The School of Greatness - How To Heal & Move On From Narcissistic Relationships w/ Dr. Ramani EP 1344

Episode Date: November 7, 2022

Dr. Ramani Durvasula is a licensed clinical psychologist, author, and podcast host. The focus of Dr. Durvasula’s work is the etiology and impact of narcissism and high-conflict, entitled, antagonist...ic personality styles on human relationships, mental health, and societal expectations. Dr. Ramani has authored two books, has accumulated millions of views on her YouTube channel and just launched her new podcast, “Navigating Narcissism”Be sure to check out her online program for people healing from narcissistic relationships & abuse here!In this episode you will learn, The red-flags of knowing you are with a narcissistic partner.How the sunk-cost fallacy plays a role in our relationships.Why you need to stop being afraid to change course.To find your best path forward to leaving toxic relationships behind.For more, go to lewishowes.com/1344Check out Dr. Ramani’s prior episode on The School of Greatness: https://link.chtbl.com/1195-podEsther Perel’s Simple Trick to Heal & Deepen Your Relationships: https://link.chtbl.com/1291-podHeal Your Past Relationships & Find Love [MASTERCLASS]:https://link.chtbl.com/1335-pod

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Starting point is 00:00:00 One thing I would tell people is don't shame your triggers, because I think what people say, I don't want to be triggered. I'm like, nah, you know, you don't have that line into your sympathetic nervous system. It's always going to be quicker than you. So because it's always going to be quicker, we have to be aware. 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
Starting point is 00:00:25 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. Well, we were talking about this beforehand, that this is one of the biggest challenges people face in modern society is understanding and navigating narcissism. How to understand if you're a narcissist, how to understand if there's people in your life who have these tendencies or personality traits, and really how to create healthy boundaries the best way possible. First thing I want to talk about with you is because the previous one, we kind of went through unpacking what a narcissist is. Yeah. The different types of narcissism and how to spot it and how to see it. And I think a lot of people went through breakups since then.
Starting point is 00:01:16 You know, a lot of people probably ended relationships that they realized were very toxic and unhealthy and not a vision for what they wanted in their life. Right, right, right. toxic and unhealthy and not a vision for what they wanted in their life right and so for people the first question I'll ask you for people who who have ended relationships with a narcissist or narcissistic personalities what's the best way for them to enter a new relationship without PTSD or without the remnants of are they going to lash out at me? Are they going to gaslight me? Are they going to do these things that I've experienced in the past? What's the best way to overcome that and enter a new relationship without bringing that baggage in the new one? When I work with survivors in my practice and when I speak to them in a subscription,
Starting point is 00:02:03 like a sort of healing program I've got that people come every month. And one thing I say is you got a way to beat. The temptation is I'm going to throw myself into a new relationship as a palate cleanser. I'm like, you know what, sit with that dirty palate for a minute because you need to do this work in you. Because I think the challenge is that when people get into narcissistic relationships or antagonistic or toxic relationships, they don't know what they're dealing with or they're replicating cycles from earlier in their life, right? Or both. And so what happens is, is that it's, if you, if you pivot too quickly, you don't get a chance to sort of know you. A narcissistic relationship does such a number on
Starting point is 00:02:44 you. You have now been living in someone else's reality, right? People forget like, do I like pepperoni pizza? Or do I enjoy this TV show? Or what temperature do I want the house at? Like you literally lose sight of your own subjective sense of who you are. You lose sense of reality and your own perception of things. You just lose it all because you literally have been living in psychological servitude to this other person. So I tell people, listen, my gold standard is a year. Give yourself a year, which I know is not a short period of time. And everyone, I'm like, you know what? Take care of your own business, but a year. I understand that
Starting point is 00:03:21 feels like a long time, but here's the thing. These relationships get so much into someone's head that in a year a person can re-coalesce and they can unpack it and they can start putting down some of the rumination. You certainly don't want to do that in a new relationship, right? You don't want to bring that. You don't want to bring that in. And you can also learn what you like, what you don't like, so that when somebody encroaches on that and says, learn what you like what you don't like so that when somebody encroaches on that and says they say something contemptuous is oh who eats that and say okay this is not this is not okay I'm not doing this again you can start recognizing those patterns of what just doesn't feel right but if you roll right into it it's almost like a recreation of the old cycle you need that
Starting point is 00:04:00 separation you need a break from anniversary dates. You need to have that first birthday alone, their first birthday alone, the holidays you do, the vacations you take. You've got to go live a life without them. And once you, because otherwise you're so, again, caught up, you might get caught up in someone else's sort of whole toxic bomb storm. So now I know a lot of people say a year just feels too long I'm like I got you I get it a year is optimal and the folks who've done it said I don't regret doing that at all now but for a lot of people might even be eight months nine months but there's a moment Louis after a narcissistic relationship where a person will look up as they go to bed that night and say oh my god I didn't
Starting point is 00:04:43 think of them once today that's a good day that's an amazing day and I want not just one of those I want a person to have a month of those a while of those where they're just you know sure something might remind them or something but not that like what are they doing what are they up to almost to the point where you've detached it might even be a moderate indifference like like, oh, whatever, you know, let them do them. It doesn't like trigger you. It doesn't set you off in the same way. But I do caution people, depending on the severity of the narcissistic relationship, sometimes people will report feeling those echoes years down the line, even if they've fallen in love with someone else. And someone will say, does that mean I'm not over them? Not at all. It means that the way the trauma systems in the mind and the body hold on to information,
Starting point is 00:05:29 it means that anything that reminds you of that can still activate you. I've been through this, and I've got to tell you, to this day, I think if I saw some of the people who harmed me in the past, I can think of a few. You'd have a response. Oh, my gosh. Beyond a response. I actually think I would have to, I would almost, it would be akin to panic. And I honestly do not care what happens to those people.
Starting point is 00:05:47 But if I saw them, it would be really upsetting for me. It's not that I'm not over it. It's just that I, it's just my nervous system is just like danger, danger, death. Get away from this experience. Yeah. Interesting. Wow. So the optimal is nine months to a year.
Starting point is 00:06:01 But it's really more like taking the temperature of allowing your nervous system to heal see if you can have a few days in a row and a month in a row where you're not thinking about that person or it's not triggering you consistently before you enter into a new relationship and that you're clear on who you are you're not because in a narcissistic relationship you're defined by the relationship are they happy today are we having a good day are they happy with their lives it's's everything is about them, right? So now for the first time, you make things be about you. Like, I'm good. Like, no, I want to pursue this job.
Starting point is 00:06:33 Yeah, no, I'm moving to New York. And not like, oh, is this going to work? You for a minute, you. And when you meet your person, capital P, and it's healthy, they might say like, ah, you know what, for about six months we could do this long distance or I can work remotely. I'll come to New York. We'll figure it out. You'll start to see that there's a possibility for compromise. But I do think that a lot of people after a narcissistic relationship, their trip wire is a bit more sensitive and they may throw back a few
Starting point is 00:07:06 fish that are big enough to keep and that's okay. I'd rather that people overcorrect than undercorrect. And they might say, am I, and this is where again, when I work with clients, they'll say, am I being too intense about this? Is this too big an ask? Nine times out of 10, Louis, it's not too big. Like they're right on point with the thing they're sensing feels red flaggy to them or doesn't feel comfortable or something isn't sitting well. And I'm teaching people, listen to that. It's so funny you're saying this because when I got into my relationship with Martha, my girlfriend now, in the beginning, I was like, listen, part of, I think I specifically said to her, I kind of want you to run away from me because I want to be so authentically myself
Starting point is 00:07:49 that it either draws you into me because you accept and receive who I am or it kind of propels you away from me of my truth and my vision and my mission and who I am in this world and my being, what I want to create in this life. Because I think I gave in so much in previous relationships to please others and to change who I was and morph to make sure that they were okay and happy, which is all my responsibility for doing that. But I was like, I'm not changing who I am just to make one person happy. This is who I am.
Starting point is 00:08:27 If you want to hang out and be friends and see where it goes, cool. If not, that's cool too. But I'm not going to change myself to try to get you to like me and make you constantly happy. Or anytime you're upset at me for doing something, I'm going to stop doing it just to make you happy and be on edge. And I'm so glad that I did that. Part of me was like probably some PTSD in the beginning where I was like, I'm just doing this to protect myself.
Starting point is 00:08:54 Right. Because I'd rather be single. Correct. Than get into a relationship that's unhealthy. And that's the key, right? I'd rather be single than get into a relationship that's unhealthy. And that's the, that's because that's because that's what people are afraid of. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:09:07 I was like, I'll be single the rest of my life if it means I'm not going to be in this type of relationships that I've been in the previous. And it's creating a new standard for myself. You know, what I'll allow in and what I want to allow. What boundaries I'll create and making sure that it's in alignment with my partner as well. And I'm glad I did that. Even though in the beginning she's like, you might have a little PTSD still from the previous relationship. I'm kind of glad that I came with that. I would call it, I was very courageous in my communication about this is my truth. And it may scare you away. And I have to be okay if you're not accepting it. I have to be okay if
Starting point is 00:09:43 you don't like me. And here's like an amazing woman that may not want to be with me and I have to be okay if you're not accepting it. I have to be okay if you don't like me. Correct. And here's like an amazing woman that may not want to be with me. And I have to be okay with that. Yes. But it's not giving in anymore. Right. Right? It's not giving in. And I think that that's the key.
Starting point is 00:09:54 Yeah. And it was a beautiful experiment for me entering a relationship that way by being honest about this is who I am. This is my values. This is my vision. This is what I'm aligned to and what I'm not aligned to. If this is something you want to explore, then let's keep dating and exploring it and seeing how it goes. And I think that was a beautiful experience for me to witness the receiving
Starting point is 00:10:15 of that on the other side. And just being consistent with my word. You know, this is what I want. This is what I not want. And being in that place. But how can we make sure? But in the beginning, I'll probably say there was a little PTSD remnants of it. How can we make sure we don't bring in that energy?
