Live Like a Girl with Dr. Mindy Pelz - Women, Men & the "Gray Divorce": How to Reconnect When Everything Is Changing with Terry Real
Episode Date: December 15, 2025Women in midlife are questioning their marriages at record rates often feeling more independent, less willing to people-please, and deeply hungry for real emotional connection. But what is actually ha...ppening inside women (and men) during this season of life? In this timely and powerful episode, I sit down with renowned therapist and bestselling author Terry Real to unpack what's really driving the "gray divorce" trend — and why so many long-term relationships feel strained during perimenopause and postmenopause. And if you've ever wondered whether midlife relationship struggles mean your marriage is broken or simply ready to evolve, this episode offers the nuance, compassion, and tools that short-form advice can't. To view full show notes, resources mentioned, discount codes, transcripts, and more, visit https://drmindypelz.com/ep318/ Check out our community membership at https://resetacademy.drmindypelz.com Please note our medical disclaimer.
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On this episode of the Resetter podcast, I am bringing you Dr. Terry Real.
Now, you all are in for one treat.
This is definitely the conversation around marriage and men and menopause that I really
wanted to bring to you because if you're not familiar with Terry Reel's work, he is a
couple's therapist and a New York Times best-selling author of many.
books, the book that introduced me to his work is called us and we reference it in this
conversation. I highly recommend it. And one of the things that I love about what Terry's
doing is he's really helping men communicate, connect, better in relationship. And I have
been really troubled in all honesty by the conversation around gray divorce. And if you're
divorce. This is of no criticism. If you're on the brink of divorce, you definitely want to listen to
this episode. Or maybe you're in a marriage, a long-term marriage that you're looking just to reinvent.
And what I love about Terry's work is he really looks at the global picture of how the patriarch,
patriarch, not being men, but being a power, a structure, has really caused women to not speak up for
themselves and has caused men to not be vulnerable.
And when we look at the amount of marriages that dissolve, especially when a woman goes
through menopause, at the heart of it is an imbalance of communication.
And so what Terry is trying to do is bring forward to men a different way they can communicate
with women.
And this isn't a podcast I want to point out of mailback.
This is a conversation around how can we connect deeper with our partners?
And he goes back and forth between men can do this and women can do that.
And he gives lots of examples.
So I really wanted to bring you all a conversation on how do we strengthen our marriages
as we go through menopause or in some of your cases, and he talks about this, how do
you know when it's time to leave?
But there has been probably the most common thing I've heard as I've been promoting my new book,
Age Like a Girl, out into the world, has been women asking me, how do I get my husband on board
with the new changes that I've been going through?
And the answer to that exists in this beautiful conversation with Terry Real.
So I highly recommend you listen to it with your partner.
If that feels comfortable, there are some confronting parts of the story.
the conversation that are going to lead to some interesting dialogue, I'm sure, amongst
couples. But Terry's the expert. He has been doing couples therapy for decades, and he has been
writing books about how to save marriages and how men specifically can show up with more
connectability for women to grab onto so the relationship can succeed. And he also speaks a lot about how
women can talk to men in a different tone to pull that connection out.
It's just, it's magnificent, you all.
I really enjoyed this, and I really hope you enjoy it as much as I did,
but that you get a new set of tools to not only help yourself, but help your marriage
and to live a more full, happy, healthy life.
This is really cool conversation.
We'll leave links for all of his courses if it moves you to take.
his courses, but most of all, you're about to gain a whole new skill set when it comes to
relationships. So enjoy. Well, let me start off Dr. Terry Real by telling you that I'm not only a
super fan, I'm also a beneficiary of your work. So I just want to start off and say, thank you for being
here with me. I'm really excited about this conversation. Well, thank you. And thank you for the
wonderful work you're doing with this podcast and now YouTube channel. You know, may I call you Mindy?
Of course. Yeah, let's do that. Please, please call me sure. Okay, so you can't throw that out without
me following up. What did you personally, what did you get out of it or what changed for you, may I have?
Yeah. So, you know, it's interesting. A large part of my new book, Age Like a Girl, is really about
a 10-year research project that I did to understand what happens to the female brain as a woman moves
through menopause. And there's a rewiring that happens that makes women more independent,
makes women less agile or less inclined, I should say, to her people-pleasing ways. And I not only was
researching that, but I was experiencing that myself. And so I landed upon your book called
us. A friend had recommended the book as I was discovering that my behaviors were changing.
And what I really loved about your book was it felt like it was the first time I had read a
relationship book that had both the unique qualities of a man and the unique qualities of a woman.
and how do we take our differences and bring them together to benefit a relationship,
specifically, in my case, a 30-year marriage?
So, like, I felt like you were going to bat for men.
You were supporting men.
And I think we're in a time where that is really necessary, not only for the culture,
but it's really necessary for menopausal women.
Yeah, absolutely.
Maniposal women.
and post-manipausal women who are pulling the plug on their marriages in record and number.
That's right.
That's right.
Yes.
Help is needed here.
Yeah.
Thank you.
So when I started this book, there were two statistics that launched this 10-year study,
or a research project that now is called Age Like a Girl.
And the first one was the most common time for a woman to commit suicide is the decade between 45 and 55.
and that 70% of divorces after 40 are initiated by women.
And so that started a long research of what's happening to the female brain.
Fast forward to this moment, as I'm teaching the principles of this book,
the most common question I'm getting right now from women is how do I explain this to my husband?
And right now, I really feel like we have.
have a lot of attention on what we're calling the gray divorce. And it's almost like divorce has
become the new women's liberation moment. Yeah. And when I wrote this book, me and my agent,
my publisher and the whole team that worked with me on the book, I said, I don't want this to be a
divorce book. I want this to be a book on how do marriages navigate this moment. So that,
My number one question to you is what does a long-term marriage need to bring into the conversation when a woman starts to go through the menopause process?
Wow. Okay. So let me fade back a little.
It is women. Look, I mean, let me really fade back.
Of course.
The great story, one of the greatest stories of the 20th century is,
the changing roles of women.
Women entered the workforce,
women, feminism,
50 years of feminism,
the culture shifted,
women's empowerment
is one of the great stories
of our century.
Women have radically changed.
Men, not so much.
And therein lies the rope.
It is women
who are spearheading
a move toward redefining
what marriage looks like.
You know, my grandparents,
a companionable marriage,
was the norm.
Intimacy, what are you talking about?
If my mom went to her mom
and said, my husband's great,
he doesn't beat me or drink too much or cheat on me,
but we haven't had sex in 20 years
or we don't talk to each other
or he's demeaning in public
or periodically he has temper tantrums,
I don't like them very much.
She would have been told, go home to your good man.
Yeah, that's right.
But nowadays, it is just these, what I call,
quality of relationship issues that are breaking up marriages.
We have never wanted more from our marriages historically than we do now.
We want long walks on the beach.
You know the drill.
We want hard-to-heart talks.
We want great sex in our 60s.
and 70s and we want to be lifelong lovers,
but we are trying to be lifelong lovers
within a culture.
