The School of Greatness - Unlocking Love: A Deep Dive into Trauma, Trust, and Transformation
Episode Date: September 20, 2024In this unique mashup episode, I brought together insights from conversations with three experts in relationships, trauma healing, and personal growth: Dr. Nicole LePera, Gabby Bernstein, and Esther P...erel. We explored deep topics like healing from trauma, building healthy relationships, and personal transformation. Each guest offered valuable perspectives on how we can better understand ourselves, heal our past wounds, and create more fulfilling connections with others. This episode provides a comprehensive look at the intersection of personal development, psychological healing, and intimate relationships.IN THIS EPISODE YOU WILL LEARN:How trauma affects our nervous system and relationships, and steps to begin healingThe importance of self-awareness and emotional regulation in building healthy relationshipsWhy honesty and vulnerability are crucial for deep connection and personal growthHow to navigate jealousy and build trust in intimate relationshipsThe balance between togetherness and independence needed for lasting partnershipsPractical tools and approaches for healing past traumas and limiting beliefsFor more information go to https://www.lewishowes.com/1670For more Greatness text PODCAST to +1 (614) 350-3960More SOG episodes we think you’ll love:Eckhart Tolle – https://link.chtbl.com/1463-pod Rhonda Byrne – https://link.chtbl.com/1525-podJohn Maxwell – https://link.chtbl.com/1501-pod
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Welcome to this special masterclass. We've brought some of the top experts in the world to help you
unlock the power of your life through this specific theme today. It's going to be powerful,
so let's go ahead and dive in.
What is the thing we need to heal first? The brain, the mind, or the heart? I think that the body plays such a larger role
than we give it credit for, especially in my field. We like to praise the power of the mind,
of the prefrontal cortex, our very empowered space that can imagine this incredibly different future
and create all of this incredible change and even affirmations.
I think that they're grounded in this reality that to think differently, we can create a shift,
a shift in how we feel and ultimately a shift in how we do. And that's half of the journey, though the other half of it is really first attuning to what signals my body is sending my
mind, my heart being included in that body. Specifically,
what is my nervous system? Is my nervous system telling my mind that I'm safe in this moment,
that I can be grounded maybe in that internal presence that we were just kind of talking about,
right? Tuning inward, what is my heart saying? What is my heart wanting or what is my heart
needing? What do I want to do to act in compassion in that moment? And if I don't feel safe in my body, and I know I spent decades with my body sending my mind, my brain signals of
lacking safety, of threat, of endless stress. Your body was sending your brain this,
or your mind this. My body was sending my brain this. I think this is why a lot of us,
we can't sit in stillness. We feel endlessly distracted by the world around us or endlessly
agitated because all of those are signals that our body is in stillness. We feel endlessly distracted by the world around us or endlessly agitated
because all of those are signals that our body is in stress ultimately.
Now, is it the body or is it the nervous system in the heart? Like, is it the skin, the blood,
the bones, or is it like more the nervous system and the heart in reaction to an environment or
memory? The nervous system and the heart we can can think of, are the control center for the rest of what the body is doing.
We're like a sensor, an energetic sensor.
Our nervous system is sending out electromagnetic waves.
Our heart is actually sending out electromagnetic waves
at a greater distance, and we're sensing the world around us.
And then how we register what's happening in our external world
is through changes in our skin.
We get sweaty,
we get clammy, changes in our musculature tension. They get tense or they get relaxed,
whatever it might be, changes in our heart rate. So those sensors and that kind of command center of the heart and the nervous system is always outside of our awareness, assessing and scanning.
And even more so than taking in information from just the external environment, it's taking information from your nervous system.
From others.
And how stressed or non-stressed you are.
And then like dominoes, we kind of ping against each other.
The more stressed you are, the more I feel your stress, the more likely my body is to become stressed.
And also, and opposite that, probably the more relaxed I am when you're stressed,
it can help you calm and regulate as well in certain ways, right?
Beautiful. I have a whole couple chapters dedicated to, and a big premise of the book
is to attune to our body, to that second subtitle, create and find peace within ourself,
so that those signals that probably historically were stressed out signals, you know, threatening quite literally the world around us and other people in relationship.
that we can do is create a safe environment, a relational environment for someone else to be who they are, to express their thoughts, their perspectives, their emotions, and really just to
be themselves. So a lot of the science within the book is harnessing the power of the heart,
harnessing the power of co-regulation, and actually teaching us to quite literally be
in that energetic state of love so that we can actually, in my opinion, heal those relationships.
I love this. Martha and I, she does a great job if I'm feeling like, you know, a little overwhelmed
or something. She does a great job of bringing calming energy to me. She can notice it and bring
calm and then I can get calm pretty quickly and vice versa, if she's had a long day or something,
and she's just having an overwhelming moment, or she's feeling sensitive,
I can notice it and just hug her for 10 minutes, and then she feels better.
You know, she can relax and calm down.
Now, both of us have a pretty good awareness of taking care of ourselves,
doing the inner work, you know, so that it's
usually not both of us at the same time and break down for a moment, right? But when two people have
traumatic nervous systems or who haven't healed their heart or their nervous system,
and they're in a relationship and neither of them know how to regulate their emotions,
what tends to happen in that relationship if they don't know how to heal their hearts? We tend to, I think, engage in cycles of endless conflict,
of endless disconnection, of endless coping strategies that we've learned. We rely on the
things that we do, whether it's using substances or distracting ourself by scrolling endlessly
online. We are then the living byproduct.
Sometimes it's in these explosive cycles of conflict. I call this patterning that I think
is pretty common in most relationships. I know Lolly and I, when we began our relationship now
near a decade ago, we were very much in a dysfunctional patterning of what I call trauma
bonding. Really? Absolutely. What is trauma bonding? So trauma bonding, again,
I like to provide a more expansive definition
than I think some could define it online,
but it's all of those dysfunctional habits and patterns
that, again, once kept us safe in childhood
that we continue to recreate,
whether it's these cycles of explosive conflict,
maybe that some of us are even defining as, right,
love and intensity and passion
and all of the
things we're looking for in chemistry or the just dysfunctional habits and selves that we're playing
where we're just one of the partners is always the caretaker of the other partner who's always
in need of the care and right no matter what relationship you're in you see yourself kind of
engaging within that same dynamic or for me i, the most prominent one is cycles of emotional
disconnection, no matter who I was with. And I was always in a relationship. I was somewhat of
a serial monogamous since I started dating when I was 16 years old. I was more or less always in a
romantic partnership, definitely had friendships and social engagements and things to do. But I
was really the living embodiment or the feeling embodiment of alone
in a crowded room. Really? And the number one complaint that would usually end to the demise
of the relationship because I would be so frustrated or resentful or so passive aggressively
acting out that before I knew it, the relationship would end was I don't feel emotionally connected.