Starting point is 00:10:34 Is it just waiting for a year and nine months and doing the work on the healing process? But how do we not bring any of that past relationship into new relationships? When you say bring that past relationship into new relationships, what do you think that looks like? What do you mean by that? The traumas of the past relationship, the trigger responses, the things that you did in previous relationships to protect yourself. How do you continue to keep an open heart and open minds and not go back into the default? Right. So one thing I would tell people is don't shame your triggers because I think what people say I don't want to be triggered I'm like nah you know you don't have that line into your sympathetic nervous system it's always going to be quicker than you
Starting point is 00:11:13 so you are it is because it's always going to be quicker we have to be aware for example sometimes we even feel it like I know that for people in a relationship something will happen they'll hear something and they'll feel that tightness in their chest that funniness in their gut right the key then becomes is to say okay I am uncomfortable let me hear through that that's where the mindfulness you almost got to try to punch through that let me be present with what they're saying even though you know it's almost like trying to listen to someone in a noisy bar at that point you You know, when you lean in, you're like, okay, I'm fully concentrating on what this person is saying because it's chaos around me. But so that chaos, that sympathetic nervous system turning on is like the noise in a bar.
Starting point is 00:11:55 So now you're really leaning in. You're looking at them. I know when I have that response, I literally watch their mouth because I'm like, okay, I can shape out the words. And it almost gives me a totally mindful space to watch them shape the words. It's almost like you can think of it in a movie when they go right to someone's mouth. And so now I'm really paying attention to what they're saying because the danger of the trigger is that we don't hear. Right? So it's to be aware.
Starting point is 00:12:21 We're in defense mode right away, right? Yeah, we're just like we're in freeze mode. Our eyes become wide the whole nine yards. We feel that. And then we start to name it and say, I can feel that I'm getting activated like I did before. I've really got to listen. Because we can't, you're not going to turn that off. That's my point is that people say, I've got to wait till I can turn it off.
Starting point is 00:12:41 I'm like, then you're going to be 117. And that's when you're going to start dating again, which I'm sure you're going to be, you know, there's a great dating pool, I'm sure, no doubt. But at that point of the other 117 year olds, but no, you can't, you, otherwise you're forever, then you're living in the, and you're still living in service to that relationship. And the whole idea is to no longer live in service to your narcissistic relationship. To the past relationship. To the past relationship.
Starting point is 00:13:05 So the trigger then becomes, me triggers our communication your nervous system saying whoa something dangerous is happening and you're kind of saying I get it I need to listen this is new because when you think of what post-traumatic stress is right it's a programming so if you use a classical example I know a person got into a an accident on a particular stretch of the freeway, right? So they avoid that road, right? And let's say then one day the Uber driver takes that road and their heart is racing because that's almost been sort of imprinted in. But you know what? You go down that road enough times, you don't let the racing heart say, I can't go on this road. Something terrible is going to happen. You say, okay, I'm going to tolerate this. Maybe you have someone in the car with you the first time. So you can't stop living, but you can also hear those triggers happening. yourself permission to communicate not say like I'm being triggered and I think you're cheating on me that might be a little heavy and say you know I need a
Starting point is 00:14:07 minute I you know in my past X and Y happened so at these moments I know it just it takes me a minute can you it's hard for me I my trust was betrayed so I'm gonna need time to build that trust I always say that in some ways people coming out of narcissistic relationships are at an incredible advantage. Because if you can really be honest with yourself about saying, I'm gonna ask for what I need, and if this person ain't gonna give it,
Starting point is 00:14:35 then maybe this isn't my person, and time is a big one. Narcissistic relationships are usually like this, fast, fast, fast, right? Let's do this, we're in love, this is the best thing ever. Let's move in, let's do this this let's go to Paris for three years like whatever kind of over the top stuff but time is usually a way that people can build trust you can see that there's a new way to respond a loving kind person will say we're good we're going to take this really really slow if if you need that because then that's telling you that this person's hearing you on one of many things you need someone in an
Starting point is 00:15:12 intimate relationship to do and maybe because I'm older I say the I think and say these things is that you know this forgive me this is going to sound so off color but I'm just going to say it is the, I call it the wiping test. I need you to look at this person. You know, everyone's young and beautiful and dating. I want you to fast forward to your 85 or maybe 90 and you've, you snapped a hip or something. This person kind of wipe your ass and be loving about it. And if the answer is yes, probably a keeper. But if you think like this person's going to sneer or doesn't want to be in the hospital, no, not your person. And I know that, but if you're really thinking you're going to go the distance with this person,
Starting point is 00:15:53 are they going to stay up all night with a kid who has diarrhea? Are they going to wipe your, are they going to be okay when things are no longer okay? Because that's where narcissistic relationships fall apart when real life comes along so try that test I'll tell you now ain't no narcissist and we're gonna wipe your ass I promise you that right now yeah I think Esther Perel talks about the difference between a love story and a life story a love partner and a life partner right where it's like you could have romance and adventure and crazy sex with a love partner, right? But are they going to be a great life partner for you during these times you're talking about?
Starting point is 00:16:31 There's also kind of like the, someone else mentioned this, I can't remember who, the 10,000 meal test. Do you want to have 10,000 meals with this individual? If every other meal they're exhausting to be around and they're ungrateful and they're gaslighting you or whatever they're doing, do you want 10,000 of these for the rest of your life? Like, can you imagine sitting down for 10,000 meals with this person? So that's why I think 10,000 meals, life story, you know, all these things I think are great. But I feel like, I'll speak from example. I used to get caught up so much in the passion the excitement the chemicals of the early relationship moments right and I used to think this is incredible this
Starting point is 00:17:14 feeling this love right and then six months nine months 12 months it's like you start to unwind and realize well what are do we have the same values and are we in alignment of what life looks like together in our lifestyle and then you try to I tried to make it work right so it was always out of alignment from the start and you mentioned something off camera about you know when we find someone who is quote-unquote boring that's a great sign I especially for people of histories of trauma yes I mean I I think that for some folks, you know, it's the it's the again the the activation the trauma bond the the sort of hot and cold is what equals love that I need to earn love that I constantly have
Starting point is 00:17:56 To feel like I'm running faster and faster on the treadmill becomes equated with love. That's the love equals chaos kind of thing So the person where it's kind of like flat, it's not. The flatness, though, and I think I even hate the word boring as much as it's not volatile. It's calm. Right, it's calm. Calm, run towards the calm. Calm is, those are what long-term relationships look like.
Starting point is 00:18:18 But I think people... They want the chaos. The chaos becomes, it's not even that they want the chaos, it's that chaos equals love they want love and so it's a rewriting of that love is stable why do they why do people you know I'm as guilty as anyone in the past for this why do people feel loved or think it's love when there's explosiveness or there's chaos or there's someone screaming at you and then apologizing and it's just this pattern's explosiveness or there's chaos or there's someone screaming at you and then apologizing. And it's just this pattern.
Starting point is 00:18:47 Why does that feel like love? Is that because we maybe saw this as a model as our childhood from our parents? Or why does that? Why do some people feel that's love where others can see that's not healthy? I don't want that. Well, I mean, part of it goes to this concept of trauma bonding, which is sort of the core of the narcissistic relationship. And in the trauma bond is formed by a relationship that has an alternation of good and bad, hot and cold, high and low. So in a way, you're sort of chasing a high because where there's a bad day, guess what's going to come again?
Starting point is 00:19:18 Makeup sex or whatever makeup looks like. Right. Because as a kid, what it was was that you'd live for those good days. Despite all the abuse, then there'd be a fishing trip despite all those bad days then your parent would do something they'd be something so quirky and fun about them or you're like the day they do something good now you could go back to constructing the narrative that I come from a normal happy family that is the origination of that trauma bond. But then in order to keep the mindset that the relationship's good, you have to justify, justify, justify. You have to make sense of those bad days to fit the good days. So the justification and the denial become big parts of
Starting point is 00:19:57 the trauma bonded theme. Now obviously that trauma bond is going to play out a lot more powerfully in somebody who has that in their back story because your entire childhood was wired around how can I get this parent to notice me? How can I be seen? How can I be heard? How can I be cherished? It's about a chase because that child was put in the unfortunate position of believing they had to earn that or even worse, their needs were shamed and their parent resented
Starting point is 00:20:23 them for having needs so they learn well if I'm going to be in love gotta be quiet can't bring up my needs there's going to be bad days but then there's going to be good days and those bad days are because well maybe I was too demanding or you know maybe I'm expecting too much so a lot of it becomes self-blame focused and that becomes a really profound kind of connective tissue it It's not to say though people who, not everybody who gets into a trauma-bonded relationship has that history. They're by far the people who are going to be more vulnerable. But because narcissism is about such a good front game, right, the charm, the charisma, the love bombing, you feel like you're in something really, really special. But the reason
Starting point is 00:21:05 narcissistic relationships are so confusing is because there's enough good days to confuse you. And the good days are good. I mean, they're really, really good. They're over the top. They're over the top and they sort of feel perfect. And remember- You try to go back to that, right? You go back to it. But the thing we got to remember is sometimes those good days even stay in there years later you know that it's whatever that moment is and narcissistic relationships are all about alignment if they're having a good day right for whatever maybe that good day at work or maybe they flirted with someone at the gym
Starting point is 00:21:40 you don't know what it is then the narcissist the narcissist and you are having happen to have a good day something could happen to you and you're both then you're like they get me and they love me no it's just coincidence a fortunate coincidence and then because the narcissist could just as easily have had a bad day their car got dinged in the parking lot their friend got the raise and the promotion and they didn't get it. Angry, angry, angry. You had that same good day. They will invalidate.
Starting point is 00:22:09 They will criticize. So it's all about alignment and timing. And that alignment is what makes people say, we have such a great relationship. I'm like, it just sounds like luck. We're so connected. We have great chemistry. Yeah. It's like you thinking like roulette can be gamed. I'm like, you got lucky on the double zero there.
