The School of Greatness - 3 Reasons Why 99% of Relationships FAIL
Episode Date: September 11, 2024SUMMIT OF GREATNESS IS 2 DAYS AWAY! Have you saved your tickets yet? Get them before they sell out at lewishowes.com/tickets.Welcome back to another powerful episode of The School of Greatness! Today,... we're diving deep into the world of love and relationships with four incredible experts who will share their wisdom on creating lasting, fulfilling connections. From healing past traumas to embracing vulnerability, get ready to embark on a journey towards deeper connections and genuine love. Whether you're single, in a relationship, or somewhere in between, this episode is packed with transformative insights that will help you cultivate healthier, more vibrant relationships. Let's unlock the secrets of lasting love together!In this episode you will learnWhy 99% of relationships fail and how to overcome the biggest obstacles to lasting loveThe crucial difference between chemistry and compatibility in finding your ideal partnerHow to create a safe emotional space in your relationship through brain preparation and self-compassionThe power of acceptance and allowance in building a strong foundation for lovePractical strategies for healing past traumas and cultivating self-worth in relationshipsFor more information go to www.lewishowes.com/1666For more Greatness text PODCAST to +1 (614) 350-3960More SOG episodes we think you’ll love:Eckhart Tolle – https://link.chtbl.com/1463-podRhonda Byrne – https://link.chtbl.com/1525-podJohn Maxwell – https://link.chtbl.com/1501-pod
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Hello, my friend. If you are looking for love, if you're looking to build a healthy relationship,
or you're trying to fix a relationship that you have and make it a safer environment
and a long-lasting loving relationship, then you've come to the right place.
Welcome to the School of Greatness. I'm your host, Lewis Howes. In today's episode,
we are diving deep into four powerful moments that have resonated with the world about
relationships from our show. From healing past
traumas to embracing vulnerability, get ready to embark on a journey towards deeper connections
and genuine love. We don't go into relationships thinking that they're going to fail. At least,
I know I don't. I've always tried to make them work, but a lot of them in the past haven't worked
and I've learned hard, painful lessons. I'm going to share some of those lessons with you today
and also dive into some of these powerful moments.
So in this episode, we are going to explore key reasons why relationships fail
and what you can do to find lasting love.
It's been so amazing.
Last year was just a transformative, life-changing event.
Team Greatness is great.
My name is Lewis Howes.
Thanks so much for being here.
I want to remind you about the Summit of Greatness,
our annual conference happening this September in Los Angeles.
With David Goggins, Dr. Joe Dispenza,
and many more incredible speakers and performers,
there will be so many live attendees there that you can meet with, you can network with,
and you can help transform your life.
I can't wait to see you at the Summit of Greatness here in Los Angeles.
To start, I'm going to introduce you to Michael Todd as he shares why 99% of relationships fail.
And this is a huge one that most people miss out on.
And what you can do today to find lasting love.
Now, Michael's insights on authenticity, trauma, and self-love are crucial for anyone looking to build a strong foundation in their relationships.
crucial for anyone looking to build a strong foundation in their relationships. And as you watch or listen, think to yourself, how can being fully authentic and addressing past traumas
help us create deeper, more meaningful connections? Why do you think a lot of relationships aren't
working out today? Yeah. Specifically to our culture and society, is it because people are choosing wrong?
Is it because they're getting into a relationship at the wrong time?
Is it because they're not clear on the tools on how to have healthy relationships and intimacy?
What do you think is wrong with relationships today?
So first off, I want to say that relationships are how we were, I believe, designed to interact with each other in this life.
So for everybody that's listening and watching, be like, that's why I don't do no relationships.
I don't want no relationships.
Like you're missing out on, I believe, what is the fabric, the most valuable connection you could have is authentic, real, life-giving relationship with somebody else.
So for everybody that's been hurt, I just feel to start there, to everybody who's been burned and wounded and all that other stuff, I do believe that this is how God intended for it to be,
us to be in relationship. But the reason to answer your question, why I think it's so hard
and it doesn't seem like a lot of people are doing well in relationship is because
of three reasons. Number one, I don't think that they're bringing their full self to the relationship.
I think many times when people start in relationship, they really give versions of
themselves. And I understand it to a degree, but some people have been married for 10 years and
still they've never met who they really are married to. Some people have been in business with people for years and they've never really
met their business partner. They're getting these versions of them that are triggered by number two,
their trauma. So the version I present of you is not really who I am. It's who I am after I was in the relationship with
the last guy. It's after I'm in the relationship with the last business partner. So when I come,
I don't come with fresh trust. I don't come with fresh expectation. I don't come assuming the best.
I come to you like, maybe you won't hurt me like the other person did. So I'm going to give you
this much because I never want to actually feel that again. And you can never really love unless hurt is an option. Wait, say that one more
time. You can never really love if being hurt is not an option. Interesting. And a lot of people
are trying to mitigate the hurt so they also mitigate the amount of love they can feel.
Interesting. And at the level that you are vulnerable, it's the level that you can actually experience the love, the acceptance, the joy that you really
want in a marriage. And so I always ask people, I was like, who are you bringing to this relationship?
Are you bringing the broken, battered, wounded, jacked up, pessimistic version of yourself to
this? Are you actually saying, you know what? I need to start over.
This is a brand new person. I need to maybe not even be in a relationship right now so I can go
heal. And that's my burden of even this book and some of the things that I'm talking about.
I really feel like the quality of our life would increase if we would allow the quality of our
healing to increase. And most people don't
want to take the time to heal. I mean, you used to play ball. Like think about it. Every contact
sport has an off season. And the primary reason for an off season is what? Healing. Healing. I've
been getting hit. I've been running. I've been lifting weights. I've been ripping and tearing
and all the different things. And so I need a season so that I can become the
version of me that I know I can be up here, but my body, my emotions, my wheel needs time to become
that in here. And a lot of people are jumping from relationship to relationship, business
entrepreneurship to business entrepreneurship partner. They're going from this to that. And
I'm scared that many people aren't reaching their greatest purpose or their greatest height because they have not taken the time to actually heal. And so that would be the answer to your question holistically. I think people aren't doing good in relationships is because they're not tending to themselves.
is because they're not tending to themselves.
Right, they're not tending.
So you said not bringing the full self to the other person,
whether it's intimacy, whether it's friendship or business,
they're allowing their traumas to guard them or hold them back as well
because they're not allowing themselves to recover or heal.
What would be the third thing that you say?
I would say that the third thing of this,
now you got my mind going a thousand places.
Now I'm ready to start relationship goals part two.
But the third thing would be that they do not give, they don't tend to themselves.
Yeah, they don't tend to themselves.
So what ends up happening is I'm a person of faith.
And so the Bible says that you can only love your neighbor at the level that you love yourself.
So if you have a level two out of 10 of self-love, you only can give
at maximum a two. Wow. And a lot of times you don't give nobody else the maximum. Right. So again,
if you can't deal with you, if you can't look at yourself in the mirror, if you can't forgive
yourself, if you can't say we failed back there, but there's still greatness in the inside of you.
