The School of Greatness - Become a MAGNET to Love (Do THIS to Change EVERYTHING Before 2024!) | Dr. Nicole LePera
Episode Date: November 15, 2023Lewis welcomes Dr. Nicole LePera, renowned author of the #1 New York Times bestsellers "How To Do The Work" and “How to Meet Your Self” Workbook. Dr. LePera, the creator of the #SelfHealers moveme...nt, discusses her latest book, "How to Be the Love You Seek," offering invaluable insights into healing relationships starting with oneself. She highlights the significance of understanding past traumas and how they shape current relationship dynamics, emphasizing the importance of self-love, emotional resilience, and cultivating healthy connections.Relationships have always been essential to human survival. Our bodies and brains are programmed to seek out connection, whether familial, romantic, or platonic. And yet, these vital bonds are often at the root of our deepest suffering. While our hearts are primed for compassionate connection, our nervous systems—which store all our past hurts and disappointments—are wired for threat and negativity.For decades, leading relationship advice has maintained that successful relationships require a specific compromise—that we must change our authentic expression to better meet the needs of others, and vice versa. It may sound reasonable in theory, but as Dr. LePera explains, this approach is nothing less than a recipe for a lifetime of resentment.Buy her new book How to Be the Love You Seek: Break Cycles, Find Peace, and Heal Your RelationshipsIn this episode you will learnThe difference between self-love and self-worth, and how to focus attention effectively on both.Strategies to practice self-love while maintaining healthy relationships.Common patterns and beliefs that hinder the ability to receive love and ways to shift these mindsets.The role of self-compassion in emotional healing and reprogramming the brain.Techniques for setting healthy boundaries and overcoming self-sabotaging behaviors in relationships.For more information go to www.lewishowes.com/1530For more Greatness text PODCAST to +1 (614) 350-3960More SOG episodes on Radical Self Love & Acceptance:Jason Derulo – https://link.chtbl.com/1460-podKaramo Brown – https://link.chtbl.com/1457-podPokimane – https://link.chtbl.com/1443-pod
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My friend, I am such a big believer that your mindset is everything.
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Thanks for spending some time with me today. Now let the class begin.
Welcome back, everyone, to School of Greatness.
Very excited about our guest.
We have the inspiring Nicole LaPera in the house.
Good to see you.
Very excited.
You are a number one New York Times bestselling author.
You have helped millions of people that follow you online
heal, deepen their relationships,
and create peace and love better. And I'm so glad that you're here.
I love your content. We've been friends for, I don't know, five, six years now, it seems like.
And it's been amazing to see the impact you make on so many people's lives. And you've got a new
book called How to Be the Love You Seek, Break Cycles, Find Peace, and Heal Your Relationships,
which is going to be so powerful for people to get.
Make sure you grab a copy.
Nicole, I want to ask you about this.
The difference between self-love and self-worth.
And what is the difference first off?
And should we focus on self-love first or is that a selfish idea?
Really great question. First and foremost, thank you, Louis, for having me back. Thank
you for so many years ago, seeing something in my work and having me on your platform
that is so meaningful. Self-love, self-worth. I think self-love is, for many of us, it's
something we have learned that is a selfish idea. I think many of us it's something we have learned that is a selfish idea I think
many of us have learned that any focus on the self having needs having space to
meet our needs sometimes having you know things that we're caring for even when
someone else does want or need something from us support from us and I very much
am that person I spent very many years, decades even, putting the world before me. I think the byproduct
of that for a lot of us is we become increasingly resentful when we don't have space to express,
whether it's our perspectives, our feelings, our wants or our needs. Over time, the anger that
builds up in that, I think, turns into resentment. And at least my journey of that was projecting
it outward, blaming the relationships I was in or the people around me, only to realize that it was
my lack of creating that space for myself. And as I often do, I like to talk about the science
of things so I can make a case for the importance of self-focus. Because if we're not caring,
especially for our physical body, if we're not
taking care of those needs, actually when we think we're serving other people, we're actually
operating quite selfishly. Really? Because when I think about self-love, I think about the concept
of actually connecting to our organ, not to sound cliche, but our organ of love, of compassion,
which is our heart. And if we're not in a calm, grounded state in our nervous system to even turn inwards, even attune to what it is that my heart wants me to do in any moment, while I might think I'm on the surface showing up in service of caring for ourself so that over time we can actually attune to our heart and be what I do think is intrinsically possible for each of us unlearning this idea of being unworthy of having our needs met and
actually beginning to create through action and lived experience, the feeling, the embodied space
of living in worthiness. This is interesting, you know, because I don't know if this is going to
empower or upset some people watching or listening to this, because I know, you know, my mom put everyone in front of her needs for decades.
And finally, it's beautiful to watch her fully take care of her health first.
She's tango dancing.
She's doing knitting classes.
She's doing all the activities that she wants to do for her
for the first time, really fully owning it.
And I notice her even being uncomfortable sometimes,
being like, oh, am I
doing too much for me? Because I'm so used to doing everything for everyone else. And from my
perspective, there are, there tends to be some women in the world who want to put everyone else's
needs before theirs. And they've been doing this for years, if not decades. And maybe they modeled
this from someone that they saw it, or they got benefit from being that person in some way. But what I'm hearing
you say is when we do that for a long period of time, that builds up a lot of resentment, anger,
frustration, and a lack of worthiness in ourselves if we're not working on self-love.
Absolutely.
And that, I think that habit, and I love that you're kind of even picking up on the identity
that some of us have created out of this endless act of service.
I talk about actually neurobiological, what I call conditioned selves, or literally these
ways of being that become wired into our biology, our neural networks.
Again, that originated at a time and a
place. So to speak to your very beautiful point, right, what a lot of our parents, our caregivers,
our, you know, mothers in particular, likely were modeled was this maybe endless service,
or the way they had a safely and securely connect with whatever caregivers were available and whatever access
point they were available to them might have been to modify or to attune to someone else's
wants or needs.
So if you had that eruptive explosive parent, a lot of us gain safety by becoming so attuned
or aware of what might cause that explosion.
So if we can minimize saying the things, doing the
things, expressing the emotion that would cause that reactivity, right, we can gain safety in
doing that. Same goes for if you had a parent like mine, which wasn't so, my mom wasn't so explosive
with her emotions, but she was really disconnected with them. And it became clear to me the things
that my mom would pay attention to me around, usually acts of achievement, and then the things that my mom would pay attention to me around, usually acts of achievement, and then the things that she would become disappointed and disconnect from me.
So whether it's what's modeled, this act of service, or what we had to do to attune to someone else,
I think a lot of us begin to wear this identity.
It becomes not only who we are, it actually becomes neurobiologically how we feel the safest and the most familiar
to ourselves.
And I think that is then continuing to be in that cycle of giving, doing, and before
we know it, it's at our own expense.
