The School of Greatness - Top Psychologist: How To Heal A Broken Heart & ATTRACT Healthy Love | Guy Winch
Episode Date: October 21, 2024In this episode, I sit down with psychologist and bestselling author Guy Winch to explore the intricate world of emotional health and relationships. Guy shares his insights on building self-esteem, ma...naging heartbreak, and creating healthy foundations for lasting partnerships. We dive deep into the importance of emotional literacy, discuss how to navigate the complexities of modern dating, and explore strategies for raising emotionally intelligent children. Guy's wisdom, gained from three decades of clinical practice, offers listeners practical tools to improve their emotional wellbeing and build more fulfilling relationships.In this episode you will learnHow to build a strong foundation for relationships through intentional communication and self-awarenessThe importance of emotional literacy and using tools like the "emotion wheel" to better understand and express feelingsStrategies for healing from heartbreak and rebuilding self-esteem after rejectionThe critical role of self-acceptance and self-understanding in forming healthy relationshipsPractical advice for parents on fostering emotional intelligence and resilience in their childrenFor more information go to https://www.lewishowes.com/1683For more Greatness text PODCAST to +1 (614) 350-3960More SOG episodes we think you’ll love:Dr. Tara Swart – https://link.chtbl.com/1629-podMacken Murphy – https://link.chtbl.com/1587-podDr. Becky Kennedy – https://link.chtbl.com/1586-pod
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It actually starts before the heartbreak when people begin to fall in love.
You become addicted.
Love is an addiction.
That's why the withdrawal of love is the form of withdrawal.
Dr. Guy Winch.
Guy received his PhD in clinical psychology from NYU.
He's been working with individuals, couples, and families in his private practice in Manhattan since 1992.
Guy Winch.
The brain doesn't distinguish that well
between emotional and physical pain.
This is true in functional MRIs.
They look incredibly, incredibly similar.
Between emotional trauma and physical trauma.
Pain. Emotional pain and physical pain.
The divorce rate is so high
and people are so unhappy in relationships.
We should be teaching this stuff in schools.
Relationship dynamics are like cement.
You can mold it when it's wet.
It's much more difficult to do when it's dry.
What would you say are three or four things that individuals could do to enter a relationship
to give them a chance for happy, healthy, long-term love?
Okay.
Welcome back, everyone, to the School of Greatness.
Very excited about our guest.
We have the inspiring Guy Winch in the house.
So good to see you, man.
You as well, Louis.
It's great to be back.
It's been too many years, but you've been on twice before and you're one of my favorite
psychologists to be on here and the things that you do around understanding science and
self-help and kind of blending them together I think is really needed in the world right now.
So thank you for being here.
Very excited about this.
The first thing I want to dive into is a quote that you have on, I believe, your website.
You said, brain studies have shown that the withdrawal from romantic love activates the
same mechanisms in our brain as when addicts are withdrawing from substances.
I don't know if that's from your TED talk or on your website
but that seems fascinating to me that the same type of withdrawal from a
relationship from love is
similar to an addict from substances
Which one do you think is harder to heal from?
Someone going through substance abuse or someone going through a breakup?
Look, first of all, we have services
for people who go through substance abuse.
There's a lot of medical care available,
their medications available, their support available,
much less so for romantic heartbreak,
especially if you're an adult,
especially if you're older, you know,
then in your 20s where you're supposed to be over it,
where these things are for kids kind of thing.
And so you find then that you're going through
a ridiculously difficult experience
and people are looking at you like, come on,
it's been a week, you're over it.
You know, and you would not say that to somebody
who's, you know, coming off opioids.
But what's interesting to me is it actually starts
before the heartbreak when people begin to fall in love.
And anyone who's done that recently will remember
you become addicted to the person
and it can happen extraordinarily quickly.
It can happen because you swiped and they swiped back
and you suddenly figure that, oh this is it. She's the one. That's gonna be the answer to
all my problems and you start to feel addicted. I.e. you think about them all
the time. Nothing else really matters as much. Every correspondence, every
word tilts you up or down and she didn't say say, love you. She always says, I love you.
Now, she was in the supermarket with five bags in her hand.
She didn't have the finger.
You know, that's not, you go into a panic.
And so it starts when you get addicted.
Love is an addiction or a form of one.
That's why the withdrawal of love is the form of withdrawal.
Interesting.
So what is the way that most people fall in love?
How is it look like in today's the way that most people fall in love? How does it
look like in today's society? How do we fall in love? I see someone and eventually I make a
decision that's the person I want to be with. Like if something clicks and is it around their
identity or their potential identity of what they could give me in the future? Is it around
our chemical attraction that gets us deciding? Is it around,, our chemical attraction that gets us kind of deciding?
Is it around, is it more analytical of like,
on paper they look amazing and all their accolades
and their status or what they can provide for me?
When do we make a decision that I'm gonna choose
to love this person?
We don't make a decision.
We don't decide.
Because if you decided, you could actually decide to fall in love.
And there's so many people who would love to fall in love, maybe even with a person
that they're actually with already, but struggle to do that.
Or people who have fallen out of love would like to fall back in love.
Or the person that's trying to woo them is perfect for them in every way.
Why can't they just love them?
That would be great.
I just don't.
So we can't quite make ourselves fall for another. But you know what happens is that people fall in love.
It's very psychological because it's with an incredible absence of information. You,
it happens quite quickly. You don't know the person. You don't. You have a few data points
and you're connecting them to create a Mona Lisa with five data points. Out of a flawed
human being.
Potentially flawed, you have no even idea where.
And you have the rose-colored glasses, everything's cute.
Those things that are gonna become incredibly annoying
later on are still cute to you.
And you just fill in the gaps with optimism, with hope,
with oh, they're probably like this.
And so you really don't know the person
you've fallen in love with most of the time.
Because I say, if you need to know the person,
you have to wait until you have your first fight.
If you don't know how they fight,
you don't know how ugly it gets,
you don't know how ugly they get,
and that can make a big difference.
But that doesn't usually happen before you fall in love,
it happens after.
You don't know how they fight, You don't know how they fight.
You don't know how they travel.
Maybe you love to travel
and they are such an anxious mess in an airport
that you really wanna just,
I am not with this person at all.
You don't know that.
You don't know how they are with their parents,
your parents, with the holidays,
whether they are a mess, they're fun.
There's so much you don't know.
But people tend to fall in love before, you know,
a full year cycle of getting to know someone, right?
Could you imagine if you had a full year,
it's like you went through every holiday cycle with someone,
you got to meet their family and friends
in multiple different situations,
you traveled once or twice at least,
you got to notice them when they're at their lowest moment
or emotionally tired or physically tired.
So you got to see how they react to situations
that are not ideal.
You got to deal with arguments with them or disagreements
and see how they respond when you don't agree with them.
You got to see how one of your values
don't fully align with their values and can you
accept one another's values in their background, in their upbringing, in their deficiencies.
Wouldn't it be amazing to have a full year of that before deciding to fall in love?
It would be amazing.
Some people do.
I mean, it's not everyone that does that.
And some people, I mean, it's hard to not fall in love for that full year.
You would have to kind of hold yourself back in a certain way, but some people do, are
much slower to boil in that sense.
So they are very fortunate in that way because they're making a much more informed decision.
What you're doing, if you don't do that, is you're doing damage control or you're trying
to like, you know, shove a round peg paint or square hole or something like that sometimes
and that's when it becomes a little iffy.
And then a lot of people are like, I don't know if we should get married.
We're having so many problems.
But well-
We've been together for three years and we're-
Yeah, I guess.
But it says you should somewhere.
I don't know where it says it.
But apparently it says you should somewhere because that's how they act.
It says you should.
I feel like we've also never been trained how to be in a relationship with
one person for 10, 20, 30, 40 years. We've never been taught that. We haven't been taught a lot
of things about dealing with heartbreak and failure and rejection. We haven't been taught
those things. But also people haven't lived long enough when they're 25, 30 to say, how can I be
with one person and have a fulfilled life for the next decades? How
can I really thrive for a long-term happy marriage? Unless we've seen a model
from our parents, which most people haven't, we don't know that skill either,
right? And it's just we don't have that skill set. What would you say if people
could set themselves up? You've been doing this, you know, work for what,
three decades more now?
Three decades.
Three decades you've been working with individuals, you've been working with couples, married,
single, all these different individuals, people at a high level of success, people who are
starting out in their career.
What would you say are three or four things that individuals could do today to enter a
relationship in the best way possible to give them a chance for happy healthy
long-term love. Okay how much time do we have? But I'm gonna start with this. I think the
thing we get wrong most about relationships is that we are absolutely clueless
about how critical the first steps are.
Those first dates, those first months,
what you are doing is you are creating
an unspoken contract with that person
about what our couplehood is going to look like.
Who's going to be responsible for what?
What the dynamic is going to be?
What the vibe is going to be?
Who's going to be pursuing?
Who's going to be the pursued?
Everything you do is a precedent.
Wow.
But you don't realize that you're setting a precedent.
So you're just like, oh, this part's okay,
this part, I didn't love as much, but fine.
No, it's not fine.
I mean, maybe it's not a big deal,
but if that's what's going on,
that's what the other person is expecting
would be cool to go on.
Here's forever.
Yeah, yeah.
In that relationship.
You are setting, if somebody tends to be 10, 15 minute late
to all the dates, and you're
like, it's only 10 minutes, I'm not going to be, you know, I'm not going to.
