The School of Greatness - This Is Why Your Relationship Won’t Last [MASTERCLASS] EP 1314
Episode Date: September 2, 2022Today’s episode is a masterclass around relationships. Three experts on love & relationships share their perspectives and advice for why your relationships aren’t working out the way you want and ...all the things to look for in a compatible partner.In this episode, Faith Jenkins, attorney & author, elaborates on the main causes of divorce and shows us how we can better understand our partner’s love language.James Sexton, divorce lawyer & author, teaches how we can solve the problems in our relationships and not be victimized by the idea of divorce.Lori Gottlieb, psychotherapist & author, shares the truth about finding love and why its so important to embrace change in your relationship.For more, go to lewishowes.com/1314Full Episodes:Faith Jenkins: https://link.chtbl.com/1221-podJames Sexton: https://link.chtbl.com/626-podLori Gottlieb: https://link.chtbl.com/1191-pod
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Everybody wants to be loved in a different way, and it may change over time.
So you're constantly evolving, and a part of your job as a good partner
is to find out, how does this person want to be loved?
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 to this special masterclass. We brought some of the top experts in the world
to help you unlock the power of your life through this specific theme today.
It's going to be powerful, so let's go ahead and dive in.
What about the subtle red flags that you, maybe you saw over time, but you didn't take action on and you realized, oh, that was actually a much bigger flag.
But it was subtle. I let it kind of slip. didn't take action on and you realized, oh, that was actually a much bigger flag than,
but it was subtle.
Like I let it kind of slip.
What are those subtle red flags that people should be looking out for?
If you tell me you're a vegan.
And you eat meat.
And I see you on Snapchat, you need some wings.
You may think that's a small lie, right?
But what does it say about that person?
It's saying that for some reason they feel that they need to, they can't be their true selves with you.
Interesting. They're trying to project someone who they think may impress you and it's not really who they are.
So when you see those subtle things that you don't understand, well, why didn't this person just be true and honest
with me about this? This was a small thing. How do you think they're going to handle the big things?
So I actually look at those little things. What kind of digital footprint are people leaving
online on their social media? What do they think is funny? I remember once someone wanted to set me up
on a blind date with an actor here in LA. And I looked at him. I'm sure he had no shortage
of women lining up to date him. And he'd reached out to a person who he knew was a mutual friend and said,
you know, I'd like to meet Faith.
Would you set me up with her?
Well, I went and looked on his social media.
And he had a joke that he put on his social media that I thought was really crude
and that I didn't think was funny, but he thought it was funny.
But in that moment, I said, I'm not going to go out on a date with him.
Some people may think, wow, you didn't even give him a chance.
You didn't even, again, I know myself now.
I know myself and I know that when I date somebody, even what they put out publicly
on their social media, that's a reflection of me.
That's a reflection of our relationship.
That's a reflection of all those things.
You may think that joke was small, but to me, it represented a bigger picture of what
I thought would be incompatibility.
How important is compatibility versus connection and chemistry?
Of the three, connection, chemistry, and compatibility, which one is most important in your mind?
You need all three.
Yeah.
When I think about compatibility, I think about not just making a decision about where you are now in your life.
Because over time, when you get into a relationship, as time goes on, people are going to change.
As time goes on, people are going to change.
When you lose a job or you get a new job, you have children, you don't have children, you go through certain stressful situations with your family, your health, all of these things in life,
they continue to change us and shape us into who we are.
and shape us into who we are. So when I think about compatibility,
I think about a person who is committed
to a certain level of growth.
You are not just going together in the future,
you are growing together.
And so that love has to be about being committed
to the same commitment and a certain level of growth.
When someone wants to continue growing and developing himself and the other person doesn't
want to, what happens in a relationship or a marriage when they're different there?
It's easy to fall in love, I think. I think it takes work to stay there.
Mm-hmm.
And so one example, I had a couple come into divorce court and the wife said, you
know, initially our marriage was great, like most marriages. But over time, he started saying things
to me that would really hurt my feelings. I gained weight. I gained 15, 20 pounds over the last couple of years. And he would comment on my weight.
And we were initially committed to just building each other up. And even when we had criticism to
share with each other, we were always constructive. And we always thought, how can I say this in the
most loving way? And so she said she continued to grow in that area, but he didn't. And I turned to
him and I said, so what happened?
He said, well, I'm just speaking the truth. I said, would you ever say to a stranger,
the things that you're saying to your wife, this is supposed to be your best friend. He worked in
a restaurant. I said, would you ever say those things to a patron in your restaurant? The things
that you're saying to your wife? He said, I don't believe in divorce. We're Christians. We don't
get divorced. I say, really, what does God say about love?
You're a Christian.
What does God say about love?
Love is kind.
Love is patient.
Love is patient.
Love doesn't envy.
Love certainly doesn't try to tear the other person down.
commitment to that growth, it really shows up in the long term, in the longevity of the relationship. And if someone's not committed, again, you have to protect your peace. I would
never advise staying in a relationship where you are being emotionally abused and disrespected because I'm going to tell you what happens. It breaks my heart
to see people come in and they've been in these relationships for so long where they have been
repeatedly dishonored. You know why? Because over time, when people have been repeatedly disrespected and dishonored, it becomes normal to them.
It becomes a part familiar.
And they, in turn, start to think they've been dishonored so much that they are not
indeed worthy of honor because they've been dishonored repeatedly.
Pain will subside in time after you leave if you do the work, but it will always be there if you stay
in that type of situation. What would you say are the main causes of divorce then? Is it cheating?
Is it disrespect? Is it a lack of growth? Is it foul play, emotional abuse? What are the main
causes you see? People not being committed to the same commitment, And that is the growth, the love, the respect, finding out how your partner
wants to be loved because everybody wants to be loved in a different way and it may change over
time. So you're constantly evolving and a part of your job as a good partner is to find out how does
this person want to be loved? If you stop doing all of those things,
it's like if you maintain and you take care of your yard, what are the things you do to take
care of your yard? You have to mow the lawn, take care of the grass, fertilize it, pull out the
weeds, all of those things to keep the yard looking great, to keep it growing. There are
going to be seasons. There are going to be seasons. It may be dry one season. It may be a rainy season.
