The School of Greatness - Master Your Relationships & Attract Lasting Love w/ Jay Shetty EP 1417
Episode Date: April 3, 2023https://lewishowes.com/mindset - Order a copy of my new book The Greatness Mindset today!Jay Shetty is a #1 New York Times bestselling author, award-winning podcast host of On Purpose, and the Chief P...urpose Officer of Calm. Since launching his video channel in 2016, Jay’s viral wisdom videos have garnered over 7 billion views and gained over 35 million followers globally. He is one of the more viewed people on the internet internationally. Be sure to check out Jay’s newest book, 8 Rules of Love.In this episode you will learn, The difference between toxic and conscious love. The greatest skill everyone should learn in order to master love.Why so many of us don’t feel worthy of love, and how to change that limiting mindset.For more, go to lewishowes.com/1417Check out Jay’s prior episodes here!https://link.chtbl.com/1386-pod5 Mistakes You Must Avoid To Find Deeper Connection: https://link.chtbl.com/1322-podCan You Make Money & Also Be Spiritual? https://link.chtbl.com/1298-podTrain Your Mind For Peace And Purpose Everyday: https://link.chtbl.com/953-pod
Transcript
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I firmly believe that taking charge of your mindset allows you to be in the driver's seat
of your life and unlock your potential. And that's why I'm thrilled to share that my new
book is out right now. It's called The Greatness Mindset. In it, you'll learn how to build a plan
for greatness through powerful exercises and toolkits designed to propel your life forward.
This is the book that I wish I had 20 years ago.
It's everything I've learned in the last decade with the research and the science to help you
unlock your mind. Make sure to go to lewishouse.com slash 2023 mindset to pick up your copy of my book,
The Greatness Mindset, today. Toxic love is when your trauma is the oxygen for your relationship.
If you think about the word, the idea that your trauma is what you're breathing into the relationship.
Welcome to the School of Greatness.
My name is Lewis Howes, a former pro athlete turned lifestyle entrepreneur.
pro-athlete turned lifestyle entrepreneur. And each week we bring you an inspiring person or message to help you discover how to unlock your inner greatness. Thanks for spending
some time with me today. Now let the class begin. I'm curious, what is the difference between toxic
love and conscious love? Because i feel like a lot of people
get into relationships based on a wound and it causes you know toxic chemicals that might feel
like love but then they unwind after six months a year two years and it feels like then it's
after six months a year two years and it feels like then it's not conscious love that they got into it from a chemical romance yeah wounded as opposed to conscious healing integrating that
into a relationship what is the difference between toxic love and conscious love toxic love
is where both people are working independently to use the relationship to serve
their own needs. That's toxic love. And conscious love is where both people independently take care
of themselves so they can bring their best self to each other. And where this often goes wrong is that toxic love turns into a competition.
Toxic love now is who's doing more for each other, who gives more love to each other,
who does more work around the house. You turn the whole thing into a competition,
which is not teamwork. And conscious love is not saying you're the selfless one,
it's you're making agreements. one. It's you're making
agreements. I think that's the mistake that love was constantly, conscious love was always like,
be selfless, love more than the other person, give more. That's not healthy either. What's
healthy is we're actually going to create boundaries. We're actually going to create
agreements. We're actually going to create principles. We're going to create rules.
The reason why I call the book Eight Rules of Love is my hope that it will inspire other couples to
create their own list of rules in their own relationship. A conscious relationship is one
that is built on a foundation of healthy agreements. Yes. Toxic love is, it's interesting when you look at the word toxic as well.
Tell me.
So toxic love is when your trauma is the oxygen for your relationship.
Right?
If you think about the word, like the idea that your trauma is what you're breathing
into the relationship.
Oh my gosh, that is so true.
Right?
You're just breathing your trauma into the relationship.
So you bring all your baggage, all your insecurities, and you're somehow expecting the other person
to inhale it all and then figure out how to respond and react.
Right.
Whereas a conscious relationship is saying that I have these things.
I'm trying to heal them.
I'm going to make my partner aware of what I'm healing because I'm not fully healed.
Yes.
And now that they're aware and
I'm working on it, we can also work on it together. So I think we've also had this unhealthy idea of
conscious love being you're fully healed. And then you come, it's like, that's not true. It's a
journey. And so, but the thing about the journey is, are you working on yourself? Have you communicated
to your partner what you're working on so that they can be aware? And thirdly, have
you found a way to get support? I had a friend whose partner was addicted to porn and they came
up to me and they were saying that their partner feels shameful and guilty and wants to work on it.