What is the thing we need to heal first?
The brain, the mind, or the heart?
I think that the body plays such a larger role than we give it credit for, especially
in my field.
We like to praise the power of the mind, of the prefrontal cortex, our very empowered
space that can imagine this incredibly different future and create all of this incredible change
and even affirmations.
I think that they're grounded in this reality that to think differently, we can create a shift, a shift in how we feel and ultimately a shift in how we do.
And that's half of the journey, though the other half of it is really first attuning to what signals my body is sending my mind, my heart being included in that body.
Specifically, what is my nervous system is my nervous system telling my mind that i'm safe in
this moment that i can be grounded maybe in that internal presence that we were just kind of
talking about right tuning inward what is my heart saying what is my heart wanting or what is my
heart needing what do i want to do to act in compassion in that moment and if i don't feel
safe in my body and i know i spent decades with my body sending my mind, my brain signals of lacking
safety, of threat, of endless stress. Your body was sending your brain this,
or your mind this. My body was sending my brain this. I think this is why a lot of us,
we can't sit in stillness. We feel endlessly distracted by the world around us or endlessly
agitated because all of those are signals that our body is in stress ultimately.
agitate it because all of those are signals that our body is in stress ultimately.
Now, is it the body or is it the nervous system in the heart? Like, is it the skin, the blood,
the bones, or is it like more the nervous system and the heart in reaction to an environment or memory? The nervous system and the heart we can think of are the control center for the rest of
what the body is doing. We're like a sensor, an energetic sensor.
Our nervous system is sending out electromagnetic waves. Our heart is actually sending out electromagnetic waves at a greater distance. And we're sensing the world around us. And then how
we register what's happening in our external world is through changes in our skin. We get sweaty. We
get clammy. Changes in our muscular tension. They get tense or they get relaxed, whatever it might be. Changes in our heart rate. So those sensors and that kind of command center of the heart and your nervous system and how stressed or non-stressed you are. And then like dominoes,
we kind of ping against each other. The more stressed you are, the more I feel your stress,
the more likely my body is to become stressed. And also in opposite that, probably the more
relaxed I am when you're stressed, it can help you calm and regulate as well in certain ways, right?
Beautiful. I have a whole couple chapters dedicated to, and a big premise of the book is to attune to our body,
to that second subtitle, create and find peace within ourself,
so that those signals that probably historically were stressed out signals,
threatening quite literally the world around us and other people in relationship.
But when we shift that, when we come into that calm grounded presence, in my opinion, that is the embodiment of being this love.
Because I think one of the most loving things that we can do is create a safe environment, a relational environment for someone else to be who they are, to express their thoughts, their perspectives, their their emotions and really just to be themselves so a lot of the science within the book is harnessing um the power of the heart
harnessing the power of co-regulation yes and actually teaching us to quite literally be
in that energetic state of love so that we can actually in my opinion heal those relationships
i love this um martha and i she does a great job if I'm feeling like,
you know, a little overwhelmed or something. She does a great job of bringing calming energy to me.
She can notice it and bring calm and then I can get calm pretty quickly and vice versa. If she's
had a long day or something and she's just having an overwhelming moment or she's feeling sensitive,
I can notice it and just hug her for 10 minutes
and then she feels better.
She can relax and calm down.
Now, both of us have a pretty good awareness
of taking care of ourselves, doing the inner work,
so that it's usually not both of us at the same time
and break down for a moment, right?
But when two people have traumatic nervous systems or who haven't healed their heart
or their nervous system, and they're in a relationship and neither of them know how
to regulate their emotions, what tends to happen in that relationship if they don't
know how to heal their hearts?
We tend to, I think, engage in cycles of endless conflict, of endless disconnection,
of endless coping strategies that we've learned.
We rely on the things that we do, whether it's using substances or distracting ourselves
by scrolling endlessly online.
We are then the living byproduct.
Sometimes it's in these explosive cycles of conflict.
I call this patterning that I think
is pretty common in most relationships. I know Lolly and I, when we began our relationship now
near a decade ago, we were very much in a dysfunctional patterning of what I call trauma
bonding. Really? Absolutely. What is trauma bonding? So trauma bonding, again, I like to
provide a more expansive definition than I think some could define it online, but it's all of those dysfunctional habits and patterns that, again, once kept us safe in childhood that we continue to recreate, whether it's these cycles of explosive conflict, maybe that some of us are even defining as, right, love and intensity and passion and all of the things that we're looking for in chemistry.
of the things we're looking for in chemistry or the just dysfunctional habits and selves that we're playing where we're just one of the partners is always the caretaker of the other partner who's
always in need of the care and right no matter what relationship you're in you see yourself kind
of engaging within that same dynamic or for me i'm the most prominent one is cycles of emotional
disconnection no matter who i was with and And I was always in a relationship. I
was somewhat of a serial monogamous since I started dating when I was 16 years old. I was
more or less always in a romantic partnership, definitely had friendships and social engagements
and things to do. But I was really the living embodiment or the feeling embodiment of alone
in a crowded room. And the number one complaint that would usually end to the demise of the relationship because
I would be so frustrated or resentful or so passive aggressively acting out that before
I knew it, the relationship would end was I don't feel emotionally connected.
Your partners would say that.
I would say that.
You would say that.
I would complain about not feeling emotionally connected, though I can share a story.
My first boyfriend ever in high school, to this day, it sticks with
me. When we broke up, we were nearing graduation. We were going to separate colleges very far away.
And so we broke up on logistics of, you know, it's college. He also lodged a statement,
complaint, if you will. And he labeled me as being emotionally unavailable. And I was really
struck by that because I was like, me, emotionally unavailable. What do you mean? I feel so loving.
I felt in love with him. I was kind of devastated when he broke up with me. because I was like, me, emotionally unavailable, what do you mean? I feel so loving. I felt in love with him.
I was kind of devastated when he broke up with me.
So I was like, that's unusual to hear.
I think he's obviously wrong.
Flash forward a couple years, I discovered I was attracted to women.
So now I was like, oh, well, it's because I'm interested in women that I'm emotionally available.
Of course I am.
Flash forward even more a couple years, I was in a psychoanalytic training program in Philadelphia right before I was licensed and one of the aspects of the
training was to sit in group therapy around a room of other analysts where essentially for an
hour and a half we just analyze each other we just analyze each other and our experiences with
each other and our perceptions and how we feel interacting this was part of your training this
was part of my training to get my license.
I selected to go into that style of training because I thought it would be beneficial.
And it was, though very difficult.
And one of the things that I heard from a colleague there one time in the group,
she decides to share her experience of me and described me as cold and aloof.