You're going to go through the storms.
But just like in life, the seasons are going to change.
But what are you doing to maintain throughout all of those things?
Being committed to doing the work to maintain the relationship throughout the seasons is
what speaks to success.
And I see the opposite end of that yeah because at no point can you just think that being on autopilot is what's going to keep moving
forward right there's a book obviously called the love i think it's the five love languages yes i
love that and um i think it's such a powerful place to even just have a conversation with a partner in when you're dating and to take the love language test to see, does this person, do I like giving love in the way this person likes receiving love?
I did this test with my, my girlfriend and I did at the same time.
I wish I would have done this in previous relationships.
This isn't the end all be all.
This isn't like if you have this in a perfect alignment, your relationship's going to work out.
But I think it's a great indicator of minimizing stress when you learn these things.
And I realize that we have the exact same order of how we like to receive love based on the test we took.
So we both like receiving love the same way, which means we both like giving love in the same way.
Whereas in previous relationships, I didn't ask them, how do you both like giving love in the same way. Whereas in previous relationships,
I didn't ask them, how do you really like to receive love? And they didn't ask me. We both
didn't really do the test and go through that process. And over time, I remember feeling like,
oh, they really like when I do certain things that I'm not comfortable doing, or it's not my
natural go-to. It's more of a strain, and it's harder for me to think of and remember to do certain things
and vice versa. They didn't like doing certain things that I like to be, I like being touched
and, you know, told nice things and they wanted to keep their hands to themselves. They didn't want,
whatever it was. And I was like, man, just like if people couldn't get an alignment on that,
at least in a couple areas, I think it would make it much smoother in the process.
And there's a lot of different things out there that people can do about that.
But how important is that, do you think, figuring out the love language of your partner before you get married?
It's a part of the service that comes with being in a relationship and being in a marriage.
Big part of marriage is service and sacrifice.
And a part of the service is how am I going to serve my partner?
I remember when my husband and I went through our premarital counseling,
and we did pre-engagement counseling even.
So before you got engaged, you did counseling to see, is it worth getting engaged? And then when you were engaged, you did counseling. Yes.
To see, is it worth getting engaged?
And then when you're engaged, you got counseling to see like, let's go.
Absolutely.
See, that's how serious I was about it.
I remember before my current girlfriend, I remember thinking to myself, gosh, I would
love to get into a relationship and start therapy.
Like when everything's good.
And see, are we in alignment and like diffuse some of the things
that could be challenged in the future. And we've been doing that in our own way. Like she's got her
own therapist. I've got mine and we're starting to do stuff together and it's uncomfortable to
have certain conversations, but it's so freeing at the same time. So anyways, you did this cause
you were so serious about it. And what did you learn about doing counseling, pre-engagement,
engagement before marriage as well? Well, I thought if I get engaged and then I go to
premarital counseling, I've already made the decision to get married. So I wanted to know,
because remember, you're talking about, I talked about the fear of the unknown.
Because remember, you're talking about, I talked about the fear of the unknown.
So I wanted to minimize the unknowns.
So I thought, I have all these questions that I think I'm asking the right questions, but I want to know, is there something that I'm not asking?
Is there another area that we need to explore?
Is there something else we need to talk about before we got engaged? Because we were talking about at that point, getting married. You know, so often when people get engaged and they announce it and they share
with the world and the invitations are going out and then, oh, wait, wait, we need to do our
premarital counseling. You may find out something that you don't like. And are you going to...
Uh-oh, whoopsie, too late.
What are you going to do?
A lot of people feel the pressure. I've heard so many stories of people gotten divorced.
I'm sure you've heard this too,
where the woman or the man said,
I knew on my wedding day, this wasn't the right fit.
It wasn't the right fit.
Have you heard that before?
Yes, they knew.
And they still go through with it.
I'm like, why do you put yourself through this?
They don't want to be embarrassed.
But then two, five years later,
you went through just pain
and sadness and you settled for something that wasn't the right thing. People think. And I'm
not judging people here because I've made a ton of my own mistakes. We've all made those mistakes.
We have to learn the hard way. Some people, you know, you have to learn the hard way and
all opportunities for you to grow. But you can minimize that based on. You can minimize it.
And maybe you go through all the premarital counseling
and the pre-engagement
and it still doesn't work out for whatever reason,
but at least you hopefully have a better.
You did your due diligence.
Yes.
You did your due diligence.
Exactly.
So you can go in with a little more confidence.
Yes.
Because of your due diligence.
And if something,
when it came up in one of these conversations
that you were like,
that's completely out of alignment with what I want.
You could have figured out, is there a solution to this? If not, then maybe you wouldn't have gotten married. out of alignment with what I want. You could have figured out,
is there a solution to this? If not, then maybe you wouldn't have gotten married.
There are two things about what you just said, which is great because some people think that
by getting married, it's going to change something or change a person or things will be different.
Yeah. The only thing a wedding will change is maybe your last
name. Weddings will break the bank, but they will not break bad habits. So you can expect when you
get married, you've won the pie eating contest. What is the prize for winning the pie eating
contest? More pie. You've won this person. What is the prize? You get more of them. So you better be happy with your choice. Yeah. And you can't change someone.
Not because of pressure or nagging or crying or any of those things. It has to be something
within. Each person has to want to change. And I really don't think you can date or marry based
on potential personally. And I hear a lot of women saying,
well, he's got so much potential,
he could become this man,
but then he never becomes it.
That's why I wrote this book.
That's why I wrote that book.
And so you date or marry based on potential,
but then you're really settling
because who you're dating and who you're marrying
is who they are.
