The School of Greatness - 3 KEYS to Healing Your Heart: Break Free from TOXIC RELATIONSHIPS & Find LOVE
Episode Date: March 29, 2024Today we welcome three incredible guests to explore the theme of healing from toxic people. Dr. Nicole LePera, author of "How to Be the Love You Seek," shares her journey of self-discovery and healing..., emphasizing the power of self-love and understanding our past. Dr. Mariel Buqué, a compassionate psychologist, takes us through her holistic approach to healing intergenerational trauma, offering practical tips for finding peace within ourselves and our relationships. Lastly, the inspiring Dr. Ramani Durvasula, author of "It's Not You," provides a roadmap for navigating and healing from narcissistic relationships, encouraging listeners to reclaim their lives. Together, these remarkable women provide a beacon of hope and a wealth of knowledge for anyone seeking to heal from toxic relationships and embrace a healthier, more fulfilling life.In this episode you will learnHow to embark on a journey of self-discovery and healing from past relationship traumas.The importance of self-love and emotional resilience in building healthy relationships.Practical techniques for breaking the cycle of intergenerational trauma.Strategies for identifying and healing from the effects of narcissistic relationships.How to reclaim your life and thrive in the face of narcissism.For more information go to www.lewishowes.com/1595For more Greatness text PODCAST to +1 (614) 350-3960Full episodes from today:Dr. Nicole LePera – https://link.chtbl.com/1529-podDr. Mariel Buqué – https://link.chtbl.com/1555-podDr. Ramani – https://link.chtbl.com/1577-pod
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to this special masterclass. We've brought some of the top experts in the world to help you
unlock the power of your life through this specific theme today. It's going to be powerful,
so let's go ahead and dive in. If someone watching or listening is in a relationship
with someone for a long time that they really love, they care about, and they have this pattern
of distancing themselves emotionally, shutting down, or kicking and screaming.
What can they do to support them in discovering tools, creating awareness around it, finding a therapist or a coach to support them in growing?
I think one of the most complicated things is you have two individuals trying to navigate a relationship where we both have our
stuff from the past. Because what often happens in those moments when someone's kicking and
screaming or detaching, chances are it could be activating mild lived experience, right? So if
someone removes themselves, distanced, just like my mom once did, to navigate whatever it is that
they're feeling, a difficult conversation
that we're having, something not to do with me at all, difficult experience they're having at work
or with their family, inherently in their distance, it's going to activate me, right? It's going to
bring me right back to in childhood when my mom was emotionally distant or when she was giving me
the silent treatment to express her, you know, disappointment at whatever I was doing in that
moment. And it's going to then activate the way I deal with it. So what happens is we have two people
kind of ever kind of cycling through these threat-based responses, and neither of them
are able to kind of return to that grounded state of presence. So the best thing I think that we can
do is, and I have a lot of tools, not only to begin to self-identify which state of nervous system activation you're in so that you can begin to regulate yourself.
Really helpful, and this is outside of even romantic partnerships for your friends, for your family members, can be really helpful to have the awareness of signs and signals that they're in a state of emotional system or nervous system activation. Because
sometimes when we understand that, oh, this person is fleeing the room and can't have this
conversation right now, not because it's not important to them, but because they're having
their own threat-based reaction, that can give us a moment of compassion. It can maybe give us
access to do something differently, not to allow it to activate our own threat response, which is going to perceive it probably differently.
Oh, well, they're leaving because this isn't important for me.
And then, of course, going back to this idea of co-regulation, the more ground that we're able to remain in those moments and the more open our partners or our loved ones are to co-regulating with us, I mean, we can actually help them calm down
from those stressful reactive moments so that then they can shift their focus. They can actually
shift the point of the brain that they're operating from and hear us and speak to us and negotiate
what's happening in a much more calm and rational way. But I like to add that point in because
sometimes we want to shake our partners and just get them to hear us in this moment where they're a million miles away or they're screaming and
yelling. And unfortunately, those aren't the moments where they're going to be able to hear
us until they're in a calmer brain state, quite literally. They're not going to be focused on what
we're saying. They're going to be locked and loaded in their perspective and their nervous
system is going to be locked and loaded in their habitual way that they need to do right then to find the safety. This is fascinating because people
watching or listening typically are the type of people that want to improve their life. They want
to grow. They want to find tools to have more awareness, more personal power, more progress,
all these different things. So I'm assuming people watching and listening might resonate with this.
Why is it so challenging for an individual who has been in a trauma bonded relationship,
and now they're aware of it, or they're in a family that has maybe had some stagnant
behaviors and patterns that doesn't want to grow.
Why is it so hard for one individual in a family or a relationship to try to improve and grow and develop new habits and transform themselves to think differently and talk differently and act differently?
Why is it so challenging in a family dynamic or an intimate relationship to grow when others aren't willing to grow?
While we all are evolving creatures, I mean, I think it's kind of intrinsically what the experience of being human is.
It's a process of evolving, becoming, process of movement.
Yet at the same time, our nervous system is wired to prefer the familiar.
Simply, we don't like change. While we can change and we can create incredible change and
transformation, our nervous system actually prefers to stay the same. It finds change and
movement very stressful. So when faced with change, often ourselves even, how to do the work was
really around that concept
of the resistance and the reason why we're so stuck
in these habitual patterns,
because any time we set the intention to do different,
and then more so when we follow through
with making new choices,
we do meet that pullback to that familiar
through the thoughts in our mind,
the discomfort in our body,
before we know it, we're right back
in those habitual patterns.
So we struggle to change, even though we can change. the discomfort in our body before we know it we're right back in those habitual patterns so we
struggle to change even though we can change our nervous system prefers us not to and our
relationships equally struggle when we begin to experience someone anew or when we're the person
making new choices especially in a family where dynamics and roles have been repeated and practiced
and validated for so long then really like dom, right, here's someone new that's maybe putting a new perspective on the family experience.
Might be really difficult to hear, right, a different truth about how it was when we have our own rehearsed story of how the family is or isn't or whatever it is.
More so when someone begins to act in a new way, then chances are there's going
to be some impact on that dynamic. There's going to be a challenge to the individual identity.
Sometimes there's the challenge to the family identity, what we thought we were, now maybe
we're not as much. And then there's going to be a reorganization of the different roles within
the family. So again, it comes down to change. How equipped is each individual in whatever relationship, dyad or family unit to deal with the stress of change? And as far as I see it,
a lot of us who are raised with past generations were not yet equipped.
We didn't have the tools. We didn't have the resources. We didn't have the attuned
caretaking in our childhood to learn how to navigate the stress of change.
I know you've talked about this before on here,
but how did you,
for those that didn't hear this in a previous interview,
how did you navigate this as you were evolving,
changing, growing, developing in your 20s, 30s with your family dynamic?
Not in your intimate relationship,
although that has evolved and changed as well.
But let's start with the family dynamic
before we talk about intimate dynamic.
Yeah, it was really challenging in my family. Coming from a family that was very
boundary-less, codependent. We had a very unified family identity. I was kind of taught growing up
that family is everything with this idea of putting family, family needs first, even going
back to this concept of selfishness. So all of that was kind of ingrained
in my belief system and very dynamically, like I was sharing when we began, showed up in how I
showed up or how little I showed up in my relationship. So as I started to become aware
and see all of the moments where I wasn't giving myself space and it was glaringly present in my
relationship with my family, that I was living actually in
quite close physical proximity. By this point, I had moved home to the Philadelphia area. They
were living right outside of Philadelphia. So I had endless opportunity to be at family dinner
on Sunday or my mom's standard doctor's appointment with a lot of health issues that
continued with my mom until her old age. So saying that to say there was a lot of the same dynamic happening at home and I was awakening to the possibility of and necessity for me of creating some more distance, of not being endlessly available, of beginning to set new boundaries.
And for the better part of several months, I would try.
I would try to decline invitations.
I would try to decline phone calls and not be immediately available.
