anything
in middle school. Like, you'll never meet a human being in their life who goes the best years of my
life for middle school. It's always the happiest person in middle school is miserable. But the truth is,
like, you love your kids, but you also are like, okay, I have to have some ground rules and how I'm
going to interact with them. Not in... Moments of
love, it's easy. It's moments of tension that you have to think about in advance and figure out
how to not back yourself into quarantine. That's a great framework thinking about kids or even work.
Like there are those days you want to just go on a tear and if you did, you'd get fired or you'd
cancel yourself. But isn't it funny how many things about marriage? Like we put marriage in this
weird category and it's just really another relationship. It is. Like, you know, I often use
the analogy of dogs because I love dogs, but I have two senior citizen dogs. I have a 15-year-old and a
16-year-old dog. And I know I'm, you know, I'm playing with the house's money at this point.
I'm on borrowed time with these guys. And I've had them since they were babies. Receipts are due.
Yeah. And I'm enjoying every minute I have. But I have to tell you, like, I've never once
looked at my 15-year-old dog who's deaf and thought, dude, I've got to get a puppy.
Like, these are this dogs so old and it, like, hardly can hear it. I've got to carry it downstairs now.
And puppies are so cute and they're fun and they run around and we play ball and they can jog with me.
Like this dog's so old.
Dude, I love this dog more than every day.
Like this, the scent of the dog.
It's like this is, you know, but yet with love, like our romantic partner, it's this constant feeling of like, well, there's a younger model out there and there's a more compelling model like there.
So it's like how you do anything is how you do everything.
Like if somebody said to me, I'll give you, well, you have dogs.
You have two dogs.
Uh-huh.
Okay.
So two dogs.
Let's try this.
All right.
If I told you, I'll give you $100 million for your dogs.
You would say no.
No.
Okay.
Well, I can pay my bills right now.
I applaud you.
There's that baseline.
So if I said to you, God forbid, not going to happen, but you have 30 days left with
one of your kids no matter what.
Okay, you only have 30 days.
Would you take $100 million then for those 30 days?
You're going to lose them in 30 days anyway.
Would you give me $100 million if I give you for that?
No.
Because why?
Because the time would even be more precious knowing that it was so short. Okay, that's love. That's love. That's as good of a definition of love as I could ever come up with. Like that there is something beyond any other kind of value that you attribute to the connection you have to this, no matter how finite it is. Because a hundred years from now, no one you love will be here and no one who loves you will be here. So this is finite. We're losing everything all the time. And I say that as a divorce lawyer for 25 years.
and I say it as a hospice volunteer for 20 years.
Like, we're losing everything all the time.
That's what makes it precious.
That's what makes it beautiful.
That's what makes it worth paying attention to
because I don't have unlimited time.
Guess what?
We don't have unlimited time with anything in our life.
So why wouldn't we just commit to, like,
this much preventative maintenance?
Well, you do have this really beautiful chapter later
in the book, How to Stay in Love, that's all about writing a letter.
Oh, okay.
And this is on page 238, and you talk about the power of writing a letter to the person that
you're in a relationship with, a really deep personal letter.
Would it be weird to write a letter to someone you've shared a bed with for years,
whom you see and talk to dozens of times a day?
Even for those who can find the right words when speaking, writing things out may help
you to better organize. Why am I getting emotional? To better organize and hence understand what you really
want to say. Even if you end up not writing the letter to your partner, I know mediators who encourage
their clients to come to the first meeting with a letter to their X to be because it, quote,
lubricates communication, as one put it to me. If at least some people in the midst of divorce can do that,
it should be way easier for those in love, knowing that their partner is receptive to,
maybe even hungry for communication and intimacy.
Anything that might ease communication in a divorce should apply far more effectively
in a loving relationship.
Write a letter to your partner.
List at least five things they do that you appreciate.
Tell them a few things they do that upset you.
