The School of Greatness - 769 DeVon Franklin: Relationships, Love, and Lust
Episode Date: March 11, 2019THE TWO THINGS AT WAR IN A MAN ARE LOVE AND LUST. People today are struggling in relationships. With social media, there are so many options. Everything looks fresh and new and interesting. Why would ...anyone be happy with just one person? But when you’re constantly searching for the next best thing, you feel empty. You lack peace and satisfaction. And you miss out on what life is all about: love. We have to practice discipline in dating in order to give and receive love. On today’s episode of The School of Greatness, I talk about dating in mastery with an expert on relationships: DeVon Franklin. DeVon Franklin is an award-winning film and TV producer, New York Times best-selling author, international speaker, and spiritual success coach. He’s been interviewed by Oprah, Dr. Oz, Steve Harvey, Dr. Phil, CNN, and featured in numerous radio, print, and online appearances. DeVon explains how one of the biggest problems in relationships is the lack of honest communication. We need to be open about our feelings about our partners. So get ready to learn how to put love in control of lust on Episode 769. Some Questions I Ask: How do you know when you’re with the right person? (8:00) How do men think beyond sex? (14:00) Do you know many successful men who are dating multiple women? (17:00) How does your wife support you? (36:30) What is the biggest challenge you’ve faced while being married? (41:00) Can you over-communicate in a relationship? (45:00) In This Episode You Will Learn: Why social media has amplified challenges for men in relationships (4:30) How peace is the strongest barometer of your relationship (12:00) Why women have to get out of the “grey area” when dating (21:00) The reason it’s important to wait to have sex (23:00) Why you have to heal internal pain (49:00)
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This is episode number 769 with New York Times best-selling author Devon Franklin.
Welcome to the School of Greatness.
My name is Lewis Howes, a former pro-athlete turned lifestyle entrepreneur.
And each week we bring you an inspiring person or message
to help you discover how to unlock your inner greatness.
Thanks for spending some time with me today.
Now let the class begin.
James Baldwin said,
Love takes off masks that we fear we cannot live without
and know we cannot live within.
And Leo Baskaliga said,
What love we've given will have forever.
What love we fail to give will be lost for all eternity. Welcome to today's episode,
all about relationships, love, and lust with my good friend, Devon Franklin, who is a Hollywood producer, best-selling author,
renowned preacher, and motivational speaker. He's best known for the films Miracles from Heaven,
Heaven is for Real, and the New York Times best-selling book, The Weight, which he co-wrote
with his wife, Megan Good. He's got a new book out we're going to talk about, and also we're
going to share how Devon teaches men to think beyond sex when sex is typically a lot of what men think about. The difference between love and lust
and how to know how to lead with love. The power of acknowledging feelings versus suppressing them,
and this is something that a lot of men in general have faced for a while now. And Devon's keys to a
successful relationship and thriving marriage. That and so much more in this episode. Make sure
to share this with your friends, lewishouse.com slash 769. Super pumped about all the wisdom you're
going to gain from this episode. Big thank you to our sponsor today. I'm so excited about this
episode. So let's dive in with the one, the only, Devon Franklin.
All right, welcome back, everyone, to the School of Greatness podcast.
We've got my friend Devon Franklin in the house, man.
What's up, bro?
Super pumped.
That was a good pop right there.
That was good, man.
Love it.
You are one of the most inspiring guys that I know.
I love following your work.
You do work that is just authentic to you.
And you don't care what people think.
That's what I love about it.
It may be unpopular.
It may be different.
It may be unique.
But it's you.
And it's just true and authentic.
Yeah, you know.
That's what I love about you, man.
Thank you, man.
Likewise, man.
We've only hung out like three times.
But I feel like I really know you. I feel like I can trust you. And I feel like you're just a great man. Thank you, man. Likewise, man. We've only hung out like three times, but I feel like I really know you.
I feel like I can trust you, and I feel like you're just a great voice for the world.
I feel the same way.
Yeah.
So hopefully we get to hang more.
Now I'm going to have to get up at 6 a.m. and start training with you.
Let's do it.
But you've got this book out called The Truth About Men, What Men and Women Need to Know.
And I'm excited about this because every time I do an interview or topic on relationships, it just seems to go crazy.
Is that right?
Because people are struggling in relationships in general, I feel like.
I feel like a lot of people are stressed out more than ever today of first finding a partner,
dating is just stressful for people.
Then when you're in a relationship, okay, what about marriage?
Then when you're married, how do you stay happily married?
Then when you get divorced, you say, well, I'm a failure.
The last 10, 20 years I've been a failure.
This was all for nothing.
What's wrong with me?
And I have to repeat the cycle.
How do I find the right person?
And I think it's stressful because there's so many options in today's world.
With social media, there's so many options.
Everything looks yummy.
Everything looks tasty. Everything looks exciting many options and everything looks yummy. Everything looks tasty Yeah, everything looks exciting. Yeah fresh and new and interesting
So this is what I loved about this. You've got these questions on the back. I
Just want to read some of them
Okay
some are from women and some are from men and I think I want to talk about men first because
You say these questions men. Have you ever asked yourself, why does one woman not seem to be enough?
Why does one woman not seem to be enough?
Why can't I ever be satisfied?
And will I ever find peace?
These last three questions I feel like resonates with a lot of men.
Yes.
And I've asked myself those questions in previous relationships and also being single at different times.
And I'm curious, you know, why does it seem like a struggle for so many men to be okay with one relationship?
Yeah, you know, I mean, listen, this is really good.
Especially today.
Totally.
I mean, today is, like you said, it makes it even harder because, really because of just the popularity of social media.
I would say that that's what's kind of amplified the challenge.
The challenge has always been there, but I think with social media,
I mean, it really takes that challenge to another level for any man.
And so one of the reasons why I wrote the book is to help articulate
and hopefully answer some of these questions.
And so why I believe that it's really hard for one man
to be comfortable sometimes with just one woman,
it comes down to me to what the book is really about,
which is love.
And I believe that love is selfless.
Love is sacrificial.
It's not just love of self.
It's love of the woman in our life,
love of family, love of our calling,
love of our destiny.
So as men, we're never really taught
to feed or cultivate love.
What are we taught to feed or cultivate?
Lust.
Sex.
Yeah.
So to me, the two things at war within a man are love and lust.
I define lust as a selfish impulse for personal, professional, financial, or sexual fulfillment
by any means necessary, even if those means are detrimental. We live in a culture that almost
feeds on the lust in men and also encourages us as men to feed on that. So what does that look like?
With the media promoting just half-naked women everywhere.
Everywhere.
Everywhere.
Sex everywhere.
And it's okay.
Boys will be boys, right?
Yeah, yeah.
That's what you're supposed to do.
You're supposed to date.
Don't even worry about one half multiple.
That's what we're taught as men growing up, that the more, the better.
So in a dating sense, what happens is if our appetite grows to such a place where we're
not feeding the love, we're feeding the lust.
What is lust?
Lust is selfish.
It wants what it wants, whenever it wants it,
however it wants it.
So as men, especially as single men,
when you're in a situation
where that's what you feed constantly,
that's what's gonna be the strongest.
And so when it comes to a world
where things are not on your terms,
that almost feels like a foreign experience.
Because you've cultivated an appetite where the more women, the better.
And guess what?
If this woman doesn't suit what I want, I just get rid of her.
I move on to the next.
And so what happens is as men, we sometimes consciously and subconsciously allow that
lust to run and potentially ruin our life.
Yeah.
And so when a man decides, you know what?
I want to get married. I want to know what? I want to get married.
I want to get serious. I want to get committed. Saying I do is not a magic wand. So if you go
from having no discipline in your dating life, no discipline in your sex life, you've had as much as
you could possibly stomach. You've had as many women as you could possibly have. And then you
meet the one that really captures your heart. She taps into the love inside, but be prior to her.
And even sometimes with her,
you have not practiced discipline as a man.
When you say I do, there's nothing magical that happens on the other side of it.
So if you have an appetite and you have no discipline,
marriage doesn't just automatically give discipline.
So why does it become hard for men to just commit to one
because they never had much practice with it?