Maybe they grow into something greater
based on what they want,
but you can't expect them to be on a timeline you want. You are dating their reality. You want to marry their
potential. Those two things should be aligned. We went to pre-engagement counseling because
I wanted to make sure that we were asking each other the right questions.
And we were getting to know each other the best we possibly could
before even making the decision to get married.
To get engaged.
To get engaged.
And then you had time to ask more questions once you were engaged.
So what were the three conversations or questions that were the most challenging
for you to have the courage to talk about or just navigate?
What were the three most uncomfortable conversations in pre-engagement counseling?
How have you healed from your past?
Gosh, healing is so key.
It's so key.
Because we both had past relationships that didn't work out for one reason or another.
that didn't work out for one reason or another.
And I think we both wanted to know if there were going to be triggers that would bring out something from the past in our current relationship.
There's always going to be residue.
We're human.
You were talking about before we started that marriage is a technology.
Now, what does that mean?
What is the technology of marriage? I think anything that's designed to solve a problem is a technology,
right? So, I mean, this mug is a technology, you know, and what is the problem to which this
technology is a solution? Well, it's the problem of I can't hold hot tea in my hand. It's a problem
of I don't want to use, and kudos to you for using non-disposable ones, that zero waste.
Yeah, yeah.
You listen to it.
And the truth is, is that it's designed to solve a problem.
So the next question is, who has that problem?
Well, you know, anyone who wants to drink a beverage has that problem, you know.
And the next question, and I think the most important question is, what problems does it unintentionally create?
So every technology is a Faustian bargain in the sense that it solves a problem and
it creates a problem.
Now you've got to clean it, you've got to use water to wash it, you've got to store
it.
Exactly.
Now you have to find stylish ones.
I mean, you went classic plane, but you've got to find ones with witty sayings on them
and it can break.
And now my favorite mug was broken and how am I going to replace it?
I mean, again, some of these problems are silly little problems in exchange for really
great benefits, but most people never ask themselves the question, the technology of
marriage, which is a man-made technology, a human-made technology. We got together and said,
hey, let's create this legal contract. Governed by a state. Right, governed by the state. Let's come
up with something that let's turn a lover into a relative. You know, let's find a way to turn
this into a legally binding contract. And people just go and sign up for this technology. And they
spend more time thinking about what cake they should serve at the ceremony than thinking about
what did I just sign on for and why did I sign on for it and
what are some problems it might create for me in exchange for the things that it solved
for me?
And by the way, will it even solve the problem that I'm trying to have it solve?
And one of the things I talk about in the book is, you know, if you got married to solve
the problem of being alone, you might be alone still in your marriage.
Like if you got married because you want to have sex,
you want to have more sex,
being married is no more a guarantee of getting sex
than living near a restaurant is a guarantee of getting fed.
It doesn't mean just because you're in it,
you're going to receive the benefit that you think you're going to receive of it.
And how many couples, before they get married,
really sit down and say,
hey, we're going to sign up for this this technology what do you want to get from it what should I be wanting to get from it how will it change over the years
that just doesn't happen yeah so if that doesn't happen how are we then surprised
that it doesn't work 53% of the time 53% is now the divorce rate and that the
divorce rate and then more probably still don't work when they're in it.
Exactly.
So that's the part, and it's funny that you go there because that's where I go with it.
So 53% is already terrifying, right?
If I said to you there's a 53% chance when you walk out of this room you get hit in the
head with a bowling ball.
Yeah, you're probably not going to go out.
Or you're going to wear a helmet at a minimum.
Yeah, yeah, exactly.
At a minimum you're going to wear a gonna wear a big probably wouldn't go out
Now let's look at that number though 53% and then divorce that's us or global us us us only
Okay. Now think about how what percent stay together for the kids?
That should get divorced but stay together and each other
They say together that they stay together because they don't want upset the kids or they don't want to give away their stuff
I would say another 75% stay together even though they want to get
divorced. Okay. So let's say another 25% of married people, let's say. So now we've got a
technology with a failure rate over 75%. Okay. So now what percentage stay together for religious
reasons? Probably a declining percentage over the years, but let's say, you know, 5%. That might be the same as kids and, you know,
might be the same. So, if I say there's a technology with a failure rate
of 80%. Toyota had a.0001%
brake failure. Nice save.
A.0001% brake failure on one of their vehicles, and they've recalled all of the vehicles.
Yeah.
So if I said to you, 80% of technology.
We still use it.
Yeah, yeah.
Not only do we use it, we celebrate its use.
Yeah, it's part of our culture.
And we're shamed if we're not married almost.
Absolutely.
Well, because it's considered a sign that you're not mature and forward thinking.
And we're shamed ashamed we weren't divorced.
Right.
But now we're being celebrated to get out of marriages
if it's not what we want
or if we're not getting what we want.
That's a trend that's definitely starting to change.
So I think-
It's like leave him, divorce him or whatever.
Right.
Well, I think a self-actualization became more of a thing.
And after the 1970s, people started thinking about
like themselves and their happiness. It wasn't just about the unit anymore. It was about,
you know, finding yourself. Then, yeah, it became more acceptable to be self-interested. I'm not
going to say selfish because not all self-interested behavior is selfish, but it became more acceptable
to say, I'm not happy. You know, I married this person when I was 20,
and now I'm 40, and shockingly I'm not the same person
at 40 that I was when I was 20,
and now I'm a different person
and it's no longer a good fit.
I mean, the analogy I tell people is,
if I said to you right now, you can have any car you want,
what car would you have?
Well, I just got a Tesla.
I have a Tesla too.
Yeah.
I actually don't care about cars at all.
I don't know if you got a car either.
But I got one for tax reasons actually.
Okay.
Cool.
And I had a 1991, I still have a 1991 Cadillac El Dorado.
Okay.
They're like 60,000 miles on it.
Okay.
I Uber everywhere.
I don't really use it.
It's a great car.
Yeah.
If you have any car you want. If you ask most people.