Tell them what you are craving but not getting from them.
tell them a few things you are getting and are incredibly grateful for. Tell them a story from your
shared history and as much detail as you can that you remember fondly. Maybe write a mini chronicle of your
marriage. It's been said that the unexamined life is not worth living. My experience has taught me
that the unexamined marriage is not sustainable. So write your spouse a letter. Make it simple
or make it detailed, but make it authentic and honest. You love him, right? Yeah. Yeah, I stand by that.
You know, what I didn't say in there, and I think is worth saying is even if you don't give it to your spouse,
it's worth writing that letter. Like, I'll share with you, you know, when my mom passed away 10 years ago
after a long battle with cancer, we had a complicated relationship. And I remember talking to my therapist
about it and saying like, you know, there's so many things like I wanted to say to her that I didn't
get to say. Because it just wasn't, we just, I don't know, it just wasn't, you know, she was so ill
and there was just no opportunity to have that conversation. And he said, you know, write or a letter.
Like, write or a letter and say all the things that you needed to say. So I did. I took the time.
I wrote this long letter saying all the things I needed to say. I brought it into therapy
and I read it out loud, weeping.
And then he said, I'm going to give you another piece of homework.
And I said, okay, he said, write a letter back from her.
And say all the things you needed to hear.
That was much harder.
Because it forced me to think about, like, what is it, what is it I needed from this person?
Like, what is it I needed to hear to heal?
And so even though, like, she never got to read that letter.
and even though the letter I wrote from her was from an imagined version of her.
Yeah.
It was one of the most powerful exercises I've ever.
And I've since then used that technique in my life when I'm having a really difficult time with a person in my life,
where I'll write a letter of all the things that I feel like I needed to say to them,
often not that I would ever give them.
And then I'll write back, like, what is that I needed to hear from them?
What is that I want to hear from them?
what would be their perfect response to this?
And very often, like, it reminds me that the answers to these things are sometimes inside me.
Like, like, the wisdom you find on mountaintops is the wisdom you brought up there.
Because sometimes you just find yourself thinking, like, you know, what is it I needed her to say?
Because I know, I don't have to hear her say it.
I knew it.
You know, when I wrote the letter back from my mom, a lot of it was, hey, I wasn't mad at you.
I've been sick for a really long time.
And I was in pain and it wasn't you.
And even though she never got to say that, I thought, oh, you know that.
Like you know that.
Or you couldn't have written it if you didn't know it.
But just writing it, the act of writing it and giving it voice and reading it out loud, even if there was no one else in the room.
So writing a letter to anyone in your life you're having a challenge with, writing a letter back from them with what it is you need to hear from them, even if you never do anything with that.
you never edit it and give it to the person or anything like that.
You're just framing in your head what's really going on here inside of me?
Because I'm in here.
This is what's amazing to me about marriage is I feel like after 53 years of walking around on this planet and 20 in therapy,
I get myself like 75%.
Okay?
And I'm in here.
Like I'm in here.
And I get about 70%.
What hope do I have of understanding 100% of the person sitting across the table from me or laying in the bed next to me?
I'm in here and I get 75% of it.
And I'm going to get mad at myself because I don't understand this person 100% and get them what they need 100%.
I don't get me what I need 100% of the time.
I don't get me what I need 50% of the time.
I screw it up constantly and they go, why did you do that to yourself?
Give ourselves and each other some grace.
And just realized that, listen, this is just about understanding ourselves what we need, what we want,
this person helping them understand what they need, what they want, and then figuring out how to do that dance.
If you had to save a marriage with one thing, what would it be?
I think the most important way to save a marriage is to pay attention.
I think we just stopped paying attention.
Like whoever discovered water, it wasn't a fish.
When you're in it, you just stop.
seeing it. And I think there's so much going on that you just don't see. And I think if you paid attention,
you might see, like you might step out of the water and see. And I think because marriage is
very often about this deep kind of proximity, it becomes the water. Like it just becomes this
thing that's around you all the time. And you stop seeing it. And you stop seeing it. And, and you stop seeing it.
And I think if you paid attention to what's going on inside of you and to what's going on with
this person, I think most things, the solution comes from that first step.
That's, I think, the most beautiful answer I've ever heard about a marriage.