Starting point is 00:22:23 It's so funny you say that. I mean, I'm going to start having flashbacks now memories uh like I did in the last interview where I remember a time for a few years I had this dream of going to the Olympics and making and making the USA first it was making the USA national team so I had the opportunity to go to the Olympics I mean you said go to the Olympics, I'm like, to watch. So you see your dreams are up here. This was 2008. 2008, I watched, I had surgery playing professional football, broke my wrist, had a cast on my arm from here to here for six months in this position,
Starting point is 00:23:02 just got it off, and the Olympicsics came on and so I was kind of down in the dumps because I couldn't train I couldn't play football anymore but I was watching olympics getting inspired and I see this sport at like 3 a.m in the morning that I've never seen before in my life called team handball oh yeah it's not well known in the us but it's a big sport in Europe it's kind of like water polo on land yes with with no water and when I watch this and my mind is blown I'm like this is incredible like this looks like the sport I should have learned growing up like I'm built for this on the size I got the speed like this is my game and it gave me this opening into a new possibility in my life like let me research this
Starting point is 00:23:43 maybe there's a usa team maybe I could make the team maybe we could qualify for the Olympics this is what happened in about 10 minutes of watching this sport in 2008 2010 rolls around I moved to New York City to play for a team on team handball the top team in the country I'm New York City's got the best team and then the USA for the club teams I moved there to literally to go learn this sport for a year I meet a girl and this girl we have this you know kind of this this chemistry this connection all these things in the first like month or whatever, right? But then I start to see the signs later, but I wasn't aware of it. And she knew that this was a part of my dream.
Starting point is 00:24:31 And I've been training this whole year for this chance to make the USA national team. They'd select 16 Americans, the whole population, to be on the USA national team. I've been planning this for two years, training for a year, moved to a new state, new city to practice every week. I get an email, and I'm with the person I was with at the time. I get an email that says, you've been selected to the USA national team. Congratulations. I'm kind of excited.
Starting point is 00:24:59 I get goosebumps thinking about it, right? This was something the email was waiting for. You've been selected. You're going to the Pan American Championships with the national team to compete for our country and i'm reading this i'm literally like so vulnerable and in tears like thinking about this when i'm reading it and i was with her she was in the other room and i take it to her i'm like you're not gonna believe what happened look at this email I just got I'm like so excited and right away she goes man I wish my career was doing better right now
Starting point is 00:25:28 there was no congratulations there was no not it was like god I wish it was she went to a depression kind of yeah yeah it was like a depression of like oh gosh I wish I could do this with my career I wish this was happening and so I put my attention on her to make sure she was okay when I'm like I've been dreaming about this for two years I'm busting my eyes like telling you about this in my mind but I was like well let me just make sure her needs are met in this moment and I'll get back to celebrating me one day and it wasn't even an acknowledgement of like congratulations right um anyways this happened multiple times in many relationships, similar situations like that, which I didn't even know that was a sign.
Starting point is 00:26:09 I was just like, I didn't know until I talked to you whenever this was six months ago or something. But, you know, I don't even remember where I was going with this, but just I think like the good days, it's like they had a good day. Talking about alignment. Right, so if they have a bad day, and you have a day, they're going to kind of try to take you down.
Starting point is 00:26:28 That's what you said, right? And your story is so interesting too because who knows if she was having a bad day or not. But your good news is always a threat to a narcissistic person. Why is that? Always. So, you know, it's funny. Why is that? Because it, remember, at the core of it, narcissism is about insecurity, deep, deep insecurity.
Starting point is 00:26:48 We always think of these people as having really big self-esteem. They have what we, I can only call inaccurate self-esteem. They have this sort of falsely grandiose vision of themselves, but at this unprocessed, deep, unconscious level. It's not like they walk around thinking, I'm really insecure, so I better be grandiose. The insecurity is unprocessed. They're not even aware of it. They're not even aware of it, but it's almost like this nagging thing that's always in the background. So anything that activates that sense, it's almost like it starts to percolate up out of the groundwater. That's when you'll see all kinds of things passive aggression which is what you were up against a sullenness resentment
Starting point is 00:27:29 sometimes over its aggression because they're trying to protect themselves against the threat that this that this insecurity will pop up that's that's the dance right so when I've worked with folks who are in narcissistic relationships listen people have who have been married a long time or in long-term relationships or have kids it's not so easy to say just break up and follow your bliss it just doesn't work that way and so I'd say okay I'm gonna have to give you some strategies to stay in this and I always call it the good bad indifferent rule never ever share never ever let the narcissistic person be the first person you
Starting point is 00:28:07 share your good news with never you should have called your bestest person at that point who's going to celebrate who would have been like oh my gosh we all got him right like the good thing happens and you're like I gotta tell this person and they're like oh my gosh 20 bottles of champagne we're having a party that's who you tell tell first. Then you got your other people who are going to be happy for you. And then and only then do you tell the narcissistic person. Because at that point, you felt that your good news was held and cherished and celebrated, and you just feel happy. You shared it with people who were able to mirror it back to you, that feeling of goodness. That's what parenting is about, by the way. When your kid says, look, mommy, I got an A on my exam. Honey, that's so great. Not like, oh, I'm too busy to deal with that right now. And that's what kids who have narcissistic
Starting point is 00:28:52 parents get a lot of, like, I don't have time for that right now. Right? And that success is never enough. Yes, it's never enough. What else do I need to do to get the attention? Yeah. But in adulthood, that mirroring matters. And then once you do that, and you roll up to the narcissistic person like I wish my life was like that in some ways you've been so buoyed that it'd
Starting point is 00:29:11 be like you know what like you don't even you at some point you're like whatever you know like I hope it is too I hope that works out for you you feel good you feel seen and that's the good the bad same thing never go to a narcissistic person first with your bad stuff. What happens when you share bad news? They'll either feel inconvenienced, frustrated. What do you want me to do about this? Oh, my gosh. Like, oh, I'm under, so many things are being asked of me.
Starting point is 00:29:37 They go into their victim thing. Yeah, you figure it out. Yeah, you figure it out. Like how, and you feel, let's say it's like really bad news. Like I found out my mom is really sick or I, you know it out. And you feel, let's say it's like really bad news. Like I found out my mom is really sick or it turns out they're going to be downsizing my division and I'm probably going to be in that first round of layoffs or whatever it is. You find out your friend is ill or you're ill or something. More often than not, the narcissistic person, it's
Starting point is 00:30:01 almost like they don't want to hear that there's like real stuff that happens in the world that has nothing to do with them your mother being sick has nothing to do with them so they're really not that interested and that you might interrupt them and bring some like negative juju into their life they don't want that so I always say to people have your people to take your bad news to so people can offer empathy compassion emotional support practical support and only as an afterthought will you say, because now you've been held, you've been supported, you might have the strength to say at some point like, yeah, my mom's sick, and they're going to have whatever foolish, you know,
Starting point is 00:30:35 unempathic response they have, but now you've been supported. So that takes us to the indifferent. I tell everyone in a narcissistic relationship, keep in your phone make a little list of completely vacuous topics the weather they're building a new house across the way can you believe that new grocery store is coming into town go back to the weather you avoid anything that's a third rail that that's a sensitive issue, or where their negativity could hurt you. Oh, my gosh. So then you can kind of keep the trains running on time. Like, can you believe this heat? It's great.
Starting point is 00:31:12 I live out in the San Fernando Valley. So we always go, can you believe this heat? In fact, all the narcissistic people out there are going to know now I think they're narcissistic because that's how I always start the conversation. Can you believe this heat? But because there's nothing else to say. So what do you say with the narcissist then? What can you talk about? You're like, you've taken out almost everything you can talk about. Can you believe this heat? But if you live with someone and you have kids with them and you have to interact. Procedural stuff. And I think that what happens is people want a real partner. They want someone to share
Starting point is 00:31:39 stuff with them. Like you don't, you're never going to have that here. With a narcissist. You're never going to have it. So give it up. So you're just going to have to recognize it might be things like who's taking them to soccer today and if they say I'm too busy to take them to soccer realistic expectations of course they're too busy say piece of cake I got it I always tell folks if you're in a narcissistic relationship you need to plan a b c and d because they are always going to let you down oh my gosh. So you mentioned a little moment ago about there are certain situations where you're not going to be able to get out of a relationship and follow your bliss. Yeah, no, you can. But is there a world
Starting point is 00:32:14 where you could at some point, as opposed to saying, I've got to live for the next 30 years with this person or 10 years with this person that sounds like a you know a free prison sentence you're in the free world but you're living a prison inside in your own home that doesn't seem like a healthy lifestyle it's not because I work with such varied audiences I'm very very mindful of how painful it is for people to say if you don't go then now I've said to them if you don't go there's limits to how far I can take you on this growth process because you're still constantly having this echoing voice that invalidates you and reminds you of that invalidation you know in the next room so there's only but there's only so much
Starting point is 00:32:58 but there's still a lot of growth I mean your life almost becomes a series of silent acts of rebellion you know some people literally I know some folks told me, you know what? I was inspired by what you said. So I just went to an online university and I got my degree and I never told them. Wow. And I was like, that to me is a triumph. It's just like inner victories. Yeah, inner like.
