The School of Greatness - Red Flags To Watch Out For & The Keys To A Healthy Relationship w/Lori Gottlieb EP 1191
Episode Date: November 19, 2021Today’s guest is Lori Gottlieb. She’s a psychotherapist, podcast host, and New York Times bestselling author of Maybe You Should Talk to Someone, which has sold over a million copies and is curren...tly being adapted as a television series for ABC. She's the host of the popular podcast Dear Therapists and she’s now releasing a new workbook that serves as a companion to her best-selling book called Maybe You Should Talk To Someone Workbook: A Toolkit for Editing Your Story and Changing Your Life.In this episode we discuss the biggest red flags to look out for in relationships, how to improve your trust and communication with your partner, why it’s dangerous to rely on your partner to make you happy, the key things healthy relationships have in common and so much more!Check our part 1: www.lewishowes.com/1190For more go to: www.lewishowes.com/1191Mel Robbins: The “Secret” Mindset Habit to Building Confidence and Overcoming Scarcity: https://link.chtbl.com/970-podDr. Joe Dispenza on Healing the Body and Transforming the Mind: https://link.chtbl.com/826-podMaster Your Mind and Defy the Odds with David Goggins: https://link.chtbl.com/715-pod
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This is episode number 1191 with New York Times bestselling author, Lori Gottlieb.
Welcome to the School of Greatness.
My name is Lewis Howes, a former pro athlete turned lifestyle entrepreneur.
And each week we bring you an inspiring person or message
to help you discover how to unlock your inner greatness.
Thanks for spending some time with me today.
Now let the class begin.
Welcome back, my friend.
Today's guest is Lori Gottlieb.
We brought her back for part two.
She's a psychotherapist, podcast host, and New York Times bestselling author of Maybe You Should Talk to Someone,
which has sold over a million copies, and it's currently being adopted as a television series for ABC. And she's got a new workbook that serves as a companion to her
best selling book. Maybe you should talk to someone workbook, a toolkit for editing your
story and changing your life. And the first episode was so powerful. I just couldn't stop.
I wanted to keep going in the interview. So this is part two. And if you haven't checked out part one yet, make sure to go to lewishouse.com slash 1190. After this,
they're both incredible episodes. In this interview, we discuss the biggest red flags to
look out for in relationships. And so many people miss these specific ones we talked about here,
how to improve your trust and communication with your
partner. Why it's dangerous to rely on your partner to make you happy. And so many people do this.
The key things healthy relationships have in common and so much more. And if you know anyone
that is in a relationship or it's looking to get in a relationship or is struggling and wanting to improve their relationship, then send them a link to this episode right now.
They will be inspired by Lori's message.
Just text it to them.
Post it over on social media.
Make sure to tag me and Lori as well on your social media profiles so we know who is listening and consuming this while they're listening to it.
And a big shout out to the fan of the week who is from Giovanni.
And they said, hey, a new subscriber, and I've learned so much from you, Lewis,
from episodes with Mel Robbins, Matthew McConaughey, and Joe Dispenza.
You and your guests provide excellent value on your show to learn from
and just overall value.
So a big thank you to Giovanni for leaving us a review. And if you guys
want a chance to be shouted out on the School of Greatness podcast, then go to Apple Podcasts right
now, subscribe and leave a review or at any time during this episode, if you're inspired and
something really stands out to you, just share some feedback in the review section of the part
you enjoyed the most. Okay, in just a moment, the one and only Lori Gottlieb.
So if you feel like you're a good team,
you got the character qualities of they show up for you, they're reliable,
you feel like you can trust them, they have emotional generosity,
flexibility,
similar lifestyle,
and the quality on a daily basis is good,
then that's a pretty good match,
is what I'm hearing you say.
Again, there's those intangible qualities,
but if all of that is there and that's going on,
yeah, yeah, like look at the Goodwill Bank.
How's the Goodwill Bank going?
Yes.
You know, if you did the assignment that we gave this person, Elena, on our podcast,
you know, to like really keep that log of the day to day.
What does it look like?
And you have to think, you know, people think when they first meet someone, they're thinking so much in the present instead of, you know, like they're like, yeah, well, you know, this person doesn't really call when they say they will or yeah, this or that.
But it's OK because there are all these other great things.
And, you know, they're like obsessed with that person.
And I always say to people, like like is this the marriage you want is this what you
want 15 years from now is this do you want to worry about like where why this person isn't calling me
or are they going to be there or they forgot to do this or they said they were going to pick up
the toilet paper but they didn't every time um they always have an excuse. They lie about the little things.
Like, you know, there are those people who are like,
they won't just tell you, yeah, you know what?
I forgot to do that.
This is, I had this,
they had this experience with this couple
where he was always coming up with excuses
because he didn't want to take responsibility
for the things.
And they were just little lies.
And she's like, why would you lie
about these tiny little things?
Instead of just, right. And and so and so there was this one
time where he was supposed to go to the market and she was always they had kids and she wanted
him to get organic strawberries because she was worried about the pesticides and the little kids
and he bought the regular ones and and he used to lie about it and be like oh they were out of
organic and this time he said you know what I just it totally slipped my mind
it totally slipped my mind I should have bought the organic ones and I didn't do it and she
started crying she said you told me the truth like all I wanted was the truth I just wanted
you to own it and acknowledge it and take responsibility he's like I'll go back and I'll
go exchange them right now she's like no no no, no, no, it's fine. Like you told me the truth, you forgot.
Please don't forget next time.
He never forgot again.
Wow.
But do you see how these little things in relationships can change a dynamic?
Yes.
In a big way.
He never forgot again and she trusted him.
Yeah.
What would you say are the biggest red flags then
women should look for when entering a relationship?
Well, I think it's not a
gender thing. You know, I think, I think people, I think you, you know, you look for just how,
how do I feel around this person? You know, do I, do I feel on edge? Is there something, you know,
I think even when people are ignoring the problems, there's a place of knowing that we all have inside of us that gets drowned out by all the noise out there.
The bigger voices, like, I really want this to work out, or look at how great on paper this person is, or I feel really good about myself because this person's a catch, or whatever it is.
Or I'm this age and I really feel like, yeah, what happens if I give this up? What if I don't find somebody? Those are those really loud voices. There might be this
really quiet voice that says, I don't think this person is the right person for me. Or I don't
really trust this person. Or this person isn't really as stable as I would like. Or this person
drinks too much. Or this person doesn't really emotionally regulate or this person
says mean things to me and i don't like that and yeah they were drunk but i don't like it
right and be aware of that yes if they continue doing this which they probably will or may are
you okay with that right well if you talk to them about it and what does that look again the repair
and then do they change their behavior
as a result of that right if they don't change the behavior then right so then you're staying
right you can justify it any way you want but you're not listening to that voice inside of you
so i think we all have this place of knowing it's not your friend's opinions like you know it's
always like i think your friends have all these opinions and then we try to like crowdsource
oh this guy's amazing you're so lucky to have this all these opinions and then we try to like crowdsource. Oh, this guy's amazing.