Then you are signing up for the fact that you get to be late, and if suddenly 10 dates
in, you're like, you know, it's really not cool that you're late, they'll be like, where
have you been for 10 days?
So it's not a new thing.
You know what I mean?
There's literally that expectation the other person has that if this is what goes on, this
is what goes on, this is what goes on.
But if you're not aware that you're writing
this unspoken contract and signing it
and agreeing to all these precedents,
then you're setting yourself up for a relationship
that a lot of people are like, oh, I'll fix this later.
I'll fix it in post and like, oh, I know.
This isn't a movie.
Here's why I'll say this last part about this piece.
Relationship dynamics are like cement.
You can mold it when it's wet, when it's fresh,
but you can't, it's much more difficult to do
when it's dry and it dries very quickly.
So you have to be aware of that.
Yeah, and if you wanna jackhammer it two years
in the future, because you don't like the way it's laid down,
that's gonna cause real damage.
And it's hard to mend that.
It's not like, well, I forget the Japanese saying
where they break a bowl and it's like golden.
It's like all comes back to that.
That's the Tsuji.
It's not that.
This is like you're breaking a road
and you're breaking a path
and you have to almost create a bridge
once you break it two years later.
And that person has to wanna go over that bridge every time.
And that's for each thing.
Yeah.
Each thing you want to fix or change or tweak.
This is interesting.
I'm so glad you're saying this because we've known each other for how long?
Eight years maybe or something like that?
I don't know.
Eight, nine years.
And we're not super close talking all the time but you've seen me
go through three different relationships in the last eight years and you've seen
me kind of show up differently in this relationship based on what we've talked
about and there are things that I did differently I think because one a lot of
the wisdom I gained from you and other different therapists and psychologists
that came on that I was able to learn from. Two, I was doing a lot of my own healing work in the practice every week with someone
that was helping guide me to heal in my last relationship and going to this new one.
Three, because I was just sick and tired of experiencing so much pain and sadness and suffering in
relationships, like the pattern that I was choosing,
that I was like, I need to do something completely different than I've always done.
Whether it works out or not, I could just try something completely different.
And I felt like what I've done has really worked well for me.
I don't know if it'll work well for everyone, but it sounds like I'm doing what you're saying
people should be doing, which is entering a relationship in a way that is going to lay the cement and
the foundation for the whole relationship and really doing it early on,
not waiting.
So a few things that I did with Martha and we did together is when we started
dating, I said, listen, I'm going to be, we're going to date each other,
but I'm not going to have sex with you.
Right? That's one of the first things I said, it's not happening. Where, you know, that wasn't the
case in previous relationships. So that's the first thing I was like, how I want to get to know
someone without chemical interference, you know, without sexual chemical interference. That was
sexual chemical interference that was always blurring me in the past. That was the first thing. And it's almost like we got to know each other as friends. And you kind of hear
people who are married a long time or happy, they're like, yeah, we were friends early
on or we were just in a friendship first. And then it grew into something because we
really loved each other, right? You hear that a lot. Not that that's always the case, but
that was what we did. And I think that was really helpful for me to see all the parts of her
and say, do I accept all the parts of her? I mean, we don't have to like all the parts,
but can I accept it? Because she's not going to change who she is. Maybe, but this is pretty much
who she is. And I was able to see clearly I accept all the parts of her to get into a committed relationship after a few months,
of us spending a lot of time together,
traveling together, seeing her family,
all the things we did early on,
I was like, I put myself in those situations,
friends, family, travel, before getting committed.
And that was really helpful.
It was kind of like a year cycle and a few months.
The next thing that I did is I told her the truth
about everything and from my past,
what I've done in my past, things I was proud of,
not proud of, everything.
And I told her my vision for my future.
And I said, this is the man I am now,
this is the man I'm growing into,
and this is the man I wanna be in my vision for my life, my career, my family, everything.
And I'm not going to change it for one person to make one person happy.
You've got to accept this part of me and I want to know what your vision is for your
life and see if we're in alignment.
Obviously things might change and evolve, but if that's what you want, I want to be
accepting of your vision for your life and you accepting of mine.
And that was really helpful.
And then we also did a values exercise.
I never created a values exercise in any relationship before.
I was like, oh, we like each other and you're beautiful and you like me and whatever.
We're having fun.
Let's just be together.
But we went on a trip and I said, I want to do a values exercise and get clear on what you
really value around family, friendships, money, time, everything, raising kids,
like what are the values in your life that you have? And we wrote them separately and
then looked at them together because there wasn't any influence. And we were in alignment on our
values, which was helpful.
And so having that clarity of kind of like no chemical interference around sexual acts
to values to this is a vision of my life, this is my lifestyle, this is what I want
to create.
Do you accept it?
Because if you don't, I'm not changing for you.
And we were able to get in alignment.
And that doesn't mean it's all going to be perfect and it's like it's going to work out.
But that created a foundation, the pavement you were talking about where we were like,
okay, let's cement this.
Let's start to like mold it and start to let it dry now that we are in agreement of these
things with each other.
And there was one other thing that we did that I'd always wanted to do because I'd always
ended every relationship in therapy
and then it ended and I said I want to start my next relationship in therapy if that's with you
or someone else like I'm not getting in a relationship unless someone else is willing to agree
to have a you know a session once every six weeks with someone where we can get clarity on agreements
because there was never agreements in relationships that were clear
and that people stuck to. And I was like, I want agreements so that if there's a disturbance,
we can create an agreement quickly so there's less disturbances. And she was like, yeah,
sounds great. I'm in. Those things that we created from the beginning have given me so much peace.
You asked me like, how are you feeling before the interview? I was like I feel pretty peaceful. It's because I've never been in a relationship
where I feel fully accepted for me and I feel that. So I have the energy to go out in life and
tackle what I want. And it's been really beneficial but I went through 20 something years of pain and
suffering in choosing relationships
without having the courage to do these kind of activities early on. And I don't know if that's
something that you would recommend for all people. It took a lot of work, it takes time,
it's like you can't rush into something, but it's given me a lot more peace in this relationship.
So I am so excited to hear that that's how you went
about it, I'll tell you why.
First of all, that's why you're at peace,
because you've done the due diligence.
There's not these corners of her that you've never seen,
exposed, or don't know about, and like,
well I like what I see, but who knows what I don't.
You actually have seen a lot,
because you've asked a lot of questions.
The due diligence you did over there, that investment of, if I'm choosing a life partner,
I'm going to vet this as much as possible.
I'm actually going to put in the work to build a foundation.
People always say like, oh, we have a good foundation.
Did you build it or are you just evaluating what actually turned out?
Or did you intentionally, deliberately build a foundation?
You did.
That kind of due diligence is extraordinarily rare.
And why it's such a shame that it is rare
is because we give that due diligence
to purchases like homes and cars.
I know people that spend two hours a day studying car models before they make the commitment
on their next car, but they're not going to spend an hour thinking about their next relationship
or what they should do or about whether they should have kids or how they want to raise
them or what their values are or all of those things.
To me, like, if they're ever gonna put in the work
to do the research, do the due diligence,
and put in the effort to build something intentionally,
deliberately, mindfully,
relationships is where it should be.
And by the way, not just romantic ones,
because all these rules of relationships
are true for all kinds of relationships.
Yeah.
I mean,
what is the big mistake that people are making today then in relationships
by entering the relationship? Is it they haven't healed from the previous one and can you enter
a new relationship while being wounded from the previous one? Or do you need to be on
some type of healing journey to set yourself up for a better opportunity, do you think?
First of all, I think you can get into a relationship in any situation. It just might mean that
you will have more work to do and mean that you will have more work to do
and that the relationship will have more work to do
if you're coming at it from a wounded place
or something like that.
When you said, I told her what the plan was.
In other words, you told each other,
and this was your individual thing.
You're like, this is the ride I want to be on.
So that's what you'll be joining me for. You need to know if you want that ride. And she's saying the same thing, you're like, this is the ride I want to be on. So that's what you'll be joining me for.
You need to know if you want that ride.
And she's saying the same thing to you,
this is the ride I want to be on.
And you need to know if that's the one
that you want to join me on.
Now they're not in conflict necessarily at all.
Each person's goals and dreams of how they want to develop
or what kind of life they want.
But it's very thoughtful and it's very important
to say this is the vision, are we sharing it?
You know, and to ask all these questions,
to have these conversations, they're not easy to have.
They're not.
Because I'm sure it wasn't the case that everything
you said, she was like, yeah, me too.
No, no.
Yeah, me too.
Stuff needed to be worked out.
And then you're like, is this critical?
Is this deal breaking?
Is this something that we can manage to accept?
You know, you will
use that word a lot. It's totally about acceptance. That's correct. That's the question. So you're
actually walking into a bit of a marsh when you do that. It's not like all skipping along,
but as long as you're willing to do that work, you get off and you get off into dry land.
That's true. Dry, peaceful land, abundant, fertile land
that you're just like, ah.
No, it doesn't mean there's not gonna be challenges
and life's gonna throw things at you,
but I think if you're in it together
and you're able to create agreements early on,
then it just doesn't mean you have to have
a lot of disturbances within the relationship.
There might be things coming at the relationship
that you need to handle together,
but when we're in disagreement constantly about each other
or what's wrong with the other person
and what they didn't do or what they didn't do for me,
then it's just gonna be a weaker foundation, I think,
when you don't have agreements.
