The School of Greatness - Relationship Expert: The SECRET to Healing Your Relationship After Conflict
Episode Date: October 13, 2025Relationship expert Baya Voce reveals why the fairy tale version of love is setting us up for failure—and what actually creates lasting intimacy. She shares her personal journey from serial people-p...leasing to building genuine connection, including the painful lesson of being engaged to someone who fabricated his entire identity. Most people never exit the "power struggle" phase of relationships because they've never learned the one skill that matters most: how to repair after conflict. Baya explains why therapy at the beginning of a relationship changes everything, how your nervous system—not your personality—determines who you attract, and why the ability to sit in emotional discomfort is more valuable than chemistry. You'll walk away understanding that love isn't about finding someone perfect—it's about two imperfect people learning to heal together.Sign up for Baya’s newsletterFollow Baya on InstagramIn this episode you will:Discover why conflict is required for intimacy – Not optional, not avoidable, but essential for moving beyond surface connection into true partnership and interdependenceMaster the art of emotional regulation – Learn why this single skill, according to neuroscientists, determines your success in every relationship more than communication or compatibilityTransform your nervous system response – Understand how your physiological health—thyroid, cortisol, sleep—directly impacts your ability to stay calm during disagreementsBreak free from the change-accept paradox – Stop trying to fix your partner or change yourself to please them, and learn the framework for healthy boundaries that create mutual respectLearn to repair instead of run – Access the exact framework (truth, agreement, responsibility) for having difficult conversations that strengthen rather than damage your connectionFor more information go to https://lewishowes.com/1836For more Greatness text PODCAST to +1 (614) 350-3960More SOG episodes we think you’ll love:Esther Perel – greatness.lnk.to/1686SCMartha Higareda Howes – greatness.lnk.to/1788SCJillian Turecki – greatness.lnk.to/1740SC Get more from Lewis! Get my New York Times Bestselling book, Make Money Easy!Get The Greatness Mindset audiobook on SpotifyText Lewis AIYouTubeInstagramWebsiteTiktokFacebookX Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
They say the NM1 skill is emotional regulation.
And there is no way around it.
You cannot escape this if you want to have a meaningful, intimate relationship.
There is no way around this.
Author and TEDx Voice, whose programs translate emotional intelligence into everyday team habits.
Please welcome via vote check.
There is no truth in relationship.
There are just two people who are having their own experiences and you live in your world and I live over here in my world.
And as long as we're arguing for the truth,
We're both going to lose because the truth doesn't actually exist.
If we're fighting the truth, we are fighting a losing battle.
Period, full stop.
Agreement is the enemy of attunement.
And attunement is really what we need in order to repair.
We need empathy, right?
If you know that you're not arguing for truth,
what we're arguing for is your perspective or my perspective,
getting heard, seen, and validated.
Yes.
Conflict without repair is just pain.
But then conflict with repair is healing.
I deeply believe that we get into relationship to heal the parts of ourselves that nobody else could heal before.
Do you feel like you've healed from those relationships with men?
I don't know.
Welcome back at one of the School of Greatness.
We have the inspiring Beja Voce in the house.
And we were just talking to Beia right before I had about how both of us, how both of
of us entered our previous relationships in therapy as opposed to waiting for conflict to arise
and then try to repair. You have been helping individuals understand conflict resolution in
relationships. I've been researching this for a long time. You've been working with people about
this. And I'm curious, do you think we need conflict in order to have a healthy relationship?
Is it part of a thriving, harmonious, healthy relationship?
Or is it better to just create resolution, agreements, acceptance, alignment from the beginning
of a relationship the first six to nine months so that we can minimize conflict so we don't
have to try to put all of our energy into repairing in the future, which sucks the life
out of a relationship in my mind.
Where are your thoughts on this?
I mean, listen, I think it's a dance, first of all.
And I look at relationships in phases.
The first phase is the part where you're sort of enmeshed.
You found your soulmate, the other half, the, like, how have I not lived without you?
My whole, like, I haven't not found you.
I'm so, you know, and there is this way that you merge.
And this is where you feel like you're never going to fight about anything.
We have so much in common.
This is.
This person is perfect.
That's right.
That's right.
And then inevitably, because you are two different nervous systems with two different
wounding patterns and different histories, inevitably, at some point, you enter into another
stage, which I like to call the power struggle.
The power struggle is where you're faced with a whole bunch of tension.
This is where your differences start to rub up against each other.
All of a sudden, we start to individuate.
so that where we thought we were just one amoeba now we're sort of like you know now we're now we're
starting to be like wait you're you're an individual with different desires and needs and i am also
so so what do we and so there's inherently tension in this phase that tension is important we have to
we have to find the areas of friction in order to move through them to where actually in the third phase you
get to interdependence. You find a space in your relationship where you have more gentleness.
You know one another's wounding. And so you're able to work with that wounding a little bit
more easily. You know where you're going to get caught. You've been in the cycles, you know,
but the tricky part is most people never exit out of stage two. Most people are in the power
struggle for the duration of the relationship. What does the power struggle phase look like for most
people. So it can look like, first of all, it can look a lot of different ways. This is not one
size fits all. For people who are a little more conflict avoidant, you might find that the power
struggle looks just a little more like distance. Like, huh, they just did something that really
bothered me. I think I'm just not going to say anything about that. And I'll just act like that
doesn't matter. Like stuffing your feelings. Totally. Silent treatment at times. Yes. Yeah, 100%.
That makes me feel uncomfortable. So I'm just not going to speak about it at all for some people.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. I like the, I like the like the stuff down, down. Oh, I can, a lot of it. Some people might be, I can handle that. That's fine. It's the quintessential. I'm fine.
Until two, three years later, you explode.
You're definitely not fine.
Or two, three weeks later, you're not fine.
And if you have two people who do that, you're going to end up, you know, you're going
to end up walking two parallel paths and you'll be roommates before long who aren't talking
about much and you're just living different lives in the same house.
Or would that power struggle phase also be, you don't say what's truly on your heart.
You don't have the courage to speak to your partner directly, but you talk about it to
other friends and family about what they're not giving you.
100%, 100%.
And listen, it makes sense on some level because if we have grown up afraid of what it actually
means to bring our truth, if we have learned that bringing what's real for us creates
distance or punishment, then we're adapting to that response.
There's a one of my mentors is Terry Real and he's fantastic and he has a line that I think
It's so profound, which is adaptive now, maladaptive then.
What now is an adaptation that you have, that you have figured out because your mom yelled
at you and your reaction to that when she yelled at you was to hide and then be good.
Now, what are you going to do in your relationship?
Well, you're probably going to hide and be good.
And so your partner might come to you and be mad at you and you might just start appeasing.
No, no, no, it's okay.
Oh, I totally didn't mean to do that.
I can't believe.
And meanwhile, you're over here fuming, but you're not going to say that because what do you think is going to happen?
That your mom is going to yell, but it's your partner.
And so we have to start learning what it actually means to grow out of our maladaptive responses into adaptive responses.
So if you were yelled that as a kid, for instance, and your adaptive, smart response,
by the way, smart response was to, like I just said, maybe hide in your room and cry.
And that actually gave you attention from your dad.
So when you cried, your mom would yell and when you cry, your dad would come and console.
So what did you learn?
You learned safety is crying, having a big reaction, and then dad's going to come console me.
Now, as an adult, you cry hoping for that same attention.
And it might not even be conscious, by the way.
You just cry because that's the thing that comes up.
It just comes out of you like that.
It's so easy.
And all of a sudden, your partner doesn't actually respond to that.
Your partner actually needs you to be in a little bit more of a regulated space for them to meet you.
And where do you go?
You go deeper into the pain.
You go harder into the crying because that's the thing that got you attention before.
So when we don't understand that there is this younger part of ourselves that is in charge when we're triggered.
Now, you can call this the amygdala.
You can call this your inner.
child. There are many, many people have had many, you know, in many traditions have called
this different things. I like to look at it as a little kid, as like your five-year-old self
who's crying, begging for a parent to hold you and give you attention. And when that matches up,
which it just tends to do in relationships with your partner's wounding, well, guess what?