And I say try because it was always met with. A running theme in my family was when there was distance
in especially contact immediately because there was so much health trauma that happened, health,
you know, concerns and worry and anxiety. The immediate belief or worry would be when someone
was out of contact for an unpredictable amount of time,
it must be because something terrible happened to them. Are they in the hospital? Are they sick?
Is something wrong? So it was a history of fear. History of fear. Which would create this.
Hypervigilant monitoring of contact. When I didn't call, for instance, on the regular,
you know, weekly phone call, it was, you know, is everything okay? Just tell me everything's okay.
on the regular, you know, weekly phone call.
It was, you know, is everything okay?
Just tell me everything's okay.
And I would call at a very particular time frame up until this period of time where I was like,
well, wait a minute, you're only doing that, right?
To placate this kind of anxiety cycle.
You don't actually want to be calling in this moment.
Yes, I want to contact with my family,
but I didn't need to have regular contact every three days
to tell them that I was alive, right? So saying that to say, I tried to put up boundaries to create separation,
to create distance and space for me to begin to honor what I wanted and needed. By this point,
I was building a practice. I was in a committed relationship. I had other things that I wanted
to be putting my time and attention to. It was always met with this fear, this worry that would
escalate into, I mean, I would get
texts like, Jesus Christ, Nicole, just tell us you're okay. You know, we're getting worried.
We're going to call hospitals, like endless. So I came to the really difficult decision to make
a break and to take, I always kind of start to say, ask for space, but I didn't really ask for
space. I more or less told my family that I was going to take space away from the family unit, that I would be unavailable for any sort of obligation or anything for the foreseeable future.
And because I didn't trust myself to communicate to them in person, I was so afraid that when my mom started to cry or my dad became upset because my mom was upset or my sister was devastated because her and I were very trauma bonded in a codependent relationship trying to navigate my mom's health.
I didn't trust myself to stand in my boundary. So I took the opportunity to write a very long
email expressing things that I hadn't fully been able to share with them in terms of what
I was coming to realize and how things in the past had
impacted me and end it with that statement that I was taking time away. And I didn't know how much
time I would want to take or need to take, nor did I know how they would react to my request.
I mean, I was very much aware of the possibility that they would be so devastated and hurt
that the door wouldn't be open on the other side of it. But at that point,
I knew I'm probably from that deeper intuitive place. My heart was telling me that I did need
more space than I was able to create. So it ended up being the better part of, I think, 18 months
before I started to really get curious about where they were at. I had built a lot of self-trust in
that 18 months,
meaning I was getting more confident that I could engage with them again.
And if the dynamic was exactly as I left it,
I was gaining more confident that I could continue to maintain my boundaries
and to live into the relationship dynamic that I wanted,
regardless of what they were unable or able to do.
And very gratefully, not only did they
email me back near immediately, they let me know that they had been in family therapy and individual
therapy and all the different types of therapy since I had, you know, ended contact with them.
And while it was very devastating, they, on some level, were appreciative of the opportunity that
it gave them and us to kind of look at things newly. We've re-engaged contact
over several family therapy sessions, which felt very safe to me because I wanted to have a
contained conversation, not knowing essentially what I was walking into. And I signed online for
that first Zoom session and I saw my mom, my dad, and my sister for the first time in eight months.
And we had some difficult conversations and had some future-based conversations
and where I was able to kind of acknowledge
what I wanted and needed
in the relationships moving forward
and intended to create for us.
And since then, it's just been really a gift
in a lot of ways.
We've been able to not only reorganize as a family,
we've been able to separate.
That has actually allowed us to deepen
and build like deeper actual real now really connected connections which has been really
beautiful that's pretty cool but it's really scary to get to that place it sounds like because what
some of your family were thinking of like okay i'm going to create i don't know hyper safety
was actually unsafe for you and didn't feel healthy, right?
This idea of, I want to make sure everything's safe and okay is actually an unhealthy or unsafe
feeling. And so you had to kind of break the cycle, which we talk about in the book,
but that's scary too. What if, how are they going to react? What if they disowned me? What if they
never want to speak to me again? How are they going to talk about me to my friends? Like this
idea of being outcasted in a sense is also scary but it sounds like for you you guys were able to
come back and create a more meaningful relationship but but i think it's so scary for us to think
about whether it's family or friends or intimate partners like having a boundary that might seem
so extreme for a while for a while because you need it to come back to
loving yourself the way that you seek that love and then reconnecting with that partner, family,
or friend, right? It can be extremely challenging. Oh, it actually, because we're social creatures
and we've evolved to connect in groups, to physically survive, to emotionally gain the support that we need.
Any thought of any actual experience of rejection, any imagined rejection or fear of it
activates actually the pain center in our brain. So we physically feel pain.
And your heart feels this pain too.
Clenching. And then so for me, complicating that with my mom increasing in age,
having very real health concerns. I mean, in the back of my mind, I was like imagining the possibility that I might not have an opportunity, depending on how long I decided to stay, stay disconnected.
have happened to my mom she could physically die in that period of time and then how would that be
but my commitment at the same time my commitment and that in our knowing that that is what we all needed was so strong that i was able to make that a really really difficult choice in terms
of relationships i'm curious what is the healthiest attachment style that we should be seeking to have
and what is the most common attachment style that most should be seeking to have and what is the most common
attachment style that most people have in relationships yes most people do not have
a safe and secure attachment this feeling of inner safety and security peace the ability to
be yourself and the curiosity to allow someone else to be curious of who someone else is right
not to be demanding domineering manipulative so that they're the person that you need else to be curious of who someone else is, right? Not to be demanding, domineering,
manipulative, so that they're the person that you need them to be, to actually allow them the space
to be themselves, express their wants, express their needs, and just be who they are. Very few
of us have that, of course, because we didn't have that in childhood. We didn't learn our body.
For a lot of us, a lot of this book is about unlearning, peeling back, right? All of the definitions
of love and relationship
we've been taught,
all of the embodied ways
that we've habitually
related to other people
so that we could actually
teach ourself,
not just read a book
and be like,
oh, this is what a safe
and secure attachment
looks like.
Actually teaching our mind
and body how to be safe
and experiencing
and feeling it,
living it,
not just analyzing it.
And for a lot of us that living and that practice begins with ourself first. Do I feel safe and experiencing and feeling experiencing living and not just analyzing and for a lot of us
that living in that practice begins with ourself first do i feel safe and secure in who i am
can i explore my perspectives whatever they might be do i know what they are can i explore my
emotions for decades my answer was no you would ask me what i wanted to do for dinner i couldn't
tell you i didn't know what i even wanted to how i wanted to spend my time on a Saturday, let alone how I'm feeling.
Right. So a lot of this reconnection begins with creating space or a practice in our world to
introduce ourself. And that was a big reason why I even wrote the workbook, How to Meet Yourself,
is because we don't have that connection to us yet. We're not safely and securely connected.
I'm a million miles away on my spaceship someone else is endlessly distracting through work or achievement right or whatever it is or i'm always agitated interrupting at the
world around me because of the reality of it is i'm not safe in my body first and foremost and
then when i'm able to be safe in my body then the byproduct of that often is developing that safe
and secure relationship with someone else where they feel calm and grounded and like someone is
interested in valuing them for who they are and you're able to like i always say with the clients
i would work within couples therapy sit next to each other on a couch and right vision a future
and negotiate kind of making sure that each of your needs and wants are factored into that
the large majority of us fall into a more dysfunctional attachment style, whether it's avoidant where you're emotionally shut down.
And like me for many years, there's no emotional connection.
I'm a little bit more anxious avoidant where there's anxiety around distance and a pursuing pattern.
There could be a disorganized attachment.
I'm just giving some of the standard ones.
But there's many ways.
I focus
a little less on what box category do I check and a little more on just individually exploring,
right? How you show up in relationships and how does it feel for you when you do?