And I'm like, okay what that is so interesting like now you're reflecting back
right this idea of me being distanced but I didn't have any language to understand I feel
thought that she was a little bit inaccurate uh though now you don't really know me yeah looking
back I'm like oh this is making complete sense the reason why I was so emotionally disconnected
that was real for me in my relationships. It was because I was emotionally disconnected from myself. So I wasn't attuned to
how I was thinking or feeling. I wasn't sharing that. So of course I was creating a cycle of
disconnection in my relationships. So as much as I wanted to not agree with those two assessments,
I mean, a lot of ways they were quite accurate.
When did you get to a point where you said, okay, this, even though I don't think I'm emotionally disconnected, the pattern is showing up that I am. Others are letting me know I'm in
breakdown, relations don't work, you know, whatever disconnection I have from people,
the pattern is following me. So, okay, I'm going to take a look at this seriously.
the pattern is following me. So, okay, I'm going to take a look at this seriously.
What did you do to break that cycle? You know, in your book, How to Be the Love You Seek,
you talk about breaking cycles. How did you break that cycle? How did you know you had something to break and that you needed to find solutions or tools to improve that emotional
connection as opposed to disconnection? I started to look for myself because, yes, other people's feedback can be absolutely helpful,
but I never would suggest that you just defer to what someone else assesses you to be or says of you.
So I finally started to take it in.
I started to say, okay, if I continue to hear this and feel this way from that conscious perspective,
I will always kind of acknowledge consciousness
or learning how to observe ourself
in the context of this conversation
within our relationships
to be that first point of action.
So I started to look.
I started to pay attention
and to assess really simplistically,
Nicole, how connected are you?
How present are you in any given moment?
And as I began to check in with myself throughout
the day, whether or not you want to set an alarm on your phone to do it or put some post-it notes
on wherever you walk by regularly, or maybe even set a designated time during the day,
over morning coffee or when I'm reading the newspaper, this is going to be my moment to
check in. And the more regularly I checked in with where my attention is, the more I noticed that it was a million miles away.
Really?
I could be in conversation with someone.
And while I'm here and I'm being talked at, I'm thinking about maybe what I'm going to respond to next.
Or I'm just somewhere else entirely.
And the more I checked in and noticed that disconnection, the more that I built on that consciousness step.
And began to, because there's always two steps to
change, me becoming aware that I'm disconnected was only half the journey. Then I had to begin
to make that choice to reconnect with myself, to shift that focus of attention time and time again
from the thoughts that they were consumed in, or even just worrying about someone else. Am I more attuned to the person across from me than to how I feel
being across from the person?
And the more I kind of flex that muscle, the more than I was able to reconnect
with what my body was doing in any given moment.
How long do you think it took for you then to to practice that?
You know, because it was probably most of your life where you had this type
of emotional disconnection, what it sounds like as a safety mechanism to create safety from childhood, whatever it may have been that you were being safe from.
So how long did it take for you to feel like, okay, I'm not having to think about this.
It's more automatic.
I am emotionally connected.
Did it take months, years, or is it still something you have to focus on?
It's still a daily intention, commitment conversation.
What has become automatic is the awareness of the importance of checking in with myself consciously, though there are still moments as my stress level goes up, as I become busy with endless obligations.
That overachiever conditioned self in me likes to prioritize
all of the things that I have to do to show up in service of someone else.
And that begins first thing in the morning when I know I have emails to answer, I know
I have a whole membership that I can tend to, I know I have a book to edit or whatever
it is that I'm working on.
So it's a daily commitment to instead of prioritizing all of the things we do or all the things I could do to really create time beginning in the morning to attune to my physical body,
to how it feels at any given moment, to giving it what it needs, whether it's movement or stretching or rest or, you know, just a conscious moment to be with me.
And there are moments when I'm not doing that, when I don't prioritize what I know I consciously, you know
And benefit it to prioritize that I do find myself being much more detached much more dissociated
Um, it becomes still easy for me to travel door down that older pan. Yeah Wow
So how to be the love you seek it sounds like we first need to figure out and pay attention to what cycle we need to break
is what I'm hearing.
It's like we need to figure out, okay, why am I in struggle, suffer, fight or flight
mode?
Why am I reactive?
Why is there a breakdown?
So we got to figure out what the cycle is.
Are there a number of different cycles to be aware of or is it kind of one cycle that we all follow?
I think we can become aware of our habitual pattern of relating these conditioned selves.
I overview several of them. Conditioned selves. Conditioned selves. These kind of typical ways,
roles I play to really simplify it in our relationships. It can look like me, right?
The overachiever. On the other side of that can look like me, the overachiever.
On the other side of that, it can look like the underachiever.
I have something called a caretaker, a yes person who kind of just defers and pleases
the environment around them, a hero worshiper.
So what am I doing habitually in my relationships?
Who am I?
What is my identity even?
You can begin to-
How many conditioned selves are there?
How many of these kind of archetypes?
I mean, there's many more than I list. What is my identity even you can begin to how many conditions selves are there? I'm gonna do these kind of archetype
I mean, there's many more than I list. I think I give about seven or eight just common examples
But so any if listeners don't relate to any of them that I just said or that are in the book is what is just?
Who are you right in your relationships? What is that very?
Stay your main way what's your role you're playing primary role that you play I'm an overachiever. I'm an over giver
I'm right. I feel helpless, whatever the role is, right?
Yes.
And you could be on that side, right?
I'm the person who's always receiving someone in care of me.
I'm the person who's in that kind of helpless cycle.
I think another really important thing to observe outside of the conditioned way that
we typically are or the role that we play is begin to really create a relationship with our nervous system
and beginning to learn when we're in those moments of a stress reaction because there are
interpersonal things that happen for many of us when say we're in that sympathetic fight mode
you know we can feel very agitated with our muscles being tense all the time our jaw being
clenched our heart always pounding out of our chest.
Interpersonally, that can look like being in active conflict, screaming, yelling, really shameful, I think, behaviors.
I know that I've often said and did things that I don't mean that are very mean in relationships when I'm in that cycle of stress reaction.
It's not that I don't care about the person aside in me. And this even
brings back in this concept of the heart. When my nervous system is telling me that I'm in a
threat state, it actually doesn't matter who the person is across from me because they become,
right, just the threat between me and safety, which is why we can become very combative and mean.
Other moments look like outside of the fight response is the flight response.
If we're always distracting ourself, we're never available for the difficult conversation.
So I have that email to answer or I'm endlessly scrolling on my phone or I'm distracting myself with TV.
Again, these are coping mechanisms of my nervous system trying to find safety.
What is usually beneath that?
nervous system trying to find safety. What is usually beneath that? If someone is in a relationship watching or listening to this and they have a partner that is more reactive,
maybe they scream sometimes or they react in an unconscious way or just disrespectful sometimes
because they're in a fight or flight state or they're trying to feel safe, but it may seem
irrational to the other person, right? This is irrational. Nothing's wrong, but they're trying to feel safe, but it may seem irrational to the other person, right? This is irrational.