And I believe that if we date better, we marry better. If we marry better, we family better. If we family better,
we parent better. If we parent better, we community better, right? So it all goes back to how we date.
And if there's no discipline there as a man, we're setting ourselves up for a massive challenge. It
doesn't mean we cannot be successful. We can't. But sometimes as a man, we think, why is one not
enough? Because we've been conditioned
to more. And so the idea of just one becomes foreign. Drop the mic. Let's just end it right
here. Let's end it right here. So how do you know what's the right way to date someone?
Let me ask this question first. When you're in a relationship and you say, you know what,
I'm going to be disciplined. I'm going to work hard at this. Even when you know it's not the right fit,
you've put in time, you know, six months, a year, two years,
and you're like, you know what, I'm just going to keep going and make it better.
I'm going to try my best to cultivate the love.
But for some reason, that relationship you know deep down isn't the one.
And you say goodbye to that relationship.
Is that you just saying, well, on to the next.
There's another option out there.
How do you know when it is the right one?
Well, that's a good question. I think a couple things. One, when you're in a situation, the one premise of the book, as it relates to love, is really we got to start telling the
truth. And a lot of times, especially in a relationship sense, it becomes a place where
we tell the least truth.
You hide the truth.
You hide the truth.
Because you don't want to hurt someone.
You don't want to hurt someone. You may have feelings or thoughts. You may have
things. And also, sometimes in a relationship, you can be afraid. If I tell this person the truth,
it doesn't even mean the truth that I'm not into them. It could be like, I'm really into you.
Or it could be like, here are some things I'm thinking about. The question sometimes is where
the fear comes in is judgment. If I tell this person my truth, will they judge me? Will they
still like me? Will they still love me? Will they still be there for me? And so a lot of times, whether
you're a man or a woman in a relationship, you bring that fear into it. And so as a result,
sometimes that fear works against being truthful. So a lot of times in a relationship, you're
more truthful with people outside the relationship than you are with the person in the relationship.
Telling the other people outside, everything is happening.
And you're not telling your partner. And this is why, as men and women,
we've got to start communicating
with one another
instead of at one another.
And so I really wanted
to write this book
to help foster more truth.
So the point you're bringing up,
if you're in a situation
where you're with somebody
and you're not sure
it's the right fit,
here is the number one way
to begin to identify
if it is operating in lust
or if you're operating in love,
it's peace.
Our peace. You feel peace. That's right. Our peace is the strongest barometer. It's our compass
It tells us we're going in the right direction
We're going with the right person in the right direction or you know what I'm going in the right direction
But something about doesn't feel like this the person is supposed to go with me. Mmm, right? It's really about peace
That's where I get in everyone has the opportunity to define what
that means for them. But to me, that's a great way to identify, is this the right person I'm
dealing with? So then let's just say, let's say you don't have peace. The truth is I need to tell
that person as soon as possible. Here's what I'm really going through. Here's why. Especially as a
man. As soon, don't wait. Don't wait. Six months. Why? Because here's what happens. As a man soon. No, don't wait. Don't wait six months. Why because here's what happens as a man the moment you start to know
This ain't it. I don't this ain't it
Here's what happens the more you do not tell her the truth about how you're feeling
Either she gonna cry now she gonna cry later and when she cries later, she's you've inflicted more pain
I believe as a man
We we're gonna be one of two, men that heal pain or inflict pain. And that truth, as hard as it may be, and as much as she
may not want to hear it, it's better for her to hear it early on before she can have more emotional
investment than to hear it later. And you knew six months ago you were out of there. Part of
telling the truth is to say, listen, I love you. When I operate in love, I put someone else's needs over my needs.
I'm thinking about someone else's thoughts even sometime before my thoughts, someone else's well-being.
So in a dating sense, as a man, you're like, hey, I need you to know what I'm really feeling here so that we can just have an honest conversation.
Like, I don't want to feel this way.
I don't know why I'm feeling this way.
But, you know, I don't know if this is just the right fit.
And, you know, and do your best to articulate that.
It's better to put it all out on the table. Yeah, then
There you go six months later seven months later something happens and then we and then sometimes I've been there when I was single
You wait for something to happen then to use that as the excuse
Oh, well, it's cuz this happened
Well, no, that's not because that because if there was really love and there was a long-term plan there you could work through that
Right, but too often I feel like as men we hold on to
what we think and I think women do that too because they're afraid so I think
when you go into this idea of like okay well how do you date and love how do you
date and mastery it doesn't mean you can't explore doesn't mean you can't
find the right fit this is all about a journey so love when you're trying to
find the compatibility you're searching right we're all we all find that journey
however it's dating with more intent it's dating with more intent.
It's dating with more intent.
So what does that look like?
It looks like, and again, this is just what I believe
will help us as men, especially in a dating sense,
think beyond sex.
Think beyond sex.
How do you teach men to do that
when that's all they've been conditioned to think?
Well, here's how.
Because again, instead of looking at that woman
as an object for your pleasure, look at her as an individual. Look at her as someone's sister, someone's mother, someone's daughter, someone's friend. Humanize her in your mind.
sex with that person, that's your business. But so often men look at women first as a sexual object,
not as an individual. And as a result, when a woman most of the time says, hey, you know what, I don't want to have sex, you know, or I want to wait or whatever. A lot of men say, all right,
well, I'm moving on to the next. If a woman does not want to have sex or share her body with you
because she does not trust you, she does not know you, she does not love you, that's a sign of a
great woman, not a woman that should be discarded. And so as a man, when you're single and you're
discarding women because they don't want to share their body, that's a warning sign to me.
Hey. About you as a man. That's right. What's going on with you, bro?
Why are you on such a path for personal, selfish, lustful fulfillment that you are
discarding potential women that could help make the difference in a positive way in your life. Wow. So for any man, it's about, hey, let me look in
the mirror for a minute and just stop. Why? Because look at what's going on in the world.
There's so much news about the challenges that men are facing. And why are so many men facing
all these challenges? Because I believe most men have given themselves over to lust. They've given
themselves over to this selfish fulfillment where they want what they want,
whenever they want it, however they want it.
And as a result, they become the sum total of what that lust makes them.
So as a man, no man can turn a blind eye towards what's going on with men in the world.
So if anything, allow what we're seeing in the world to then be a motivator for every
individual man.
Who do I want to be?
Am I inadvertently living in a way where I may meet the same fate
of some of the same men that I'm seeing in the world?
Right?
Because it's not like, oh, point the finger.
Oh, look at them.
Oh, I would never become that.
Wait a minute.
The moment any of us as men say, oh, I would never.
You might.
Set the watch.
Right?
Because all of us have the same struggle.
All of us struggle between love and lust.
And the issue is getting control, getting discipline, getting mastery to the degree where I don't believe we can ever eradicate lust.
I don't believe that.
And that's a truth most women don't want to hear, right?
But I believe that is the truth.
Lust is in every man, no matter who that man is, no matter what.
How faithful you are.
No matter how faithful.
It's there.
It's not even a reflection of the woman in his life at all.
However, as men, when we learn to get control of it, when we learn to put love in control
of lust, that's when we position ourselves to not allow that lust to destroy us.
Couple things I want to ask from this.
You are a successful man in Hollywood.
You've been married for how long now?
Seven years, almost. Seven years.
Two-part question.
The first part is, do you know any successful men in Hollywood who are not married and who have multiple partners?
Do you see any of them that are successful in their career but also have that inner peace that you talked about a few minutes ago i don't see many successful men that would live are living according
to what you how you just outlined that are uh that have the peace they might have the fun yeah they
have they have the fun they have the money the position all of that but i would not say that the
men that fit the description that i've been privy have that peace where there's just a sense of, okay, you know what?
I'm cool.
I'm competent.
I'm here.
This is what it is.
A lot of times, and I believe that if any man is really honest with themselves, I don't
believe the more women you have, the more peace you get.
I think it actually is-
More chaos.
More chaos.
Think about it.
It's like as a man, at the end of our life, when you think about how much time you spend with women, chasing women, spending money on all those things, you've got to ask yourself, what do we have to show for it?
So for me, prior to getting married, I had to ask the same question.
What do I have to show for all this?
And it wasn't like when Megan and I started dating that I was all of a sudden ready to get married.