And, of course, I love David Foster Wallace.
Yeah, so good, so good.
I actually reread that essay quite often.
because I actually think it's fascinating how often I have to be reminded of that.
You know, if you don't know the essay we're talking about,
which became this very, very viral graduation speech that David Foster Wallace,
the writer gave before he died.
At Kenyan University.
Yeah.
It's out there.
I think it's called This Is Water.
They published it as something called This Is Water,
but you can actually watch a video of it.
And there's this poignant moment the essay hangs on where two fish or swimming
and they pass another fish
and one of them says the other,
hey, how's the water?
And he says, what's water?
Yeah.
And then it unravels
into this unbelievably
profound essay
about how much of life
you're missing
because you're just not present.
And the thing that was beautiful
about that essay
is I think he realized
something that maybe not every person
who's writing the story
in their head realizes,
which is,
you could just as easily cast the characters as villains or heroes.
And, you know, he talks about in the essay how, like, the person in line in front of you,
you know, who's, like, in a bad mood, you can just say, oh, they're an awful person,
or, like, maybe they have a sick relative at home.
And this is, like, the only minute that they manage to get out, and they're so stressed.
And he's like, and if you just reframe, like, it's just as easy to tell yourself that story
as it is to tell yourself the story where they're the villain in your story.
the hero, if you judge me as a parent by my greatest moment of parenting, you're giving me too much credit.
And if you judge me as a parent by my weakest, worst moment as a parent, you're not giving me enough credit.
I'm really kind of the aggregate of all of those things.
Well, that's a lesson to bring to your marriage, because in your marriage, anytime someone tells me
the story of their life and they're the hero of the story, I'm instantly skeptical.
Well, that's a really good insight because we all have that friend, particularly the one going through a divorce,
where the narrative is, evil, evil, evil, evil, evil, evil, evil, because you're hurt.
Of course.
And there's no self-awareness to say, well, you know, I haven't met affectionate in three years,
so I can kind of see how the door opened up for them to walk away or find somebody else,
or I really have some reflecting.
And just going back to that essay and the moment in the essay of not seeing the water,
and also you can choose to write a story about the rude person.
It goes back to the original thing that you said.
You always have the opportunity to remind yourself
that a really good relationship is one
is where you can be in the narrative,
this is my favorite person.
Even if they're pissing me off right now,
even if I have a lot of evidence
for the things that have gone wrong,
even if I'm scared, we're headed for divorce,
I can still stand in a narrative that this is my favorite person.
I at least remember a time when they were.
Yeah.
And what are the core components of that beauty that you saw in them that are still there?
Yes.
That are still there.
If they've changed, what changed them?
Because it's rarely like a nefarious thing, right?
Like, you know, if I let myself get out of shape, it's not that I was like, oh, I really want to be in bad shape.
You know, like when my mom was actively on hospice, I gained 30 pounds because I took such
like pleasure, like everything hurt it felt like. So I would eat dinner every night and I would
just eat anything. I would eat like delicious because it just gave me like a moment of sensory
pleasure. And I remember like people who I knew but only knew casually through work being like,
oh, Jim, you've been putting on a couple pounds. I just remember like it hurts so badly because
I wanted to say to them, like, do you understand this is the only thing I have right now?
Like, is that food tastes good?
Like, everything else hurts right now.
And I feel like if we looked at our partners and went, okay, this, even if they're not
currently my favorite person, they were.
I think it's a really important tool that I want to make sure as you're listening and watching,
you land the plane on that one and understand that it's a tool, which is if you're in a
patch in your relationship where things are really challenging. Okay. Or you hear that phrase,
you're my favorite person because I ran to the bathroom and bumped into somebody that was coming
out of the bathroom and like, oh my God, James is unbelievable. And he can boil relationships down
to one sentence. You're my favorite person. And the person coming out of the bathroom looked
at me and said, oh my God, that's hard. I think it's hard because
I think it's scary to think that no one could love us that way.
And it's also scary to think that anyone could.
I think those are equally terrifying.
Like, as a human being, I find both of those things terrifying.
