The School of Greatness - 225 10 Ways to Stop Jealousy from Sabotaging Your Relationships with Chris Lee
Episode Date: September 9, 2015"Sometimes our imagination runs wild in the wrong direction." - Chris Lee If you enjoyed this episode, check out show notes and more at http://lewishowes.com/225. ...
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This is episode number 225 with Transformation Coach Chris Lee.
Welcome to the School of Greatness.
My name is Lewis Howes, former pro athlete turned lifestyle entrepreneur.
And each week we bring you an inspiring person or message
to help you discover how to unlock your inner greatness.
Thanks for spending some time with me today.
Now let the class begin.
Welcome everyone back to the School of Greatness podcast.
My name is Lewis Howes.
Thank you so much for being here.
It means the world to me.
If this is your first time here, thank you.
I'm so blessed and grateful that you showed up.
If you've been here before, then welcome you. I'm so blessed and grateful that you showed up.
If you've been here before, then welcome back.
We've got a great one today.
His name is Chris Lee.
He's been on here more than anyone else has been on the School of Greatness podcast.
We'll have it all linked up for the other episodes he's been on because you're going to want to make sure to check those out after this one at the show notes at lewishouse.com
slash 225. So make sure to go back there after this one at the show notes at lewishouse.com slash 225.
So make sure to go back there after this episode.
But we've got a powerful interview today because we talk about jealousy.
Now, I actually don't know too many people that talk about this on podcasts or blogs or videos.
It's not really talked about how to overcome jealousy and how to really make sure that
you don't allow jealousy to ruin your life, your emotions, and your relationships.
This could be intimate relationships, professional relationships, family relationships, but sometimes
jealousy controls us and consumes our mind so that we can't actually move forward in
a powerful, loving way.
And in order to create great results in life, you've got to have incredibly loving relationships.
If they're filled with jealousy and fueled by that, then it's going to be tough to communicate
and work well together.
Now, I've been in many relationships, both intimate relationships and friendships and
family and other things where I've experienced jealousy in a major way completely. And I think
that stems from a lot of insecurities growing up is having that jealousy. But I've learned over the
years as I've matured and I've learned that what jealousy does to me when I allow it to consume me,
how it affects me and realize that it doesn't serve me in any way, then I've learned to
grow beyond it.
Now, listen, I still get jealous from time to time.
And I think that's human nature in a lot of ways.
But we definitely have tools available for us to not let it control us, to recognize
when it happens.
And in this episode, we talk about the 10 ways to overcome jealousy and not let it control you
or sabotage your relationships. So I'm super excited about this. And I think you're going
to get a lot out of this. So make sure to share this episode, lewishouse.com slash 225
with your friends, because it is going to be powerful.
And please tweet me at lewishouse and at chrismotivador and let us know what you enjoyed from this episode the most.
Now let's go ahead and dive into this episode with the one, the only Chris Lee.
Welcome, welcome, welcome back, everyone.
This is the sixth time that Chris Lee is in the house.
Oh, my God, no way.
We are very excited about this.
People have been asking for you to come back on.
You're like the resident therapist for everyone out here.
I meet so many people who love you, who listen to the podcast and say,
Chris Lee is my favorite.
Thank you for having him on.
When are you having him back?
So I'm super pumped for this.
And you talked to me
a week ago
and you said,
I've got a great topic.
Yes.
And you said it's about jealousy
and the 10 ways
to stop jealousy
from sabotaging
your relationships.
And I said,
that is a topic
I've never really heard
anyone talk about.
Right.
And probably something that could save a lot of relationships and empower so many people.
And coming from my own experience of being a jealous boyfriend in many, many relationships
and just allowing my jealousy to control me and consume my thoughts. I mean,
I talked to so many men specifically. I know women deal with this as well,
but I talk to so many men who are in relationships
and it's like their egos consume them
and their minds play tricks on them
of like what's their girlfriend doing
or the girl they're interested in
or their business partner, what are they doing?
All these different things that like
our mind plays these stories in our head, right?
Where we think people are doing
things and we get jealous for no reason well we use our imagination sometimes our imagination runs
wild in the wrong direction wrong direction it can be powerful in the right direction yeah your
imagination is like einstein uh has said in his quote imagination is more important than knowledge
but when your imagination runs wild in the wrong direction,
it could create a lot of unnecessary drama.
Drama and sadness and pain and misery.
Well, it could go to every level that you could even think of
in terms of your imagination could actually have you sabotage great things.
And it's not just in relationship.
I want to be clear about this.
Jealousy, you could have career jealousy.
You could be jealous of your friends.
You could be jealous of your spouses, your children.
Your child likes to hang out.
Your child likes to hang out with someone else's dad.
And that could cause jealousy.
There could be jealousy, professional
jealousy. Somebody's further
along than you are in their career.
And maybe they're not working as hard
and you're just jealous. You could be jealous of your employees.
They came up with an idea you didn't come up with.
So jealousy is all across
the board. I want to be clear about this.
All relationships, not just an intimate relationship.
Professional relationships, personal
relationships, social relationships.