It sounds, I mean, I was probably, I don't know, all these attachment styles of the past at one
point that were anxious, avoiding, I probably had it all um and i attracted certain individuals
who also had you know anxious or avoided attachment styles too i never attracted like a safe secure
individual and maybe because i was too insecure to attract that or they would have not you know
attracted me because they would have seen, oh,
he's got issues. I don't want that in my life right now if they're safe and secure. But it's
interesting, you know, once I started to create that safety and security within me, and it's a
constant process and a journey, it's not like it's perfect. But once I started to do that,
I started to see others and be like, wow, this is a healthy person. I started to see and be like,
okay, let me explore more about this person. So the person, I don't know, they just got something where like their heart
is out of coherence. I know what that is. Cause I used to experience that constantly. I don't think
I want that dysfunction anymore. Let me lean more into the safe, secure. And it was unfamiliar when
I got into this current relationship with Martha that I'm now engaged to. And it was unfamiliar, but it
felt safe. And I was just like, man, this is different. This is weird. Like it's, I've just
never experienced this. But do people, have you ever seen people who have an anxious or an
avoidant attachment style get in a relationship with someone who's safe and secure, does that ever
happen? Or is it typically you attract something you have a similarity to or something you're
lacking in? I think often you are attracting kind of particular dynamics, though if and when you meet
a safe and secure individual, I think often what you'll feel, especially if you are more of the
anxious type or the high emotions, you come from a chaotic, stressful childhood, typically,
you might start to see them as boring, right? There's no passion. Is there anything even here?
Is it worth continuing? So I would not say it's that you don't attract them or you can't find
your way into meeting a person. I don't think the relationship would be something that you don't attract them or you can't find your way into meeting a person, I don't think
the relationship would be something that you would pursue or would be pursued for very long. And
those are typically the languages and how it registers. Oh, there's a passion here. Maybe
we're just friends, friends own this person. This is boring or it's not what I'm looking for. And
then on to the next. So what are the different types of relationships? Interdependent?
Is that kind of like what might seem boring when there's like interdependence?
Would that categorize that?
I think maybe if you're in that more chaos cycle, the emotional addiction cycle,
that likely could.
Though I think the reality of it is maybe there is a little bit of a boring nature when
you're living calm and
grounded and peaceful you know there's no there's no stress yeah i think to some extent in absence
of right those highs and lows for a lot of us um i do think that even as i too am moving toward a
much safe secure partnership um i do think that we on level, that expansive part of our mind is always seeking more or bigger or what's next.
So it's interesting to consider if there is intrinsically a kind of boringness and stability for all of us.
For me, it's like what I think about is when I am on my purpose and I have a vision that I'm excited about, there's going to be challenges and ups and downs when I'm on my vision in my life.
And my relationship, I want us to have fun.
I want it to be like a safe, fun environment
where we can connect about our lives independently
and share our lives together.
For me, that's exciting.
That is like the highs of it, I guess.
Not making the relationship the battlefield.
Your life is like, okay, you got to go out and hunt or provide or create or make music or art.
That's going to have its ups and downs.
Let's make your relationship healthy.
Let's make it fun.
Let's make it enjoyable.
It doesn't have to be so heavy and dark and high at the same time. It's like, out of the out, that's where I find a lot
of peace now is creating and experiencing that. Yeah, that's beautiful. And what you're kind of
highlighting in there is the kind of aspect of interdependence that honors the unique individual
that has passion, has purpose, you know, has those deeper things that I think we are absolutely
driven. And I think, again, this is sometimes where we set up an expectation of relationships
that it's somehow shared. I mean, a partner has all the same interest as me or, you know,
isn't interested in anything, or I don't know what my interests are yet. I think the more we create
space for individual, you know, exploration of unique passion and purpose
and hobbies and all that comes along with that. And it might be outside of the relationship in
some other, you know, realm or other, some other relationship entirely where you go and pursue
whatever your hobby is with other people. I think if we can expand that that is still part of an
absolutely healthy relationship, then I do think we create the space for that.
How much do others pick up our pain?
It's almost instantaneous.
And especially the people that are closest to us, but especially children, because children are very, very keen on picking up on nonverbal cues. We actually,
when we're like infants, that's the way that we understand whether or not the world is safe or not.
We actually see the facial expression of an adult that's our caregiver. And if the facial expression is one that mirrors safety, calm, and ease,
then what we interpret that as is the world is safe.
I can be calm.
If the adult feels preoccupied, angry, right, like babies pick up on that,
and their nervous system is also picking up on that.
And so it's important for us to actually be more attuned to
the ways in which other people also pick up our energy. And perhaps that can offer more motivation
for people to actually do the nervous system practices that can actually be helpful for them
and their families. If a parent is watching or listening to this right now and they're thinking, wow, my kids are five or 12 or 16. And I'm just starting to realize that maybe I was too reactive based on, you know,
my nervous system wounds or for many years, or maybe we shouldn't have yelled at each other
as parents, you know, in front of our kids. Or we shouldn't have been so reactive in situations that
we were explosive and we didn't need to be.
And they're starting to realize, oh, okay, this could have some long-term effects on kids.
And they've been living that way for a decade with their kids growing up.
What can they instantly tell themselves right now about how they've shown up?
And what are some actions they can take to start breaking the cycle for
themselves and their kids who still have developing minds who maybe aren't as
comfortable talking about emotions yet because they're younger still how can
they start shifting that without thinking I've ruined my kids lives you
know it it's important for parents for anyone really to understand if I didn't
know better I couldn't do better so if I didn't know better, I couldn't do better.
So if you didn't know that what you were struggling with was intergenerational trauma because you were exhibiting toxic relationship behaviors that were reflected in your childhood home and you absorb those as the norm, as a status quo, then you wouldn't know to actually disrupt those and not pass those on or not exhibit those in your home. However, it's important that if you now do know better,
that you take action, that you decide, okay, I know that there's a different way. And I understand
that the way that I've been behaving is unhealthy. Let me shift. That is already a step in the right direction. When it comes to children,
it's important to understand that children can also engage in the healing process.
They can.
Yeah. I mean, there's a lot of age appropriate ways in which we can integrate the work with
children. Children can meditate. Children can do breath work. Children can talk about their
emotions. Children can do dance parties
with their parents that actually help them to release some of the stress and tension of the day.
And all of that can be a large part of what families can do together to actually do some
collective healing and engage in age-appropriate types of practices that can help their children
not only absorb the healing in the moment but also understand for the long term for the
entirety of their lives that they can do something that can help them to heal
mm-hmm that's cool yeah dance part party and drawing classes together just
different things I can go you know going for a walk out in nature yeah that's
beautiful what are some you mentioned these nervous system restoration practices.
What are a couple other examples
you have for that
where we can start healing
the nervous system?
The practice that I tend to integrate
into my work the most is humming.
Humming.
Humming, yeah.
It's so calming.
It is very calming.
And most people don't know you actually have this tool that you can use whenever and it can actually help you feel calmer.
Well, humming, I mean, there's so many, you know, there's now science that's backing all this, but this has been the, you know, ancient spiritual leaders have been oming and humming for thousands of years.
Yes.
Because of the, you know, I think ohm is like God,
right? It's like you're connecting yourself to God and you're speaking like source, creator,
breathing it. And there's chemicals involved, there's dopamine involved, and it's calming,
like this feeling in your heart is starting to like get into a better rhythm, right? So there's all these benefits to this.
Yes.
And when we think about it from, you know, just integrating the nervous system perspective into that as well, there is, you know, we have like different branches of the nervous system.
And the branch that actually helps us to feel relaxed and calm is the ventral vagal nerve, which is what tends to be stimulated when we own.
When we own.
Yes. And so, or when we hum, right? Like typically, like if I'm doing work with a family
and, or with a child, you know, sometimes I'll pick a song that they like and we'll hum the
song instead of singing it. And that already is an age appropriate practice that we can do that
integrates the practice
that we understand is gonna be restorative
to their nervous system.
But we're not necessarily like shoving mental health
in and out of their throat.
Just therapy talk all day.
Right, right.
But we're doing something
that can be very health promoting.
Now eventually, people catch on and they say,
that made me feel relaxed.
That made me feel more at ease,
especially when I had all these like floating thoughts
that just wouldn't go away.