I wasn't.
But what I did was a friend of mine encouraged me, don't be afraid.
Don't allow your fear to mess this up.
Afraid of what?
Commitment?
Marriage?
Marriage, all of it.
Committed.
The unknown.
Because you were dating other girls before then.
You were having fun.
Yeah, but I was dating with intention.
I was dating saying, hey, yo, here's where I am in life.
Here's what I'm looking to do.
So that there was no lack of clarity with anyone that was dating me where I was.
And I talk about this in the book.
It's so important.
I'll talk about it from the male side and the female side.
For men, it's important because what happens is lust makes us a part-time manipulator in
a single sentence.
What does that mean?
What does that mean?
It means that you're dating multiple women.
Those women don't really know that there's as many other women as there are.
And they don't even know that you're not as serious as you seem to be when you're with them because your intention is for
sexual desire sexual desire companionship in that moment whatever your pleasure is long term there's
there's no long term and and at the same time there's no regard for their real feelings it's
like this is a woman that i may date on tuesday here's someone i may date on thursday here's
there's one a woman i may date on sat night. And none of them really know the other
one exists. So that's what I mean about not dating with intention. So when you're dating with
intention, you're letting everybody know, listen, here's where I am. Here's what I'm doing. Very,
very important. As a man, I encourage any single man to, if you really want to get, become successful
in life and success to me is nothing to do what happens in the world
Success is to me peace inner world. It's inner world success is who is the person that looks back at you in the mirror and
There is where success starts and where it stops
We see a lot of men who have public success, but no personal success
Yeah, and there used to be a time where that was okay, but now real success starts
You know with who's looking back in the mirror.
So I would ask any man, if you are finding yourself dating multiple women for multiple
women's sake, why? Just stop the ask question. Why are you doing it? And what is the real value
that you're getting out of it? Do you find yourself with this insatiable appetite that
no one person can ever quench? And as a result, there's no peace within your spirit. Super
important. The second part of that is that if you find yourself saying, hey, you know what?
I am going to get more disciplined here, but I still want to explore.
Okay.
Explore with intention.
Let the woman know what your intentions are.
So then they, as an adult, can make the decision if they want to engage with you.
That, to me, is what real honesty and transparency looks like.
Now, for a woman, if you're dating a man, you've got to get out of the gray area.
You've got to get out of the gray area.
It's quick and possible, right?
What does this mean?
That's right.
But that gray area is the area where you are most liable.
Because in a relationship sense, the one who has the knowledge, the most knowledge, has
the most power.
And a lot of times, men have more power because they know what they're really serious about
and what they're not.
And the woman that they're dealing with does not know.
That's a gray area.
He may text you all the time.
He may talk to you all the time.
You may go out on a date.
You may have met his parents, but never has he told you we're together.
Right.
Or he's thinking about the commitment.
That's right.
And so for a woman in that situation, she's in a gray area.
And I encourage her in the book, you've got to get out of the gray.
You got to ask clear, direct questions, questions wait for clear direct answers so that the man that you're dealing with you get a sense of
Are you are you dating anyone else? Are we committed? Are we exclusive? What are your plans? Where are you going?
Don't be afraid to ask the questions because so often when women come to me for advice
They're afraid. Well, what if I ask him these questions and he leaves well Well, he was going to leave anyway. That's good. That's great.
Right?
That's great.
I mean, here's the thing.
I've dated women in the past who they're almost so honest in the beginning.
It's like, oh my gosh, you're like pushing me away because I'm like, this is not where
I'm at in my life.
Like you're talking about kids in the first five minutes.
I'm like, I just want to have fun right now.
But then there's other women who are that honest where you're like, wow, I'm actually really interested in you.
This is kind of scary that you're so honest.
But I'm going to keep exploring because I like you and I'm that interested in you and I want to learn more.
Yeah.
I think the more honest you are in the beginning, maybe you don't have to say in five minutes, I want to have five kids.
But I think almost the more truthful you can be earlier on, the better.
Because you can start to eliminate those people or know exactly where they're going to be at.
Well, yeah, you get a better sense of what's what.
And I also encourage women.
I say, listen, have an observation period in dating.
What's that mean?
Meaning don't just rush into when you're dating somebody telling this particular man all of the stuff you want.
Like you don't even know if you're going to like this person.
Right.
And sometimes it's like just on that, like you said, even know if you're going to like this person. Right.
And sometimes it's like, just on that, like you said, on that first date,
they're like telling, oh, here's what I want to do, da-da-da.
No, no, no, no.
Chill.
Observe.
See if this man is even worthy of knowing what you think.
See if this man is even worthy of knowing your plans and how you see your future.
How will you know if he's worthy of knowing?
Because you're going to spend time, you're if he's worthy of knowing? Because you're
going to spend time. You're going to evaluate. You're going to see who he is. And this is why,
listen, I know in this modern world, what I'm getting ready to say is just uncommon,
but I don't care. I'm going to say it. This is why it's so important. I'd say in this book,
like I believe it's important to wait until marriage for sex, but most people aren't going
to do that. I say in this book, at least wait until you're in a trusted, committing, loving relationship before
you have sex. Why? Because when you have sex with someone and you do not know them and you do not
trust them, it becomes hard to really get clear on who they are and what they're about. So important.
So as a woman, I'm like, listen, if I was a woman and I was dating, oh, you ain't getting
nothing from me.
Why?
Because I don't know you.
I was at Facebook on the book tour, and this woman asked me a question during our Q&A.
And so I said this to her, man, and she said, she was asking me a question about sex and
whatnot.
And I said, okay, I said, so let me just give you an analogy.
Okay, how many women in the audience, after a month of dating a guy,
would you give them the code to your phone?
The code, your passcode.
Yeah, and most of them say, oh no, there's no way.
Are you kidding me?
I said, okay, now listen,
I'm not trying to get in your business.
I'm not going to judge you.
I said, but in that same period of time,
in previous relationships,
how many of you in that same period of time
have already given him your body?
90%. I mean, so if you don't trust him enough to give him the code to your phone,
why would you give him your body? Wow. You don't give a man your body, right? It gives you a better
opportunity to observe and evaluate what does he really want? Is he even really interested
potentially in who I am, what I think, or is he just interested in what my body can give him?
That's what I say about an observation period so that you can really see who this man is,
what he's about, and really where he's going.
And I believe that women have a lot more power in dating than they realize.
But a lot of times they give it away.
So much power.
But they give it away.
They give it away to men.
You know, like, oh, yo.
And it's like, no, no. Hold on to that power. Evaluate. Make decisions. Even if you want to be in a relationship super bad, don't allow your flesh and your desire to then make you so desperate that you lower your standard to the degree where you're allowing men entry into your life that really are not qualified for sex.
What if the woman just wants to have fun and they're not looking for a committed relationship either?
You know what?
Listen, I'm not going to judge what consenting adults want to do.
If that's her point of view, that's her point of view.
And that just is what it is.
And at a certain point, when she's doing the same thing
and wants a different result,
it'll require looking at what she's doing to get the result.
Same for any man.
When any man gets to a place where he's like,
you know, I keep doing the same thing,
I get a different result,
maybe I have to change what I'm doing.
Yeah.
I might be having fun,
but I feel soulless inside.
Yeah.
I feel like I'm not having true intimacy or...
Yeah, exactly.
Lacking the partnership that I really want.
Totally, totally.
Just by having this fun.
Exactly.
Now, are there any men in Hollywood,
again, I don't want you to say names or anything,
but are there any men in Hollywood that you know
who've been married for a long period of time that are just so happy?
They've been married for 10, 15, 20 years.
Yes.
And they're just like so happy that they feel zero desire for other women.
Do you know any of that?
Well, now, hold on.
I don't.
I see, again, I'm going to say something that's probably crazy that most women don't want to hear.
I don't believe there's any man on this planet in a marriage that has zero desire for another woman.
I don't believe that.
It just becomes a question of managing that desire.
The discipline.
Yeah, totally.
And saying, yeah, there's a desire here, but whatever.
You know, it is what it is.
It'll pass.
I love my wife.
I'm not going to do that.
Boom.
But in terms of Hollywood, I think that there's no exception there.