Our Western culture, which is individualistic,
not relational, and which is patriarchal, not equal,
and which does not give our sons and daughters
and non-binary kids the basic skills
of how to get this done.
We know more about how to run a digital
dishwasher than how to have a relationship.
We don't.
I say we have a filet mignon ambition,
a lifelong lover relationship,
and hamburger skills.
We just don't know how to do it.
Kids aren't taught how to fight fair,
how to repair,
how to speak up for yourself with love.
None of this is taught.
So, and by the way,
I would love to have relationship skills taught
in elementary school and junior high and high.
I mean, hello.
I mean, we're now, I'm wising up and talking about physical health, even sexual health.
Well, let's talk about how to handle yourself in a relationship.
Look, research tells us that good relationship is as important to our health as not,
being in a bad relationship or in no relationships.
I'm not talking about, you don't necessarily need a man, but you're still in a bad relationship.
relationship, not being an intimate connected relationship is as bad for us as smoking a pack
and a half of cigarettes a day. This is a black and white research. Who of your people listening
right now say, oh, I'm going to go out and smoke a pack and a half a reason. But we do say,
I'm not going to put an hour into learning how to fight fair or stand up for myself in a way
that's going to work. It should be spontaneous. I should just. So here's what I'm,
what's happened. When I say we now want an intimate marriage or long-term relationship,
well, who's that we? That we is women. And what's happening is across the West
in heterosexual relationships, women are insisting on levels of emotional intimacy
from their men that as a patriarchal culture, we don't.
don't raise boys and men to give.
In fact, we raise them to not give it.
You know, one of the things I say, look, you want to know about men, this is one sentence
everybody can take home.
The essence of traditional masculinity under patriarchy is invulnerability.
The more invulnerable you are, the more manly you are.
Think about boys' heroes.
Wolverines, Superman, Terminator, no flesh on them.
Literally, no soft flesh on these guys.
They're made of steel, literally.
The more invulnerable you are, the more manly you are,
the more vulnerable you are, the more girly you are,
and girly is not a good thing.
Okay, well, here's the problem.
Ready?
As good old Renee Brown has thought the world,
we humans connect through our vulnerabilities.
Yes, so true, yes.
That's how we connect.
So, you know, guys, if you're watching me, I don't know about you, but my wife, Terry, I want to hear about what you're feeling vulnerable about in your life.
You do?
Yeah.
Does she say that?
Yeah.
Amazing.
I'm going to try that on.
We're both.
You're not going to get very far.
We're both there.
I don't want to talk about what I'm vulnerable about.
I'll talk about what you're vulnerable, but I don't like vulnerable.
I'm a guy.
Okay.
And what were, okay, so somebody described my work with men as women have had a revolution
and now men have to deal with it.
Women are asking for emotional intimacy from men.
What do we learn as boys?
Be independent.
Be strong.
Be logical.
Don't be too emotional.
Don't cry.
Don't be vulnerable.
I deal with very tough guys
and I deal with marriages on the brink of divorce.
That's my feat.
I deal with marriages that nobody has been able to help.
Here's what I say to these guys.
What you learned as a boy, whether you wanted to or not,
it landed on you with or without your consent.
What you learned as a boy about what makes a good man
being strong, logical, independent,
by today's standards will make guarantee that you're a lousy husband.
Wow.
Think about that.
Yeah.
What got imposed upon you as a boy because boys are not born like them.
Mm-hmm.
I have a boy.
I remember that.
Yeah.
Boys love their mommies.
Yeah, they do.
That they do.
It's a great thing.
The research tells us, if anything, little boys are more,
emotional than little girls, more sensitive. And moms know that about their little son.
Yep. Until the code of masculinity lands on that. Now, women, you spoke about women being less willing
to be the accommodating peacemakers that women are groomed to be under patriarchy. When they hit
menopause, like Gabe at the office, I'm done. I want to be my own person.
person now. Yeah. The wound to women, as Carol Gilligan wrote back in the 80s and a whole generation
of women after her, is the loss of voice. They stop telling the truth. They overaccommodate and
resent it. That's the traditional role. That lands on girls at 10, 11, 12, which is when many
psychiatric symptoms show up. Bulimia,orexia, depression, anxiety.
Why then? Because they fall prey to what Carol famously called the tyranny of the nice and kind.
Now, Carol said her research broke open the day. A woman looked at her. She asked her opinion.
And the woman said to her, now, Carol, do you want to hear what I think or do you want to hear what I really think?
Oh, wow. By the way, I have a whole chapter on Carol Gilligan's work in my new book.
Because I, but what's interesting about what you're saying is I only saw it from the female lens, which is, and I added in my understanding of hormones and its effect on the brain that when estrogen comes in, it starts to activate the corpus callosum that is connecting the right and left hemispheres. And all of a sudden, a woman is bringing both hemispheres to every decision, which means she's bringing the emotional along with the logical. And you combine that with Carol Gillis.
Gilligan's work, which is the cultures taught her that she's good if she pleases everybody.
So I never heard the boy side of it.
I only thought of the girl's side of it.
So that's really fascinating.
Well, let me tell you the boy side.
And then let me tell you how they go together.
Because Carol and I have worked a lot together.
Amazing.
For over decades.
Okay, here's the boy side.
Under patriarchy, the wound to girls traditionally.
Now, feminism has shifted that.
about that. But traditionally, the wound of girls is over-accommodation and resentment that shows up
10-11-12. As they're initiated in the womanhood, this is what they're initiated, and to be kind,
be accommodating, don't rock the boat, and resent the hell out of it, get depressed, get symptoms,
get cancer and die, but don't rock the boat. Okay. Boys. So the wound of girls is disempowerment,
the loss of voice.
And the healing move is re-empowerment, telling the truth, standing up for yourself.
The wound to boys is disconnection.
The way we, quote, unquote, turn boys into men under patriarchy.
We teach them to disconnect from their vulnerabilities, from their feelings, literally from their emotions, from others.
and what I wrote back in the 90s
I wrote a whole book on Man Called
I don't want to talk about it
the cost of a disconnected boy
is a disconnected man
and the healing
for a woman is reempowerment
the healing for a man is reconnection
and this is what I do
reconnect them to your feelings
reconnect them to their heart
reconnect them to the people that they love
There was just an article in the New York Times.
It ran today about fathers and films,
and I'm quoted in it.
And it's all about these men struggling
to find connection, often with their children.
When they've been pulled out of connection,
patriarchy pulls men out of connection.
That's so true.
So let me just say,
so when we're asking men to all
open up, share their feelings, be vulnerable.
All of which I support,
we're literally asking them to reconfigure
what it means to be a man to begin with.
We are asking for nothing less
than for these men to be pioneers moving beyond patriarchy.
And good for us.