You're so lucky to have this guy in your life.
He's a catch.
Like what a great guy.
You don't have to live that life.
And I think the same thing, by the way, going back to affairs, like people say like, leave
the guy, like he's trash, leave him.
And it's like, you don't have to live this person's life.
And this person might have really good reasons why the affair didn't break their marriage.
You know, so when someone had an affair,
don't go telling 12 of your friends, like right away. Like you need to process this, maybe go to a therapist, process this, but don't go telling like 12 people and don't broadcast it. Don't go
on social media about this because you might actually find that you love this person and want
to stay with this person and that this person really is the right person for you and they will never do this again
and they will not, you know, like they understand what happened.
But telling the world and your family and your friends, they're never going to support
that person in your life again.
It's good.
Every time you go around for the next years, you're going to make it uncomfortable.
Right.
And that's going to be rupturing the relationship in the future.
Right.
And what feels really good in the moment is to blame your partner.
Now, yes, they're responsible for having the affair, but they're not necessarily responsible for all the other factors that are going into this.
Yes.
Interesting.
What are some unrealistic expectations that people should stop having?
How long do you have, Lewis?
Well, entering a relationship.
should stop having an interior relationship. Because I feel like people, not just women,
on men and men are women, but people have an expectation
that their partner should be kind of like everything,
you know, and should be perfect and all these things.
What are some things that they could have a standard,
you know, I want my relationship to have this standard,
but this expectation is unrealistic.
If you ask people if they have unrealistic expectations about certain things,
nobody thinks they do. So people will say, no, no, no, no, no. I know that they don't have to be
the hottest person or the most this person, or they make the most money, or they're the most
charming or funny or entertaining or whatever it is. I know that, but that's not what their
behavior says.
You'll find.
So people with unrealistic expectations
are often the people who don't realize that they have them.
People who actually have realistic expectations
sometimes think they don't have realistic expectations.
It's interesting.
There's sort of a lack of self-awareness there.
That's funny.
The unrealistic expectations have to do with,
you know, maybe it's like, you know, it could be around appearance.
It could be around what the other person is going to do for them.
When somebody isn't satisfied in their own life, they somehow think it's the other person's responsibility to make them happy, to fill the hole, to fill the gap.
You know, when they're having a hard time in their life,
suddenly they're bored in the relationship, right?
It's like, I don't feel good about myself.
And oh, look, I wonder if maybe I'm with the wrong partner.
I wonder if she's the problem.
I wonder if he's the problem.
You know, I'm feeling stuck in my life.
Oh, maybe I need a new relationship.
As opposed to maybe there are other things
that are making you feel stuck in your life. and this idea that i think that some of us have that we would never articulate
but that your partner is there to save you you know save me from my damaged childhood save me
from the other hurts in my life save me from these wounds and when there's misattunement in the
relationship and there always will be so again i'm I'm very suspicious of couples who say, oh no, we agree on everything. There will
be misattunement because somebody's tired one day, somebody had a bad day, or you're just
different people and you see the world differently. So when there's misattunement, suddenly that
person becomes, oh, you don't understand me. As opposed to, wait, you didn't understand that,
let me explain it again. Let me help you understand me because you thought this, but actually what I'm trying to say is this.
Right. Right. But then people don't do that. And so they think, oh, they just sit with it and they
go, my partner never understands me. Every time I say something, my partner thinks this, but I've
never tried to help them to understand me. They're supposed to magically, intuitively be telepathic,
read my mind and understand me in exactly the way that I need to
be heard and seen and felt. Now, in therapy, we have this expression, feeling felt, that that's
what you want. You want to feel felt. And it's such a great feeling when it happens. But even
therapists will get it wrong. You know, sometimes I will misunderstand someone, but the person
doesn't like yell at me about it. Or they don't think like, I need a new therapist because we'll repair it right there in
the moment. But they don't do it with their partner. They'll go home and their partner
will make the same mistake I did. And they will say, oh, I don't know if I should be with this
partner. He doesn't understand me. And the partner's like bewildered. Like, I didn't even
know that I didn't understand because you never told me I didn't understand. Yes. So I just assumed that I understood you.
When do you know that your partner understands you
even if they completely disagree with you?
When should someone know like,
okay, they disagree with everything I just said,
but I feel felt and they understand me at least?
Yeah, because we say that expression feeling felt
because you feel it so
it's not it's not up here it's in here probably just oh you're good it's an emotional feeling i
feel okay my partner disagrees with everything i just said but they understand where i could be
coming from if they stepped in my shoes i think it has to do with respect right you feel respected
in that moment you feel like like and and you feel loved and cared for.
Like, you and I see this very differently,
but I love you, I care for you, I don't agree with you.
But I respect you as a human.
Like, I respect you as a person.
Yes.
I'm not going to, like, cast aspersions on your character because of this.
Right, right, right.
Like I can accept and acknowledge the separateness of us as two different human beings.
And when people get really enmeshed, they have a real problem with that.
Like someone will say, my friend did this.
Can you believe that my friend did this?
And her partner will say like, yeah, yeah well but I can kind of see because
you also did this and she's like how can you take her side I'm not taking her
side I'm just giving you a perspective I see it a little bit differently I can
see why you felt though I can see why you feel hurt I can see both and and if
you can't accept the both and about yourself and your partner then you're
gonna end up feeling very alone.
So it's almost like you need to be flexible
in their communication as well
and them not siding with you on everything,
but saying, okay, I understand where you're coming from
and I see this perspective, I just see it differently.
Yeah.
So having the flexibility to be okay with that also.
Like I can hold both.
Yeah.
You can hold both and I can hold both
and we care deeply about each other
and we have each other's backs
Which doesn't necessarily mean we agree. We have the same perspective on every single thing. Yeah
The beginning of this year I had I
started seeing a therapist in a previous relationship and
The therapist had me just working on my own healing stuff. That's like healing stuff that I was going through.
She had me put a photo of myself around five or six years old on my phone.
So I see it.
So I still have this up where I just constantly remind myself like you're safe.
You're okay.
I got your back.
We're healing together, things like that.
It's been a beautiful journey for me to like work on inner child healing
and just kind of the memories of the past and um i'm i'm curious about just like the consistency of healing in a relationship
and because i heard you say that like it's hard to fully heal alone we almost need a mirror to
be able to practice and integrate this is what i think i heard you say right it's like you need to have someone where you can practice it coming up
if you're in a vacuum you're not going to be triggered right it's like can you show up differently
in the future and not repeat the past what is the thing people usually need to heal is it something
from childhood is it something from previous relationship is Is it after their whole life? It can be anything from, you know, there's different,
we use the word trauma a lot and people say,
oh, you know, trauma is something big,
like someone died in a car crash,
or you were in the war or, you know, systemic racism, right?
All traumas that people accept as trauma.
Think about though the daily trauma.
The little T's. The little, though, the daily trauma.
The little T's.
The little T's, but they're big T's
because the trauma might have happened to you once,
like you got in this bad accident
and you're traumatized by that or, you know,
whatever it might be.