But I like the Tesla.
I like the Tesla because it's fuel efficient, it's, you know, I just wish I had a bigger
battery.
So you're a pragmatic guy.
You ask most people that question.
It's nice too, though.
It's clean.
They're going to go Ferrari, Lamborghini.
Ferrari, Lamborghini, I want a Maserati.
Okay.
Now, if I then said to them, okay, you get one car, though.
Whatever car you pick, that's the car you're going to have for the
rest of your life suddenly a lamborghini is a terrible idea because you can't put a car seat
in it for a kid and you can't you know when you're 80 years old get into that car right so if you are
only allowed to have one car you got to find a car that not only makes sense when you're 20 and 30
and 40 but when you're 70 yeah and when you have kids and when the kids
have gone away.
So again, like a minivan that might make sense when you got three kids, when the kids go
off to college, that minivan no longer makes sense.
Well, marriage is a technology where you're signing on with one person and saying, for
the rest of my life, I'm going to be with this person.
And that's a very challenging thing.
But here's the thing.
I actually think people give more thought
To the car they're buying then they do really to the technology of marriage and what about it specifically
They like or don't like hmm
What training or information do you think do you wish every couple would go through before signing up for the technology of marriage?
That's a great question. I I, you know, if you buy a house, you get a lead paint disclosure,
you get a HUD disclosure that talks about the loan, you get all kinds of disclosures,
right? You sign a will, there's all these pages that explain to you in great detail,
you know, what's happening when you sign that will. You get married, you don't even get
a pamphlet. You don't even get like a one-page
brochure this is what this is the most legally significant thing other than
dying that you will ever do legally and you don't get any information about what
just happened so the first thing I would say is I think everybody who's gonna get
married should have an hour consultation with a divorce lawyer absolutely so they
should go into your office yes Yes, but for a different reason. For a different reason. Prophylactically. Yes,
they should come in proactively and learn about what's about to happen legally. What's about to
happen to my rights? You know, what's about to change in terms of how I own property,
the financial obligations I'll have to this person. I would also say one of the best things
they could do is talk to someone candidly who's been married for an extended period of time. You know, that's not
something we do. We're not encouraged to be honest about our relationships. We're not. I mean, one of
the things you talk about masculinity that I loved is about, particularly for men, but I think it's
true for women too. We don't share candidly what's really going on in our lives.
We're in a very curated society
where you put up on social media the best picture
and the best vacation photos
and the best of everything we're doing
and we don't share with each other the challenges,
we don't share with each other
even really relevant information.
Like when I meet
a couple who's been together for 20 years you know I want to know I mean I love the story oh how did
you meet and you know how many times a week do you have sex who started who initiates it do you ask
the shiz do you always do the same stuff because you've been together for 20 years and you know
what each other like or like do you try like do you like call an audible every once in a while
just do some wacky thing like what is it
like what what is it really like the day-to-day of your relationship and so
many people I mean you've been in relationships I've been relationships so
many people just don't talk honestly even when I'm with my guy friends you
know do we really talk honestly about the day-to-day of our relationships the
way we talk to the women in our lives like the nickname they
have for us or the nickname we have for them again it's private to some degree information
but if we could share that stuff a little more we'd have a lot more accurate of a perception
of where our relationship stands in the scheme of things and how we're doing you know because
i really think there's this perception that people have of, you know,
oh, we're only having sex this many times a week.
And it's like, well, okay, is that a lot?
Is that too little?
Like, you have nothing to compare it to.
Right, right.
You know, so in marriage, there's no way to know if you're doing well at it.
Because you can't say, well, you know, we have fights every now and then.
Well, okay, people have fights every now and then.
But if you have a fight every week, that might be a lot.
But how would you know?
What would you compare it to right?
so I would say one of the best things you do to people who are considering getting married is
Put them in a room with people who've been good at that technology who've managed to not only endure marriage
But endure it and still like it and thrive right and thrive right and still say, you know what?
I'd sign on for this again. Yeah, like in a room full of people, I'd still pick this person.
Yeah.
That's cool.
You know?
And how many of those opportunities do we really get to talk to people that way about
the relationship?
Not many.
Yeah.
And maybe also talk to someone who's been through divorce and ask them, what didn't
work and why didn't it work?
And where did it break down?
Yeah.
Exactly.
See, one of the principles that inspired me to write the book was the idea that, you know, again, I hate using car metaphors because I'm not a car guy.
But it's the best analogy I can think of in the sense that if when you bought a car, you did every bit of preventative maintenance that a mechanic told you to do.
You changed the oil every two months or whatever.
Yeah. My sister's a dentist, you know, and she always says to me, by the time your tooth hurts,
you're screwed.
Prevent it.
Yeah.
Floss every day.
Not after you get the cavity.
If you do all the stuff she tells you to do when you go see her, your teeth are going
to do well.
So it's, for me, who knows more about how a car breaks down than a mechanic, right?
So I know what, I know people are in my office and I get a very candid view of them and I get to talk to them.
And I have been very blessed that people trust me with tremendously personal information.
And so what I wanted to do with that information is just find a way to leverage that into some kind of wisdom that people could use and say, you know what, just don't do what they did. When we were talking about titles for the book, you know, it was a hilarious escapade
because, you know, one of the first ideas was, well, we'll call it Everyone Screwing Everyone
because it was about how people just abuse each other in the process of divorce
and how they're really taking advantage of each other.
And then we said, well, no, that's too pessimistic.