And I said, you have two choices. You can either leave them because you don't believe them and this affects you negatively, which it was,
or you can stay with them and support them
through their journey because they want to change.
It's not that you're forcing them to change.
And they're honest about it.
They're coming to you about it.
They're vulnerable.
They're vulnerable.
They're open about it.
They're honest about it.
And what I found in that scenario was that
that person was able to support their partner.
Now they have a really healthy relationship.
But the thing is that we can't also, a toxic relationship is also when you use someone's
trauma against them. So someone's been vulnerable with you about what they're struggling with.
And now you use it as ammunition in an argument to shoot them down. And so when people are vulnerable with you, when they're honest with
you, when they're transparent with you, don't use that against them because basically you're saying
to them, don't be honest with me. And I think that's this really interesting thing. We all say,
I want someone who's honest. But then when someone says something honest, that's uncomfortable,
we say, no, no, no, I don't want your honesty or I don't like that. And I think you push the other person away. And so,
yes, if it's really, if they share something that's really not aligned with your values,
of course you can leave and move on. But chances are, if they're opening up about a journey they're
on, it's worth giving it an opportunity to support them if they're serious about it.
I love your definition of toxic love versus conscious love.
And when I was hearing you say this, I was thinking that conscious love is also wanting to take emotional responsibility and accountability for emotions.
As opposed to saying, you made me feel this way.
You said this.
You didn't do this.
And it made me explode on you.
It's having the emotional responsibility to manage it.
And if you aren't good at managing it,
say, I take full accountability and I'm working on that healing journey.
And I think that responsibility and accountability
adds to the potential growth for conscious love.
I love that.
That's such a great point.
It's such a great question too,
because you also realize that we have so many flawed views of conscious love too. And so people always think
like, oh, toxic love, that's the worst. You could actually be doing pseudo conscious love and that's
even worse sometimes. What does that mean? Like a spiritual bypass to conscious love?
Yeah. Or like you're practicing it in a really superficial way. Like it's conscious in the
language and the way you talk about it, but
you're doing unhealthy things. Like, for example, you could think you're in conscious love, but you
can't deal with someone's honesty. You think you're in conscious love, but you don't feel
comfortable having uncomfortable conversations. You think, oh yeah, we just talk about good stuff
and everything's positive. Everything's perfect all the time's positive and we never argue and it's like well no it's important to have uncomfortable conversations
and so i find that a lot of couples struggle with having these uncomfortable conversations
we didn't get into fight styles but we'll get there whenever you want because that question
was so good that question was so good and don't feel i'm saying this as a friend now like off
camera in the sense of like this is so good bro like this is an interview that i haven't done with anyone because it's not about
the book and we're getting into it so it's like don't feel any pressure to go into the like yes
the stuff we're talking about is amazing yeah yeah i just reiterating as a friend yeah yeah it's so
good so what were you gonna say though you were saying something i was i was just saying that
this superficial idea of conscious love becomes really practiced as a deeper love.
So, yeah, like we don't argue, but we avoid having uncomfortable conversations.
Everything's always good, but I often go to sleep at night wondering what they're thinking.
Right?
Like that's not conscious because it looks good.
It's conscious because you're constantly
working on it. I think we're so scared of accepting that something may need fixing
because that means it's broken, but it's not broken. There's just parts to relook at.
Yes. What are the things that most people don't think are harmful to hurting loving relationships that are actually the most
harm not like he cheated or she lied to me or he's watching porn or yeah whatever
that is yeah but what are actually the things that most people think that's not
really that big a deal yeah that actually you do it year after year to
year is a big deal breaker in ruining relationships.
Maybe it's the little things.
Maybe it's the whatever it might be.
Is there anything you can think of?
Yeah, there's a few things I can think of.
I'd say there's four coming to mind right now.
The first one I'd say is the idea of control.
I think we're trying to control the other person,
but it doesn't look like control. It looks like care. And that's the interesting thing.
It's like manipulative care. Correct. Yeah, exactly. So control in a relationship can often look like care,
but deep down you're doing it because you want to control the other person.
Right. So you want to tell them what to wear. You want to tell them how to spend their money and how
to invest it. You want to tell them how to live their life and which friends are good for them
and which friends are bad for them. Now, it's different when that's a conversation from them
to you and asking for your advice. But the best thing you can do as a coach, a partner, a guide, a friend is to help someone understand what their goals are.
We talk about this all the time.
Like we don't project what I think is a worthy life or a worthy podcast or a worthy home onto what someone else wants because we all have different values.