But I do know men, yes, that are married, that are happy.
Happily married.
Yes, happily married, love their wives, love being married.
Even with all the challenges that there are and the temptations, that is not – there are a lot of men that I know that fit that description.
They have not fallen into temptation no matter what desires they may have because they love their wife, they love their life so much. And from your point of view, you think that these men who've been married for 10 plus years,
who've been faithful and committed, or maybe they've had some slip ups or whatever, but they're
in the marriage, they're happy, they're committed. You believe that those men are going to be more
successful in life than men who are not married or not committed in relationship because the people
that are not committed are lacking the inner peace as much?
Here's what I feel.
I feel like going back to that battle between love and lust, right?
And love being selfless.
And I believe as men, one of our biggest challenges is we don't know how to love.
We don't know how to love ourselves.
We don't really know how to love the women in our lives.
We don't know how, because we don't know how to give love. We don't know how to receive love. We don't really know how to love the women in our lives. We don't know how, because we don't know how to give love.
We don't know how to receive love.
And this is an area where most men struggle.
And it's actually the area, no matter how successful in the world or publicly a man
may be, without love, I do feel that that man is deficient.
Because love is the name of the game.
Love is what this is all about.
It really is.
It's what life's about. It's not about the money. It's not about the power. It's name of the game. Love is what this is all about. It really is. It's what life's about.
It's not about the money.
It's not about the power.
It's not about the fame.
It's not about the success.
It's about love, period.
Because at the end of the day, you can pass on to your children or pass on to the next generation money.
You can pass on influence.
But if you don't pass on love, those children will be deficient.
Wow.
Right?
Those children will become dysfunctional.
It's love.
And so as a man, when I decide I'm not going to open myself up to love, I don't believe I can
ever reach my fullest potential as a human being. So it's not so much that the institution of
marriage makes men better in and of itself. It's that institution which fosters that love
and vulnerability, because I believe our vulnerability leads to our victory,
not the opposite way.
And so as men, we have to really work against
the training that we get, which is like,
oh, growing up, love makes us weak.
Oh, you're soft, right?
You know, the whole box that we're taught as men to live in
and we don't live in that box,
you know, we're either met with violence
or put downs and whatnot.
So most men growing up,
if we don't fit the box of every man is strong and every man has the answers and every man has women, every man has power.
If we don't fit that box, most of the time growing up, we're told, stop crying, stop being a wimp.
So the box breaks us.
So what do we as men do?
Anything that does not contribute to our survival, we suppress.
So we may want to say, yo, what's up, bro, man?
Love you, man.
You good?
But we don't do that because we're taught growing up, yo, what's up bro, man, love you man, you good, but we don't do that.
Because we're taught growing up, yo, you don't say that.
I love you, are you crazy?
So we hold it in, right?
And then we just try to do everything we can to survive.
So we try to subscribe to everything in the box, but secretly we know there's something
off.
So to me, when you have a man that is choosing not to open himself up to love, I would argue
because that's happening because that man has had to love, I would argue that's happening
because that man has had a deep hurt in his life
that he is not yet willing to process
and face and get healing over, right?
It's like, okay,
either it's something with a parent
or a previous relationship.
I think that's also one of the truths about men
is we're more sensitive than most people realize.
Yeah, very.
And there's a lot of times
men have gotten their heart broken so bad at one point in time, it was so painful. They have no desire to ever go do that
again. But I believe we are naturally predisposed to love, but as men, we have to work against the
cultural and societal conditioning in order to do that. And I believe when we do it, we are happier,
we live longer, we are more peaceful. So I do think a man certainly can adjust to life without a woman, without love.
But do I think the fullest life is when we find the right person that we can walk through life with?
I do.
Yeah.
Because I think love is what it's all about.
That's true.
I do too.
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And now let's get back into this interview with Devon Franklin.
It's interesting you said that men can go through extreme heartbreak.
And I think I'm going to generalize this, but I feel like men in general have not learned how to deal with their emotions.
Yeah.
And so when an extreme emotional attack is against us, it's like a bomb explodes.
Totally.
It can be horrible for women, too.
I mean, it can be heartbreaking.
It can take a year or two to, like, recover in a breakup.
It could hurt really bad.
But I feel like, in general, women are able to express their emotions with other girlfriends
more, their family members, and at least talk about their feelings.
Whereas men, when you get heartbroken, it could break you physically.
Because we don't talk about it.
That's it.
We hold it in.
We suppress it. That's it. We hold it in. We suppress it.
That's it.
Oh, man.
I talk about this in the book.
Anything we suppress, we empower.
We empower it to destroy us.
Really?
Seriously.
And that's one of the reasons why I wrote this book.
We've got to start talking.
We've got to start being honest.
We've got to start communicating.
We've got to start.
I have a whole chapter in this book called Create a Safe Space where we have at least one other person that we can talk to, that we can tell what's really going on,
and we can do it without fear of judgment.
Yeah.
Because as men, I remember my early 20s,
you know, I got my heart broke, man.
Oh, man.
It's like life was over.
It was over.
Forget about it.
I'm done, okay?
And a lot of, but then you don't want to go to anybody
and tell them that, you know, you're as messed up
because people are going to judge you.
Suck it up.
Suck it up and all that.
Get back out there.
That's right.
Oh, it's fine.
You're playing with the fish in the sea.
Well, no, I wanted that bit.
I didn't get it.
And so I talk about in the book it's important for us to no longer suppress because that suppression, it builds that pressure within us.
And why do we feed lust?
Because then lust becomes an outlet.
Lust becomes a relief to the pressure that we're not acknowledging and the stress that
we're really feeling internally.
We find a vice.
There's a whole chapter in the book called The One You Feed.
You know, so either you're feeding love or you're feeding lust.
And vices feed the lust.
Virtue feeds the love.
And so as men, think about how much of this world is designed to feed vice, to feed men vice.
Everything.
Everything.
Every time you turn your phone on.
Oh, my goodness, dude.
Drive down the street.
Oh, my goodness.
It's everywhere.
It's everywhere.
As men, we then have to practice mastery, which is the practice of love, where we become
smarter.
We become to realize, oh, got it.
This world is actually not predisposed for me to become as successful as I can be.
I have to look at things through a different lens.
So I have to say, oh, God, there are traps set up every day for me to fall into vice.
Every day, every man.
I'm not pointing the finger.
I'm saying every man.
Just open up Instagram.
Look at you.
Yeah, yeah.
You know what I mean?
It's like, yo, okay, man, listen.
If I don't manage Instagram, Instagram's going to manage me.
All right?
So I got to get control.
All right?
Because there's vice everywhere. And we have to make the decision about, OK, I have to consistently seek out virtue. putting things in our spirit that remind us of who we are, that remind us of whose we are,
that remind us of where we're going.
Because if we don't consistently nurture and feed ourselves virtue, that vice is,
I mean, seriously, it's like junk food, man.
It's gonna attack, attack your body.
It's gonna attack our body, it's gonna attack our spirit,
it's gonna take us to a place we don't wanna be.
No matter how healthy we may want to live,
if we don't go and put healthy food in our refrigerators,
if we don't make a decision to eat that way, we're going to eat whatever's close.
And whenever we are impulsive and we eat whatever's close, it's always going to be the worst thing.
And the same thing goes in life.
So it's so important to cultivate this lens of identifying, okay, here's where the vice is, here's where the virtue is, and making ourselves committed to consuming as much virtue as we can.
How does your wife support you in staying virtuous
in your thoughts, your actions, your beliefs?
I would say just her encouragement.
Even her encouragement to write this book.
When I first told her, she was like,
oh yeah, you gotta do that.
And I would read her chapters of the book
and passages as I was writing it.
And so she was just completely on board.
And I was like, okay, cool, that really helped me because, you know, writing this book and being honest and being transparent
and being vulnerable in front of people that I may never meet and they're going to know all
this stuff about me, that was hard. But her encouragement really, really did a lot. And
then also just that support system, you know, that support system of knowing no matter what
happens in the world, I got somebody who's there with me.
Someone that I can come home to and she can come home to me.
And that in and of itself is virtuous.
And that really helps lay a great foundation for feeling comfortable doing everything that I'm called to do.