You're probably not going to get your needs met. It's going to lead to more tension. So this question
of, you know, can we just deal with it at the beginning and talk our way through agreements
and whatnot so that tension doesn't arise? I don't, I think that actually goes a little bit
hand in hand with this narrative that we've all been sold and has been steeped into our subconscious
that is from Disney and Hollywood rom-coms and hashtag couple goals on social media around what a
relationship should look like. And unless you're in self-development, unless you're in therapy,
unless you read relationship books or go to the workshops, there's actually nowhere in culture
where you're learning that conflict is normal and that you have to, it's intimacy building.
Now, there are plenty of unhealthy ways to do conflict. So I don't mean to say that yelling and
abuse is, that's not a healthy way to do conflict. But if you can do conflict in a way that
actually then lends to repair and then you complete the cycle, then when you, conflict without
repair is just pain over and over and over again. Yeah, but then conflict with repair is
healing. I actually really like thinking about it this way. So you each come into the relationship
with all of your relationships behind you. So it's your relationship with your caregivers.
It's the relationship with the person who broke your heart or the 12 people who broke your heart before that.
It's the pain that you did to other people and it's the pain that other people did to you, caused to you.
You walk into your relationship with all of the unhealed pain and you basically walk to your partner and you say,
heal me.
Here it is.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, but we don't know that's what we're saying.
That's not why we get into relationships.
That's not why we think we're getting into relationships.
But that to me is when we're talking, when I get a little more kind of spiritual and woo-woo and
esoteric about it, I deeply believe, I deeply believe that we get into relationship to heal
the parts of ourselves that nobody else could heal before.
And when we find the relationship that is the one we decide to basically put on the
altar as this is where I'm going to do my work, this is where I'm, then what you are
saying as each partner is, I am signing up to be here, to help you heal the parts of yourself
that nobody else that came before me could help you heal. I'm up for that task. And vice versa.
It's to me, that lens is, it's a gift that we give each other when we sign up for relationships
and say, it doesn't matter how perfect I want you to be. I know you come with unheeled wounding.
and I have the exact recipe
that's probably going to bump up against those wounds.
But if we're responsible enough
and we do our work enough,
that what I also can do
is support in the healing of those wounds.
Yes.
I heard Gabor Mate said that
if it's hysterical, it's historical.
And if someone is reacting
based out of a trigger or something
and they're reacting hysterically
to a situation or an environment
that even isn't a physical threat
but feels to them like there's a physical threat.
There's some type of history behind it
that's causing them to be hysterical
or reactive in whatever situation.
And what I'm hearing you say is that
healthy conflict takes courage
is what I'm hearing you say.
And what I lacked for most of my life
in every intimate relationship I was in was courage
for most of my life.
I would stuff it down.
I was in the second phase,
the power struggle phase
for most of my relationship life.
And I was, you know,
I'd get into a relationship
for two years, three years, four years, and just kind of repeat the cycle thinking it was
the person I was with and get in a new relationship and kind of repeat the cycle of
phase one to phase two.
And then you're in phase two forever.
And you're trying to get into interdependence, right?
But it never felt like it for me until this, my marriage now.
And what I'm hearing you also say is that you're not getting into a relationship with a human
being.
You're getting in a relationship with their nervous system.
And if their nervous system is wounded and irregulated or deregulated, then that's what you're getting in a relationship with is how someone perceives everything in the world.
And if they're traumatized or if they have thin skin by every little thing that you say or do or don't do, that's the relationship you're getting into.
Not the person and how they look, but what's inside their nervous system and how they respond to their environment.
You know, I often say, like, if we were to go on for states and be like, all right, what, when you're, when you're just off the rocker, what do you like, when you're super triggered, when you're a 10 out of 10, when you're a 5 out of 10, what do you, what are we up against?
There's a bear inside of me.
There's like a bear that wants to destroy.
If I'm like not regulated, you know, it's like, I'm like, let me just take on the world, you know, it's like a bear.
Same.
I can get, I can get both, I can get loud.
And I can get super, I can get super quiet and just, like, you don't, you don't even feel my heart.
Like, I can go to both of those places.
And they're not, they're not places I'm proud of, by the way.
But we, and, and by the way, no matter how much work we do, these pieces live inside of us.
It's not that the little kid ever goes away.
It's that when you start to understand what your nervous system is like when it gets dysregulated, like, oh, I know that my, my chest tightens.
or I start to talk really, really fast, or I start to sweat, or it's maybe it doesn't feel
so physiological, but I can start to, I can start to feel you become my enemy. I'm like trying
to build my case against you, right? Like, we've all kind of been here in one way or another.
When I begin to understand what my particular brand of dysregulation looks like, then I can start
taking responsibility for when I'm going there and that adaptive part, that young, because that's
really what it is. It's the part of ourselves that's just trying to fight for, keep me safe,
keep me safe. We can sort of do this thing where we put the kid in the back. It's like,
okay, you're five. I don't want you to go away, but you also can't drive. And this is another
thing that Terry talks about, which I think is also really smart, which is like you put the kid in
the back and you've got to give the kid love, but the kid needs a boundary. Like, that's what
kids need. They need love, but they need boundaries. So you put it, you put the kid in the
back and you're like, hey kid, I got this. You don't need to be the one. And they generally don't
want to be the ones to be in the fight anyway. They're like, oh, great, hands off the wheel.
I can take a nap or play Legos in the back. And then the more regulated part of you can start
to come online. But you've got to take care of the part that's dysregulated.
Generally speaking, you're either better at auto-regulating, so regulating on your own
or co-regulating.
Like, you need somebody to help you regulate.
And we want to get better at the other.
That's generally what we need.
I fall into the co-regulation category.
Like, I really, it feels like at times I need my wife to help me.
Like, I need her to help calm me down.
Like, I can't.
And that's been a huge.
But if you attract an independent person and they're like, hey, I don't, I'm an independent,
like, get away from your, you're clinging to someone who wants to be alone.
but that but that's also where the healing comes into play right so because i have been like
save me save me from my own emotions that i don't feel like i can handle on my own and she's like
that doesn't actually work what do i have to do i have to build the skill of auto regulating i have
to build the part of myself that understands how to take care of myself and probably the more you
do that the more she wants to come in and 100 correct she needs to do it 100% and like yeah 100%
That's interesting.
You mentioned before that there's a massive link between physiological health and emotional
dysregulation. How does this play into relationships then?
Oh, thank you for asking this. Thank you, thank you, because this is so important.
So I think one of the things that we're missing in the relationship space as far as
like a real conversation in the field is right now we talk a lot about trauma. We talk a lot about
nervous system. And those are important. I don't mean to say they're not. But what we haven't linked
in the relationship space is how our physiological and biological health connect to our ability
to regulate. So if you just ate a meal that had a bunch of sugar, if you haven't gotten
sleep if your thyroid is off if you don't have enough vitamin D if your hormones are out of whack
if you're cortisol I mean we my wife and I were literally just talking about this she's been
disregulated lately and we were we were talking about why and she was like oh I just got my thyroid
levels check turns out they're all out of whack and it changed within two months she had just
gotten her labs done and got her and we were like oh this makes a ton of sense this happened
to me too my cortisol was way out of whack and I and I was like why am I being so sense
I don't understand. I've been going through IVF. Same thing. But with IVF, I know what's happening. It's like I'm taking estrogen. I'm taking progesterone. And I can literally be like, whoa, one day I take progesterone. And I'm like, the devil. And then, you know, I take estrogen the next day. And I'm like, everything's cool. I'm fine. I'm fine. Nothing bothers me. But we're not linking that. We're talking a lot about trauma, which, again, is not, it's not that it's not important. But there are other reasons why you aren't regulating. And it could.
be something that is so getting your labs done to me is one of the most it's like a low hanging fruit
i mean if we're talking free we're talking morning and evening sunlight just easy we're talking about
getting as good as sleep as you possibly can and then eating well those are free options the next level
up is getting labs just to peek under the hood and be like okay what's actually going on with my hormones
function health is a great panel they do a membership that's way it's way cheaper than the actual
labs and they're fantastic. I work with them closely, so I love them. And they also track it
over time. So once you start to understand, it's another way to take control of the regulation
conversation and you cannot repair without being regulated, period. It's really tough. Because if you're
on breakdown or fight or flight, it's hard to resolve any conflict. You need to get down to a peaceful
state so you can have a conscious conversation without being freaking out. Because I, again,
being in that phase two that you talked about, the three phases of relationships, I was in the
power struggle phase a lot because I lacked the courage to sit with someone who is emotionally
dysregulated. When they would scream at me or cry or have an explosive reaction or give them
the silent treatment, I was like, how do I just make them happy in this moment? And it was like,
I would attract people with a dysregulated nervous system. And I lacked the courage that I needed
to get into interdependence. So I was in that.
power struggle constantly and I kept repeating cycle because I was just like I just don't want
someone screaming at me anymore I don't want someone crying every time they're not happy with something
about me I was like I couldn't handle it I didn't know to sit with the emotions so I just change who
I was to try to please someone and become a completely different person and then resent myself
them and the relationship and it would fall apart because I was like I don't even know who I am anymore
I'm constantly evolving and adapting to please this person and they're never happy and I take full
responsibility because I lacked courage to say listen I love you I care about you but this doesn't
work for me we need some boundaries we need some agreements as opposed to it's your way you're going
to react if you don't get your way and I have to shift to make you happy so I lacked courage
in that space they lacked you know regulating maybe or whatever it was courage as well we both
lacked things and I realized that I need to be able to sit in the fire when there is something that
feels uncomfortable. And I need to continue to heal so that it's not that uncomfortable anymore.