One of the things I say is that moving men, women,
non-binary folks into true intimacy is synonymous with moving beyond patriarchy, we have to
reconfigure our traditional gender roles in order to be intimate with each other because those
roles don't allow intimacy. One thing that's interesting about that is in my research, I discovered
that estrogen stimulates oxytocin. So when estrogen goes away, oxytocin becomes what I call
muted for a woman. Like her oxytocin system doesn't work the same. And I will tell you as a 56-year-old
woman that I have found myself searching for deeper connection with everybody because that's
where I get an oxytocin buzz. So, but if I, if I listen to your words, I'm thinking about my own
marriage and I'm like, how do you get then a man who's been trained by the patriarch to
disconnect and you're like, hey, if this thing's going to continue forward, you're going to need
to connect deeper with me. How does that work when he's never done that before? Well, first, why don't
you start off with some acknowledgement and compassion? Yes. You know what? I want to acknowledge
to what I'm asking you to do is something not only did you never learn to do, but you are
actively discouraged from doing. Yeah. This goes against all the rules.
my dear, your darling husband.
And I know it does.
And what an amazing, courageous act on your part to open up your heart and have this old dog
learn some new trick.
Thank you for doing this for me.
I mean, who sounds like that?
Listen.
I was going to say.
Yeah.
Not very many people I know.
No.
Here's number one.
Men are criticism phobic.
Men, I have to take.
teach almost every man I work with healthy self-esteem,
which comes from the inside out.
It doesn't get earned.
You have worth because you're hearing your breathing.
This is medical ethic.
This is democracy.
One man, one vote.
You have worth because you're here.
Men don't believe that.
Men believe that my worth is predicated on my performance.
So you get somebody you love coming at you and going,
oh, buddy, I don't like what you're doing.
You better do it this way, not that way.
they're going to shame.
Yeah.
Not guilt, not remorse.
Healthy self-esteem, which I have to teach men, women too,
but means I hold myself in warm regard
even while I feel proportionally bad about bad behavior,
both at the same time.
And if I'm entitled, if I'm irresponsible, if I'm defensive,
I don't feel bad about bad behavior.
you deserve it or it's not that bad or the sort of thing that you hear from husbands all over
when women confront them.
On the other hand, if I do that in the bad behavior and I don't have some healthy self-esteem
on board, I go all the way into I'm a bad person.
I'm a worthless person.
I just did a whole talk on how healthy self-esteem in men is a prerequisite for accountability and
If my self-esteem is based on my performance, you tell me, hey, Terry, don't scratch me here,
scratch me here.
What's the matter?
You didn't like it over there?
Boom.
I'm a worthless piece of shit.
And I don't want to feel that.
So how do I protect myself?
Well, I argue with you about your criticism.
That's how.
Oh, yeah.
I've been the recipient of that conversation.
Of course.
I mean, which is part of traditional masculinity.
Being accountable is moving beyond patriarchy.
Being accountable is moving beyond patriarchy.
Look at the male leaders who are surging all over the globe.
You see them as souls of accountability is weak.
Vulnerability is weak.
I mean, there's been across the globe a rise
in some of the most vile aspects of traditional masculinity
because men are feeling threatened by the rise of female power.
Look, women, you know, in Jane Austen's day,
you were either married or you're in your uncle's jack somewhere in the back 40s.
You needed marriage, you needed men.
Nowadays you don't.
And women are proving that they don't by divorcing men in record numbers.
Why do I want to stay with you?
Because of the quality of our love.
That's why.
paycheck. Those days are gone. Right. Okay, well, the quality of our love better be good. Women are
raising the bar. And culturally, the response has been a backlash. Shut up, be traditional, get rid of all this
woke nonsense, and just go back to the 50s and we'll be fine. Well, sorry, that genie is not
going back. That toothpaste is out of the tube. So rather than standing women down,
from these new demands for intimacy.
My work, and I don't mean to whatever,
but I do think it's a pretty unique contribution.
I'm proud of my role as a public figure in this.
I want men to stand up and meet these new demands.
It's good for you.
Relationship and learning intimate skills is good for us.
You will live, this is what I say to the guys in my office.
honestly got literally you will live 10 years longer if i had a pill and you took it every day and i said
you could live 10 years longer you would take the damn pill if you're related and you're in a good
relationship and your your partner and your kids are close to you and proud of you you will literally
live 10 years longer your partner will be happier with you you'll have a better sex life
you'll have a better body your kids will be close
closer to you. You will be a better father than the one you had. Come on, man, let me teach you how to do it.
And when you pitch it this way, not critically, this is what you're doing wrong, but positively,
logically, this is what I can give you. Men aren't stupid, they shape up. But women have to know
how to ask, how to insist. And so let me now talk about women.
Yeah, I was going to say help women because I just want to, I always try to be, you know, call us out.
And I can say that, you know, I've sat next to a lot of friends who have gone through the divorce process when they hit their 40s and 50s.
And if there's one thing I observed is that they had a bit of a nagging quality that's like he's not doing this and he's not doing that.
And I, you know, I watched that and thought, that's not going to get them anywhere.
So I think this is really important that what you're saying, we need to help women understand how to create an environment where a man can do what you're asking the man to do.
That's right. That's right. See, under patriarchy, what do I mean by patriarchy? Well, the three concentric rings of patriarchy, but let me just do the first one. The binary, the split, the having, you take the equality.
of one whole human beings
all line down the center
so all these qualities are feminine,
all these qualities are masculine,
and we all know the drill,
we know what goes where.
Okay, here's what happens.
Because of feminism
and this shift in the culture,
because of octetosis
and estrogen drying up,
women are less willing.
You know, there's an old saying
in couples therapy,
post 45-50,
each of the two genders start to blend.
They start to move toward the middle.
And women start looking more like men
and men start looking more like women.
And it's just exactly what you're talking about.
But you've got to be careful.
Here's what happens.
Under patriarchy,
you can either be connected
or you can be powerful.
But you can't be both at the same time.
This is the way out of this mess.
Girls, ladies, listen to me.
Under patriarchy.
Connected.
Accommodating and resentful.
Go along to get along.
Oxytocin.
Quote, feminine.
Powerful.
Logical.
Assertive.
I'm doing what the hell I want.
Stand back.
Quote, masculine.
But masculine is not connected.
It's powerful.
powerful, but power is power over, as Rian Isler says, not power with.
So when you step into power, you break connection.
Now, what's happening, and I've been calling myself a feminist family therapist for 40 years.
All of my friends and colleagues are feminist.
That's to Perel, Carol Gilligan, the beautiful women of the Stone Center.
Right.
Here's what happens.
It's what I call individual empowerment.
Remember, I said our culture is patriarchal and individualistic,
very much including self-help, personal growth, therapy, 12 steps.
Personal growth is personal growth, not relational growth.
And so as a couple therapists, the bane of my existence is often individual therapists
who empower their clients right out of marriages.
I'm mad as hell, and I'm not putting up with that.
Yeah, easy for you to set.
Here's the deal.
A lot of people in general and women in particular, particularly when they hit post-menopause,
move from this side of the binary to this side of the binary.
And I call that individual empowerment.
I was weak, now I'm strong, go screw yourself.