And also becoming everything I'm called to be.
When home life is settled, it really helps feel there's a
freedom there. And so I think both of us really try to give each other enough support and an
environment where we both can become who we're called to be. When do you feel the most loved?
Going back to the five love languages, I'm one love in action, right? That's my thing. So I
really feel the most love when I see the support. And that support could be as
simple as like, oh, babe, you know, I know you were gone, you know, but here's what I did while
you were away. Just little things like that. You know, that's when I really feel the most love.
They're like, oh, okay, got it. You know, she's in it with me. We're in this together. You know,
I'm not out here fighting this battle by myself. She's not out there fighting her battle by
herself. But we are in it and connected where I'm understanding, oh, got it. She's doing da,
da, da, da, da. She's probably going to need this. Let me think ahead and plan ahead. So since she
knows I'm thinking about her in the same way, that's when I feel the most love.
When do you feel the most hurt?
I feel the most hurt when I feel like I'm alone, you know, where it's like, oh yeah,
I feel the most hurt when I feel like I'm alone, you know, where it's like, oh, yeah, it's like, oh, man, I'm just doing this on my own.
This is hard. Yeah. You know, it's a blessing to be able to do all the things that I do.
But, you know, there's some moments, man, where it's like, yo, I'm just one voice shouting in the wind.
And so, man, that's when it can get hard. Really, really hard. And I think also all of us struggle with what we can see in our head where we would want to be and sometimes where we are.
And there's sometimes a difference between the two.
There's things, dreams, ideas, thoughts we want to see manifested for our life.
And when they aren't yet manifested, we're still reconciling the present that we have that doesn't really align with our future.
And I'm no exception to that.
So there are moments when I'm like, yo, what am I doing? This is crazy. Am I really? Oh,
all the time. Am I on the right path? Am I really making a difference? What am I? You know,
this is crazy. I'm just going to stick to producing or whatever. Like, I'm going to stop doing all this. Like, you know, there are those moments. I'm not praying on Instagram.
There we go. No, for real. It's like, what am I doing? What am I doing these things?
But then I get back to a place of like, okay, I just can't allow where I want to be to disrupt where I am and to really just take a
minute and appreciate. Anytime I get in that headspace, discouragement, I try to practice
just moments of gratitude. You know what? Thank you. You know what? I woke up today. You know
what? Thank you, God. You know what? Thank you for this opportunity. Thank you that I said something that someone appreciated.
Whatever.
Like just practicing those quick moments of gratitude just help me get focused.
Yeah.
Because sometimes when I'm not in that, that's when I feel the most alone.
Yeah.
So you've been married for seven years.
Yeah.
Together for eight, nine years.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
About nine years.
A little over eight.
Eight plus years.
Eight, nine years?
Yeah, yeah, about a little over eight.
Eight plus years.
You know, there's always those people who say, gosh, perfect couples online.
They always have the perfect videos.
They're always like amazing together.
There's never any challenges.
You know, it's the person who's not in a relationship or went through a bad divorce. They just hate watching people who look perfect online.
And you're like, how could they be so perfect?
They've gotta have some challenges.
Could you share maybe the biggest challenge you face
while being married that you're open to sharing?
Sure, sure, yeah.
Either as yourself or as a couple.
Sure, sure, sure.
You know, I think the biggest challenge of being married
is you're taking these two individual entities. Yeah. Different people,
different people, different thoughts, different expectations, different experiences, different
realities. And you're consistently, constantly trying to merge the two into one. And that
is one of the hardest experiences in life, period. You know, Even in physics, when two atoms come together,
there's fusion, there's tension, there's heat, there's friction.
Pressure.
There's pressure, there's conflict. And it's the same thing when two people are coming together.
So in marriage, it's that same thing of that consistent negotiation of like, okay,
my thoughts versus sometimes her thoughts versus our thoughts and what's good for us, what's good for the marriage, what's just good for me, what's good for her.
So there's this consistent dialogue and debate and dance around trying to find the sweet spot.
And I think that's one of the beauties of marriage is that it's constantly challenging us to become our best self and to expand who we think we are.
Marriage is really about compromise
and, okay, how do we find the common ground here? And where is that? And also as a man leading in
love, one of the challenges sometimes in leading in love is like, man, okay, I want to say this,
but you know what? I shouldn't say that, right? Okay. How do I get my attention across in love?
And that is hard. So I would say of the chair hardest things in marriage is just
the coexisting, you know, and and and living together living together and and and and also it's like finding that common ground of
The things that she wants to do the things that I want to do and the things that we then commit to do together
Mm-hmm, and there's no rule book on how to do it
But this is where the love comes in. And so
like, even when people see us on social media, you're like, oh man, I think what you're seeing
is even in the midst of the challenges, you're seeing the reality of what's really there,
which is, oh, these are two people that genuinely love each other.
Even if you're going through adversity or challenges or arguing.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. Totally. Totally. I mean, I think that what you see or anyone that sees us on social media
at some moments,
I think what's coming through is the truth.
The truth is that that love is really there.
But even in the midst of that love,
we still cultivate still coexisting
and negotiating and what's right and what's not.
And all those things happen all the time.
Really?
All the time.
Oh, yeah.
But because you know you love, you know,
I know I love her and she loves me and we are in love. It's what allows us the environment to still
work through so many different things on any given day, you know. What's the thing that you believe
you can improve to get to the next level individually for the marriage to thrive even
more? Yeah. You know, I think where I can improve,
you know, I think it's the area where all men struggle,
communication.
Really?
Yeah.
You're this excellent communicator, speaker, executive,
movie producer, author, writer, freaking pastor, you know.
You are the communicator.
So if there's a struggle for you, it's like,
what are the rest of the men? We're screwed, you know. It's like, you're the communicator. So if there's a struggle for you, it's like, what are the rest of the men?
We're screwed, you know?
It's like, you're the best communicator there is.
The rest of the men have no chance.
But there's a difference between communicating publicly and then communicating personally.
You know, so the public communication is actually the easier communication.
It's easy for you to write the books.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
I mean, it's not, don't get me wrong, there are still difficulties.
But in terms of that interpersonal communication,
that's an area
where I absolutely
want to get better.
For sure.
And what I'll tell you
is writing this book
has really helped a lot.
It has helped me tremendously
work on that
and not being afraid
to be honest
and not being afraid
to speak my truth
and not being afraid
to say what I'm thinking
and doing it in love.
And it's been
hugely cathartic and very
liberating because as I was saying, when we first sat down, so it astonishes me how little we really
operate in truth. Wow. It astonishes me how little real communication there is in a relationship or
even a marriage for that matter.
Or to yourself.
Or to yourself.
Because a lot of times we feel things, but we suppress.
I don't want to think that about myself.
No, I can think about it.
Well, guess what?
Any suppressed thought does not go away.
It persists.
The only way to get a suppressed thought to go away
is to acknowledge that it's there.
Hey, you know what?
I'm feeling this.
I don't want to feel it, but it's here.
So now that I'm acknowledging it, I have a question.
What am I going to do about it? But if I don't acknowledge that it's there, guess what? It's only going to get bigger. It don't want to feel it, but it's here. So now that I'm acknowledging it, I have a question. What am I going to do about it?
But if I don't acknowledge that it's there, guess what?
It's only going to get bigger.
It's only going to get worse.
So what I've been learning is the more I communicate and the more I'm honest and the more I'm truthful
and the more I work on those things, the better I become as a person.
And I think that also lends itself to the marriage and the healthier the marriage becomes.
Do you believe that you can over communicate in a relationship?
Yes, and I'll answer it this way. Without a doubt you can. When I'm making a movie,
so like my new movie is called Breakthrough, it's a true story of a mother who prays her
son back to life after he dies falling through a frozen lake. And Chrissy Metz from This Is Us
stars as the mother. And I do a lot of true stories. One of the last true stories I did
was Miracles From Heaven with Jennifer Garner. And so whenever I'm do a lot of true stories, you know one of the last true stories I did was miracles from heaven with Jennifer Garner and
So whenever I'm developing a true story and I sit down with the real person or the family that the movie is based on
I say this very thing I say listen
I'm excited to tell your movie. I'm excited to bring it to the world
I said I want to be really clear about something. There's a difference between the truth and the facts. I
Said that the facts are for the documentary. The truth
is for the movie. So I'm going to help develop a script and produce a movie that will tell the
truth of your story. But if you want every fact to be told, that's where you can write a book and
go get a documentary made. Because the movie is to try to articulate the truth. So when it comes
to communication, I think it's important to articulate truth. But sometimes when you're dictating every fact, that can feel like
over-communicating. People want to know the essence of what you're feeling, but it's not like,
okay, so at five o'clock I did this. That's when it's like, wait, it's just too much information.