I find the prospect that I could ever feel that way about another person
and I would know I'm going to someday lose them is terrifying.
and to consider the possibility that someone could actually know me, all of the stuff in me,
and go, no, you're my favorite person.
To me, like, that's, I mean, there's nothing more incredible than the possibility of that.
When I look back at my life, every single thing that meant anything was some connection
to another person, someone I loved, someone who loved me, a moment where I felt loved.
truly and deeply for who I am, where I felt joy for being in the presence of someone who loved me or who I loved,
when I felt joy of just being in the presence of love.
As a hospice volunteer, I will tell you, nobody I've ever done hospice visits with wants to talk about the fact that they're dying.
It's not that interesting. It's something that they're confronting all the time. They're aware of it.
They don't want to talk about it. They don't need to talk about it. It's their present reality.
They want to talk about their life. They want to talk about the people they love. They're not that.
interested in the things they owned. They're interested in the connections they made,
the impact they made, and when they were loved. Like feeling loved, I think, is the most powerful
thing in the world. And there are a lot of people who don't feel loved ever in their life.
And sometimes that's their circumstance. And sometimes it's that they haven't had the real
courage it takes to let someone see the truth of you.
From your best-selling book, How to Stay in Love, this is page 248.
When is the last time you and your spouse discussed what it specifically means to be happy
and how you each define that term?
When was the last time you discussed in specific terms what a satisfying sex life is for each of you?
These should be conversations you look forward to.
They're about being happy and about fucking.
for fuck's sake. You're married. That means you're in the same car, driving on the same road.
Logic says you should be headed toward the same destination. Are you? Who selected that destination?
Is it where you both want to get? Is it one of you crawling out the back window while the other one plows
ahead blindly? Yeah. Yeah, I think we don't ask enough questions about what's going on in our
relationships. I mean, in terms of where are we going? Like, what's the story we're writing together?
You know, you'd never, I live in New York City. You'd never get in a cab and just go drive.
You know, you say where it is you want to go, and then you can have a conversation about what's
the best way to get there. But, you know, to some degree, we learn about relationships by watching
our parents, or the environment we grew up in, and by watching popular media. And now by
watching curated images on social media. So those are the three ways to do it. I don't think any of
those is a particularly honest or great teacher necessarily. And you know, marriage is very much rooted
in tradition. And tradition, I think, is really two things in varying measure. It's the wisdom of the
people who came before us and what they have to teach us. And it's peer pressure exerted by dead
people. When you're doing something because it's tradition, like, why did you get married? Well,
my mom and dad got married and my grandparents got married and my great-grandmother got married.
And by the way, the reason your great-grandmother got married is because her mother got married,
right? So your great, great-great-great-grandmother got married. Okay, your great-great-grandmother used a buggy whip.
Do you have a buggy whip? Like, are all the technologies that made, did she have the entire sum total
of human wisdom available in a device held in her hand that comes from the sky? Because that's incredible.
Like, she lived in a different universe than the one you navigate on a daily basis. Why would you think
the technology of marriage that worked for her will work for you the same way with the same tools?
And all you need to do is watch how this was done in this apprenticeship model of figuring out what
marriage looks like. Your relationship, your rules, the two of you. It's the only two people that
matter is the two of you. Are you happy? The two of you. Do you have a rhythm that works for you?
You know, I posted something a couple of weeks ago where I was talking about how I personally
don't understand why people sleep in the same bed. Just for me, I just don't get it. Like two adults
and two dogs, it's a lot in a bed. Like, I'm not saying. Well, you also have a broken nose.
So you probably are a big snore. I'm not sure I want to be in that. And the truth is, like,
If you think about it, like, hey, listen, like spend time in bed, have fun in bed, all those things.
They go sleep in your own bed like a civilized person.
Now, again, this is my personal feeling.
People had a lot of feelings about this.
It had hundreds of thousands of comments.
Why do you think people had a lot of feelings about that?
Because I think people hear anyone's saying, here's what's important in my relationship,
as you're doing it wrong in your relationship.