What you guys did is for a year and however many months,
you actually practiced communication,
conflict resolution, negotiation.
You practice all these very important couples,
relationship and communication skills
that would have come up a little bit here,
a little bit there, but not in that substantial a way.
So you guys developed these muscles
and these habits with one another
of like, if we have a problem, we know how to talk about it.
We know how to be honest about it,
and we know how to resolve it.
So that's the other part of the piece and the confidence.
You worked all that out.
You developed those skills together in the formation.
That's why they go into therapy every six weeks or whatever it was.
Great idea.
Let's get a little bit of guidance on that,
because it doesn't hurt.
It actually helps quite a bit.
And there was nothing wrong in the relationship early on.
It does not have to be to learn good habits.
I know, it's amazing.
But it takes time and investment.
I told her, I was like, I don't think I'd have been ready
for you if I met you 10 years ago.
I wouldn't have seen you the same way,
I wouldn't have been, I didn't have the tools
or the skills to deal with my emotions,
I was still healing, I was still growing. And I was doing my interview show and I had resources, but I think a lot of people
don't have the tools or the skills to have the courage to speak up for what they want,
to navigate challenges in a relationship when they feel their button is pushed and they're just
reactive. They don't know how to respond
calmly because they're in fight or flight. I've been there many times in the past. It's a massive
problem for people. They don't have the tools. How do you see the younger generation, people in
their 20s or 30s, being able to get into relationships and have these tools if they've never been trained. Like it took me a long time to have a lot of pain to be like, okay, I need to learn something
different. But look how much research you did along the way. You know, this is the third interview
we've had, we speak outside of this sometimes, but you are prepared. You do the reading. You do the research. You've learned so much from so many different experts.
You are not a lay person coming at it.
You practically have an honorary PhD in psychology
and relationships already for all the stuff
that you've done.
I'm serious.
But most people don't have this.
Most people do not.
That's my point.
In other words, you do have to put in the work.
You had put in the work. And in the books I write and the things I do
is to get people to be more thoughtful
and more mindful about how they feel
and what they want and what they do.
Because we can't be on autopilot all the time,
and most of us are on autopilot all the time.
One quick thing I wanted to touch on,
because I think this is something that young people say to me a lot, and it's problematic.
They say, one person will say to another,
I don't like when you did so and so,
and that person will say, well, that's who I am.
I'm not going to change,
and you shouldn't try and change who I am.
And I think it's really important
that people distinguish who you are from what you do.
From behaviors.
From behavior.
Yeah.
They're not asking you to change who you are
a lot of the time.
If it's like, oh you hate skiing,
you must come with me on skiing vacations three times a year,
it's not gonna happen.
But if it's about, I don't like when you say
those things to me, well that's just who I am.
No, no, no, that's what you said.
It's not who you are.
And so people get stubborn and they don't wanna change
things that you actually should change and be open to.
Yeah, I mean, you can't be disrespectful and say,
well, this is who I am, accept me
for being disrespectful to you.
Or stubborn or difficult or whatever it is.
Yeah, and I think it's also important to know,
like, hey, before you get into a relationship,
make sure you find out if this is the way they are and they're not going to change that.
Maybe they're not for you.
What I really find surprising is sometimes somebody will say to me, yeah, the other person,
the person they're dating, they just keep telling me what they want and what they like
and what they want and what they like.
And it's like, it's so annoying.
And I'm like, I'm sorry, they're giving you the user manual.
They're communicating.
How to be in a relationship with them and you don't think it's important for you to read it.
It's amazing they're communicating that that should be the best thing ever. Now you like it
or you don't like it but it's not annoying that they're doing it. You should be doing the same.
They're giving you the instruction manual on how to be with them. Exactly. Pay attention. No,
I think it's really important. I think I probably over communicated more
in the first year, probably out of trauma from the past
of like, okay, this is really who I am
and this is my truth
and I just wanna make sure you're okay with this.
Yeah, she's lying on the couch watching you,
watching you going, I heard you the first three times.
No, I'm like, 20 times, anyway.
She's like, you were really traumatized in the past.
I'm like, I just wanna make sure you know who I am.
All my flaws, all my past, where I'm at, where I'm going,
this is what I want.
You sure you're good.
It's like kind of mile markers, right?
You got to lay the cement.
It's like every mile marker,
okay, you're still in the same path.
Make sure you're in alignment
because it's not worth me being like out of an invested
and then you want me to change who I am.
So I think you got to be willing to accept the person and make sure you figure out all
their behaviors or as much as you can within the first six to 12 months before you take
the long road with them and say, all right, am I down for this journey?
If it's a little bumpy, am I cool with it?
Or don't choose the person.
If they have bad behavior over and over, you don't have to choose them.
If they're not going to change,, you don't have to choose them. If
they're not going to let it change, you either accept it and that's it. But you had this on your,
I think this was on your website as well, a quote from you that said,
mental health is about diagnosable conditions like depression and anxiety.
Emotional health is about common experiences like loneliness, failure and
heartbreak, the non-diagnosable stuff. And you also mentioned that you grew up,
another quote from you who said, I grew up with my identical twin which of course
made me an expert in spotting favoritism. So when I became a psychologist I didn't
take, it didn't take me long to recognize how much we favor our physical health over our emotional health.
For example, if we get a cut on our arm,
we can just tell by looking at it
whether we need a badge, a stitch, or an ambulance.
But when we sustain an emotional wound
like rejection, failure, we have no idea how to gauge
whether the wound is deep
or whether it requires emotional first aid.
And a few of us would know how to treat it ourselves if we did.
And as a psychologist, you find that unacceptable, you said.
Our physical health and our emotional health are the twins of our general well-being.
And as such, we should treat them equally.
How can we start to self-diagnose the emotional wounds that we deal with? And
how can we know when we are having a symptom of an emotional wound that is worthy of a
deeper look rather than just a quick rub it off or a bandaid?
I would use a similar guideline that you do for a physical wound. You might wake up with
a little bit of a scratchy throat or a sniffle, but you don't know if it's gonna go somewhere.
If two days later you're still sniffling and scratchy,
you might consider you have a cold or something worse
and you might wanna do something about it,
but it might go away.
It's the same thing.
We get wounded all the time.
Every time you check social media
and that person didn't like your thing
or share your thing or respond to your thing, we feel rejected.
And every little swipe that doesn't get swiped back, we feel rejected.
There's a lot of rejection in the world today.
Because we tell that to so many people electronically, the opportunities are tremendous.
But if it nags you, really nags you, if it's really bothering you, if you're having trouble
shaking it, that's when you might want it's really bothering you, if you're having trouble shaking it,
that's when you might want to consider
doing a quick exercise or doing something
to actually treat the wound rather than just waiting
for it to go away.
So for a filler, what would that nagging feeling
look like for someone if it's an emotional wound?
Is it a physical sensation internally?
Is it like their chest is tight?
It's a preoccupation, probably, and it's a mood probably.
A rumination of something or...
It can be a rumination or just you keep thinking back,
like why hasn't she even responded?
I thought the date was good.
And why is it like, she's not responding I guess.
It's like now she's ghosting me.
Like I don't understand.
And it's four or five days and it was one date.
Right.
And you just don't get over it.
Now you don't have to run to therapy for that,
but there are certain exercises you can do
to just revitalize your self-esteem, your mood.
What's an exercise that someone can do
if they feel rejected or feel like someone hurt them,
whether it was intentional or not?
There are two things.
Actually, there are many more than two,
but I'm gonna mention two.
One is the don't do.
The don't do is, the first thing we all do
is become very self-critical.
In our efforts to understand why it happened,
we review everything that might not be great with us
to see if that's the reason.
Is it because I'm not this or I am that
or I'm too much here or I'm too little here?
Maybe it's because, oh, I knew I shouldn't have done.
Like there's this, and this is not, you just got rejected.
Not the best time to go through the greatest hits
of your insecurities.
You know, you wanna be doing the opposite,
when deriving your self esteem,
not actually reviewing all the wounds
that you've sustained in the past.
Because when you look at past wounds,
you reactivate them emotionally, right?
If you had physical injuries, if you think about them,
they're not gonna hurt.
But if you think about some of the emotional times,
about the rejections or about the depressions
or about something that got you really upset,
you're gonna get upset again, even if it's 20 years later.
Isn't that interesting?
It is, but that's the problem.
When we think about a memory of trauma
that we have yet to heal, and we relive that in our mind,
is it almost just like we're living
that moment all over again?
Yeah, but it's not one that you have yet to heal.
It can be one you've healed.
If you think about something small
and incredibly irritating that happened 15 years ago,
and you start literally thinking through the details,
you're going to start to feel really irritated.
It has zero consequential meaning in the present, none.
But that's how we are.
I mean, our emotional reflection reactivates these things.
So, and it's important because that's when,
if you're spinning about, oh, I'm not this enough
or that enough and that person reject me,
was it for the same reason?
Is it like, is it this?
Like, what's going on?
Like, you start to question yourself
and that's just doing damage to your self-esteem.
Because if it's after one date,
and really truly if it's after five,
whatever the reason is, it's about chemistry,
it's about fit, it's about timing.
It's not personal.
It's personal in that you might not have been good fit
for them, but it doesn't mean you're a bad person
or not a great fit for anyone else.
Why do so many people take it personally
when they get rejected in a dating situation or relationship?
It's not only that. They take it personally and then they generalize it to mean something bigger than what it does.
I never find love. Really, she just didn't sway back.