Nothing's wrong, but they're reacting.
What is usually underneath that reactiveness?
Some feeling of being threatened.
And again, it might not be logically present what the fear is.
I mean, you could be sitting in your living room seemingly in a very calm circumstance
in that moment, but something even perhaps interpersonally is similar enough
to a time in a space before, usually in childhood, where that was the only option. I mean, think
about children screaming, yelling, you know, kind of all of those are that moment of reactivity,
usually because something is feeling unsafe. The person is feeling some fear around being
threatened. Wow. I heard this. I don't know who originally coined this, but I heard someone say
that if there's hysteria, there's history. If someone's being, you know, overreacting about
something when they don't need to, there's a history behind that. There's a wound. There's
something that's triggering the fear, like you just said, what can someone do who had been conditioned for
years or decades in that state to actually address it? How do they start addressing that
to find peace, to heal that hysteria that's causing them pain?
Yeah. I really want to focus too on the history aspect of it because I want to
affirm that those feelings, even if they are out of proportion,
disproportionate, over the top, whatever we want to label or maybe have had them labeled
or believe them to be if it's in our partner, they're real. Even if it's from our past,
that physiology is real, is active in that moment. It's present. It's present. It's alive.
It's as if we're back in time as that younger child, right, when kicking and screaming was it's not actually what's happening in the moment. Because according to our body and our physiology, it's actually very much happening in that moment, which then opens the door for many of us to begin to make new choices in that moment to deal with that elevated physiology, to actually be with those uncomfortable emotions.
those uncomfortable emotions because what has happened is kicking and screaming or yelling and you know fighting whatever it is or fleeing has been the only way that we've been able to cope
and it's still very much what we need to do in that moment because we don't yet have other tools
so what's really difficult is when we try to shame it away and then we don't leave ourselves with something else to do with how we're feeling.
So it really is the kind of shifting and expanding of energy and of attention in that moment to create the opportunity to begin to practice new habits, to learn new things to do when we're feeling overwhelmed.
Because until we embody a consistent practice, we will be overwhelmed by our emotions
and our nervous system will kind of travel down that well-worn rut because it will need to do
something to create safety for ourself in that moment. Yeah. And I guess people respond and
react in different ways based on the history they have or the trauma they have where some,
they have or the trauma they have where some you know some partners may scream and kick and yell whereas others may shut down and be distant right there's
different types of responses that we might have from the history of our pain
if someone watching or listening is in a relationship with someone for a long
time that they really love they care, and they have this pattern of
distancing themselves emotionally, shutting down, or kicking and screaming.
What can they do to support them in discovering tools, creating awareness around it,
finding a therapist or a coach to support them in growing? And what if their partner doesn't want to address it ever,
isn't willing to be vulnerable about the past, and doesn't want any help from anyone else?
How do they manage that? I think one of the most complicated things is you have two individuals
trying to navigate a relationship where we both have our stuff from the past. Because what often
happens in those moments when someone's kicking and screaming or detaching, chances are it could be activating my old lived experience, right?
So if someone removes themselves, distanced, just like my mom once did, to navigate whatever it is
that they're feeling, a difficult conversation that we're having, something not to do with me
at all, difficult experience they're having at work or with their family, inherently in their distance, it's going to activate me, right? It's going to
bring me right back to in childhood when my mom was emotionally distant or when she was giving me
the silent treatment to express her, you know, disappointment at whatever I was doing in that
moment. And it's going to then activate the way I deal with it. So what happens is we have two people kind of ever kind of cycling
through these threat-based responses and neither of them are able to kind of return to that grounded
state of presence. So the best thing I think that we can do is, and I have a lot of tools,
not only to begin to self-identify which state of nervous system activation you're in so that
you can begin to regulate yourself.
Really helpful. And this is outside of even romantic partnerships for your friends,
for your family members can be really helpful to have the awareness of signs and signals that
they're in a state of emotional system or nervous system activation. Because sometimes when we
understand that, oh, this person is, you person is fleeing the room and can't have this conversation right now, not because it's not important to them, but because they're having their own threat-based reaction, that can give us a moment of compassion.
It can maybe give us access to do something differently, not to allow it to activate our own threat response, which is going to perceive it probably differently.
Oh, well, they're leaving because this isn't important for me. And then, of course, going back to this idea of co-regulation,
the more grounded we're able to remain in those moments and the more open our partners or our
loved ones are to co-regulating with us, I mean, we can actually help them calm down
from those stressful reactive moments so that then they can shift their focus.
They can actually shift the point of the brain that they're operating from and hear us and speak to us and negotiate what's happening in a much more calm and rational way. But I like to add
that point in because sometimes we want to shake our partners and just get them to hear us in this
moment where they're a million miles away or they're screaming and yelling. And unfortunately, those aren't the moments where they're going to be able to hear us until they're
in a calmer brain state, quite literally. They're not going to be focused on what we're saying.
They're going to be locked and loaded in their perspective and their nervous system is going to
be locked and loaded in their habitual way that they need to do right then to find the safety.
This is fascinating because people watching or listening
typically are the type of people that want to improve their life they want to grow they want to
find tools to have more awareness more personal power more you know progress all these different
things so i'm assuming people watching and listening might resonate with this
and listening might resonate with this. Why is it so challenging for an individual who has been in a trauma bonded relationship and now they're
aware of it or they're in a family that has maybe had some stagnant behaviors
and patterns that doesn't want to grow? Why is it so hard for one individual in a family or a
relationship to try to improve and grow and develop new habits and transform themselves
to think differently and talk differently and act differently? Why is it so challenging
in a family dynamic or an intimate relationship to grow when others aren't willing to grow?
While we all are evolving creatures, I mean, I think it's kind of intrinsically
what the experience of being human is.
It's a process of evolving, becoming, process of movement.
Yet at the same time, our nervous system is wired to prefer the familiar.
Simply, we don't like change.
While we can change and we can create incredible change and transformation, our nervous system
actually prefers to stay the same.
It finds change and movement very stressful.
So when faced with change, often ourselves even, how to do the work was really around
that concept of the resistance and the reason why we're so stuck in these habitual patterns
because anytime we set the intention to do different and then more
So when we follow through with making new choices
We do meet that pull back to that familiar through the thoughts in our mind the discomfort in our body before we know it
We're right back in those habitual patterns
so we struggle to change even though we can change our nervous system prefers us not to and
to change even though we can change. Our nervous system prefers us not to. And our relationships equally struggle. When we begin to experience someone anew or when we're the person making
new choices, especially in a family where dynamics and roles have been repeated and practiced and
validated for so long, then really like dominoes, right, here's someone new that's maybe putting a
new perspective on the family experience. Might be really difficult to hear, right? A different truth about how it was
when we have our own rehearsed story of how the family is or isn't or whatever it is. More so when
someone begins to act in a new way, then chances are there's going to be some impact on that
dynamic. There's going to be a challenge to the individual identity.