Yeah. Just tell me the truth.
The truth. The truth is like, you know what? I'm really happy right now. And the reason why I'm
happy, I had a great day. Or you know what? I'm really sad right now. And the reason why I'm happy, I had a great day. Or you know what, I'm really sad right now.
And the reason why I'm sad, I had a bad day.
That's the truth.
Over-communicating can sometimes be
over-communicating so many different facts.
And so that's how I articulate that.
And I think that anybody wants to know the truth,
but not everybody always wants to know
every detail of the fact.
Yeah.
You've been sharing a lot more truth in this,
and it sounds like a lot more with your wife.
Yeah.
Recently in the last year with this book being out and working on this, is there any truth
that you have yet to share with yourself personally, to your wife, with the world,
with your brothers?
Sure.
You know, I think that-
Or that you need to share more of.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I think that that's a question that's evolving.
You know, I think that there's always
truth in us that we aren't always aware until certain circumstances come up and you're like,
oh, wait a minute. Hmm. I didn't know that was there. I didn't know that feeling was there.
You know, so in this moment, I feel pretty resolved around my truth. However, I don't
let that produce an arrogance that, oh yeah, I'm owning my truth.
I'm fine. No, no, no. Something could happen right after I leave this interview. And I realized,
holy crap, there's some truth in me that I wasn't even aware of. There's some stuff I got to be
honest about. Wow, I didn't know that feeling was still there. So I say with an asterisk that
in this moment, I'm owning my truth, but I have to be in touch and sensitive to each moment.
Because I think so often, especially as men in the public eye to a degree, there's a tendency to want to portray we have it all together or portray that we have it all figured out.
And that's one of the reasons why I wrote this book is to dispel that.
I don't have it figured out.
I don't.
I work on it every day.
I struggle between love and lust.
And I do my best to become the man that I really want to be and lead in love.
And that's a struggle at times.
It's a challenge at times.
But I'm committed to the work because the work is fulfilling.
But I wanted to, in this book, really close the distance between a persona and a person,
right? Because a lot of times when we're trying to portray this image, it gets exhausting because
the persona isn't really who the person is. So with this book, it's like, okay, let me bridge
the gap. So here's who I am as a person. Here's who people may think of me as a persona. And here's
the reality so that there's not a distance between the two as much as humanly possible.
And as part of walking that journey
I think we all have to be open to there are certain things that we have gone through in life
There are certain things that are still buried in our subconscious that we aren't even aware of there's pain. There's trauma. There's tragedy
We all have gone through and we compartmentalize some things we pack some things away
And we do our best to operate with the consciousness that we have.
But at any given moment, something can trigger us.
And we're like, I didn't know I was still harboring that hurt from my mother.
Or that pain from my dad.
Or whatever it may be.
So that's a long answer to your question.
But I, again, with an asterisk, say, hey, I feel good about the truth I'm owning now.
But I'm just sensitive enough to know that there's other stuff in me
that only over time will reveal the areas
I still have to work on.
You mentioned trauma.
What's the biggest trauma you've had in your life
that has taken you the longest to heal,
but also defined who you are in a positive way
at the same time?
Sure, sure.
Like it's driven you to be the man that you are in a positive way,
but also driven you into darkness and taken the longest to heal.
Man, you know, I would say it's the loss of my father.
Because you were young when that happened, right?
Yeah, I was nine years old.
Man, I mean, you know, that was the most, it was just traumatic.
I mean, I remember my mother, you know,
walking me and my brothers into the morgue at the hospital.
Wow. Yeah, and there was my dad. You saw him into the morgue at the hospital yeah and there was my dad you saw him on the oh yeah she she asked us to go kiss him goodbye no way dude that's heavy dude
i remember the nine-year-old knife i was nine my older brother was 12 and my my younger brother was
uh six years old and she said go kiss your father goodbye. And I mean, I will never
forget kissing his forehead. And it was the coldest. Oh my gosh. Dude, it's like you've never,
you don't know cold. You don't know cold until you have experienced that with someone that's
passed away. And it wasn't that that moment itself was traumatic. It was the realization that he's
gone. He's not coming back. Like, this is not
like, oh, maybe things will turn around. Like, it's over. So, you know, make your peace with
this because this is not going to change. So that trauma for me, I think, has driven me. It's driven
me in many different ways, some positive, some negative. On the negative side, I think what it
has done is like, it's always put me on a path of, you know, I got to
prove something. You know, I got to prove something. I got to show that either I'm not him
in that he was a great man, but he had his flaws. You know, he was an alcoholic. I even talked about
in the book how I found out my teenage years, he had an affair on my mother and all these things.
So, you know, he was great, but he was flawed. And so sometimes I'm driven to like prove that
I'm not him. I'm also driven to prove something like, okay, I'm going to make something of my life. And sometimes when that becomes your
driver, you operate in lust, you know, because less is more than just sex or women. Lust can be
power. Lust can be fame. Lust can be success. And so sometimes I found myself being driven by those
things to prove myself to an imaginary person. Who do I have to prove myself to? Who? Outside of
the person that looks back at me in the mirror and God, who do I have to prove myself to an imaginary person. Who do I have to prove myself to? Who? Outside of the person that looks back at me in the mirror and God,
who do I have to prove anything to?
But I think losing my dad and that trauma really put me kind of,
even in my teenage years, a rebel in reverse.
I wasn't rebelling in a way where I was out drinking or partying.
I was rebelling through achievement and trying to find my value in achievement.
And what I discovered, and what I discover is that anytime as a man or a woman,
when we have an internal hole, a pain, a trauma,
and we're trying to find something external to heal it, it doesn't work.
It doesn't work.
Because what's internal has to be healed internally.
So anytime I have this internal pain, I'm trying to find my value in how I do,
and what I do, and trying to find my value in making the money,
and all the achievements, it doesn't satisfy. Because there's something on the inside that still says you're
not good enough. So how do you heal internally? By being honest, by accepting, you know what?
I don't feel good enough. Why don't I feel good enough? Where does that come from? And because I
don't feel good enough, what are the negative things that's causing me to do? And so once you're
aware, you know, and even for me, like saying, okay, well, shoot, where does that come from? Oh,
God, that comes because a lot of it's from the death of my father. Okay. All right. So how do I
just begin to process that, you know, and heal from that? And so some of the positive things have
come through this, through like, okay, saying I don't always feel good enough, but I'm doing things
that actually contribute to the feeling, don't heal the feeling. So me accepting that the feeling is there,
then I can say, okay, what are the facts based upon my feelings? Because sometimes my feelings
are actually completely not based in fact. So my feelings, my facts are saying, well,
you are good enough. God created you good enough. You are exactly who you need to be, when you need to be, where you need to be.
And sometimes it's really just repeating that and owning that in a moment that helps begin to feel it.
You know, that helps me begin to say, okay, yeah, that's cool.
You're right.
And even now, so like, you know, we were talking even before the cameras started rolling.
And I was in the Bay Area this weekend.
So like, you know, we were talking even before the cameras started rolling and I was in the Bay Area this weekend.
And in the message that I taught on, I was talking about going from discouragement to determination.
Because a lot of times when things don't pan out, we get discouraged.
And so I was encouraging people to get determined, determined to go after.
Don't stay in a season of discouragement.
Whatever you hope didn't happen, acknowledge that it didn't happen. It's okay to be upset about it, but use that being upset for fuel to become determined to do whatever you're called to do.
And so I was talking about this book, this book coming out, not hitting the New York Times bestsellers list, man.
And I was, oh, man.
Oh, I was discouraged. I was discouraged.