Your partners would say that. I would say that. You would say that. I would complain about not
feeling emotionally connected, though I can share a story.
My first boyfriend ever in high school, to this day it sticks with me.
When we broke up, we were nearing graduation.
We were going to separate colleges very far away.
And so we broke up on logistics of, you know, it's college.
He also lodged a statement, complaint, if you will.
And he labeled me as being emotionally unavailable.
And I was really struck by that because I was like, me, emotionally unavailable? What do you
mean? I feel so loving. I felt in love with him. I was kind of devastated when he broke up with me.
So I was like, that's unusual to hear. I think he's obviously wrong. Flash forward a couple
years, I discovered I was attracted to women. So now I was like, oh, well, it's because I'm
interested in women that I'm emotionally available. Of course I am. Flash forward even more a couple of years. I was in a psychoanalytic
training program in Philadelphia right before I was licensed. And one of the aspects of the
training was to sit in group therapy around a room of other analysts where essentially for an
hour and a half, we just analyze each other and our experiences with each other and our perceptions
and how we feel interacting um this was part of your training this was part of my training to get
my license um it was i selected to go into that style of training because i thought it would be
beneficial and it was though very difficult and one of the things that i heard from a colleague
there one time in the group she decides to share her experience of me and describe me as cold and aloof.
And I'm like, OK, what?
That is so interesting.
Like now you're reflecting back, right, this idea of me being distanced.
But I didn't have any language to understand.
I thought that she was a little bit inaccurate.
Though now looking back, I'm like, oh, this is making complete sense. The reason why I was so
emotionally disconnected, that was real for me in my relationships. It was because I was
emotionally disconnected from myself. So I wasn't attuned to how I was thinking or feeling. I wasn't
sharing that. So of course I was creating a cycle of disconnection in my relationships. So as much
as I wanted to not agree with those two assessments, I mean, a lot of disconnection in my relationships. So as much as I wanted to not agree with those
two assessments, I mean, a lot of ways they were quite accurate.
When did you get to a point where you said, okay, this, even though I don't think I'm
emotionally disconnected, the pattern is showing up that I am. Others are letting me know I'm in
breakdown, the relations don't work, you know, whatever disconnection I have from people,
the pattern is following me. So, okay, I'm going to take a look at this seriously.
What did you do to break that cycle? You know, in your book, How to Be the Love You Seek,
you talk about breaking cycles. How did you break that cycle? How did you know you had
something to break and that you needed to find solutions or tools to improve that emotional connection as opposed to disconnection?
I started to look for myself because, yes, other people's feedback can be absolutely helpful,
but I never would suggest that you just defer to what someone else assesses you to be or says of you.
So I finally started to take it in.
I started to say, okay, if I continue to hear this and feel
this way from that conscious perspective, I will always kind of acknowledge consciousness or
learning how to observe ourself in the context of this conversation within our relationships
to be that first point of action. So I started to look. I started to pay attention and to assess
really simplistically, Nicole, how connected are you?
How present are you in any given moment? And as I began to check in with myself throughout the day,
whether or not you want to set an alarm on your phone to do it or put some post-it notes on,
you know, wherever you walk by regularly, or maybe even set a designated time during the day,
you know, over morning coffee or when I'm reading the newspaper, this is going to be my moment to check in. And the more regularly I checked in with where my attention is, the more
I noticed that it was a million miles away. I could be in conversation with someone. And while
like I'm here and I'm being talked at, right, I'm thinking about maybe what I'm going to respond to
next, or I'm just somewhere else entirely. And the more I checked in and noticed that disconnection, the more that I built on that consciousness step and began to, because there's always two steps to change.
Me becoming aware that I'm disconnected was only half the journey.
Then I had to begin to make that choice to reconnect with myself.
Wow.
To shift that focus of attention time and time again from the thoughts that they were
consumed in or even just worrying about someone else.
Am I more attuned to the person across from me than to how I feel being across from the
person?
And the more I flex that muscle, the more then I was able to reconnect with what my
body was doing in any given moment.
How long do you think it took for you then to practice that?
Because it was probably most of your life where you had this type of emotional disconnection,
what it sounds like as a safety mechanism to create safety from childhood, whatever may have been that you were being safe from. So how long did it take for you to feel like, okay, I'm not
having to think about this. It's more automatic. I am emotionally connected.
Did it take months, years, or is it still something you have to focus on?
It's still a daily intention, commitment conversation.
What has become automatic is the awareness of the importance of checking in with myself consciously, though there are still moments as my stress level goes up, as I become busy with
endless obligations, that overachiever conditioned self in me likes to prioritize all the things that
I have to do to show up in service of someone else. And that begins first thing in the morning
when I know I have emails to answer. I know I have a whole membership that I can tend to. I know I
have a book to edit or whatever it is that I'm working on. So it's a daily commitment to instead of
prioritizing all the things we do or all the things I could do to really create time beginning
in the morning to attune to my physical body, to how it feels at any given moment, to giving it
what it needs, whether it's movement or stretching or rest or, you know, just a conscious moment to be with me.
And there are moments when I'm not doing that, when I don't prioritize what I know I consciously,
you know, and benefit it to prioritize that I do find myself being much more detached,
much more dissociated.
It becomes still easy for me to travel down that older pathway.
Yeah.
Wow.
So how to be the love you seek. It sounds like we first need to
figure out and pay attention to what cycle we need to break is what I'm hearing. It's like,
we need to figure out, okay, why am I in struggle, suffer, fight or flight mode? Why am I reactive?
Why is there a breakdown? So we got to figure out what the cycle is. Are there a number of different cycles to be aware of?
Or is it kind of one cycle that we all follow?
I think we can become aware of our habitual pattern of relating.
These conditioned selves, I overview several of them.
Conditioned selves.
Conditioned selves.
These kind of typical ways, roles I play to really simplify it in our relationships.
It can look like me, right, the overachiever.
On the other side of that, it can look like the underachiever.
I have something called a caretaker, a yes person who kind of just defers and pleases the environment around them, a hero worshiper.
So what am I doing habitually in my relationships?
Who am I? What is my identity
even? You can begin to- How many conditioned selves are there? How many of these kind of
archetypes? I mean, there's many more than I list. I think I give about seven or eight,
just common examples. But so if listeners don't relate to any of them that I just said or that
are in the book is, what is just, who are you in your relationships? What is that very standard way?