We could be jealous of the neighbors because they have a better car than we have or a nicer house.
Or a pool in the backyard or whatever.
A pool in the backyard.
You could be at the gym jealous of the guy working out next to you because he's got a better body than you.
Right.
Or you're a girl and you're jealous of the blonde that lives next door who's really skinny. Right. and you keep it in check and you're able to go, oh, yeah, this person is doing better than I am.
Let me strive to be better or let me be a better husband or a better father or a better son
or a better businessman. But when jealousy goes spiraling out of control, it could cause anxiety.
It could cause stress. It could cause a lot of unnecessary drama to the point where people can't stand to be around us anymore.
And you could take a relationship that is full of love and someone who loves you and cares about you and is visualizing their future with you, and you could destroy that to the point where that person that
loved you, maybe they still love you, but they are running in the opposite direction.
And if we don't have the right tools to deal with this, then what we'll end up doing is
sabotaging our relationship. And given that my mission and your mission is to empower people
and to bring them tools that will transform their
lives, I believe that these 10 steps and these 10 keys could really make a huge difference.
That's crazy.
And where the topic came from was actually in one of my seminars, I had a student of mine
who is married to the most incredible guy in the world. She loves him. He's a successful lawyer and he's a great
businessman, father, et cetera. And when she first met him, it was amazing. But he has developed this
paranoia to the point where when they go to restaurants, he has her facing the wall.
No.
Because he doesn't want her looking at anybody. He's afraid people are looking at her.
He checks her messages.
He checks her Facebook accounts.
He hacked one of her email accounts.
I mean, this guy is out of control.
Wow.
And so she's like, if something doesn't shift, I'm out of here.
shift i'm out of here yeah and so i believe that if we have the right tools and we're able to face up to this we could transform it it's amazing and so not only is this podcast going to be great for
those of you that have that jealous attack but also how to deal with somebody who's jealous yes
because it's both it's two two things and we're never taught how to do this we're never taught
how to overcome like these feelings these emotions that are it's like a prison we're never taught how to do this. We're never taught how to overcome these feelings, these emotions.
It's like a prison we're in when we feel jealous.
Right.
I can only imagine what prison would be like because we create that for ourselves in our own body when we are in that conversation and in that madness dream of jealousy of what's happening.
And we're never taught. No one teaches us growing up how to overcome jealousy
or how to change the script
or how to communicate about it
with the person that you're jealous about
or whatever it may be.
And when you think about
what the source of a lot of jealousy is,
it's our ego that is always competing
and we always need to be number one
and we always need to be the best
and we got to be the best looking,
the smartest, the prettiest prettiest the brightest the fastest uh the number one team i'm sure that
in sports there's a lot of jealousy did you ever experience that of course yeah jealous of other
teammates or jealous because the coach is paying attention to other players you know it shows up
in in our relationships you know you're always comparing yourself to someone prettier, smarter, hotter, more powerful.
And what we don't realize is that we're only looking at superficial attributes and we're not realizing the reason why people are with us is because of something that can't be measured.
There's something so powerful and something that – I don't know why you're one of my best friends.
It's not just because of what you do and what you have.
It's who you are.
There's an element that attracts people to you, and that element is priceless.
And I believe that every human being on the planet has an element that's priceless.
And when you don't value that, then you create insecurities.
So this is an amazing topic.
I'm excited.
We could talk forever about this.
This is really cool.
I'm excited about this for myself because as a teenager in early 20s,
I would say that I was easily wrapped up in being jealous for different reasons,
whether it be sports or girlfriends or whatever it may be.
Sibling jealousy. Sibling jealousy.
Sibling jealousy.
Yeah, my brother was always,
you know,
the greatest in the world
and what he did
and I was like,
what do I need to do
to catch up?
Musician.
Exactly, yeah.
So there's always been
a level of jealousy.
What about me?
I'm the youngest of five
and so I was jealous
of everybody.
Exactly, yeah, yeah.
And they were jealous of me
because I got all the attention.
Right, exactly.
You don't realize it.
Reverse jealousy, yeah.
And for me, I feel like I've definitely evolved and grown up from allowing jealousy to control me.
But it still creeps in from time to time.
My ego flares up.
I'll run stories and dream in my head about what could be happening with certain relationships or whatever maybe in my life.
And it doesn't serve me one bit and it doesn't serve the relationship at all.
So I feel like I've evolved a lot and I've grown a lot, but there's still so much more
to overcome.
Well, as we develop our self-worth and as we develop our self-value and as we become
more appreciative of what we are and what we have, jealousy diminishes.
That's nice.
Yeah.
So that's something that we'll be talking about for sure.
Yeah.
So when you're a teenager, you're probably going to be at the peak of your jealousy and
then hopefully it'll diminish as you continue to evolve as a human being.
Well, it has to do with emotional intelligence.
Exactly.
And part of what emotional intelligence is, is the ability to handle your emotions and the ability to handle interpretations
because usually your imagination is truly a series of interpretations and perceptions.
Yeah, exactly.
And these are disempowering perceptions.
Exactly.
Yeah.
Well, I'm excited.
We've got 10 steps.