So it becomes more like, okay, I don't like this maybe, but it's not going to make me
change who I am to make one person happy. Courage is one way to look at it. But you probably
actually had a really good reason. Sure. Why you went towards pleasing and appeasing and overriding.
I wanted to feel safe. Yeah. So it's like, like now that doesn't work.
work, as you know.
There's actually good reasons we do things that at the end of the day we might get
done with that fight and be like, why did I do that?
I can't believe it.
Why did I yell again?
Or why did I override again?
Or there are really good reasons.
This is where the digging.
This is where therapy or workshops or whatever are so important to start to understand the
mechanisms for why you behave the way that you do.
Like that's there.
I think one thing that feels really important is that we give ourselves a bit of grace
here about why we, why we behave the ways that you're not wanting to appease. That's not something
and you're not going into a conversation being like, ah, I'm going to override all my own boundaries
right now. You do it because there's something in your system that locks up that doesn't have any
idea how to react other than the way to your point that is going to keep you safe. And I think it's
really important that we know that. Well, something that goes in with that. You have a quote about
this that says the real challenge isn't just about using the tools. It's about rewiring
how you approach conflict.
And speaking around this, like,
I didn't have all the right tools before.
And even if you have the tools,
you also say it's about rewiring
how you approach conflict.
So when there's a breakdown from your partner
or you're in breakdown,
they are, you both are, whatever it is.
I think one, we can pull the ground
that we need certain tools
to regulate our emotions
when our emotions are heightened, period,
every human being.
And then it's also figuring out
how we approach the conflict.
where I used to approach every breakdown or conflict
is how could I get through this as quickly as possible
back to peace, back to safety, back to harmony,
back to back to soulmate energy
versus power struggle energy, right?
How can we just go back to the way it was in the first month?
It was so easy and fun and amazing.
Can't you just be that person again?
Like it was like, who are you?
What is going on?
You weren't this way for the first six months of knowing you.
Now this like hurt-wounded little girl is crying every other day
and yelling at me.
well what this isn't who I knew so you're like you're going through an identity shift of the
relationship where you're like what is this they're maybe seeing something in you that they said
oh you weren't doing what you used to do whatever it is right we're both not doing something
and then you're in this power struggle you're just thinking how do I get back to soulmate energy
this feeling of soulmate which also I don't even agree with but because I think it's a you know
it's interesting my wife she's a very famous movie actress in in Mexico and she's done over 40
movies and she was the rom-com queen in Mexico so every movie she did was a rom-con for many years and it was
number one box office and she grew up in the Disneyland rom-com this is how relationships are based on
cultural she didn't see that with her parents her parents have a very healthy relationship but she
grew up kind of in this movie scene living these stories and kind of embodying this in her own life
as well and she had to really heal and realize like it's not about
you complete me.
It's like I need to complete myself and create wholeness within me.
Then we can create interdependence when we're both creating this wholeness next to each other.
Right.
It's like we can both continue to grow next to each other.
But part of it is like the approach to conflict.
I think both parties need tools.
But we both need to approach conflict with saying instead I used to want to create peace.
I wanted to create harmony or I wanted to win and I want it to be right.
It's like, you're wrong.
I'm right.
I know you're weak right now.
I have the answers like my ego is so big also, right?
It was like, I just wanted to win.
Yeah, welcome to all of us.
Right?
Exactly.
But then when I got into the relationship with Martha early on, I was like the only way I win
is that we both win.
And if one person loses, then we both lose.
Yeah.
So we both need to.
So as my approach was like, how do we both win when there's conflict?
And that's something I've learned in emotional intelligence workshops that we've both
been through.
and it's really about approaching conflict with me to that mindset and it's not always easy to do
even today even with the tools you still have to approach it with it's not about me being right
you being wrong how can we both win here yeah they're just speaking of mindset i actually think
there are there are three things i think about that when approaching conflict that are really
important that i think we we've gotten kind of wrong or we haven't been taught i use the
acronym tar basically so that I can remember it. But it's truth, agreement, and responsibility.
Now, truth, you're saying win, lose. Oftentimes we want to fight for the truth. We want to fight.
Like, you just yelled at me. I wasn't yelling. I was just speaking loudly.
Yeah, yeah. No, you weren't. Yeah, yeah, yeah. You're going too fast. I was going five over, right?
If we're fighting the truth, we are fighting a losing battle. Period. Full stop.
there is no truth in relationship.
There are just two people who are having their own experiences and you live in your world
and I live over here in my world.
And as long as we're arguing for the truth, we're both going to lose because the truth
doesn't actually exist.
It's so important to know this because we often think that we need to, to the second point
of the mindset shift, agree with one another.
Now, if we think we have to agree, then we think we think.
your truth has got to be right and then my truth has got to be wrong. So how does that work?
That doesn't, that's not, that's not an equation that works out. So, but if you don't, if you know
that you're not arguing for truth, what we're arguing for is your perspective or my perspective
getting heard, seen, and validated. Yes. The way to do this is one person has got to go
at a time. You cannot go at the same time. Try, try doing that with a Mexican family.
They all speak at the same time.
At the same time.
This is, by the way, simple, not easy, simple, not easy, everybody.
This is, this is super, super tricky.
You have to really listen.
Even when you feel heightened in emotions, you have to say,
I'm going to listen, you're going to listen,
we're going to create an agreement around who's listening.
Without interruption, right?
It's like...
It is hard.
This is hard.
It's like we don't really realize how challenging these skills can be to put into play.
Like, we need so much repetition for these.
is to, so listen, you're going to go one at a time, you're going to say it's your partner's turn,
they're going to say something that pisses you off, and you're going to jump in. That's going to
happen. Like, we just have to know that that is going to happen as we're practicing this.
This is a lifelong journey here. But the move is to know who's most dysregulated, and that person
should get repairing first. So first, before ever entering into a repair conversation,
you need to both at, I call it do nothing.
Like go into your separate sparring corners and like drink water, take a bath, phone a friend,
talk to a therapist, do whatever you need, put your feet on the ground, like whatever you need
to start to ground a little bit to start to regulate.
Once at least one of you is, you know, regulated at like a, on a scale of one to ten, like a three
or below, then you're ready to have a repair conversation.
Then you're ready to go in.
at this point
if you and I are repairing
and you're the one
who needs repairing first
I have to overhear
be like okay
it's not that I don't get my turn
but my turn just isn't right now
for a lot of us
especially my people pleasers who are listening
that's me also recovering people pleaser
in the house
you have to know that you're going to get a turn
so how I think about it is you like
zip down this little meat suit
you just zip it down and you just take your
perspective off and you put it over the side and it's just taking a little cat nap.
Just take, not that your perspective doesn't matter.
Not that it's not important.
It's just taking a nap for the time being so that I can come in over here and focus 100%
of my effort and energy and attention, even though I have my truth over here, even though
I have my perspective over here.
I have what happened that really hurt me over here.
We're going to address that.
We're just not going to address it right the second.
So if I know that, then I actually can zone in on you.
now I can start to get curious about what is happening over in your world this is what I was talking
about with the second piece which is agreement yes we get so caught in needing to agree like like that
you're going to say something and all of a sudden it's it's going to need to change my mind about
my worldview and what happened for me we don't need to do that agreement is the enemy of attunement
and attunement is really what we need in order to repair we need we need empathy right attunement
empathy, I can use them kind of interchangeably. And there are two types of empathy, emotional
empathy and cognitive empathy. Honestly, there are probably more. This is Susan David at Harvard.