And then I had to ask myself a question.
Why?
Why are you so discouraged?
And a lot of it was, oh, well, I find my value.
Oh, well, I'm a New York Times bestseller. There you go. Man, that's what more prestigious
achievement is there as an author, right? I was challenged, again, this wound, going back to the
wound, trying to do versus be. And I talk about this in the book. As men, we got to learn how to
be, not just do. We need to find our worth in who we are, not in what we do.
And so I was challenged.
I was discouraged.
I didn't get the list, even though I had the sales and all that kind of stuff in the media.
Didn't hit the list.
So I was discouraged.
So I had a decision to make.
Am I going to be determined to just do what I'm called to do and not worry about the list,
but focus on the person?
And literally what began to happen is as I transitioned from discouragement to determination and no longer putting my value in a list, which who, I mean, what does it even matter?
At the end of the day, is the content and the message touching people?
When I began to change my focus, I began to realize, oh, wow, we're good. And people would come up to me,
oh, man, I got your book. Oh, wow. Man, as men would come to me and say, you're changing how
I think about my life. Women would come up to me and say, oh, I'm getting information. I walk to
the airport. People say, oh, I have your book. There was one time I was in Chicago. I'm sitting
down and one of the stewardess, one of the flight attendants, she walks right by me. She's like,
And one of the stewardess, one of the flight attendants, she walks right by me.
She's like, I got your book.
Wow.
Can you sign it for me?
That's cool. So what it did was it just reinforced, let me stop trying to do to prove my value.
Let me just own who I am, share what I know, and find the value in that.
And that is how I consistently work on still healing from the wound and
the trauma of losing my father because I I still veer towards wanting to do
versus wanting to be where do you think you'd be if he was still alive and
that's a good question I have no idea sometimes I think about that you know
and it's like I mean I think I would be where I am I might be whole. I might be more whole because having that father figure and having that support is like
everything, you know what I mean?
Not having a father is a really deep wound that I don't think anyone who doesn't have
a father ever gets over that for whatever reason that you don't have a father in your
life, whether he's just not around or he passed away or whatever the reason may be.
So I think if he was here, I think I would be where I am
I probably like I said, I'd be more whole and it'd be awesome to share these experiences with him, right?
You know, do you not feel whole right now? No, I don't feel as whole as I think I would if I had no no
No, cuz there's nobody I can look to above me
That's a man that I came from that can tell me about who I am.
You know what I mean?
So, yes, my mother and my grandmother, when she was alive, and my aunts and my family
do a great job, but there's no experience that can replace sitting across from somebody
that is your father or if you're a woman, that is your mother. Or even as a woman, if that's your father, or if you're a woman, that is your mother, or even as a woman,
if that's your father.
If you lose a parent, man, there's nothing
that can replace that, and as a young man,
trying to figure out manhood in the world
and doing that without your father,
that's a very challenging proposition,
which I do think, for me, it doesn't mean
that I don't practice wholeness, right? It doesn't mean that
I don't practice healing. It just means that I recognize there's still a brokenness in me relative
to losing him. Wow. What should women know about dating a man who's lost their father?
I would say a woman dating a man that lost his father, and I talk about this in the book,
that it's important to know to go beneath the surface.
And here's what I mean by that.
If you're dealing with a man in that situation or in some men that are not in that situation,
go beyond, how are you doing?
Oh, I'm good.
Because so often when you have a wound,
the thing that you try to do is hide it.
I don't want the person that I'm with
to know I'm in as much
pain as I am. So I want to present an image of I got it all together. I'm good. I'm cool. I'm calm.
I'm collected. I'm successful. Nothing phases me. It's just not true. So I would encourage any woman
to go beyond, how are you doing? Oh, I'm fine. No, no. Ask that man, what's worrying you right now?
What are you anxious about? What are you afraid you right now? What are you anxious about?
What are you afraid of right now?
What are the things that are that may be making you a little insecure right now? Hmm?
When you start asking those questions
then you start to get to the heart of the matter Wow and
What begins to happen is that man starts to feel more connected to you than he might any other woman
Because most women are not asking those questions. They're not going beyond the surface. Oh, he's good. I think great is that man starts to feel more connected to you than he might any other woman.
Because most women are not asking those questions.
They're not going beyond the surface.
Oh, he's good, okay, great, you're good, great.
So what are we gonna do tonight?
Right.
Oh, what's our date tonight?
Yeah.
Cool, we can go on a date,
but I wanna know how you're really doing.
What's going on on the inside?
I think that's some truth,
and those are some things that a woman can do,
especially with someone who's lost their father or the father's not around.
And I would argue that those are tips just good in general.
Yeah, those are great.
I want to ask a few more questions.
What's the process if you could do these things every single day in your marriage
or in a relationship to continue to make it thriving and growing?
What would be the few things every day that would be non-negotiable for you?
I know that when I do these things, it's better.
And sometimes I forget, or maybe you do it every day.
But what are those things that you think,
if people did these things every single day
in a relationship, both sides, it would thrive?
Or support the cultivation?
Yeah, I think first and foremost,
start the day in love.
And really all that means, you know, like let's just say if you're in a dating sense,
let's say you're not living together.
Communicating your love and your appreciation to that person when you start the day.
Hey, babe, just want to let you know I'm thinking about you.
Just woke up.
I want you to have an amazing day.
Just something simple.
Just something simple.
Where you communicate like, yo, you know, or here's a thought for the day.
You know, or here's an affirmation I just read I want you to have.
Here's a scripture.
Something where you are communicating your desire for their well-being.
Wow.
That, oh my goodness.
Powerful.
Oh, yeah.
Because it's like, well, oh my goodness.
I can't get this.
They got my back.
Yeah.
They got my back.
They're thinking about me in a way that is,
it goes beyond anything that anyone's ever done.
So just something that small.
In the morning.
In the morning.
Start the day letting that person know
how much you love and appreciate them.
I like that.
And let's say you're married,
or you're living with somebody.
You do it the same way.
Yeah.
It's not just like, okay, I'm getting up.
I'm checking Facebook
or whatever. I'm rushing to get to work. Just take a moment. Take a moment. Plug into them.
Hey, we woke up. It's good to see you. Hi, we made it. Love you. Anything you need me to do today?
Okay, cool. All right. Just that little bit of consideration, it sets the tone for the day. Because sometimes
in a marriage or in a relationship, things get so busy that the other person, no matter how
supportive they may be, can start to feel like they're not a priority and they don't matter as
much. And that happens on both sides. And so just those little things that communicate, no, no, no.
And that happens on both sides. And so just those little things that communicate no no no I know I'm thinking about you. I care about you. You're important to me and doing that as a level set
I think is awesome. I think also
It's more than just checking in during the day
Sometimes this is my experience people have come to me for help in this area and
The only thing they're really interested in is what their partner can
provide to them. What they can get out of the relationship. Yes. How they can feel better. Yes.
Not always interested in even what their partner does. Right. And what's going on. I believe in,
I think success is in the opposite and everyone has their philosophy on this, but I think
be aware enough of what that person is going on in their profession, what's going on in their life,
so that you can even ask questions. Hey, you know, you were having that meeting with Bob today. How
did that go? Right? Not just like, oh, you're home now. Let's go eat. Or what are we going to do?
Like, no, no. Because what happens when you start to have separate lives, we all have separate
lives. It's important to maintain individuality, even in a collective sense. But when you start to have separate lives and your partner has no idea what's really going on in it,
this is when your relationship is liable for somebody to step out.
So I have a whole chapter in the book. Here's how you save proof for your relationship. Here's how
you claim your territory. You got to start plugging in. So during the day, it's okay to say, hey,
how'd that meeting go? Or, you know, I know you were gonna go to the store,
how did that go, did that go okay?
So that way, both of you feel like you're invested
in what each person is doing.
These are small little tips and tools, they're small things.
It's like somebody told me, I'm not a captain of a ship,
I know nothing about it, but somebody told me
that if a ship is one degree off
from where it ultimately wants to be, by the time it
gets where it's supposed to be, it becomes way off.
Every great relationship that ultimately does not work, every great marriage that ultimately
falls apart, I believe starts with the one degree.