Yes.
And that's what you're hearing in your women who wind up divorce.
Yes.
I'm empowered. I've found my voice. You shut up, sit down and listen to me. I haven't been speaking for 20 years and I'm finally going to tell you. That's right. That's right. I didn't. I've been doing everything for you. I mean, I, you know, I gotmans, the Gottman's, Julie Gottman. I spent a day with her and she told me something that I really see in almost every woman who's been married that resentment builds when you say yes over and over and over again to the things you really want.
want to say no to. And when I hear the women in our community, when I hear my friends who are leaving
divorces, there is this anger and resentment. And what I think is so interesting about what you just
said is that the woman now moves to the place of power. And now you have two people in individual
power, but that is moving you away from connection. You're done. You're done. You do that you both
have both of you over there on that quote unquote masculine side of power without connection and
you're divorcing. So, and, you ready? Yep. A woman, anybody, could be a man, but particularly
a woman, woman moves from disempowerment to individual empowerment. I'm not putting up
of this anymore, God damn it. And therapists, friends, family, 12-step sponsors, cheer.
Yes. Go ahead, sister. Get on that chair and scream at that son of a bitch. He dessert,
well, you're going to get yourself.
Okay, here's the new news.
Remember, I said,
moving men, women, non-binary folks
into intimacy means moving beyond patriarchy?
Guess what?
I was weak, now I'm strong.
I am going to stand toe to toe with you.
I'm going to tell you my truth.
I'm going to tell you what I want from you
because I love you.
I love us.
We're a team.
Let's work together.
This is what I want.
Now, remember I said, who sounds like this?
Who sounds like this?
This is what I want from you, honey.
As a favor to me, will you work on that?
Oh, you will?
Great.
Listen to this one, Mindy.
What could I give you to help you do that?
Who says that?
This is really powerful.
I love you.
You're a team.
That's great that you're working.
willing to try to do that for me. How can I support you? The relational golden rule is, what can I
give you to help you give me what I'm asking? We're a team. Let's work together. And the energy is
love, not power. I love you, honey. I know you love me. This is working, but this would work
better, let's roll up our sleeves and work on this together. No one, I call this loving power.
Yes. And no one knows how to do that. This goes beyond patriarchy. You know what that reminds me of is
there's a lot of discussion in feminist circles about men not creating safe spaces for women. And yes,
we have plenty of examples of where women have been mistreated in their safety, emotional and physical
therapy safety has been at jeopardy. But what you're saying, and I want the women, and I'm hoping couples
will listen to this podcast together, the heterosexual ones, I think what we need to understand from
the statement you just made is that safety is a two-way street. And so if you're wanting your
husband to open up and be more vulnerable, when you make a statement like, how can I help you in
this process, then what you're doing is you're creating a safety.
container in which a man can feel like he could become vulnerable. Is that correct? Yeah, and think about it
for a minute. Is it really in your interest to demand, does the man open up and be vulnerable and not
provide a safe space for him? I just think we don't think about it. How well do you think that's going to work?
Yeah, I don't think we think about it. That's right, because we're individualistic.
after 50 years of therapy and feminism,
women have earned the right to be as obnoxious as men has always been.
It's like that is not a step up.
But people are so thrilled at the shift from disempowerment to empowerment
that they're not paying attention to the fact that it's not loving,
it's not relational, it's not positive, and it won't work.
Try this.
I love you, honey.
I know you love me.
You're doing a great job.
Lose the criticism.
You're doing a great job.
These are some of the things I appreciate about what you're doing.
Now, here are some things that will work even better.
Would you be willing to try that for me?
Yeah, yeah.
Can I give you a story?
Yeah, please.
True story.
This is my sort of classic, but it's absolutely true.
for those particularly
heteronormative folks listening
and see if you can relate to this.
Her to him, you're a reckless driver.
Him to her, you're overly nervous.
How many of you can relate to this one?
Yep.
Okay.
This fight had gone on for 20 years
by the time they hit my office.
It wasn't the central issue, but it came up.
Mindy, after one session with me,
this is an absolutely true story.
Ready?
Her to him.
Recall everything I've been saying
about the New World Order, loving power.
Heard of him.
Honey, I know you love me.
Let's hold the phone right there.
What a difference in the energy.
What a difference in the tone.
Not righteous indignation.
It's well said.
You drive like a main thing.
You don't give a shit.
I can't.
No.
That's the way she sounded.
I know you love me.
Yeah.
Look, maybe I'm a nervous Nelly.
I don't know.
She takes a whole, I call it an objectivity battle.
Objective reality has no place in marriages.
It's two subjectivities.
I don't care who's right or.
I say the relational answer question who's right or wrong is who cares.
Yeah.
We're a team.
But maybe I am a nervous Nellie.
See, she takes the whole back.
battle right off the table. You're nervous. No, you're reckless. No, you're nervous. I don't care. Maybe I am.
But you love me. Look, when you drive really fast and tailgate people and move from lane to lane,
none of which he denies, he just thinks he's safe, aggressive but safe, reckless and unsafe.
Instead of arguing about that, when you do those things, maybe, you know, whatever, but I get really scared, honey.
Do you love me?
When you're driving by yourself, I mean, I worry about you, but it's your life, drive how you want.
But do you really want me sitting next to you every time we're in the car being terrified?
Is that the way you want to show your love for me?
Listen, even though you may think you're safe, I'm scared.
As a favor to me, could you slow down and drive more conservatively?
Him to her.
True.
Ready?
Of course, honey.
And he did.
Wow.
I was going to say, did that work?
Yeah, like a knife through butter.
Wow.
Because he does love her.
Yeah.
Take objectivity off the table.
It's not you're a reckless driver.
No, I'm not.
Yes, you are.
Forget it.
As a favor, be subjective.
Be humble.
As a favor to me, would you?
Be relational.
It's not about right or wrong.
It's about our feeling.
This is how I'm feeling.
would you help me with my feelings please yeah i'd be willing to do that nice guy yeah i was going to say
that seems like a a man who wants to stay in his marriage too you know i that could as opposed to what
don't you think i deal all day long with men who would like to stay in their marriages if they had a shot
at being able to do it so here's my question on that is all the everything that was coming out recently
has been that marriage, long-term marriage, actually benefits men more than women.
That's been true for 30 years.
Right. So I think a really interesting part of this discussion is what's the benefit to both parties to stay in a long-term relationship?
The worm in the apple is the essence of what's wrong is what one of my heroes, the founder of family therapy.
a family therapist. Gregory Bason, anthropologist married to Margaret Mead, wonderful man.
Oh, wow. I know Margaret's work. Yeah. And Bason wrote about what he called humans' epistemological
philosophical mistake. And the philosophical mistake is, I stand apart from nature and I can dominate it.
You know, in the King James version anyway, God gives Adam dominion over all the things.
It's a bad idea.
So here's what I said.
The idea that you stand apart from nature and you can control it is a suicidal delusion.
Whether the nature I'm trying to control is my wife.