I don't know what they are yet, but Chris has them right in front of him and he's going
to be explaining to me.
So I'm excited to learn as a listener myself we'll develop it together yes so obviously the first step to stopping
jealousy from destroying our relationships is to accept it and acknowledge it accept the jealousy
except i am jealous except that i have this pattern, acknowledge it, own it.
Because if I don't accept it and I don't acknowledge that I have this jealousy tendency or that I am jealous, then it's going to destroy my relationship.
Gotcha.
So how do we accept it?
What's the process for accepting it? So the process for accepting it is to identify what's causing in me this stress.
Why am I exaggerating with my imagination what's happening?
So it's acknowledging the behavior as a breakdown, as mean excessive breakdown for example if i find myself uh posting on my
girlfriend's facebook page or posting on my husband's page or you know making some some
outrageous comments or comments or passive aggressive behavior as a way of identifying it. Knowing that I'm feeling uncomfortable around certain people and interpreting their behavior as offensive.
So when I feel like I'm going to lose something, when I feel like there's loss, like I'm afraid – because when you think about jealousy, it's about afraid of losing something.
You're afraid of losing that relationship. You're afraid of losing that relationship.
You're afraid of losing that job.
You're afraid of not being enough.
So accepting it is just acknowledging it.
It's owning it.
It's speaking it.
It's identifying that I am comparing myself with other trainers and I was feeling jealousy, the minute I was able to own it and go, okay, I'm jealous, just knowing it and acknowledging it and sometimes speaking it to somebody else and communicating it with somebody else and having a dialogue that you actually admit and acknowledge
and accept that you're a jealous person.
You know, it doesn't make you less of a person.
It doesn't make you an alien.
You know, it means you are a human being and you've got flaws.
Sure.
And the first step to overcoming any flaws to accept it.
Okay.
And to own it.
There you go.
You know, so you and to own it. There you go. So you get to own it.
And those of you listening and you know that maybe you're not jealous in all areas, but maybe
I want you to think about it. In what areas of my life is jealousy hindering my capacity to create
joy and love and success? Am I jealous in my friendships? Am I jealous in my relationships? Am I jealous with
my children, family, professional? Where am I jealous? I want you to identify. And what you
could do is journal about it. Write down the areas of my life where I experienced jealousy are. And
by acknowledging it and owning it, then you gain power over it.
As long as you're a no, I'm not jealous or someone else is jealous or you're pretending not to know something, then it has power over you.
So the first step is to accept it and to acknowledge it and to own it.
Perfect.
Okay.
Once I accept, I acknowledge, and I own it, Step number two is feedback. Get feedback from your spouse, get feedback from your children, get feedback from
your boss and you know, be honest. I noticed that I'm feeling tense around you. I noticed that I'm
experiencing jealousy. What's your experience of me? How am I showing up to you?
And what if they say, no, you're not – I don't seem like you're jealous at all.
Then maybe you're not.
Maybe it's in your head.
Maybe it's all just you, yeah.
Yeah.
Or maybe it's a private conversation you haven't made public.
Gotcha.
So it could be one or the other.
And what if they say, yeah, I've been feeling like you're a little jealous or passive aggressive
and it really upsets me.
Great.
And so thank you for the feedback.
I appreciate it.
And why I'm asking is because I'm committed to breaking through it.
Okay.
And so if you have a spouse that says that to you, how's that going to make you feel?
I own it and I apologize and I'm committed to breaking through.
You'll feel supported.
You'll feel loved.
and I'm committed to breaking through.
You'll feel supported.
You'll feel loved.
And I think it's important to get feedback from somebody that's around you that is experiencing it or feedback from a third party,
someone who has nothing to do with the situation that is watching you.
A friend.
Your friends see you in action.
They're like, hey, dude, lighten up.
Right.
Or come on, honey, lighten up. Or come on, honey, lighten up.
Maybe a girlfriend that is seeing you because usually the people that are closest to us are the ones that hear our banter about whatever it is that we're upset about.
Exactly.
And so feedback I think is important in any aspect of your life and any part of growth, being aware of how I'm coming across.
And so when you have a third party that is not invested, not attached to the situation, they could see it.
Hey, am I coming across as jealous at work?
Absolutely.
You are making snide comments.
You are always demeaning the coworker. You know,
you are doing little things to sabotage that person because that's what we do. We start
sabotaging. We get passive aggressive. You know, we, you know, start showing up in a way that
can cause problems for people and ourselves. And at the end of the day, this is about being joyful and happy. And so if your
behavior is not producing joy and happiness, then you get to shift it. There you go. I love it.
You get feedback and find people that are honest with you because sometimes we got people that
sell out on us and tell us what we want to hear. Those are the wrong people to ask. You want
someone to say, you know what?
This is not working.
Right.
And so once I get feedback from people, I'm able to really embrace and accept, okay, it's
not just me feeling it.
It's my partner saying it.
It's my friend saying it.
I need and I get to transform this.
Perfect.
and I get to transform this.
Perfect.
So once I'm able to accept it and acknowledge it,
like I said, journaling works throughout this whole process.