The dailiness of a parent saying, you're stupid.
What's wrong with you?
You're so stupid, right?
We had someone on
a podcast like that. And, and he, you know, when we, we really like got him through that in that
hour of, of going through a way to think about it differently. And he, he needed to understand,
like, this was real trauma. And he knew that, right. He knew that, but he kind of felt almost like, nah, it's not
really that bad. Right, right, right. But you know, just like you're worthless, you're stupid,
what's wrong with you? All those things. And think about the number of times that that happened. If
you add all those up, I mean, that's trauma. So when you talk about the inner child, and I love what your therapist had you do,
it's really important that we are able now, we weren't then able to be that adult for our inner child,
but now we are.
So don't expect your partner to be that, that you have to be that for yourself.
And then your partner is there because you're not in that toxic environment anymore.
Right.
So it makes it safe for you. It makes it safe for you. Right. So it makes it safe for you.
It makes it safe for you as the adult.
It makes it safe for you as the child.
And at any given moment, by the way, a different age of us will be exposed.
So like, you know, you go home for Thanksgiving, you're 12, you know, with your siblings or
whatever it is, right?
You know, something happens with your partner that just feels very similar to you of some
feeling you
had when you were five you're five you're gonna act like you're five um you know there are times
when you act your age so you don't know like so i always say to people like when couples are
getting at it in couples therapy i'm like how old are you right now i will say that to them and
they'll step back for a second and go oh oh, I know exactly how old I am.
I'm eight.
I'm 16.
So you mean how old are you emotionally reacting?
Yes, yes, yes.
Right now.
Right now.
Not physically.
Yes, that's what I meant.
So they're doing something.
Something's happening for them and they're not able to kind of, I can see them regressing.
Wow.
And their partner's getting really frustrated.
And you're watching this happen.
And I just say to them, how old are you right now?
And if they can just step back and they have so much compassion for that kid that they
are at eight or 12 or 16 or whatever they are.
And so does their partner, by the way.
When their partner says, oh, you look like a grown man.
Right?
You look like a grown man.
But that eight-year-old, and they don't mean it in a pejorative way.
They don't mean it.
They're not judging their partner.
They become really compassionate, like, oh, that eight-year-old.
And they move toward their partner.
Like, I can see that.
So the partner isn't healing the eight-year-old, but the partner is creating this environment that lets the eight-year-old do the, that lets the adult do the work for the
eight-year-old there. What should the adult be saying or doing for the younger version of
themselves that is having an emotional human experience that is not their age in this moment?
What's the conversation or the... It's exactly what they wished at age eight that, that someone
would have said to them.
We all know what that is.
We all know what we wanted to hear because as a kid you fantasize about it. You look at other people's parents and you say, oh, that interaction.
You can see what you would like it to look like.
My parents were like that.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
So saying that out loud internally to your 8, 12, 16-year-old self.
Right, right.
In that moment.
And be really kind.
Wow.
Have you ever noticed how unkind we can be to ourselves?
Uh-huh.
Have you ever noticed that?
My entire childhood was pretty much unkind.
Right, right.
Yeah, to myself.
Right, and, but we carry that into our adulthoods.
And so I had this patient who was like so self-critical
and she did not realize it.
And you have to realize,
I said to her this,
that the person we talk to most in the course of our lives is ourselves.
Yes.
And what we say to ourselves isn't always kind or true or useful.
I say that all the time to people.
I will say that till I'm blue in the face because people don't get it until
they try this exercise,
which was what I had her do.
I said,
I want you to write down everything you say to yourself over the course of a
few days.
And then when you come back next week, we're going to talk about it. And so she
did the assignment. She was very skeptical. She's like, I'm not that, I'm not that, I'm not like,
not that. Like every thought that comes to you. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Like everything, like when you
hear, it's like this radio station is playing in the background that you think you're not hearing
because it's just like playing in the background or like a TV show that you have on in the
background, right? And you're like, I'm not really paying attention to it.
I'm doing other things, but no, you hear it.
And so she came back and she starts to read this
and she said, I can't even read this.
I am such a bully to myself.
And there were little things she would do
in the course of a day, like she was typing an email
and she made a typo and the voice in her head said,
you're so stupid.
Like it was spontaneous.
And she would not have paid attention to that before. Like she didn't know she was saying that. Or she passed her reflection in a mirror and she said, you're so stupid. Like it was spontaneous. And she would not have paid attention to that before.
Like she didn't know she was saying that.
Or she passed her reflection in a mirror
and she said, God, you look terrible.
Now, if your friend or someone you cared about
made that typo or looked however she looked that day,
you would not truly think that person is stupid
or that they look terrible.
You think like, oh, you know, like they made a typo.
It's like, there's no emotional generosity toward oneself.
Yes.
So what should we be doing instead?
And so it's starting to notice,
how do you talk to yourself?
You know, like whose voice is that?
It's not yours.
We are not born with that voice.
So that voice came from people who raised you.
It came from the culture.
It came from, you know, the people around you, it came from whatever we're being told.
It's external is the point.
It's external to you.
It is not of you.
So we need to listen to that voice inside of us that is of us.
And we will be so much kinder, not only to ourselves, but to other people.
Because as we always know, like the biggest bullies are, you know twice as mean to themselves right yeah so when you think about like the environment i talked
about the biosphere before like the the ecosystem in your relationship that's the ecosystem in your
home we saw during covid right where everybody was like in the same contained space and we were all
worried about the contagion of the virus and i said to people i want you to worried about the contagion of the virus. And I said to people, I want you to look at the contagion of mood.
Look at the contagion of anxiety.
If someone is anxious or someone's in a crabby mood
or someone is being unkind,
everybody's going to be crabby or anxious or unkind.
Yes.
Right?
Because it's so contagious.
So when a partner is coming from that space
of angry, upset, or negative mood,
what should be done in order to try to shift that energy without rushing them along, but without allowing it to be going on for so long that it's just like sucking up all the air and the energy of the atmosphere?
What should happen next? Right.
I mean, it depends what they're going through.
If they're going through something that's kind of like they're grieving something or there's a loss, the worst thing you can do is rush their wellness.
We call that actually rushed wellness, where you are trying to kind of, oh, well, it's been a year.
Shouldn't you be over this?
It's like, but the person's still dead.
It's like, what does that even mean?
You know, so how are they grieving?
What does their grieving process look like? What kind of support are they getting? Are they able to talk about it? Do they have
a therapist? Do they have a grief group? You know, what are they doing in their lives to
go through this process? How can you support them in it? So there's that. But I think if,
you know, if people are just being crabby or they're just being unkind because they're worried about a promotion at work or, you know, someone, their brother said something mean to them or, you know, whatever happened and they take it out on you.
That's when you've got to say, wait a minute, what's going on here?
Right.
Right.
Let's talk about what you're upset about.
Right.
Before it gets to that point.
You know, and if someone's really anxious all the time, it's like, what are you doing to,
let's talk about the anxiety in the household because it's really contagious.