If you can't do that to yourself, it's very difficult to love somebody else at that level. And that's where I think a
lot of times our relationships are really a reflection. The reason it's not working is
because you can't divorce you, but you can let go of them. And you don't like what you're getting
from you, but you can not like what you're getting from them and try it again. And so I think that sometimes I'm talking heavy right now, Lewis, but what I am
saying is I feel like some people need to take time to reflect and remember, to retool and then
renew. And I think that's how out of that your relationships will be so much more vibrant.
And I think that's how out of that your relationships will be so much more vibrant.
They'll be so much more intentional as well as you'll get to experience the fruitfulness and the joy out of those relationships because you've done enough work on you to know what
you're actually looking for.
This idea of healing is something that I've really loved over my last decade, but specifically
over the last two and a half years, I've
dived deeper into internal and spiritual healing. Yes, sir.
And it has created a level of peace and an internal environment of harmony that I've never experienced in my life. Yes, sir.
That allows me to see clearly, or at least more clearly, right, Of who's in front of me, what I want. It just gives me more awareness.
But I remember many years, if not decades,
feeling very anxious when a relationship wasn't working out,
going through a breakup and feeling like,
I got to get back on my relationship game quickly.
And never really taking the time to heal
because it was really scary.
Yeah. It was really scary to face the trauma or the shame or the whatever it was I was holding
on to. It was scary. And all I wanted was intimacy and connection with someone else.
I didn't want to be alone. Yes. I don't know if anyone can relate to this.
Everybody can relate to that. Everybody can. So for those who are like, you know what,
but it's just, it feels, I feel so alone.
I feel so scared. This trauma, I don't want to think about it because it's so dark or it's so hard for me to focus on. What do you say to people that are really struggling, that really want love,
really want intimacy and connection and just deep compassion with someone else,
but they're afraid to do the healing work
because the trauma is so scary.
So I would say to you,
because I know there's thousands of people watching this
that feel that exact same thing.
You need to examine the pattern.
Man, that's so true.
Because if this is a pattern
of you continually getting hurt
because you do not heal,
then it might be better for you long-term to do the work to heal so that you can cut the cycle. I think about, um, um, rest in heaven,
Kobe Bryant, when he, when he, um, tore his Achilles and he said he could come back and play before he was fully healed.
He was ready. I mean, and he would have probably been better than nine out of 10 people
on the floor. He could have fooled everybody, but he knew he wasn't his hundred percent.
He wasn't his best.
He was not his best. So if it came down to the last minute
when he really needed to be his best, he wouldn't have what he needed to have. So they took the time
for him to actually heal. What I'm saying is you may be fooling everybody. You may, your Instagram
is popping, your business is successful. You got the bag and the body and you got all the different
things, but you know, deep down in your soul,
your mind, will and emotions, you know, you're still hurting. And so what ends up happening is
you come in limping to love. You limp into love. Wow. Instead of leaping into love. Right. You
should be able to go a lot higher, but because you're still aware of the thing that you need
to be healed, you don't go. And so what i'm saying is if this is a
pattern if this is if it's been the same it was john and then it was joey and then it was julio
then it was jay kwan and then it was jared like if it if it's the same thing you might want to
step back and get a new perspective because the pattern is the same and a season of discipline
can produce a lifetime of freedom.
Come on.
And that's where I just, my encouragement, I've counseled too many people.
I've been around too many people.
I've helped so many people get through this hump in their life.
And what they realize is what they're scared of, they need the most.
That intentional time with themselves, that intentional time with God, that intentional time with God, that intentional time with community,
that intentional time in counseling.
They need that because if you discover you,
if you find out who you were made to be
and walk in your purpose and get confident in that thing,
then you actually will attract what you really want to love.
And most people are attracting to their insecurities.
Ooh, man, that's true.
You're attracting based on your trauma, not on the healed version of you. And so you're looking for somebody to play savior
and they can't. They've never been able to have that ability in this life. And so I would just
encourage those people. I know it's hard. I know it's frustrating. I know you probably even tried
before, but as someone who can identify with
you, like as someone who did not want to face their trauma, did not want to talk about the
bad stuff that happened, did not want to even block stuff out. Like, no, like I'm not going
there. Like the journey that I've gone on to actually take everything that has damaged me
and say, you know what? I may be damaged, but I'm not destroyed.
This thing that was trauma, it actually can be fuel to make me triumph. I learned that the value
was still in me. And then once I learned the value was in me, then I could give and add value to other
people. And so I'm telling you, it may be hard, but it's going to be worth it. I love this segment because Michael talks about these keys to really creating lasting
love.
And I think one of the biggest that resonated with me is making sure you take the time to
heal.
I've heard this from so many different relationship experts that I've interviewed here over the
years.
And I have made this mistake more times than I can remember where I didn't take the time to heal between relationships
or I didn't take the time to heal within a relationship and I just wanted to fix something
and not address the traumas, the pains, or the things that were causing me breakdown.
So really take the time to heal. If you're in a long-term relationship right now that you feel
like you're struggling or there's a lot of friction, take the time and space within the relationship. You don't have to
end it and break up with the person. Just take the time to make sure you heal. Then you can create a
better relationship moving forward or take the necessary steps to remove yourself from that
relationship. This will allow you to get clear on what are these negative patterns that I'm constantly
in and how can I shift them or shift into a different relationship with myself or the
person I'm with.
So again, I hope you enjoyed that.
Leave a comment below on what your big takeaway from that moment was.
So next up, we have New York Times bestselling author and relationship coach Matthew Hussey,
who is one
of my longtime friends and a favorite here on the School of Greatness. He emphasizes that love is not
enough in intimate relationships. And this is a concept that I thought, you know, love is all you
need. This is something we hear all the time. But he says love is not enough. So let's take a look
and let me know what you think. Like a friend of mine I wrote about in the book, her name is Tanya. She had a very, very busy
career for a long time and was at a point in her life where she wanted a relationship. And she also
knew she wanted a family. She wanted marriage. She wanted kids. And she got to the point where she just would be
very, not upfront with people about asking, like, do you want that with me? It would, that she would
never do that, but. Do you want to have kids? Do you want to be married? Yeah. She would literally
bring those things up proactively and say, you know, but she would almost start with herself.
So she'd say, I'm really excited. You know, whenever they asked
her a question about her love life, she'd say, I'm really, I'm in a place in my life where I've
worked hard for a long time. I've put a lot of focus into my career. I feel like I'm ready now.
Like I get really excited about the idea of being married. I get excited about the idea of being a
mom. That's something I really want for myself at some point. And by saying that,
she wasn't saying I want it tomorrow, but by saying that she was very clearly putting her
cards on the table about what was important to her. She wasn't trying to play cool and indifferent
and like, yeah, you know, just see what life throws at me. I don't care. Yeah. She's like,
very clearly, like, this is something I'm excited about in my life how about you and then you're inviting someone to the conversation you're doing it in a
way where you're making it it's a very positive thing this is you know often we think of the
things we want as our baggage how do i bring up the fact that i want kids or that i want to get
married or like i don't want to scare and i don't want kids or that I want to get married or like,
I don't want to scare him. I don't want to, we come at it from this place of like, it's,
I'm fearful of putting my intentions on the table. But if you, what she did very well is she didn't
make them her intentions for someone else. She made them her intentions for herself. She was
just letting the person in on those intentions. And then she was asking what their intentions were for themselves.