It's the one small thing that you don't look at every day, but then over time becomes so
massive you can't bridge the gap.
So that's what I would just encourage
anybody that's in a relationship, marriage,
just practice on the small things, the little things.
Then let the person know, I hear you, I see you,
I love you, I'm for you.
If you do that, everything else takes care of itself.
Wow.
What about a woman who's dating a man
who knows could be a great man in a relationship,
but maybe they're
living in fear. They're not fully sharing their truth. They're doing things that are a little
all over the place. They're a little messy. They're still acting like a boy. They're not
becoming a full man yet. But they know, man, this guy has great potential to be this incredible
partner, this great loving father, this thriving man in society, is there anything a woman can do
to call that man forth to being more of a man? Or does it have to be the man's decision to say,
okay, I'm ready to step up? Okay, so this is good. I talk about this in the book.
So I use an anecdote to articulate the answer to this question, which is,
so there was a great preacher, old preacher, that said, in every man there's a king and a fool.
Yeah.
Terry Crews talked about this on my show.
Oh, don't.
Go ahead.
You're probably going to tell the story better.
I mean, this is just a quick anecdote.
I don't know how extensive he went.
But this preacher said that his wife, whenever he would act a fool, she would talk to the king.
And he said what that did was it helped him put aside his foolish ways.
Wow.
Because she would talk to the king in him.
She would bring the king out of him.
So in my book, I talk about love represents the master, right?
So in every man, there is that master.
And so in a dating sense, if a woman is dating a man
and she knows that there is great potential or power there,
I do think it's important to help cultivate that love in him,
to help call that master out,
to help affirm the goodness that is within him.
However, here's what's so important.
So the answer to your question is that both.
If that man is not open to doing his work,
there's nothing that that woman can do.
A woman cannot do a man's work for him.
As a man, I have to commit to doing my work.
And when I have a woman in my life that I involve in the process, then I allow her to even speak to the master in me to
bring that master out, to bring that love out. But some men are like saying, hey, no, I don't
want to become better. So you can call the master all you want. He ain't coming. Right? I'm not
ready. So in this situation, here's what is so important.
And this is where one of the reasons why I wanted to write this book, so women can have
information.
Why?
So they can take the power back in a relationship.
When you're dealing with a man, and this book will give you tips and tools to know what
kind of man you're dealing with.
When you're dealing with a man who is not willing to do his work, who's not willing
to lead in love or operate in love, or not even open to what you're trying to do to bring
love out of him, the biggest thing you can do is leave. Why? Because the pain of your absence,
talking to a single woman now, the pain of your absence is sometimes the only thing that can
convince him to change. It's true. And sometimes when you're a man and the woman is with you,
walking with you, sometimes men take that for granted, the presence, her presence for granted.
Absolutely. I know it's hard to do
But sometimes you guys say you know what I'm out. I love you too much to stay
Mmm, and if you choose to change and maybe I'll still be around
But I can no longer accept living life less than what I know
I'm actually qualified to live and that's taking women to be called to their own self-worth and there you go and acceptance of being alone
There you go, potentially
Yeah to their own self-worth and acceptance of being alone. There you go. Potentially.
Yeah.
And being okay being alone and not having that partner or that person by your side.
Right, because here's the reality to me.
It's like, I don't believe you have to choose between love and being respected.
And so often, I think that the culture wants women to feel like they have to make that decision.
Well, at least I have a man in my life.
No, I'm not respected as much as I might like.
No, I'm not valued as much as I might like. But I still have that companionship. But what's that companionship worth? If you as a woman can't be your full self, if you can't be the 100% of
who you really are, is it worth it? I'd rather you be alone and single and be whole than to be
in a situation where you never feel like you can be all that you want to be just because you want the companionship. And I do believe that if you are whole and you are single,
you're going to find the right person. It's going to happen. Just give it time. And don't lower your
standards just to have companionship because most of the time, the person you're lowering your
standards for is not going to value you anyway. But the person that has the work and you keep your standards high for,
they say, wow, man, I value this.
I value her.
Man, as a man, I had to step up to her.
You know, like that, for men, that matters
versus sometimes when you're dating
and you know the woman is kind of compromised.
It just, it's not the best situation.
This is powerful, man.
We'll have to have you come back on soon
and talk more about relationships
because I'm just getting started here.
But this question is called the three truths.
I think I asked it to you last time.
Okay.
We'll see if it's changed.
Oh, boy.
So imagine you've achieved everything you want in your life.
Yes.
For the next 100, 200 years.
You're around for as long as you want.
But then one day you've got to say, all right, it's time for me to go from this physical body, right?
Okay.
And you've created all the books, the movies.
You've done everything you can imagine.
Any dream, it's come true.
The most beautiful family, marriage, everything.
But for whatever reason, you've got to take all your work with you when you go.
Okay.
So your message isn't in the world physically anymore.
Yes.
But you get to write down on a piece of paper three things you know to be true about your entire life's experience.
These lessons that you know to be so true that you would want to pass on to the world.
And this is all the world would have to be reminded of you.
Except for their memory of you.
So three things that you know to be true that you would share with the world.
What would you say are your three truths?
Man, okay, I would say
Love will love works and love wins
That's what I would say. Love will always find a way
Love absolutely works and at the end of the day love will win Wow
period of the day, love will win. Wow. Period. It's powerful. Yeah, it's powerful. Thank you. We can
get your book online right now, at bookstores. Make sure you guys go get this book, The Truth
About Men, What Men and Women Need to Know. This is going to be really powerful for you. I recommend
getting this, whether you're single, whether you're in a relationship. Read it with your partner. Get
it for a girlfriend of yours, because we know that women are going to read this more than men probably.
So get it for a few girlfriends of yours and let Devon know what you think about it.
Make sure you share this episode out.
Let him know what you enjoyed most about this interview.
Before I ask the final question, I would acknowledge you, Devon, for, again, just constantly doing the work.
I love that you said that you shared your truth but you continue to be humble with an asterisk and say, you know what?
But there might be more stuff that I uncover later today or next week or in a year that I haven't been truthful about.
So that you continue to do the work that you're honest about your relationship of not being perfect on social media all the time.
There's constant challenges, but you've created a safe space for that relationship.
I acknowledge you for constantly producing inspiring work.
I feel like you're in an industry that people can get caught up with the wrong things,
and you continue to create meaningful work, your movies, around ideas that inspire the world.
Wow.
And for me, that's you're living in truth in the work you do, in the relationship, in the man that you are.
So I acknowledge you for that, my brother. Appreciate that, man. Of course, man. Of course,
man. Final questions. What's your definition of greatness? What's my definition of greatness,
man? Lord have mercy. I really think greatness is mostly found in humility. I think that the
greatest people I know are the most humble. They're not the
strongest, they're not the richest, they're not the most dominant, they're the most humble.
And that humility, when I've been around them, is like, oh man, you're great. Because you
don't have to be humble. But when I'm really in the presence of greatness, I'm absolutely
in the presence of humility.
That's how I define it.
Devon Franklin.
Thanks, man.
Appreciate it.
Yeah, you got it.
Thank you.
There you have it, my friends.
I hope you enjoyed this episode.
Devon Franklin is the man.
He's got so much wisdom around this topic of love, lust,
marriage, relationships. So I hope you enjoyed this. I hope you got a lot of wisdom out of it.
Make sure to tag Devon over on Instagram. Let him know what you thought about this. Tag me as well.
Take a screenshot of this while you're listening and post it on your Instagram stories so we can reply back to you and connect over there as well. And spread the message of
greatness. If you want to help someone who might be struggling or just want to continue inspiring
the friends in your life, then send them this link, lewishouse.com slash 769. Or you can just
take the link from your podcast app or on Spotify or wherever you're listening to this right now.
You are an amazing human being. You have so much love inside of your heart. And
James Baldwin said, love takes off masks that we fear we cannot live without and know we cannot
live within. And Leo Buscalagia said, what love we've given will have forever. What love we fail
to give will be lost for all eternity. Stop holding back the
love in your heart for the friends and family and people around you. Start giving it away more and
more every single day and watch your life unfold in a beautiful way. I love you so very much and
you know what time it is. It's time to go out there and do something great. Thank you.