And so when these children are then older, they have the tools.
And that's what I want for us.
I want for us to be able to be the generation of cycle breakers that can build the tools
for ourselves and for the next generation.
And even if we want to maybe like pass some of that back.
My parents are 65
and 71 and I do this stuff with them and they're open and willing and they're Dominican parents,
like, which I would have never thought would, you know, like do anything that was related to
mental health period. But they're so willing right now after a couple of years of talking it through.
And it's beautiful to see how they have never really had any kind of like
foundational orientation around how they can feel more settled. And now they do. And that in their
old age, they can actually feel more at ease in their own bodies. It's beautiful.
If someone's in a marriage and they realize they want to break the cycle and they're willing to do
the work themselves, but maybe their partner isn't as open yet.
And they're realizing like, oh, this person, you know, I want to do this work.
I'm healing.
But this person's still in a nervous system, reactive state and unwilling to break their own cycle.
What can they do if they're the only one trying to grow and their partner is not?
That's a really tough situation.
And, you know, we have to empathize with anyone that is in any kind of environment,
particularly a home environment in which they have to go back to the source of their pain,
right?
Or back to a place where their safety is compromised in any way, their sense of psychological safety, I mean.
And so, you know, what I tend to help people reorganize in terms of like their own thinking around this is like show up as your more healed self.
Let people see how you walk and move as a more healed version of yourself.
Model for them, whether it's your kids, it's your parents, it's your partner, it's friends, right?
Like anyone.
Let them see how you're modeling, how you show up differently and how you no longer feed the cycles.
You break them.
And then see who is willing to join you in that process.
Right.
then see who is willing to join you in that process.
Right.
And there may be months of resistance and challenge where you've got to keep showing up as a healed person or in the process while someone's reactive or crossing your boundaries.
You've got to keep creating those boundaries, which is a challenging thing to do.
It's one of the biggest barriers to people being able to continue their cycle breaking
process, which is going into the spaces where people have not actually done the work
and them feeling like, what am I even doing this for?
Right.
Like, I may as well just like, you know.
Let it go and just play their game.
It's so challenging.
It is very challenging.
And it's a process that also is going to require that they, in essence,
like just tolerate the distress,
which is why distress tolerance skills are so important when it comes to trauma-based work,
because we have to train the mind and body to tolerate the guilt, tolerate the guilt of being
the one that's doing the work and leaving others behind, right? Like that, that sometimes tends to be like how
people feel about their healing. And so when we're, when we're able to reorganize the body
and how it's actually internalizing that emotion, it helps them to sit with whatever guilt may still
be lingering in a more settled way and not just throwing the towel. What do you think of all the different traumas
that you've worked on in your clinic
and worked on with individuals,
all the different types of traumas,
abandonment, abuse, neglect,
all these different things,
bullying, being cheated on,
all these different things.
What one is the hardest trauma to overcome
that you've seen or takes the longest for people to psychologically wrap their heads around
the wounds that they've received? You know, grieve, forgive, own, move on, process.
Which one is typically the hardest to overcome? What I have seen has been the hardest and what I have seen people struggle
with the most and has taken the most time has been abuse, childhood abuse specifically.
Them experiencing childhood abuse. Them experiencing it, yeah. From a trusted adult,
someone who either cared for them or someone who was proximal to them and the experience of feeling almost kind of like their entire life formation
was around that experience also being a part of it and then having to extract that from all the
layers of how it became a part of them is is something that can be really really hard but also
there's people that can live really abundant lives once they
start doing the work in that direction. Usually wherever we feel the biggest triggers,
that's where the work is. So when we can centralize the work there in that triggered space,
right? It makes it so that we can experience probably the better part of our healing. I guess in storytelling mythology, there's heroes and there's villains.
And they have a similar backstory.
They've both been abused or abandoned or something happened to them, right?
And the villain uses that pain to hurt others.
And the hero works with that pain, transforms it into making sure that others don't have that pain to hurt others. And the hero, uh, you know, works with that pain, transforms it into
making sure that others don't have that pain ever again. Right. And I probably had both of those in
my life of like, I've used the pain to try to be angry at others and like dominate and win in sports.
And then I've found transformation and be like, I don't want anyone to feel this pain ever again.
And so I think we have a decision at different times of life of like, how are we going to use this trauma or this
memory or this experience for us? Are we going to live it to harm others or to help others and be
in service? And I think it's really tricky, speaking from experience, as an adult mind,
trying to understand your 5, 7, 12, 15 year old self,
who is sexually abused childhood mind that's still stored inside of you. It's hard to reflect
back and recall all those moments. And then think about how you carried that trauma until the adult
mind is reflecting on it process process however many years that is
and all the decisions you've made your entire life,
why you've been reactive,
relationships you've gotten in,
challenges you might have,
good that might come from it too,
and then learn how to heal that time.
It's kind of a mind mess.
It's tricky.
And so I think you're, you know, you're probably right in that that's probably a painful one
to overcome.
I know there's lots of different traumas, but that one's definitely painful.
But I know from experience that there is incredible peace and love on the other side if you're
willing to do the work.
Took me a couple of years to really kind of feel like I could speak about it without
having a nervous system response anymore.
But I think also when you realize you can overcome something like that, it gives you
a lot of confidence, a lot of poise, a lot of power, a lot of peace.
And knowing, okay, if I can take on this as a five, seven, 10 year old, what can I take on as
an adult with these tools that you're providing? So I think it's a great, you know, it's a great
thing that you're sharing these tools because a lot of adults don't have them still. And I'm still
learning as many tools as possible, but why is that so challenging for adult minds to understand sexual abuse or some type of abuse as a child?
Why is it hard for adult minds to understand that and overcome it?
Well, because there's been a really pervasive intrusion.
You know, like a person feels like they are accessible to people, like people can hurt them, right? You know,
they're vulnerable and they've remained stuck in that vulnerability. And so the, the challenge in
our adult lives is in the fact that that vulnerability just got carried on and we,
we still feel raw and open and vulnerable and like tender to the touch and people can actually hurt us easily.
And so that's why very often like people also develop
the coping mechanisms to try and protect themselves
because they don't wanna land in a similar situation
where then there's yet another intrusion
and how will they then survive that, right?
And so it makes it, I always say, you know, when it's
doubly hard to actually get through something, the reward would be double. Right. Even more.
It'll be even exponential, right? I think so. And I think your story, you know, which I know
you've spent many years now sharing, and I think that it offers a beautiful moment for all of us to also reflect upon the fact that there is hope about abundance on the other side of healing.
Because most of us think like, when will this ever end?
Will I ever heal?
And we kind of get stuck in that narrative rather than in the narrative of just do the work and trust that there will be abundance on the other side.
There will be a steady version of you that is meeting you on the other side.
Yeah.
I started the healing journey 10 years ago with this, with the sexual abuse that I experienced as a kid.
And I thought that I had healed a lot of it, but I still kept, and I did in certain areas, but I still kept
entering relationships that proved otherwise and allowing myself to be kind of cross certain
boundaries that I didn't want to, right? Because I didn't have the skills or the courage to be
able to stand for the inner child inside of me and what he really needed during certain
relationships. And so it wasn't until about three years ago when I kind of revisited it again through intimacy. Like I was able to
heal in some areas, but not every area. And that's when it took even more work. It was like
an extra couple of years. So, you know, I feel like healing is a journey. It doesn't like mean,
okay, I've done six months of intensive work. Now I'm good. Like new things might come up in a couple of years that you have to readdress.
And at least that's what's happened for me. But not thinking you've got it all figured out,
I think is something we need to have in mind. Be like, okay, I don't know the answers. Even
if I feel better, I'm going to keep working and processing. If we don't learn to heal our inner child as adults, what will happen to us?
Well, we can actually develop the same type of inner child wound in our children.
Ooh.
Yeah.
So they don't have to experience the wound.
We're just passing it on, right?
Yeah.
And that comes up.
We're just passing it on, right?
Yeah.
And, you know, that comes up. Of course, you know, we're talking about intergenerational trauma having some biological, you know, connections, right?