Sit down, shut up and do it.
My kids, you will do as I say.
My body.
You know, you're a doc.
My GP, my family doc says he's going to write a memoir of his life.
and he's going to call it,
how have I lost 10 pounds and 40 years?
I've got to control my body.
I've got to control my thinking.
You know, I'm a meditator.
That's too negative.
I got to stop.
Control, control, control.
And by the way, for the women,
the control is one down.
Up, regulate.
That's what all that accommodating is doing.
This control.
Don't set daddy off.
Don't rock the boat.
Don't stand up for yourself.
But then resent the shit out of it.
That's the,
traditional role of women.
So when you come out of this individualism and patriarchy,
you come into relationality.
What does that mean?
I call it ecological wisdom.
This is what I teach the men, women, non-binary folks.
Our relationships are our biospheres.
We're not above them.
We're not below them.
We don't upregulate them.
We don't dominate them.
We can't control them.
wake up, we're in them.
And so for both men and women,
it's in my enlightened self-interest,
not to give in to you,
not to bully you,
but to take care of my biosphere.
Why? I breathe it.
I can pollute my biosphere
with a temperature from here,
but my partner and I are an ecosystem.
My partner is going to withdraw
over there, count on it.
Look, from an ecological perspective, if one of you wins and the other one loses, you both lose.
Why?
Not idealism.
The loser will make the winner pay for it.
That's why.
The unacknowledged bill that comes due when women overaccommodate is resentment, and that resentment
leaks out sideways.
Yeah.
It poisons them.
They get physically ill.
It poisons the relationship.
Yep.
So, lean in, stand up to each other, but with these new skills of love and teamwork.
It's not about pounding you into the ground.
It's about, seriously, sex, sex.
We need more sex here, which is a guy I usually talk to.
And, honey, we both deserve a good sex lot.
What do we need to do to jumpstart this thing?
Is everything talking like two competing individuals and remembering that you're,
a team for both men and women.
Yeah.
I'm powerful now.
Sit down and shut up.
No, I'm powerful now.
This is what I want, honey.
Let's work together to get this done.
Like the woman asking her husband to slow down.
We're a team.
We love each other.
That's brand new.
That goes beyond anything any of us have ever been taught.
Yeah.
I really like that way of thinking of it like a ecosystem.
I think, because that's how I think of the body, the human body is an ecosystem.
And especially the female body, every environment the woman puts her body in, her body is going to adapt to whatever that environment is.
So that's a beautiful way to look at it.
I'm reflecting upon my parents are in their 80s and they've been married 60 years.
And recently, I had an interesting observation of my mom because my dad went into spinal surgery.
he was away from the home for close to three weeks.
And she had to rely on her girlfriend.
She started going out with her girlfriends more.
She started doing things.
And you could see her 86-year-old self come alive.
And I told her, I was like, hey, how come you don't do more things with your girlfriends?
And she said, because I don't want to leave your father at home and alone.
And I think one of the things that we see as we age is for men.
And if this is a myth, I'm happy for it to be wrong.
but it's harder for men to find male friendships.
And women can't breathe without their female friendships.
So one of the challenges that we see is men are trying to hold on tighter to the marriage
while women are trying to just get some freedom to go hang out with their friends.
And I think this is a pretty common situation.
Is there a way for men to, I mean, I don't know another way to say this,
to start to fret.
I mean, as an adult, it's hard to find friends.
but how do men start to find good, meaningful relationships
so that the center of that isn't their wife?
Yeah, no, I talk about that.
And, of course, you know, the literature on widows versus widowers is pathetic.
And women do fine when their men die and men fall apart.
Yeah, supposedly the strong independent man just falls apart because it's the only.
So, yes, no, I do talk to men about who do you talk to, Bill?
And do you talk to anybody other than the folks at work?
And, you know, how deep is the conversation?
And I teach men to, okay, pick one guy.
You've been going to do the same six guys golfing every Sunday.
Pick one guy that you think is the best shot and talk to him a little more than just about sports and politics.
Tell them about your marriage.
Tell them that you're worried about one of your kids.
show some vulnerability and see what they do with it. Now, this guy, you show some vulnerability,
and he's like, whoop, let's go right back to the Red Sox. Fine, done with him. This guy,
you show him a little vulnerability, and lo and behold, he goes, wow, that sounds tough. Tell me what
you've tried. You know, I'm struggling with, oh, my God. And suddenly, you're having a deeper
conversation with this guy than you've had in 40 years. So you have to pick people and give
it is shot by leading with your own vulnerability and seeing what they do with it and then adjusting
depending on what they do with it. So there's an art. And one of the things I want to say,
particularly to the women. Yeah, please. Read my book, take my courses, do your best.
If no matter how skilled you are, you are not getting through to your partner, drag them to me.
We have the school I've created
is called Relational Life Therapy.
We're very different than most couples
therapists in that we take sides.
And if a woman drags in a man and says,
I want him to be more intimate,
guess what we do?
We go, she's right, you're wrong,
let me grab you by the collar
and teach you how to do this.
Which no other therapist.
Wow, you're going to have a light out the door
after this podcast.
Great.
Go to my website, terryreal.com, hit find a therapist.
We have RLT trained therapists all over the world, really.
Yeah.
So, yes, I recommend the RLT because they'll be your ally the way a lot of therapists won't.
But if you can't, look, when do you need help?
You need help when you can't do it yourself.
Yeah.
You know?
Yeah.
My 77-year-old wife has really bad arthritis.
So I tie her shoes.
Why do I tie her shoes?
Because she can't with her hand.
When do you need help?
When you can't do it yourself?
When do you need help as a couple?
When you can't get through to your guy yourself,
then drag him to somebody else and ask them to help you get through to him.
And an RLT therapist will help you do that.
And what do you say to the man that's listening to this?
He's like, I don't want to go to that kind of therapy.
It's in your interest.
It's in your enlightened self-interest to take care of your biosphere.
You know, I deal with tough guys.
This is my beat.
I get these big breath.
Why should I work so hard to please my wife?
And I go, knock, knock, you live with her.
Right.
It's in my interest to take care of the biosphere.
And you know what?
Here's the shorthand.
If you ride in the one-up, superior, entitled,
disconnected, irresponsible,
take a breath, open up and come down.
Yield, open your heart, be vulnerable.
Beautiful.
If you ride in the one down,
afraid, accommodating,
upregulating, walking on eggshells,
and resenting the hell out of it,
take a breath, dare to rock the boat
in these new, loving, skilled ways that I'm talking about
and take some wrists to come up.
If you're one up, you're biased,
and easy to come down.
If you're one down, your biosphere needs you to come up.
Yeah.
Figure out where you are and then lean into it, but with love and connection, not with scorched earth.
I found my voice.
Go screars.
That's beautiful.
What about libido?
That's another mismatch that seems to happen as we age.