So in doing that, you're not making it about like we're on, you know,
date four and having this conversation that's way ahead of where we are right now
for ourselves, for each other, I mean.
It was more, I'm the same way that I might on a date talk about how I'm excited to start this business in the next few years.
Well, what's the difference between that?
And I'm excited to be married in the next few years, or I'm excited to have a family in the next few years.
Like, what's the difference?
They're all just things.
They're all goals of yours.
They're all things you're excited about for your life.
So why attach all this baggage to the one that, you know, might one day involve
someone else? It's because we, our, our fear of getting rejected is getting involved and saying
they're going to make, they're going to think that I'm putting pressure on them or whatever. But
actually, if we own it as our intentions and, and we own the fact that they haven't even,
And, and we own the fact that they haven't even, they're not even at the point where we could know that we, like, you're not at the point where I know I could want that with you right now.
Right, right, right.
There's a hundred more little experiences we need to go through before I would ever know that you're the person that I want for that.
So how could it be about you right now?
This is about me. But I'm curious to know whether, you know, what it is you want in your life.
Because if for you, you told me today, oh, I categorically never want to have kids.
Right.
And that's important to me.
Then, hey, that's cool.
I get it.
Let's have a great dinner.
And see you later.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Have a good one.
Exactly.
It's so interesting you say this because Martha did a really good job of being curious with her questions with me early on and not reacting or being like, I can't believe that's what you want right now.
Being neutral about it.
Yeah, just kind of being curious about, tell me about this and tell me about this and tell me about your past and all these things where she wasn't reactive and making me wrong or shameful for my life,
right? And she wasn't like, oh, that's really scary or something like that. She was more curious
and just paying attention and noticing. And there was about maybe a month and a half in of us
dating. Maybe it was two months. I can't remember. We weren't officially committed yet, but we were
dating and having hundreds of those little moments.
She said, hey, I want to ask you a question. With a pause. And I was like, okay, what is this? I've already told you this before. She was like, what are your priorities? She said, what are your
priorities in life? I think every woman says this at some point to some guy they're dating.
What are your priorities? And I got sad in that moment. I got sad because for the first time,
I was like, man, I really like her. And I feel like we're in harmony in a lot of areas. We're
in alignment in a lot of areas. But every time I've shared my priorities in previous relationships,
there's always a negative reaction. There's always a pain
and anger and upset something. So I was like, I'm really sad because, and I said this to her, I said,
I'm going to tell you the truth of my priorities, but I think this is the last conversation we
might have. And I was really, I was really sad because I was like, dang it. I'm really enjoying
my time with her. And I just don't
know if she's willing to accept the priorities in my life right now. And she kind of got a little,
she was like, what is it? She thought it was going to be some horrible thing or something, right?
So I'm like, listen, this whole time I've known you, I've been 100% honest with you about
everything, even stuff that's uncomfortable for me, from my past or shameful things. And so my priority is to continue to
be honest with you, but I just don't think you can handle what I'm about to tell you.
And I don't think you're going to accept it. And then she eventually was like, listen,
trust me, I'll be able to handle it. And I said, okay. No woman has ever handled my response to this
question before, but it's nice knowing you. It's been nice knowing you. And I was really sad. I was
really sad before I shared it. And I said, listen, my first priority in life, and this may change
in the future, but this is where I'm at right now in this season of my life. My first priority is my health because I want to be healthy.
I want to make sure I'm taking care of my mental health, physical, spiritual health.
So I need time every day to take care of that.
And that's a number one priority.
If I don't take care of health, I'm not going to have good energy.
I'm not going to be as happy.
I'm going to be cranky.
And that's not the life I want to live.
So that's the first priority for me. And I've told that to previous relationships. And every
girl I was dating got mad at me for saying health as number one, as opposed to them as number one,
the relationship. And she didn't react right away. So I was like, okay, priority number two,
you're not going to like this. Hold on. It gets worse.
Yes. Priority number two, you're not going to like this. It's still not going to be you if
we're in a relationship. Priority number two is my vision, is my purpose in life. What I feel,
I don't know the magic and the miracle of life and why we're here, I don't know the answer to. But I do know
that there's some type of calling inside of me, some type of voice, some type of pull telling me
that I need to continue to grow, continue to develop, and to serve humanity in a specific way
as my purpose for this season of life. And that requires a lot of time, a lot of energy, and a lot of attention.
And I know if I'm not taking care of my energy with that priority, I will be frustrated, cranky,
grumpy. I'll feel like something's off inside of me because I'm pulling myself away from my purpose
of this season of life. And that's priority number two. It's still not you. Or if we get together,
it won't be you, right? And she didn't react right away. She's just kind of like, okay,
and what else? And I said, priority number three in my life right now is my intimate relationship.
If that's with you or whatever it might be, it'll be creating a healthy, loving environment,
a peaceful environment in a relationship so we can thrive together in a relationship.
And those are my top three priorities.
And I'm just kind of waiting for her to say, okay, see you later.
But she goes, I love that.
You know, that's really beautiful.
And I've always wanted to meet a man who valued their health, valued their purpose, and valued their relationship. And I said,
really? You're not going to run away? You're not afraid of that? She said, no. She goes,
that makes sense to me. And it was in alignment with her as well. And I said, listen, the reason
I'm saying this, because if I'm extremely healthy and taking care of mentally, physically, spiritually, if I'm on purpose on a daily consistent basis, I'm going to be more
alive. I'm going to have more energy and you're going to feel like the number one priority.
You will feel my love, my appreciation, my attention, my care, my thoughtfulness,
my generosity a thousand fold than if I made you the number one priority and I
neglected health and I neglected purpose. That would only last so long where I could pour into
you as my only priority, top priority, and then everything else is secondary. And so you will feel
like number one priority if you're in alignment with me with these other two.
And it was a beautiful experience
because I thought the relationship was going to be over.
But instead, that's when it started.
When it was like, okay, I'm able to have a challenging conversation
and share these things vulnerably.
The fear that you may not like what I'm about to say.
And if I'm accepted with that,
then it felt like it was just starting to begin with that
challenging conversation. And I think a lot of us get afraid of opening up. We get afraid of
talking about these things, or even like you said, my intention is to have a family one day.
It doesn't have to be with you starting next month, which that would scare me away if someone
was like, I need this by next month. We need to make this happen. I'd be like, no, that doesn't work for me. We don't
know each other. But I think having these uncomfortable conversations earlier on will
create more freedom later in the future. Wow. Love is not enough. I remember posting a clip
talking about this myself on social media, and I think it got like 10 million views
when someone said, well, why is it not enough?
Well, I said, you need values, vision, and lifestyle.