And we said, well, you know, maybe we can, can you know just call it you know um uh vows
and talk about like the promises that people make but it's not really the promises that are
interesting it's the way that people go in with good intentions with those promises and they just
can't keep it together yeah so i really think that that you know for me um the best thing we can do
with anybody is is to yeah show them a model to, yeah, show them a model of success, right? And show them
a model of failure. You know, and look, you've said it a million times on this show that you
learn just as much from your successes as your failures. You might learn more from your failures
even to some degree. So we don't have those role models. We don't have relationship role models,
you know? And, you know, one of the things you talked about masculine masculinity, when you're talking about, um, uh, Neil Strauss, um, and his marriage and how he says, look,
it was my stuff. It wasn't like I said, Oh, I don't like marriage. Cause I don't like this
about it. And I don't like that it would force me to do this and force me to do that. And really
what it was is he just didn't want to look at his own stuff. Yeah. And he felt like to have a good marriage, he'd have to look at his own stuff, which
is absolutely true.
Yeah, terrifying.
And most of what my book is about is about, yeah, you got to look at your stuff.
If you want to be successful in this technology, you got to look at it, own it, and share it
with this person.
And be aware and be honest with the person about who you are and what you want, what
you don't want now you were
You were married for how long I was married for 12 years 12 years. Yeah got divorced
Yeah, got divorced while you were a divorce
Yeah, while I was at the worst it's a you're hearing these stories every day and going through your marriage
But you know my yeah, I mean my marriage
I think benefited from my experience as a divorce if you knew the cues of what not to do or what was going to work.
But it was hurt by the fact that I love what I do for a living and was so consumed with it that I worked constantly.
You know, my ex-wife, who is one of my dearest friends to this day, she's remarried to an amazing guy who's a great stepdad to
my sons who are now older. They're both in college. But I'm very blessed. I mean
I've had an experience of divorce where I'm still close friends with her. I'm
friends with her husband. You know and I'm very lucky for that. Because I look
at it like there's a lot of people I love that I wouldn't want to be married
to. And she's one of them.
She's someone I love.
She's someone I appreciate who I think is just an amazing person.
But we don't have the chemistry, the exact ingredients that you need to be successful in marriage.
Because we met when we were 17.
And what we wanted when we were 17, 18, 19, 22 when we got married, 24 when we had kids, when we turned around and we're
in our 30s, we went, you know, we don't actually have that much in common.
And so either I'm going to have to stop being who I actually am.
Like, I love to travel.
You don't love to travel.
You love, you know, I mean, from silly things, you love shabby chic furniture.
And I like very zen aesthetics you know like you love this
kind of movie and I love this kind of movie and you reach a point where you kind of go well do
we white knuckle it now because we don't want to quit something that isn't working or do we say
you know what let's call this let's call this and let's find someone who feeds us in the right way
and and see if or or just be alone for the right reasons, you know and
I'm very blessed that the person who I was married to was mature enough to see it the same way and to have that
painful but really
Wonderful conversation that so few people can have and that is to say look this this thing was successful
You know, we both are leaving this better people than we were when we came into it. And we're leaving it with two kids
that are the exact chemistry of the two of us. And they're made up of the two of us. But we're
going to kind of take our different paths now. And let's still love each other. Let's still respect
each other. Conscious uncoupling. Yeah. Absolutely.
I mean, that's the term that's been handed to it. But you know, the truth is, is I think people
been doing it for years. You just don't hear about it. It's not that my divorce is the least
interesting thing about me. It really is. Yeah. Like if I said to you, like, you know, tell me
10 things about yourself. The fact that I'm divorced wouldn't make a list because the fact
that I tried to marry someone and stay with them forever and it didn't work out
isn't that interesting it's not that unique you know what you hear about into
the people who talk about their divorces incessantly are people who were wounded
by them yeah and and now they've been victimized by their divorce and so it
becomes a tremendous part of their identity they hold on to it for a while and they talk about it and here's what happened.
And so, you know, they're the silent, you know, there's a huge number of people that
had divorces like mine where the marriage just ended and ended in a friendly fashion.
They continue to co-parent successfully together and they both live their lives.
There's not this pain and resentment for years.
No, and I have to tell
you, as a divorce lawyer, as a practicing divorce lawyer, a huge, I would say more than 50% of the
people that I represent, it's that kind of transaction. It really is that it's just two
people that their time is done. And now we just have to figure out how to divide up the things
they have and work out the schedules with the kids. That's good to know. 50%. Yeah. I would
say at least 50%. That's good. But the thing is, the other 50% are so much more interesting.
I mean, so much.
It's like, because really, who wants to hear about, like, oh, I talked to my ex-wife yesterday, and she's lovely.
She's moving to Rochester soon.
That's her life.
It's the drama and the train wreck.
Yeah, she threw a bat at me.
She set my car on fire.
It's way more interesting.
Oh, man.
Do you feel like, you know, marriage, I hear this all the time, it's something that's not going to be easy, right?
There's going to be challenges.
There's going to be fights or arguments, and there's going to be some things that you're not going to agree on. Sure. If you agree on everything, awesome. But it doesn't sound like there's many marriages that are always perfect and always smooth.
After 10, 20, 30 years, there's going to be some conflict.
So does that mean in your opinion that we should just be like, you know what, let's
throw in the towel when it gets too challenging or you know what, it's getting challenging.
That's when we got to dive in deeper and like come together as a marriage because we signed
up for this. It's a great question.'s when we got to dive in deeper and come together as a marriage because we signed up for this.
It's a great question.
I would say the following.
I think one of the most common things people will say to you about marriage is, you know, marriage is hard.
Marriage is hard.
I don't know that that's true.
I think if you consider paying attention hard, then marriage is hard. Right. If you don't consider
paying attention hard, then I don't think marriage has to be hard. I think that it's again, not to
use the metaphor again, but, you know, losing weight is harder than maintaining your weight.
And I really think, look, you're going to have challenges.
You're not necessarily going to have fights.
You're going to have challenges.
Life is going to throw challenges in your way.
Illness, adversity, career issues, you know, day-to-day miscommunications with each other.
If you're not paying attention, those things get huge. And then
the big, big things happen. So people come in and they go, I'm getting divorced because he's
sleeping with his secretary. You are. That's a great reason to get divorced. And that's a legit
thing. He's not, he's sleeping with his secretary because there's something wrong in the marriage.