She talks about this, and I think it's a really brilliant way to think about it.
Emotional empathy is, I feel what's happening over here with me. And as you talk and you speak
and I start to learn more about what's going on for you, I can start to feel how that feels for you,
how that hurt you. It's not that I leave myself. But all of a sudden, I can start.
Like, oh, wow, if I believed what you believe, I can totally see how that would hurt and how you would be angry and sad and frustrated about that.
That doesn't mean, by the way, that I don't have my perspective.
It's just taking a nap.
It's just still over here.
But now, because I know it's only taking a nap, I can just come over to you and be like, be so immersed in your experience.
Cognitive empathy, I might not feel what you feel, but now I can start to understand it.
on a really different level.
Your story is starting to make sense to me.
I'm starting to be like, ah, okay, well, again,
if you believed that, that makes sense to me.
It's not necessarily happening in my body,
but I can understand it cognitively.
This doesn't mean we agree.
Yes.
And I think this is so important
because it's where we find collapse in conflict
is when we feel like we have to take our perspective away
or the thing that happened to us away
in order for you to feel repair.
I also have something that I call the 70% rule that I discovered because I I this was this is a hard one for me which is which is when we start to expect about 70% attunement 70% of you're trying you're doing it good enough you're asking the questions it might not be exactly how I want you to ask them or in the tone I but you're like doing you're doing it's like 70% there.
the 70% is the couple's work.
It's like below 70% you need, the couple needs more work.
But anything beyond the 70%, that 30%, that's really your work.
That's the part of yourself that is sort of unrepairable with.
That's how I think, like I'll never forget, Emmy, my wife and I were in this fight and
she's trying to repair with me.
It's before bed and she's doing all, she's pulling out all the stops, everything she could
possibly do, to pull it out everything.
and we're in there for maybe an hour.
And eventually I just look at her and I was like,
I don't think there's any way for you to win right now.
And she looks at me and she goes, thank you.
And it was actually in that moment that I started to understand this more that I was like,
oh, this is mine to do.
This is the part of myself, the well of loneliness that I am so deeply needing, quote unquote,
needing somebody else to meet in me because I'm so afraid to meet that black
well of sadness in myself. Once I got that, now I know what's mine to do. I know where my work
is because she has met me as much as she can meet me. This is important work for me to do.
And then the last one is responsibility. And we know this because of the MITT and I know this
from the landmark world, which we both did years and years ago. And generally,
when we don't know what it means to truly take responsibility,
we're either absolving responsibility and putting it onto you,
so I'm blaming you,
or I'm taking all of it.
And I have so much shame.
And then you're resentful also probably, yeah, it's like.
And you can't actually meet your partner in that space.
You can't actually meet their pain in the place where I feel so much shame
about the thing that I did that all I can think about is,
like, oh, I can't believe I hurt you. What is it about me that made me do that? And now I've
completely left your experience. So neither work. Like we've got to. And the partner feels abandoned
because you're in your shame world versus trying to repair still. Right? It's like, yeah.
Completely. Completely. Okay. You did this bad thing. Now you're in this world. Now I have to tend to you
even though you hurt me. So now I feel like I didn't get repair. Yes. Because now I'm trying to
soothe your pain of feeling so guilty and shameful. Yeah. Now we're over here on,
in your world where what happened to what I was just going through,
and now I've been completely left.
This power struggle phase is like, exhausting.
It's a tough one.
It's a tough one.
And by the way, just to name, you don't actually go through, you know,
merging and power struggle and interdependence as some like linear,
you know, you can go back into the power struggle
when there's a new transition that you're going through,
when someone loses a job,
when there's something really big that happens.
Like you can kind of go, you can, you know, move through the phases.
And it's not, it's, you know, as we know,
relationships aren't so linear.
Yeah.
But knowing that there is a way that when you're either blaming outward
or you're blaming yourself,
neither of those places are going to help you actually meet the needs of your partner.
That's so true.
And it's really important to get there's,
I actually brought this, we can go over it if you want,
This is a, okay, so this is, this is, I got this from Terry Real also.
I think, listen, I don't necessarily buy into one modality of couples work or another,
but I think this simplifies where we go when we're triggered.
So I think it's kind of an easy, easy model to look at.
So what is this?
What is this explaining?
So this is called the relationship grid.
This is explaining when we go into blaming outward, right?
It's what you call grandiosity.
This is where this isn't me.
This is all you.
You did this.
You did this.
You need to take responsibility.
That's right.
Like this isn't me.
I didn't, there was no fault over here.
We tend to, and this is going to be on the dramatic end of things, we tend to either go up, one up to grandiosity or one down into shame.
But we do a couple of other things too.
We either go into boundaryless behavior.
And boundaryless behavior is yelling.
It's crying.
It's exactly how it sounds.
It's crossing over your boundary.
in order to get my needs met.
Or to protect ourselves, we wall off.
These are the silent people.
These are the ones who are going, like, you know.
We give in also.
Is that what we do?
Or is that more boundaryless?
Well, it depends on where you fall in the quadrant.
We'll get to that.
I used to give in to like someone blaming
or screaming or crying at me.
So I didn't create a boundary
to try to keep peace, but it never had peace.
No, no, no.
I have a guess of where you fall,
but I want to say, okay.
So those are the four places that,
the four places on the quad.
But we basically embody.
one of these four places. So in grandiosity, if we go one up into grandiosity and we tend to be
more boundaryless, this is behavior that's, it's on, again, the very dramatic end. This is where all
abuse and violence lives. This is yelling. This is hitting. This is throwing things.
You are being grandiose towards your partner and you're not having a boundary. Is that what you're
saying? It's not actually not having a boundary. And we can talk about boundaries in a bit.
boundarylessness is it's like the way that we express ourselves so if someone who's walled off
is going to get quiet and reserved and distance the boundaryless person is going to get needy
and please and it can show up in a lot of different ways actually that's the one if you're getting
needy and grasp grasp that's down here so up here in grandiosity your your boundarylessness
that's where it looks like anger pointed at you i'm screaming i'm getting big i'm trying to intimidate you
when we go down from boundaryless and shame-based so now we're in the one down category now i'm not
yelling at you and making things about you i'm over here being like desperate and need please don't
leave me please i'll do anything like i didn't mean to do that i can't believe i just did that again
i'm being dramatic sure sure sure yeah yeah of course but but and my guess is needing neediness
like yeah i'll make it go away okay i'll do anything that you need this is appeasement but
appeasement can also be walled off but you're probably going to find more appeasement in the like
okay I just want to make that this is why I kind of feel like this is where you may have lived I don't know
maybe not the extreme no no but in that area for sure most of us by the way don't inhabit the exchange
some of us do but but you know this is like you can think about what the moderate version may look
like I would do this I this is where I live I live in boundary list and one down and so how it would
look for me is I would be she would my wife goes into kind of a walled off closed down space
and I would do it super covertly I would be like oh baby
are you are you like a little bit shut down right now do you like I wouldn't go into like
I would therapist her I would be like do you need space like is there something that you need
but I'm not doing it from a regulated place I'm doing it from place of please don't leave me
wow really yeah totally totally okay so then we go over to wald off and shame base this is like
just create before you go on there what would happen if she left you like or someone left you
what would happen for you if someone's like you know what I've tried this just doesn't work for
anymore, I think we're done.
How would that make you feel?
By the way, that's happened.
So it's, you know.
But what happens in you when that happens, I guess, or that's happened?
It's actually sort of what I talked about before.
It's the place in me where I go is this lonely well that feels like if I touch it, it's so big
that I'll die.
Like that's how it feels.
It feels like this space of like there's one place I can't go.
It's that dark thing that lives.
lives in this amorphous place that if I touch it,
it's like the world ends.
What is that thing?
Is that you being alone or not loved by one person
or not accepted by one person or is that, what does that mean?
For me, it's the space of, if you leave me,
you prove that I am actually as unlovable
as I may think I am.
And that's in kind of my unhealthiest space.
That's where I go.
I've done a lot of work on that part.
But the part in me that will always exist that I'll always do work on is the part in me
that feels like no matter what I do, am I actually lovable?
Can you really, can you really love me if I have a big reaction?
Am I worth loving?
Or would you leave?
Would you walk?
And so part of, again, my kind of young adult life and growing up in relationships would be,
I'm going to be big and I'm going to get loud so that you can prove to me.