And you need to really prioritize values first, I believe,
and make sure that you're in alignment
and super clear with the person that you're dating
or entering a committed relationship with
and say, these are my values and not make someone
else wrong if they don't have the same values as you. And really asking yourself, are we in
alignment? We don't have to have all the values exactly the same, but am I okay with their values
if they're not mine? And are they okay with mine? Or are these going to be challenges and struggles
in the future because we're just not in alignment
on our values?
So I wish that we could all live in fairyland and think that love is all you need.
And sometimes maybe it is.
But for most of the time, I really feel like you need values.
You need your vision to be in alignment.
And you need your lifestyle alignments to be there as well.
That's my thought.
What do you think below?
Is love enough? Do you need more than love? Leave a That's my thought. What do you think below? Is love enough?
Do you need more than love? Leave a comment below and let me know what you think. Now, in our next
segment is, you know, my favorite person in the world. It's Martha Iguerreta. She's my fiance.
She's spoke on Summit of Greatness 2023 stage where I proposed to her in front of the entire
audience. There was a beautiful moment. But we talked about, before I proposed, we talked about the importance of authenticity, acceptance,
joy, and freedom in relationships. And I'll tell you what, I've been in many relationships in the
past, and I've never felt free in any of those relationships. In this one, I do. It is an
incredible feeling that I want everyone who
experiences a loving relationship to have. And when you don't feel free in a relationship,
I'm not saying you can do whatever you want in the relationship, but I feel free to be myself.
I accept myself and I feel accepted by her. It's a beautiful thing. And I didn't know that was
possible because I never experienced that in any relationship before
I don't know if you can relate to that raise your hand leave a comment below like this if that it relates to you
If you know what that feels like, but it's suffocating it feels like you're trapped
It feels like you're a prisoner to a relationship and you have to change yourself constantly, but martha's approach
She really talks about
Chemistry versus compatibility
in this moment that we're going to share with you. And she offers a fresh perspective on attracting
your ideal partner. I'm so excited for you to listen to this, to watch it. Leave a comment below
as you're listening and let me know what you think. So my acronym is the word balanced.
So my acronym is the word balanced and balanced with triple C actually.
We'll go into it.
But it's not passion or chemistry.
It's not passion.
It's not chemistry.
No, no.
You know, that's the other thing, because because I think chemistry is extremely overrated.
It should be valued because I think it's important, but it's extremely overrated because what chemistry does,
and this is why they say love is blind,
is because it really gets in the front of your head,
creates all these chemicals,
and you're not able to see the person as who they really are.
It's true.
You're feeling these chemicals,
and you think you like the person,
but you're actually, what you're liking is the chemical reaction that person is creating in you.
You don't know this person. How can you really like them or love them? So that's why I'm a firm
believer in the advice that my parents always told me, which is spend time getting to know the other person
and everything that comes your way is just information you don't try to add to it make
them more you know amazing that they really are and also you don't try to delete all the little
things and little red flags that you're seeing. Everything is information. And you don't, what I've heard you talk about is like not choosing to be with someone based on potential.
No, no, no, no.
Why not?
Because then you're basically going to spend a lot of time to try to mold them
and make them or encourage them into becoming that potential.
But every person is just living their own life.
Nobody wants to be
changed you know saying to a person you should do this you should do that no like nobody likes that
i guess it's different if you're seeing that someone's taking their own actions and they're
becoming something yes that's definitely inspired by that potential yeah but if you're like well
they're so good but they're they could be so much more but they're not taking any actions to show it
then yeah that's not the same.
And that's why I think the key of what you just said
is if you're already seeing they're taking action.
The problem is if they're not taking action,
but you are the one seeing that they could take the action,
you're going to start saying,
hey, do this, do that, do that.
And at the end of the day,
that creates a dynamic that is like this you telling this person that
they should be different and that creates a lot of resentment from the other person and a lot of
resentment on yourself because you're trying really hard to change them right yeah one of the
things that you know before you get into your acronym which i know i think is really powerful
we've read so many books together i'll talk about some of this we've done so many different things together, which has been really cool. But
one of the things that we talked about before we got committed to one another, we spent many
months together, so much time together before we got committed. I made a conscious decision,
and I think you did as well, that we were going to choose to accept the person for who they were
in that moment and what we've experienced and saying, okay, if this is who you are, I choose to accept you. It doesn't mean I'm not
going to get frustrated or be, you know, have some aggravations here and there, but choosing to accept
and love you for this person that I'm experiencing and let stuff go. Like just not let other things
affect me. That takes a lot of work for me to continue to grow and a lot of work for you to continue to grow, to accept one another. So it's been,
but having that and feeling like I can be a hundred percent who I am is the greatest peace
and freedom I've ever experienced in my life. Me too, for me. And I'm sure for you, like I,
I told her before this day, I said, listen, if we're going to choose to commit to one another,
before this day, I said, listen, if we're going to choose to commit to one another,
I said, I'm never going to get angry at you. And I don't think I have. Maybe I've gotten, you know, a little frustrated, but I haven't, I haven't gotten angry at you in over two years.
No. I mean, call me out if I am. No, you haven't. I've gotten maybe frustrated or I've been tired
or I've been, you know, whatever, not my best self, but I'm not getting angry at you. And, and hopefully I never do get angry at you,
but I made that commitment. I was like, I am going to accept you. You know, as long as we're
living into the agreements that we've agreed to with flexibility, with, you know, patience,
then I should have no reason to be angry at you. Cause I've gotten to know you up to this point
of who you are. I've seen so much of you, probably 90% of your personality I got to witness in multiple
months of tons of time and trips and traveling and all these things we went to. I was like,
okay, I've seen a lot of your personality. Obviously, I don't know everything about you,
but we knew a lot about each other. And I was like, okay, if this is who you are,
then there's no reason for me to get angry. Unless you start not acting this way and you act like a completely different person,
I'm going to accept you and never get angry at you because there's no reason for me to.
And hopefully that makes you feel at peace.
It makes me feel very at peace.
And I said, and that's my one one thing I need you to accept and love me because if I'm going to give that to you I don't want someone getting
angry at me or reactive or frustrated it doesn't work for me yeah and so it was a mutual agreement
and understanding from the beginning and again I was like it doesn't mean you can't be frustrated
or let down or sad or disappointed you can have emotions and feel things but lashing out on me
doesn't make sense if we're
trying to create a value system of conscious relationship for me it didn't make sense because
I've had that so many times in the past and I didn't like it yeah so I'd rather be alone and
single and peace in my own space than be on eggshells wondering when is someone going to be
unhappy with me or react to me or whatever. And so it's been a beautiful experience.
I'm very grateful for you for that.
It's been a beautiful experience for me.
But I don't know if a lot of people have learned how to do that.
And so what is this BALANCE acronym?
Oh, yeah.
So, okay, this, I think this is very important.
I mean, at least it was for me, and it is for me.
One of them, so I said it's balanced, right?
So the B, which is super important, is be yourself.