Starting point is 00:33:17 That's a triumph. It's like everything is a little game for yourself to like find your own joy. Correct. Or they volunteer in their community. And what they recognize is that the volunteering was joyful. The narcissist would say to them, why would you want to help a bunch of people who are too stupid to help themselves? If anything, they'll say their horrible negativity only reinforces that I'm totally right about them. I'm not wrong about this. I'm not a bad person for recognizing that they're toxic and I can go out
Starting point is 00:33:45 and do something that fills my soul. But you're right. It's only a partial victory. But if you can get out, get out. Right. Okay. So let me ask you this. So again, I know there are certain cultures and situations and countries that probably have harder restrictions of removing yourself. that probably have harder restrictions of removing yourself. Okay, so let's figure this out. It's going to be painful to stay in the marriage if there's with a narcissistic person. It's going to be extremely painful to leave for potentially years where you might have to find a whole new community,
Starting point is 00:34:19 move, build friendships and relationships again, be on your own, all that stuff. But if there's light at the end of the tunnel when you leave, three, five, seven years out, as opposed to being in the relationship for that time, is that the better solution? I think that it's so hard to say because if somebody said to me, tell me the best solution, take away all the contextual factors, it's obviously not to be in such a relationship. When we talk about how people manage themselves in these relationships there's all these forms of contact you can have and the most extreme is no contact which means
Starting point is 00:34:57 done. You block them, you cut them out, you don't speak to them, you don't take their calls nada nothing and you know what there's new there's places I've actually seen the hard data on this everyone will say no contact awesome like I I feel so much better now that they no longer exist in my life but it's a really limited strategy if it's your family member if it's someone you co-parent with it's somebody you might still have professional contact with so that's such an extreme that it might work like somebody, let's say someone dated someone and you don't have a ton of mutual friends and you move away physically, no contact can happen. And let me tell you, I've done no contact. It's good. Okay. Then there's low contact. Now, low contact can be
Starting point is 00:35:41 done in a couple of different ways, but it tends to be, you know, what I'd say more perfunctory. You don't really engage with them. It's just really like just sort of, let's say it's a family member. You've decided like, okay, this person's so bad for me. I want nothing to do with them, but your beloved cousin's getting married. You may just, you say to beloved cousin, just whatever the opposite side of the room for seating me is I'd appreciate it maybe they come and talk to you and you give them very simple yes no kids are great responses you go to the bathroom a lot when they approach you people are going to think you have some sort of digestive problem but it's a great out but you step away and if it gets to be too much you give yourself permission to leave so it is you know low contact doesn't mean like you they come to you and you don't speak to them you might say oh hi yeah kids are great yeah it's been a long time yeah I actually got to run
Starting point is 00:36:31 to the restroom it's one of those and so or I got I got to run I've got a call or whatever so you find your ways to maintain and then you won't have contact with them maybe for 10 more years until there's another wedding or funeral or something like that. So that's more of the low contact. And then there's all these techniques like gray rock and yellow rock, like all these techniques to figure out ways to communicate. But the tool I give people, and I think maybe I talked about this last time, I don't remember, but it's something I call don't go deep with them, which means don't defend, don't engage, don't explain, and don't personalize. And it's a mantra, like don't defend, don't engage, don't explain, don't personalize, deep. What happens if you do any of those? If you defend, you're going to get in the mud with them
Starting point is 00:37:14 and they like it and you get dirty. So that doesn't make sense. So you don't want to, if you defend, it's just going to escalate and gaslight and fight. And there's no point because you're not going to end at any kind of sane, rational place. When you explain, they will definitely gaslight you. So there's no point to that. Engaging means don't get into a conversation with them. Do not ask them what they think of something. Do not tell them that good news.
Starting point is 00:37:36 And don't personalize, this isn't about you. They do this to anyone in your position. They're going to manipulate. It's what they do. And so they're going to lie. They're going to manipulate it's what they do and so they're going to lie they're going to gaslight it's just how their personalities are organized it's not about you there's nothing you can do to change this not you not me not anybody and so that's the it's a really fun if then that's what we call radical acceptance and nothing you can do oh man it ain't going to change and that's not because call radical acceptance. Nothing you can do. Oh, man, that's so true. It ain't going to change, and that's not because,
Starting point is 00:38:07 and a lot of people say, well, it's not going to change because I'm not enough. It's not going to change because it's not going to change. No one's ever enough for them. So, again, let me ask you a practical question. There's different stages of being in a relationship, right? You meet someone, you go on a date with them. That's a certain stage of a relationship. You date for weeks, months, however long before you say we're going to be committed or exclusive with each other.
Starting point is 00:38:31 Then there's a marriage commitment and that type of relationship. What would be, in your mind, the key things that an individual should really focus on seeing or experiencing from the person that they want to date before they say, I want to get committed and exclusive with you. Not before marriage, but just, okay, I feel comfortable enough to be in an exclusive, committed relationship with you. What are those key things you would need to see or experience to make sure you feel comfortable taking that step? Watch how they respond to stress or frustration. If you only had one thing you can do, it's that. Because that's the test, right? Do they start, do they become really dysregulated, impulsive, say really awful things, and then,
Starting point is 00:39:20 you know, I was just really stressed out you know because if they did it they're always going to do that because they're on their best behavior in this early dating relationship they'll do it worse in the future you know how are they handling themselves in a in a traffic jam how do they handle themselves when you get to the restaurant and they say oh we've lost your reservation you know because you really are looking for the person who says you know what you up for fast food because there's a place across the street. And you know what, it could be the dinner where you fall in love with that person over your, you know, over your cheeseburgers. French fries and burgers, yeah.
Starting point is 00:39:53 Exactly. And so, but if that person makes up, do you know who I am? Oh, let me tell you, Yelp review, blah, blah, blah. You're going to be sorry, blah, blah, blah. No, I mean, and I think those those situations manifest pretty early on and the trick is because everything else is sort of new and sparkly and fun people want to say oh they just had a bad day they have bad days all the time I would say that's your especially that early in the game that's your first few months a runaway kind of like kind of
Starting point is 00:40:23 or not even run away to say yeah just sort of slowly start distancing some people need to see two of those events okay so great there's your you'll get your second soon enough and so I would say that's a really that's a big one I think other things you want to look at are things like around equity equitability and balance in the relationship how often are you knocking yourself out for them so in other words you're shaping your schedule to them you're shaping your preferences to them you're giving up things for them and yet they still make it sound like you you give up maybe I don't know you're you're invited to a old friend's birthday party and it's gonna be a girl's night out and they doubt your commitment like oh really it's your friends instead of me and then
Starting point is 00:41:11 you end up canceling on the friends and you go out with them and they'll say isn't this so much more fun so they make it seem like your sacrifice was actually good for you that's something else you could see oh my gosh early in the game you know and especially narcissistic people do tend to like to control the narrative so they will there will be some isolating happening if you feel that you're not you you don't feel comfortable saying I'm going to go see my friends or you know this is a I want to spend time alone with my sister or something like that and they pathologize that especially when it's early this is sort of a process for you and if they're trying to annex all of your time
Starting point is 00:41:50 that's a sign too that you need to pay attention yeah if they're trying to take you from your friends and family but sometimes it's not even that obvious it's it's more of a why am I why can't I come or they doubt your commitment and so it's not as like, you're not seeing your friends. It's, you know, you spend a lot of time with your friends. Like, you know, maybe this just isn't the right time in your life for a relationship. I get that. I got that. So they play that game. And then you're thinking, no, I'm kind of really into this person. So they're not angry at you, but they're doing it in a covert way. They doubt your commitment. And because people want to prove their commitment
Starting point is 00:42:25 right and they know I'm really committed to this okay you know it just I find it interesting that on a Saturday night that's what you chose even though you've told them weeks ago and then you give in so look out for those two things it's interesting because I'm a you know every time you say something like this I'm reminded of the past of like, okay, all these stressful situations. But with Martha, I talk a lot about Martha on the show because she's been amazing for me. But with Martha, we had an experience, we went on a trip within the first like month, right? Of kind of knowing each other and dating. And we were supposed to go to Vegas, and we had flights booked,
Starting point is 00:43:06 but for whatever reason, all the flights that day got canceled, and we couldn't get there for the event. We were going to see an event until the next morning on the flight, and we were going to miss it. And so I'm coming to her, kind of bringing a little bit of this PTSD remnants
Starting point is 00:43:20 of like, I hope she's going to be okay. Is she going to be upset? The flight's this. And I bring her in and say, hey,'s going to be okay. You know, is she going to be upset? The flight's this. And I bring it in and say, hey, the flights are not, you know, happening. We could try to take a later flight, but we may not make it in time for the event. What do you want to do? Let's just drive.
Starting point is 00:43:37 Yeah. I was going to say, if this girl's got it going on, she would offer to let's just drive. Oh, it's no worries. Like, let's just drive. I'm so used to people being like, well, I need first class and I needed this. And, you know, this kind of like, don't you know who I am type of mentality. She was like, let's just, you want to drive?
Starting point is 00:43:52 Kind of like fun with it. I was like, you sure you're okay with that? She was like, yeah, let's go. And I was like, cool, let's jump. So we jumped. We just grabbed our bags. We packed. We went in and we drove.
Starting point is 00:44:01 And it had the most incredible five-hour drive. There was traffic and it was on a Friday night and it was like whatever stressful but we had so much fun I was like this girl's got something yeah she got something going on and it's and I think when you travel with someone you can see yeah yeah yeah stressful experiences yes I do agree that if you travel with someone you can see a lot and that's what I'm saying that stress can come out there too but I do think it's it's almost a way to create a living lab and set up a trip in the first three months of the relationship it doesn't have to be elaborate it can be something as quick as Vegas could be a
Starting point is 00:44:33 weekend trip it doesn't have to be like two weeks somewhere watch how they do because I will tell you that's the test somebody who can be chill while they travel done that's that's one it's almost like a final exam really before you get committed relationship yeah before you exclusively commit and again for people to know this doesn't mean you have to have air tickets and this it could really be like a road trip it could be a camping trip it could be any number of things but like a few days where it's really just you and them and there's because when you travel inevitably, it's something, right? And to watch how you manage that. It's a great test because if it's a narcissistic person, if everything
Starting point is 00:45:12 isn't just so perfect, and the thing is you got to watch how they, they gaslight, try to gaslight it away. If you start getting a little leery on, this is not okay. They're going to make it into, don't you understand? I wanted to make it perfect for you okay I just wanted it to be a great trip you know and and so because if you might be pushing back and saying you know the way you were acting under stress I just trying to make it right for you and now you're feeling so guilty because they were trying to make it right for you so I will tell folks this if you're noticing there's some of those early patterns and you decide to distance from this relationship because it feels like there's some red flags, don't tell them the why. Really?
Starting point is 00:45:52 Yeah. You ain't their teacher, their life coach. You're trying to get out of this relationship. Because if you tell them the why, they're going to gaslight you. They're going to say, well, I was stressed. I was stressed. I was trying to do something nice for you. You being unappreciative you're unappreciative exactly you're sensing a red flag you can make it about yourself and say yeah you know whatever your
Starting point is 00:46:15 reasons are i think work's getting to be a lot for me or maybe this isn't the right time for me to have a relationship and people say well drney, isn't that a missed opportunity? No, they ain't listening to you. So it really, if you say to them, this is why, it'll be gaslight city and you're going to stay in it. Because I think people feel like, well, I need to tell them and maybe they'll improve. They're not going to improve. That's the radical existence. What about if, what if someone feels just stuck in a relationship? Maybe there's
Starting point is 00:46:46 narcissistic tendencies, maybe not, but they feel stuck in a relationship. What's a good conversation that someone should have with their partner to evaluate where it's at and how they can get unstuck, whether there's narcissism or not? What's just, what's your opinions on that? I mean, it's a different, it's an, it's a different scenario, right? Because I think in a, in a narcissistic relationship, you're working for survival, right? So you may not even, I have to tell you, people in narcissistic relationships may not initially feel stuck. They may be like, okay, it's, it's like the MacGyver of relationship situations. Like what kind of duct tape do I need to use to fix this thing, right?