Sometimes there's the challenge to the family identity, what we thought we were, now maybe
we're not as much. And then there's going to be a reorganization of the different roles within
the family. So again, it comes down to change. How equipped is each individual in whatever
relationship, dyad or family unit, to deal with the stress of change? And as far as I see it,
a lot of us who are raised with past generations were not yet equipped. We didn't have the tools. We didn't
have the resources. We didn't have the attuned caretaking in our childhood to learn how to
navigate the stress of change. I know you've talked about this before on here, but how did you,
for those that didn't hear this in a previous interview, how did you navigate this as you were evolving, changing, growing, developing in your 20s, 30s with your family dynamic? Not in your
intimate relationship, although that has evolved and changed as well, but let's start with the
family dynamic before we talk about intimate dynamic. Yeah. It was really challenging in my
family. Coming from a family that was very boundary-less codependent
we had a very unified family identity i was kind of taught growing up that family is everything
with this idea of right putting family family needs first even going back to this concept of
selfishness so all of that was you know kind of ingrained in my belief system and very dynamically
like i was sharing when we began showed up in how i showed up or how little i ingrained in my belief system and very dynamically like i was sharing when we began
showed up in how i showed up or how little i showed up in my relationship so as i started to become aware and see all of the moments where i wasn't giving myself space and it was glaringly
present in my relationship with my family that i was living actually in quite close physical
proximity by this point i had moved home to the philadelphia area they were living right outside
of philadelphia so i had endless opportunity to be at family dinner on Sunday or
my mom's standard doctor's appointment with a lot of health issues that continued with my mom until
her old age. So saying that to say there was a lot of the same dynamic happening at home,
and I was awakening to the possibility of and necessity for me of creating some more distance of not
being endlessly available of beginning to set new boundaries and for the better
part of several months I would try I would try to decline invitations I would
try to decline phone calls and not be immediately available and I say try
because it was always met with a running theme in my family was when there was
distance in especially contact immediately when there was distance in especially
contact immediately because there was so much health trauma that happened, health concerns
and worry and anxiety. The immediate belief or worry would be when someone was out of contact
for an unpredictable amount of time, it must be because something terrible happened to them.
Are they in the hospital? Are they sick?
Is something wrong?
So there was a history of fear which would create this…
History of fear, hypervigilant monitoring of contact when I didn't call for instance
on the regular weekly phone call.
Is everything okay?
Just tell me everything is okay.
And I would call at a very particular timeframe up until this period of time where I was like, well, wait a minute.
You're only doing that, right, to placate this kind of anxiety cycle.
You don't actually want to be calling in this moment.
Yes, I want to contact with my family, but I didn't need to have regular contact every three days to tell them that I was alive, right?
Right.
So saying that to say I tried to put up boundaries to create separation, to create distance and space for me to begin to honor what I wanted and needed.
By this point, I was building a practice.
I was in a committed relationship.
I had other things that I wanted to be putting my time and attention to.
It was always met with this fear, this worry that would escalate into, I mean, I would get texts like, Jesus Christ, Nicole, just tell us you're okay.
You know, we're getting worried.
We're going to call hospitals, like endless.
So I came to the really difficult decision to make a break and to take, I always kind
of start to say, ask for space, but I didn't really ask for space.
I more or less told my family that I was going to take space away from the family unit, that
I would be unavailable for any sort of obligation or,
you know, anything that for the foreseeable future. And because I wasn't, I didn't trust
myself to communicate to them in person. I was so afraid that when my mom started to cry or my dad
became upset because my mom was upset or my sister was devastated because her and I were
very trauma bonded in a codependent relationship, trying to navigate my mom's health.
trauma bonded in a codependent relationship, trying to navigate my mom's health. I didn't trust myself to stand in my boundary.
So I took the opportunity to write a very long email expressing things that I hadn't
fully been able to share with them in terms of what I was coming to realize and how things
in the past had impacted me and end it with that statement that I was taking time away.
And I didn't know how much time
I would want to take or need to take, nor did I know how they would react to my request. I mean,
I was very much aware of the possibility that they would be so devastated and hurt that the
door wouldn't be open on the other side of it. But at that point, I knew I'm probably from that
deeper intuitive place. My heart was telling me that I did need more space than I was able to create.
So it ended up being the better part of, I think, 18 months before I started to really get curious about what they were where they were at.
I had built a lot of self-trust in that 18 months, meaning I was getting more confident that I could engage with them again. And if the dynamic was exactly as I left it,
I was gaining more confident that I could continue to maintain my boundaries
and to live into the relationship dynamic that I wanted,
regardless of what they were unable or able to do.
And very gratefully, not only did they email me back near immediately,
they let me know that they had been in family therapy and individual therapy and all the different types of therapy since I had, you know, ended
contact with them. And while it was very devastating, they on some level were appreciative
of the opportunity that it gave them and us to kind of look at things newly. We've re-engaged
contact over several family therapy sessions, which felt very safe to me because I wanted to have a contained conversation, not knowing essentially what I was walking into.
And I signed online for that first Zoom session and I saw my mom, my dad and my sister for the first time in eight months.
And we had some difficult conversations and had some future based conversations and where I was able to kind of acknowledge what I wanted and needed
in the relationships moving forward and intended to create for us. And since then, it's just been
really a gift in a lot of ways. We've been able to not only reorganize as a family,
we've been able to separate. That has actually allowed us to deepen and build like deeper,
actual, real now authentic connected connections which has been really
beautiful that's pretty cool but it's really scary to get to that place it sounds like because what
some of your family were thinking of like okay i'm going to create i don't know hyper safety
was actually unsafe for you and didn't feel healthy right this idea i want to make sure
everything's safe and okay is actually an unhealthy or unsafe feeling and so you had to kind of break the cycle which you talk about in the
book but that's scary too what if how are they going to react what if they disown me what if
they never want to speak to me again how are they going to talk about me to my friends like this
idea of being outcasted in a sense is also scary but it sounds like for you, you guys were able to come back and create a more meaningful relationship.
But I think it's so scary for us to think about,
whether it's family or friends or intimate partners,
like having a boundary
that might seem so extreme for a while
because you need it to come back to loving yourself
the way that you seek that love
and then reconnecting with that partner, family, or friend, right?
It can be extremely challenging.
Oh, it actually, because we're social creatures
and we've evolved to connect in groups, to physically survive,
to emotionally gain the support that we need,
any thought of any actual experience of rejection,
any imagined rejection or fear of it, activates actually the pain center in our brain.
So we physically feel pain.
And your heart feels this pain too.
Clenching.
Yeah.