That seems like a leap in inference to make from that, but it's a very natural thing we do.
We assume it's us. Now, literally, people do that when they text it with somebody back and forth for a bit,
and then that person disappears. You have no idea if you're even talking to a real person. It's us. Now, literally, people do that when they text it with somebody back and forth for a bit
and then that person disappears.
You have no idea if you're even talking to a real person.
You have no idea.
That person might be in the hospital.
They might have been chatting with you
to piss off the person they're actually living with
at the time.
They might be going through whatever hell we could work.
There's a thousand things that can be going on
for you to assume that you did something wrong
in five texts that were so bad that it's completely
unnecessary, but that's where the mind goes.
So let's stop that damage.
That's the first thing to not do.
But the thing you can do is the opposite.
You want to remind yourself in those moments
of what you bring to the table, what you do have to offer.
Now, you can't fool yourself.
You can't say to yourself, I'm the most gorgeous person in the world if you do have to offer. Now you can't fool yourself, you can't say to yourself,
I'm the most gorgeous person in the world if you're not.
And if the feedback that you get is that you're not.
Because your mind won't believe that.
You know, we have this automatic way of thinking
that will reject things that fall outside the sphere
of what it considers believable.
And so you can't just like convince yourself
of something that's not true.
You have to focus on the things that are.
So think about your best attributes.
I have amazing eyes.
I know I'm gonna find someone who'll wanna gaze into them.
I am such a great listener.
I'm emotionally available.
And I'm always up for doing things.
Those are wonderful qualities and characters
that somebody will appreciate, et cetera.
You actually review what is worthwhile about you
and not do the opposite.
It almost sounds like before you start dating
or getting into a relationship,
one of the best things that you can do for yourself
is build your self-esteem is what it sounds like.
Because when you have a quality or high level of self-esteem,
you're not going to get into a relationship
that's not good for you.
You're not gonna stay in one that where someone's
treating you poorly or not respecting your boundaries
or you're not gonna take the scraps of something
because you're just lonely, right?
So building self-esteem sounds like a great foundation
for the individual before even getting into a relationship.
It is doing, and the way you do that
is doing what you did in your relationship
on an individual level.
I.e. you get to know yourself
and you get to accept yourself.
All the parts of you.
All the parts of you,
because there's no one who's perfect, right?
Every good quality you have comes with a downside.
It's gonna be true of everyone, right?
Give me an example for yourself. For me? Yeah, what's a good quality that comes with a downside. It's going to be true of everyone, right? Give me an example for yourself.
For me?
Yeah, what's a good quality that comes with a downside?
I can think of several.
But OK, I have a sense of humor.
You're very funny.
I enjoy my sense of humor.
I sometimes deploy it in ways that are maybe not...
Bad timing or something?
You're right.
Yes.
Because if the joke is going to be funny, I'm going to say it no matter what just because
you can't, I can't pass it up.
And I'm going to be upsetting someone by doing so.
Potentially.
I try not to.
It does, it leaks out in sessions sometimes.
When they're like sad and like, yeah, whatever.
Inappropriate moments.
I'll give you a quote, you know,
and I'll give you, this is terrible,
I shouldn't do it just because it makes me sound so bad.
I'm going, now you have to do it.
You have to do it.
Okay, I'm not gonna say anything about the person,
but it was a session in which somebody
was having an issue in a relationship.
And I was challenging on why they're not,
you know, setting more limits
with their partner who needed limits set with them.
Set boundaries.
Right, and they said, yeah, that's how it is.
And this person was very successful.
And they said, that's how it is.
I'm a lion in the boardroom and a pussycat in the bedroom.
And I said, I agree with every word except cat.
It was funny to me, not funny to the other person.
I apologized for it. I apologize again if they happen to be listening. But
the point was actually sound. Yeah, of course. I didn't need to. But the joke was
dangling and I couldn't. And so here's a thing that has a downside. Sure, sure, sure.
Somebody who's very, very, let's say, conscientious about things. That's a wonderful thing that they're conscientious.
But it's also a standard that they're probably going to likely have that they'll likely want
to hold you to as well.
So lovely to receive it, but then they're going to be expecting it.
And so that can be a pain sometimes.
I mean, there's always a downside to things.
So you just have to learn to accept and to go, this is great. Yes, it comes with that. I'll accept it because I like that.
Yeah, exactly. If someone has gone through a heartache or has, you know, sadness or felt rejected
in their life right now, and they're looking to rebuild their self-esteem and rebuild a powerful,
you know, strong self-identity. What would you say
are three to five things they could start with over the next few months to build a powerful
self-esteem so that they can make a better decision in their next dating relationship experience?
So first of all, they have to be honest with themselves about, you know, like you have to,
these are writing exercises. You know, you can't maintain so many data points in your head.
But you want to make a list then
of what are the qualities that you like about yourself,
what are the ones that you don't.
And be honest, this is private,
no one else is gonna see it.
So be very, very honest with yourself.
What are the things about you that you think are good?
And the fact that you have them
doesn't mean that they're in performance all the time,
you might miss at times,
but generally I tend to be this.
And generally is also that.
So, laying it out.
Which of the that's, so the things you're not that thrilled with,
do you actually want to work on and improve?
Because we're all, or should be trying to improve on a regular basis.
And so here's your list of where you can spend,
where the opportunities are, as they say in job reviews.
This is where your opportunities are
to improve here and here.
So where are the opportunities,
and then how can you go about it
and choose one at a time,
because these are difficult things,
but work on yourself.
That's the first thing.
That's the first thing.
Make a list of the good qualities
and the opportunities for growth.
Correct.
Secondly, you need to get in touch with how you feel,
because this is all an emotional thing
and we are remarkably emotionally inarticulate.
Our language, and I literally mean our ability
to distinguish what we feel,
the nuances of what we feel is extraordinarily limited.
Men are usually worse than women,
but generally this is something that,
when I ask people, how do you feel,
they're like, cool, okay.
And I'm like, give me, this was a complex situation
that happened over there, this happened,
or this, you must have all kinds of feelings about it.
Yeah, so I'm bummed.
Right, right, right.
Not a feeling, really.
I mean, it implies one, but it's not.
I can relate to that before you go on.
I can relate to that for men or women
watching or listening because I used to,
my default emotion was anger.
But really it was, I felt betrayed, I felt not enough.
I felt rejected, I felt sad, I felt alone,
I felt rejected, I felt sad, I felt alone, I felt misunderstood.
It was like a waterfall of emotions that I was feeling, but all of it led to, I don't know how to communicate this, so I'm just kind of angry.
And I'm going to react with something that's familiar, which is anger.
And whether that's defending myself or working harder or proving my worth, whatever might be, I'm going to use anger
as the emotion to communicate my words and my energy in the situation.
It was very challenging to learn how to communicate.
I just feel really sad.
I feel really hurt.
I feel alone.
I feel misunderstood.
I feel betrayed by my friend or whatever might be. It was challenging for me because I lacked the tools on how to communicate those things.
So I think what you're saying is really important. Specifically, I think men who haven't learned the
tools beyond anger or numbness of emotion on how to say what is really going on. I think the reason
why it was hard to me
to communicate those things,
I was kind of like a jock growing up in the Midwest
that I didn't think communicating those things
would be accepted, I think there'd be laughed at.
And it's probably because they were laughed at.
They would have been in school with my like guy friends
at 13 to 16, you know, they were kind of like made fun of.
And so when you enter a relationship in your late teens, twenties, it's like,
okay, well, is this person gonna make,
is the girl gonna make fun of me that I'm dating?
If I say I'm sad or I'm lonely,
are they gonna think I'm weak?
Is they gonna, so it's kind of a protection mechanism,
I guess, at least it was for me.
And I had to really learn how to have self-esteem
and self-confidence, which when you're lonely,
sad or feeling
not enough, it's hard to build that to where you can express emotion and accept yourself
either way if the person in front of you doesn't accept you.
That's the challenging thing to be like, can I love myself and express it if the other
person's gonna laugh at me or make fun of me?
Here's what else your anger did, and this is why it's a go-to for many, many people. It actually saves you from having to deal
with the more uncomfortable feelings of sadness,
of disappointment, of betrayal,
feeling misunderstood, all those things that you mentioned.
In other words, anger, you know,
it's considered like a negative or a bad feeling,
but it actually doesn't feel that bad.
It's quite activating.
And so you go to a feeling that's externalizing and activating to avoid feeling sad, feeling
vulnerable, feeling bereft, all the other feelings you had.
So anger is not just, oh, it's my go-to instead.
It prevents you from having to deal with the actual feelings that are going on, which is
why it's problematic.
And when you have an emotion like anger
that prevents you from feeling what's actually going on,
what happens to the brain and the body when you do that?
Well, what I say to people, number one,
is be suspicious of anger.
Because there are very few situations,
I mean, we respond with anger when we're hurt.
Mm-hmm.
That's the, you know, like you stub your toe,
everyone I know will smack the file cabinet.
It's a file cabinet.
It didn't do it on purpose.
That was your toe that interrupted.
But my point is that's our default response.
So that's why when you're hurt, you're going to get angry.
That is the default.
That's how we evolved.
It's a protective mechanism because our brain doesn't distinguish that well, if at all,
between emotional and physical pain.
This is true in functional MRIs. They look incredibly, incredibly similar. Sometimes experts
are like, I'm not quite sure which that is. And-
Between emotional trauma and physical trauma.
Pain, emotional pain and physical pain.