What's your main role? What's your kind of like- What is the role are you in your relationships? What is that very standard way? What's your main role?
What's your kind of like primary role that you play?
I'm an overachiever.
I'm an overgiver.
I feel helpless, whatever the role is, right? Yes, and you could be on that side, right?
I'm the person who's always receiving someone in care of me.
I'm the person who's in that kind of helpless cycle.
I think another really important thing to observe outside of the conditioned way that we typically are or the role that we play is begin to really create a relationship with our nervous system and beginning to learn when we're in those moments of a stress reaction.
Because there are interpersonal things that happen for many of us when, say, we're in that sympathetic fight mode.
us when, say, we're in that sympathetic fight mode. We can feel very agitated with our muscles being tense all the time, our jaw being clenched,
our heart always pounding out of our chest.
Interpersonally, that can look like being in active conflict, screaming, yelling, really
shameful I think behaviors.
I know that I've often said and did things that I don't mean that are very mean in relationships
when I'm in that cycle of stress reaction. It's
not that I don't care about the person aside of me. And this even brings back in this concept of
the heart. When my nervous system is telling me that I'm in a threat state, it actually doesn't
matter who the person is across from me because they become just the threat between me and safety,
me because they become just the threat between me and safety, which is why we can become very combative and mean.
Other moments look like outside of the fight response is the flight response if we're always
distracting ourselves.
We're never available for the difficult conversation because I'll have that email to answer or
I'm endlessly scrolling on my phone or I'm distracting myself with TV.
Again, these are coping mechanisms of my nervous system trying to find safety.
What is usually beneath that?
If someone is in a relationship watching or listening to this
and they have a partner that is more reactive,
maybe they scream sometimes or they react in an unconscious way
or just disrespectful sometimes because they're in a fight or flight state or they're
trying to feel safe, but it may seem irrational to the other person, right? This is irrational.
Nothing's wrong, but they're reacting. What is usually underneath that reactiveness?
Some feeling of being threatened. And again, it might not be logically present what the fear is.
I mean, you could be sitting in your living room, seemingly in a very calm circumstance in that moment, but something even perhaps interpersonally
is similar enough to a time in a space before, usually in childhood, where that was the only
option. I mean, think about children, screaming, yelling, you know, kind of all of those are that
moment of reactivity, usually because something is feeling unsafe.
The person is feeling some fear around being threatened.
Wow. I heard this. I don't know who originally coined this, but I heard someone say
that if there's hysteria, there's history. If someone's being, you know, overreacting about
something when they don't need to, there's a history behind that. There's a wound. There's
something that's triggering the fear. Like you just said. What can someone do who
have been conditioned for years or decades in that state to actually address it? How do they
start addressing that to find peace, to heal that hysteria that's causing them pain?
Yeah. I really want to focus too on the history aspect of it,
because I want to affirm that those feelings, even if they are out of proportion, disproportionate,
you know, over the top, whatever we want to label, or maybe you have had them labeled
or believe them to be, if it's in our partner, they're real. Even if it's from our past,
that physiology is real, is active in that moment. It's present. It's present. It's
alive. It's as if we're back in time as that younger child, right? When kicking and screaming
was the only thing that we could do in that environment. I just want to say that to not
only normalize the experience, but to try to avoid the tendency to shame it in ourselves and in other
people, or the idea of kind of just
bypassing it. Oh, we'll just get over it because it's not actually what's happening in the moment.
Because according to our body and our physiology, it's actually very much happening in that moment,
which then opens the door for many of us to begin to make new choices in that moment to deal with
that elevated physiology, to actually be with those uncomfortable
emotions. Because what has happened is kicking and screaming or yelling and fighting, whatever
it is, or fleeing has been the only way that we've been able to cope. And it's still very much what
we need to do in that moment because we don't yet have other tools. So what's really difficult is when we try to shame it away and then we don't leave
ourselves with something else to do with how we're feeling.
So it really is the kind of shifting and expanding of energy and of attention in that moment
to create the opportunity to begin to practice new habits, to learn new things to do when
we're feeling overwhelmed.
Because until we embody a consistent practice, we will be overwhelmed by our emotions and
our nervous system will kind of travel down that well-worn rut because it will need to
do something to create safety for ourself in that moment.
Yeah.
And I guess people respond and react in different ways based on the history they have or the trauma they have where some partners may scream and kick and yell,
whereas others may shut down and be distant, right? There's different types of responses
that we might have from the history of our pain. If someone watching or listening is in a relationship with someone
for a long time that they really love, they care about, and they have this pattern of
distancing themselves emotionally, shutting down, or kicking and screaming,
what can they do to support them in discovering tools, creating awareness around it,
in discovering tools, creating awareness around it, finding a therapist or a coach to support them in growing? And what if their partner doesn't want to address it ever, isn't willing to be
vulnerable about the past, and doesn't want any help from anyone else? How do they manage that?
I think one of the most complicated things is you have two individuals trying to navigate a
relationship where we both have our stuff
from the past.
Because what often happens in those moments when someone's kicking and screaming or detaching,
chances are it could be activating my old lived experience, right?
So if someone removes themselves, distanced, just like my mom once did, to navigate whatever
it is that they're feeling, a difficult conversation that we're having, something not to do with me at all, difficult experience they're having at work
or with their family, inherently in their distance, it's going to activate me, right? It's going to
bring me right back to in childhood when my mom was emotionally distant or when she was giving me
the silent treatment to express her, you know, disappointment at whatever I was doing in that
moment. And it's going to then activate the way I deal with it.
So what happens is we have two people kind of ever kind of cycling through these threat
based responses.
And neither of them are able to kind of return to that grounded state of presence.
So the best thing I think that we can do is, and I have a lot of tools, not only to begin
to self-identify which state of nervous system activation you're in so that we can do is, and I have a lot of tools, not only to begin to self-identify
which state of nervous system activation you're in so that you can begin to regulate yourself,
really helpful. And this is outside of even romantic partnerships for your friends,
for your family members, can be really helpful to have the awareness of signs and signals that
they're in a state of emotional system or nervous system activation.
Because sometimes when we understand that, oh, this person is fleeing the room and can't have this conversation right now, not because it's not important to them, but because they're
having their own threat-based reaction, that can give us a moment of compassion.
It can maybe give us access to do something differently, not to allow it to activate our
own threat response, which is going to perceive it probably differently. Oh, well, they're leaving
because this isn't important for me. And then, of course, going back to this idea of co-regulation,
the more grounded we're able to remain in those moments and the more open our partners or our
loved ones are to co-regulating with us, I mean, we can actually help them calm down from those stressful
reactive moments so that then they can shift their focus. They can actually shift the point
of the brain that they're operating from and hear us and speak to us and negotiate what's happening
in a much more calm and rational way. But I like to add that point in because sometimes we
want to shake our partners and just get them to hear us in this moment where they're a million miles away or they're screaming and yelling.