Like, so there's already a family that perhaps is already from a nervous system perspective, from perhaps an epigenetic perspective, already having tenderness and vulnerabilities that are emotional.
perspective already having tenderness and vulnerabilities that are emotional. And then you have, you know, the possibility of there being like misattunement between a caregiver and their
child. The caregiver may be so preoccupied with their own stress and trauma that they miss
the social cues that their child is telling them, I need you. And that sense of emotional
abandonment, you know, can surface or an inability to really relate to
and connect with others, which is kind of like the general foundation of like attachment and
attachment styles, right? A lot of those things can start to surface as a result of those initial
imprints of the relationships that are primary to us, which are with our caregivers or individuals
that are in essence taking care of us
in the school system, any of the individuals that have proximity. And then, you know, it's going to
be really important for us to also understand that whenever we're talking about like not wanting that
to carry on to the next generation, not wanting that tender little soul in front of us to then
experience the pain that we have carried for so long.
We have to talk about how we can also heal our own wounds. We need to reparent ourselves while we're also parenting others. So it's an intergenerational reparenting.
Something just came up for me as you were saying this, because I think a lot of,
I'm not a parent yet, but I get the sense and the feeling that a lot of parents in America today are very protective of their kids.
You know, I see this.
Maybe it's not everywhere, but I see a lot of that happening.
They're more worried about, you know, who they're hanging out with.
I hear a lot of parents say, I'm never going to let my kid do sleepovers anymore.
You know, I'm taking them out of public school because it doesn't feel safe or whatever it is, right?
They're just more protective as opposed to allowing their children to kind of fumble and learn along the way.
And I'm curious in your perspective from what you've experienced and what you've seen with your clients, your patients,
is it worse to allow our children to be, you know, free in the world and be vulnerable to potential harm? Or is it worse to
overprotect them and pass on our own traumas and wounds because we keep them so close to
our wounded self? I would say that it is important for us to actually allow them to have some connection to the world that isn't necessarily overprotected by us.
However, it is going to be really critical for us to, as parents or parents-to-be, to also vet the environments that they're a part of.
We also vet the environments that they're a part of.
We need to vet the people that are their babysitters and ask them questions that are taboo, that are uncomfortable, that are likely to actually protect our children.
Right.
Be uncomfortable with your questioning.
Be uncomfortable with your questioning so that you don't have to live a life of discomfort because you didn't ask the question and properly vet the person.
Right. And then something would have happened that could have been avoidable.
Not always, right?
We can't say that, you know, it's the onus is on parents.
The onus is really on people who, you know, just aren't protective of the children that they're connected to.
But beyond that vetting process, right, which is a vetting process that is permissive because you're also
allowing the child to be in the world and explore and understand and enjoy the world and fumble and
pick themselves back up. And what we know about that process is that that also builds resiliency,
right? And so we need that process in our lives in order to actually be resilient adults.
But it's also going to be critical, as I see it, specifically as cycle
breaking parents, for us to then transition into also being advocates on behalf of our children.
We need to also, in whatever way is possible, advocate for the systems that they're a part of,
for them to keep them safe, right? Like advocate for better safety in schools, which, you know, as we see in today's world,
especially in the U.S., is like really compromised.
And, you know, also advocate for the laws
that hold people accountable when they hurt children.
And it's like all of these things that are also systemic
are also going to be a part of the process
of how we parent forward in a way that's different.
Chemistry and connection are really dangerous words to me. When somebody says to me,
I feel the sense of connection, my question is, shrink's
going to be, what does that mean to you? Right? Because what you call connection, what I call
connection, what a random person on the street calls connection may be very different things,
right? There's healthy feelings of connection, feeling attuned to, feeling seen, feeling heard,
a conversation that seems to just flow effortlessly. You don't feel judged.
You feel safe. I like, I'll buy that as connection. But connection when it's sort of like,
you kind of feel like you're on your back foot, that now you're sort of game on. And how do I
win this person over? And it's a little bit of like, you're almost like, it's almost like a
match. Like, how do I sort of, like, it's a little bit gamey.
That concerns me.
Wow.
Because that to me could actually be a throwback to somebody feeling as though I have to win this person over.
What are the tricks?
And you'll see this in people who have sort of a sympathetic, nervous, fawn response.
Like, how do I have to modify myself to win them?
That familiarity, especially if that's
how somebody had to go through childhood, can actually feel like connection. Wow. Because it's
work. It's exciting. Oh my gosh, here's something I need to do. But if one doesn't feel worthy of
being loved as who they are, and somebody comes and just likes you for who you are, well, that's
not very fun because I don't have a template for that. You're almost like, what? Why are you like, hmm?
But when you're feeling you have to win someone over, that becomes exciting.
So I think that that idea of chemistry can make people irrational.
Listen, if you have chemistry with somebody who is empathic, compassionate, kind, and respectful, you won the lottery.
We call it what it is.
You're just a lucky person wow okay and that's great and
there's people out there who have connection and all those goodies and they are as blessed by the
heavens as a human being can be right the majority of people who have connection sadly will say we
had this kind of connection and that's why i excused the this and excuse the that and the
this and the that.
And it's funny because when I have worked with people who are in more trauma-bonded relationships,
this idea where it's hot and cold and back and forth, and you keep having the same arguments,
and you're always justifying. The hack I have for figuring out whether or not someone's in
a trauma-bonded relationship,
I'll have a client who's in a chaotic dating relationship or like a really unhealthy
relationship. And we'll sometimes hit the wall of like, oh, I know this isn't healthy. I love them.
And I'll say, okay, right now, take a minute. Tell me why you love them. And you know the answer I
get when people are trauma-bonded? The answer I get, or with chemistry know the answer I get when people are trauma bonded? The answer I get,
or with chemistry,
the answer I get is,
okay, doc, give me a second.
Well, you know what?
It's, I don't,
it's this,
I don't know how to describe it.
It's like this,
I don't know.
It's just sort of this,
you can connect,
that's not an answer.
They can't clearly define
why they love you.
Because it's, see,
and whereas I ask that to healthy people,
because I have friends whose marriages are just,
they're for the, they're beautiful.
And I'll say to my friend, tell me why you love her.
And she's like, oh, please, my best friend.
Like, I love him.
Like, we've got each other's backs.
I feel like we kind of almost read each other's minds.
We do stuff together.
He's the first person I want to see in the morning.
I look forward to landing on my flights because he's the first person I text. I miss him and I'm not. Those are answers. Nothing trauma bonded, but the whole like, I don't know. That's not good.
How do you know if you're entering in a relationship through trauma bonding?
So I don't think anyone enters in that way, Lewis. I think that we are, attraction's a pretty universal phenomenon, right?
Although we might find different things attractive, right? Different people find
different people attractive. Attractiveness, there's something that sort of, we're attracted
to what we're attracted to. We're attracted to whatever is aesthetically pleasing to us,
what might feel so much familiar to us, what is sort of normative for our culture. Attraction is attraction. Now remember, narcissistic
folks are charming, charismatic, and confident, and successful, right? So that is attractive to
everybody, which is why everyone's attractive to narcissists, why narcissistic people are
attractive to everyone. But trauma bonding is not what gets people into relationships,
it's what gets them stuck. So a person might be drawn, for example, in a narcissistic relationship to the
charm, the charisma, the confidence, the attractiveness, the smoothness, the whole thing,
the whole package, and say, whoa, wow, you know, I want to meet them. And you meet them and they're
every bit as charming as they were across the room, that's attraction. When you're three months in and this person's gaslighting you and manipulating
you and doing shady stuff and invalidating you and you're making excuses for that, that's trauma
bonding. So someplace between attraction and trauma bonding is a process. And that's the process we'd
love to be able to short circuit. But the problem is most of that process is something we call love bombing.
And it just like brings you into the relationship and makes you feel like you're thinking about them all the time.
How do you pull someone out of a fairy tale?
It's not easy.
How do you?
And this is why I'm the last person anyone wants to spend Valentine's Day with.