Yeah. You know, and if you don't want to look at that because you have some culpability in that,
and it's easier to just go, Oh, this harlot came and took him away.
And it's a lot easier to say that.
But the truth is, you know, you stopped paying attention.
You know, and this is the question I find myself when I have a minute, you know, with a client who I've been some miles with.
And we're sitting outside of the courtroom waiting for the case to be called and I have
enough of a rapport with them and we've been enough of a distance together that I feel
like I can be candid with them.
I'll say to them, was there a moment where you realized your marriage was over?
What was that moment?
And you would be amazed at the insight if people think about that question that they
give to you.
I had a woman who said to me, and was a to me a very powerful example I discussed
a little bit in the book she said there was a kind of granola that she liked and
you could only get it at like a certain store like a Whole Foods or something
like that and her husband used to always buy it he's always but whenever she was
running low she would just open the cabinet and there'd be another bag of it
there and she loved that mmm because he would just open the cabinet and there'd be another bag of it there. And she loved that.
Because he didn't say like, oh, and look, honey, I bought your granola.
Like, I get credit for that.
You know, like he just would do it.
He just saw that this was something that he was paying attention.
He just saw that there was this little thing.
And it was this little kindness that he showed her that let her know she was important to him.
He was still kind of trying to woo her without being obvious about it.
And he was still paying attention.
And she said then one day,
she just ran out of the granola and it wasn't there.
So she thought, well, maybe he's like busy
and he just didn't notice.
So she kind of left the bag out.
And, you know, sure enough,
he still didn't replace the granola.
And she said she had a tangible memory.
It was about a year before the actual divorce,
but she said she had a tangible memory where she thought, okay, this is over. You know, this thing is over now. And I think that
that's the thing. That's kind of, if you boiled my book down, one of the things I say to people is
there's this thing in every relationship, some little thing that you had to, that you did for
your partner or some little thing that you just had to tell them that at some point you just stopped telling them. Yeah. You know, I don't know if it's,
it's just in the morning saying like, God, you're so pretty when she walks by. Or if it's
her saying to you, like, you know, I love your, your strong arms or whatever it might be. Like,
there's just those little things. Like we, we just want someone cheering for us. We just want,
why do we, why do we get together? We want connection. We just want someone cheering for us we just want why do we
why do we get together we want connection we just want connection like
there's no other reason to get married other than wanting connection
the people come in because they're in pain and they want the pain to go away
yeah and they've tried maybe they've tried something else I didn't work and
you're like talk talk medicine, right?
Without having to take a pill, how can I relieve this pain, this suffering, this problem?
But the problem, what I'm hearing you say, is never about another person.
It's always with them.
Well, not always.
I think that relationally, a lot of people don't realize that even if the other person is problematic.
So, right, when I was training, one of my clinical supervisors once said, before diagnosing someone with depression, make sure they aren't surrounded by assholes.
Right. Right. So, you know, it's not like there aren't problematic people out there.
Their environment. Right. But then what is your response to that? And I think that people don't
realize how much agency they have. They don't realize that they can choose their response
to their circumstances. They can choose their response to the people around them. And I'm not saying that there aren't
incredibly daunting circumstances right now in the world,
for example.
But then how do you respond?
What are you going to do about it?
And I think that's where people get stuck.
And you talk, I love your TED Talk
because you talk about rewriting your story from the past.
And I believe that we hold onto our stories
and we probably continue
to write them in a more powerful way that keeps us trapped or traumatized. Is that fair to say
that something happens in our past, we hold on to the story daily or whenever we're triggered
and it's like amplifies the story in our mind? Well, it does. And the problem is that often
whatever that version of the story is, we carry with us and we never revise it. And so you create a story that we're all unreliable narrators, that
we all tell a story through this lens.
And the thing is, these are usually faulty narratives.
So there's a broader version of the story that people haven't looked at.
And so I feel like in a lot of ways, what I do as a therapist is I act as an editor
and have, of course, a writing background.
And so I help people to revise their stories
because the reason they can't move forward in the story,
the reason they can't get to the next chapter
is because of something is wrong with the story.
They are stuck.
And so it's almost like I'm helping them
with writer's block.
I mean, for me, life is an interpretation.
Yes. Right?
There's an instance that happens
and we can interpret it as good or that happens and we can interpret it as
good or bad, or we can interpret it as this is a neutral event and I'm going to make the most of
this. Is that fair to say? Yeah, absolutely. And also how we attribute other people's parts of the
story, right? So who are the villains and the heroes in the story? You know, I talk in the
book about the difference between idiot compassion and wise compassion.
And idiot compassion is what our friends do.
They back up our story no matter what.
We say, this happened.
This happened with my boss.
This happened with my partner.
This happened with my parent.
Right?
This happened with my best friend.
And we say, yeah, that was terrible.
Screw them.
They're a jerk.
You know, that's awful.
You're right.
They're wrong.
Don't let anyone treat you that way.
That's what we do.
And if you've listened to your friend's stories,
you start to realize over time
that even though the situation
and the names might be different,
the kind of story they're telling is similar.
It's kind of like if a fight breaks out
in every bar you're going to, maybe it's you.
Yeah, exactly.
But we don't say that.
That's idiot compassion.
Idiot compassion is where we as friends say,
yeah, you're the best person in the world.
This person's horrible.
Yeah.
Leave them or let them go.
Yes.
Forget about them.
Like, they're so bad at what they did.
There's always two sides to every story.
Well, right.
And so the value of therapy is that we offer wise compassion.
We hold up a mirror to you and help you to see yourself in a way that maybe you haven't been willing or able to do.
And that's where the other version of the story comes in.
So how do we have wise compassion for our friends when they're like, she cheated on me, he left me, they had an affair, whatever.
How do we change our story and also show compassion that we're there for our friend, not making, when they're in a vulnerable place,
not making the other person right or wrong,
but being there for them and also kind of giving them
some tough love, I guess.