Starting point is 00:47:26 So you're doing, doing, doing. Where people feel stuck in a narcissistic relationship is when they get in too deep. Share a place, kids, marriage. That's where the stuckness happens because I think by and large, and then honestly there's one big interesting thing with narcissistic relationships is the fear that the narcissist is going to change for the next person because there's a lot of stuff they like about that person like they're really attracted to them they have great sex with them they they're charismatic they have shared interests people love them they've got a really amazing
Starting point is 00:47:58 career job status whatever whatever it may be there's a lot of magnetic qualities. And so that idea that the new person is going to get, you know, Mr. Magnetic is actually really overwhelming. But in the sense of stuckness, it's an interesting issue. And it's something I've encountered even, there's sort of the kind of the standard advice around like, how do you start dating again in this relationship? How do you keep that piece of it alive? How do you keep giving it some level of priority status? How do you make sure you do communicate, make the time?
Starting point is 00:48:41 Part of that is, I mean, mindfulness has such an important role in human relationships not just intimate relationships all relationships everybody's talking about mindfulness mindfulness mindfulness it means paying attention to what's in front of you and that means that it's it can be the littlest things about oh my gosh that's right he had an appointment he had a meeting at two you text him at three like hey how did that meeting go I was just thinking of you that stuff becomes the stuff of the relationship and then saying hey you had a tough one today let's cook this go here pop the champagne it's that idea that someone's noticing you so put mindfulness can be one piece of the stuckness. The other is, do you have shared vision? I mean, we talk about this in the workplace all the time.
Starting point is 00:49:30 But is that there? Because it does. And that doesn't even mean there's something wrong with someone if they don't have shared vision. But sometimes if you don't have that, that can contribute to the stuckness because you're not working towards a common goal, right? If you have a company and one person's like, I want to sell lots of hand lotion. And the other person's like, I really envision us as being a salsa company.
Starting point is 00:49:53 You're going to be stuck. Right. Someone's chopping tomatoes. Someone's like putting on all this lotion. So you're going to be stuck. So it's the salsa hand lotion of it all. Like one of you may be wanting to work towards family and children. The other one wants to travel the world.
Starting point is 00:50:06 Both people are afraid to talk about it. And so how do you get unstuck? You actually go to the edge of the cliff and recognize that if you open up and they go, because that's the fear, that fear of abandonment, that fear of being alone, that fear of loss, that if you can go to the edge of the cliff and say this is actually what I want and can tolerate that early in the game especially if you don't have stuff like kids and commitments and all that where you spoke in your truth and they can say that's not what I want and not personalize it because as kids it's it's almost like the
Starting point is 00:50:46 equivalent of bringing our picture to our parents and say look what I drew and the parent not caring or even worse the parents say you're not my kid anymore because that's a bad oh my god yeah yeah right and so what the idea that we could bring our truth to someone and they'd say, yeah, no, that's not what I want. It starts becoming the sunk cost fallacy, which kills most relationships, right? That's the idea of I've already put all this resource into something. That's how people get stuck is the sunk cost fallacy. And you've got to remember behavioral economics often does have some of these answers. You've already put the money in. You've got a human human experience don't put more into this and so then you have the conversation and I've actually seen some people have beautiful ends
Starting point is 00:51:31 to their relationship where they say I you know I still have this I'm not ready for x or y I don't want to do x or y that's not the direction I want to go in and they manage to salvage friendships and genuine curiosity in each other and then that and then that's that yeah but it's scary it takes a lot of courage for someone to end a relationship no matter what type of you know and I wouldn't even say it's ended I think it takes a lot of courage to speak your truth in a relationship it's not even the ending it's saying what I want in this relationship is I want us to set I want to have kids I want to live I want to move out of the city I want to put our focus there and the other person might say I don't want those things and that's when you say okay then we're on very different paths but it's so easy for me to
Starting point is 00:52:20 sit here in a studio and intellectually say this I'm let's say I'm a 39 year old woman that's not what then what then yeah you know now you're thinking oh my god I want a child this is this is what's in front of me but I'm good and then they start doing the math I'm gonna meet how many years now I'm 42 I want to find someone yeah is there someone better than this yeah all these things and it's not even like or not even better as much as somebody who's more on my path. This is how it happens because we do forget that there is a sort of a biological piece to all of this. I mean, reproductive technology is changing that. And some women out there and women close to me have said, you know what?
Starting point is 00:53:00 I want the kid. I'm not so sure I want the relationship. And should I fall in love with someone? I't want to fight with them for over custody so women are having their own children without a partner and saying i now now motherhood's out of the game it's actually easier to date and now i'm going to meet a man either he wants a woman with a child or he doesn't if he doesn't he's not my guy but i'll never have to fight this guy for custody of this kid it's a new world and people who are making allowances for not wanting to get stuck in toxic relationships are going a different path. And I know men who have done that, too.
Starting point is 00:53:31 Men who have gotten surrogates and said, I want to be a father. No, they look. They find this. I'm going to get donor eggs. They get donor eggs. And they find surrogates. And they're like, I want to be a being a father to me was foremost if i meet and fall in love with someone super but i want to be a father it's not
Starting point is 00:53:53 cheap though so these are very privileged folks who can do this but the fact is that there are paths forward in a way and i think that the amount of damage, Louis, that people being raised in toxic relationships, having witnessed toxic relationships, may be one of the biggest psychological crises that most people bring into adulthood. So I think making different choices is how we were raised. And not breaking the cycle. We have crappy blueprints. Very crappy. I have this, I don't know if I want to call it a formula, but just some steps that I've been developing through my own healing journey and helped me in this transition towards what to create when stepping into a new relationship. The first one is for a conscious, healthy relationship. The first one is you working on your healing journey before you get into it.
Starting point is 00:55:00 Or if you're into it, start it while you start the relationship, being in a healthy, focusing on a whole healthy body, mind, spirit, and soul, healing the past and being on that journey. Step one. Without that, I feel like it's not a strong foundation, right? Because you're going to be more susceptible. Step two is, I don't know if this, for me, feel free to pick a hole at this. Step two would be to do the love language test with the person you're dating and to see if you're in alignment with the way you receive and give love naturally. I think in previous relationships, for whatever reason, I chose women that didn't receive the love that I naturally gave.
Starting point is 00:55:42 They liked acts of service and gifts. I was like, I don't care about giving someone a gift because it's not value for me. I like praising someone and touching someone. Words of affirmation. Yeah, and touching them and giving affection and telling them how much I appreciate them. But they wanted a gift to feel loved
Starting point is 00:55:59 because that was their blueprint. So I was always doing something that was more work for someone to feel loved. And in the current relationship, we have like identical love languages in order. So we both naturally show up who we are and feel loved by the other person. So it's just less friction. I don't have to think, I need to buy a gift or I need to do this every week that I normally wouldn't want to do. do this every week that I normally wouldn't want to do. That's number two. Number three, four, and five is getting clear with your honest truth about your values, your vision, and your lifestyle.
Starting point is 00:56:36 Kind of like what you were saying. If your values are out of alignment, it's going to be challenging. If your vision is, I want to make hot sauce and you want to make shoes, we have a different shared vision of our relationship. And if you want to live in the city and i want to live in the country with the lifestyle there's going to be some friction there um number number six uh for me this is this was a non-negotiable entering this current relationship maybe this is too tough but for me i was like we need to enter a relationship in therapy and start the relationship in therapy so that we can communicate in a conscious way with a third party about agreements. You know, there's going to be things that come up. There's no perfect relationship.
Starting point is 00:57:14 You're going to have a different lifestyle, this and this. But can we create agreements together so there's alignment on our communication, our agreements, to just minimize some friction, not have expectations but get clear on agreements. And a standard we both have. And then with that, going through those first six things, choosing to fully accept the person for who they are. Once you've gotten clear on all these things over a period of time, saying, okay, I'm not expecting you to change into a potential in the future but do i accept who you are from your values your vision your lifestyle your
Starting point is 00:57:50 your healing journey we're doing therapy together um can i accept this person my girlfriend she's an actress so she's does movies she's on set she's kissed guys on movies in the past and maybe she will in the future i had to be like do I accept this is who she is yeah yeah yeah or am I going to need to change her and say you can't do this correct correct so I said I fully accept you you know and um and this process has been very powerful for us I'm sure from my personal experience what's worked for me uh is there anything that you would poke a hole in or add or remove from these kind of seven things that I've been, you know, kind of playing with myself? So it's almost like I'd make a step zero. Okay, give it to me. And a step zero is addressing legacy issues and your own traumas and all of that,
Starting point is 00:58:36 right? Because the word healing is so ephemeral and it's so sort of n-specific but when I think of hundreds probably now thousands of people whose narcissistic abuse in intimate relationship stories I've heard it was a they went into the relationship and actually I take that back because some folks enter this relationship confident as can be it's not not like they entered in deficit territory. But it was for a lot of people, for many people, their own backstory shaped what they thought they even deserved in a relationship. And I will tell you this, part of that step zero is how do you reconcile yourself with societal messages? You had said something earlier that made me think about this too, which is this idea of the romance and how we view relationships early on. We're very programmed, whether we like to think that we are or we're not. We can, you know,
Starting point is 00:59:35 everyone brings up the Disney movies, but it's beyond Disney movies. It's about what a love story is supposed to look like, what at least a heteronormative relationship is supposed to look like what at least a heteronormative relationship is supposed to look like um you know we have these and this is where we get this idea of a gift like what do you how many people say you mean he didn't give you anything for valentine's day and i've had to say that and i'm in a relationship i said if he brought home something home for valentine's day i would slap that man silly because figure what are you wasting your money for a fool but the day after the candy is off 50 so you're welcome to go to CVS and grab me a box, honey. So it's a— Because your value was something different.