Interesting, it's my clinical day.
I'm like, it's best that I just stay locked in with my clients on Valentine's Day and be kept away
from everyone else because it's not easy. So when people are in the fairy tale, I say to people,
like, listen, if any of you have the discipline to just eat the top off the cupcake, do it. But
then don't get involved in the stumpy bottom part. Like, we don't need that. You want to ride it out?
Ride it out.
Have some fun.
Do some fun things.
But it's pretty rare.
Two to four weeks and then stop.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, it's pretty rare for a person to say, okay, I'm...
Or, you know, or to leave after the third invalidation or the third shady thing, right?
I'm a big fan of threes.
You know, first time happens, it happens.
Second time it happens, it's a coincidence.
Third time it happens, it's a pattern.
And that's, you know, like, ooh, what's happening here?
But that overlap, that overlap period where love bombing turns into devaluation
is this demilitarized zone that's a really dangerous place.
Because it's where the good stuff is still happening at a pretty good frequency,
but the devaluing is starting to kick in. and you're now trying to make sense of it.
And you want the good stuff.
Go back to the good stuff.
But it's happening enough.
You're still getting enough good stuff.
So it's almost like you're with this,
again,
it's all intermittent reinforcement,
all trauma bonding.
It's not consistent.
It's a slot machine.
I think the last time you're on here,
or maybe it was the first time you're on,
I didn't really know what narcissism was fully.
I was kind of like,
and I remember just having all these gasping moments
where I was just like starting to realize
more and more about the pain of experiencing
a narcissistic, either person or narcissistic,
tendencies from a person
where I had once in a relationship
felt so much love
for many, many months. And then this intermittent make wrong, or you need to change or this or
whatever it was like this less accepting of me, more shaming of me, diminishing me,
trying to change me, but still bringing some of the love. But then it just faded all the way into, you know, 5% of the love and all
blame, make wrong, gaslighting type of experiences. And when you first started telling me about this,
I was just like, man, this is a, it's a pain. It was because it's so painful to experience.
It's painful.
And so many people have experienced this in some way, whether it's intimate relationship
or a friendship or with our parents. And it's painful to be in. It's painful to try to get out of. It's painful to heal from.
The whole thing is painful. It is painful. And I'm so glad you brought up that painful part because
the simplistic view is this person's mistreating you, step away.
But for some people, they'll say, it feels like cutting off my own arm.
Like I, and many people
when they're a trauma bonded will say i am this i'm feeling like a panic attack at the idea of
even considering leaving this relationship you know not even having the conversation or considering
doing it and so that so we can't live in tension all the time that's not how the human the human
nervous system set up and the human psyche is not set up that way. So how do we dissipate that tension? That cognitive dissonance, we call it, we
undissonance it, right? And we make the justifications. So the justifications make us
feel less tense. And now we've bought another month, six months, 10 years. And when life gets
busy, right? Which is where when people might get married to a narcissistic person and then there's wedding, wedding and busy, busy instead of a household.
Distractions.
Distractions.
Then you have kids.
I've worked with so many people.
That's why 20 to 25 years is not an unusual time for a marriage with a narcissistic person to break up.
Because around that time, everything, like there's no more, there's not so much activity to pay attention to.
You're like, I hate this person.
Right.
I hate them. I don't want to be in this house with them anymore. But there was so much activity to pay attention to. You're like, I hate this person. Right. I hate them.
I don't want to be in this house with them anymore.
But there was so much activity before.
Distractions or things before.
Or whatever it was.
You just dealt with it enough, right?
Yeah.
Mm-hmm.
Man.
Yeah, this is, you know, I have a lot of compassion for people that have experiences because I
just remember thinking, like, I would think, how do I get out of this relationship?
Mm-hmm. But it's almost,
but I didn't have the courage. Now I had the courage to do everything else in my life and
achieve and, and go after my goals and have challenging conversations and succeed or whatever
it might be. But I lacked the courage to have tough conversations in a previous relationship
that kept me in. I lacked the, and when I would think about ending the relationship,
I would have heart palpitations.
So what were you afraid of?
Oh man,
let me go back to the state now.
Cause I feel like I've been a healthy place.
Right.
Sorry.
But I think I,
I think I felt like I was a failure if I couldn't make the relationship work.
I think I was thinking,
um,
something's wrong with me if they're not accepting of me or loving me
or if they're mad or angry with me.
I was thinking, how come we can't just go back
to the first few months when it was just like,
everything was amazing.
There was never any stress.
There was never any like make wrong or blame
or you need to change or you can't do that
or you have to do this.
None of that.
I was like, why can't we just go back to that you can't do that you have to do this none of that i was like
why can't we just go back to that experience again and have that more continuously so but i just also
didn't know what a healthy relationship looked like ever so i never experienced that from the
model of my parents that's right that's right i never experienced that from all the relationships
i had so i was unable to know somatically, this is healthy.
This is the way it's supposed to look.
Whether we work out or not, you know, based on our values or our vision or whatever.
But this feels healthy.
I'd never felt healthy in any relationship.
And so I just didn't know.
No, you don't know. And in some ways, ending, so being honest with yourself about that moment in a relationship
where you're like, this is not good for me.
I'm afraid.
Like you said, I felt a lack of courage, as it were.
And I was also afraid, like, if I end this, this person's going to go out and try to,
like, ruin my life.
Okay.
Well, then, but see, the thing is that that's a real, so those fears, some of those fears
are fears based on history. Some of those fears are fears based on history.
Some of those fears are fears based on identity.
I'm a failure.
Some of them are fears based on potential reality.
Right.
Because if there's one thing anyone, because this is what's challenging about narcissistic
relationships.
It's actually great when they break up with you.
And all my clients will say, what are you talking about?
My heart's broken.
I'm like, you're going to be so glad about this at some point.
That didn't happen though.
I had to do it.
You had to end it.
Yeah.
You had to end it.
I kept saying, please end this.
But they wouldn't.
They wouldn't do it.
Okay.
And then they were like, you're breaking everything up.
It's your fault.
And I'm like, oh my gosh.
Yeah.
But when you end it, then something that often happens is a period we call post-separation
abuse.
Oh gosh, yeah.
And post-separation abuse can be everything from stalking to incessant text
and email messages
to talking badly to you
about other people.
Telling your friends,
reaching out to your friends.
Putting on passive-aggressive
posts on social media
when they clearly,
everyone reads it,
knows it's about you.
Yeah, of course.
And all of that stuff,
large or small,
I mean, some of the stuff
can be, I mean,
obviously in the most horrific cases
it's physical violence afterwards.
But in, you know,
what we're talking about is that not as dangerous, but still psychologically
dangerous.
People kind of know that's going to happen and they don't want that to happen.
And so they say, well, there's one way to avoid this from happening.
Stay in it.
And it's to stay in it, right?
But to see one of these relationships, so that partly that courage piece is to see a
toxic relationship clearly, intimate relationship clearly, especially when we've had no template of healthy relationships or a history of relationships where we've made the accommodations in ourselves to make them work.
To come into that place of courage, to see clearly that it's not okay and something needs to be done can give people this tidal wave of terror of that means all this other stuff in my life was a mess too.
It's terrifying. It opens up this sort of door on our narratives that we sometimes don't want to look at and examine how these other things have shaped us.
Or examines our parents.
Our parents, exactly.
That's my point is that it's almost, it feels like too much. But I have to say that, and the
other fear that I hear a lot of people have is regret. What if I'm wrong? What if I'm reading
this wrong? Those first three months were good. And maybe this is just a bump in the road. And
if I walk away from this, and in fact, and I'm out there in the desolation of dating profiles
and people's popping pictures, what am gonna do and now and they never find
someone as good as the next person's gonna get the better version of them and
so then people go down that rabbit hole and it's almost like that you know it's
almost you it's like a kid with a toy they're like I don't really want this
toy but I don't want you to have this you've ever had a sibling you know the
sibling doesn't give up the ball but like you don't want the ball like but i don't want her to have the ball right it's that so they so people
that fear of regret what if i'm wrong what if they change what if they change for the next person
what if they move on quickly they're going to move on quickly that's what they do they sort of and
and all of that and then i've got a bird in hand and it's so hard to date and all that stuff.