Wow.
So like a head injury, like a physical head injury versus a psychological injury. Here's the experiment they put heat conductive pads on people's forearms and just kept
turning up the heat until they couldn't stand it for more than seven seconds
mm-hmm and then they rated how high the pain tolerance was then they took people
who were just heartbroken and they had them bring an 8x10 glossy of the person
Yes, it's gonna be that yo
Yeah, oh my god, and they stuck it to the top of the MRI
Because you're in this tube and then they had them relive the breakup while looking at the picture
You know what I did when I saw that experiment for what I wanted to look up how much money they paid them
I know right like That better not be a $10 experiment.
Anyway.
It's true.
But then they compared the two functional MRIs, the pain from the thing and that, and
experts have trouble turning them apart.
Wow.
Based on what they were seeing in the imagery of the brain.
In the imagery of the brain of how the brain is responding.
I mean, some of the theories are that emotional pain literally is piggybacking on the pathways
of physical pain.
But the point about what you're saying is when you are hurt, you're going to respond
like you just got, like somebody physically hurt you, you're going to be angry at them
or shut down and get numb, like you said.
But it's one of the two.
That's the natural response.
We have to learn how to overcome it. So when before we go on to the next point, but when someone is reliving a heartbreak,
right?
They got broken up with three months ago, a year ago, whatever it is, and they relive
it.
They think about the person and look at the videos and the photos, they hear memories,
they hear the person's name and they relive that emotionally. Is the thought, the electrical
charge in the brain or the mind creating a thought that is then creating physical pain
on the body? Or is the memory creating an emotional pain first that's creating a ruminating
sad thought?
I'm going to say something trite, but then forgive me because you've heard this as an athlete and and it's gonna piss you off
But all pain is in the head
Really? I mean it's not in the mind. It's our interpretation of
Something it's like, you know, you know
If there are certain areas of the brain if you shut them off, you won't feel pain
You you'll have damage to tissue cartilage bone what have you you just won't feel that as pain
So it's all in the head.
And so therefore, how it gets interpreted,
where it actually happens,
the fact that it happens in such similar regions
doesn't mean, I mean, you'll feel it in the same way
you feel visceral distress,
which we all feel a little bit differently,
but it can be here in the chest or the this,
that's why people say heartbreak,
because it feels like something's going on viscerally in your chest,
in your stomach, in this area and that's how you experience in that way. But it's a thought.
When does the body start to respond positively to after a heartbreak? Like what has to happen
for the mind and the thought of a heartbreak in a person and what happened or didn't happen
until you feel more at peace?
Is it the meaning you finally create
that's different or positive?
Is it moving on and being with another person
so you don't have to think about it?
Like when does the heartbreak stop for someone?
When does that like switch where they're like,
okay, I did this and I finally feel better.
And how can people get there faster?
Is that even possible or does it just take time?
First of all, that is the question
that most heartbroken people ask most.
They don't ask how can I heal?
They ask how much longer will this hurt?
Because it hurts so much.
When you're in pain like that,
you wanna know when it's gonna stop
or get a little better.
Why I wrote the book about how to fix a broken heart is because there is a lot you need to
do to make it happen more quickly.
There's a lot you can do to make it happen more quickly.
Fundamentally, the general thing that you need to do is that heartbreak and loss leaves
a lot of voids, and you have to fill them.
You can't just white-knuckle it.
You can't just like, no, I'm fine. I'm telling you have to fill them. You can't just white-knuckle it. You can't just like,
no, I'm fine. I'm telling you, I'm fine. But half your closets are empty because she took all the
stuff and half the furniture is missing. You have nothing to do on weekends and all her friends were
the ones you hung out with, so you're not even in touch with your pals anymore. And you used to go
to her gyms, but that's awkward. You're not going there anymore. And suddenly there are all these areas of your life,
mostly your sense of identity of I was a we,
I was part of a couple, that was who I was,
now who am I?
And so there's a lot of rebuilding and replacing
and refilling that needs to happen.
It's an active process, but we don't know how to do it.
That's why I wrote the book,
because people were like, oh, I don't know what to do and I'm like
Oh, there's so much you need to be doing right. So there's a when you go through a breakup
There's a void and we need to fill it void. Zah voids. What are the things that people?
tend to fill it with that cause more pain and what are the voids that
They can fill it with that will support their healing journey
The things that people, I mean,
I'm thinking, oh, what those things are.
It's the key lights, ice cream.
It's a lot of television, but it's numbing.
People tend to numb at the beginning,
and I'm not necessarily opposed to numbing,
because even if social support is very important,
even if talking things out and getting perspective
is quite important, even though there are all these things
that are important in the first throes of that pain,
you're not gonna be talking to friends 24 sevens,
you just need to break from that.
Because every time you talk, you're hurting,
you need to come out every once in a while.
So I'm not judging that,
that's something you kind of have to do.
But people tend to not know what to do.
They think that the thing will time, it's just going to take time, so I'm just going
to suffer silently for however many weeks or months, but it's like it does take time,
but there's a lot you can do to move that process along so it's quicker.
Primarily, the goal is get the person out of your thoughts.
The symptom is how much you're thinking about them, the place they have of your thoughts. The symptom is how much you're thinking about them the place they have in your thoughts
The symptom reduction is think about them less. It's useful if you have a job that you must concentrate in
It's useful when you have kids that you have to take care of. I mean, it's so difficult, but it's actually a decent enough
Distraction so there'll be some moments that you're not hurting. There'll be some moments
We are not bereft to be some moments where your world hasn't ended
It would also remind you of other aspects of your life and yourself that are still there no matter what. It's just going to be very,
very difficult. But doing these things and thinking these things through and taking an active
position when you are hurting emotionally from anything, whether it's grief like heartbreak or
any other kind of loss or rejection or failure or guilt or loneliness.
Thinking about it more will cause more pain.
If it's not productive thinking.
In other words, there are two kinds of thinking.
There's useful and not useful.
And the useful gets you something out of the thinking.
In other words, as a product.
At the end of it, you've got perspective, you've got support, you've got some insight, you've got a deeper understanding, you've figured something out of the thinking. In other words, as a product, as the end of it, you got perspective, you got support, you got some insight, you got a deeper understanding,
you figured something out, there was an action item that you got. There's something, there
was a product that came from it, you weren't just spinning. And hurt, hurt, hurt, hurt,
hurt, hurt, hurt, that's not useful.
Yeah. So I think we've, there was two steps to building self-esteem and then we went on
this side.
Oh, yes.
There's a second one.
Sorry.
Thank you.
And I'm thrilled that I actually remember because I would have forgotten.
But it's the emotional literacy.
I started to say it.
We need to be able to name our feelings.
You rattled off that list after the pain and you were like misunderstood and disappointed
and betrayed and trust.
You gave like six or seven words
for distinct feelings that you had.
That is a high level of difficulty
that most people cannot do.
What I do, and I literally use this myself at times,
and I recommend it, it's gonna sound like
I'm being condescending, I'm not,
I truly have this and use it myself, is the emotion wheel.
The emotion wheel?
Yes.
You have one?
There are so many versions of them online.
You can find them very easily.
20 different emotions or something,
how many emotions are there?
Oh no.
I mean, how many are on the wheel?
Oh, a couple hundred.
Couple hundred?
Yeah, well no, I'm talking about 20 here.
Oh geez, okay.
Right, because it's the good ones too,
it's the neutral ones, it's all of them.
It's all of the feelings.
So there's a wheel.
So there's a wheel and it's by category.
All the anger ones here, all the pain ones there, all the joyful ones here, etc., etc.
Sometimes color coded but for no real reason.
Just to go to, you know, just design purposes.
But I will say to people like, what are you feeling?
Here's the wheel.
I want at least seven of the challenging ones and two of the positive ones. And like, well,
how can I have positive ones? And like, because when that friend betrayed you, there was also
a bit of relief there because they were annoying sometimes. And there was also, you know, a
little bit of validation there because you had that suspicion and like, and people when
they actually see it, oh oh yes, there's this.
And here's the thing, it's not what's at a 10.
That's one or two things.
Some of them can be at a three.
Or I mean the relief part of when your friend betrays you
is small, but then you go that one's a two,
that one's a four, that one's,
and find 10 for each situation.
That will teach you to find the language
to express yourself more accurately, because if you express yourself more accurately the other person
Understands what you actually want to need and feel rather than some general. You're angry. I guess I hurt you in some way
But I don't know why or what I need to do about it. That's interesting the wheel of emotion
So well, you said they're online like images of these things emotion emotion wheel
Emotion wheel you Emotion wheel.
You'll find many.
We'll put it up on this video on the screen right now.
We'll have it up there so people can see it
and link to one or two that we find.
I think that's really interesting.
I never heard of that.
The emotion wheel, the wheel of emotions.
You can get them, I mean, it's not my thing,
but you know, like I literally bought a pillow on Etsy.
That has the wheel of emotions?
Yeah, there are many.
And it's not just Etsy, you can get them anywhere.
With all the emotions on it?
With the wheel on it.
Wow, that's cool.
Because you want to use it with kids
and you want it in the living room.
So when the kid is having a meltdown,
you're just going.
Here, punch the Wheel of Emotions and then point at it.
Yeah, yeah.
Tell me.
Wow, that's interesting.
I think that's really fascinating.
Blankets.
And when we can point to emotions
and start to speak about it, what are we saying?