And so I think we do controlling means. I don't want
to understand your values and what you believe in. I'm going to project mine onto you because
I think they're superior anyway. And I feel more comfortable if that's the case. And it's very
subtle. Like this is something you have to really monitor. Like, you know, I'll give an example of
like I've always been driven or at least I've been driven for a lot of my adult life and one thing i had to be really careful for when i met radhi was to not project my ambition and
drive onto how she lived and hoping she does the same correct because radhi's this beautiful
abundant like sun energy yeah flowing and she's flow. And that's what makes her beautiful.
That's what makes her attractive.
It's what makes her special to me and to everyone else who knows her.
And if I try and contain that and try and direct it towards what I think it should be,
I could potentially make her lose all of that.
And so I've seen my role with Radhi as being more protecting and helping her protect that
than exploiting it. And I think it's so easy for us to think, well, I'm driven and I'm ambitious
and look what I've done. And so my partner should do that too. And it's like, well, maybe they
shouldn't. I remember I was speaking to a client. Actually, no, this was a friend. They weren't a
client. I was speaking to a friend and she was saying, oh, you know, my partner, he's lazy.
He doesn't work hard. He doesn't have
any ambition. And I said, well, if you want someone who has ambition, is driven and works hard,
then he's not your guy. That's basically all it's saying. And she was saying, no, no, no,
but he's really kind and loving and thoughtful. And I was like, okay, well, which one do you want?
And if you want both, go out there and look for it but chances are that's tough too or he may not if
he's driven he may not have as much time for you that's what it was and that's what she that's
exactly what she discovered that she was like i want someone who's driven and present and i was
like they can be present in the moment but they're not going to have as much time available or at
least not during their season of being driven correct maybe in 20 30 years it'll change but
you can't expect it to change exactly okay so that's number one the idea of control yes the second one which again is subtle and that's why i love your quality of
your question because it's like what do we miss or what do we not see is comparison yeah i think
we do it without even knowing i've heard couples literally say oh did you see like where they went
for their anniversary trip and there's some passive messaging in there it's true and you passing it off like you're really happy for this person but
really there's this part of you that's saying we didn't do that or i wish we did that or why don't
you think of stuff like that and i think passive aggression in comparison comparison will make your
partner feel on comparison is the number one thing you can do to make your partner
feel devalued and unlovable. There is nothing like comparing your partner to another person.
Now, some people will say, I'm not comparing them. I'm just saying what someone else is doing.
Yeah, but you're pointing out something that we're not doing, which makes me feel like I'm
not enough. Exactly. That is the bottom line. That's
it. You do that week after week, year after year. You're like, I'm never enough for this person.
What do I need to do? So they start celebrating what we're doing, not what everyone else is doing.
Exactly. Exactly. And I think that comparing is so unhealthy. Two more. I think complaining about your partner to your family and other people, it creates a loop.
So if you complain about your partner to your family, then your family is going to check in with you.
And then you complain again and then they check in with you.
Now, I'm not saying you don't talk to your family about your partner, but there's a difference in saying, hey, we're going through this and we're
going to therapy and we're figuring this out versus he's so this, she's so that, they're so that. And
I find that that complaining that we do, it also seeps into what we spot in our partner. We're now
looking for them to confirm our complaint. So if we just complained about our partner and said,
oh, they never do this.
When we go home and they haven't washed the dishes, we're like, oh yeah, see, I was right.
And now we're double triggered rather than talking to them and communicating and saying,
hey, when I come home from work and I see this, I'm triggered by X, Y, Z. Let's talk about this.
So complaining. Yep. And that goes back into your third agreement of love. Yeah. I love that.
And the fourth and final one that comes to mind right now is, this one's really tough because I had a friend who was going through this a lot.
Whenever he was making progress in something, like let's say he got a promotion, his partner
would say to him, I don't know how they promote you.
I never see you work.
Oh my gosh.
It was criticism.
Like diminishing them. Diminishing them. So it's criticism. Yeah. It's like diminishing them
about something that they've achieved or missed out on. Or someone saying, oh, I didn't get that
promotion. And you say, well, yeah, I didn't really see you work for it. Right. So there's
criticism either way. And I think we do this because we want to be honest with our partners
or we want to tell
them the truth. We don't want to lie to them. Or most of the time, it's because we're hard on
ourselves. We're criticizing ourself for not achieving what we wanted. And now we project
that criticism onto our partner for what they wanted. And criticism ends up making someone feel
so far away from you. Like criticism increases distance in a relationship.
It pushes someone so far away because you've made them feel unworthy, unwanted, and not enough.
And again, I'm not saying the opposite is praise your partner, tell them really nice things about
themselves, but there's a way to communicate about certain challenges they're going through.