And, you know, from a menopausal lens, of course, when there's, you know, women's desire
goes down, there's dryness, it can be uncomfortable, and some, you know, some women have been in
these long-term marriages where maybe there needs to be new tricks put in place, but it does seem
as if there's a libido mismatch that can happen in the 50s and 60s for couples. How do you
navigate that? You know, a friend of mine was a doc, a woman's doc, when Viagra first hit. I'm old
enough to remember that. We were on the beach in Martha Benio. And she wrote, all of her female patients
were, what did they, what did they give my husband? He left me alone and now he's chasing me
around the room. Stop it. Whatever you're giving him, stop it. Yes. You know, the essence of
sex therapy with low libido partners of either sex, but it's often women, along with whatever the
physiological issues are, is reclaiming your own sexuality.
Traditionally under patriarchy, women are over-accommodating and resentful.
That very much includes the bedroom.
You talk about saying yes when you mean no.
So many women service their guys because they don't want to deal with the pouting or the bed.
It's easier just to bop them than put up with them.
That is a terrible, that's a great recipe for having no sexual desire yourself.
So 99 out of a hundred sex therapists in these situations will begin by empowering the woman
and helping her rediscover her own erotic system.
Do you masturbate?
Do you have a vibrator?
Do you have fantasies?
You know, you've gone sexually dead because sex equals sex.
accommodating somebody, you're out of touch with your own sexual pleasure. Let's start there.
Yeah. It's really true.
So in these situations, I put the woman in charge with their sex vibe. And I get her to start
feeling juicy again. Have you seen the movie Hello, Leo Grand?
No. Oh, you got to see it. It's about this exact thing where a woman, her husband dies,
and she realizes that she hasn't been having the sex she's been wanting.
to have so she hires like a like a call guy to have the sex she wants to have but to hear her I think
every couple should listen to it because to hear her explain what she wants to experiment with
this guy she can barely get it out of her mouth and I think there is something to that that we as
women were not taught healthy sexual behavior and we're objectified so we're taught by the patriarch
If you have big breasts or you're a certain size, then you're sexually attractive.
And so you have a lot of women that are disconnected from their libido for sure.
That's right.
If you're not attractive, you feel shame.
If you are attractive, you feel objectified.
And in either case, you're reactive to the male gaze.
You're not asking yourself, what do I want?
You know, there is some beauty in some of the sort of the female rock stars and stuff.
starting with Madonna way back when
who started claiming their sexual prowess
and strutten their stuff.
Yeah, I want women to start strutting their stuff.
But what you have to understand is
asking for what you want sexually
for a woman
codes as selfish
because asking for what you want in any way
as a woman codes as selfish.
In the same way I have to talk to men,
I have to say,
It's in your interest to come down off of your invulnerability, off of your power, off of your walls, and join the human race and open your heart.
For women, it's not selfish to stand up for yourself.
It's taking good care of your biosphere.
When you don't take care of yourself, your guy pays for it.
There's no favor there.
Yeah, it's true.
I have to help women learn that, oh, really, I get to say, I kind of like it this way, not that way.
I really get to say that.
But, you know, one of the things I say, Mindy, is people tend to do in the bedroom what they do in every other room.
And, yes, it's selfish for a woman that claim her sexual power and ask for what she wants.
It's selfish for a woman to claim any power and ask for what she wants.
So why would text be different?
That's right.
And therein lies a big core belief of my book is that I think menopause is the moment women wake up.
And they're like, I can't do it this way anymore.
And then the carnage of that are all of these divorces.
And a question, I love how you're weaving in the patriarch because I think we've really thought of the patriarch as men.
And it's not men.
It's a power or a system that's over you.
over all of us.
All of us.
It does at least as much damage to men as it does the women.
Agreed.
At least as much damage.
So if we want a culture that has more
communicative, connectable men
and women to stand up for what they believe in,
then does there need to be a redefinition
of what marriage is?
Absolutely.
And here's another thing that women have to get by.
Ready?
Mm-hmm.
Why should I have to work so hard to teach this guy all this bullshit?
Yeah, I've heard that, yep.
You know, he should just know.
Yeah, maybe he should, but you want to tell me who you've got that does?
You know, I've been listening to women for 40 years.
Like, girls, I believe you.
I believe that men don't know how to be relational.
Like, why don't you believe you?
If you believe that men don't know how to be relational,
why are you insisting they're relational but not giving them the information about how to do it
or helping them do it like what do you think the odds are they're just going to oh okay i'm going to
be relational now sure no uh-uh so there are three steps of getting this is what my course is about
online which i would love people today one dare to rock the boat loving power loving power
honey you love me i love you we're doing fine not a criticism
we could do better
these are the things
that would help me feel better
one two three four
would you be willing to work on them
for us for me
I know you love that
and I'm willing to help
two
once your partner says
oh okay I'll try
don't criticize them
people say to me
well you're really tough on men
when do women's issues come up
I go the minute the guy
starts giving her what she wants
that's when her issues come.
I talked about transmission reception.
Once he starts transmitting,
there are women falling.
Oh, thank you.
No.
Uh-uh.
Yes, but.
Well, yeah, you say you're going to do it, but.
You don't really mean.
Yeah, you're going to do it, but.
You don't do it well.
You're going to do it, but you're doing it now.
What happened?
Yeah.
You have, it's, you know what?
There's one thing to complain about not getting something.
It's a whole other thing to open up and receive it.
And so I teach women in particular to, I call it, celebrate the glass 14% full.
It was only 5% full last week.
But who does that?
That's beautiful.
And you know, have you ever heard the thing that like whatever you said before but gets negated once you say but?
Oh, yeah.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
I had a Southern gal client who said, my daddy said everything before.
That's a nice dress, but the hem could be a little low.
My dad has said everything that comes in for but is bullshit.
So, yeah, we say, eh, not, but anyway, listen.
So one, this is what I want from you.
It's really, really important to me as a favor to me, to us.
Would you work on it?
Sure, good.
Two, let me break it down and teach you.
I don't expect you to read my mind.
Just like sex.
We know this for sex.
This is too soft.
This is too hard.
This is too slow.
Let me teach you.
So for example, when I come to you with a problem, don't solve my problem.
Just listen to me.
Be like a girlfriend.
Put your own.
Go there, there, that's a literally take the guy by the hand and show him what you want from him.
It's beautiful.
Two.
And women will go, I shouldn't have to work that.
I know.
Life's unfair.
Do you want it or not?
I'm sorry.
And then three, once your partner starts to try, reward them.
them don't discourage.
Yeah.
Nice try, honey.
Keep going.
That's how you do it.
I love that.
If he did it at 5%,
and he's now doing it at 14%,
you're moving it.
It's so beautiful to think of it that way.
I'll tell you something interesting.
But, Mindy, you know, that's what you would do with your kid.
Right.
If it were a child and your child came with a D
and you read him the Rite Act and they showed up with a C,
you wouldn't say, where's the A?
That's right.
That's great improvement, but we don't treat our spouses like it.
Yeah.
So when I got married, like the months leading up to my wedding, my mom's friends all gathered me around.