So you can comment and show me.
Show me.
You're not going anywhere.
No matter what I do.
No matter what I do.
You'll still be here.
Yes.
Yeah, which I got to tell you, it didn't work so well.
It was not a winning game if we're going to talk about how to, you know, not.
Why do you think I'm in the space of repair?
Repair has been the hardest place for me in all of my relationships, and I have had a lot.
So this is just like the work that I've had to do for myself.
I grew up in Salt Lake City where my parents were hippies and I was.
wasn't Mormon. But I grew up so desperately wanting to fit in. And so I went to church. I dated
the Mormon guys. Your parents didn't go to Mormon church. No, no, no, no. They weren't LDS.
No, no, no, no. But you were in a community where a lot of people did. It was Salt Lake City in the
90s. Mostly everyone was Mormon. So you wanted to fit in and be accepted. That's what they were
doing. And so you're like, I'll go. At such a young age, I learned how to chameleon. I learned how
Yeah, yeah. Yeah, it was, I remember in junior high, getting into seventh grade and being like, okay, there's a, there's a new game to play. And it's called, I'm going to be liked and popular by every single person in this school. And I will do everything to fit in with every single person. And so that's what I did. You could take me anywhere. And the bea you would see in a hip hop dance class would be a completely different bea you would see in a church with my friend or dating my boyfriend or whatever it would be.
like that's and I and it by the way it worked I was everything you would I was miss high school
until it didn't work it works until you realize my nervous system is still unregulated you know
it worked until I would I would date I would literally like I got to tell you I'm kind of like an
indoor outdoor cat I like I can be outside but like you know I actually feel really good
inside it's warm and cozy and whatever and I would date you know pro athletes and be like
Yeah, let's go on a black diamond on a really crappy day outside where it's going to be, you know, super cold.
And yeah, let's go.
I'm in.
Like, the whole time, I'm like, I hate this.
I hate this is terrible.
I hate it.
But I didn't care because all I wanted to do, it was like I was great at the game of seduction.
And in fact, I used to teach a workshop when I was younger called Seduction 101.
I used to be in the, in the.
So you like seducing men.
Oh, it was a game for me.
To like get them to be into you.
Yes.
But then what?
But then what?
But then about six months later, like you're saying.
Oh, what am I doing?
I was probably a lot like your ex, like six months later, I would be like, oh, I can't keep
the game up any longer.
Now it just, now I don't know how to hide it anymore.
So here's this thing that it's actually really vulnerable.
And here's how it's going to, it's going to come out sideways and lopsided and not cute.
And are you going to accept me for where I am?
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Not that I'm not this perfect person that you saw for six months.
Totally.
I mean, it sounds a lot of my life.
Yeah, I got to, I got to tell you from all of your exes.
I just want to say, I'm sorry.
It's all good.
I'm sorry.
I didn't know better.
And it wasn't, it wasn't, by the way, I was not doing this consciously.
This was who I was.
It was like, survival.
It was as easy to me as picking up this glass of water and drinking it.
Like it was nothing to it.
It wasn't like I had to sit there and be like, oh, what am I going to do next to make this person like me?
What happens when you seduce a man from a wounded place?
Or a man seduces a woman from a wounded place.
what happens to that relationship?
So there is a theory that we attract somebody who is at our level of emotional development.
Or based on their psychological wounds, Dr. Tara Swart would say.
Yeah, you attract based on your psychological wound.
Totally.
And so as much healing as I've done, I'm going to scan the room and probably be attracted to the person
who's done just as much healing.
and about my stage of development.
I mean, because what would happen when that,
I dated a fantastic, one of my best boyfriends,
he was amazing.
I was bored out of my mind.
I was bored out of my mind
and ended up breaking up with him for no reason
other than I just couldn't name it,
but it just didn't make me feel alive.
I had no idea what healthy love felt like or looked like.
Healthy love is a little,
it can feel a little boring at times in some way.
It's not supposed to be like this.
No, I know.
Firework.
That's, that's, that's, I had to learn that, though.
I had to learn what.
And I feel peaceful.
I, exactly.
I wouldn't actually call it boring.
I would feel calm, peaceful.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Not boring.
Yeah, yeah, but that's how it felt in my system.
100%.
And so what would I do?
I would scan for attraction.
It's not like I knew out of the gate.
That's who I was going for.
So what happens when someone wounded,
attract someone wounded?
Well, guess what?
We're going to hit against each other's wounds.
Now, I want to say this because I think this is,
I think this is important.
Okay.
We don't necessarily, it's almost impossible to go into a relationship fully healed.
Of course.
My perspective is we do most of our healing inside of relationships.
It's going to be harder to do that healing when two people come from trauma.
When even one of you comes from trauma, it's going to be harder.
It's going to be more volatile.
It's going to take more work.
You both need to be committed to saying, I want to grow.
that is to me the number one thing to look for and it's not just someone who wants to do it but
who can who can actually willing and we'll do it and we'll do it yes and so you watch behavior
change over time because we're all fallible human beings it's not you know we're not perfect yeah
wouldn't you imagine that i am after all this just talk to my wife she's definitely
yeah yeah right what kills trust more than anything in a relationship in your mind
threatening the relationship threatening it yes what is threatening the relationship look like
saying you're going to leave when you're when you actually are not going to leave it to me this is
the number one trust killer because what happens when you start to threaten that you're going to
leave and then you don't do it and then the next time you get into a fight you threaten to leave
again your partner now starts to not feel safe bringing things to you because they feel like
every time they're going to they say something that you're going to disagree with that the relationship
is on the line so they'll stop feeling safe bringing things to you and you'll stop trusting yourself
so it is a one-two punch that is so detrimental to the health of a relationship that and the
threatening to leave and not doing it I mean think about it you when when you say it I'm gonna and then
don't think about how degrading to your own sense of what you're going to do our own sense of
responsibility integrity all of it yeah yeah you don't do what you say you do you're
you're weakening your identity and part of you feels that like it part of you feels that and so as
much as you can if you do not intend to leave there's a very big difference of I'm actually contemplating
leaving really it is on the table and we need to address the thing that is going to have me stay or
go and being in the heat of the moment triggered and just saying you're out but not meeting it
and then five days later you're in a spiral again like it is it's so
detrimental to the health of relationship. I cannot overstate it. I can only imagine the amount
of traumatic and experiences you've had in past relationships, because I know I've had a lot of
them. And one that reminded me of this is when I was 23, I was in a relationship with a woman
who was a few years older than me. And it wasn't good from the beginning. Like it was just,
the dynamic wasn't right, all these different things, but, you know, she,
she threatened to like take her own life multiple times not not like leave the relationship but she
threatened is she threatened that and as a 23 year old i had no clue how to handle any of this let
let alone intimacy like i was just so okay what do you need me to do is like oh you know it happened
to multiple times where it was like a threat to ending her life and i'm just like how do i navigate
this what if this actually happens you know and i just didn't understand anything about it
And I remember one day after like, whatever, the third time is happening after like, I don't know, six or eight months or something, she was like, I laugh. I don't know about you, but I have like a laugh when something's really traumatic. You know, it's like, thinking of a memory, I'm like, this is not that funny, but it was scary.
This is like in therapy when someone laughs and it's not funny and you've got to be like, that's not funny. There's a reason, you know. Yeah, it's not funny, but it's just like I can look back and it's kind of funny 20 years later or whatever. But.
she i was sleeping on my this is how bad this was i'm sleeping on my sister's couch i have no money
uh i'm sleeping on my sister's place and she comes she's trying to call me all day and she comes to the
her my sister's house where she knows i'm living and she's like i'm on the why i laugh at something's
bad she says i'm on the i'm going to therapy i know right she goes she goes i'm on the doorsteps with a knife
I'm sorry me to say it was funny she said I'm on the doorstep with a knife I'm going to stab
myself in the stomach if you don't come out right now and get back with me and I kid you not
this is all of her text right this is all her text because I didn't pick up her calls and she was
like calling me obsessively all day and I'm gonna I wouldn't pick up and I kid you not I was just like
something switched off in me where I was just like this was multiple times after eight months or
something and in my mind I said do it you know I
I was just like, I'm sick of being this person where you're threatening to do something that
you don't do.
You know, and I'm talking about if you're threatening to leave a relationship, but I'm a 23-year-old
and I'm just like, I'm sick of this.