And then, so for me, complicating that with my mom, increasing in age, having very real health concerns.
real health concerns. I mean, in the back of my mind, I was like imagining the possibility that I might not have an opportunity depending on how long I decided to stay, stay disconnected.
I was entertaining the possibility that something could have happened to my mom.
She could physically die in that period of time. And then how would that be? But my commitment
at the same time, my commitment and that inner knowing that that is what we all need it was so strong that I was able to make that a really, really difficult choice.
In terms of relationships, I'm curious, what is the healthiest attachment style that we should be seeking to have?
And what is the most common attachment style that most people have in relationships?
Yes.
Most people do not have a safe and secure attachment. This feeling of inner safety and
security, peace, the ability to be yourself and the curiosity to allow someone else to
be curious of who someone else is, right? Not to be demanding, domineering, manipulative,
so that they're the person that you need them to be, to actually allow them the space to be themselves,
express their wants, express their needs,
and just be who they are.
Very few of us have that, of course,
because we didn't have that in childhood.
We didn't learn our body for a lot of us.
A lot of this book is about unlearning, peeling back,
right, all of the definitions of love and relationship
we've been taught, all of the embodied ways
that we've habitually related to other people so that we could actually teach ourself, not just read a
book and be like, oh, this is what a safe and secure attachment looks like. Actually teaching
our mind and body how to be safe and- Experiencing it and feeling it.
Experiencing it. Living it, not just analyzing it.
For a lot of us, that living and that practice begins with ourself first. Do I feel safe and
secure in who I am? Can I explore my perspectives, whatever they might be? Do I know what they are? Can I explore
my emotions? For decades, my answer was no. You would ask me what I wanted to do for dinner,
I couldn't tell you. I didn't know what I even wanted to, how I wanted to spend my time on a
Saturday, let alone how I'm feeling, right? So a lot of this reconnection begins with creating
space or a practice in our world to introduce ourself.
And that was a big reason why I even wrote the workbook, How to Meet Yourself, is because we don't have that connection to us yet.
We're not safely and securely connected. I'm a million miles away on my spaceship.
Someone else is endlessly distracting through work or achievement. Right.
Or whatever it is, or I'm always agitated, interrupting at the world around me because of the reality of it is I'm not safe in my body first and foremost. And then when I'm
able to be safe in my body, then the byproduct of that often is developing that safe and secure
relationship with someone else where they feel calm and grounded and like someone is interested
in valuing them for who they are. you're able to like i always say with the
clients i would work with in couples therapy sit next to each other on a couch and right vision
a future and negotiate kind of making sure that each of your needs and wants are factored into
that the large majority of us fall into a more dysfunctional attachment style whether it's
avoidant where you're emotionally shut down and And like me for many years, there's no emotional connection.
I'm a little bit more anxious avoidant where there's anxiety around distance and a pursuing pattern.
There could be a disorganized attachment.
I'm just giving some of the standard ones.
But there's many ways.
I focus a little less on what box category do I check and a little more on just individually exploring, right? How
you show up in relationships and how does it feel for you when you do? It sounds, I mean, I was
probably, I don't know, all these attachment styles of the past at one point that were anxious,
avoiding, I probably had it all. And I attracted certain individuals who also had, you know, anxious or avoidant attachment styles too.
I never attracted like a safe, secure individual.
And maybe because I was too insecure to attract that or they would have not, you know, attracted me because they would have seen, oh, he's got issues.
I don't want that in my life right now if they're safe and secure.
But it's interesting.
issues. I don't want that in my life right now if they're safe and secure. But it's interesting,
you know, once I started to create that safety and security within me, and it's a constant process and a journey, it's not like it's perfect. But once I started to do that, I started to see others
and be like, wow, this is a healthy person. I started to see them like, okay, let me explore
more about this person. So the person, I don't know, they just got something where like their
heart is out of coherence. I know what that is because i used to experience that constantly i don't think i want
that dysfunction anymore let me lean more into the safe secure and it was unfamiliar when i got
into this current relationship with martha that i'm now engaged to and it was unfamiliar but it
felt safe and i was just like man this man, this is different. This is weird.
Like it's, I've just never experienced this.
But do people, have you ever seen people who have an anxious or an avoidant attachment style get in a relationship with someone who is safe and secure?
Does that ever happen?
Or is it typically you attract something you have a similarity to or something you're lacking in?
I think often you are attracting kind of particular dynamics, though if and when you meet a safe and secure individual, I think often what you'll feel, especially if you are more of the anxious type or the high emotions, you come from a chaotic, stressful childhood, typically.
You might start to see them as boring, right? There's no passion. Is there anything even here?
Is it worth continuing? So I would not say it's that you don't attract them or you can't find
your way into meeting a person. I don't think the relationship would be something that you would
pursue or would be pursued for very long. Gotcha.
And those are typically the languages that-
Interesting.
And how it registers.
Oh, there's a passion here.
Interesting.
Maybe we're just friends.
Friends own this person.
This is boring or it's not what I'm looking for.
And then on to the next.
So what are the different types of relationships?
Interdependent?
Is that kind of like what might seem boring when there's like interdependence?
Would that categorize that?
I think maybe if you're in that more chaos cycle, the emotional addiction cycle,
that likely could.
Though I think the reality of it is maybe there is a little bit of a boring nature when
you're living calm and grounded and peaceful.
Peaceful and safe and secure.
There's no stress and peaceful. Peaceful and safe and secure. There's no stress and chaos. Yeah, I think to some extent,
in the absence of those highs and lows for a lot of us,
I do think that even as I too am moving
toward a much safe, secure partnership,
I do think that we, on some level,
that expansive part of our mind is always seeking more
or bigger or what's next.
So it's interesting to consider
if there is intrinsically
a kind of boringness and stability for all of us. For me, it's like, what I think about is
when I am on my purpose and I have a vision that I'm excited about, there's going to be
challenges and ups and downs when I'm on my vision in my life and my relationship.
my vision in my life and my relationship, I want us to have fun. I want it to be like a safe,
fun environment where we can connect about our lives independently and share our lives together.
For me, that's exciting. That is like the highs of it, I guess, not making the relationship the battlefield. Your life is like, okay, you got to go out and hunt or provide or
create or make music or art. That's going to have its ups and downs. Let's make your relationship
healthy. Let's make it fun. Let's make it enjoyable. It doesn't have to be so heavy and dark
and high at the same time. It's like, out of the out, that's where I find a lot of peace now,
is creating and experiencing that. Yeah, that's beautiful. And what you're
kind of highlighting in there is the kind of aspect of interdependence that honors
the unique individual that has passion, has purpose, you know, has those deeper things
that I think we are absolutely driven. And I think, again, this is sometimes where we
set up an expectation of relationships that
it's somehow shared. I mean, a partner has all the same interest as me or, you know, isn't interested
in anything or I don't know what my interests are yet. I think the more we create space for
individual, you know, exploration of unique passion and purpose and hobbies and all that comes along
with that, and it might be outside of the relationship in some other realm or some other relationship
entirely where you go and pursue whatever your hobby is with other people.