Like I can support you in certain ways, but you might need to get a different kind of support.
Maybe it's medication. Maybe it's a therapist. Maybe it's,'s you know why don't you explore some options
if someone is bringing in this contagious energy from a previous relationship you know they're they're they're recalling events from the previous relationship they're talking about the previous
relationship they're in fear on things that happen they don't want it to re occur in this current
relationship how important is it to let the past
be in the past and not bring it up or how do we not ruin the current relationship by talking about
the past relationships what is that balance it's like well here's what has happened in my previous
relationships but not talking about it all the time right so that's called punishing the punishing
your partner for the crimes of partner for someone else's crimes.
You don't want to punish your partner for someone else's crimes.
So your other partner, previous partner, treated you a certain way, and then you don't trust your partner.
You're like, why are you looking through my phone?
Oh, well, because in my last relationship, this happened.
And so I want to make sure it's not going to happen to me again.
But I didn't do that to you, right?
And I don't like people looking through my phone.
If there's a difference between secrecy and privacy,
we all need privacy in relationships.
We all need privacy.
So secrecy is something like,
Carl Jung called secrets,
it was like emotional poison or something like that.
It was, you know, it's a poison when you keep secrets.
That's different from privacy.
Privacy is we're allowed to think things and feel things.
We don't need to share every thought or feeling
that comes across our frontal lobes.
We don't, you know, or anywhere in our brain
or in our heart, we don't need to share everything, right? So it's not like you have an X-ray of the other person. So what I, in this relationship that
I'm talking about, she was, she was like, what, but I, but you know that I have these trust issues.
And he said, yeah, but I'm not, I'm not doing anything to break your trust. And, you know,
and, and by the way, let's redefine trust. So a really good redefinition of trust
is that you are okay with what you don't know, that you feel safe with what you don't know.
Then you really trust someone. If you can feel safe with what you don't know, that's trust.
What she was confusing was she was saying, I will trust you if I know everything. No, no, no, no.
Trust is going to be if you don I know everything. No, no, no, no, no. Trust is going to be if you
don't know everything and you feel safe. Yes. How does someone get to that place where
they have no reason to mistrust someone? You know, they're everything they say they're doing,
they're backing up, you know, maybe you checked their phone because you thought something and
then you didn't see it and everything was fine. Like, how do you get to a place of just accepting their word and trusting them?
Right.
So it's within reason.
So if someone says, you know what, I have a sensitivity around if I text you and I don't
hear back for, you know, five hours.
Then I get it wrong.
And I know, and you're in town and you're at work and things are normal or whatever,
right?
And your phone is near you, yeah.
Yeah.
And I know you keep your phone by you all the time.
That's going to make, that's going to trigger me.
And so then you want to make sure that you respond to the person in a timely manner,
but that doesn't mean like you have 30 seconds.
So it has to be reasonable.
Right, you have 30 seconds or else I'm going to like, you know, I'm off to the races.
You know, those kinds of things.
What does it mean?
What do you mutually agree on?
Like how often do we need to be in contact?
What does it mean to be in contact? and and what feels good to both of us because it's
not going to work if it doesn't feel good for both of you both it's only feels good for one
and the other person feels like ah i'm constantly having to do something i don't want to do right
that's not good right and then what the person does is they become untrustworthy because they
don't want to report in and so then they start hiding things just because they weren't given enough space it's kind of like I use this analogy
with parenting but I think it works in relationships too which is the aquarium
so it's like you don't want to be so confined that you feel like you're in a
fishbowl but you don't want the boundaries to be so loose that you're
like in the ocean you want to be in an aquarium with your partner which is that
like we're in a safe contained space but we both have enough room to swim around. I've got some darkness over here. I can just
chill and I can go. Yeah, exactly. I can still in the bubble, but you know, let me just be alone
for a minute. Yeah. Yeah. So the difference between secrecy and privacy in a relationship,
what's, what do we need?
And should everyone have access to someone's passwords and phones at all the time?
Or is that not necessary?
I mean, you know, I think that people have to agree again.
But I think this idea that, you know,
like you can look at my phone whenever you want
will feel very intrusive.
Well, but it feels very intrusive.
I don't even, I'm saying I don't think that that's, I don't think that person has the definition of trust that I'm talking about, which again is that I feel safe with what I don't know.
Right.
Meaning I know that you're not doing anything to betray me, so I don't need to look.
If someone gives you reason to look, that's a completely different thing.
You know, if someone gives you any kind of reason, that's, that's, that's like a completely different kind of conversation that you have.
Sure. But if this person has been trustworthy to your knowledge, you know, this idea that like,
we need to know everything about each other. By the way, you want to kill sex in a relationship,
know every single thing about each other. You will kill the erotic energy in the relationship.
It's a mystery, right? You need, you need some separateness. You will kill the erotic energy in the relationship. It's a mystery, right? You need
some separateness. You need some differentiation between you are you and I am I, and we are
different people. And if you know every single thing about that person, there's no gap to bridge.
What happens with the erotic energy is like, we want to bridge this gap. We want connection,
right? We've been apart. We want to connect. If you you've been fused it's kind of like oh wait actually i want space
right you need space you need space yeah it's the mystery that brought you together in the first
place that made you attracted to each other you know it's like if you know everything all the time
it's hard to keep that going you need that space How much space do you feel like you need in a relationship to make it like still feel that sexual attraction and chemistry? It's everybody's
different. Um, you know, but I think, I think, you know, it, I think when one person feels like,
wait a minute, this feels intrusive. That's their, their body is telling them something. You feel all
these things in your body. So a lot of people say, how will I know? Like as if it's an intellectual
thing. And I always say your body will tell you. You know when you recoil from that person. You know when you
feel like, oh, I hear their voice and they've just walked in the door and I'm not ready for this.
You know, it's not even like something that goes, it's like you feel it in your body. Did you just
tense up? Did you feel it in your stomach? Like what just happened? Did your breathing change?
Right. What should you do in that space where you're not like,
I want to leave this relationship,
but I just need space and create a conversation
where it's safe to say that.
I think it's all about audience and presentation.
So choose your audience well.
Do you have a partner who can hear what you're saying
and not hear it as a rejection?
Take it personally or yeah.
Because you know, a lot of what people call complaints
are actually compliments.
And what I mean is, and I talk about this
and maybe you should talk to someone,
is that when someone is complaining about something,
they're basically saying, I want to get,
I want to have a better relationship.
They're not saying to you, I want to break up with you.
They would just say, I want to break up with you.
So when they're saying like, hey,
I want to come to you with this like I need more space I'm saying that
because I want to be in this relationship I value this relationship I
love you I care about you and what's not working for me is that sometimes I need
some space after work or I need some time to myself on the weekends I don't
want to do every activity together or I need to go out with my friends or
whatever it is.
And that's what's going to help me in this relationship because I want to be with you.
I won't be able to be with you if I don't have some kind of, if we don't work out something around the space.
Right, some arrangement around the space.