I'm tired of this manipulation.
And I was like, at the point, I was like, in my mind, I said, do it.
I didn't text her that.
I called 911 and I said, my girlfriend, ex-girlfriend is outside of the house.
Here's what's happening.
She's threatening.
I have all the text messages.
Can you please come and do something?
I don't know what to do.
And I just called 911.
They came and arrested her against.
I laughed because it was just a crazy moment in my life.
And I remember just being like, I didn't know what to do.
What do you do in these environments where someone's threatening the relationship,
threatening to take their life or doing something extreme, hurt themselves, harm
themselves, harm another person, threatening something.
These are things that we as human beings usually are not equipped with.
Like we don't have the skills, the tools, emotionally, physically, logically.
on how to navigate the emotions of another person
or the threats of another person.
And it is a scary thing
when someone threatens any of these things
to exit the relationship,
to exit the world or harm someone.
It's terrifying.
This is where 12th store programs
like Al-Anon, Coda, adult children of alcoholics,
like this is where programs like this
are actually really helpful
because they're not only free,
but they, so they're,
they're helpful resources in that way but they they teach you about what it actually means to
take care of yourself when you are with somebody who cannot take care of themselves and and these
could be relationships where you can't leave where it's dangerous where you and and that's really
what they're there for so I do think this is where programs like that because you're right we don't
who's teaching us this how no one's equipped to deal with somebody who says I'm going to kill
myself if you leave me. I mean, no one, unless you've ever been in that situation, you have no
idea how you're going to react. No idea. Especially if you're wounded psychologically and your
immune system or your nervous system's off. It's like, ah. Yeah. Again, your main focus is
how to repair from conflict, something you've researched for a long time. Is there anything
that someone can do in a relationship that is unrepairable? I think that's up to,
the people in the relationship.
Like for some people,
infidelity is a deal breaker.
Yeah.
Period.
Yeah.
For others,
they can actually get through it
and it will make them stronger.
That's just the truth.
So I think in some ways
that's a pretty personal question.
You know, even people,
there are people in relationships
where someone has murdered someone else
and they're still in that relationship.
That person is in jail and they visit them.
Wow.
That's, that's, you know, so is there,
I don't think I'm the person to answer that.
I think that deeply depends on your value system.
Interesting.
But in your work, I guess, with people who come to you for repair, you know, information
and expertise, what have you seen that is almost like a deal breaker?
Every time this happens, it's hard to come back.
Here's what I'll say.
If there's active addiction, it's really hard to, it's hard if not impossible to repair
because you're in a cycle of retox and detox and you're not.
really in relationship with that person. You're in relationship with their
dysregulation and their addiction. Right. And that is almost it. You're just saying I
commit to accept this life for the rest of my life. Yeah. And some people do. So I'm not
even saying that's bad or wrong to stay. But I'm saying it's really hard to repair
with someone who is in active addiction. It's also really hard, if not impossible, to repair
in situations where there's high levels of manipulation, you know, personality disorder.
Narcissism. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. And I know you've had Dr. Romney on a couple of times.
Yeah. And so she'll speak to this much more intelligently than I will. But because what's
happening in manipulation cycles is there is no intention to actually repair. There is intention for
power and control and coercion. And when only one person is in on that game and the other person
is trying to repair, both people have to be in on the repair in order for it's a two person. You can't
do with them. No, no. Except I'm with this type of person. They're never going to change. Is this the
life I want. And maybe I don't have a choice because my life's in danger, my kids' life's in
danger. I have to learn. And then you make it work. And then you make it work however you need to
make it work. You get yourself in a program. You get a therapist. You just, you learn to live
with it in a way that that you need to. Yeah. Interesting. So if someone's in addiction and
unwilling to get out of addiction, that's really hard to have a thriving relationship.
You're in a relationship with their dysregulation. They're consistently going to be in either
on a substance or coming off of a substance.
And that's impossible to, in order to repair,
you have to be in a regulated place, at least one of you.
And if one person is always the one who's dysregulated,
they have, and with addiction, it's hard to come into a regulated state, ever, really.
Like, you're always, again, in kind of detox or retox,
that's consistently happening in the background.
So it's, it may not be impossible, but it is really, really hard.
And it takes a lot of skill.
And it's probably, I would say one mistake I see couples make a lot.
And I see this online more than anything, is that they, to your point of therapy and getting
into the work, they try over and over again to work whatever their trigger dance is without
support. And their nervous systems are in too much intensity to actually address it on, like,
you need a third party. I think goodness for the kind of generation of practitioners and
facilitators and therapists and coaches who came before us, who normalized therapy, because now
we're in a culture who says therapy is fine.
Yeah.
But getting into therapy earlier, to your point that you've talked about, I think, or coaching
or whatever, or getting support earlier, a lot of times people, here's the thing, a lot of
times people wait a really long time to come to see a couple's therapist or practitioner.
And by the time they get there, it might not be too late.
It might be too late.
But at that point, you've got to have somebody who is so skilled to work with you.
And the truth is, couples therapy is super hard.
There just aren't that many great couple therapists.
If you start at the beginning, though, when things aren't as bad, your couple's therapist
doesn't have to be as good.
Yeah, that's true.
But if you start where things are like, it is do or die and you're on the brink.
Good luck.
Your therapist, first of all, it's like a miracle.
It is, it's just really hard to find a really good couple's.
And here's the thing, you know, you got to give, it's, yeah, I feel for couples therapists
because you're not just trying to help a relationship.
You have to address each individual's childhood wounds and nervous systems
and understand the psycho analysis of each individual and their nervous system.
And then the relationship, it's like you're helping three people.
Yeah, it's not.
Two individuals and a relationship with individual history of both
and then relationship history.
It's three entities.
Totally.
In an hour session once every month.
Good luck.
I know.
Or 50 minutes, which is what a lot of companies.
It's going to look. It's going to take years. And that's why there is a lot of negative feedback
with therapy because it's like, oh, we've been going once a week or once a month for six
months and we're not getting improvement. It's a slow moving process.
Because you need, I feel like you need extreme exposure therapy individually to start
healing and processing these things, each individual. And if one person's willing to do the work
more than the other, it's going to be harder for the relationship to really thrive. And it's
I feel like it's taking years and you're still not getting anywhere.
Well, and this work in general, repair work in general, is hard and takes a long time and
is a slow process.
This is something that I liken it to going to the gym because I feel like...
You want to see muscles right away, but it's like years.
And you're never, you would never expect to get fit going to the gym once a week.
You would never expect to get fit going once and never showing up again.
That's sort of how we psychologically think repair works.
is I'm going to show up, and I'm going to somehow naturally know how to do this.
But you've got to go to the emotional fitness gym and you've got to practice all the time.
It's like it's almost like we're expecting that we should be able to be able to play Beethoven on the
piano before ever being able to play chopsticks.
Oh, yeah.
We have to, and this is the exposure.
This is the exposure over and over the small things.
This is why like having a simple, okay, I know I need to do nothing at the beginning.
I need to regulate myself.
That's okay.
That's one thing I need to practice.
That could take. You could practice that for years. That's hard. Okay, I need to practice perspective taking. There's a fantastic. I don't know if you've interviewed him, but he's a former CIA agent named Andrew Bustamante. He's fantastic. And he has this, I love what he talks about around perspective and perception. Perception is where I sit over here every day. It's, okay, how do I look right now? Is this interview going well? It's where I live most of my life.
perspective taking is coming over to you and being like okay so how does lewis think this is going
what's going on in louis's world over there that's the skill and really it's you go one step
further and it's perspective getting which is not just okay you have another perspective and
i can do the work to figure you know to get in your world but like now i get it i have i've been
curious enough and even curiosity as that one skill that's a freaking hard skill that's complex
Because that's like learning how to get out of your own way, ask the right questions,
ask them in a way that's going to elicit something from your partner that you've never heard.
Like these are hard tools.
These are hard skills to learn.
We need to practice them.
But if I can practice getting out of my own perception over here and perspective take over there,
but that's a, he's talking about that as a CIA skill.
Like we're not practicing that on a day-to-day basis.
It can be really trick.