It's not in the moment saying, hey, I didn't get the job. Oh yeah, well, better luck next time. Or,
oh, it didn't quite work out. And you might say, well, people don't do this. I promise you,
what I'd love for everyone to do with this, I'm going to set a little challenge.
If you're in a relationship, I want you to do an audit or account of how many of these you do
every week about your partner. So just do it
honestly. Honestly, for the next seven days, if you're in a relationship, think about how often
you complain, compare, criticize, or try to control, and just keep a count. Now, you may get through the
week and you only do one. That's amazing. I'm really, really happy. But if you're really self-aware
and you're really questioning yourself,
I'd find that even I do a few of these things constantly.
And what's even, I think this is a beautiful audit and probably a lot of people don't even,
aren't even aware they're doing it. That's what it is. Such a pattern and an unconscious reaction to seeing something.
Yeah.
And even if you don't do it verbally, I would ask yourself to audit it internally.
That's what I'm saying.
Am I criticizing?
Am I comparing?
Without even saying it.
Maybe I keep the peace and I don't say what I really think, but are you thinking it?
Yeah.
You're scrolling on social media.
Yeah, yeah.
Am I comparing?
Am I complaining in my mind?
I wish he would do this.
I wish he would do this.
But without saying it, that's still like creating this rumination inside of you.
I love that audit.
We are here talking about eight rules of love,
how to find it, how to keep it, and how to let it go.
If you guys haven't got a copy yet,
make sure to get 10 copies right now.
This question is about the greatest skill
you think that everyone should learn
in order to master love.
What is that skill that will allow them to find it,
keep it, and let it go, but really to master it?
I'd say the number one skill to master love in relationships
is to remember that in every relationship,
there are three relationships.
The one you have with yourself,
the one your partner has with themselves, and then the one you have with yourself, the one your partner has with themselves,
and then the one you have with each other. That's good.
And I think so often we only think about the one we have with each other.
We don't realize that so many of the challenges in our relationship are because of our relationship
with ourselves and our partner's relationship with themselves. We think, I'm doing everything,
but they don't feel better. But that's because they're
going through something internally. We think I'm giving them everything. I'm doing everything they
need. I'm here supporting them. But if they've got something going on internally, they can't
even receive any of that. And so often we look at it through the lens of it's just me and them.
That's just not true. And so you have to remember that there was a you before,
there was a you during, and there's a you after every relationship. And there's a them before,
a them during, and a them after every relationship. And when you accept and understand that,
you can actually solve problems easier because now you have three things to look at rather than
just one. So you can start
to understand, okay, well, is that their internal thing? Is it my thing? Let's check with them.
Let's communicate. Let's figure that out. You just got to really become a master of human dynamics.
Yes. It's like understanding human dynamics and all that stuff. It's interesting when I was
playing sports, I remember a coach asked us at one point um he said there's always three teams on the field
wow your team the team you're playing against and then the refs wow there's always like you know
you're never just playing against the team you've got to be aware of how the refs are calling the
game how to influence the game in certain ways you know how to show up differently but there's
it's never just you versus someone else or you with someone else.
It's always like your interpretation to yourself,
their interpretation, outsiders.
There's always so much else going on.
But I think, yeah, that skill of understanding
there's three relationships in one
and navigating those.
I really think of that as like
just learning how to master emotions.
It's like learning how to be the master of your emotions,
understand someone else's emotions,
and the emotion that you're creating together.
Speaking of creating together,
you mentioned this a little bit before,
about conscious love, having agreements,
principles, boundaries, and rules,
which I think is a great thing.
Most people don't have that.
They just have assumptions and expectations.
That goes more into toxic love.
A friend of mine, Ryan Holmes, told me this years ago
when he got married.
I was like, what has made this a healthy relationship for you?
He was like, we created a, what did he call it,
like a family vision.
We actually sat down and we created a family crest,
like a sign, a symbol of what we wanted to mold together
to build our family.
Something like we used to do in England like 500 years ago.
And he said doing that allowed us to get clear on our principles,
what we wanted to really step into,
how we wanted to serve each other and our communities, our families, and the world.
And I thought that's cool.
Is there anything that you have around building kind of like a relationship motto,
you know, crest, vision?
Is there anything you talk about around that? Yeah, I talk a lot about how there's three things.
You've got liking someone's personality. You've got respecting their values. And then you've got a commitment towards helping them get to their goals. Right? So that's
my definition of love. My definition of love is when you like someone's personality, when you
respect their values, and you're committed to helping them towards their goals, which means
you have to know what your values are and theirs, and you have to know what your goals are and
theirs. And someone asked me the other day, they're about to get married, and they said, Jay, what's your advice?