Starting point is 01:00:10 Right, yeah. And so it's that. But beyond that is that we get this message of what it's supposed to be. And when it's not that, we think, well, there's got to be something wrong with me. wrong with me. And so I do think that there's some pushing back on existing sort of societal messaging. There is being aware of one's own legacy issues. What are you trying to work through? One's own history of trauma and those kinds of adverse experiences from early in life. To me, those are sort of like the step zero before the step one. So being aware of those things, talking to your partner about them or just being aware.
Starting point is 01:00:50 I think that's the word. Step zero is almost like before you ever meet any partner. And part of me is thinking, you know, the healing journey is being aware of those things, addressing them, you know, reflecting on them, and then starting to integrate it, some type of therapeutic healing process. on them and then starting to integrate it, some type of therapeutic healing process. And then I think that the other thing I'd say is the, going back to that societal message, is the abyss of it all.
Starting point is 01:01:14 I think a lot of people would hear a list like that and be like, homie, you're high. Like, if I do this, I am going to be alone for the rest of my damn life. But I was willing to do that. You were. Because I had felt so much suffering inside from the pain. I was like, I'd rather be alone with a cat and dog. Correct. Be peaceful. Right.
Starting point is 01:01:26 Than be in a relationship where I have to, you know, give up who I am every day and walk on eggshells. But that means that people have to understand that giving up who I am means that they value the who I am. That that's actually something to give up. And I think that what I wish this happened in school. I wish that a significant part of the curriculum was on the who am I what am I about what do I stand for what matters to me what are my values I got a I got a text from my daughter two days ago she's in in college right now still trying to figure out her major and she texts me and she's like mom I've decided I'm going to pursue a career in the arts and I
Starting point is 01:02:06 text her back like that is absolutely magnificent and she texts me back said no mother ever do you realize that I'm probably never going to have a lot of money I said girl I've been broke since I was 50 so I said and I wasn't happy so I said if you wake up every day excited about what you do you're good and so what my daughter was doing was she was unfurling herself in front of me. Now, inside, am I thinking like, you know, rice and beans in your studio apartment? Okay, yeah, you could do that. You could do that. That's all.
Starting point is 01:02:35 But you know what? If you're doing what you love, that rice and beans in that studio apartment is going to be A-okay. It's going to feel like a filet mignon, you know. And she's loved. You know know that this is not like how dare you take this expensive education you are loved and i want you to be you and i want you to find your path you know it doesn't definitely not how i was parented you know and that's not how a lot of people you're loved if you do what we tell you you're loved if
Starting point is 01:03:00 the word doctor is in front of your name they're like i don't care what damn way you get to that you're gonna be a doctor here's the funny thing you the doctor's in front of your name, they're like, I don't care what damn way you get to that. You're going to be a doctor. Here's the funny thing. The doctor is in front of your name. Do you feel loved or did you feel loved after you got that accomplishment? No. And I think I became the wrong kind of doctor. I think they had the whole MD thing in mind.
Starting point is 01:03:16 Sure, sure. But, you know, I also understood where they came from. As immigrants in the generation they came, they really did believe. They said no one in this country is going to take you seriously, you know, look at your face so they said at least with the doctor you're going to get a little respect when they say your name so I'm like okay I could work with that but the fact is I did think like oh they're going to love me more if I do this no they had their own story but I think that for and I'm bringing in my daughter is like she's trying to figure out who she is who are you what do you stand for and And that idea, what are
Starting point is 01:03:46 your personal values? Like I do leadership training with folks and they actually take a values deck of cards and you realize like, whereas if you and I did that exercise, we should do that one. We should have that episode. I should bring in my values card. Let's do that. For sure. I'm going to bring them in and we're both going to do it. And then I think you put your top 15 and you take a look at them. Right. And so ours are going to be completely different. And yet I adore you, you're a friend of mine, all of that, but we'll have very, and you know what, I'm going to get your own deck, take it home, do it with Martha. Well, it's funny you say that because before we got committed and maybe you think I'm high because these things were important for me because I was like, I'd rather scare her away from being intentional about my communication and my values and my vision and who I am or what I want to create in this world than attract someone on a false foundation. So I want to push back on your language there.
Starting point is 01:04:41 I want to scare her away. How interesting that you still view that. Not scare her away, but make sure that we're the right match right but you're you're like but let's language matters I'm going to scare her away the real Lewis is scary is sort of that and that right right you know that's sort of there's a certain ingrained assumption that if I'm me that is going to scare her rather than simply I'm going to show her the real me and let's see if that's a fit. So I hear some unconscious bias within you towards that. I like that. I like that. I'll start correcting myself. That's good. So I wanted to share her with the real me and be honest about all these things that I wanted to create in my life unapologetically. Let's say that. I wanted
Starting point is 01:05:21 to be unapologetic about what I wanted to create. And so before we got together, you know, got into a committed exclusive, you know, dating experience, we had had an amazing few months already. Like so many trips and things. And it was just like peaceful, right? And so I took her to Sedona. And I took her up a vortex, right? Like this kind of little mountain vortex in Sedona.
Starting point is 01:05:49 And I had a workbook for us, a journal. And I gave it to her. I put some music on and I said, listen, I want to do a values exercise with you. Good for you. So it's kind of like the value deck. But I said, I want you, I put some music on, some gentle music. We're up. The sun is setting.
Starting point is 01:06:10 We're on this energy vortex I said I want you to be so honest and authentic with what your core values are and this is this is many things that are part of your values in your life you know take five ten minutes right I'm not going to look at it I'm not going to uh you know you do your thing I do that she writes it I then I I said give me a blank piece of paper and I take it and I do the same exercise. And I said, now I want us to look at them side by side without a bias, without me seeing it first and then me writing down the same things because I want you to think I have the same values. Are we in alignment? Is there alignment? Not perfection. Is there alignment? 80% of the things we wrote down were the same, right? And the 20% that was different, it was like, okay, cool.
Starting point is 01:06:50 That's nothing against that here and nothing against here. And it felt just more organic, right? It felt because we were honest about it. Right. I don't think there were many relations in the past where I talked about values and vision and lifestyle until it was too late. Correct. Correct. When we're breaking down and it's like this frustration and we're like, what are we doing?
Starting point is 01:07:08 Right. But we've already chemically bonded and we've already like gotten deeper into a commitment and you're like, well, we just lacked the, I guess, emotional courage or intelligence to have those conversations early. And I just don't think a lot of people live their lives from that examined standpoint. Like what are my values? What do I stand for? And people are like, what do you mean what do i stand for i can't afford gas you know and so that and i understand that right i'm surviving you are surviving but there are
Starting point is 01:07:34 certain things you that you're willing to fight really really fight for and be and that you actually do need you know for some people for example spirituality may really matter you cannot minimize that. And if a person for whom spirituality matters enters into a relationship for someone who doesn't, it's not an indictment of either of them, but that may not be a language they can use with each other, which might leave both of them frustrated. But there's some things that you're not going to fully map on to someone else. Someone may say, I'm very comfortable with your spiritual world. I'm simply not going to participate in it.
Starting point is 01:08:08 And then that will work. And they'll say, I can see how joyful it makes you. But the struggle here, though, the main sort of pushback I'm going to have on your list is your list is predicated on two healthy people. That's why step one is both need to be healing. Yeah. And both need to be in a therapeutic journey together. That's why for me, if one person is working on their healing journey and doing some type of therapy consistently with accountability and emotional intelligence and integrating that process, and the other is not, I feel like it's going to be challenging.
Starting point is 01:08:39 I think it's going to be impossible. That's why I said enter the relationship in therapy, which again, this is maybe hard for people to do. I think it's great to enter a relationship in therapy. It's just not a typical third date activity. Hey, instead of going out for drinks, you want to come to therapy? This is after a few months. But even still, I do think that there's a business for me to open, like third date therapy. But here's the thing.
Starting point is 01:09:03 What's the alternative? Getting in a relationship where 50%, you know, go through divorce within however many years and then those that stay together more unhappy and then you're suffering and you're feeling trapped and you feel stuck. And it seems like very few in their first marriage make, you know, create a peaceful, thriving life
Starting point is 01:09:22 with, you know, challenges and bumps along the way. But it just seems like it's rare. And so if you want that, if you want a healthy, thriving, long-term committed relationship, not perfect, but a healthy one. I mean, I feel like it's rare. You got to do the extreme or the different things that people have never done. I don't know. Right. But you also have to value yourself.
Starting point is 01:09:44 And that's the work, right, is for a person to be able to say, I am valuable. And if a person can get there, all relationships in some ways have a fighting chance, not toxic ones, but because they do value themselves. So they're willing to set a boundary. They're willing to extract from unhealthy situations. They are mindful and aware of what another person, you know, they're self-aware.
Starting point is 01:10:08 They're able to and also aware of another person and can make judgments and statements and all of that about the, you know, in an informed, aware manner. And then above all else, they have empathy, right? And either you got it or you don't. And in the absence of empathy, your whole system goes away, right? Without that, this doesn't work. Compassion and empathy, yeah. And I think that there's, you know, I think that a lot of people right now in the world are engaging in pseudo healing. And I think it's just narcissistic navel gazing and they're actually not really healing. What does that mean, pseudo healing?