I think if we can expand that that is still part of an absolutely healthy relationship,
then I do think we create the space for that.
Each person being self-actualized as Maslow put it.
Right.
You've had a number of different relationships in your life,
from family dynamics to the relationship to yourself
to intimate relationships.
You had boyfriends in high school.
You married a woman.
And now you've been talking about this new relationship,
which did you coin this word or someone else coined this?
No, it's not. I Googled it.
I Googled it. I handled it on Google.
And so you're now in a new relationship that's extended from your current relationship and
it's Ruppel.
So there's three of you now.
How has what you've learned been put to the test by adding to a current relationship and
creating a new relationship?
Yeah. So as Lolly and I, my first relationship, my longest tenured one,
her and I are currently married. We've been together for almost a decade. And from the
beginning, as we both started to become aware of our past and how that was playing out in all of
our past relationships, our shared vision of our relationship for the future was always one of
honoring each other and our self-expression and our wants and our needs, both having come from
past where that was not the case in our homes and in the relationships we pursued.
And did you guys have a codependent relationship to start and then it evolved or how did it start?
Yes, I was absolutely 100% codependent
She was too but was more of the kind of anxious avoidant
Right that she liked some aspects of being close and then there was too close and then there was she would move far away
Which was trigger you anxious and I would chase after her
It was this cycle or this kind of endless dance
And so as we both became very aware of our patterns and we're both committed very gratefully on the journey of, you know, unpacking them, peeling
back all the onion, doing all the nervous system work. We continued in our relationship until
we crossed paths with Jenna. Jenna is someone that I connected with actually in the community.
I remember her handle from the very early days interacting with the Instagram account.
And when we decided to open up a membership, the day of the membership, we actually had a huge tech issue and ended up putting up a story,
letting members know essentially what was happening and that we would get back to their emails in a timely manner.
Meanwhile, behind the scenes, we're like, oh, my gosh, we're freaking out.
matter. Meanwhile, behind the scenes, we're like, oh my gosh, we're freaking out. Long story short,
within seconds of putting up that story, Jenna pings a DM over and acknowledges that she, you know, has been seeing what we're doing and celebrating what we're doing. And in her own
journey has been kind of working and wanting to create a similar community and was available to
help if we were to need help in any way. So that at that point was a no brainer. Not only did we
need help, here was someone through my interactions with her
within the community was feeling
like she could be someone that was capable of doing that.
Long story short, we jumped on a call.
She integrated into the team
and became very much an integral part of the circle
in the business from the beginning.
Flash forward in time,
her and I were living in Venice separately.
I was with Wally., of course she was there.
And as time progressed, spending outside of business hours together, we started to develop
personal feelings for each other, though none of it was being spoken, of course, because
I'm in a committed marriage.
I had no idea that this even type of relationship, had a name, was possible.
I probably wouldn't even let myself even think about the possibility
because it's just not something, right, that you do or that you think about.
Though, meanwhile, we were starting to notice breakdowns in our communication
in terms of our work relationship and moments of conflict and snarky remarks
and just upset feelings.
So in service, actually, of the business,
we kind of had very
direct conversations with each other. We're like, what is going on? Like things were so collaborative
and great. Like this business is a number one priority. We need to talk about what's happening.
And long story short, after Jenna did some, you know, kind of connecting with her heart,
she's always someone that's very driven to be very heart led. She sat both of us down one
particular morning and disclosed that
from her perspective, one of the things that was creating her own internal conflict that was
leaking out is agitation and nitpicking and all of this communication breakdown was that
fact that she was realizing that she had feelings for both of us. I had obviously no idea how I was
even, she's like, I have no idea how you're reacting to this right now when I'm telling you
this. My commitment is to the business. This is what I want to be able to continue to move
forward I know this is a big part of what's getting in the way of me and what's coming up for
me I don't know what you're going to make of this but I just wanted to have this conversation and to
honor what it was that is on my heart and she urged me to take some time knowing that I typically need
a minute a minute to process things like that or things in general.
And I took a minute and Lolly and I had a conversation
shortly thereafter and were able to acknowledge
that beneath the surface for both of us,
there was developing feelings and interest.
And so no jokes or jokes aside,
we literally sat down online.
Lolly loves to research things when she's unsure.
So she's like pinged in Google, like what three-person relationship?
Is this possible?
And we discovered the word throuple and saw very limited examples of it at that time,
though, since I think that there's been a ton more visibility around different types
of relationships.
So we embarked on it.
We were curious.
We followed that curiosity. So I think
so much of that journey really symbolizes all of the work in general, the work in the book of
really connecting to what the truth in your heart is. Of course, for listeners, it might not be to
expand or open a relationship up, but I think there's a million things that our heart tells
us in any given day that we don't hear because we're distracted elsewhere, that we override.
We're afraid maybe to tell our loved ones what is actually coming up for us.
And I do think the byproduct is, you know, discord and conflict and agitation and more so a lack of that heart-based connection.
lack of of that heart-based connection so what was the the thing in your book in this book that gave you a tool to be able to navigate this new uncertain experience and relationship
that has supported you and having more peace over problems with this new dynamic um all of the work
right just remaining commitment committed to me as a participant now with two others. Now that I have two people to distract me with from the time I wake up in the morning, right? That doesn't mean that my body and my physical self is any less important.
Right. adds kind of relational moments of conflict. Interacting with two different people
brings up two different, you know,
aspects and sides of me and my self-expression,
which can on the one hand be very beautiful and expansive,
and on the other hand can be very challenging.
They both challenge me in different ways
and touch different kind of aspects of my older wounding.
Interesting.
Then I have the, you know,
opportunity to view upon their relationship,
and of course there's moments of, like, comparison wounding. Interesting. Then I have the, you know, opportunity to view upon their relationship. And
of course, there's moments of like comparison and of jealousy and of trying to make their
relationship fit into the box that my relationship with each of them does. So from top to bottom,
I mean, it's a daily practice of staying committed that I am a separate individual,
even though I share my life with two other ones and continuing to
be connected with me and my heart so that I can open. And then there's that complicated aspect.
Now I have two people to love me, right? To receive love from. There's still that wounded
girl inside that feels so vulnerable asking and opening my heart to someone else to connect with,
not used to doing that in childhood so even though in any moment
right i have two individuals that are more than willing to show up in support of me one of which
of both of which might be actually energetically available in any given moment and there's still
times where i'm screaming and yelling from the bedroom and not letting them come close to me and
then telling them that they don't care because that is so alive for me still where the vulnerability of being seen and of receiving love
and support is still unfamiliar in my mind and in my body. It's an ongoing healing journey.