And I said, do you know your partner's top three values?
And they struggled.
I think so.
Yeah, and they were saying.
Friends and family.
Yeah, exactly.
Very, very broad things.
And I was like, well, what does that mean?
What's the hierarchy?
What's the order? And then I said, well, do you know your partner's goals for the next 12 months?
And they struggled again. They were like, oh, I don't know. Like they're just settling into a new
job. And I was thinking, if you don't know who your partner is and where they're going,
then how are you meant to be their partner? And so to me, check-ins about these three things regularly and consistently
give you a full vision of who your partner is and where they're headed.
And that's so good. Liking their personality is what you said first, right? If you don't like
someone's personality, you're going to spend 10,000 meals with them. You better enjoy their
personality. Exactly. And that's the study that shows that to make some, and me and you are
great friends because of this, by this definition too, and I've really thought about this. So to
make someone a casual friend, you should have spent 40 hours with them. 40 hours for a casual
friend. If you consider someone a good friend, you have to spend a hundred hours with them.
And if you consider someone a great friend, you should have spent 200 hours with them.
We've definitely spent more than 200 hours together but that's the question i would ask when you say like their
personality can you spend 200 present hours together not just 200 hours watching tv or
the movies present hours so that's the like no distractions with no distraction you and the
other person you know i heard this i think it was a year ago about like you're gonna spend 10 000
meals with someone that's're with them forever.
Can you sit across the table and have 10,000 meals and enjoy the meals for the most part?
So I love this liking personality, respecting values.
I think with Martha, I got so clear on my values and communicating it effectively.
And she asked me early on, I've told you this before.
and communicating it effectively.
And she asked me early on, I've told you this before.
She asked me early on the,
what are your priorities, Lewis, question?
I don't know, maybe a month into dating.
Like, what are your real priorities in life, right?
That like every man fears answering.
And I said, ooh, do I step into courage here or do I shy back to keep it comfortable
and not stir the boat?
And I remember saying, well, I want to be very honest and authentic with you, but I don't know if you're going to like it.
And I don't know if you're going to want to hang out in this way anymore.
Yeah.
She was thinking I'm going to say something like horrible.
And I was like, do you want me to be fully honest?
And she looked at me and said, yes.
I said, are you sure?
Because I've been honest in the past and people don't like it. Yeah. Are you sure? And she said, yes. Take a deep breath. I'm like, okay, I gotta
have this courage. Cause I just know that I thought that she wouldn't like what I was about
to say. And I said, okay, here are my three main values in order in life number one is i value my health and that needs to be like my top priority
because if i'm sick i can't do really anything so i need to take care of health first and you
need to support me in making sure that i use my energy to do that on a consistent basis you can't
pull me away from my health or healthy activities or make me feel bad for going to the gym or whatever it is.
Number one.
Number two, priority number two is my purpose, my mission.
Like in the season of life, the mission that I have right now
and that's being all in, focused on that
and not feeling bad about it, not taking time away from it.
You know, not being resentful of it, any of those things.
That's priority number two
and i was like no woman wants to hear from their man or potential man that they're not their number
one or number two priority and i said then number three would be my relationship you know if we're
gonna end up dating together it would be us yeah and and i said that doesn't mean you wouldn't be
like i would never have time for you.
Yeah, I'm not going to choose the gym over here.
But I need to make sure those first two priorities are set in stone so that I can actually give to you more.
So that I can be more present with you.
So I can give you fully, abundantly.
And we can do all the things you want to do.
You're going to feel like number one.
But you need to know that number one and two,
I have to do these first.
So good.
And you will feel like the most important person in the world.
But if I don't feel healthy,
if I'm being pulled away from my purpose and my mission,
I'm not going to be good for you.
So good.
And she looked at me, she goes, this is amazing.
I can imagine what to say.
She goes, that's amazing. I this and i go really because i'm thinking like yeah i've i've experienced and i've heard other
people experience that if you're not making your woman your number one priority yeah if you don't
put me first over everything then it's like a stressful experience yeah and for me, that goes back into toxic love. And it's not about you aren't my top priority.
It's prioritizing health and purpose and service, whether you want to call it the same level or just above it, so that you have the energy to be present to your relationship.
At least that's for me what I feel like a man needs to be in their relationship.