I wouldn't call it tough love, I would just call it,
Reality?
Love.
Love.
It's love, it's much more loving to be truthful
in a compassionate way.
So I sometimes call them compassionate truth bombs because we
need to hear them. But how do we do it? It has to do with timing and dosage. So the timing is when
they're really raw, when something just happened. You know, now's not the time to say, you know,
this has happened with your last three boyfriends, right? Maybe you're the problem here. Have you
noticed that going through people's phones is not working well for you? You know, we are not going to say that maybe in that moment.
So that's the timing.
And then the dosage is how much are you going to say in a particular moment and in a particular conversation?
It doesn't all have to happen in one conversation.
So I think that that has to do with being a good listener.
And a lot of us don't know how to listen.
And I think it's really helpful.
I see a lot of couples in my practice too and if you can say to the person when they come to you with something
how can I be helpful in this conversation right now I know you're really hurting do you want to
just vent do you want a hug do you want me to help problem solve with you do you want do you want my
honest opinion or do you want me to hold off and we can have that conversation another time
let them tell you what they want so you can give them something that is helpful to them
in that moment and then in another conversation,
you might be able to offer them something more.
When they're not completely raw or broken.
Yes. And hurt.
So what is that specific question
when anyone's coming to you with a challenge
or a complaint or hurt,
what's the question you should ask them?
How can I be helpful to you right now? I know you're really hurting.
What does that do for the person who's hurting when they hear that?
It helps them to reflect on, oh, wait, what do I need? Right? Am I just going to download all of
this stuff and then I'm not going to feel any different at the end? Or is there something else
that I want right now? And maybe downloading it will make them feel different.
Just make them feel seen and understood and heard,
which is important.
Or maybe they want something else, but let them tell you.
And I think the other thing is these three words
that are really helpful when they're talking to you
are tell me more.
So instead of saying, you know, when they say like,
oh, here's what's going on.
And we say, oh, well, we try to cheer them up.
Like, you know, here's what you can do.
We try to fix it.
We try to cheer them up.
We try to make it seem like it's not so bad, whatever we do.
Instead, just say, tell me more.
We do this with our kids.
I can say as a parent, we do this all the time, right?
So your kid comes to you and says, you know, I'm really sad about this or I'm really worried about this.
We say, oh, don't worry.
No, it's not a problem. We say, oh, don't worry. No, it's not a problem.
We say, oh, don't be sad.
Right.
Go have ice cream.
Right.
Exactly.
But the thing is that then you get the message as a kid that like, oh, wait, I'm not supposed
to feel this.
And really what it is, is we get uncomfortable as parents with our kids' feelings.
Why is that?
Because we can't. we are uncomfortable with feelings.
We grew up in a way where feelings were messy, feelings were uncomfortable, feelings were
something that, you know, they were going to be trouble.
Yeah.
As opposed to feelings.
Stop crying.
Stop crying.
Yes.
As opposed to just, you know, feelings are actually a great thing.
People say, oh, there are these negative feelings like sadness, anxiety, anger, whatever, even envy.
I always say feelings are like a compass.
They tell us what direction to go in.
So with envy, for example, I say follow your envy.
It tells you what you want.
If you are feeling envy, that's great because it says, what do I desire?
It puts you in touch with your desire.
What is it that I desire and what steps can I take to get something like that in my own life?
If you're feeling sad, if you're feeling anxious, what is not working right now that you can look at?
If you stuff down that feeling, if you pretend it's not there, it just gets bigger.
And here's what happens.
It doesn't go away.
It comes out in too much food, alcohol, drugs, insomnia,
a short temperedness, inability to function,
distractibility, that mindless scrolling we all do
through the internet.
A colleague of mine said that the internet
was like the most effective short term
non-prescription pain killer out there.
Wow.
Right, and so what happens is your feelings
are still there but you're not dealing with them.
What happens when we never deal with our emotions or feelings?
Well, you, first of all, get sick.
Physically sick, emotionally sick, mentally.
Everything.
Everything.
Right?
So we have, just like we have a physical immune system, we have a psychological immune system.
And we have to take care of our psychological immune system.
So it's just like, you know, what do you do to keep healthy with your body? Like you're going
to eat right. You're going to exercise. You know, you're going to do all the things that you want
to do to take care of yourself. You're going to get enough sleep. Those things also help your
psychological immune system. They're not totally separate. The mind body connection is profound.
But at the same time, are you going to
be around people who don't nourish you? That's going to hurt your psychological immune system.
That's going to make you sick. Are you going to stuff down your feelings? That's going to make
you sick. And so how do we take care of ourselves? And part of it is instead of trying to numb out
your feelings, because numbness isn't the absence of feelings. Numbness is a state of being overwhelmed
by too many feelings.
Wow.
And then not only do you not experience
the feelings that you don't want to experience,
but you don't experience the other feelings.
You mute one feeling, you mute the others.
You mute the pain, you mute the joy.
So you're living in this state where you don't actually
get to feel the range of feelings that make us human.
What is that state called?
I would say, I was going to say dead.
I mean, I feel like you can be alive, but not living.
And that's what happens to people is that they're alive.
They're going through the motions.
They wake up every day, but they're not really living their lives.
What's an assessment we could take for ourselves
if someone's listening or watching to ask themselves how alive or how dead they are and if the people in their life closest
are actually good for them or are hurting their psychological states? Right. Is there a questionnaire
we could take like just off the cuff? Is there an assessment? Is there a few things we could ask
ourselves? Yeah, I mean, I think that it has to do with a sense of vitality, right?
Which of course like vitality the word like life is right in there.
When you wake up in the morning,
are you excited about what you're doing? Is there meaning in what you're doing?
Do you feel connected to how you're spending your days?
Because at the end of your life, are you gonna look back and say what did I do that was know, in, in maybe you should talk to someone in my book. I, there's a woman
that I treat. She's this young woman who goes on her honeymoon. She's newly married. She comes back
and she has cancer. And she says to me at one point, she says, why do we need a terminal diagnosis?