I've invested a year or two years or four years, whatever it is, right?
Gosh, how do you know when you know?
That someone's narcissistic?
That someone's the right person.
The right person.
You know, they say you know when you know, but how do you fully know mentally, spiritually,
How do you fully know mentally, spiritually, somatically, this is healthy, this is or could be the right person for me?
So you're neither indifferent nor ruminating.
Does that make sense?
And the reason I'm making that distinction is- What does that mean?
Okay, so you're ruminating when it's unhealthy.
Like you're ruminating the whole drive to work.
Like, how could you sit down?
You're asking people, your friends, like why is this happening? And what do you think about this?
And asking for advice. All that. So that's bad.
Ruminating. Yep.
Indifference is bad because I was going to say, because you're not thinking about it all the time,
but I don't mean not thinking about it all the time because you're literally indifferent to
someone and you're like, if they never call me back, I don't care. Right. I would say that in a good relationship, you are looking forward to
seeing them. They're the first person you want to tell good news to because you feel validated
that they see something in you that you don't see, that they're genuinely proud of you, that they are, but it's more of the
looking forward to them. Like even at the end of the day, I think I'm always amazed when I was,
I have a friend of mine, she's been married for about 30 years, 25, 30 years. And she was visiting
me over the summer and I was listening to her talk to her husband on the phone. And I mean, they're an old married couple. Sorry to friend if you're listening. You know I'm talking about you. But I was overhearing their conversation and it was so beautiful. He was so solicitous. He works very hard in the summer. She works very hard during the school year.
and she wanted to go do all this stuff.
And he's like, sweetie, sweetie,
you just need some time to yourself.
Like, don't put so much on the day.
Like, go out there, go with the kids, enjoy the beach.
So it wasn't like, oh, you're having a vacation and I'm not.
And he's like, I miss you so much,
but I'm so glad you're having a good time and can't wait to see you.
And she was, the tone of their voices.
But I'm like, oh my God, after over 25 years,
she is as looking forward to talking to him as she probably was when they were first dating.
I have several friends in these situations.
And you don't feel like you're looking at a friendship.
You still feel like you're looking at something special.
And I have to say that there's a fantasy of like, imagine if you grew up with parents who had that kind of a marriage.
What that does for you, what that does for you what that does your heart but you know what louis there's people out there whose parents were
happily married and they end up with narcissistic folks and that's its own whole kind of mess of a
situation whose parents are super happy like parents were like love story but what the kids
are not married no the kid marries a narcissist why that's a great question and i'll tell you
why because i've seen it happen many times.
They're just so compassionate and loving and accepting or how's it work?
So go back to the charm, charisma, confidence, success, all that stuff, right?
So the person's shiny and cool and neat and sometimes that narcissistic person,
not only love bombs person, they love bomb their family.
Oh yeah.
Right?
And so, especially a close knit family where everyone's doing stuff together. And so they ingratiate themselves into that system
sometimes. Right. Especially the happy family. That's clearly a united front, but they're not
a difficult front. And since they love each other and they love their kids, they believe in love.
Right. So that kind of cynicism that you'd see in most of the dysfunctional families,
I know that they're like, well, who's this guy?
It's more of like, come on in, like, welcome to the fin now.
So they're getting so much validation, right?
So then when things start going wonky,
talk about the lack of a template.
At least those of us from dysfunctional families were like,
I know from Messi, okay?
Something messy is happening.
I don't have a name for this.
But they literally have not been to this planet before. They're like, what is this place?
They're speaking the language I don't understand. And I'll tell you, this actually can be quite
tragic. I consulted once. There was a couple of times, actually, not even once, a few times
with families where, when I remember so well, the parents had been married like 48 years,
45 years, really healthy, did all kinds of wonderful stuff together.
And daughter married a narcissist. Right.
And the parents were almost coming to me like, we don't get this.
And they said, we're devastated because these parents literally believe that, like, well, he's not a very nice guy.
So family court is just going to give the parents to the nicer person.
And I'm like, no, no, no, no, no.
This is not how this works.
Your daughter needs an attorney like yesterday.
And they said, well, no, we're already learning this because this process has already begun.
And we're watching our daughter fade in front of our eyes.
And so they said we did.
And they felt very guilty because they felt like they'd given her terrible advice because they kept saying, just love him more.
Love him more.
That's what we do in our family.
We just love more.
Sometimes that would come in the way of giving him more money.
That would just be like, you guys go away to the Bahamas for the weekend.
We'll watch the kids.
It was just like they were basically giving him supply, and he was getting and cheating on her more and it was just getting worse and worse and worse.
But the family really, they said they were so, and they felt almost a sense of moral injury that they had done something wrong to their child by not seeing this.
But Louis, they had no template.
And there are people out there who are like, they don't know this.
They really have this joyful, happy, happy life.
And you want to trust the people.
You want to trust the world.
You want to be open.
You want to be vulnerable, all that stuff.
But the good thing is, but there's a good thing, is that the woman did have this happy family who was this tremendous source of support.
So as the whole thing fell apart, whereas most people who go through this don't have that.
So they're not only do they, are they going through this nightmarish divorce
or something like that?
They don't have a family of origin they can turn to
or the family of origin blames them
or the family of origin was half their problem.
So they really,
it can sort of double down on their grief.
Man.
Now, four things you said about a narcissist.
They're charming, charismatic, confident, and successful.
Is that right?
Charming, charismatic, confident, successful, curious, attractive.
I mean, we can keep going.
Shiny.
Shiny.
Now, is it possible to be charming, charismatic, confident, successful, attractive, and not be a narcissist?
Yes.
And please.
How do you know the difference between the two?
Well, here's how you know the difference.
Here's the thing.
Charm and charisma get supply. Right. They're like the fancy pollen anything that sticks out of a flower. Right. They attract the bees and the birds. Right. So there is a there's an interpersonal skill that's cultivated in the charming and charming and charismatic person. It can happen, right? So how do you know? Because the charming, charismatic, successful,
attractive person who's not narcissistic is empathic. They listen. They're warm. They're not,
you know, there's always that sort of that, that vision of the person who's at the cocktail party
that is talking to you, but they seem to almost be looking through your head at the door behind you to see if something better is coming in. You don't get that vibe from them. There is
a genuineness. They don't monopolize the conversation. There's a genuine warmth to them.
You feel it. I mean, you definitely feel it. And it takes a few hits, a few times up at bat
to be sure that that's what you're dealing with.
It's a, I mean, listen, I've met charming, charismatic people who are nice, but I've met more that are narcissistic.
It's a pretty rare combo.
Right.
Yeah.
Oh, man.
It's probably rare depending on where you are located in the country as well, too, where there might be more.
L.A. is a lot.
L.A., right.
Yeah.
What is the percentage of narcissists in the country right now, do you think?
This is a number, I mean, I'm going to spitball a number because we have never gotten good
prevalence statistics.
Here's the problem.
There's this thing called narcissistic personality disorder that I don't even concern myself
with.
It is a clinical diagnosis that can only be issued by a mental health practitioner who
spent enough time with a client to actually unfurl these patterns.
And no narcissists are going to a therapist.
They're often not.
And when they do, they're going in for a backdoor reason,
like addiction, depression, optics.
A court order.
A court order, being forced,
ultimatum by a spouse, that kind of thing.
So, and a lot of therapists don't issue it
because it's stigmatizing diagnosis and insurance.
Well, you know what I'm saying? It's like the whole world of diagnosis is messy. And usually
the way we figure out the prevalence of disorder is what we call epidemiological studies where
people are brought in and like, they're actually just put through the interviews and they're
anonymous and it's not going on any record, right? Those studies of NPD show one to 6%
prevalence, right? But again- In the country.
In the country.
Which is like the strong, on the spectrum of narcissism, they're at the highest.
They're at the most, they're in the research studies.
I can't even say they're at the highest.