But it is the practice that is required for entry.
there is no other way these these are the skills that we have to relationships aren't as
this is how i think it was alison armstrong and this is a quote from her that i'm going to
butcher because i butcher every quote i just can't remember them exactly but it's something along
the lines of relationships aren't as hard as we make them out to be but we the skills that we need
are like we need to we've just haven't been trained for relationships that's it we know
we psychologically understand that in order to get fit we have to go to the gym
Period. Full stop. We have to work out. We just know that. No one needs convincing of that. We have not yet learned. We haven't like really gotten at the core of ourselves what it takes to be in healthy, long term, secure functioning relationship, especially for people who come from trauma. It takes a lot. It takes years and years of practice. And you can't expect to come into a relationship fully heal. That doesn't happen. You do your work on your own. But ultimately, most of the work that you're going to do is when you get triggered inside of relationships.
And learning how to integrate the tools you've learned from the healing journey in the emotional
reaction and say, how can I feel safe here?
Yes.
What's the tool I can use in this moment to calm my nervous system to regulate so that I can
take a break, not feel like I'm getting threatened, and listen and then respond.
Yes.
And know that I'm going to be safe after this uncomfortable hour to five hour conversation,
10 minute, whatever it is, that I'm safe after it's still going to be okay.
I may not like it, but this is going to help me thrive.
And I think the more we can learn how to have calm conversations
when our nervous system is frustrated,
it's just going to help us be better in relationships.
Yeah, and that takes, we're not going to be able to have calm conversations
if we're not used to that or that wasn't modeled for us at the beginning.
So don't expect that that's going to be, that just means, okay, next time I'm going to be a little more,
or I'm going to be able to say one thing that's a little, that's the, it's the, it's the, it's the,
micro. Exactly. It's the micro repairs that actually ultimately. 100%. It's a journey. Healy's a
journey. Thriving a relationship is a journey. Listen, I'm only four and a half years in. I'm almost a year in
marriage. And I'm sure, you know, I'm going to have to continue to learn how to do this like after
kids. She's going to be different after kids. Her priority is already different. She's already different.
Yeah. Totally. I mean, it's like, and I have to continue to evolve. And I have to continue to learn new
skills and I have to continue to be even more present and more patient, which is like the
thing I need to work on the most, all these things, right? It's like, I got to lean in and it's
uncomfortable. It's not what I would like to do. It's not like, oh, this is all easy. But this is
transformation and growth, which is ultimately the dojo of relationship. Exactly. And I think
it's very, it's not easy, but it's rewarding if we're willing to lean in. Yeah. And we can take the
comfort, convenience road and just keep things simple, I guess, or just try not to rock the boat or we can
lean in and say, how can I continue to develop as a human being to have the best relationship
I can have? Or why am I in a relationship? It's like, if I'm not willing to go all in and try to
transform myself and be of service to the relationship, sure, we have to take care of our needs,
we don't want them to neglect ourselves, but how can I take care of me and then serve the relationship?
I just think that's the only way we're going to have a long lasting healthy relationship.
That's going to have bumps and bruises and stuff like that, but like long time.
term healthy is taking care of self and service to the relationship.
It's a beautiful frame perspective.
But again, I mean, I don't know.
Ask me in five years.
But I mean, I just think that's probably the path.
It's like you've got to be willing to continue to reinvest in you and the relationship
always for growth.
You know, there was a moment right before Emmy and I got married.
It was two weeks before our wedding and we got into one of the biggest fights we'd ever
been.
Wow.
Two weeks before the wedding.
You both probably try to sabotage it.
You know, it's like fear.
Some subconscious.
Yeah, it was over something dumped it.
It was like, it was one of those fights that devolved so quickly that, anyhow, we ended
taking two nights of space.
Two weeks before you're supposed to get married.
Two weeks before our wedding.
Two weeks before our wedding.
Wow.
We take two nights of space.
Space for her is like a breath of fresh air.
She's like, ah, space for me is like, it's painful.
It's a lot of pain.
She's like, I'm free.
You're like, huh?
She's not going to think about it for two days.
She's going to like romp around do whatever you're doing.
I'm going to be like in my pain.
body and I want to you know I'm just anyway so so anyway the first night I cry myself to sleep
and I am just sobbing and sobbing and and in that moment I have this voice that I hear and it's like
me but smarter like that version of me who just knows something I don't and she starts being like
it's okay keep crying I've got you and I'm crying and I'm sobbing she's saying it's okay I've got
you keep crying keep going you're not going to be alone i'm here with you even if emmy leaves i'm here
even if she goes away and never comes back i'm here and i'm sobbing and i'm sobbing and i'm sobbing
until like until i basically cry myself to sleep that night and the next day i rewrote my vows
and i said to her and i think about this i come back honestly i don't even remember any of our
other vows this is the vow that i come back to all the time i said
said, here's my heart.
The most vulnerable thing I can do is say to you, you have it and you do.
You have my heart.
Because what I really want to say is you have my heart.
Please keep it safe.
Don't hurt it.
Don't hurt me.
Interesting.
And what I know I'm saying is here's my heart.
I know you'll drop it.
I know you'll break it.
and in the moments where you can't help me pick it up because of your wound and your trigger
and you're in your thing, I will do the work to pick up the parts of myself that are hardest
for me to love and hardest for me to be with.
And I won't have the expectation that you'll do that work for me.
And I know that when you're able to hold my heart, you will.
but when you're when you're not able, I've got me.
Yeah, that's beautiful.
And I come back to that all the time in the moments that it is hardest to get me.
Yeah, I think that's necessary.
And that's very internal family systems kind of mindset.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
There's lots of parts of us.
I use it all the time.
Frank talks about this a lot.
Gabri Bernstein talks about this a lot.
It's like there's lots of parts of us.
This is the body keeps the score.
Yeah.
There's many parts of us.
And the highest conscious version of our adult self,
has to kind of build this like connecting relationship
with all the parts of us that are wounded
or the past parts that we haven't healed
and knowing that the adult in the room
the highest, healthiest whole version of us,
it's like what you did there.
It's like you had a conversation spiritually
with the wounded part of yourself
and you integrated safety within you.
Yeah.
And as woo and weird as that sounds,
I think psychologically we all have this like psychological mind
and it can mess us up a lot.
You know, it's like,
thinking of all these things, like our brain,
we have to kind of take back the reins.
And the IFS, you know, format mindset is like having that relationship
with the wounded parts of us, not making them wrong.
It's also allowing them to have a voice, not trying to block them out.
So I used to try to shut those voices up and like, get this wounded part of, like,
away from me.
I don't want to show this part of me, but it was like, gosh, then I'm just abandoning myself.
Like, I'm doing what I felt everyone else did to me.
when I was younger. If me as the adult is trying to kick out the five-year-old, the seven-year-old,
the 13-year-old, the 23-year-old who felt like not enough, then I'm not healing that part
of me. I'm trying to remove him from me. And that's not, that doesn't feel good. And that's
what's yours to own. That, that, that your, that work your partner can support with, but ultimately
your partner cannot heal for you. They can't do it. They can't do it.
And it's where we get ourselves into trouble,
I certainly have, where you expect, this is the 70%, right?
Where your partner can only show up so much.
But if they're giving 70%, like a solid 70,
that 30% is your, and you're still not,
you know, you feel unrepairable with that.
30% is yours.
Yeah, I mean, you could also even reframe it.
If it's 70, 30, you could say, like,
they've got to give 100% of themselves
and you've got to give 100% to like,
what are you called 7030 or 100,
but it's like, you got to be willing to go all in.
and it's going to look differently.
But if we are not able to learn the strategies
and the tools for self-regulation,
that is healing the parts of us that we're ashamed of,
I feel not enough,
healing the parts of it,
I heard you say this early in the conversation,
it's like, I used to feel like if anyone knew this about me,
no one would love me.
Totally.
If anyone knew this part of me at this season of life,
if anyone knew I thought this thing,
if I did this thing,
how much shamed I felt,
no one would actually love me.
And that was my biggest fear.
If anyone knew that I'd been sexually abused and raped by a man,
no one will ever love me.
It was 25 years I kept the secret from the world,
from anyone in my world.
And it rocked my heart.
It rocked everything inside of me.
And I was just like, I have to project confidence.
I have to project that I'm strong.
I have to project that all these different things.
Because if anyone knew that this happened to me,
no one would love me.
No one would accept me.
I would be alone for the rest of my life.
It was a survival mechanism.
So I had to learn how to heal and have like grace and acceptance
for that younger version of me when the healing journey started
and just know that like, okay,
that's why I showed up in certain ways.
And that's why I attracted certain people.
And that's why I had no boundaries
and that's all these different things.