And unfortunately, those aren't the moments where they're going to be able to hear us until they're in a calmer brain state, quite literally.
They're not going to be focused on what we're saying.
They're going to be locked and loaded in their perspective and their nervous system is going to be locked and loaded in their habitual way that they need to do right then to find the safety.
This is fascinating because people watching or listening typically are the type of people that want to improve their life.
They want to grow.
They want to find tools to have more awareness, more personal power, more progress, all these different things.
So I'm assuming people watching and listening
might resonate with this. Why is it so challenging for an individual
who has been in a trauma-bonded relationship and now they're aware of it,
or they're in a family that has maybe had some stagnant behaviors and patterns that doesn't want to grow. Why is it
so hard for one individual in a family or a relationship to try to improve and grow and
develop new habits and transform themselves and think differently and talk differently and act
differently? Why is it so challenging in a family dynamic or an intimate relationship to grow when others aren't willing to grow?
While we all are evolving creatures, I mean, I think it's kind of intrinsically what the experience of being human is.
It's a process of evolving, becoming, process of movement.
Yet at the same time, our nervous system is wired to prefer the familiar. Simply,
we don't like change. While we can change and we can create incredible change and transformation,
our nervous system actually prefers to stay the same. It finds change and movement very stressful.
So when faced with change, often ourselves even, how to do the work was really around that concept
of the resistance and the reason why we're so stuck in these habitual patterns because
anytime we set the intention to do different and then more so when we
follow through with making new choices we do meet that pull back to that
familiar through the thoughts in our mind the discomfort in our body before
we know it we're right back in those habitual patterns. So we struggle to change even though we can change. Our nervous system prefers us not to. And our
relationships equally struggle when we begin to experience someone anew or when we're the person
making new choices, especially in a family where dynamics and roles have been repeated and
practiced and validated for so long, then really like dominoes,
right? Here's someone new that's maybe putting a new perspective on the family experience.
Might be really difficult to hear, right? A different truth about how it was when we have
our own rehearsed story of how the family is or isn't or whatever it is. More so when someone
begins to act in a new way, then chances are there's going to be some
impact on that dynamic. There's going to be a challenge to the individual identity. Sometimes
it's the challenge to the family identity, what we thought we were, now maybe we're not as much.
And then there's going to be a reorganization of the different roles within the family. So again,
it comes down to change. How equipped is each individual in whatever relationship, dyad or family unit, to deal with the stress of change? And as far as I see it, a lot of us who are raised with past generations were not yet equipped. We didn't have the tools. We didn't have the resources. We didn't have the attuned caretaking in our childhood to learn how to navigate the stress of change.
learn how to navigate the stress of change. Wow.
I know you've talked about this before on here, but how did you, for those that didn't
hear this in a previous interview, how did you navigate this as you were evolving, changing,
growing, developing in your 20s, 30s with your family dynamic?
Not in your intimate relationship, although that has evolved and changed as well, but
let's start with the family dynamic before we talk about intimate dynamic.
Yeah.
It was really challenging in my family.
Coming from a family that was very boundary-less, codependent.
We had a very unified family identity.
I was kind of taught growing up that family is everything with this idea of putting family,
family needs first, even going back to this concept of selfishness.
So all of that was kind of ingrained
in my belief system and very dynamically, like I was sharing when we began, showed up in how I
showed up or how little I showed up in my relationship. So as I started to become aware
and see all of the moments where I wasn't giving myself space and it was glaringly present in my
relationship with my family, that I was living actually in quite close physical proximity. By this point, I had moved home to the Philadelphia area. They were
living right outside of Philadelphia. So I had endless opportunity to be at family dinner on
Sunday or my mom's standard doctor's appointment with a lot of health issues that continued with
my mom until her old age. So saying that to say there was a lot of the same dynamic happening at home and I was awakening
to the possibility of and necessity for me of creating some more distance of not being endlessly
available of beginning to set new boundaries and for the better part of several months I would try
I would try to decline invitations I would try to decline phone calls and not be immediately
available and I say try because it was always met with.
A running theme in my family was when there was distance and especially contact immediately
because there was so much health trauma that happened, health concerns and worry and anxiety,
the immediate belief or worry would be when someone was out of contact for an unpredictable
amount of time, it must be because something terrible happened to them. Are they in the hospital? Are they sick?
Is something wrong? So there was a history of fear. History of fear. Which would create this
hypervigilant monitoring of contact. When I didn't call, for instance, on the regular,
you know, weekly phone call, it was, you know, is everything okay? Just tell me everything's okay.
regular, you know, weekly phone call. It was, you know, is everything okay? Just tell me everything is okay. And I would call at a very particular time frame up until this period of time where I
was like, well, wait a minute, you're only doing that, right? To placate this kind of anxiety
cycle. You don't actually want to be calling in this moment. Yes, I want to contact with my family,
but I didn't need to have regular contact every three days to tell them that I was alive, right?
Right.
So saying that to say, I tried to put up boundaries to create separation,
to create distance and space for me to begin to honor what I wanted and needed. By this point, I was building a practice. I was in a committed relationship. I had other things that I wanted
to be putting my time and attention to. It was always met with this fear, this worry that would
escalate into, I mean mean I would get texts like
Jesus Christ Nicole just tell us you're okay you know we're getting worried we're going to call
hospitals like endless so I came to the really difficult decision to make a break and to take
I always kind of start to say ask for space but I didn't really ask for space I more or less told
my family that I was going to take space away from the
family unit, that I would be unavailable for any sort of obligation or anything for the foreseeable
future. And because I didn't trust myself to communicate to them in person, I was so afraid
that when my mom started to cry or my dad became upset because my mom was upset or my sister was
devastated because her and I were very trauma bonded in a codependent relationship trying to navigate my mom's health.
I didn't trust myself to stand in my boundary. So I took the opportunity to write a very long
email expressing things that I hadn't fully been able to share with them in terms of what
I was coming to realize and how things in the past had impacted me
and end it with that statement that I was taking time away. And I didn't know how much time I would
want to take or need to take, nor did I know how they would react to my request. I mean,
I was very much aware of the possibility that they would be so devastated and hurt
that the door wouldn't be open on the other side of it. But at that point, I knew
I'm probably from that deeper intuitive place. My heart was telling me that I did need more space
than I was able to create. So it ended up being the better part of, I think, 18 months before I
started to really get curious about where they were at. I had built a lot of self-trust in that
18 months, meaning I was
getting more confident that I could engage with them again. And if the dynamic was exactly as I
left it, I was gaining more confident that I could continue to maintain my boundaries and to
live into the relationship dynamic that I wanted, regardless of what they were unable or able to do.