Writing down how you're feeling around certain people,
writing down the moments that you feel uncomfortable or jealous and who you're jealous of, why you're jealous of them,
what do they have in your mind that you don't, et cetera,
et cetera? Or what is the scenario you're afraid that is happening? And then second step, get
feedback. Then you want to ask yourself, and this is an important question to ask to overcome this
and break through this. What is my reward for being jealous? What's the payoff?
You know, jealousy is a racket.
And a racket is an automatic behavior that I use to protect myself.
And rackets are not random.
They're there because of a reason.
They're there as a result of experiences.
Maybe in the past, people have betrayed you.
Maybe in the past, you were compared.
Maybe in the past, you felt like you weren't worth anything. So the racket is there to protect you. And it also brings
you a false reward. And so you want to ask yourself, what's my reward for being jealous?
Well, believe it or not, there's a reward. And some people equate love with jealousy.
You know, well, I love them so much, that's why I'm jealous.
So it's kind of like the prize of loving.
And people have a strange interpretation of love.
And there are also couples that foster jealousy.
Really?
Like they'll do things just for you to get jealous.
Really?
Like they'll do things just for you to get jealous.
And the game that they're playing to get you jealous makes them feel like they're loved.
Significant or whatever. And valuable.
And, oh, see, he's jealous of me.
How cool.
It's cool until it gets out of control.
But there's a payoff.
It gives me a false sense of control, of power.
Well, that's unacceptable and I can't believe – it's like you find people out.
There's like this whole conspiracy about it.
And so I know that people have a hard time understanding, but there is a payoff.
The payoff could also be a negative payoff.
Like I get to be right that I'm worthless.
I get to be right that i can't trust people i get to be right that people are going to cheat on me you know so the payoff and the reward is a false sense of security of knowing i'm right i'm right
i found them out sure you know and there's And there's an ego gratification in that.
Mm-hmm.
Sure.
There's people that love to out people.
And there's people that love to be right about –
Prove people wrong that they were right about what they were going to do or whatever.
Exactly.
Or I knew I can't trust men.
Right.
Or I knew that my son was going to let me down again.
Or maybe you're looking for information to be right about an argument with somebody.
So there's a reward in all of the behaviors that don't work.
There's a reward.
It's like what do you get to be right about?
Sure.
Okay.
So the rewards.
So that's the third step.
Okay.
And the fourth step is – and this is a critical step – is to identify the prices.
Okay.
What does that mean?
The prices is what it's costing me to be jealous.
What is the cost?
What is the price tag that I'm playing?
Which could also be the reward in some senses, right?
The price could also be I was right, but it's like I'm ruining my relationship while being right.
Yeah.
Isn't that the price?
Wouldn't that be the price?
The reward is the false positive.
Yes.
But the price is what is hurting me.
The reality of that reward.
The reality.
Yeah, because the reward is not really a reward.
It's false.
Yes.
So the price is the reality.
Yes.
Yeah, it's tell the truth.
And so the price could be, you know, think about people that are jealous.
They're paranoid.
They're exhausted. They're exhausted.
They get anxiety.
They create in their own minds a reality that doesn't exist.
It could cost a relationship.
The price tag could be that people can't stand to be around you.
The price is your self-worth is on the ground.
The price is that you could end up physically hurting somebody.
So the price that you – you're not the only one paying a price.
The people around you pay a price.
Emotional abuse.
So when you think about prices, think about the prices that you pay and think about the prices that people pay around you.
So the price I pay when I'm jealous is I'm on edge all the time. I can't work.
I can't focus. I can't concentrate. I don't get to manifest my vision. Joy goes out the window.
Peace goes out the window. Stress becomes my new mantra. And so when I'm jealous and I'm in a jealous rage, blinders come on and I can't see anything around me.
I'm wasting life.
Can't see the good around me.
Can't see the good around me.
I don't appreciate myself.
I don't appreciate others.
The price I pay could be I could do things that I regret.
The prices other people pay.
Think about people when you're jealous,
not only do you pay prices, but the people around you pay prices. So for example, people will
withstand accusations that are not true. That's a price. People feel wrong all the time around you.
People experience emotional abuse by people that are overly jealous.
People can actually experience physical abuse when it's extreme and chronic.
And also the emotional abuse can manifest into physical stress, cancer, whatever it may be.
If you've got that much emotional stress on you, it creates in your body something physically challenging.
And then also what happens is that if I think you're cheating on me, well, I'm going to cheat on you.
Right, right.
And then you're paying for something that never happened.
Yeah.
So the people around you pay.
And so it becomes a very toxic situation.
And the biggest price is our joy and our happiness.
It's like life is meant
to be a joyful experience i'm gonna repeat that life is meant to be a joyful experience not a
stressful experience and so all this stress is being caused by yourself and now those of you
that are saying but what if people really are cheating on me and really are betraying me and really are hurting me?
Well, then you get to make a choice not to be with those people.
Or clear with them, have a conversation with them.
Or confront the situation and identify the situation and transform the situation.
And if the situation doesn't change, then make another choice.
But jealousy is still optional.