They've got to be on purpose right and she told me I love it because I've never been with a man who
had a purpose they always made me their purpose and after a while it doesn't feel good you're
like go out and do the thing you want to do in life like I don't care if you want to you know
serve two people a day but go do something that you're excited about not just make it about me yeah and so give me your thoughts on this you know yeah this this idea
this philosophy um if you think that's in alignment with your eight rules of love or if you think
that's i'm crazy and i got i just got a lucky one who just accepts me for that i love it so it's
really interesting you say you did that because inside my book, Eight Rules of Love, I actually talk about how I gave a client that same exercise. So I asked them
to rank their top three priorities in order and I was coaching the couple. So the man wrote,
me and she wrote me the kids you oh and this is so funny he was so upset like he was go ahead no go ahead this is funny because i want to unpack this because i went to um caesar milan
the dog whisperer and i took my team to do like a full day leadership training which you got to
take your team one day so cool and he i'm always scared Caesar's going to give me a dog.
That's why I don't go.
I know, right?
I'm so scared.
And he talks about the dynamics, at least in America, of married couples where if he
asks most women, what's the priorities in the relationship?
It's like mom, kids, dog, then then the husband this is what he says a lot of
women say it's like the husband is last because they get this unconditional love from the dog
but that's after the kids oh my gosh and then husband and he's like we've got it all backwards
yeah yeah you know we need to be the parents need to be leading the pack yes together side by side
yes right yeah so anyways i don't want to no no no i love that that's a beautiful point yeah so You know, we need to be, the parents need to be leading the pack together, side by side. Yes.
Right?
So anyways, I don't want to.
No, no, no.
I love that.
That's a beautiful point.
Yeah.
So you said he had one thing, which was her, the kids, and then himself.
And she had herself, the kids, and then the man.
Exactly.
Exactly.
And so what happened from that dynamic?
And what happens when you enter or are in a relationship like that?
Well, he was distraught and he was really upset because he was just like, how can I be third on your list?
And even more than that, he was actually upset that she put herself first.
That's what he was more upset about.
He actually wasn't that upset about being third.
He was more upset about how are you first for yourself?
How is it not the kids?
How is it not the kids? How is it not the kids? And her response
was similar to yours that I want to be present, energized, and my best for you and the kids.
I don't want to give my leftovers to you and the kids. And I often say this to people, like if
someone is emotionally and energetically dead, how can they keep you
alive? It doesn't make any sense. And so what we have to understand is someone's not being selfish
by focusing on themselves if they're doing it with a selfless spirit. That's the key.
So you may meet a man who's not like Lewis and says, yeah, I'm first for me. I'm first.
who's not like Lewis and says, yeah, I'm first for me. I'm first. And they're only doing that because they think they're first. There's no, I'm going to take care of myself so I can be better
for you. That's the spirit you're looking for. So you're looking for someone who's selfish with a
selfless spirit, not just someone who's selfish. And there's a difference. And it could sound like
the same thing. It could even look like the same thing. You could meet someone who says,
I'm dedicated to my purpose. I'm dedicated to who I am. But it's not anything to do with you.
And I think that's the difference. People who prioritize self-care in order to serve,
that's the self-care we want in our lives. And so that's what I encourage in people that
you should always take care of yourself so you can take care of your partner, so you can take
care of your kids. You're not just taking care of yourself just, like it has to go somewhere.
And being lazy about everything else. Exactly. Speaking of priorities, I'm curious your thoughts
on what is more triggering and harder to talk about in intimacy,
which will lead to marriage. Is it around money or how to raise kids?
Or are they kind of equal on their triggering? No, I'd actually say that this is such a great
question. I'd actually say that more of our trauma, because this is what's interesting, right?
great question. I'd actually say that more of our trauma, because this is what's interesting, right?
The honest answer is it depends on what your trauma is, but most people's trauma comes out more strongly in how to raise kids because now it goes back to how they were raised.
And what they got, what they didn't get, how you're treated.
Exactly. So I'd say that raising kids becomes a really tension filled point for couples
because both either think the way they were raised was great or both had bad experiences
and now they're repeating them with the kids or a mix of both. And so I find that
kids are also triggering because now you're getting to see
who they love and who they respond to, who they listen to, who they like, who they connect with.
Now, of course, kids don't have favorites, especially when they're young, they don't even
know. But there definitely is that feeling from an insecure parent that, oh, I do this all for
them and they just want to hang out with you or you get the fun side of the kids and I have to deal with the stress. And I'm not saying
none of that's true. I'm just saying that I think raising kids triggers the most amount of trauma.