You're being much, first of all, it's much bigger relief
when you're actually expressing what you feel.
You're trying to a lot of the times
when people are trying to tell me how they feel
or tell their loved one how they feel,
they really want to convey it.
They want to be understood very badly.
But it's difficult to be understood
if the words you're using are very general, generic, and not very clear.
Oh, I'm just bummed, I'm just upset.
I'm like, that's generic.
But what specifically?
When you articulate, oh, this friend did something
and I feel so betrayed and so disappointed,
and I lost my trust and I feel misunderstood
and I'm questioning my own judgment,
and all of those things,
it really helps the other people
understand, okay, that's what you're going through.
Now I know what kind of support, feedback,
whatever it is you need.
So what happens, I mean, this is fascinating.
I don't know if I've heard of this, the Wheel of Emotions.
It's almost like if you wanna create the Wheel of Fortune,
you need to be able to point out the Wheel of Emotions,
what you're feeling.
It's like a color wheel, but it's not,
because color wheels are very nuanced, right?
And I'm not colorblind, so, you know know like I am with primary colors and like people like
well that's future and I'm like I have no idea what that sure sure sure like I
can maybe whatever now let's say we get to where we're able to communicate our
emotions but the other person isn't able to receive them or just can't handle it
it's just like just figure out your own life you know I don't know what to do
what do you do in that situation when you're trying to communicate
and you are, here are the seven things that I'm feeling
and the other person just can't receive those emotions?
But the other person can say,
I'm feeling a little overwhelmed by your list of emotions.
Maybe we can put that wheel aside for just a moment.
Because I need guidance from you about what you want.
Because I'm not sure what to say or it's a lot for me
and I'm just not sure how to react.
What would be helpful to you?
And if the other person's not saying that
and they're just like, look, you will know
when the other person's shutting down
because it happens a lot.
And it's often you will come and have this conversation
and you'll go on for too long,
you'll mention too many things, it'll be so overwhelming, it won often you will, you know, you will come and have this conversation and you'll go on for too long. You'll mention too many things. It'll be so overwhelming.
It won't be this specific thing happened.
This is how I felt about it.
You always do this.
You'll take a running start back in the 90s.
You did it for the first time.
Not necessary for the point you're making 30 years later, you know, and so, you know, when their eyes are glazing over and they're starting to do this.
Back off on their motions.
Back off. They're getting overwhelmed. They're flooded now. So they're starting to do this. Back off on their emotions. Back off.
They're getting overwhelmed.
They're flooded now.
So they're not going to be useful to you.
This may be a controversial thing to say,
but it seems like, and you've been in this work for three
decades, right, 30 years.
It seems like when I was growing up, at least in the Midwest,
there were different, I guess, roles for men and women, right?
Or at least cultural standards, let's say.
And it almost feels like now, and again, I'm generalizing this, but I feel like I'm seeing
this more and more in movies and media and just what I'm seeing online, people talk about,
that roles are blending or changing or shifting, evolving, where there used to be more masculine,
yeah, I guess, figures in media and TV.
Now it's like the men are skinnier and more feminine
as like kind of the main roles, right?
In movie and TV, some of these big movies.
And it seems like that is also translated
in the younger generation in society,
like the skinnier man or things like that.
And then you see some women
becoming even less feminine acting
or less emotions and more like anger.
I don't know if I'm communicating this right,
but it seems like the roles have been shifting in some ways
around cultural standards.
And I don't know if that's just what I'm seeing online
versus what's actually happening.
But do you feel like roles are shifting between men and women in relationships
from when you started 30 years ago?
I think the younger generation Gen Z is one of the strengths is that they feel
much less bound by labels, by roles, by expectations of what they should feel, say or do and what they
feel like saying or doing. That has its downside, you know, in some ways. But the
upside is you're much more likely to see young men be actually quite thoughtful
or articulate about their feelings and young women being more assertive than
you might have expected their grandmothers perhaps to be or feeling less restrained in terms of what their narrow role should be
because it's not narrow and should never have been, so they're less constrained.
And so that's what you're seeing.
You're seeing a more natural, because those divisions between the gendas were very cultural and enforced.
And the invitations were rigid.
And so it's like, as you said, if you had expressed emotion when you were on the field,
that would not have gone well in the locker room.
But we're like, what's wrong with him?
We used to, we still do, have a way of confusing muscles with emotional resilience and emotional strength.
Muscles don't have anything to do with resilience necessarily and somebody can be…
Emotional resilience or…
With emotional resilience, you know, and physical resilience, yes, you have more layers of protection,
so if you get hit by a car, the muscled person will fare better. That's about the end of their advantage.
It also puts more of a cardiovascular burden on them.
But that aside for a minute, it has nothing to do with resilience because resilience actually
is very context specific.
You can take the biggest war hero and put them in an argument with their wife and they
will melt into tears because that's not where they're resilient,
that's not where they're strong.
Unless they've developed that muscle.
Unless, coincidentally, they have.
But if they've been a war hero all their life,
I'm not sure when they would have had the chance to do it.
Not saying all of them, but I'm just saying,
you develop the resiliences for,
resilience is an adaptive evolutionary thing,
you develop it for the context you are in.
So the context you are not familiar with, you're going to be less resilient in.
Some of them will lend, but most not.
And the ones you're familiar with, you will hopefully have built much more resilience
within that sphere.
So resilience is not even a general thing.
It's context-specific. In 2025 and beyond, if someone is a new parent and they have young kids who are developing,
what are the three skills that you would wish every parent could learn themselves or at
least try to teach their kids to grow up being the healthiest, happiest versions of themselves with all this
to come in the world for them?
What would you suggest to parents?
The most important thing I think, well, at least three, I'm going to mention all three.
One of the most important things I think a parent can do is teach their kid that whatever
they feel is entirely normative and natural and anyone else in that situation
would feel the same thing whether they showed it or not. So to teach them that
their feelings are to be accepted, those are natural. What you do with those
feelings behavior-wise, how you manage them in terms of how you manage your
emotions because we can actively manage our emotions in all kinds of different ways and contexts.
That's on you and the parents should teach them those skill sets.
Parents don't usually know them so it's hard for them to teach them.
But the idea that nothing the kid feels is wrong per se, the feelings are not wrong,
only what they do with them.
Their actions or behaviors.
Yes, and all their interpretation of it might be wrong, like what it do with them. Their actions or behaviors. Yes, and all their interpretation of it might be wrong.
You know, like what it says about them might be wrong.
But the fact that they're having the feeling is a default.
And if they're having it, 90 something percent
of other people would have it.
They might have it less, maybe that kid's sensitive
to this or that, but they will have a version of it.
If you look at the wheel, that'll be a three rather
than a seven, but it'll be a three.
So that's the one thing.
The other thing is-
Have your emotions, those are okay.
It's okay to have all the range of emotions.
Never shame a kid for having emotions
and always validate that what you're feeling
is completely reasonable.
Now let's talk about what you can do with it
or what's going on.
What if a kid is feeling, again, I'm not a parent yet,
so I can't start to begin to talk about
how I'm gonna navigate the emotions of a child and the reactions and things like that.
But if someone's, if a child is having an emotion or reaction to something and an
emotion, and then it's followed by a negative behavior, um,
do you allow the behavior to, cause it's part of the emotion or how do you
communicate that to a child? Like, Hey, you can feel all these things,
but this behavior does not work. How do you navigate that? It depends on the age.
You can say something like that or you can say something like look if you're doing this and
you're still upset let's talk a little bit more or do you need some time to yourself because
you know you're upset before it sounds like you still are that's completely okay
but that's not okay to do so let's talk about what's the best thing for you right now.
Got it. But the second thing a parent has to do,
and this is the goal of parenting.
The goal of parenting is to prepare your child
to manage the world they will be in,
not the world they grew up in.
Wow.
They grew up in a sheltered world,
not the world they're emerging to.
That's true.
So you want to start as protective as you can possibly be
and then you wanna loosen that as the child grows
because you would much rather they went through hardships
while you were still around to help them cope,
learn from it, change things, evolve and grow from it,
develop the resilience from it,
then shelter them so then they go into the world
and when the bad stuff happens,
they're gonna crumble because they never developed
the resilience or the skills or the coping mechanisms
or the way to communicate it or the expectations.
So your goal, I see people sheltering
these 17, 18 year old kids and I'm like,
they're leaving home soon.
You're putting them back into the wild,
and you haven't let them hunt.
Right, right, right.
Stop hunting for them.
Yeah, yeah.
So what can parents do to where they feel like,
okay, they're gonna be safe,
but I need them to take some risk in their own too.
And what ages should they start to really let them go more?
Look, I joke about it with people who are my age.
Because we, and it's-
45?
Ish.
And so because people my age, we joke,
and it's not a joke, that if every parent,
mine and everyone else's would have been arrested
such a long time ago for neglect.
Because, for neglect, because I was unsupervised from age eight or nine most of the afternoon.
Many hours of the day outside and unsupervised.
I was a latchkey kid.
I came home with my brother.
We were 10 years old.
We had to make lunch.
Knives, oil, gas.
We're making French fries.
What did you think we would make?
We're 10.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. We're making French fries. What did you think we would make? We're 10. Today, if you come home and there's a 10-year-old with a bunch of other 10-year-olds crowding
around popping and everyone was like, oh, the oil.
It was just like today that would be, oh, they've disappeared for four hours.
Well, they'll be back for dinner.
But where are they?
Oh, we don't know.
That would not fly.