A lot of the times when we meet someone new,
we are trying to mold ourselves to who they are
or just show the best version of yourself all times the whole time
or that you know things like that just be yourself and in order for you to be yourself and your
authentic self get to know yourself and getting to know yourself also takes the exercise of
knowing how do you like to be loved and how you like to love and we got very fortunate because early on we went
through so many different exercises on our love languages yeah i don't know if it's like just
synchronicities or timing but we have the exact same order of love language meaning what i like
to give i also like to receive and she likes to give and receive as well. So I'm not
really a gift person. If she buys me a gift, I'm like, thank you. But it's not like, oh, it makes
me feel so loved and so warm. And I feel so appreciated and seen. It's like, I'm cool,
but I can buy this myself. You know, I'm kind of have that mentality. Okay, cool. But it doesn't
make me feel loved. But touch and affirmations, you know, and words of affirmation, like, I'm doing that
with you all day and you're doing that with me.
And I'm like, man, I feel really loved.
So I don't have to work harder to make you feel loved.
And you don't have to work harder to make me feel loved or do something that you normally
don't do authentically yeah and i think that alignment
has been really helpful and i'm not saying it's what has to happen but it's been really helpful
for me and for yeah it's been really helpful and even if we didn't have the same love languages
because maybe some people here say wait a second we don't have the same love languages we do and
this is great mom and dad they have it too they have words of affirmation with each other and acts of service with each other and but if you have different ones you can have the conversation
and then do the things that you know for the other person will make them feel loved exactly and then
vice versa so so the b is be your authentic self the The A is so important, which we touched a little bit on this, is acceptance.
It's so important to accept the other person, which is why it's important to take your time to get to know them.
Because you're going to see if the things that you hold as your values, as your vision, and as your lifestyle matches with the values which is so important
of the other person and their vision yeah and also the lifestyle we did a lot of exercises early on
about our values and our vision yeah we actually went to a location and we did a whole meditation
process where i said listen i want you to write your values and I'm going to write my values.
We're not going to let each other see them until after we've both completed.
Because I wanted to see if we're in alignment or if we're completely off on things.
Not meaning it wouldn't work out, but we'd have to come to an agreement on alignment.
Yeah.
And we had so many things in alignment based on this exercise where I was like, okay, she's not just writing something down because she knows I wrote it down and vice versa. She's not doing something because she wants to
impress me. She was just writing down what your values were. And that was just another helpful
exercise, I think, for both of us to be like, okay, maybe those three things are my values,
but I'm not against those things. And same thing for you. It's like, okay, he really values this.
It's not really for you, but you're he really values this it's not really for you but you're not against it it's not against your values it actually enriches my life and vice versa so
and a lot of them were very similar values it was it was a beautiful exercise that i recommend to
everybody even if you are already together just write it separate from each other what are your
values see how you can find the line we did i mean we did six seven we did an eight hour therapy session on a saturday one time together and um it's kind of crazy but
it's also extremely powerful on all the different exercises that we did and we learned more and more
about each other even though we were doing these exercises together it was powerful to have a third party who had been seasoned in these things to
support us in any disagreements we might have. Because we do have disagreements, but they don't
become arguments because we create conscious conversations to form new agreements around
a disagreement. And that allows us to have more peace and harmony as opposed to resentment.
So it's beautiful what you're talking about.
Yeah, I think acceptance is very important because of the changing thing that we just
talked about.
Most people don't want to be changed by the other person.
So I just accept the person for who they are and where they are.
Exactly.
I think that's very important.
And the L from balance is laughter.
I think laughter, joy, sexiness,
like anything that you guys enjoy together.
That's why I said laughter and joy.
I'm curating this, all of this for Harper.
Exactly.
I think that's important.
Yeah, laughter. Laughter, laughter joy appreciation with each other
you know having these moments i think you know i don't think anyone's going to disagree with that
the other a which i think is extremely important is allowance and i think what do you mean by
allowance allowing someone to do whatever they want at any moment, at any time? No, I think allowance has to do with flexibility.
Like allowing the person to make mistakes.
Sometimes we get into, when you're in relationships,
you get into silly arguments because somebody made just a tiny mistake
and you're like, oh, how come you didn't take out the dogs?
And I don't know.
Well, I just forgot. And that's okay. Like allowance, have the allowance.
So I don't have to be perfect all the time?
You don't have to be perfect all the time. No. And also because I am living my human experience
and Louis is living his human experience and we're just sharing it with each other.
So if in your human experience, there's something that happens to you,
you're just living your life.
And I'm here for you and next to you.
And you're allowed to be.
It's the allowance also of having freedom.
In the relationship.
Within the relationship.
I think it's important.
The other day you came you
came home and i saw this jujitsu jujitsu suit outfit and i'm like oh it looks like he's getting
into jujitsu now he's like yeah i'm gonna get into jujitsu oh what if your ears go into the
if he wants to turn his ears into broccoli or whatever brussels sprouts okay that's his life
or whatever, Brussels sprouts.
I'm like, that's his life.
It's good.
He's living his life.
Broccoli?
I don't know.
Cauliflower?
What, cauliflower ears?
I don't know how you call them.
I just think it's a vegetable.
I'm going to turn his ears into carrots and asparagus.
I'm going to love you.
It's your life.
We're sharing it with each other.
So anybody's allowed sometimes.
Well, you know, I want to go on this trip with the guys.
Go on the trip with the guys.
If that's something you need.
And I'm sure he's okay with me going on a trip with the girls.
Sometimes we get stuck in these little things.
Because they make us feel unsafe.
And so the more we feel unsafe, we want to have these parameters to create safety. But in reality, it starts creating a cage.
Again, one of my favorite people in the world, Martha.
I'm so grateful for her.
And if you haven't seen the full episode of that interview, we'll have it linked below
where you can see me actually
proposing to her on stage. It's on YouTube as well. You can check that out. And the big takeaway
for me, I mentioned this before we started this moment, was acceptance and allowance. One of the
things that Martha and I did early on is we went to couples therapy together as we started dating
early on. And there wasn't any problem or challenge, really. We had minor things we went to couples therapy together as we started dating early on. And there wasn't any problem or challenge, really.
We had minor things we had to address and discuss to get alignment on.
But we did it not to fix anything, but to make sure we were setting up a strong foundation.
And one of the key things that we talked about was acceptance and allowance.
Before we got committed, I said, listen, I have one condition is that when we are exclusively
committed, you fully accept who I am and I accept who you are. You've got specific things in your
career and as an actress in your lifestyle that I get to choose to accept. And same for me. You've
got to accept me and my lifestyle and my career choices and the things that I do as well. Now,
we create boundaries, we create agreements and all these different things.
But I accept who you are at your core, your personality, your flaws, your imperfections,
and you accept those with me, knowing that we are also committed to growing as individuals.
We're committed to becoming better and not just staying where we're at for the rest of
our lives.
So it's these agreements when there is acceptance and allowance as well.
But finding a partner that can be in alignment with you on those things, having those agreements
and allowments and acceptance is a beautiful and powerful thing.
And for our final moment of today, this is a extremely powerful guest that we've had
on.