It's true.
You know?
It's like you could choose to see it as a gift. Well, I'm glad to know that this person is cheating on me. Now I'm
going to go find the person that I truly deserve, or now I'm going to go be with someone that I,
that deserves me. Yeah. You know, so even if it's, even if you have a reason to be jealous
or a reason to be upset, you're the one that chooses how to see
that situation. Sure. And you're the one that gets to shift it. So it's really important to
see the prices that you're paying and the prices other people pay. And once you're aware of that,
the fifth step, and I think this is one of the most important steps, is to get to the source.
And at the end of the day,
the only person responsible for your jealousy and responsible for your wild imagination is you.
And you want to ask yourself,
so what's going on with me?
What's happening with me that I am reacting this way
or overreacting this way.
What do you think it is for most people?
Obviously, it's different for everyone, but what's the common thread that comes up for
people when they're jealous, whether it's a wife or their husband or a husband or their
wife?
Two things.
Yeah.
Either they're so egocentrical that they need to be at the center of the universe and they
see people as pawns and they see people as a means to an end and if they're not
in the center of the conversation do you know people like that that they'll walk into a room
and they gotta be in the center of the conversation and if it's not about them they'll take their toys
and run away right right it's people like to be right don't want to be in control that want to
look good yes so either it's that that you that my wife is supposed to be there for me
and they want to be,
they're like uber OCD controllers
or it's the flip side,
absolute insecurity, low self-worth.
Insecurity, low self-worth,
thinking I'm not good enough,
I'm not pretty enough,
I'm not sparring enough.
The person I'm in a relationship with is going to find someone hotter than me, funnier than me, smarter than me.
And so I'll start making up stories that line up with that.
Sure. interpretation and my belief is that I'm worthless, that not only am I going to feel that my partner
is going to cheat on me, I'm going to actually be mad at them for loving me.
It's like mad at them for loving me.
Yeah.
Like, like, I'm so worthless.
Like, what do you possibly see in me?
Wow.
And so then a person that feels worthless, they'll start seeing the good in everybody else and then think that that person is going to be with that other person because it's just bound to happen.
So they're always waiting for the other shoe to fall, to use one of my mom's quotes.
I'm just waiting for the other shoe to fall.
And that's someone who is expecting the worst.
Gotcha.
And so the source of feedback is just fear.
And when you live in fear and you live in a negative interpretation about yourself,
then you're always comparing yourself to other people.
And that happens not just in relationship.
Actresses that compare themselves, businessmen that compare themselves, athletes that compare themselves, all across the board.
If you have low self-worth and low self-esteem, then you're going to compare yourself and you're going to be jealous.
And not only that, you will only validate yourself when you have a good result.
that, you will only validate yourself when you have a good result.
So if you like hit, you know, pass the touchdown pass or.
And a lot of people won't validate that when they have a great result, they say it wasn't good enough.
Right.
Or what's next or.
Or they'll or the opposite.
I am that touchdown pass.
Right, right, right.
And then when it doesn't happen because nothing lasts forever, lasts forever, we go from hero to zero in a second.
A second, yeah.
You could be on the top of the game and you could be on the bottom of the game.
Exactly.
If who you are –
Tiger Woods, Lance Armstrong.
Absolutely.
If who you are is that result, then when it's not there, you're nothing.
Exactly.
I know the topic for our next number seven podcast.
It's how to increase your self-worth.
Yes.
Absolutely. Because I think a lot of self-worth. Yes, absolutely.
Because I think a lot of people would be asking that. But this is figuring out the source, number five.
And then so what are the interpretations I have of myself? What are the beliefs I have about myself?
What are the interpretations I have about the person that's with me? What are my beliefs,
my interpretations about life? And once I'm
able to identify the source, step number six is to let it go. Let the source go. Let the source,
let those interpretations go. Shift them. Instead of coming up with your imagination of 10 reasons
why your partner would leave you, write a list of 10 reasons why your partner wants to be with you.
And also another thing is, another source of jealousy is the interpretation that if I lose
something, I'll have nothing. And so part of letting it go is letting go of the attachment
to the person, letting go of the attachment to the result. So what's the benefit of losing this
person? And I know it's crazy and I know it's not. What do you mean losing it? Well, yeah.
If you're attached to the person you're with and you feel like you're nothing without them,
then that jealousy is never going to go away. So you've got to find what are the qualities in you, what's the value of you without this
person.
Even use your imagination to imagine yourself without the person and imagine the good things
that are going to come of it.
Right.
The other things that could come, it may not be the same, but it could be different and
still beautiful in its own way.
Exactly.
Yeah.
So letting it go is letting go of the feeling,
letting go of the interpretation. It also could be letting go of the emotion or letting go of the
past. Maybe husband number two is paying the price for husband number one. Right. Or boss number two
is paying price for boss number one. Or partner, business partner number two is paying for business partner number one.
I did an exercise yesterday on trust in a training,
and I had this woman who said, I don't trust any men.
Zero men.
Not one.
Because of what one man said.
Not one.
I trust none of them.
And I go, are you married?
Yes.
How's that going?