So it's a compliment.
It's like I love you enough.
I care about this relationship enough to bring this up with you.
If I didn't care, I wouldn't bring it up i'd just leave
and how toxic is it in your opinion to think that the partner is supposed to make you happy
the thing is it's even if you don't call it toxic, it's just dangerous. Okay, why? Because they can't.
They can't make you fundamentally happy.
They can bring you joy.
It's a great joy to be with someone whose company you really enjoy, of course.
But they can't heal those wounds for you.
They can't take away the hurts.
They can't repair everything that happened for you in your
life they can't do that you're going to have to do that for yourself again they
can provide that sort of containing warm holding environment in which you feel
safe enough to do that but they can't do it for you and when you depend on
someone else you were talking about expectations earlier when you depend on
someone else to do that for you they will inevitably fail because hashtag human right because they are human yeah um they can't they can't do
that so don't have an expectation that you meet this guy or this girl or whatever and they're
going to make me happy they should be able to add to my joy the additive yes they're gonna they're
gonna your quality of life will be greatly enhanced if you have a good relationship.
Right.
Okay?
But you've got to focus on your own happiness.
But in terms of those things where they're going to be misattuned to you sometimes, they're going to upset you sometimes, they're going to do things that you think, how could the person I love me make that choice?
Right?
They're not going to be some like you know magical fairy person yes
and what about um the online world how have you seen this as a therapist the online world uh
supported or hurt relationships you know it's online dating and overall have you seen it to
be a positive thing and also it's just social media hurtful or helpful
when in that relationship with someone and i would say to both social media and online dating both
and yes um i think that online dating makes it um possible for people to meet who ordinarily
would not meet um but that's really all it does so it's, you know, it's like we used to meet people in a much more organic way, but we don't do that anymore. So now you can meet people and it makes it a lot easier.
The downside of that is that there's this illusion with online dating and apps that, you know, you
go out on a date. I hear this all the time from people. They went out on a date. They had a good
time. No butterflies, but it was, they had a good time, no butterflies, but it was,
they had a really good time. Like they, they spent three hours there. Like they, you know,
they had a pretty good time. Um, but yeah, no, you know, I don't know. I just didn't feel like
the chemistry or I don't know, or whatever it was. And so, you know, but there's this other guy,
you know, whatever. So then they like keep going through the apps as opposed to why wouldn't you
go on a second date with that person that you just had a pretty good three hours with?
Like spend another two or three hours with that person.
Even spend one hour and you do coffee so you can get out easily if you want to.
But you had a pretty good time.
And I think people think that like it's got to all be there right away.
And actually they did these studies where they followed couples over 20 years.
This longitudinal study.
And what they did was they didn't do reporting where you look back and you say, what was
your first date like?
They actually did reporting at the time.
So they got all of these reports, you know, they followed them every five years and they
would interview them.
And the people who were happy 20 years later, when they recalled their first date, they
would say, oh yeah, I was so into him.
I was so into her. It was amazing. Right. In those reports, often they would find what they reported
at the time was really nice person. You know, like, yeah, no, I had a good time. Like, like
there wasn't like this magnetic attraction of the butterflies. Sometimes there was, but in more cases
than not, there wasn't. And then when you looked at people who were like divorced or really unhappy but still
married and you asked them about it, they're like, I didn't really like him that much.
Oh really, in the beginning?
They've revised the story.
But when you go back to what they actually said at the time, they were like, you know,
lots of chemistry.
So in other words, our opinions about people change the more we get to know them.
And so if you go out with somebody once, twice, three times, right?
And you had a pretty good time that first time, go out with them again.
Like why wouldn't you go out with them twice or three times?
And see what happens.
People won't do that and they keep like cycling and juggling all these different people.
Like maybe the next person
will be you know like i'll feel more attraction to but maybe that person you don't have as much
kind of emotional chemistry with right um you know so then that person's ruled out um you know you
have enough in common or whatever it is sure um so like at what point are it's like musical chairs
like at what point you're going to sit down because the chairs are going to get filled well
i think you hear people say you you know, don't settle.
But it's like, how do you know when you've not settled?
Right.
And you found a great match, but it's...
Well, so the thing is, you never want to feel like you're with a person where you settled
and you don't want to feel settled for.
But I think, again, going back to defining things, what does settling mean?
So there was a study that was in one of my earlier books where men and women were asked,
you know, what would it take to get a second date?
Like what, what qualities would a person need to have?
So men named three things that a person would have to have for them to want to go on a second date with that person.
And they said she has to be attractive enough.
And they did not mean like she has to look like a supermodel.
They meant like, I think she's cute.
That's all.
I think she's cute.
Like they know, you know, they know that they're not like a supermodel. They meant like, I think she's cute. That's all, I think she's cute. Like they know, you know, they know
that they're not like a supermodel themselves.
She has to be easy to talk to and she has to be kind.
Like she can't be like, oh, you know, mean to the waiter
or, you know, like kind of entitled or whatever, you know,
just like, she has to like seem like a really nice person.
Sure. Okay.
That person gets a second date.
Women named 100 things.
So from three to 100, 100 things that would not get a guy a second date women named 100 things so from three to 100 100 things that would
not get a guy a second date and they were you know these like really really picky things you know i'm
not saying if he was this he was that he was this or that or the other thing like you know oh he
wore khakis and and you know like just really ridiculous or he didn't like like you know or
his hairstyle his hair style or he did this like
really like, by the way, people are nervous on first dates. They're sweaty. They're stressed.
People can get nervous. They might be like, maybe they were a little bit overly animated because
they were trying to impress you. Maybe they, you know, they were just like trying to entertain you
and it was a little too much, but like overall you had a good time and overall you
there were these there was enough there that maybe you'd go on a second date and if they're that way
on the second date then no don't go on the third date right um but i think we have to we have to
kind of remember that like it's a process and so many people want immediate gratification they want
like that story of like we met it was it was immediate. Explosive and chemistry.
Right. And so when someone feels this like instant attraction and explosive chemistry and like
finishing of each other's sentences or whatever this is, these butterflies the whole time,
I couldn't stop thinking about them all week. If what I'm hearing you say is that sometimes or
most of the time, like 20 years later, those don't work out?
No, they can work out.
But sometimes, and again, it depends where you are in your own healing.
Yes.
Sometimes what your unconscious is doing is saying, oh, you look familiar.
He's familiar.
Come closer, right? You look familiar.
And his unconscious and her unconscious and them, whoever you're dating, right?
This is not gendered at all.
This works no matter who your partner is
and who you are, right?
That if something feels familiar to you
in this very, you know, unconscious way,
and you haven't worked that stuff out,
the unfinished business,
you're gonna be like, yeah, this feels really familiar,
but it feels so good, right?
Come closer, it feels so familiar to me.