Her name is Dr. Caroline Leaf. And she talks about the fascinating world
of neurophysiology and emotional dynamics.
And Dr. Leaf reveals the science behind falling in love
and staying in love.
And from preparing your brain before resolving conflicts
to cultivating self-compassion,
Dr. Caroline Leaf's insights will help you create
a safe emotional space in your relationship, both emotionally and physically. And as you listen or
watch this segment, think to yourself, how can I really understand the brain's role in relationships
to help us build stronger, more resilient bonds? Let's go ahead and take a look.
to help us build stronger, more resilient bonds.
Let's go ahead and take a look.
If someone's in a broken relationship right now,
maybe they've been arguing for years or fighting.
They don't, you know, maybe they have good weeks and then there's a bad week
and it's the cycle of good and bad up and down
and it just feels like it's draining or exhausting.
What can they do to start healing the relationship,
to start healing individually and the relationship to create harmony in the future?
What are those steps?
Okay, so first thing is, if it's an abusive relationship, then obviously, get safe.
That's priority, as we all know.
But let's say that it's not an abusive, you're just creating some bad habits.
Both of you are doing bad habits.
There's a lot of love.
Both of you are trying to fix the other person.
Both of you are... But you're still together because there's love. And there's a desire to
be together. So that's the scenario. Okay. So the first thing to do is to get into some good
practices that will help calm your neurophysiology down. So I call that brain preparation.
You're calming your nervous system or... Calming the entire neurophysiology. So that when your
mind, you've got a calm, wise mind
that's always active and always on your side.
Then we have our messy mind that's in the relationship.
It's in the moment.
It's the in-the-moment messy mind.
It's a reactive.
Reactive, learning.
It's very normal.
It's like experimental.
And it sometimes goes really messy,
and other times it kind of gets it right, whatever.
So it needs a lot of guidance.
And that's our wide-field
of nature is our wise mind.
So the first thing is that
when we're in that messy mind state,
that's sending all this messy energy
through the brain and it's triggering all kinds of
thoughts. Just think of an argument.
When you start, some stupid thing gets
you going and then you end up arguing, what am I even talking about?
Exactly. What's the point in the first place?
Why did I even bring that stupid thing up we resolved that years ago you know
why am i bringing that up now you know that's that's what will happen if you don't calm down
on neurophysiology so it's get your neurophysiology calm first and you can do that with meditation
breathing with exercise gym workout with it creating space that okay we're too both too
hot now let's just fresh air yeah get some fresh. Let's resolve this at a later, let's create mental, physical space.
I mean, just there's so many ways of doing that.
There's so many great sort of meditative breathing.
Find something that works for you.
It may not be the same thing.
Mac and I like to just create space.
And I like to do a 3-7 breathing thing that gets my neurophysiology under control.
So you breathe in for three and out for seven.
And if you do that seven times, you'll feel high.
But it's great because you push so much oxygen to the front of your brain.
And it's a very good way of calming down your neurophysiology.
You can do that in an intense, I call it a 10-second pause.
You can do it for 60 to 90 seconds.
So it's 10 seconds that you do six to nine times. Great little formula for calming down neurophysiology.
Wow, that's great.
That's a fail safe we always use. Really good fail safe. We are a family-run business. All of us are
involved. It's very easy to argue with family. So when we all get hit up, which we do because
we're all very Italian, we do a 10 second pause and we will go out the room, grab a cup of coffee and then come back and reconvene.
Those simple things that I know we know, but are we doing them?
Or are you trying to push through?
I've got to solve this now.
I used to be like that at the bed.
We've got to fix this now.
And so I had to learn to, hey, no, you don't have to fix it now.
You cannot fix it.
Take a pause.
Yeah. Okay. So that's the first thing. Is it possible to fix something when you're in chaotic thoughts you can
but it's more difficult and you you have to you know it's just going to be confusing and you know
messy and harder and not very sustainable and it's just it's not a very peaceful way of doing it
it's exhausting yeah i wouldn't do it that way then the next thing that's very practical is you
can focus on good stuff.
So it may just be good stuff about yourself.
So you can, part of what I work, part of mental health is not just detoxing stuff.
It's also building healthy stuff.
So I love talking to you.
We have great conversations.
Every time I talk to you, I think of you, I always have great memories of our conversations.
So if I want to get myself into a good state, I can think of, I can recall a good moment,
like maybe a conversation with you.
I love my research.
We just published a paper.
And I mean, I look at those results
and I get like high, literally.
So get yourself.
So this is two silly examples,
but they're very powerful.
So if you've now calmed down your neurophysiology
and you now go and focus on something
that you know makes you feel great, that means you're pulling this up. When you pull this up, amazing things happen in your brain.
You change all the delta, theta, alpha, beta, gamma frequencies. You calm down. Think of the
waves of the sea. You want, you know, they're bold, they're deep and big, and then they're
bold on the beach, crash, make little waves, go back. We want that kind of energy going through
our brain, which activates good
neurochemical flow the endocrine all that stuff immune system so by the brain prep that i explained
the breathing whatever and then these you have put yourself into a really good brain state mind
brain body state not just brain state but you've got a very good flow happening now you're still
as irritated as hell still would like to go and do something physical,
like, you know, whatever.
I'm just joking.
But I mean, you might want to throw a plate at the wall
or you still, oh, I'm so mad about what.
It's okay.
It's okay to be messy.
So third thing, tell yourself it's okay to be a mess.
It's okay.
I can be a mess.
It's okay for us.
It's normal.
But how am I going to manage the mess?
Give yourself permission to be the mess. feel the mess, analyze the mess.
I'm frustrated.
What's my emotion?
I'm, what's my body feeling?
What's my perspective in this moment?
What am I doing?
So you go through, it's okay to be a mess and do a little mini neuro cycle.
Go through, why am I feeling like this?
Write a few things down.
Do a recheck.
Okay, this has happened.
What can I do?
Action.
Okay.
I'm ready to talk. See what I've just done? So step one is brain prep. Step two is think of
something good. This has activated our natural resilience. We are not fragile. We are resilient.
We are much more resilient than we realize. But if we take on the current zeitgeist that we break
and it will misdirect us for life, we're going to become fragile, which we're not.
We're going to mask our natural resilience.
We are pretty amazing as humans.
Look at the stories of people surviving and getting through stuff.
You know, and then we need to draw on that.
We need to unmask our resilience.
So these steps, the brain prep,
focusing on something about yourself,
and then you could also add up to this,
not just focusing on your own good stuff.
You could think of something great about your partner.
You could think, you know, whatever.
Think of a great memory, which is a really good addition.
And that people hear before, but, you know, I'm sure you've heard that before, but it's
doing this great stuff in your brain.
Then do a neurocycle in yourself.
You can do this in three minutes, in 10 minutes, in an hour, whatever.
Then reconvene and say, okay, now we're going to do this as a neurocycle.
I have a whole relationship podcast where I went into in detail of how to actually,
what to say, the guidelines of what to say at each step.
And I mean, we can talk about some of those.
Right, right.
I'm curious.
I love all this.