So, and I've seen that it's, it's, and it's, and it's natural because you are now looking at that
kid with the lens of what did I not get at that age and I want to give it to
these kids. And even though that's a beautiful intention, it may not be ideal because you may
overcompensate, you may struggle. And what I've realized generally is that with any of this,
we're all going to make mistakes. We're all going to get things wrong. But I think with our kids,
we want to be perfect and we want to get it perfect because we love them and we don't want to mess something up.
And often it's that recognizing that loving them is more important than perfecting everything around them.
And I feel that way with my parents.
Like I feel my mom loved me so deeply and truly that despite all the imperfection of my upbringing her love is what
lives inside of me and that is something that no one's ever going to forget whereas sometimes you
can set up the perfect environment around the kids but if you don't fuel it with love if you
don't fill it with the oxygen of love they're not going to grow up with that or remember that
it's interesting i heard i heard heard I'm pretty sure it was
Wendy Suzuki on the podcast she said that you know her parents never really said she loved they loved
her right and it was very hard to have that conversation she said she wanted to tell her dad
and she wanted to have that conversation and start talking about it more and just say hey i know we don't do this as family but i want to say i love
you yeah and if and i get it back it'd be great but you know you could set your your kids up with
like giving them the best coaches and teachers and training and schooling to want them to be
successful but i think what i took from her was like, she just wanted to hear that she
was loved. Yeah. Not yes. Set up the perfect environment for me to flourish. That's great.
But as kids, like you said, we want to be heard, seen and accepted, which essentially allows us to
feel loved. And I think when we can learn to do that, which is hard if we never got that ourselves.
learn to do that, which is hard if we never got that ourselves. So it's hard to unlearn it and do the uncomfortable. But if we can do that in our intimacy, in our relationships, and with our
family, it will help us feel a deeper sense of peace and love, which is what we're always looking
for. Absolutely, man. Well said. Well said. That's beautiful. That sounds like a great interview too.
well said that's beautiful
that sounds like
a great interview too
I'm curious about
I'm always a guinea pig
on this show
I'm always like
you know
revealing stuff
and opening up
about stuff
and sharing
this is how I made a mistake
and this is what I'm learning
yeah
as your friend
I'm curious
and you can be as honest
as you want to be
what
feedback
would you give
on love for me
that and you don't have to like you know build me up or anything but what feedback real you give on love for me that,
and you don't have to like, you know, build me up or anything,
but what feedback, real feedback, honest feedback that you've seen,
I know you talked to me all this time about this,
that you see as possible for me to step into that maybe I'm doing,
but need to do more of,
or that I struggling with that you see from a perspective you haven't told me
yet.
What is that feedback you would give me so that I can be vulnerable and work on it in this process? So I'm going to build you up because it's true.
And I have to, I have to, because it's, it's true. Like, I don't think I've seen many people do the
amount of self-work you've done over the last few years, the amount of energy, time, money you've
invested in working on yourself. It's unbelievable.
And you're seeing the results because of it, right? Like that's the most beautiful part that
you've always worked on yourself. So that's not new, but I know that love has been like a real
investment and healing for you. And I just don't ever want anyone to think that,
oh, because you have a good podcast and because you write amazing books,
shout out to the greatness mindset. Like, you're doing that stuff, that's not why you have
love. You don't have a good relationship because you're Lewis Howes. Does that make sense? I think
often externally it could look like, yeah, Lewis is good looking and he played sport and he's an
athlete and he did this and he did that. And that's why it's like, well, that's not what's
made you a good partner or that's not what's made you a healthy partner. It's the work you're doing behind the scenes that
you obviously share on the show, but the work that I get to see you do as a friend. So I do
want to say that because I think it's important to notice and acknowledge that. But if I had to
give any feedback or thoughts, let me think where I want to go. And also like, you know,
knowing, you know, taking the relationship to the to go and also like you know knowing you're
taking the relationship to the next steps and what you know being married and what that looks like
and what i'm going to be preparing for in the future and how to make sure what to look out for
for myself that it could be a trouble for me or something i do think i start the book with this
beautiful conversation between a student and the Buddha. And the student asks,
what's the difference between I like you and I love you? And the Buddha replies,
when you like a flower, you simply pluck it. But when you love a flower, you water it daily.
And so my honest advice, and this isn't just for you, it's truly advice for all of us, including me sitting right in front of you, giving all of this advice, is are you watering your relationship daily?
Are you checking the soil?
Are you giving it sunlight?
Are you aware?
I think so many of us get a beautiful tree, a beautiful plant in our lives, and then you think it's just going to survive.