The healing doesn't stop, I guess. No, it doesn't. It's interesting. I mean,
listen, this is something I'm completely uneducated about, but I'm assuming,
about. But I'm assuming, I've never been in the throuple and I'm assuming I never will. But I mean,
I know that you got a lot of support, but you also got a lot of frustration, sadness, loss,
you know, criticism, right? And I'm not here to criticize or judge anything because in history we have seen people of different
socioeconomic classes get together and get married when everyone was against marrying or being in a relationship outside of financial class we've seen that be looked down upon and now more acceptable
we've seen um people of different cultures or religious backgrounds not supposed to
be together now in relationship and marriages we've seen same-sex relationships that was
criticized for so long now more acceptable in most places around the world we've seen same
different races now coming together you know interracial relationships now being more acceptable
when 10, 20, 30, 50 years ago weren't as acceptable, right? Or looked down upon or judged or criticized.
So I think we got to be open-minded to different styles of relationship dynamics in general,
because things that were once looked down upon are now more accepted. And as long as people are finding peace, harmony,
breaking cycles, and developing more heart coherence in their relationships, that's for me
what matters the most. So I'm inspired by what you're doing. I don't know if I could do it,
but I'm inspired that you're allowing yourself to heal. You're trusting your heart. You're
leaning into your heart and what you feel is right for you.
So I acknowledge you for the journey.
Thank you.
And I hope you're able to heal throughout all this as well.
It's inspiring.
But it sounds like, did you get more love or support from your online community since
you are a public figure talking about your relationship?
Because there's pros and cons to sharing any relationship
publicly. And because you're a public figure, how did you navigate that?
So the choice even to go public when we did, it was probably more than a year ago now,
was really born out of the commitment to be authentic to myself. Because at that time,
Jen and I were regularly running the circle together. We had events where one of the events every month is a community check-in where very much
we just have a discussion and oftentimes our current struggles in our own healing journey
are coming up or our relationships being a point of that topic.
We then were co-hosting a podcast together.
So oftentimes again in conversation, I was noticing both she and I that we were censoring.
I had to kind of sub out or not use a particular example because I was with Jenna and no one necessarily knows that we are in a different type of relationship now.
And as the community continues to grow, there's just many more opportunities where I meet community members out publicly where they see me shopping or walking through the airport and come say hi. And oftentimes Jenna's with me. And I was starting to worry that I was going to,
you know, either have to not be, you know, physical with her when we were in public
or be physical with her in public. And if people, you know, as they start to see more visibility
and compare her to Lolly and some of them might know what Lolly looks like, and that's not her. And then what message does that send? So it was really a exercise in my own
authenticity, knowing full well that or being unsure, but having an idea that not everyone
would be equally as receptive to it. And while it was one of our most unfollowed days on Instagram,
we did lose a lot of followers. People did share some
of their opinions. And, you know, I welcome anyone's opinions. And if, you know, my content
is no longer aligned because of this aspect of my personal relationship, then I can accept that.
So much more, though, was support. Support of people just celebrating the choice to be authentic,
even if it was something that was not anything in their own world or realm of possibilities.
And then many more that we're supporting because they too were exploring for themselves or
living in a more non-traditional relationship.
And I think that very globally, like you're saying, the natural tendency is to criticize
what we don't understand and ultimately-
Resist something that's new.
Yeah. And then ultimately it becomes more common. I think that it is much more common now.
Different types, even in monogamous relationships.
I hear from a lot of the community that live in different ways, don't share the same bedroom with their partners.
Some don't share the same home with their partners.
I think that there's a lot more that we're kind of doing uniquely in our relationships that isn't so unique. I even think too about just our evolutionary
times. And, you know, while there might've been some version of monogamy, I do think that we
were kind of wired ancestrally to be more group oriented. I mean, children, babies were raised by the community. It wasn't
as structured as like two parents and however many children in one separate home. I think we've
really come from a more communal roots and I would be hard to believe that that didn't involve maybe
less of a monogamous kind of arrangements too for some. So again i think what is happening more so is it's not even
necessarily new it's just more visible really old dynamics that are just now coming out in a
clearer way that of course as all new things will be challenging um before that i do think that in
time they will be accepted absolutely yeah it's funny i was uh I was on a trip in Turkey a number of years back, and I met this guy. He was kind of like showing me around, I guess a tour guide, and just asking me personal questions about his life. We were spending a few days together, so he was showing me around. And I was like, are you married? He goes, yeah, I'm very happily married. And I go, is your wife here, or what's the deal? He goes goes no she's lives in the United States and I go really how does that work long
distance different countries she goes this is why I worked for us because I'll
spend three months with her and I'll spend three months away and it's why
it's amazing so it's just you know and I was like I don't know if I could be that
long away from someone but for them it seemed to work so it's just like okay
whatever works for you to bring you the most joy, the most peace, the most love.
And I welcome it.
So as long as you're not hurting me or anyone else in the process, then it's all good to go.
This book, How to Be the Love You Seek, Break Cycles, Find Peace, and Heal Your Relationships is extremely powerful.
Make sure you guys check this out.
Again, lots of useful tools, research, science to support
you. I am all for love and peace and healing. And I see the benefits of my life. The more I tap
into those things, the more I deepen my relationship with self and self-love, not in a selfish way,
but in a selfless way to myself, because then I'm able to have more energy and
make better decisions, be kinder and more compassionate to others, intimately friends
and strangers. So how to be the love you seek, make sure you guys get a copy, break cycles,
find peace, heal your relationships. It's not going to be easy to do these things,
but I'm telling you it's worth it. Where can we connect and follow with
you beyond the book, Nicole? Absolutely. At this point, I have a presence on pretty much all of
the social media platform. Of course, it all began on the Instagram account, the.holistic.psychologist,
though there's a threads account now, a TikTok account, a Twitter account. We're all over the place.
All over the place.
YouTube, podcast.
Yeah, I'm going to say there's a YouTube channel that I'll be dropping some new video content so soon, The Holistic Psychologist.
I also have a book webpage up, howtobetoloveyouseek.com, for any information on book retailers and book tour opportunities as they become available.
I'm glad you're starting to do more events. So
make sure you go follow her, go online, see where your events are, say, how do you live? You're
getting more courage to be out there and doing bigger events. So we got to get you doing more
of those. Nicole, appreciate you for always showing up, for always being in service and
really acknowledge you for making sure over these last 10 years, you're showing
up more for your authentic self and you're healing the parts of you that didn't used to be seen.
And you're allowing yourself to be seen in new ways. I know that's big for you. So I acknowledge
you for the entire journey. I'm proud of you for this book. It's so inspiring. And thank you so
much for being here. I appreciate it. I hope you enjoyed today's episode and it inspired you on your journey towards greatness.
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And now it's time to go out there
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