And all I'm actually trying to get anyone to do is just let's all come out of the closet a little bit.
Like, let's all come out and say, you know, my spouse and I do this.
It works for us.
Because once you start doing that, everybody at the table starts to go, oh yeah, we do that too.
To me, that's the best stuff in life, is that intimacy, is those little tiny shared private joys.
Like, that's the coolest, most wonderful thing.
We don't share that with each other.
And by the way, it's not for public consumption necessarily,
but just sharing that, like, give it a shot and see,
like, that might be the cure for the disconnection between the two of you
is to be silly sometimes together.
Or maybe, you know, it really is, like, well, we have to sleep in the same bed.
Who told you that you have to sleep in the same bed?
Maybe you were the kind of people that would be more comfortable
sleeping in separate beds.
Or maybe one of you or both of you think it's really important
to be in the cave together, curled up, holding each other.
Like, all that matters is this.
two of you coming up with rules that makes sense for you? Who cares how many times a week I have
sex? How many times a week did the two of you feel satisfied with having sex? If it's good enough
for the two of you, no one else's business. It's no one else's business. Well, I think the reason
why people get so offended by that opinion is that if you're honest with yourself, you're clinging
to very surface-level pieces of evidence of connection.
Yeah, we're doing great.
That the ring on the finger or the fact that we're in the same bed,
that that means you're connected.
And when somebody erupts,
it's because you're showing us all
that connection is actually something else.
And again, like, I love that
because the truth is we live in a symbolic world.
As humans, we're constantly making meaning,
we live in a symbolic world.
Like, why do I wear a tie?
Why do I wear a suit?
Like, why couldn't I just go to court
and jeans and a t-shirt?
Like, I wear this suit for a re-
when you wear a suit,
why do you wear a suit to a job interview
or a funeral or a wedding?
Because you're saying,
this suit is a statement.
The statement is, I take this seriously.
This thing I'm doing, I take it very seriously.
And what you're, what you taught us today
or what you taught me
is that the symbols of I'm sleeping in a bed
or I have a ring on my finger or we've been together for 32 years.
That's actually not the symbol of connection.
It's do you show up and treat somebody as if they're your favorite person?
Yeah.
Yeah, because here's what I'll tell you.
And it's a hot take and it's an unfalsifiable premise, so it's safe.
I genuinely believe that the connection that you have with Chris
and that many of the very happily married people that I know,
if you took off the ring, if you took away the government's involvement,
they would still be two people who were each other's favorite person
and loved each other more than anything
and wanted to stay together forever,
not because they were afraid of giving away half their things
but because their life is better,
because this person is next to them.
And to me, that's worth fighting for.
That's worth building.
That's the thing worth protecting,
if you're lucky enough to have found it.
Like I say sometimes marriage is like the lottery.
You're probably not going to win.
But if you win, what you win is so fantastic,
why wouldn't you buy a ticket?
Why wouldn't you try?
Why wouldn't you?
And unlike the lottery,
there are very specific practical things you can do
that will increase the chances of you succeeding at this thing.
And they're not difficult.
They don't require you to buy anything.
They don't require grand gestures, which is, by the way, why you're not hearing about it from advertisers, because there's nothing to buy.
There's no course to take. There's nothing. Like, it's all stuff you already naturally know how to do and what to do, because it's all the same things that if someone did it for you, it would make you feel seen and loved and heard and important.
James Sexton, what are your parting words?
Oh my gosh. You need to get me speechless. I think my parting words are, you know, love each other.
fearlessly. It's the bravest thing in the world. Like it's the bravest and best thing in the world.
And I genuinely believe that we're worthy of love. I genuinely believe almost everything we do every day
is to find love, be worthy of love, and keep love. And I think it boils down to two words and four words.
pay attention, and you're my favorite person.
I cannot tell you how completely floored I am by you.
I feel so grateful that you are doing the work that you're doing.
I'm so moved by everything that you shared and even just pay attention and you're my favorite
person.
Those are two things that are going to immediately.
improve and deepen my relationship with Chris because it's a skill that we have to continue.