And so all the work that you've done now, even though it's tiring, exhausting and transformative, that never stops. And I see that in my life today. I've been with Radhi for 10
years. And I would say that we still have to water the relationship, check the soil,
check the sunlight. And I don't think that it ever changes
the stuff you're checking changes but the checking process doesn't change so you can't just set it
and forget it you can't that's exactly it you can't do a lot of work in the first couple years
and then say I can ride this for 20 that's exactly the problem I think we we think that two years of
work results in 20 years of fruit.
And it doesn't.
It doesn't.
Like if you look at the harvest, if you look at the seasons, it's a yearly thing.
It's an annual thing that happens.
And so I just, I really, really feel that.
And I would often also say that, you know, look out, using the garden analogy, like look
out for the weeds and make sure you're constantly planting
new good seeds. I think we also think we've thought about all the good seeds. We don't need
anymore. We don't need to think about anything new. And we keep trying to recreate our first
date or we live in the same way or the way we had it was amazing. And we keep celebrating
how it is rather than recreating what it needs to be.
And so I think that's really important. But that's not just about you. It's more of a warning to
myself, to you, to everyone, because I think amazing relationships can go stale really quickly
because we become complacent. And complacency, it's always like, we always hear that phrase,
curiosity killed the cat. And I'm like, complacency did.
If you're curious with your partner, you'll keep it growing.
And so use curiosity.
I love that.
Okay, I think I have two final questions.
Before I get to them, I want people to get the book, Eight Rules of Love, How to Find It, How to Keep It, How to Let It Go.
Make sure you get a copy.
how to find it, how to keep it, how to let it go.
Make sure you get a copy.
Get a copy for your friend, your partner, your family who's struggling in relationships
or people that want to just keep them growing
by being more curious.
We'll have it all linked up in the show notes
on YouTube, on audio.
So again, make sure you guys get this.
Follow Jay's podcast and subscribe there.
We do a lot of fun stuff together over there.
So make sure to check that out as well.
Your first book as well is amazing.
So make sure you guys get Think Like a Monk.
His book is sold, I think, what, 2 million copies now?
Yeah, two and a half now.
Two and a half million copies.
Make sure to get that.
Again, On Purpose, one of the top podcasts in the world.
And if you want a great speaker at your event,
make sure to hire Jay. He's one of the best speakers out there. So again, you want a great speaker at your event, make sure to hire Jay.
He's one of the best speakers out there.
So again, get the book, subscribe, do all those things.
Two final questions.
I've asked you questions about your three truths before,
so I'm not going to ask that.
I've asked you about your definition of greatness.
And people can go back and listen to those episodes
if they want to.
This is a question,
because you have a prompt in here about writing a love letter to
yourself. So if you had to give a love letter or a love audio note to your younger self,
the part of yourself, the time when you felt the most shame, you don't have to say what was
happening, but the time you felt the most shame what would that audio note be
to younger Jay of that season of life a love letter to him don't try to fall in love
like they do in the movies don't try and fall in love in some big romantic Hollywood idyllic way.
Ask yourself, do you know who you are?
Do you know who they are?
Every time you ask yourself, do they like me? Ask yourself, do I really like them?
Every time you ask yourself, do they think I'm attractive? Ask yourself, am I working on myself?
Every time you think, do they want me? Will they take care of me?
Ask yourself, how can I better take care of myself?
And so everything you want from someone else,
give it to yourself first.
That's what I'd say.
Yeah, that's a good love letter.
That's a good love note.
Okay, final question.
So imagine, this goes back to our Matthew McConaughey scenario.
Oh, yeah.
Imagine your 90-year-old self.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Giving a love letter or a love note to your current self.
What would your 90-year-old self say to current Jay to support you for the next season of love?
After 10 years of being in a relationship and
I think seven years of marriage what would you say for the next 10 20 30 years
after it's all said and done the love you have for humanity and the love you have to serve and to use your purpose in helping other people
that's the only thing that will stand the test of time and that your life will be measured not by
awards or trophies, or numbers, but by how deeply you helped people love themselves.
And I think that's a really interesting nuance, that we're often focused on how much we love people,
but if you really love someone, you can make them fall in
love with themselves. And so I would measure myself not by how much I loved, but by how much
I was able to help people love themselves. Because that would be proof that I really love them.
Eight rules of love. Jay Shetty, love you, brother. Appreciate it, man.
Best interview of mine. love them eight rules of love jay chevy love you brother appreciate it man best interview i hope today's episode inspired you on your journey towards greatness make sure to check
out the show notes in the description for a rundown of today's show with all the important
links and if you want weekly exclusive bonus episodes with me as well as ad free listening
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And if no one has told you today,
I wanna remind you that you are loved,
you are worthy, and you matter.
And now it's time to go out there and do something great.