If something feels unfamiliar, but it feels good, is that? Come closer. It feels so familiar to me. If something feels unfamiliar,
but it feels good, is that a sign that... That's you and your girlfriend. Is it like, oh, maybe
you're choosing something different and you're experiencing something different. Is that
something that people should keep exploring or what do you think? Yeah, yeah, absolutely. If it
feels better, right? It feels good. Again, keep that journal. Look at the bank account
that you guys are creating together,
your joint bank account.
Are there five deposits for one withdrawal?
Right?
You're experiencing that right now.
It's unfamiliar, but it feels healthy.
It feels good.
Absolutely, yeah.
Yeah.
Man, what else do you see right now
that people are really struggling with
when you're doing therapy with them?
Or just the emails, the calls coming in for the podcast you guys are doing.
What's kind of a common theme of right now?
I would say connection.
People are lacking the connection?
People are lacking connection or they want to learn how to better connect. So they have someone that they want to connect with,
but they're bungling it up in all kinds of ways.
That's sort of what happens on our podcast every week.
They're bundling it up.
They're bungling it, yeah.
What does that mean?
You know, it's like they want to
have this healthy relationship
and they're afraid to have the conversations
they don't know how to have the conversations they're doing things they
know they shouldn't be doing they don't see their own role in it you know all of
those things but again I think you know I think that that it's so relatable
because we all act this way we all have our blind spots. We all think that we're extremely self-aware.
And you can't see what you don't know.
It's like you don't know what you don't know.
Right, right.
What's something we should do on a weekly basis to check in with our partner to make
sure we're cultivating that connection?
Is it a question we should, hey, every Sunday we're going to have this 10-minute conversation.
What should we talk about?
I notice as a therapist that people talk more about what they don't want than what they do want with their partners.
So they'll say, like, I don't like it when you do this, or I wish you wouldn't do this, as opposed to, I really like when you do that.
I felt great when this happened.
I want more of that, or I like that, just appreciating that, right?
If you're always telling people
what you don't like about them,
it's hard for them to see what you do like about them.
So I think that people need to spend more time
telling the other person what they do want.
You know, when we talk about complaints as compliments,
you can say to somebody,
say you feel like your partner isn't being affectionate enough with you, right?
You can say like,
you never kiss me when you come in the door
or you don't hug me enough.
Or you can say,
I really love it when you come in the door and kiss me.
As opposed to being like,
as opposed to making them defensive
by saying you're not doing this enough.
And they're like, what do you mean?
I was just doing this earlier and I did this before and you're not doing this enough. And they're like, what do you mean?
I was just doing this earlier and I did this before
and you're not appreciating it.
But when you show, like you said, appreciation,
I really appreciate it when you do this.
It's gonna make you wanna hopefully do it more.
Right, and also not arguing with people's feelings.
Like I can see the other side of that
where someone says to someone,
I really like it when you hug me when you come in and and and then you know maybe it's a guy who says
to her like but I do I hug you all the time right she's like okay now we're
gonna fight over the content which is like how many times do you actually hug
me and when was the last time you hugged me which is different which is just like
oh oh you know to register for yourself oh she feels like I don't hug her enough so it doesn't matter whether I do to register for yourself. Oh, she feels like I don't hug her
enough. So it doesn't matter whether I do or I don't. The point is she feels like I don't. So
I'm going to make a conscious effort to make sure that maybe when we're watching TV together,
I'm going to put my arm around her. Right. Instead of arguing about, but I just hugged
you yesterday, you know, when I came home and I hugged you the day before. And I'm sure that
I hug you every day. Don't argue about it. Just be like, oh, noted. Noted.
Let me give you a hug later, yeah.
Yeah.
What would you say, you know,
obviously you work with a lot of couples
that are experiencing some type of problems, right?
Most of them don't come into you and say,
everything's amazing.
We're just here to like,
just make sure it's still amazing, you know?
Which I think it's actually,
I think it'd be healthy for relationships to,
you know, get into therapy sooner.
When things are actually good, it's for like just a checkup every now and then and say, hey, how can we keep cultivating this?
But I'm curious, from the relationships you've seen that have been thriving, like it's pretty healthy, happy, thriving, like it seems really good.
What would you say those key things that they all have in common?
Kindness.
Kindness. Kindness.
Yeah.
You can't take back the unkindnesses.
They're there.
They live there.
You know, people will remember, by the way.
Always.
I remember three years ago when you did this thing.
Yeah, I remember when you said that thing.
I remember how it felt in my body.
So kindness is especially important. And I would also say there are all these cultural
norms that we have to get rid of. Like I had this couple where, you know, it was a heterosexual
couple and she said to her husband, I just, I feel, I want to get closer to you. I feel like,
you know, I want to know what's going on with you.
I wish you would share more with me about your inner life.
I feel like there's this distance between us.
And he was like this guy's guy, right?
And finally, finally, he opens up to her.
And he gets a little tear.
And I see her body.
I'm watching her.
And she's sort of, she's there with him, right?
And then he starts crying.
He starts talking about something really difficult he has been
holding in for a really long time and she on the one hand feels so much
compassion for him and on the other hand she's terrified because you know she
kind of looks at me like what do I do now and so was this interesting thing in
our culture about safety with men and vulnerability because on the one hand
she's saying to him,
I don't feel safe when you don't share with me.
I feel distance from you.
I feel separated from you.
I feel disconnected from you.
I don't feel safe in our relationship
when you're over there and I'm over here
and we are not meeting.
But on the other hand,
if you start crying in front of me like that
and you really are vulnerable
and you let down your guard like that,
I also don't feel safe, not because of anything you did wrong, but because I've been
told by society that you are weak when you do that, right? Like, I feel like you are now not
my rock, and you are not strong for me. And I didn't even realize I had those perceptions. I
didn't realize that that's how I grew up, but that's what society has been telling me, that
when a man cries like that in front of me, that he's weak, and now I don't feel that that's how I grew up, but that's what society has been telling me, that when a man cries like that in front of me,
that he's weak and now I don't feel safe,
and that somehow as a woman, I'm weak
if I don't have a man to be strong for me.
Mm.
So we had to talk about all of these ideas
that have been, you know, we've been brainwashed.
Yes.
And so then we have to, like, do the un-brainwashing,
and then they can actually come closer to
each other and he didn't have to be the rock all the time and she didn't have to feel like
you have to save me all the time.
I'm so happy you said this, Lori, because I wrote a book about this a few years back
called The Mask of Masculinity and I went on tour.
I don't know if I told you this before, but I went on tour to talk about this and the
rooms were typically 50-50 men and women
who were in the rooms.
And I would say this exact thing that like women would say,
well, I wish my partner or my husband were more sensitive
or emotional or vulnerable and open up.
And I'd say, well, you've got to learn to be there
and be able to handle it.
Because I've talked to so many men who say,
you know what, my wife keeps telling me
they want to do this and I finally do it. And then they're like, well, I need you to be strong.