Yeah. To have a wake up call. Why do we need a terminal diagnosis to live our lives
with intention? Why do we need, terminal diagnosis to live our lives with intention?
Why do we need that to really pay attention?
And I think that if we can keep the awareness of death sitting on one shoulder, and I don't mean in a morbid way or in a creepy way, it's not depressing.
It's actually, again, going back to vitality, it helps us feel alive because life has 100% mortality rate, And that's not for other people. We like to believe that. Right. And so the thing is that if we know that we have a limited
time here, I think we would pay more attention to what we're actually doing every day.
Why is it so hard for people to pay attention? Fear.
But they feel like they're stuck sometimes for years. It's like I stay stuck in a relationship that I know is not right for me for years. I stay in a depressed state for years. I stay in a job that I hate
for years. It's all based on fear. Well, I think it is fear. I think it's fear of uncertainty.
This is going to sound strange, but change is really hard because we cling to something that's
familiar to us. So even though we may know, oh, this would help me,
this would be a good change for me,
we don't do it because it's unfamiliar.
And so if you grew up with a lot of chaos,
if you grew up feeling sad all the time or anxious all the time,
that feels like home to you,
even if it's unpleasant or even miserable.
She'll keep finding chaotic environments.
Right, and keep recreating it.
Yeah, and so it was funny
because my own therapist gave me this great analogy.
He said to me, he said,
you remind me of this cartoon
and it's of a prisoner shaking the bars,
desperately trying to get out.
But on the right and the left, it's open, right?
No bars.
So basically the prisoner is not in jail and that's what so many
of us are like we feel like we're trapped we're not in jail we can change we can just walk around
the bars but why don't we because with freedom the freedom to walk around the bars comes
responsibility and if we're responsible for our own lives that scares us we feel like oh i don't
know if i can do that i don't know if i'm competent enough to do that. Or now I'm to blame if things don't go right. I can't blame it on
everything else. Is this one of the reasons why inmates after a long time being in prison who get
out, go back into prison because they feel like they need to be back in that environment? Are
there other reasons? I think there are other reasons. I think we don't give people the support when they come out.
You know, the mental health issues that they needed to be treated for were whenever, you know, they never got that support.
And then they come out and they're back in the same situation where they don't have that community support.
Why is it so hard for us to take responsibility for our own happiness?
for our own happiness?
I think that if you grew up in a household where you were seen and heard and understood,
those are the people who do take responsibility
for their own happiness.
I think for people who felt like
they were ripped off in their childhoods,
there's a part of them that's still in a fight.
There's a part of them that still wants that redo.
And so it's kind of like they're not aware of this,
but what they're saying is basically,
I will not change mom and dad until you give me the things that I did not get in childhood.
So they'll go find a partner that emulates their environment from mom and dad and try to change
them so they... Well, right. This is the irony of relationship, right? For those people who have
not sort of worked through it. This is so common.
And I think all of us have this piece in us, right, because nobody had a perfect childhood.
So what happens is people say, OK, when I'm an adult, I'm going to pick a partner who really makes me feel nourished, who really gives me all those things that I did not get growing up.
But what they don't realize is unconsciously they have this radar for the people
who look very different from their parents on the surface. But then once they get into that
relationship, it's kind of like, oh, this feels familiar. Right. And so what they did was their
unconscious said when they were picking their partner, hey, you look familiar. Come closer.
Even though in consciously they thought, oh, you're totally different from my parents. This is going to
work out great. But no.
They have radar for that if they haven't
worked out the stuff that's sort of
their unfinished business. There's this saying, we marry our
unfinished business. We
actually do marry our unfinished business.
So that is why it is so important as
an adult to take responsibility
and say, you know what? I'm going to have
to grieve this loss of what I didn't get. And I'm going to have to grieve this loss of what I didn't get and I'm going to have to work through this and
assess where I am as an adult so that I pick people and surround myself with
people who are healthy for me what if you've chosen someone that you love
deeply but it's unconsciously your unfinished business mm-hmm is that the
wrong person for you once you realize oh they're never going to
change or is that a point for us to reflect back and say actually i need to heal the past accept
this person for who they are and be willing to flow within this relationship well what happens
is so you married your unfinished business but so did they and so if you can both recognize that if
you realize hey wait we have a lot of conflict in
our relationship or we're really avoidant in our relationship or we don't feel connected in the way
we want to feel connected that's a great opportunity for both of you to work out your unfinished
business to heal together to heal together right and so that relationship could thrive if you both
are willing to look in the mirror at yourselves and do the work. Yes,
that could be a really beautiful relationship. And it can be very healing for both of you. In fact,
it could potentially be the strongest bond ever if you both were able to go through that. Yeah.
But if you're unwilling to go through that, then what? You're going to be in pain.
Right. Well, both people have to be willing. I mean, that's the thing. So it's like you may
wake up one day and say, oh, wait a minute, I have all this unfinished business. And then your partner says, yeah, it's all you. You're the problem in the relationship. You know, it's kind of like in couples therapy. So often I'll see something like someone will say, like, you never listen to me. And I'll say, how well do you listen to that? Right. Right. It's always like if you're just yelling at someone all day, they don't want to listen to you. Right, right. So, you know, there's this dance that we do in relationship.
And what happens is people are doing these dance steps.
And people become very, they become very ingrained.
It's like, oh, here we go.
You can, you can script out people's arguments.
You know exactly what they're going to look like.
It starts with one thing and then it goes back into many different things.
And you're like, oh, man.
And you know exactly how it's going to go and who's going to feel what and who's going to accuse the other person of what.
And that's the dance.
And so if one person changes their dance steps, the other person either is going to fall flat on the dance floor or they're going to have to change their steps too if they want to keep dancing.
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
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And if no one's told you lately, I want to remind you that you are loved, you are worthy,
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.