And the thing that came up for me is, what happens if we want love,
we want to be in a relationship, we want connection, we want intimacy,
but we don't believe we're deserving of love? What will happen then? Such a great, great question. And it just reminds me,
as you're talking, you're just prompting all these clinical experiences I've had.
I'm a very successful, incredible person. And just could, what of those people that could get anything in their life, okay, and just wonderful in every single way.
Thank you.
And just could not keep a relationship going.
Always start off well and everything.
And at the end of the day, the core issue once this person had worked through was that
they didn't deserve love.
And it came, unfortunately, a lot of it comes from childhood.
Really?
And it's not everything because you can have a great childhood
and really trust in love
and then go into a really bad first marriage
or first relationship.
How does that happen?
And a person can break you.
Really?
I can give you an example of that.
So it could be you could have a great childhood,
great parents, great model of love.
Total.
But you get into a relationship,
you fully trust and accept and love someone.
Because that's what you've seen.
You throw everything.
And so you expect they're going to do the same for you, and then it doesn't go your
way.
Exactly.
And then that could potentially set you up to think, I'm not deserving of love.
Yes.
Especially if it happens in your adolescent years.
12 to 18 is the most difficult part of the entire human life cycle.
And that's we.
We are interested in forming our relationships.
That's where romantic relationships are what we desire.
Up until then it's more friendship based.
You know, it could be earlier, 10, 11, you can have little boyfriend,
girlfriend things, but it's more just community connection, deep
friendship, something starting.
But those years are, and you're at that age, your relationship with your
friends and potential partners are more, a lot more important, but are more important than your parenting.
Wow.
They supersede.
In terms of relationships, yeah.
In terms of the formation of who I am.
Wow.
So at that stage, you can have this great foundation.
Amazing parents, no trauma, fun all the time, peace, harmony, and home.
Sorted it out, did the real thing.
Just great parents.
They had their own messed up lives,
but took responsibility, said sorry,
did all that stuff.
Right.
And then you get into a relationship
where someone who's broken is attracted to you,
and you're attracted to them,
and you swept off your feet either way,
and their brokenness is put onto you
in your informative years,
and you get told you're not good enough.
Oh, what happens when we believe that?
What's wrong with you?
And at that stage where you are so like,
you're forming yourself,
you're forming your choice, your identity
in terms of others' relationships,
me in the world,
in terms of that drive for love.
So if you're told you're not,
you're never going to get a relationship.
Or you get rejected, or you get dumped,
or you get cheated on as a teen.
How does someone overcome that feeling of,
I'm not deserving of love?
So that is a hard one.
So to start, all of it's hard.
But it's to find the source.
So what you very often as an adult,
and it's very often in the 20s and 30s
where you start doing this work,
and it can happen, I'm not saying always,
I'm not generalizing, but very often
because that's when you kind of get through school
and whatever you do and you get into the workspace
and you start actually really forming deeper relationships
and then you start getting to the point
where you're thinking, okay, well,
why are friends getting married?
You know, everyone around me is in relationships and I'm the only one who's not in a relationship.
I can't seem to keep a relationship.
What's wrong with me?
That's when you start seeing those signals, patterns.
That's when you need to sit down and do the work over 63 days and multiple cycles of 63 days.
And then you'll get to the point where you'll see, okay, what is the root?
The root was either a childhood issue or an adolescent issue maybe it was you were the new kid in town
and everyone laughed at you because you wore glasses and they just you know said you never
you know what you were not so you were too scared to actually show that guy that or that girl that
you like them and you were too scared because you were so quiet, whatever. And that was the source of the, these many reasons, you know, there was this,
I can tell a story of someone else who was one of four kids and it was the only
girl, three boys, kind of almost like seemingly perfect, I mean, there's
never any perfect, whatever, but kind of got it more or less okay.
Yes.
I don't know, religious stuff going on then, but still, but the boys were very sporty
and very, you know, and the father just, you know, like always, that was totally
sporty, so it was like a big deal, but this was not a sporty little girl, but
to get the father's recognition, this little girl had to be like one of the
boys also, she thought, and sofully, like almost made herself a mirror with the hat on backwards
and baggy clothes and didn't want to feminize, yeah, tomboy, didn't want to
feminize and that kind of stuff.
And didn't want to, not that there's anything wrong with that, but her
objective was not a healthy one.
It was trying to fit in to be accepted.
And her perception once we got to the root was, well, I was never accepted,
but I never accepted my mother.
I thought that I had to be like a boy for my father to love me.
And that was a huge thing.
But it was so interesting.
What really triggered that, this kid was about five or six, already doing this, already reading the room and thinking this was the answer.
And they were sitting, and some stranger came up.
They were sitting at some restaurant, and this kid was dressed up like one of the boys.
And someone said, oh, what a cute little boy.
And that broke her.
Wow, she remembered that.
Because it was confirmation that that was,
that she's not good enough as a female.
That even outside people are saying,
oh, I accept you because you're a cute little boy.
Wow.
So that led to years of self-abuse,
self-hurt, sexual promiscuity, brokenness, broken marriages.
Isn't it crazy that one thing we hear from a friend, a sibling, a parent, an outsider, a schoolmate, a teacher, it could stick with us for decades, forever.
Forever.
Now, imagine, Lester, if that person could have,
and this is what triggered me to write the current book that I have on children
with all these stories that I can tell.
That person, I remember saying to me,
if only I had known how to say to my parents,
am I only loved if I'm a boy?
I feel sad because you don't seem to love me unless I'm like a boy.
Or that that man made me sad because that man made me say,
I've got to be a boy.
Or, Daddy, do you love me even though I'm a girl?
That child didn't know how to say that, didn't have the language,
didn't have the tools.
So what I'm trying to create, and we know that the mental health situation
is for a multitude of reasons.
We know the individualistic society, social media, AI.
I mean, there's our
generations facing our problems every generation faces their issues every generation thinks what
we were worse than the previous one no we're not we're just facing our unique problems what we need
in this generation with our kids so that they have decent relationships is and it starts with having
a decent relationship with themselves is we have to have a way of them being able to process
and express their feelings.
So that five-year-old needs to be able to say,
hey, I feel sad, or have a point of contact, something.
So you can teach a child as young as two how to do this.
My youngest patients in my practice were two and three years of age,
and you can teach them how to identify these signals,
detox, and to make it really
easy.
That's what I've done in the latest book, this one, how to help your child clean up
their mental mess.
But we created this character.
I actually created this character 25 years ago.
I had a Disney artist create this character and we had it all updated.
So the book, if you flip through, you'll see these multiple images of Brainy.
This is a character we've created called Brainy.
Brainy goes through all these different scenarios,
and it's how you understand how you can teach a child as young as two
that there's trees in the brain and how you can change your brain
and how to express and identify your signals.
All these hard things that we battle with as adults,
you can teach children very basically as a child.
So we created a toy.
So, for example, let's say you have a two-year-old who is sitting at, let's say a five or six-year-old,
and they're at school, daycare or whatever, I mean, at kindergarten,
and someone constantly comes up and knocks their toy tower over their building,
and then next day pulls the heel on the playground.