Horrible because I'm always monitoring everything he does.
I found a piece of paper with a phone number.
I made a fool out of myself because I accused him and it turns out it's his aunt's number.
Oh my goodness.
And so it's out of control.
I trust no men.
And the reason why I trust no men is because this one guy hurt me when I was a little girl.
And another guy hurt my mom. and then it's like a pattern.
And so if we don't let that go, we're going to end up making everybody pay for what one or two people did to us.
And I have a saying that I use a lot.
I'd rather have a bruised heart than a boxed heart.
A boxed heart.
What does that mean?
A boxed heart is a heart that's closed, a heart that doesn't trust, a heart that doesn't
let anybody in because a boxed heart is a broken heart 24-7.
Wow.
A bruised heart is a loving heart, a joyful heart that every now and then gets broken.
Yeah.
But it keeps putting out there.
It keeps going out there and keeps loving.
It keeps putting out there.
It keeps going out there and keeps loving.
And so by letting something go, you're letting go of being right.
Choose love versus being right.
Choose positive versus negative. And so not just letting go of the interpretation and shifting it.
Let go of the emotion.
Have a good cry.
Journal about the things in your life that have caused you to feel stress, anxiety less than.
Maybe your whole life you were told you were worthless. Maybe you had a coach that just abused the shh. Crap out of you. The crap, sorry. I almost said shh.
I caught myself.
That abused you.
Maybe you had a devil wears Prada boss
that treated you like you were nothing.
Yeah.
And so that affects our self-worth.
So letting it go is a very important step
to transforming this
and shifting the interpretation,
shifting the beliefs,
create a new story. Yeah. How about this? Start believing your spouse.
You know, I went to a concert with my business partner, believe them,
you know, start believing the people around you. Stop doubting, stop searching. Now,
if something comes up and you have a valid reason,
then check it out with the source. And like I said, if the person's not treating you how you
deserve to be treated, if the person is cheating or the person is, the boss is disrespecting or
you feel like you're being bullied or something, what's your responsibility to step out of it?
Yeah, and one of the challenges,
we were talking about this before,
if someone is so jealous all the time of you,
it's putting you on this leash.
It's making you feel trapped
or like you don't have freedom to be yourself.
And it's probably gonna make the person
want to give you reason to be jealous
when you do that, right?
It's gonna want them to get away from you
to get their space,
to go hang out with other people
who are accepting and loving of them,
which could cause even more jealousy.
But you've got to be able to be trusting
in order to let go of some of that.
I call it loosen the leash.
Loosen the leash.
Because jealous people want to keep
a tight leash around people.
And it's give people space.
And if you're listening and you're a jealous husband,
give your wife space.
Let her go out with her
friends. Trust the process.
Don't micromanage.
Nobody wants to be micromanaged.
If you're jealous of your boss
or your coworkers,
give them space.
It only creates more drama.
And by truly shifting and transforming those beliefs and transforming those interpretations, you create a different environment around you.
And step number seven is to create a vision.
We could never miss out on that word, vision.
I believe it's the first chapter in your book.
It is, yes.
Of course it is.
What is your vision for your relationship?
What is your vision for your career?
What is your vision for your family?
What is your vision for your health?
And use some of those things that you're jealous about.
Maybe you're jealous of somebody who's doing something you want to do.
Then develop that.
Maybe you're jealous of somebody who's able to work out in a way that you can't work out.
Develop that.
Maybe you're jealous because your neighbor is nicer to your kids than you are.
Develop that.
What's my vision for myself?
What's my vision for my family? What's my vision for the world? And really get connected to that
vision. And part of journaling is writing that down. Take the time. What's my vision for my
relationships? What's my vision for myself? What's my vision for my self-worth? And by getting clear on your vision
and visualizing it, being connected to it, then you could create what's necessary, the conversations
and interpretations that are necessary for that vision. There you go. And transform your
relationships. I love it. Vision is everything. Yeah. Vision is the heartbeat to everything.
And when you're not clear on what you want, you'll be getting whatever is left over.
Exactly.
You'll be getting all the leftovers that you don't want.
And once you're clear on your vision and clear about what you are committed to causing in your relationships and you're clear on the barrier of jealousy and you've accepted it and you acknowledged it.
You've gotten feedback from people and feedback from a neutral party. You've identified the
rewards. You've identified the prices that you pay that others pay. You got to the source of it.
You started letting it go. You created a vision. Then step number eight is to create an action plan. So what actions could I
take in my relationships that will foster love and unity? Well, I could give people space. I could
trust people. I could let it go. I could give up the attachment, the control that I want to have over people. The action I could take is to celebrate when a partner or a co-worker gets a promotion
instead of sabotaging the promotion.
Or I could celebrate that my girlfriend, wife, husband, boyfriend, significant other has
other friends other than me.
I could celebrate people's accomplishments and turn envy
into appreciation. And by creating that, I start creating a different environment around me,
an environment of love and support and an environment of prosperity and abundance.
Yeah, I remember in the previous relationship years ago I was in,
I remember achieving things and being so excited to want to share it with my partner.
That's healthy.