Starting point is 01:10:42 I think it's that they're doing whatever they're doing. Like I meditate 75 times a day and I do mindfulness this and I ayahuasca that and blah, blah, blah, blah. And they do all of that, but they're still really going through the world in a rather monstrous, entitled, dismissive, contemptuous way. But it's sort of like, you know, what I call healing porn or recovery porn. Like, look at my recovery recovery i'm so recovery-ish and it's like a spiritual bypass exactly it's a spiritual bypass and that that gives me pause so you can't even just say oh they're doing all this work on themselves i don't care how much work they're doing on themselves how are they showing up behavior yeah how are you showing up what's your thoughts on plant medicine as a professional you know in terms of a a therapy
Starting point is 01:11:23 so in terms of helping people heal. Right. I tread so lightly here because as a licensed person, I always have to recognize that my feedback will always carry weight. I'm not an MD, so I can't prescribe medication. I do believe this, though. What's happening in plant medicine, what's happening in the psychedelic world is the future of psychiatry. I do. I think that there's things happening there. The early
Starting point is 01:11:48 clinical trials on MDMA and PTSD, we're seeing some really extraordinary things starting to happen. And I'm enough of a cynic and I don't know maybe I look like I have a tinfoil hat right on right now, but I do believe big pharma doesn't want this to happen because I think that there may be a lot of answers lurking there. But folks, this is not about you going home and going to a rave and doing some MDMA and saying, oh, I'm treating myself for PTSD. No, no, no, no, no, no. The treatment protocols for this have to be done with licensed people in controlled settings. Therapy is happening while the person is using the
Starting point is 01:12:27 psychedelic. This is under the most, it has to be done under the most clear formatted protocol. So this isn't just like party drug time and look at me, I'm treating myself. This is not self-medication. It's none of that. This is highly controlled. The dosages are controlled. But I do think there's a tremendous future there. I would be, it would be arrogant for me to say otherwise. And when I've talked with folks doing this kind of work, it's impressive what they're showing. I'd like to see more data. I, you know, I'm not, when it comes to what I do from a practice perspective, for example, I can't say to someone, you need to be on Zoloft.
Starting point is 01:13:05 I have to say, I'm going to give you a referral to a psychiatrist. You will work with that psychiatrist, and they will make whatever medication recommendation they have for you. But I can't, the way my license works, make clear recommendations. So if a client of mine says, I want to explore this, I'll say, if you do, we just simply need to make sure you're doing it with a licensed, so somebody who's doing this with a licensed, you know, so somebody who's doing this in a very legitimized, thoughtful kind of a way.
Starting point is 01:13:29 Yeah, I have a, I feel like I have an open mind to a lot of things, but for whatever reason, I, it's going to be intentional with my words here. I've met a lot of people. I have a lot of friends who have done lots of different, you know, ayahuasca and plant medicine journeys and experiences and retreats and all these things that swear by it, right? Yeah. And people I respect, people that I love and I appreciate, and there's nothing wrong with it. But years down the road, I don't see it having, like, the healing effect that I'm like, okay, well, you keep going to doing it.
Starting point is 01:14:09 Right. But where is the progress? There's like a week or two of this euphoria. Yes. But then you're still struggling and you're still being a bad person. And it's not for everyone that does this that I know, but I've just experienced that where people swear by it as this euphoria experience but then six months later they're suffering again right it's the but then there's the bypass though right because the work and and I I've worked with narcissistic clients Lewis it's not like I'm only on the survivor side
Starting point is 01:14:39 I've worked with Mindy in my time and let me tell you I mean that's I I feel like foreman in the ring and mercifully i'm actually really good and you know actually more like ali because i can get them against the ropes and exhaust you probably created the energy field so you're not like yeah or i can take the actually no foreman gets them against the rubs ali can take the punch yeah i can take the punch and so it's a but what i would see is i would say because because here's the thing, what would be really interesting being in the room with a narcissistic client who actually saw through the therapy. They didn't drop out. One of the interesting things for me, I was fortunate because I had no spots in my practice and I've completely downsized it and mostly have ended most of it.
Starting point is 01:15:20 But back in the day I'd say, you don't't show up you lose your slot and you're not in this practice and I'm like well I don't want to lose my slot right they don't like that so they'd show up but the fact is is that when they'd show up they would sometimes say like I would say gosh that thing you just told me you said to your wife like how did she feel and how do you know no no they'd be like I didn't really think about it I'm like let's think about it shall we and that's something called mentalization when you have someone reflect on what they think how they think someone feels how they think their behavior is affecting someone like put yourself in that headspace so I said how do you think your wife felt when you did x or y oh yeah I guess that
Starting point is 01:16:00 wasn't cool okay so what what might you want someone to do for you in that circumstance? Right. Get them to do it. And they would sometimes say like, yeah, you're right. That wasn't so they weren't like punching me in the face. They were just kind of like, okay, that wasn't cool. Would they keep making the same mistakes? Yes. Me repeatedly saying, what do you think she felt? Or sometimes I'd even say like, that's not cool. You know, that was that. And I would often say, how would you feel if your wife saw the text that you sent? I divorce her. Really? You know, and so they and I said, do you see you have a double standard? Here's my point, though, Lewis, and one of the most, you know, and this is going to be sort of a what I call like a composite of multiple people, you know, from a confidentiality
Starting point is 01:16:47 perspective. But I do remember working with a series of people to the end of their, their relationships. And a couple of them said, more than a few said, you're telling me to make my marriage work. I got to listen to her, talk about her emotional stuff. You know, she's getting old. I don't even like to look at her that much anymore you're telling me that I can't like all right so I'm having I'm just having sex with this other person but you're telling me it hurts her you know like okay so you're telling me I've got to listen to her and I have to care about her feelings and and then and you're also telling me I have to do this with this other woman I'm having sex with who thinks I'm gonna have a relationship with her, please. And like that. Okay. So you know what? I remember one of
Starting point is 01:17:28 my more successful, you know, some of the more successful cases, they come back and say, I divorced the wife and I dumped the mistress. Like if this is, if I don't want to be causing this much harm, they weren't sadistic, you know, but, and after the therapy, they're like, okay, if that, if this is never going to change, I don't, I, I change, it's very clear I want to do what I want to do. And I thought that was a win. They're like, I'm not changing. They were even aware they weren't going to change. Like, I'm not listening to her nonsense.
Starting point is 01:17:53 And I don't like looking at her. And I don't think she's attractive anymore. It's like, yikes. But it's a win for her and for them. It's a win for the other people who have been released. That's big. Most folks, most narcissistic folks or people with these personalities don't stay in therapy. They're not great candidates for therapy.
Starting point is 01:18:10 And my guess is to your point about these people who all slide backwards, there ain't enough ayahuasca in the world to turn these people around. I can tell you that right now. There's not enough MDMA. There's nothing. I think everyone's looking for the empathy pill, right? That's what there's, that's not how it works. You know, there's just no such thing. There needs to be a, you know, this could be something that unlocks you and allows you to start processing and bringing up, you know, potential wounds that you could start to heal.
Starting point is 01:18:41 To do that work. Yes. But you've got to be willing to do some other therapies that's not, to heal. To do that work. But you've got to be willing to do some other therapies that's not external focused around like a medical drug or something to fix you. You've got to do the inner work to continue that journey. Right. Exactly. And that's why I'm saying that any of the protocols that are showing any efficacy around things like PTSD and everything have to be done in a managed circumstance. And to your point, I remember once meeting a guy swearing by whatever psychedelic they're swearing this is it yes can i curse on here because i'm gonna tell you right now this guy was the biggest a-hole yeah yeah i have ever met i mean i he was just a jerk just a jerk and cold and abrupt and he was but yet he had the audacity to say I am so empathic now I'm like you know like okay that's not that's not how it's usually done but I didn't I was not I had no skin
Starting point is 01:19:32 in this game I was just sort of watching this conversation happen he was talking to a group of people but he was just a jerk for the full two days I had to spend in his presence and yet was extolling how much growth he had had. And so I don't know what that meant to him. And maybe people in his life thought there was progress. You know, remember, I mean, if you're starting from negative 10, even getting up to zero is growth. So there is that too. But it's really tough because I do think there was an interesting article in the New York Times, actually, I think it was today or, about this idea of like, does being in therapy make me a good person? And is that what the point of therapy is, to make someone a good person?
Starting point is 01:20:14 What really is a good person? So it really raised a lot of philosophical issues. Interesting. It's subjective to a point, but I don't think it is I think one thing we do know when we look at personality in general the I do think we do believe that compassion and respect make for a good person but we also live in a world where people like that are viewed as suckers right you have to have discernment around things and not just buy into what everyone's but it's not even that if you're just especially men this is and I really feel for men having to endure
Starting point is 01:20:49 this if you're compassionate sweet and respectful often it's not those are not masculinized quality versus the guy who is like a corporate raider who has a ton of money who drives the fast car is is somehow viewed as strong that's I, this is an instant right now that that's right there. The paradox of what masculinity is in our modern age. Until we can make compassion sexy, we're in trouble. What do you wish every man could learn to develop more of in society? Being vulnerable with emotion, to share vulnerability, to share sadness. The number of men, for example, who've been sexually abused, we don't talk about it. One in six. Yeah, exactly. And for women, there's actually, at least in therapy, I'm talking about the safe space. But I'm telling you for clients I've worked
Starting point is 01:21:36 with, with male clients, I remember some of them saying, I don't want to, I have something to talk to you. Can we do this session by phone? I don't want to look at your face. So shameful. So shameful. And when I taught abnormal psychology at the university level and I was teaching about adverse childhood experiences like child abuse, child sexual abuse, what I did notice was that some of the male students were really shifting uncomfortably in their seats. And I would slow down. I'm like, listen, if we don't take this topic slow. It felt like the women in the class were actually had processed that a little bit more on the macro,
Starting point is 01:22:12 like overall, than the male students in the class. So I think that to hold space, to be able to feel safe with talking about their insecurities, their vulnerabilities, their feelings, to show tears. I mean, there is nothing more beautiful when a person's able to cry because they're feeling a genuine emotion. And I think of how we pathologize men for doing that. We do. We literally pathologize. It'll be the cold open on Saturday Night Live. They'll make jokes about it. There'll be memes about it. It horrifies me. So why would a man ever be vulnerable if he thinks he's going to be turned into a big joke? It's interesting you say this. And I wrote a book five years ago called The Mask
Starting point is 01:22:55 of Masculinity, which is about my journey of letting go of anger, frustration, resentment, and stepping more into vulnerability, right? The healing journey and allowing myself to be vulnerable, talking about sexual abuse for the first time in 25 years since it happened, and just unpacking it all, what it means to be a man, how to take off these masks. And in the process of doing this, I would go to events and talk about the book, right? And there'd probably be 50-50 men and women who would be in the room. And I would ask at some point in the event, I'd say, all the women in the room, raise your hand if you once a week talk to your girlfriends or you have a place where you can go
Starting point is 01:23:34 and talk about your challenges or insecurities or fears and things like this of life. Your body, you know, shaming issues, whatever it might be, you can talk to someone about it. And pretty much every woman in the room would raise their hand I said keep your hands up if you do this every day with your girlfriends your mom your sister and pretty much all of them kind of laugh and say yeah I call people every day and I said okay the guys in the room raise your hand you know if if you do this once a month you talk with your guy friends and you feel safe to be vulnerable and open up about
Starting point is 01:24:03 your insecurities and all these different things as well. Maybe two hands out of hundreds once a month would raise their hand. And I'd say, are you guys part of a church group that does this kind of like mandatory, like structural thing where you feel safe in this place? And they all kind of laugh like, yes. And I go, how many of you do this once a year? No hands. And so I go, ladies, of you do this once a year? No hands.