And very gratefully, not only did they email me back near immediately,
they let me know that they had been in family therapy and individual therapy
and all the different types of therapy since I had ended contact with them.
And while it was very devastating, they, on some level,
were appreciative of the opportunity that it gave them and us to kind of look at things newly.
that it gave them and us to kind of look at things newly.
We reengaged contact over several family therapy sessions, which felt very safe to me because I wanted to have a contained conversation,
not knowing essentially what I was walking into.
And I signed online for that first Zoom session,
and I saw my mom, my dad, and my sister for the first time in eight months.
And we had some difficult conversations and had some future-based conversations
and where I was able to kind of acknowledge
what I wanted and needed
in the relationships moving forward
and intended to create for us.
And since then, it's just been really a gift
in a lot of ways.
We've been able to not only reorganize as a family,
we've been able to separate.
That has actually allowed us to deepen
and build like deeper, actual, real now authentic connections, which has been really beautiful.
I started a healing journey of 30. For those that aren't aware of their emotion traumas,
and also those that don't have tools in a healthy way to to navigate
those what would be the process would you say let's say give it a framework yeah it's a healing
trauma is it like a if you could simplify it not that you can but if it's like there's four steps
to healing trauma three step one be aware two like because it's really hard to do it on your own. So I'm going to read you the chapter titles. Cool. Okay?
Because this is the journey.
Yes.
It's my, this is my journey from recovering from trauma.
In that process, I share many, many methods and tools that one can use immediately.
Yeah. And also introduce the therapeutic practices that changed and saved
my life.
And in introducing those practices, I actually give ways that you can do them in real time
so that you can say, oh, this was really soothing for me.
Or I just listened to Gabby do some IFS with Lewis.
I want to look further into IFS.
But the journey looks to me like this.
And then I think we all have our own individual
journeys. But my hope in this book and the intention here is to help the reader, one,
know that they're not alone. And to know that there is a guided path from trauma to profound
freedom and inner peace. There's no way I would put my face on that cover if I couldn't stand
behind that. Okay, so here we go. So the first chapter one is become willing to become free.
Willing to become free means you can't even open this book if you don't have a desire.
To want to be free.
To want to be free, to look more closely, to even just have a mustard seed of hope that
there could be a better way.
How does someone start the willingness process?
Well, if they're still listening, they're willing.
Okay, good.
Yeah.
You have a curiosity, you're willing.
If you're here, you're willing.
Yeah.
And even if you tuned into this episode, you're willing.
Because I'm sure there'll be trauma somewhere in the title or whatever you decide, but it'll
be something that's going to be an acknowledgement.
Yeah, there's something in that for me.
Many, many, many more people are willing these days than ever before. I think that if I'd written this book five years ago, I'd have a half the audience that I have now.
Right. I mean that. Okay. For this specific content, chapter two is become brave enough
to wonder. So in my case, I literally didn't remember and had to be brave enough to wonder what was there.
And in other people's cases, they just have to maybe wonder, not that they don't necessarily remember what happened to them, but to wonder what could be behind these triggers.
What could be some feelings behind these triggers?
I did a podcast with somebody the other day and
she was like i have she's like my co-host has so much trauma and she's so open about it and she's
like i have no trauma within five minutes we were like the neglectful father and the this and that
you know like it was just like instant and everybody's got it everybody's got it so you
just have to become brave enough to wonder and it might be a little t but becomes big t over time
what was interesting she's like i guess I just have little T, little T.
And then she started to describe her story.
And we were both like, that's big T trauma.
So chapter three is why we run.
So what is it?
What is the reason that we're running?
Why are we running and recognizing, okay, we have this trigger.
We have a feeling behind it.
We have a reaction to it.
And then what could it
be is it just so it's so painful for us to face it that's why we run most of the time that's right
it's just so hard for us to what mentally emotionally underneath all of the unresolved
traumas big t small t from our past is the belief system that we are unlovable and inadequate. How, and we did not, you said
beautifully that now little Louis has big Louis helping him process this stuff that he wished
he'd had when he was little. But when we're young, we don't, and if we don't have a caretaker
or a primary care caretaker that has a secure attachment to us, helping us in those young moments
to feel safe and seen and soothed and secure,
as I talk about later and I'll get into that,
then we literally have to rely on the protectors.
All those storylines that we build up.
The parts.
Yeah.
The challenge is, I mean,
how many parents have tools,
are healthy in their own emotional
so how do they how do you raise a kid who's healthy when so many people are struggling
with their own challenges read the book yeah i'm so serious because then we get into well
if you fast forward to chapter nine it's about reparenting yourself but so much of this book
is if you go through this book you are you will be a better parent without a shadow of a doubt.
I mean, I've got a whole, I've got a chapter in here about hiding behind the body that we have impermissible rage locked up in our back pain, in our headaches, in our gastrointestinal issues, in our insomnia, eczema.
And I talk about the psychosomatic effects of the mental disturbances that have not been resolved and how they affect the body.
And then speaking about shame and then going even further and IFS and all of the somatic work that we can do and then it carries on.
So I take you through, this is the playbook.
Yes.
This is the playbook.
And now one thing I'm really cautious of with the reader is not every chapter is going to be right for where someone is right now.
Right.
For you, you could pick this up and be like, yeah, I could do all of that. Or I've done half that. I'm going to do more. And for Marta, it's the same. It could be somebody on the street could
be like, okay, I just have to read this right now and just take it in. Yeah. I can't even get started.
I got to come back in a year to do the exercises. Now. Okay. So once we're aware and once we have
the willingness and we're starting to wonder and look at some of these things and we say, okay, here's two things from my past that I haven't been willing to tell friends,
partners, husbands, wives, spouses, parents, like I've neglected to talk about these things. They're
so shameful. I'm so afraid to talk about them. Let's say it's one thing, two things, whatever.
What is the next step? Once you become aware of your trauma and you know there's something you
want to heal is it well there's a number of different therapeutic experiences you could go
through here's a few to try is it everyone does it differently some people more introspective and
do journaling prompts others need to speak to someone is what are the best ways to heal and
really integrate the healing?
Because I think it's, again, I don't think it's like I'm aware and I'm healed.
It's like you've got to integrate the practice.