Now I don't feel safe. Exactly what you said. I was like, I'm so glad you said this from a
therapist's point of view and not just, you know, a guy saying this, but I'm so glad you're saying
this and that you've witnessed this with your, your couples that have come in and you actually
seen this. Because I feel like like it's it's so hard for
men to want to express their vulnerabilities and if they don't fit and i had a previous girlfriend
that i would cry in front of that i would show you know my vulnerabilities and was freely doing
it i never held back because i was comfortable doing it myself in certain moments you know when
i'd see something on tv or a movie or a sensitive thing I'd show emotion and it's like she couldn't handle it it's like she could not handle it and she was like crying
is weakness and she didn't cry in front of me and I was just like man you're never gonna have
respect for me if you think I'm weak for showing vulnerabilities and then why would I want to be
vulnerable around you if you're going to disrespect me I'm going to want to gain your respect and I'm
going to want to get harder and have a wall, which luckily I didn't do.
But I feel like in general, a lot of men do that. Well, what you're doing is you're being really
courageous, right? So I think it takes an incredible act of bravery to say to somebody,
this is who I am. And so, and she's saying, oh, that makes you weak. No, it makes you strong.
That's what I say. It's like, it's like I say. It's like you are so okay with yourself.
Yeah, I don't care if you make fun of me.
I'm still going to do it.
This is me and I'm going to show up and I'm going to share with you and I'm going to be in this relationship.
It's so interesting that you say that.
So I'm raising a boy.
And I noticed this because during COVID, you know, everyone was saying, talk to your teenagers.
Talk to your kids about what they're experiencing.
A lot of them are anxious and depressed
and all these things are happening.
And my son one day said to me, he said,
you know, that's really easy for people to say,
but boys don't talk about this stuff.
And I said, and I said, yeah,
what do you think makes it so hard?
And we had a little chat about it
and we actually put it on Instagram
because I thought it was really important
and all these people responded to it.
So he started-
Didn't he write an article I saw you send me?
He did.
He wrote an article for Time Magazine.
But he started this thing called Talk With Zach on Instagram.
I saw it, yeah.
And he just wants to model that, like, for boys and men,
that, like, you can talk about what you're feeling.
You can be vulnerable.
In fact, not only can you, but you should,
because you want to be a whole human being.
And I think that it's been really interesting because it's opened up the eyes of women and girls.
Yes.
That's beautiful.
You know, it's like I have so many men who come to me for therapy and they say, I can talk to my guy friends.
People think that your guy friends will make fun of you if you open up to them.
They won't, actually.
The people who I'm most afraid to talk to they'll say girlfriend is my girlfriend
my wife right like my sister like these are the people who like but your girlfriend or your wife
especially because they depend on you in this way absolutely they tend to be the rock because
they may not be the emotionally stable person majority of the time maybe they are or not but
the problem is though like so john in my book he's one of these people who would, like, hold it all in, right?
And then there's this tragic thing that happens in his marriage.
And he and his wife are both grieving.
And he says, I had to be the rock.
Like, I couldn't cry.
And he's the one who has insomnia.
He's having nightmares.
But he can't talk about any of it.
She's the one who always cries all the time.
And I said, maybe she's crying for both of you.
And it just stopped him in his tracks. Maybe she's crying for both of you and it just stopped him in his tracks maybe she's crying for both of you and when he was
able to start talking about what had happened and this loss that they'd had
in their marriage and in their family their marriage completely changed it
transformed right because he didn't have to be he thought she didn't tell him you
have to be the strong one for me it was something that he just took in from the culture. And when he was able to share in the grief and the loss and they were able to kind of do this together, it was a game changer.
is more men to be courageous enough to be vulnerable in sensitive moments and more women to be strong enough to be there when their male partner is being vulnerable and sensitive
and not making them wrong or laughing at them or feeling unsafe in those moments.
I truly believe that when men can learn to have a safe environment to
communicate effectively and vulnerably in appropriate times, there are going to be a
lot happier people in general. There's going to be a lot less stress in the world. It's going to be
a lot less fighting, arguing, power struggles, political struggles, you know, wars. I just feel
like when men can learn the process of being able to express themselves and being accepted for it,
they won't need to put up these walls and try to, like, protect themselves all the time.
Right.
And what happens is they don't deal with what they're experiencing.
So you'll have so many women come into therapy and say, you know,
oh, I think I might be struggling with depression or anxiety or whatever, a relational difficulty. And men just never talk about it. And you can see what happens.
It affects their physical health. Right. It affects their health. And it comes out in other ways,
right? The anger, the resentment, the stoicism. Yeah. Too much food, too much alcohol, you know,
drugs, just a short temperedness and relationships pornography
any kind of any kind of distraction from the pain it's really their self-medicate
they're really trying to medicate themselves they're saying you know like i am really in distress
but i don't know where to go with it so how I mean, what needs to happen first?
Men should start being more vulnerable
and intimate in their relationships.
You know, even if their partners
are not willing to accept that,
or women should start saying,
hey, I want this, like your couple came to therapy
and said, I wish he would do this,
but then when he started to open up,
she was like, I don't know how to handle this. Here's what I say to couples about that now
I say you're going to need a disclaimer
Because there's nothing they can do at that point if you've given the disclaimer that doesn't you know that doesn't keep them aware
so you can say to
Your girlfriend your wife you can say, you know, I, I'm, you, you asked, you want me to
be closer with you. You want me to open up to you. Um, I really want to do that. I think it would be
really good for us. I'm worried that if I do that you're, you know, there are all these stereotypes
in our culture that you're going to, you're going to feel really uncomfortable that it's going to
make you uncomfortable. And I'm asking you that if I do this,
that you are able to sit with your discomfort and be present with me.
Now, that's a lot of words, right?
That's a lot of words.
Not a lot of people will say it that way.
I'll be able to say that, yeah.
But you can say something like it.
Like, I want to be able to do this,
but I need you to be able to be there and not judge me. Because the
last thing, if you judge me, if I feel like you think I'm weak or you think anything like that,
you can bet that we're not going to be having conversations like this.
Yes. I think this should be a highly encouraged video or audio to listen to. So if you're
one person listening to this, you should have your partner listen to this with you
and listen to this last part specifically
and say, hey, listen, let's try this if you feel this way.
So you're both on the same page.
So I encourage you listening to this with your partner
or watching this with your partner.
Yes.
You know how men will often say like,
oh, when she's crying, I just want her to stop crying.
Yes. Right? And yet oh, when she's crying, I just want her to stop crying? Yes.
Right?
And yet, when a man is crying, it's not.
So how will a man help a woman to stop crying?
He'll usually, like, go and hug her and comfort her.
What does a woman do to get a man to stop crying?
She just freezes.
She really does.
Or she'll use words.
Like, it's okay.
It's going to be okay.
No, really, it's not that bad right she generally won't go and hug him because it's she's so uncomfortable
what should women do in that moment go and hug him hug him i'm here i'm here tell me more
tell me more say more i'm here let's talk about it wow that's beautiful i really want to hear this imagine all
the men listening imagine your partner doing that it'd probably feel like freedom peace like finally
this feeling so for all the ladies listening if you have a male partner who's been resistant to
being vulnerable listen to what lori is saying about this because this could really heal your
relationship in a big way and help it thrive in that process.