And there's a series of teasing going on.
And that child most likely has, and I'm talking of another clinical case,
has been abused at home by terrible, terrible physical abuse,
but it's taking it out on the most vulnerable person in the playground.
Then that child comes home and takes it out
on the most vulnerable person in the family,
which is the younger brother,
who's maybe two or three years of age.
And so now we see a perfect home environment
with all the love and dealing with all the issues involved.
But this child's now starting to bully the younger child quite badly so that there's this terrible sibling rivalry.
Where does bullying come from?
Like, why do most people start to bully other kids?
It's a coping mechanism from abuse.
Really?
Could be verbal or emotional or sexual or physical abuse?
Yes.
So it's coming from any level of 8, 9, 10 traumas.
If you think of a scale of 1 to 10, 8, 9, 10 would be your extreme traumas.
And persistent bullying that's breaking a person down would fall under that category.
Any kind of abuse would fall under that sort of category.
So when bullying is one behavior, and amongst those four signals I keep talking about, that is energy that's built up.
That's self-hatred.
And self-hatred, therefore, is now now blasting out and they're repeating a pattern. So bully has been bullied.
And so it's a persistent pattern that goes through generations.
They don't know how to process their emotions in a healthy way. So this is how they get it out.
Exactly. That's how they're getting it out.
So bully has been abused in some way.
Yes. And they've been bullied or have been bullied or are being bullied.
And so they're just taking it out.
So you can't treat the bully by punishing the bully.
You've got to actually help resolve why the bully is doing the bullying in the first place.
And so you'd start with a child in your home that's bullying the little brother and find out, okay, well, let's now, you know, and this is key.
You need to make a person feel validated because you need to say to that child, whether an adult, this is not who you are.
These behaviors that I'm seeing that are impacting us, the rest of the family, yourself, your friends or whatever.
This is not who you are.
I know that because I know you are.
I know who you are.
I love you.
So in other words, you divorce the behavior from the person.
And that's really critical to create that safe space.
So I'm going to help you work through this.
This is no judgment, but let's talk about this.
Let's talk about how you can't hurt your brother or sister or whatever.
But at the same time, I recognize that this is not who you are.
So you're doing this for a reason.
So you've got to stop hurting.
And we're going to put boundaries in place for that.
But I'm also going to help you understand what's going on. And you're going this for a reason. So you've got to stop hurting and we're going to put boundaries in place for that. But I'm also going to help you understand what's going on and you're going to help
me understand, and then you take them through a process of a neuro cycle.
You have a contact point.
So I've created things like toys, coloring books, that character, that if a child is
not able to verbalize, which they're not until they're old enough to have the
language and even then they don't have the words often, but if you have a key
point contact point or a point in your house where you know like you have a sitting room and you watch tv and that's your place of relaxation you need a mind management place in your home
you've got a gym you've got a whatever you need a mind management center in your home which could be
a beautiful little couch that you were a little beanbag and makes a pretty plant something that
you as a family create
and choose.
You feel safe.
Whenever you go there, there's no judgment.
There's only safety.
And if someone's sitting there, that's they're needing support to creating that environment
and then having, you know, like a toy like this.
A young child, it's often easier to say, oh, shame, Brainy was bullied today and he's so
sad.
And, you know, so they, I see that Brainy's angry.
And so you transfer that over to the toy.
Then the child can enact and carry it out and show you what's happening.
And then it divorces it from them directly and it enables them to try and
enact that without feeling threatened or scared or externalizing.
And you can also model for yourself, oh, mommy feels sad today and this
happened.
And so you model and you actually walk through the five steps without saying them, but you do that and you model.
So that allows them to have the space.
Oh, mommy also sometimes gets mad or dad also sometimes gets mad or uncle also.
But you're in that space.
Now that idea of creating a mind management space or a neuropsychal space, whatever you want, or a brainy space, whatever you want to call it.
I've got these examples in the book.
Came from a study done in Zimbabwe years ago, where I was actually born, called bench therapy.
And it was a granny on a bench in a tribe, in a country that has no money for current
modern mental health and actually has better mental health than any Westernized country,
because our current model doesn't make things better.
It actually makes things worse.
And the science is there to prove that. And all that this granny did, Lewis, was sit on a beach
and create a safe space for people to listen. I love all the stuff that Dr. Caroline Leap
just shared on our shows before. We've had her on many times, and they've gotten millions of
views and plays. So make sure to check those out as well as we dive deeper on those topics.
But one of the things that she talked about that I loved here was creating safe spaces.
First off, within yourself.
How can you create a mind management
or neurophysiological space within yourself
and in your physical home or environment
where anyone can express themselves freely
with their emotions?
This could be you going to a specific room.
This could be you taking a moment and really getting quiet with yourself and allowing yourself
to process internally within your mind.
It's important for us as humans to have that space, to not suppress our emotions and our
feelings.
It's also important to express those things in a conscious, healthy way, not attacking
your partner and screaming at them or making them wrong,
but allowing yourself to process first,
creating a safe environment
where there is no retaliation from another,
then coming, letting some of that out
and communicating consciously
how you're feeling about something,
what works for you, what doesn't work for you,
what agreements you need to create, et cetera.
Again, this was a
powerful moment for me. Share in the comments below what you enjoyed most from Dr. Caroline
Leaf or your biggest takeaway from all these different relationship experts who shared valuable
insights in the pursuit of lasting love. Again, it's important to remember that relationships do
take time. They take effort and they take attention.
I thought if you just have a feeling with someone, if you just like someone, then you guys can make
it work. But like we talked about in the beginning, love is not enough. It's not all you need.
You've got to be constantly thinking about how can I show up for myself? How can I love myself first?
How can I make sure I'm in a healing journey
and creating wholeness within myself first
so that I can attract from a healthier space?
And then I can respond, not react, from a better position.
Because if we feel wounded, if we feel like we're broken,
if we feel like we're not deserving of love, if we feel like we're always choosing the wrong partners and getting taken advantage of or cheated on or hurt by them or lied to or manipulated, then we're never going to believe in love.
We're never going to believe that we are deserving and capable of love because of these poor experiences in our past. So when we take back control of how we view and love ourselves,
when we take back the intimacy with self first,
then we can learn to communicate and respond in a conscious way with another
and create a loving environment with them.
It doesn't mean everything's gonna be perfect
and roses and fairy land every single day,
but when you have safety within you,
you can create safety within another,
or you can speak up when you know you're not safe
to create those boundaries.
I hope you enjoyed this episode.
Again, let me know your biggest takeaway below.
I'm so excited for you on your loving relationship journey.
Make sure to subscribe to this channel to get more incredible content on love, life,
mindset as well. Thanks again. I hope you enjoyed today's episode and it inspired you on your
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Let me know what you enjoyed about this episode in
that review. I really love hearing feedback from you and it helps us figure out how we can support
and serve you moving forward. And I want to remind you if no one has told you lately that you are
loved, you are worthy, and you matter. And now it's time to go out there and do something great