And it's one thing I do want to correct is that just because someone has NPD doesn't
mean they're more severe.
It merely means they were diagnosed.
That's it.
Does that make sense?
There might be others who haven't been diagnosed.
Who never diagnosed, but they are way worse, right? But if we were to look at across from mild to
severe narcissism, because it is on the spectrum, so mild to severe across the population, the
spitballed number that I think most of us in the trenches would probably agree with, enough
narcissism that it's causing other people problems, 15%. That's my guess. Somewhere between 15 and 20.
I'd say certain parts of LA, 20. Certain industries, 20. But I would say on average,
somewhere around 15. And that's all types of narcissism too, which means 85% of people aren't,
which is good. That's good. Yeah. And there's what, four different types of narcissism?
I'd say probably closer to six, but we can go with four. I would say grandiose, which is a traditional arrogant, pretentious, charming, charismatic,
shiny narcissist. That's your kind of prototype of the narcissist. There's the vulnerable
narcissist. This is probably, to me, the most compelling form of narcissism because this is
where you see the sullenness, the petulance, the passive
aggression, the chronic victimhood, the social anxiety, the failure to launch. These are people
who live in fantasies of the great things they're going to do, but they never do them.
The grandiose people actually often do get them done. They will talk the big game and they'll
kind of do the big game. So vulnerable doesn't mean they're actually intimate and vulnerable
with you. No, no, no. It means that they talk of the game, but they don't actually take action. Correct.
And they tell you, everyone, I'm going to do this project or this thing. And you know why I couldn't
do it? Because that guy didn't give me the money. And that guy was scammed me. And that, you know,
everyone takes advantage of me. And that person stole my idea. That's that. The vulnerable.
Okay. The vulnerable. Okay. Then there's the malignant. Now to me, the malignant
narcissist is the most severe form of narcissism. And that's when we talk about stuff like the dark
tetrad. And the dark tetrad is composed of narcissism, psychopathy, Machiavellianism,
the willingness to take advantage of other people, and sadism. And I also believe paranoia sits in
there too, right? So in malignant narcissism, we're talking about people who are more coercive, who are more menacing, who are more isolating. This feels a little bit more
like psychopathy, but it's still narcissism. That's much more severe. Okay. Then we have the
communal narcissists. Communal.
Communal. And these are the folks who get, so all narcissistic folks need validation.
The communal narcissistic folks are interesting because they get their validation by being perceived as saviors, rescuers, and do-gooders.
Like cult leaders or more?
That's a severe.
So a cult leader would be a communal malignant narcissist.
That would be.
Wow.
These are like cocktails, right?
You move every, you put it all together.
Wow.
At the extreme, a communal malignant narcissist cult leader.
So at the extreme, a communal malignant narcissist cult leader.
But some communal narcissist could be a mother who does all the activities and the PTA and helps the little league and raises the money and goes to the galas and goes home and screams
at her kids and is horrible and abuses her partner.
But on the surface, it looks like she's-
They think she's a saint amongst us.
It's the person who walks around and
everyone thinks they're humanitarian and people are like no no no i worked for their non-profit
and like they we was crazy a hellscape right when you look behind the curtain you see bingo so it's
that's the communal narcissist so they're they get validation by being by the sense of look what a
good person they are they're rescuing puppies and they're doing this thing
and they're raising all this money and they're so good.
But behind the scenes they're not.
Not, so it's not saying if people do nice things
or are communal narcissists.
It's that they continue to have the lack of empathy,
entitlement, all that other stuff.
So it's like you can, you know,
cause I'm like, okay, well, you know,
I wanna build a community and serve people.
So how do you build a community?
You've got a big audience.
Like how do we build communities without that becoming a thing?
Is it just because if you're not consistent with service all around you and your relationships,
then you're more-
So, I mean, are you being mean to other people?
Got you.
So if I was-
Public facing, you look like the best thing ever, but behind the scenes.
Exactly.
So you're mean to your partner.
You're mean to your family.
You're mean to your-
Got it.
People who work with you. You're inconsistent. Well, you're mean to your partner. You're mean to your family. You're mean to your people who work with you.
You're inconsistent.
Well, you're consistent. You're consistently mean to the people who are behind the curtain. You're consistently sort of putting on a show in front of the curtain.
Yeah, but you're not consistent on both ways of service mindset.
No, communal. And then there's the self-righteous narcissist. And the self-righteous narcissist is judgmental, moralistic, rigid. They're often
funky with money. This would be a kind of person who has so much money and someone in their family
has a hardship. They had a job loss and then their kid needs medical care. And they'll say,
well, I didn't create this situation, so I guess you'll have to figure it out.
They have no heart.
It feels like no heart, but there's also this really rigid judgmental. And they judge people
from the sense of, well, look at all I built. I guess I must have worked hard. They'll never
account for their luck, right? Or sometimes their absence of bad luck, that kind of thing.
They will say, if they say dinner's at six and you show up at 6.30 because your kid got sick,
they'll say, I'm sorry, we already ate.
So it's very, it feels very rigid, cold, moralistic, miserly, obsessive.
These are people who are often workaholics and with little care for how it would affect.
And he was like, there's workaholics out there who check in on other people.
Like, I'm going to make time for you. Or once in a, we're going to do, we're taking a vacation when this is done, whatever. And he was like, there's workaholics out there who check in on other people. Like I'm going to make time for you or once in, and we're going to do, we're taking a
vacation when this is done, whatever. And they're communicating and people are aware, okay, they're
doing this so we could buy the house or whatever. So is it possible to be self-righteous and not
be a narcissist? I don't think you can ever be self-righteous and healthy because I think if
you're self-righteous, you're like, I'm better than you. Ah, gotcha. So you'll even see self-righteous narcissism in some of these kinds of exercise zealots
who are like, I wake up at 4 a.m. and then I milk my goat and I make a smoothie and then
I do a thousand, thousand crunches and run 10 million miles and then I work and then
I journal and then I this and I sleep at eight o'clock.
And I'm like, what are you talking about?
Like, is there no other human being in your life?
Like, how do you deal with a crying sister? I told her to go to hell and I
drink more goat milk. You know, I mean, it's that, that can be some like, and the reason I'm in
shape and I'm going to live to be 179 years old is because I do all this and you don't, you lazy,
awful person. That's self-righteous. Lacking compassion, lacking understanding.
It's lack of awareness of others. So that self-righteousness is sort of where the lack of empathy sits, right?
So I don't think you can be self-righteous.
I don't think there's good self-righteousness.
I don't think all self-righteous people are narcissistic.
But many people said to me that self-righteous narcissism is really what happened in their family of origin.
It was apparent.
So there would almost be this unrealistic expectation that the child would adhere to rigid, obsessive rules like don't touch this, don't do this, don't sit there, eat like this.
And so the kid never got to be a kid.
Okay.
Number six?
And number six would be more of a neglectful narcissist.
So these are the people who they will not, they view everyone as object.
So coffee cup, whatever, and they just neglect them until they need them.
They just discard them, or they just don't give them attention or energy.
They don't give them attention.
They don't attune to them.
When a person around them is struggling, they won't care.
It's a lack of empathy.
It's a lack of empathy, but it's a lack of...
Like, for example, a malignant or a grandiose narcissist
might actually get mad at someone.
Like, oh my gosh, why do you keep talking to me?
And people in relationships with neglectful narcissists will say,
I'll take it, because at least that person was listening.
But people in these relationships will literally feel like they're losing their minds because
the person with them is literally not noticing unless they need something from them.
Wow.
So they're giving the cold shoulder.
They don't speak to them for days, whatever it might be.
Yeah, whatever.
They just don't notice.
They don't care.
They won't know.
Like you might say, I have the biggest presentation of the year next week.
They won't even ask. Wow. It's all about them it's all all about them but in this weird way but
and and they don't even take notice of other people so it is a um people i've known clients
in this experience and they'll say it's as though i didn't exist. But then when I had the piece of information
or something they needed, I existed.
So you feel like a really neglected personal assistant.
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