And have compassion for that 25 years of life,
which you're like, man, I missed out on all these opportunities.
And what if I just would have known this sooner?
like having compassion and letting that go and just saying, okay, now how do I create safety
in me every day? How to create this sense of safety, a sense of harmony. And it's not always
going to be perfect, but the more harmonious that I can create inside of me, the better I'll be
in every relationship. And it's a constant journey. And you know, you know, and I'm never going to
be perfect. And it's, you know, it's of course. What comes up for me as you say that is this idea
also around
what we are tracking
in our nervous system
with our partners
that
when there are secrets
when there are things
that we're keeping
we may not understand it
but on the subtle body
we are feeling
an incongruence
and that might have nothing
to do with us
it might have everything to do
with your shame
and you'll just
but depending on our wounding
we'll then make it
about us.
And this is where we can also start a trigger dance.
So this is, it's just, there are so many,
there are so many ways in, everybody,
so many ways in to conflict.
Yeah, I thought, I thought incongruent
for most of my life based on shame, guilt, lying, stealing,
you know, whatever.
And so you can imagine partners you would attract,
would either pick up on that or be incongruent themselves
or then be getting mad at you at other things,
even though they're feeling a group, right?
That's just.
Yeah, yeah.
So it's like having compassion for your younger self and having the wisdom now, hopefully,
and saying how can I use this wisdom now moving forward to stay in congruent as possible,
knowing that we are again, have crazy thoughts and dreams and all these different things.
It's got to come up, all these things, but it's like, how can I live with my intentions,
my words and my actions in alignment the best I can, every moment.
When you do that, you feel peace.
you may not like situations in life.
Like things are going to happen
where you're like, I don't like that.
You might still react.
But if we can create more harmony and peace within us
by being integrity with ourself,
you're going to be in a more harmonious relationship with others.
It's just going to naturally attract others energetically
or you'll be able to be more discerning like you said
and be like, oh, this doesn't work for me or this relationship,
I'm going to put this on a pause or maybe I shouldn't work with this person
because you'd have a lot of alignment.
You know, it's, I love this.
And I also think there's another kind of take on it, which is we so, we're in this era right now of authenticity, being authentic with ourselves.
And not that that's not important, it's super important.
But what I'm finding interesting is that as.
authenticity rises in the conversation and speaking your truth rises in the conversation.
There's another thing happening around, how do I want to say this, how hard it is for us to hold
complexity.
Yeah, gray.
Yeah, like it's, like, I believe this.
And so, and so I have to hold to this and I can't change my mind.
And I've, or, and that there's like, you know, this is kind of Esther Perel that has been talking about this a bit. And I think, I think she's really on to something here where, you know, she has this quote, which is relationships are not problems to solve, but paradoxes to manage. And inside of ourselves, when we're on our own, we have to, we're forced to look at the paradoxes inside of ourselves. So maybe the
part of us that wants to move close to our aging parents and the other part of us that wants
to stay where we live because we have community.
And we have to wrestle with that on our own.
That's a friction that we feel in ourselves.
As soon as we have somebody else in the room, a partner, all of a sudden, the paradox
inside of ourselves that we would need to wrestle with, we can now polarize and project
onto the other person.
So maybe, you know, we're talking about parenting.
Maybe there's a conversation within myself around sleep training or, what's the other one,
sleep training or co-sleeping.
And maybe there would be, or breastfeeding for six months, but I want to keep my career.
And so I'm going to need to, do I do that for six months or a year?
How do I manage the, and do I want to do formula?
These are complexities that we need to navigate and wrestle within ourselves.
but when we polarize with another person, all of the sudden, we no longer need to wrestle with
the complexity within ourselves because if you hold the pull of we sleep train, then I can just
hold the pole of, okay, no, no, no, we co-sleep. And that's the truth that I want to stick my
stake in the ground on. And I'm going to fight for that because we've now polarized into
these two different perspectives. And I no longer have to wrestle with that inside of myself. And so
it's interesting as we sort of started to have this conversation about authenticity and speaking
our truth and it's almost as if we're losing the ability to hold complexity of of this idea
that that sometimes it's not going to feel good or we have to do things that are really
challenging that might challenge the ideals that we thought we once had but that feel more
in line with a self that we're that we're coming into or or we're needing to to wrestle with
within our partnership because we both have these different values or ideas about how we want
to raise kids or where we want to live or all these things. And so I think in ways there's a way
that we've simplified the conversation of authenticity and integrity and that has, that has,
it's almost like this social atrophy, this atrophying of a, honestly, is it atrophying
did we ever have this skill? I don't, I don't actually know. But that that really makes me
wonder about how we build our relationship with our ability to hold complexity.
We're seeing this in the social political divide, right? And one way I see us being able to do this
is through, and this is a huge conflict resolution skill, but is through stories, like truly
being able to sit with someone else's story, not need to be in agreement over it, but actually
sit with it and contemplate it. But we don't need to do that.
now because everything in our feed is feeding us.
It's an echo chamber of everything we want to feed us.
So we're getting fear from where, you know, from the other side and we're getting fed
the information that's from our side.
We never have to listen to another person's point of view.
But now we're in relationship and our partner has a different perspective and we want to be
authentic with ourselves.
What do we do?
Right.
And something that me and Martha did early on was like, I was very clear.
I was like, we need our values to be aligned.
otherwise, it's going to be hard.
We need our values, our vision, and our lifestyle to be in alignment.
What happens when one of those values or the vision changes?
Exactly.
Where in the beginning, I was like, we need to be like 80% aligned on all of our values,
vision, and lifestyle.
And she was like, I'm in, and I need you to be flexible.
You know what I mean?
And it was like, it can't be so rigid.
It has to be this way.
It's got to be absolutes.
Like you were talking about absolutes, where I was more like, well, you know,
I want these things.
to be in alignment. Otherwise, what are we doing? Why are we getting into a relationship if we're
not in alignment? At least we have to have some alignment somewhere. You know, you can't have
complete friction. And she was like, yes, and I need you to be flexible on things. And I go, okay,
so it took time for me to learn how to be more flexible and make sure we're also staying in alignment.
So I didn't feel like I was compromising values, right? Same for her. She doesn't want to compromise
values, but she was like, you can't be so strict on a rule here on this one thing. If I didn't
live up to something, I'm like, okay, I get it. All right.
I got to be more flexible and this and this.
And I think that's been a great thing.
It's like, how can you be flexible with your values, with your agreements, and making sure
that things are going to evolve and change, and you've got to be okay with it.
Well, there's certainly research on rigidity and relationships and how if you are, the more
rigid and the more you expect perfection, obviously, this is not going to surprise anybody,
but the less satisfied you're going to be with your relationships.
You're going to be miserable.
Well, baby, this has been powerful.
I want to ask you a couple final questions before I do.
So where's the best place for us to support you, follow you, connect with you all alone?
You can go to my website, beavoche.com, B-A-Y-A-V-O-C-E, and I'm at Bayavoche on Instagram is
mostly where I hang out.
But on my website, I have a couple of resources.
I have a free repair PDF that you can get, which has a ton of scripts for all sorts of conflicts.
So that's a good one.
And I also have another worksheet on the change and effort mismatch.
So for people who are in that kind of change and accept dance, if they want some support there,
that's also free.
And then I'll be launching a group for repair.
Awesome.
Thank for being there.
Thank you.
Having me.
I appreciate you.
I have a brand new book called Make Money Easy.
And if you're looking to create more financial freedom in your life, you want abundance
in your life and you want to stop making money hard in your life, but you want to make it easier.
You want to make it flow.
You want to feel abundant.
Then make sure to go to make moneyeasybook.com right now and get yourself a copy.
I really think this is going to help you transform your relationship with money this moment moving forward.
I hope you enjoyed today's episode and it inspired you on your journey towards greatness.
Make sure to check out the show notes in the description for a full rundown of today's episode with all the important links.
And if you want weekly exclusive bonus.
episodes with me personally, as well as ad-free listening, then make sure to subscribe to our
greatness plus channel exclusively on Apple Podcasts. Share this with a friend on social media and
leave us a review on Apple Podcasts as well. Let me know what you enjoyed about this episode
in that review. I really love hearing feedback from you and it helps us figure out how we can
support and serve you moving forward. And I want to remind you if no one has told you lately
that you are loved, you are worthy, and you matter.
And now it's time to go out there and do something great.