It's a different world.
Yes.
Do we need to go back to that you think or no?
No, not exactly there because that was maybe a bit much,
but something in the middle.
In other words, if your kid is going to the party
and you know there's going to be drinking at the party
and they're 17, do you want them to learn how to manage
the fact there's going to be drinking around them
or drugs around them or not?
You want that, yes.
Well, right.
But if you don't let them go, then they won't.
Right. And if you don't have them go, then they won't.
And if you don't have a big talk about it about, you know, and people go, people say
this, well, what happens if you're 15?
What happens if your friends start drinking or doing weed?
Will you do it?
And all the kids are going to say no.
And that's the end of the conversation.
That's not the conversation.
The conversation is going to be, you're going to be sitting there and everyone else is going
to be doing it
and looking like they're having the best, best time.
And looking at you like you're an idiot.
Why wouldn't you do this?
There's no adults around.
What are you gonna do then?
That's the question.
But that's the conversation the parents need to have.
Like, real, like how do, not bad things won't happen.
How will you deal with them when they will?
Okay, that's the second thing.
What, did you have a third thing or not?
Yes, relationships.
You said it, right?
We should be teaching this stuff in schools,
but we know so much about relationships,
relationship skills.
You had to evolve them over the past 10 years.
You could have done it as a teenager
if somebody would have taught you
and saved yourself a lot of heartache,
a lot of aggravation, a lot of broken up relationships.
Not you, everyone I'm talking about, right?
Like the divorce rate is so high
and people are so unhappy in relationships
because we have actually such great knowledge about it
and it is not disseminated in any way, shape or form.
This can be a two week class in high school for goodness sake, it's not that complicated.
But at least tell people the facts and so they don't, you know, because people say to
me things about relationships when they're young and I'm like, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah,
yeah.
What are they saying about it?
Well, I'm not going to talk to them.
If it was meant to be, it'll work out.
And I'm like...
Good luck. I'm not gonna talk to them, if it was meant to be, it'll work out. And I'm like.
Good luck. Relationships are an active formation process,
not a passive, let's see what happens,
and you know, like, no, that's absolutely incorrect.
You should be forming, I mean,
we just spoke about how much work.
So much work.
You both put into creating the foundation of the relationship.
So much work.
So no, if it's meant to be the foundation of the relationship. So much work.
So no, if it's meant to be, it won't just work out or not.
No.
And it was intentional effort.
I don't want to say it's hard work, but it was intentional effort.
It's effortful.
It's effortful.
It doesn't mean it's hard or unpleasant.
It can be memos maybe. Yeah, and it was a consistent conversation of what are we building?
What are we creating?
What works for you?
What doesn't work for you?
What do you like?
What do you don't like?
It was a constant conversation of being in the present but also thinking about the future.
And when you've gone through challenging relationships in the past, for me, I was like,
I don't want to repeat that. I don't want to repeat what my parents did by them having
a horrible relationship and getting divorced. And essentially when you go through, I mean,
for me, when I look back on it, when parents get divorced, and maybe you can correct me
on this, but as a child, they're breaking up the family one way or another. It's a psychological and physical break.
It's like jackhammering the road and there needs to be some type of bridge somewhere.
But sometimes you don't create a bridge. There's just disease, discomfort, stress for years until
you psychologically and physically create your own bridge on however you view your parents,
their relationship, and relationships in the world.
Correct me if I'm wrong,
but that's kind of what it felt like for me.
And it took a long time with a lot of fear, stress
and anxiety to say, I don't wanna recreate
what my parents did.
I don't wanna feel trapped and not loved like they felt.
And I don't wanna recreate that.
And I don't wanna have that for my future kids.
So I was terrified in relationships
to commit to the next level.
But I was afraid to be alone.
And it's just like, so I stayed in places I was not happy
and I didn't have the courage or the tools.
And those models, that model created challenges for me.
Now there's, I've created beautiful meaning from them now
and I've, you know, I see the benefit of it now, but it's, it's painful. And like you said, the divorce rate,
50% of marriages are probably still getting divorced right now. So a lot of kids are having
psychological and physical breakups within their own family dynamics and relationship dynamics.
And it's, it's, this is more needed now than ever, this information.
I completely agree.
Look, divorce is incredibly destabilizing for kids
because that's the family unit,
the thing that you, you know, that's supposedly forever,
and I guess you can't trust that people who love each other
will always love each other,
and it's very difficult for a child
not to go, what does that mean about people who love me then?
Whether it's mom or dad, you know,
like sometimes parents handle divorce very, very well.
It's a minority who do.
I've seen parents handle it beautifully.
I mean, as best as one can.
I've seen parents truly go into it saying,
we're gonna do everything we can
to make this less damaging to our kids
and put themselves in significant discomfort.
In order to do that, I feel like applauding them whenever I see it. And if it's in a session,
I will. I'll literally clap. I'll be like, I can't tell you how impressed I am that you would put
yourself both into this level of discomfort when you're probably hating each other right now
for the sake of your children, but bravo. You're doing an exquisite job. I mean, I see it and I
love it. But most don't because it's very, very difficult,
obviously, and they don't have the tools,
and they don't have the know-how,
and they don't have, they've waited too long,
so they just cannot stand aside of each other,
and it's too difficult, one feels, victimized,
whatever, you know the story.
But it's very destabilizing for a kid,
so that has to be mended.
Where does your faith come in?
But you, by definition, have healed from that.
Because if you hadn't, you would not be able
to put in the investment you did
into creating the relationship you do now
because that would not have seemed
like a wise investment for you
because you can't count on it.
So that's the proof of your healing
from that specific thing
that you would put that much work in.
Yeah, and I almost got to the place of myself
where I had built so much self-esteem, I guess in
a humble way, where I was like, I'm going to vest so much into over-communicating, not
from a traumatized place of anxious over-communicating, but over-communicating my values, my vision,
my lifestyle, what I want.
And if it works out, great.
And if it doesn't, I'm happy to be alone.
I'm happy to be alone and live my life for as long as it takes until I can create that
with the values, the vision, and the lifestyle in alignment.
Not perfect, but aligned.
And truly accept the person in front of me after getting to know them, accept myself,
and make sure that we're both willing to be doing the work individually and together.
Yes.
That's something that Martha did really beautiful. She was doing her own work.
I was doing my own work and I said, I want to do it together too.
Like relationships can be very challenging as you know, even when everything is good,
it's eventually kids, money, challenges, death from parents, like stuff happens.
Let's keep intentionally putting effort into this together and individually
if we want it to work. Otherwise, we're going to have to do damage control in the future.
And that's what most people do. Or they have affairs or they cheat or they lie or they
say whatever it is, like you're doing something to numb the pain as opposed to intentionally
going through the pain to creating peace. It's a very, very important lesson.
I'm so glad you're sharing it with people
because this idea of you actually have to work
really hard on yourself to get to know yourself,
to be happy enough with yourself
so that you have a complete self to offer the other person.
And then you have to work just as hard on the relationship.
It doesn't, doesn't, and I am certain there were moments
where you felt like, I just don't,
probably not right now. Why am I spending a Saturday afternoon with a therapist felt like, I just don't, if not right now.
Why am I spending a Saturday afternoon with a therapist?
Yeah, I thought.
But because it's good for you.
100%.
Because it'll pay a lot of dividends
and because it'll prevent a lot of heartache later on.
Absolutely, and I think of my parents
who got divorced when they were,
they were married for I think 30 years, something like that.
30? I think it was 30, like 28 to 30 years. They got married when they were like for I think 30 years, something like that. 30?
I think it was 30, like 28 to 30 years.
They got married when they were like 20, right?
They had my brother when they were 19, right?
So I think they got divorced around late 40s or like 50, maybe it was around 50.
But all I remember, my earliest memories were when I was like four and a half, five, right?
All I remember is uneasiness, tension, stress,
screaming, slamming of doors.
You just didn't know when it was gonna be peaceful.
So it was this uncertainty every few days.
And my brother, when I was eight, my brother was in prison
and a lot of that had to do with the family dynamics
of just like, you know, how they raised him.
You know, my sisters both struggled with suicide attempts
when they were teenagers.
So it's just like a lot of uncertainty.
It's just like, there was love.
Like I knew my parents loved me and cared for me,
but they didn't love each other.
And therefore, that just shook the energy consistently.
And it didn't feel safe consistently.
And so my early memories are thinking, I wish my parents weren't together, right?
Like they shouldn't be together.
It's just kind of this innate feeling like there's not love there.
There's something that's off, but they stayed because of the kids and religion or whatever
it is, right?
And when they got divorced, there was a relief, but there was also a lot of anger and frustration
and sadness, like what they put us through as kids.
So it was hard to really love them.
I wanted to be around them,
but I didn't wanna be around them.
It was hard to really love them
in that 16 to 24 timeframe,
because I was so angry at them.
And I think a lot of kids have that feeling of anger
that the parents either couldn't figure out
how to communicate and love each other
and breaking up the relationship.
I think a lot of kids feel that.
Oh, the kids feel that because parenting
is the hardest job in the world.
It's gotta be so hard.
And no one teaches you anything about it, nothing, nothing.
Like, you know, you come home with a baby,
and that's it.
And most mothers, when they feel like,
like, wait, you can't just leave me here with this,
I don't know what I'm doing.
And parents get panicked, and it's so difficult.