And she would get upset when I would express it with her and talk about it.
She would get upset. She would get down. her and talk about it. She would get upset.
She would get down.
She would talk about, I wish I was doing certain things in my life.
And she would automatically take the wind out of my sails and make me feel bad for achieving things.
And never smiled or never was happy or hugged me.
And it was like, let's celebrate.
I hear that a lot.
And it was the worst feeling in the world.
It made me not want to create more great things in the world. It made me not want to create more great things in the world.
It made me not want to do anything great.
Or not share it with her.
And not share it with her too because I was just like this is not –
And not include her.
Yeah.
And I think the best way to support your partner or anyone in any type of relationship is to be excited and empower them to create more great things in the world. It's to create a ripple effect, not take away their joy,
take away their gifts, but inspire them to keep creating.
Yeah, what we end up doing is we clip people's wings.
Yes.
And instead of being the wind beneath people's wings.
And when you are generous with people, people will be generous with you.
It's the law.
generous with people, people will be generous with you. It's a law. When you are a valuable team member that is excited about your team and their success and you want to forward a team,
you become a valuable businessman and a valuable employee and a valuable partner.
If you're the owner of a company and you're jealous of your employees, you're going to clip their wings.
It's our ego that wants to be the best.
I'm somebody that everyone I coach and everyone I work with, I've been in this work for 28 years.
But if I could pass on to you 28 years and millions of people that I've impacted and you can create something way beyond I did, I'm excited.
I'm not jealous.
Yeah.
Because to me, I'm proud.
Yeah.
Because I think that the biggest thing we could do is to forward each other.
And if you want your relationships to last, people need to feel inspired by you, not limited by you.
So true.
If you want your relationships to last, they need to be inspired.
And that means every relationship.
I love that.
So that was number eight?
Number eight.
Okay, awesome.
Taking action, creating that action plan.
Number nine is to have a support system.
To keep you on track?
On track.
So the same people that you asked for feedback, maybe it's a friend, maybe it's a coach.
And I know you've heard this a lot. I am a firm believer in having people coach me,
having people support me. I know I'm a powerful man. I know that I'm capable.
I know I'm a powerful man.
I know that I'm capable.
But because I've got a network of support and a network of coaching and a network of development, I'm able to continue being the best I could be.
And part of this is having a network of support, people that know what you're working on.
And if you're working on professional jealousy, have someone that knows that that could support you. If you're working on your self-worth, because by elevating self-worth,
jealousy decreases, then have a partner. Have a buddy. Have someone that is going through the same thing and that wants to work with you on it. Hire a life coach. Participate in a seminar. There are lots of seminars around
the world that give you the opportunity to really uncover and to redesign the beliefs that you live
from such that you experience a transformation. Read. Listen to podcasts. Read Lewis Howell's
new book. These are all things that just contribute
to me being
an effective human being,
an emotionally intelligent
human being
and live a life
of joy and peace.
Yeah.
I mean,
I'm big on having
a support system
and,
you know,
sometimes it can be,
you know,
the support doesn't serve you.
At the end of the day,
you've got to be able
to make your decisions
and go with what your gut says but the support, having a coach, I've got coaches in many different
areas. You coach me. I've got other coaches. I've got mentors who aren't coaching me. I've got
friends, but I'm constantly reaching out for feedback and support.
I think that's what has you be effective and authentic and it has you be real and people relate to real.
People relate to authenticity.
And if you're truly committed to transforming an area of your life, then I recommend having a coach or a buddy or a partner that's going to support you with that.
And even your own partner.
And even your own partner, like even the person that, you know, honey, you know that I have – I've owned, that I'm jealous, and I really need you.
When you see that I'm going overboard, just kind of let's pick a code word.
We could pick a word that – because sometimes you're aware of it and you let it go and it's just a pattern. And it takes time to practice letting things go and new behavior.
time to practice letting things go and new behavior.
I say it takes anywhere between 60 and 90 days of rigorous practice to shift a habit.
And a lot of studies on human development and shifting habits will agree that it takes 60 to 90 days of practice to shift a habit.
And jealousy is a racket and it's a habit.
And you could enlist your partner or your friends.
Your friends know when you're jealous of who they're hanging out with because of the passive-aggressive questions.
So you went out to dinner with so-and-so.
So when these people see that that's happening, they get to remind you.
And your response, of course, will always be, thank you.
Yeah.
So that is the ninth step.
Perfect.
And the final step, I say, is celebrate your victory.
Celebrate that you have broken through this.
Every time you shift your response, you get to acknowledge yourself in a positive way.
Like, you know what?
Good for me.
You know, and, and, you know, also journal about that celebration. Like what's the lesson?
You know, I think that part of celebration is identifying the lesson. Lesson learned
is a powerful gift in your life. Lesson learned is a means for celebration and if you fall down again then start all over again
acknowledge it and just go through these steps again you know because i think that it's with
practice that you're gonna be able to shift things and if you're somebody i want to talk about this
uh before we finish the podcast if you're somebody that is with someone who's jealous, have them listen to
this podcast. There you go. Send it to your friends. That is, send it to your, hey, you know
what? This is feedback for you. I love you. And you know what? You're going to ruin your relationship
with your wife or you're not going to have the best work ethic, the best work relationships.