And every time you're triggered, can you breathe and respond differently?
Integration is the word, actually.
It's the word.
And, well, like I said, everyone's going to resonate with different methods in this book
that are appropriate for them at this time.
with different methods in this book that are appropriate for them at this time.
You can trust your own internal system and intuitive force to know what's safe enough for you today.
You'll feel it in your body.
So for me, I wasn't going to be able to do the somatic experiencing, the body-based work
until X period, like two years ago, because that was when I
could feel safe enough in my own body and almost back in my body. Like I would just departed my
body and I was like back in my human body. What somatic experiences you mean, like just body work?
So SE, which is somatic experiencing I write about in this book, it's invented by Peter Levine, is built on the premise that trauma is the
inability to be present.
And when we have deep-rooted trauma, yes, it's activated in our thoughts at times, but
primarily it's body-based.
So we have these triggers that then send...
Store to the body. The body keeps the score. Yeah.
Correct. So they send these messages, these triggers send a message to the brain that says
fight, flight, freeze. And so what happens as a child is whatever you were unable to do,
like in my case, let's say I needed to push someone off of
me. That became, I mean, I was not able to complete that, that full blown, you know,
so fight, flight, and then it froze, right? So if you freeze in time, you're, you're stuck,
that, that energy gets truncated in your system and you become stuck in the neural loop of fight,
flight, you know, and then, and then you get stuck and then fight of fight, flight, you know, and then you get stuck and
then fight, flight, stuck, you know, and that repetition, repetition.
And so the beautiful process of somatic experiencing is about no storyline.
It's not about what happened, where were you.
It's all about the body and going right into the body, going right into the presence of
the body and allowing the body
to show you what it needs to do to fully reprocess the experience. And so in some cases it's very
slow, right? So it could be like, if you wanted to punch somebody, it's like a really, really slow
movement. And I give, and this is body-based work. So the practices that I give in that chapter
are also things that you can do right now to start to ground your body.
So a heart hold, like putting your right hand on your heart and your left hand on your belly.
And actually, interestingly-
Hugging yourself.
Try this out.
Put your right hand on your heart and your left hand on your belly.
How does that feel?
That feels good.
Okay.
Switch hands.
Left hand.
Does that feel better or worse?
Different because I'm used to putting my right hand over my heart
so not as not as soothing not as natural there you go okay so it's important i just learned this i
interviewed dan siegel and i was doing this and he's like well you put the right hand on your
heart but i do the left and he's like 70 of people put their right hand on their heart and they feel
that safety and the rest kind of do the left so you have to check on which side's right for you but the heart hold
or a head hold these practices are really profound for settling your nervous system
uh breathing in for two strokes out one long stroke if you're feeling overly anxious and
activated so uh tapping eft which you've talked about tapping on the gamut point. So there's a
point between your ring finger and your pinky finger. And if you're in that stressed out place
and you're getting in the loop, tap, I am safe and tap and just repeat. I am safe. I am safe.
A power pose, like standing like Superman, you you know superwoman that can change your nervous system so
these practices are really body-based practices for letting your system settle in the moment and
then of course i say in the book if you want to go further find a somatic experiencing therapist
and here's how yes and and all of the methods that i was guided to for my recovery were all
spiritual therapeutic practices i can say this because I'm not in the
clinical space, but I believe that they're all extraordinarily spiritual, the specifics. So EMDR,
which is eye movement desensitization and reprocessing, that's designed again to help
you reprocess that loop. So once we figure out which therapeutic experiences are best for us,
right, because it's going to be different for each one of us.
What would you say, you know, can we fully heal something?
Yeah.
How long does it take?
You know, is it based on the trauma and how long we've set it stored?
Is there hope for people to say, I don't have this trigger for the rest of my life?
Yeah.
I want to feel like peaceful.
Well, let me ask you this.
When things happen, I don't want to be reactive.
Let me ask you this.
In general, how do you feel? Incredible. Yeah. Yeah, I feel good.. Well, let me ask you this. When things happen, I don't want to be reactive. Let me ask you this. In general, how do you feel?
Incredible.
Yeah.
Yeah, I feel good.
Me too.
Yeah.
But for 25 years, I felt a lot of inner stress, inner conflict and anger.
Thank you to the 25 years for all that it offered you to get you to where you are now.
Right.
But you feel awesome.
Yeah.
So do I.
now, but you feel awesome. So do I. So while it's been a good, committed devotional practice,
we are living proof that there is a guided path from trauma to profound freedom and inner peace.
Absolutely.
We're living that. And it doesn't mean that we don't still have triggers. It doesn't mean that there isn't more of the crystal to shine. It doesn't mean that I still don't go to therapy every single week and sometimes twice a week.
But because I want to continue to care for and honor and respect all of the parts of who I am.
Yeah.
I mean, I come from the sports background, which you know.
And I'm a big fan of having accountability for your goals.
If I'm talking about sports background, it's like, and I know I can't do it alone in athletics.
So why try to do it alone in my emotional growth?
Totally.
My mental growth, my spiritual growth.
I can go pretty far on my own, but I think it's just good to have the accountability for whatever that looks like for people.
far on my own, but I think it's just good to have the accountability for whatever that looks like for people. I'm not saying they need therapy every week or they need to invest in something,
but it's good to have accountability however you find it. I agree. I think it's really powerful.
It's one of the reasons that the 12-step program works so well. It's because of the fellowship.
It's because you have a sponsor. It's because you have meetings. People are looking for you.
Where is that person today? I just got a text message from one of my friends who had been sober.
Where is that person today?
You know, I just got a text message from one of my friends who had been sober.
We've been sober for 16 years.
He's been sober 17 years.
And I was the first person I met in AA.
And he texted me today and he's like, check it in.
You still good?
Yeah.
Check it in. How long were you in AA for?
I'm still in AA.
Really?
Yes.
So once you started, you never stopped?
Some people stop.
So is that once a month?
Is that once a week?
What is that?
Well, really depends on who you are and what you need right so i i go to meetings now you can go to
zoom meetings i go to meetings in person sometimes but mostly zoom since since the pandemic
unfortunately right right is it hard for people who started aa to not need it anymore?
Or are you kind of like, can you transcend that?
I guess you can move into a different type of program.
You can move into a different type of therapy.
There's plenty of people when they get long-term sobriety
that they start to feel less resonant
with some of the meetings and things,
but it's suggested and I think recommended
to stay close to it because you don't want to
forget where you came from right uh i think everyone's path is different sure i actually
share a story in the book about sharing about i believe and i god bermate would say this and other
other folks in this trauma i've been watching his stuff i love he's incredible yeah i gotta
interview him yes you do it's amazing uh what he would say is that, and I agree with this completely, is that trauma is the root
cause of addiction.