I think that's a big part of the repair process
from what I'm hearing you say is like,
you know, obviously when a woman feels safe to be vulnerable,
they're going to feel like they can trust their male partner more.
And when a man feels safe to be vulnerable,
he'll be willing to do that and trust you more
with that emotional burden as well,
with that weight that he's feeling. You asked earlier, sort of like, what is the secret
to success of relationships? This, this is it being able to, to know that if you go to your
partner with something that feels delicate, that they won't, they won't smash it, that they won't
drop it. It was like what I said before, where I felt like he had grabbed his heart
and extended it to her and said, I feel lonely.
And she said, but I didn't do that, right?
Like that you can,
that if your partner is going to give you something,
think of it as like something really fragile and delicate.
Like when you mail things, it's just like fragile,
like be very careful with it.
Like it's really delicate.
You have to be really gentle.
Be really gentle. When your partner is handing you something delicate,
be really, really gentle.
Or you can bet that there's going to be a lot of loneliness
in that relationship
because people are going to go into their own silos.
Man, this is so good.
So the keys of thriving relationship,
kindness, being gentle when there's vulnerabilities.
Is there anything else you would add there?
Or if you can do those two things,
that's a pretty good relationship.
And take care of your own healing.
Do the work.
Don't expect someone else to do it for you.
Do the work and bring that work to the relationship.
I love this.
I love this.
You've got an amazing book.
Maybe you should talk to someone.
I feel like this is such a game changer for so many people.
So make sure you guys pick up a copy of this book.
You also have a workbook.
Same title.
Maybe you should talk to someone.
Workbook.
The workbook.
It's called How Changing Your Story Can Change Your Life.
And it takes people through the process of rewriting their story and getting a much more accurate version of their story.
Which is a game changer for your healing process
to rewrite the story of the past, right?
Yes, and even the faulty narratives
that we carry around in the present.
We carry around all these faulty narratives.
I'm unlovable, I can't trust anyone,
nothing will ever work out for me.
How do you rewrite those narratives?
Yes. Yeah.
And so this
workbook workbook takes you through a step-by-step process of doing that it's based on maybe you
should talk to someone the book but it's also based on my ted talk which is about how changing
your story can change your life um and um you know everybody said when maybe you should talk
to someone came out they said i learned so much from the book, but I want to be like, I want,
I want a guide to do that. And so I put together this guide for everybody who has been asking for
it. And I really wanted to give people the experience of what I do with people in the
therapy room, how I help them edit their stories. Yeah. Where can we get that? The workbook,
wherever you buy Amazon, independent bookstores, wherever you get your books,
it's all there. And where's the, and everything, the podcast, everything's on your website too, right?
Yeah.
The podcast is called Dear Therapist.
So you can listen on Apple or Spotify or wherever you listen to podcasts.
It's a great podcast.
And Guy is your co-host on there.
He's been on the show as well.
He's amazing.
So you guys have a great banter there.
So Dear Therapist, the workbook,
you're also on Instagram.
I see you over on Instagram, all your content as well.
We'll link up that, everything in the show notes,
the TED Talk.
This is amazing.
I want people to, you might need to go back to this
conversation and take some notes
and start really implementing some of these things.
So hopefully this has been a helpful resource for people. I appreciate you sharing. How else can we be a
support to you? What else can we do to take action on? So that's get the workbook, get it for you and
your partner. Get this book, listen to the podcast. What else can we do? Yeah, I would say like the
best thing that people can do is to just, you know, benefit from all of this is to actually use it
in their own lives. I feel like, you know,
emotional health is not just a thing that happens between you and yourself or you and a partner,
but on a societal level, if we could all do these things, we would live in a very different kind of
world. Absolutely. Yeah. I love this, Lori. I'm so grateful for you for coming back on and sharing
this wisdom. And I acknowledge you for man just
showing up and doing the work with people you're in the work on a consistent basis you're hearing
these stories you're getting feedback by giving exercises you're you're just a wealth of information
and knowledge so I acknowledge you for showing up and making tools for us like the book and the
workbook and the podcast because this stuff is messy for a lot of people. Really messy.
It is, and that's why I feel like in the therapy room,
you work with one person or two people or whatever it is,
and I really wanted to make this accessible to everyone.
And that's why I'm writing these books
and doing the podcast and the TED Talk and all of that
and having these conversations with you.
Because I think that people,
nobody did this for people, right?
Like growing up, that's not what we do.
We learn all these subjects in school, but we don't learn about emotional health.
And so I really want to make it accessible for people and valuable for people.
I love it.
Lori, I asked you this question before, but I'm curious again, your three truths.
So imagine it's your last day on earth.
Oh my gosh. And you've accomplished all
of your dreams and written lots of books and created more and more content. But for whatever
reason, no one has access to your content anymore. It's got to go somewhere else. Your books, this
podcast, everything, it's all gone for whatever reason. Hypothetical. But you get to leave behind
three lessons to the world or what I would call three
truths. And this is all we would have to kind of have access to your content. What would you say
would be those three truths for you? Oh, that's really hard on the spot. I would say the first
one is you are enough. Yes. I think that people forget that, that you can be messy and fallible
and imperfect and all of those things but you are enough your essence
is enough um i would say um if you uh the thing about if a fight breaks out in a bar in every
bar you're going to maybe it's you um i would say um your blind spots are important to shine a light on. It's really important to shine a light on your blind spots.
Yes.
And I would say be kind to yourself because then you will be kind to others.
Absolutely.
I've heard this in the past.
I can't remember who, but it's kind of in the personal development talk
it's like what's inside of you comes out
so if you're you know
if there's whatever
you get cut off in the car in front of you
if you're reactive and angry
there's anger inside of you
if you're like okay
he's probably just having a bad day
and smile or she's having a bad day then there's kindness inside of you so it's like whatever's inside of you. If you're like, okay, he's probably just having a bad day and smile, or she's having a bad day, then there's kindness inside of you. So it's like whatever's inside of
you comes out. So be aware of what's coming out of you and how you're reacting to situations.
That can be a blind spot too. Right. And what we were saying before about like that biosphere that,
you know, if you yell at that person, then what are you putting into, what fumes are you putting
out into the world that other people are going gonna be breathing and you're breathing them too
absolutely final question what's your definition of greatness mmm I think it's
very different from our culture's definition of greatness I think
greatness is like a feeling of peace I think it's a feeling of peace but not
not in a kind of a way just for you, but I think like making peace for other people in the world.
That you're offering peace, that you're creating a way for people to find peace, that you act,
you navigate through the world in a way that creates peace for other people.
There you go.
Lori, thank you so much for being here.
Appreciate it.
Thank you so much again for the conversation.
Amazing.
Thank you so much for listening.
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
show with all the important links.
And also make sure to share this with a friend and subscribe over on Apple Podcasts as well.
I really love hearing feedback from you guys.
So share a review over on Apple and let me know what part of this episode resonated with you the most.
And if no one's told you lately, I want to 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.