That also could hinder progress. You might not get a promotion because of it.
You might miss out on a lot of things.
So if you've got somebody that's jealous in your life, send them this podcast because
they're definitely going to benefit from it.
And if you are a jealous person and you're listening to this and your partner or your
friend is jealous, you guys both have a jealous relationship, whether it's intimate or non-intimate,
I would say share it with that or non-intimate, I would
say share it with that friend and say, listen, I want to come from a loving place and say,
I acknowledge that I've been jealous.
I feel sometimes you are as well.
We both acknowledge that.
I want us to work on this together.
Wow.
That's a great idea.
As a jealous couple where we're both jealous, I want us to acknowledge it and both listen
to this and work on it together and journal about this and celebrate our victories and talk to each other about it and figure out a game plan because it's not serving our relationship anymore and I want it to work.
And the reason why we're doing this podcast is because it's worth the attention.
It's worth looking at it because it could save a relationship.
It could save a life.
It could save your health. Quality of life. It could save a relationship. It could save a life. It could save a quality of life.
It could save your health.
And I want feedback from you guys.
Write on this podcast where you can write comments about how you used this podcast to how it helped you and how you used it.
It's going to help you if you use it.
Yes.
So leave a comment below this podcast on the blog.
I'll give you guys the link to where to go in a second.
But also, Chris is on Twitter, at Chris Motivador.
How do you spell that?
M-O-T-I-V-A-D-O-R.
There you go.
M-O-T-I-V-A-D-O-R.
And Instagram, ChrisLee65.
There you go.
And my Facebook page. Very important.
What is it?
Chris Lee Motivational Trainer.
Perfect.
We'll have it all linked up here in a second.
So make sure to comment and connect with Chris.
Let him know what you thought.
Let him know what inspired you the most about this episode over on Twitter and Facebook as well as on the blog.
Let's do a quick recap of the 10 points. So if you guys missed any of them, we'll just do them quickly. And you can write them down as well as on the blog. Let's do a quick recap of the 10 points.
So if you guys missed any of them, we'll just do them quickly and you can write them down
as well.
Okay.
So the first key is to accept and acknowledge.
The second is feedback.
Ask for feedback from the people that are around you that are experiencing your jealousy
and how they feel about it or a third party, someone who's outside of it but is seeing you in action.
Identify the rewards.
What are the rewards that I am getting out of this?
Because there's a reward.
Number four is the prices that I pay and others pay.
Identify those prices.
Five is get to the source.
What are the interpretations and the feelings and where is
this coming from? Six is to let go, let go of those feelings and those interpretations.
Seven is to get clear on my vision. Number eight is action. Number nine is support.
And number 10 is celebrate.
And this is the 10 ways to stop jealousy from destroying your relationships and sabotaging
relationships.
There you go.
Chris Lee, it's always a pleasure.
This is episode number six with you.
We'll have all the other episodes linked up from the previous ones.
Make sure to check them out if it's your first time coming because they're going to change your life.
Some really powerful ones.
But super honored that you keep coming back on.
I love it.
And I'm so grateful that you're in my life and in everyone's life on the School of Greatness podcast.
You enhance us.
You elevate us.
And you are the wind beneath our wings.
So thank you for lifting us up.
And very excited.
So make sure you guys share this out.
Thanks, Chris, for being here.
And we'll see you on the next episode coming soon.
Wait, you forgot to ask me a question.
Oh, the final one?
Do you want to answer it again?
Okay.
What's your definition of greatness?
See, I'm a regular member.
What's the definition right now? My definition of greatness
is gratitude. Being grateful for everything in my life, grateful for you that you're in my life,
grateful that I'm alive, that I get to be here today because I may not be here tomorrow.
So I live in gratitude. There you go. And that's one of the keys to greatness,
gratitude. Chris, thanks for coming on. Appreciate it. Thank you.
Wow. There you have it, guys. I hope you got a lot out of this podcast, whether you're a jealous
person or not. I hope you saw the value in it. And you can use these steps and these tools
for yourself, but also for other people that
you're in relationship with.
Again, whether they be intimate, your family, your friends, your business, we all experience
ourselves or other people jealous at one time or another.
And if you experience someone jealous, who's a friend of yours, who's jealous of someone
else, you can then coach them through these steps or just send them to listen
to this episode.
Again, lewishouse.com slash 225.
Share it with your friends on social media.
Tag me at lewishouse and at chrismotivador.
Also go back to the show notes, lewishouse.com slash 225 to learn how you can connect with
Chris and more information about this podcast in this specific
episode. And I got some incredible guests coming up soon. So subscribe to the School of Greatness
podcast. If this is your first time here, get the updates. We come out with shows every Monday,
Wednesday, and Friday, and I'd love for you to join the party in the community
because it's all about greatness. You guys know what time it is. It's time to go out party and the community because it's all about greatness.
You guys know what time it is. It's time to go out there and do something great. This day butchered