And these were about five women that were in their 50s that were still married.
And they literally sat me down and they said, let me tell you what's going to happen.
There's going to be a moment where you're going to wake up and you're going to say,
what the hell did I do? And on that day, just know that's normal and it's going to pass and you're
going to move through it. And I'll tell you, that was one of the most helpful things because my parents
do have an incredible marriage that was always put on a pedestal. And we see incredible marriages
in movies and Disney movies and all of that. And to know that the bumps would be there by these
very wise women was a really helpful thing. Now fast forward to this moment, my 25-year-old daughter is
getting married next summer. And I keep thinking about how marriage has so many components to it that
are outdated. And I keep thinking about what you're, you know, things like what you're saying,
where men can, you know, if they show up more connected and women are better at expressing what
their needs are that the marriage can be stronger. What would you say in this day and age to a 25-year-old
and her fiance is 28 about how to succeed at marriage? This is how I begin us. And it comes from the
infant observational researcher Ed Tronick. He and Barry Bresilden were the first generation to stick a
camera in front of mothers
and infants and then fathers
and actually look at
what went on instead of
Freud didn't figure it out from the 40-year-olders
remember. No, let's look at it.
And what Tronna came up with which
I then stole, that
borrowed,
all relationships are an endless dance
of harmony, disharmony,
and repair.
Closeness,
disillusionment,
and a return to closeness.
It's beautiful.
And harmony, disharmony, and repair can play out 20 times over one dinner conversation.
It can play out over 40 years in a marriage.
And when you're in the disillusionment, disharmony phase, it sucks.
Yep.
And you're talking to the guy who coined the phrase normal marital hatred.
When you're in disharmony, that moment, I can't believe I am so trapped with.
How did I do? I hate your gun. That's fine. Don't sweat it. But all of the skills that I teach are all about moving from that moment back into repair. And there's skills that have to be done on both sides. And who doesn't? Very few people in our culture.
So the disruption is normal. And how dark and absurd.
setting that disruption is, is normal. Now, take a breath and figure out how you're going to get back
on the horse who just fell off of. That is the essence of a real relationship. In our culture,
we worship harmony, harmony, harmony, just like, you know, a 17-year-old body, just like sex like
the first two weeks that you're, no, harmony, disharmony. You know what I say, Mindy? I actually wrote
You know how on the back of a couple's therapy book, you always get the couple and they look like they just had the biggest orgasm of their life.
I want a book where Belinda and I are like, I hate your gut.
I'm sure you can create that.
You go to, this is what I wrote, you go to a cocktail party and you hear, oh, 87-year-old Mindy and her husband, Fred.
They've been married for 70 years.
they're more in love now.
Aren't they?
Yeah.
Once I'd like to hear this.
There's 87-year-old
at Mindy and husband, Fred.
They spent 20 years duking it out.
Fred used to be a rager.
Mindy drank too much.
He finally got fed up and left her for a year.
Fell in love with another woman.
Mindy said, I'm going to deal with my dot, dot, dot.
Fred reluctantly came back.
They went to couples therapy.
They worked it out.
Are they great?
I mean, it depends on the day,
but they're really pretty,
committed to each other, aren't they adorable? Just once I'd like to hear a couple describe that
one. It would be a very real description for sure. How do you know, how does a couple know when it's
actually time to end and to split? Well, good plug because I'm about to do a three-hour workshop
on should I stay or should I go. And so everybody should do that, but I'll do the headline.
because I have a tool.
The tool is a question.
Now, first of all, I believe in the serenity prayer.
You do everything you can on your end.
And that includes I'm learning all these skills
about how to approach my partner with loving power,
ain't working.
I dragged my partner to a therapist, ain't working.
I fired that therapist and went to that therapist,
still ain't working.
This isn't this I'm not going to get it.
What do I do?
Here's the question.
You ready?
Mm-hmm.
I call this a relational reckoning.
Am I getting enough in this relationship to make grieving what I'm not getting worth my while?
Oh, that's beautiful.
Am I getting enough to make grieving what I'm not getting worth my while?
Yeah.
Am I getting enough?
Ask yourself, what am I going to miss?
if I kick this sucker out the door.
And that includes money, logistics, help with the kids,
all of it.
What's my life going to look like without them?
Yeah.
Am I getting enough in all these ways?
And what our culture doesn't prepare us for is grief.
Oh, yeah.
You are an imperfect person married to an imperfect person.
There are things they are not going to do for you.
There are things that they are going to do that are going to drive you insane.
Yep.
Okay.
What do I do with that?
Nothing.
Feel it.
Bear it.
Yeah.
And no, if the answer is, even though this drives me nuts about them, these five things are so wonderful.
Yeah.
No, it's worth my while to stay.
Then embrace what you're getting and don't walk around like a resentful victim.
Yeah.
And if the answer is no, it's not worth it to me.
You're done.
Then you go.
Yeah.
I love, I've heard Esther Perel say that you're going to grieve something.
You're going to grieve a relationship that you once had or what it could have been
or you're going to grieve the person you might have been outside of the relationship.
So pick your grief.
Which grief are you going to go for?
Well, we're imperfect human beings.
You know, the issue is we long for the divine.
I mean, in our heart of hearts, we really want, and of course the advertising in Hollywood,
we really want gods and goddesses
who are going to like utterly be there for us
and complete us.
But it's exactly your human imperfection
and mind and how we manage that collision.
That's the guts of what real intimacy is.
That's the show.
That's where you get to grow
and go beyond your comfort zone
and learn some things about yourself.
If you were being honest,
endlessly gratified. I mean, I'd be bored to death, but you're just not going to grow. That's not
what a real relationship is. That's an AI program. Yeah, it's really beautiful. What do you think
our culture can do to support men right now? I'm seeing a lot of conversation. I'm not just talking
about men we might be married to, but I'm the mother of a son. And I've, I took that responsibility
really seriously when he was born. And I continue to look for ways I can help him feel connected.
I think one of my big takeaways from this conversation is how the culture has hurt men.
And women are screaming to bring men back into relationship and to help men change.
But it gets exhausting sometimes and it needs all of us. So what can we do culturally to
support men to be more vulnerable. Let me talk about the boys to start all the way. Yeah, please.
Okay. I want you to understand that raising a relational boy is going against the culture.
Yeah. And I want you to understand what you're asking your son to do. So I talk about raising our sons in particular to be culturally literate.
And in our culture, there's a choice at any given moment.
You can be really authentic, which means human, vulnerable, and express yourself, and you'll get shit for it.
Or you can accommodate, duck under the radar, escape the grief you'll get, but sacrifice your own.
you know, the story I always tell is this one, if I may.
When my kids, they're in their 30s now,
but when they were little boys, we were in the Caribbean
and they were doing corn rolls in their hair.
And so my older son was a big jock.
He had like maybe two little Keith Richards rock star cornrolled.
That was enough.
The other one who grew up and became a ballet dancer,
and now he's a doctor, but you dance
for the L.A. ballet for a year.