That's what he says a lot.
100%.
Couldn't agree more.
Because if you're not, yeah, if you're not, you don't need addiction if you're not traumatized
by something, right?
If you feel peace inside, why would you need to reach for some coping?
Correct.
And we all have trauma, and so we all have reactive ways of acting, but the bigger the
trauma, oftentimes the bigger the coping mechanism,
a.k.a. the firefighter part, and that's an addiction, right?
So addiction is a way of, a huge way of putting out the fire.
So the root cause, or the root of addiction is trauma,
or unresolved trauma, it sounds like.
That's correct.
So if you want to eliminate your addiction, your negative addictions, the key is to figure out where's the trauma and start healing that trauma.
Yeah, that would be the goal.
But I noticed in my own, with a lot of sober people in my life, that they all have had similar experiences to myself and to you and big T traumas.
And even being clean and sober, it's still terrible.
I mean, I was sober 11 years before I was ready to face into my big T trauma.
Interesting.
Do you feel like if you would have faced it year one or two,
do you think you would have?
I wouldn't have been able to, and I'll explain to you why.
So I said to my therapist when I remembered that trauma,
why now?
Why am I remembering this now?
And she said, because you're safe enough to remember.
You've been in enough therapy.
You have enough spiritual foundation.
You're safe enough to remember.
You've got to get support group.
You've got to get partnership.
Yeah.
Interesting.
That's right.
But if he is saying that the root of addiction is trauma, wouldn't we want to start going
to the trauma first?
But if you're saying, if you don't feel safe enough to face it, it may take you time. So that's the point. So I think going to the
trauma is so delicate and gentle. And it's like peeling back those layers of the onion. And anyone
that's listening right now, still listening, because many people might have just been like,
I'm so activated. This is a lot for me. And they'll come back in a half a year or whatever
a year from now and listen again. But the bottom line is, is that we all have these traumas and
we're running from them. And to go head first into them would be like ripping off the bandaid
or just being in the dark and all of a sudden walking into the brightest light you've ever
seen. And it would maybe blast you out. And can happen it does happen people do remember when they're not ready to
and even when you are ready it's terrifying to remember these things
or accept things but yeah it's you have to go slow
what about when um someone says you know i'm with this person they make me happy what does that happen when you're looking for someone to, you know, I'm with this person, they make me happy.
What does that happen when you're looking for someone to make you happy in the relationship?
Well, the day they don't, you will say they make me unhappy or they don't make me happy.
But it's they, they do to me.
I'm the recipient of what they do.
They have the power.
They can give, they can withhold.
I depend, I crave, I long. They can withhold. I depend.
I crave.
I long.
I yearn.
I respond to them.
And what should we be thinking of instead of this person makes me happy?
How should we approach that?
We give each other a good foundation from which we can each launch into our respective worlds
that's cool a home is a foundation with wings or i like to think a good relationship is a foundation
with wings so you feel the stability that you need, the security, the safety, the predictability as much as you can, as much as our life allows us.
And at the same time, you have the wings to go and explore, discover, be curious, be in the world, sometimes together and sometimes apart.
What do you think happens when people are in a relationship and let's
say they're together for a year or a couple years and they decide okay we
want to get married but maybe one or two each of the individuals don't accept
something fully about the other person maybe there's like three things that
they really don't like or don't accept or wish they change. I don't know I'm
just trying to think of something where you're like I love so much we have We have this great connection. We have so much fun and we're growing and building
a relationship. But behind their back, you're telling your girlfriend or your guy friends,
I wish they'd changed this, this or this. I don't like this thing. I don't like this thing.
That's ambivalence. What does that mean? Meaning that you have to be able to live with the
contradictory thoughts and feelings of what you like and what you don't like.
What makes you want to be here and what makes you not want to be here.
What happens when we don't accept that, though?
And we like, you know, hopefully they'll change out of this or grow out of this thing that I don't like about them.
What happens when we're in that space?
That means that when you get married, you're not just making a deal with your partner,
you're making a secret deal with yourself
that this is going to change.
And then when it doesn't, you get very upset or pissed
because your deal with yourself,
which you never said out loud,
it's a private bargain you do with yourself.
And all of us, when we pick someone,
make private bargains with ourselves too.
And it's often that bargain that is broken more than the one because the partner never promised you that this would change
exactly and so it just creates more resentment when we want something to change we don't accept
expectations are resentment in the make uh-huh the more expectations you have the more things
you can be disappointed of afterwards right especially when they're not articulated I think what you need to know is what are some of the things if
you are with someone who if you if you go back to the erotic connection if you
with someone with whom you have a very difficult erotic connection and you know
that this is something that really is important to you being seen being touched
being held being kissed being stroked being made love to is really a language that is
very important to you and you don't want to live without it then listen to
yourself mm-hmm if it's not an important part for you because that is not the way
you express yourself most then then you know that this is not the center person the centerpiece of your relationship you have other things that
you share if you know that you don't want children or the reverse that the
other person doesn't want children don't go in there hoping that they're gonna
change your mind their mind because that is not fair to you nor to them if you
are with someone who says I do not want to marry and you to them if you are with someone who says I do not want
to marry and you do or if you are with someone who says I see love plural I do
not see myself just with one partner and this is very clear to you that that's
not okay or that you want it differently listen to yourself those are values that
involve life decisions that you don't sit there waiting
until they're going to catch up with you.
And what happens when two people's values are not in alignment?
Can they still have a beautiful life story,
or do you feel like there's always going to be some type of unnecessary struggle?
No, I think it depends on the degree to which people can live with what we call a sense of differentiation.
Meaning, if I am okay wanting to go to church, and that's not part of what you do.
We come from the same faith or we come from different religions.
And one of us wants to adhere to their tradition and wants to participate in the practices of their religion and
Is okay doing it without the other?