It's the rep that you do in a relationship.
But I think, you know, what you're standing in like awe of and moved by is what's inside
you.
Like it's the feelings inside of you for Chris and for the people in your life that you love
and the love that of theirs that you feel towards you and how that makes you view
yourself because you know it's authentic and real that love. And if you can love yourself the way that
those people love you, like, that's the greatest superpower ever. And so, like, I think this is just
what love's supposed to be is that we bring this out in each other. We bring out in each other.
Yes. What's in there? Yeah. That's all. Yeah. Well, thank you for absolutely everything.
Thanks for having me. It's great to see you. It's great to, it's great to stand in the presence of it when people, like, there's so much that I have to learn from people like you and Chris who have maintained that connection. And I feel like for me, there's tremendous value when I get to talk about these things because I'm learning it. It's moving me in the same way. You know, like this is all, I could say this every day and I would still lose the plot sometimes. So. Well, I'll tell you one thing that really struck me is when you said, ask,
yourself if you're in one of those moments in your relationship, what's changed. And if I look back
on the period of time where Chris and I really struggled and you can point at the stress of life
and the financial pressure we were under and just everything that was going on. But what we've now
really realized is that a lot of what changed was that his father died in the middle of it.
Yeah. And it's only recently, and this would have been 19 years ago. I mean,
that he really understand how that just changed him and I didn't see it.
Yeah, and grief, you know, sneaks up on you.
Yeah.
And especially, too, when, like, Chris, you navigate the terrain of that.
Yes.
Like, it's a familiar terrain.
You sort of feel like, oh, I'm exempt from it.
Like a physician who's like when they get ill.
Yeah.
You know, but it's like, no, no, no.
Like, this is different.
Like, experiencing it outside of the connection of self and family.
And it puts yourself where you stand in the history of things.
things. And, you know, it's all sort of impermanence at the end of the day. But I have to tell you,
I think, again, if you pay attention, all of that is there. I've learned firsthand as a divorce
trial lawyer for almost three decades now, how much ugliness and anger is in all of us. And I've
also learned how much beauty is in all of us. And I try in my relationship with the world to bring
what I think people bring in a good marriage, which is they cling to the possibility of the good
in us, and they try to overlook the possibility of the fool in us. And there's nothing to me more
beautiful than that. Well, James Sexton, thank you for showing us what to pay attention to.
Thank you. So we can experience all the possibilities that love and relationships have for us.
And I also want to thank you. Thank you for making the time to listen to or watch.
this conversation. I know you feel so moved. I hope you will share this generously. I hope you've
already shared it with your favorite person. And in case no one else tells you today as your friend,
I want to tell you that I love you and I believe in you. And I believe in your ability to create a
better life. And I know based on everything that I was reminded of, everything that James taught us
today, that I have tools to create a better life because this is going to lead to more love,
better relationships, and we all deserve that.
Alrighty, I'll see you in the very next episode.
I'm going to welcome you in the moment we hit play.
Okay, are we ready?
Okay, here we go.
I want you as you're listening to notice who popped into your mind.
It's some, is it your favorite person?
What do we do?
Okay, I'll hunt.
And one more thing.
If that subscribe button is lift up, if that subscribe button is lit up,
please help your friend Mel Robbins achieve the goal of having 50% of you be
subscribers to this.
Should we do it back there?
See, I'm such a workaholic. I have to live three and a half hours from here.
Yeah. Yeah, that's good, though. Yeah, that's good though. Can you imagine Tracy if I was, Tracy is a block from here?
Sure, whatever they need. What is it? No, it's fine. I'll get it.
Wonderful. Oh, my God.
Good. Awesome.
Oh, and one more thing. And no, this is not a blooper. This is the legal language. You know what the lawyer's right and what I need to read to you. This podcast,
is presented solely for educational and entertainment purposes.
I'm just your friend.
I am not a licensed therapist, and this podcast is not intended as a substitute for the advice
of a physician, professional coach, psychotherapist, or other qualified professional.
Got it?
Good.
I'll see you in the next episode.
Serious XM Podcasts.