So I feel bad for parents,
because no one's telling them how to do it,
and there's much less information available
when your parents were growing up and parenting you than there is today but
there's so much online like even just people who are watching your you know
your podcast can just you know like there's so much information there that
they can just glean so it's free it's available go get it you know that kind
of thing but it's very difficult to do. Yes. A couple of final questions for you
before I get into them.
A lot of great content we've shared today, but if you've dealt with a broken heart, your book,
how to fix a broken heart is extremely powerful. I came out many years ago,
but it's still really relevant and powerful today.
So make sure to check this out or get it for a friend who's been through a
breakup or any type of broken heart. This other book here,
emotional first aid, healing, rejection, guilt, failure, and other everyday hurts, I think is a must read for,
for everyone because emotional injuries are something that, uh, we don't,
um, evaluate. We don't, um, diagnose, right?
We just say, ah, I'm angry.
Let me just numb it or drink or take substances or have sex or watch porn or
whatever it is to numb the feeling.
And the more we numb things, the more pain we're going to feel long-term and it's going
to be harder to emotionally unwind those kind of wounds.
And you'd say that we all sustain emotional wounds, these feelings.
I've felt a lot of these as a child growing up, almost like weekly it was like something
else happened in school where I felt an emotional wound, but I didn't know how to react to respond to them.
So if you're an individual who doesn't know how to do that yet, get this book.
And you also have this other one, which is, which one is this about?
Complaining the right way?
This is about the psychology of complaining.
This is my first book that I wrote.
It, I, there was no book book out there that talks about the science of
complaining and what we know and what we do well and what we do poorly and how it impacts
us in relationships and self-esteem and all kinds of other ways.
So there's actually a right way to do things and that's what that book.
How to complain the right way to get the benefit out of it. Before I ask the final two questions, Guy, where can we follow and support you online?
You've got a podcast, you've got the books, where can we follow you and support you?
So, guywinch.com will be where you can get most of the information. I have a newsletter,
you can subscribe to it. I'm working on a new book, it should be out in a year or so,
and you'll find information about there. That's a book about the workplace.
It's called Mind Over Grind,
How to Break Free When Work Hijacks Your Life.
Because our work actually hijacks our life
in many ways that we're aware of and many that we're not.
And seeding control in those ways is actually costing us
in all kinds of really important ways and our loved ones it's
costing them to our families our spouses and so you need to get a handle on that
or at least be aware of the damage that might be going on so but that would be
in a year or so. Okay cool guywinch.com for all this stuff social media as well
powerful stuff I've got I've got a couple of hot questions for you. For Gen Z, the Gen Z world right now,
which seems like probably has the most confusion of all
because they kind of grew up in social media.
They didn't really have the lifestyle we did
where we're going out until dark and then coming back
and just playing games outside.
They're kind of growing up on the phone, social media,
more connected to the world
and disconnected to the world at the same time,
more friends than ever but feeling lonelier than ever,
all these different things.
If you could give them one piece of advice
on how to set them up for success
for the rest of their life, with the world they grew up in,
what would you say they really need to focus
on developing more? I think with Gen Z, it's a very difficult thing when you grow up with the phone. The
phone is this device that I – this might sound extreme, but here's how I think of
Marie Curie. When she was – was it uranium? What did she find? whatever the material that she found,
she died from radioactivity because she was dealing
with something that was extraordinarily toxic.
I hope I'm not getting that wrong.
I'm getting all these physicists going like,
don't you know your history?
And I'm like, no, not that physics.
I'm, anyway, but anyway, but my point being,
this is a very damaging device.
It's very, very problematic.
It has amazing things in it.
It can do a ton of good, but it's dangerous in all kinds of ways.
The fact that we don't regulate that now, the fact that there's no, you know, I mean,
there's a lot of clarity about all the ways that it's damaging, but we just tend to ignore them.
You have to look at that device and like look at your relationship with it
and be honest with yourself about where it's helping and where it's not.
Where it's not is when you're feeling,
if you're Gen Z, and truly of everyone,
but especially if you're Gen Z, if you're feeling bad,
down, disconnected, lonely, you're gonna go there
to get comfort and it's gonna make you feel worse.
Especially on social media.
And so you have to know when to use it,
when to not, how to use it, and how to not. Gen Z has substituted
a huge significant chunk of their relationships from virtual, from in
person to virtual. They have much less face-to-face time and it's costing them
not just in terms of loneliness but in terms of social skills, social anxiety,
self-esteem, all of those things. So try and when you're
with friends and you're having dinner, put the phones aside and I don't mean
down because you'll glance, I mean away. Like create phone-free zones when you're
interacting in person. The temptation is too great. Otherwise whenever I see young
people they're all together on their phones and it's like it's a miss.
So that would be my advice. It's gonna be extraordinarily and every time I see young people, they're all together on their phones, and it's like, it's a miss.
So that would be my advice.
Like, it's gonna be extraordinarily tempting,
but police yourself.
Police yourself, yeah.
In that way.
Yeah.
I think I've asked you this before,
but I wanna ask you your three truths again,
and see if anything's shifted here.
So at the end of the conversation,
I asked people if you get to live as long as you want
in this life, and you get to accomplish everything you dream of
But on the last day you've got to take everything with you all your books this conversation
No one has access to anything you shared in your lifetime hypothetically
But you get to leave behind three lessons or three things, you know to be true
And that's all we would have to kind of remember you buy are these three truths. What would those be for you?
Caring? To care for other people is free. It can only pay benefits. Yes, it can disappoint
you if you don't get cared back, but it really should disappoint you once. Because if that
person's not caring back, you don't need to keep at it. But the benefits are immense.
In the workplace, it's part of the book that I'm writing now,
but in the workplace, the toxic cultures we have are very,
people leave jobs because they feel uncared for.
That's really the ultimate truth about things,
and people who feel cared for in their work and in their lives thrive more.
It's free.
We should be giving this to other people, not hoarding it.
So just having this idea of kindness, of caring, I think is super important. In the similar vein,
I practice gratitude extraordinarily regularly, like daily. And gratitude is incredibly powerful.
And so you're like, okay, fine, yeah, I'm grateful for the sun. And I'm like, then you don't understand
what gratitude exercises are, because it's not,
I'm grateful for the sun.
You might be grateful for the sun, but why?
The gratitude exercise is like, oh my goodness,
it's been cloudy for five days, it's finally sunny.
It improves my mood, I feel like going out.
It just, I see everything in a more bright way.
I'm so glad it's sunny today.
That's a grateful reflection.
And especially powerful if it's interpersonal.
If you're thinking about someone in your life
that was meaningful to you many years ago
but you never expressed it,
a friend you have now perhaps,
writing something, picking up the phone and saying it
will lift your spirits for days, for days.
It is the most powerful thing we can do for ourselves.
It improves optimism.
It changes our perspective on life.
It makes us find the silver linings.
It's such a potent, healthy thing to do.
Again, free.
Anyone can do it.
I really recommend that.
That's something that I do and that I practice.
And the third one, I want to say,
and I have no recollection of what I said last time,
so for anyone who feels like doing the research, humor.
Now that's my bias because I like humor.
I find it to be a great way to dissolve tensions.
I find it a great way to connect with people. I find it a great way to connect
with people, I find it a great way to offer a perspective
to get emotional distance from something that's painful.
Using humor gives you emotional distance.
If you're upset about something, writing jokes,
that's what stand-up comics do, right?
I mean, the real ones, they talk about their pain,
but it's therapeutic for them.
They work it out because if you can laugh at something,
you are by definition distant from it.
And by definition, you added a layer of protection.
So that would be the third.
That's beautiful.
Guy, I'm always grateful for you.
I appreciate you and acknowledge you for your
three plus decades of research and the science
of self-help and personal development and healing and understanding
emotions. I truly believe that the most powerful skill that any human can develop is really an
understanding of their own emotional intelligence, emotional resilience, so that they can handle the
world in front of them because there's going gonna be a lot of ups and downs for people
and if they're not emotionally fit or resilient,
they will have a lot of pain,
a lot of suffering, a lot of pain.
So we need more people like you, Guy, I appreciate you.
Final question, what's your definition of greatness?
Did you ask me that one before?
I'm trying to remember you did,
I have no recollection of what I said about that one.
Before I said that, I'm just gonna say,
I love talking with you,
because you ask such interesting questions,
and I think they're so grounded,
and I think they're so relevant for people.
I think that's why you have such a big following,
because it's actually very practical.
It's very, you know, people can relate
to what you talk about in terms of your own experiences,
and the questions you ask come from that. So they're always, for me, they're always very, you know, people can relate to what you talk about in terms of your own experiences and the questions you ask come from that.
So they're always, for me, they're always very, very interesting and different.
And that's why I have to do things like buy time when you ask me about how I define greatness.
I guess my, look, my definition, if I'm thinking about myself, like what would make me feel
that I've achieved
some kind of greatness, and it's not a hubris thing,
because I don't believe in greatness in terms of stature.
I believe in greatness in terms of how you're meeting
your own goals and expectations.
To me, greatness is a little bit of what you laid out earlier.
You have articulated for yourself, which is, by the way,
a step ahead of a lot of people, what your vision is
of what you want your life to be about,
where you want to go, where you want to develop as a person, and in the work you do in the world.
And this might be your definition of greatness, but I do think greatness is articulating that and
working toward it. And the greatness comes from the journey, not from reaching some kind of
artificial milestone. There you go. God, I wish. Thank you, sir. Appreciate it. Thank you. Amazing.
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