He was like, yeah, let's do it,
a whole lot. And his favorite colors,
which were golden pink.
So the night before
they go back to school, they have this stuff
in their half. And, you know, it's
quite a deal to get it out.
And Belin and I sit him down and go,
okay, here's the deal.
If you keep this stuff,
everybody could love you.
I think you're the head of the town
or some or all could give you a lot of grief for it.
You have to decide.
If you take them out of your hair,
you're giving up the joy of walking in with that stuff.
If you don't take them out of your hair,
you're going to have to withstand whatever people throw at you.
What do you guys want to do?
It's not our decision is there.
It's beautiful.
What do you guys want to do about it?
And the little one said, I'm going for it.
But when it came time,
to put their foot in the car to go to school, the older one freaked out.
I can't do it, I can't do it.
And we wound up having to cut it.
Oh, my gosh.
And I think knowing the kids in his class, he would have gotten shit for it.
Yeah.
The little one, who's always been a little charmed, was the toast of the town.
But I don't think my older one was stupid.
And when we teach boys to be relational, we have to understand,
Just like when we're asking men to be more intimate,
we're asking them to move beyond patriarchy.
When we're asking boys to stay relational,
it's within a context in which there's a lot of pressure
for them to not do that.
So I want you to have sensitivity to that.
Case by case, it's not your decision as theirs.
But I do want you to build what I call
a relationship-cherishing subculture
around your family.
friends, go into school and either join or create a non-bullying committee.
Because the way boys are enforced in the patriarchy is through bullying.
The biggest enforcers of traditional masculinity are other boys on the playground.
So do what you can to protect your son and show your son different ways of being a man
than what they're going to get out in the media.
And take that job seriously.
And then don't assume that your boy is going to stop being relational because that's what happened.
Yeah.
You know, one thing I used to do with my son a lot because he would want to avoid conflict and he had quite a temper.
I found one thing that I could say to him, which was, when you look me in the eye, I know you're listening to me.
So I don't care what you're saying, but just sit here and look me in the eye because that's how I
feel like you're paying attention. And that one became really, I have a 23-year-old, very
relational son. And my new phrasing at 23 as he's in a relationship is I ask him questions,
and this one's interesting. I'll ask him questions like, tell me how you're feeling about that.
I try to get him to use his feeling words. And sometimes he'll say to me, mom, I don't like
talking about my feelings. And I find that I'm sort of at a loss for what the next thing is to say,
to him, but I try to show him by our, by his relationship to me, what I'm looking for.
Do you think, how do we help young men, especially, you know, I've got, he's 23, he's dating a woman
that he's very serious with, and I just keep thinking how to support him in that relationship
in the more connected way.
Just tell him that being connected is a great thing, even though, I want you to be
connected to your woman and don't be telling your male friends about it.
But how will we change it if nobody, you know, it's like if it's all done in secrecy,
how are we going to change the patriarch?
One step at a time.
Okay.
You know, I don't think this is for you to do.
But when I'm sitting with men, I routinely, you don't have feelings, Bill?
you got a piece of paper?
I want you to write down these seven words in a column.
Primary feelings like primary colors.
There are a million use of feelings, but these are primary.
Joy, pain, anger, fear, shame, guilt, love.
As you listen, joy, pain, anger, fear, shame, guilt, love.
Got them, Bill?
Yeah.
Good.
As you're sitting there now,
are you feeling? I could be faint, but tell me something, invariably. Well, I don't want to
screw this up. I guess that's, what would that be? Nervous? That's fear, Bill. Okay, Bill,
where's that in your body? What's the sensation? It can in my chest? What do you got? It
butterflies? If those butterflies could speak, what would they say? I hope I don't screw this up.
Okay, great. What else are you feeling?
Well, I'm feeling some,
Mindy, by the time I'm done with this list,
I've been noticed where every man comes up with three, four, five feelings
by this time I'm done with it.
And then I get to say the punchline.
Here's the punchline.
Bill, you're a passionate guy.
You know what?
Your feelings never left you.
You left them.
All you have to do is to,
and the satellite dish in, get some structure, and pay attention, and they've been burbling
along all along.
Beautiful.
So, uh, here you go.
Yeah.
Amazing.
Well, Terry, this has been an amazing conversation.
And I, you know, I really, uh, again, admire your work and I really hear the cries of my
community.
So I think this podcast is going to do incredibly well and help people.
So thank you for your wisdom.
Tell us a little bit about your courses.
because I know that there's a lot of couples that are looking for a lifeline.
Yeah.
So we have sort of three flagship programs.
Go to terrierreal.com.
We have therapists that you can find all over the world.
And how to get more of what you want to stand up with love in your relationship is the basic relationship skills course,
how to fight fair, how to empower your partner to come through for you.
How to get what you want.
Amazing.
Yeah.
We have one course on self-esteem, what it is and what it isn't, because most people don't have it.
And one course on healthy boundaries.
How to assert healthy boundaries without clobbing your partner.
So these are the three things.
And then we have little specifics, like how to come back from an affair.
How to stop fighting.
Should I stay or should I go?
It's going to be the new one.
So we have these little courses, and then we have these bigger courses.
Come to my website and investigate, read my book, of course.
But take a course or two.
And if the guy you're with won't take them, you take them.
Yep.
And then seduce them.
Hey, Bill, I've been taking this course by Terry Real and relationship.
I just realized I can be.
one-up and boundaryless.
You've got this grid.
And this is what I sound like.
What a pain in the ass that must be for you.
Hey, you want to see where you are on the grid?
It's kind of fun.
That's beautiful.
Talk about your own work and what you've learned
and do it with humility and honesty.
And that's the best way to invite your guy to get,
oh, that's kind of interesting.
Okay, where do I fit on the grid?
But you start first.
Amazing. Amazing.
Amazing.
Well, keep up the great work.
I assume it's terryreal.com, and we'll leave links in here.
So, yeah, thank you.
Well, again, I mean, I've been listening to you.
I listened to us on a drive from L.A. to San Francisco.
And it was a really good read.
A good listen.
And I was so intrigued.
I then went and bought the book.
So just, yeah, really thank you.
You know, I really, the women thank you.
I think the men thank you, too.
I think what at the heart of this conversation, why I wanted to bring you on, is that women aren't wanting to leave their marriage.
They're wanting more connection.
Yeah.
As my beautiful DEI consultant, Duran Young, says, let's not have the oppression Olympics.
Patriarchy hurts everybody.
Yes.
We all want to connect.
Before you get individually empowered, fed up, and leave the son of a gun, drag him to somebody like me.
and see if he can be made and do a better son of a gun.
But you have to learn how to do that skill for yourself.
Amazing.
Amazing.
Thank you so much, Terry.
I really appreciate you.
Beautiful work.
Thank you.
Thanks.
Thank you so much for joining me in today's episode.
I love bringing thoughtful discussions about all things health to you.
If you enjoyed it, we'd love to know about it.
So please leave us a review, share it with your friends, and let me know
what your biggest takeaway is.