Starting point is 01:24:29 And so I go, ladies, imagine going once a month. Not even going once a month. Not even going once a year. Imagine going a lifetime without ever being vulnerable and opening up because you feel like you're going to be shamed. Just think about the weight. I'm not saying how men act and treat you and this and this is okay or actions are okay but just think about yeah it's true that it's true and I had and I talked to different men throughout this period who said Lewis I started the opening up with my wife and after years that she would always say I wish you were more vulnerable I wish you would show emotion more not just be stoic or angry and some men would say listen I started to do this and I got the worst response from my wife
Starting point is 01:25:11 my partner interesting because they weren't available to receive me being they're so used to me being stoic and having it all together that when I was emotional they needed me to be strong for their emotional challenges. Some of these women, I'm not saying all these women. So how do we get women to accept the idea of men starting to shift and be able to show emotion, to cry, to say, hey, I'm struggling. I'm really going with some issues right now. And I've got some stuff I've got to deal with. How do we get women also to be like, hey, it's encouraging, it's okay,
Starting point is 01:25:43 and keep a safe space so that men will continue to and not be like well I'm never doing that again she she laughed she made fun of me like why would I ever do this I'm going to be strong and tough again and that's something that you know all everyone has to work on is how do they get to say what are our um our biases about masculinity does that how how do we would that change how you view a partner with that? You know, I mean, again, we, you and I, I was watching you talk about something recently where someone was talking about masculine and feminine energy and all that. I'm not so sure I agree with that dichotomy, to be honest with you, but I do think that it is a,
Starting point is 01:26:19 you know, the shaming of emotion and anger being the only acceptable emotion. So men use that. They, they, they've turned it into like the Swiss army knife of emotion. I'm sad only acceptable emotion. So men use that. They've turned it into like the Swiss army knife of emotion. I'm sad. I'm going to be angry. I'm vulnerable. I'm going to be angry, angry, angry, angry, right? It's like, it's just like the one, the one stop shop kind of thing. And to me, anger is an incredibly acceptable, healthy emotion. It's in the whole, but it's meant to be a whole drawer full of stuff, not just one emotion you use for everything. And that's the challenge is that men do have emotion, anger. And it's sort of switching that up, societally not pathologizing that, and women holding space for that.
Starting point is 01:26:57 But I think the other piece for men is I want them to have more deep friendships. Again, something else I read, a great article I read about a guy wrote this idea of how many men out there have colonoscopy friends. And that headline grabbed me. So I kept reading, you know, what his point was, I think he had a girlfriend or wife or something. And he said, if she wasn't in my life, there's nobody to drive me home from a colonoscopy because you can't drive yourself home and you can't take an Uber home. So a person has to come and get you at the colonoscopy. That's vulnerable. It's very vulnerable. Most men don't have a colonoscopy.
Starting point is 01:27:28 And this is like men over the age of 40, which is when you'd be getting a colonoscopy, that men often don't have friendships. They have like, let's go play golf. Let's go watch a game. Let's meet at a bar. But that person, where women are really good at that, and in fact, it's why women often fare better
Starting point is 01:27:46 Later in life after a spouse dies, whereas a guy it's sort of like they'll often decline rather quickly Some women not because they flourish but some women actually do flourish, but they often have a stronger support network Because women are often doing that that cultivating of of social relationships And so because that's, because that's just something that's more validated for them. And so, and I love that analogy of the colonoscopy friend, like the person you call and say, can you pick me up from this? And that, go to work. You know, of course, I'm thinking of the friends I have, like, if you give me enough notice, of course, I'm going to come get you. And there's dozens of women I would do that for. And so,
Starting point is 01:28:29 when I even ran that by my partner, he got really sad. He's like, I don't think I have any colonoscopy friends. Yeah. And he's like, I got to work on that. And so, yeah. Dr. Romney, I appreciate you. I want people to get more of your work, Navigating Narcissism. Yeah, you got to tune in. Podcast, powerful. season 1 is almost complete season 2 is going to be coming out early next year but they can go through 30 episodes of the podcast if you want more go there, subscribe everywhere podcasts that you listen to
Starting point is 01:28:56 also your YouTube is an amazing resource they can go check that out as well subscribe there you've got an online program for people healing from narcissistic relationships and abuse can go check that out as well. Subscribe there. You've got an online program for people healing from narcissistic relationships and abuse. If they go to your website, doctor-romney.com, they can learn more about that. They can sign up and get that as well. You've got great content on social media. How else can we be of service to you today? I would say that, you know, for people
Starting point is 01:29:21 who want to do the deeper dive into healing, I have that monthly healing program. I know some people say, I don't know. I don't know if I'm getting this in therapy. I may not have the money. It's very affordable. And I'd say to people, try it for a month. If you don't like it, it's really not that much lost. And some people say, okay, this is working.
Starting point is 01:29:39 Well, you see there's a community of other people who have been through this. So definitely encourage people to check out my healing platform. They can go to my website and find that. And, you know, for people who want to hear lived experience, the podcast is great for that too, because on YouTube, I teach people about stuff. On Navigating Narcissism, I talk to people who've been through, and all kinds of things. They've survived cults. They've survived abusive relationships. They've survived spiritual abuse. They've survived, I mean, pick a form of abuse. We have talked about it. And so it's a real interesting opportunity to hear that conversation happen in real time and the insights people get when it's framed in that way. And like I said, YouTube is like a big old library where if I haven't talked about it, then drop me a line.
Starting point is 01:30:25 And if it makes sense, then I'll make a video about it. And that's where a lot of our content ideas come from. People saying, could you talk about this or that? So I do that. And then I'd say, you know what? Get out there and be empathic. Be compassionate. And practice what I call recognition.
Starting point is 01:30:39 And by recognition is that see other people. Feel them, experience them, hold space for them. Because that moment of recognition, for some people, this might be the very first time they've gotten it in years. And it can be a real eye opener. That every time we meet someone, there's something really extraordinary about them. Recognize it. Powerful stuff. I asked you a couple of questions last time.
Starting point is 01:31:06 But I want people to go to our previous episode to see your three truths and your definition of greatness. They probably have changed. Next time I'll ask you those again, but I want to acknowledge you first before I ask you the final question. I want to acknowledge you for what you just said about five minutes ago, about how I think it was a week or two ago in your own therapy, you realized you're still having awakenings and growth and creating more wholeness in yourself, which is really cool to see that you're teaching the work, but you're doing the work yourself.
Starting point is 01:31:31 Oh, you have to do the work. It would be disrespectful to everyone I work with if I didn't do the work myself. Well, I appreciate it and acknowledge you for how you show up in so many ways, in private conversations with people, the way you coach people, the way you're teaching in all the different platforms. So it's amazing. We need your voice. Very grateful for you and appreciate you for learning and using your wisdom from
Starting point is 01:31:54 experience on how to teach this stuff. I appreciate that. You're welcome. And my final question, I want people to go check the three truths in the previous episode. We'll link it up. But my final question is if you could go back to your younger self before the first narcissistic experience that you witnessed yourself. You probably weren't even aware of it, obviously. But if you could go back in before that and she was standing in front of you, whatever age that was, what are three things that you would say to her to support her in the journey she's about to experience or to help kind of like you know minimize some of the things that she was about to experience if you could go back with the wisdom you have what would you say to her I would say to her
Starting point is 01:32:56 I would say to her, keep getting lost in the daydreams because they are going to happen. And don't be afraid to change course. And especially that last one is don't be afraid to change course. And especially that last one is don't be afraid to change course. I'm somebody who went a very traditional educational route, you know, four years of undergrads, five years of grad school, one year of the training, like residency kind of thing, two years of postdoc. And there was a time in there that I thought to change course and I didn't. And there was a time in there that I thought to change course and I didn't and then I became an academic and tenure and blah, blah, blah. And when I was…golly, I really didn't change course. I was 55 years old and it worked out just fine.
Starting point is 01:33:39 I landed on my feet and…but there was a lot of work that had to lead up to that. There were times I was working three and four jobs but i would say don't be afraid to change course i don't know what would have been different if i had changed course when i was earlier in education i knew probably there was a different path for me there's a lot of dreams i haven't i i don't know that i might ever get a chance to do i've always wanted to live in another country and things like that i don't know if those will ever happen for me had i changed course those would have. So I'd tell her, change course. Like, it's okay if in the second year of grad school you're a journalist. And we end up where we end up.
Starting point is 01:34:11 So it's, I think that the path is the path. And, but I, yeah, those are, but I'd say it's going to be okay. And when I look at pictures of myself at that age, I'm thinking of my life exceeds anything that she would have allowed herself to think. That's beautiful. Dr. Romney, thanks so much. Appreciate it. Thank you so much. I hope you enjoyed today's episode and it inspired you on your journey towards greatness. Make sure to check out the show notes in the description for a full rundown of today's episode with all the important links.
Starting point is 01:34:45 And if you want weekly exclusive bonus episodes with me personally, as well as ad-free listening, then make sure to subscribe to our Greatness Plus channel exclusively on Apple Podcasts. Share this with a friend on social media and leave us a review on Apple Podcasts as well. Let me know what you enjoyed about this episode in that review. I really love hearing feedback from you and it helps us figure out how we can support and serve you moving forward. And I want to remind you, if no one has told you lately that you are loved, you are worthy, and you matter. And now it's time to go out there and do something great.

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