It doesn't feel that that needs to be shared
Doesn't experience every time they sit in church. I wish you were sitting next to me
Why do I have to come here alone all the time, you know, I I that so it's accepting someone's choices. It ex it's it's it's accepting that your choice if
you practice it you can accept to do it without your partner so it's you accepting it it's you
accepting it of course the other person but the other person can often tell you you go if you
like to be there i don't want to go there on sunday morning other things to do with your time
sure okay religion is a major one on that travel is another one on that children it's
difficult to say to someone I'll have a child alone you don't have to
participate but it is easier to say I will continue to practice my religion
because it is central to me you don't have to be a part of that we have other
things that we will share mm-hmm but you need to know to be a part of that we have other things that we will share but you need to
know to do that and feel okay about it if all the time now that doesn't mean that on occasion you
don't miss and you wish you part of it there's a great sermon i so wish you had been there to hear
it great but if it's chronic and you just feel this hole all the time and you know from the
beginning that it is a unifier for you and your partner is and your
partner doesn't show curiosity because you can come from something else and say I'm interested
in this let me let me see what this sure if you want to go back to live in your home country and
your partner has zero intention of living where they are listen to them don't hope if they tell you yes I would like that at some
point then listen carefully if they're saying this to pacify you if they're
saying this to make sure that you don't leave them or if they truly intend to do
this at some time and don't hope something's gonna change don't hope
they're gonna do something later after you get married or no start from the
place that it's not going to happen.
See how it is for you.
Can you accept that?
Can you accept that?
Then, if things change, all the better.
But don't start with the hope that it will be different.
Right.
And how does jealousy play in relationships?
I used to be extremely jealous and insecure.
I remember that.
And then something
switched in me, I don't know, five years ago, six years ago, maybe somewhere around that time where
I was like, you know what, this does not support me or my relationship at all. This jealous nature
or this. That you knew even when you were jealous. Oh yeah, I knew, but I couldn't let it go. Right.
So it's not what you said to yourself
that changed what you experienced. Something changed. Yeah. I don't know exactly what it was,
but I remember just being like, I'm tired of this. I'm tired of feeling this way.
So what did you change? Not what did you say to yourself?
I think I changed fully accepting the person's decisions and lifestyle and what they were doing
and trusting that everything was going to be okay
and not needing to be jealous I think I was just afraid like are they talking to some guy or some
you know is there something behind my back that they're doing I don't know it was a worry of like
an anxiousness right so and then I was just like wait wait wait yes part of what accompanies
jealousy you know jealousy starts at one and a
half year old okay it's not an early emotion interesting it needs a sense of self first it
needs the beginning of self-awareness as a baby to be able to experience jealousy it's not like
fear and joy and disgust and sadness so So where does it come from? And anger. What is it?
Where it comes from and how evolutionary psychology
has all kinds of explanations for jealousy.
But where it comes from interpersonally
is that it requires having a sense of who you are
before you begin to experience how you respond
to what other people are doing.
I want that too.
I don't want know I don't
want to lose something what changed for you is that you became more confident
yeah you felt less that your sense of self-worth is in the hands of the other
person and that in they turned away from you that means that you are not enough
is that you're gonna lose them or that they're going to leave you. That's what changed. And then I'd be like hurt or empty or sad or in pain because of their actions.
And I think that's 100%.
I think I didn't feel like I was good enough or something where I was just like,
you know what, it's all going to be okay.
You know, if they do something or...
But this, it's all going to be okay, followed in different sense of yourself.
Absolutely.
Where you were less in a panic, less in the grip of they're going to abandon me and I'm
not good enough.
And from that place, you began to say, it's okay.
Absolutely.
Nothing bad is going to happen to me.
That's how we diminish jealousy.
It's not how we react to what the other person does.
It's how we feel about ourselves that changes how we react to what the other person does. It's how we feel about
ourselves that changes how we react about what the other person does. Absolutely. And it's been
an incredible freedom and gift that I received or gave myself. But it took me 30 something years
to learn it. And it feels incredible. it feels incredible but for years I struggled with
it and I think a lot of people in general at least guy friends that I knew growing up struggled with
it as well where they didn't feel comfortable or maybe their female partner didn't feel comfortable
with them doing certain things without them there or whatever and now I'm just like at peace of
whatever my partner wants to do.
I'm like, live your life.
Have you ever had a conversation
about jealousy with your girlfriend?
I've talked about it.
Because it's highly cultural.
Interesting.
Yeah, I mean, I've talked about it with her.
I'm like, I'm so glad I'm not jealous.
Right.
But Americans think that being jealous
diminishes them.
They pride themselves when they say, I'm not jealous.
Really?
Yes.
It's a kind of a thing like it's not a nice thing to feel.
Other cultures see jealousy.
Or Latin cultures.
It's intrinsic to love.
It's how you love.
If you're not jealous.
You don't love the person enough.
Yes.
That's a distortion in the other direction.
But it's very cultural jealousy.
That's a distortion in the other direction.
But it's very cultural jealousy.
Jealousy, if you track the magazines in America, is a subject that disappears for decades sometimes and then suddenly reemerges.
But it is often seen as a negative emotion.
It isn't seen as an emotion that is so simply part and parcel of the experience of love.
Is jealousy then a healthy emotion in a life story? It sometimes can be a perfectly healthy emotion and sometimes it can be very very challenging and sometimes it can
become pathological. It covers a whole range. Where is jealousy a good thing when someone
has jealousy? When is jealousy a good thing when have you experienced jealousy
and you didn't feel like it was debilitating and crippling you i mean debilitate i mean
yeah i don't know i think there might be i don't i mean it was always debilitating for me i think
before i learned to process it and and let go. Because I realized it wasn't supporting my thoughts and my emotions.
And I was saying or doing things that wasn't the highest level of love, I would say.
Or like the most conscious way to communicate, you know, when those scenarios would happen.
So I just realized it wasn't supporting me.
And I didn't feel good when I had that emotion or those jealous thoughts in a relationship. But if you were part of a culture that told you
that jealousy is not something you want to get rid of,
but it actually signals certain things to you
and it communicates certain aspects of love,
you would have had a different experience.
Maybe, yeah.
Now, when is it positive?
Probably the easiest example for me is
if I ask people all over the world, by the way,
when do you find yourself most drawn to your partner?
Not sexually attractive, just drawn to.
When other people are interested in them or?
That's one of them.
That is one of the main four.
When other people are flirting or giving them attention.
Yes.
When I see them with other people, when I see other people captivated by them,
when I see the magnetism that they have over other people,
when I see how others are drawn to them,
when they don't belong to me.
Now, if you are jealous in a feeling
that is really crippling and painful,
then you do not enjoy that.
You feel uncertain.
You feel insecure.
You feel scared.
You feel like they could leave you.
You realize that maybe, you know, they're not attached to you.
But if you are more grounded and if you feel more secure in your connection to your partner and to yourself, then when you see that experience, you have a tingling of jealousy.
But it is a jealousy that actually increases your appreciation for your person.
Interesting.
that actually increases your appreciation for your person.
Interesting.
So that's an example of when do people experience jealousy in a way that actually is fueling.
Healthy jealousy.
Right, okay.
But I don't call it healthy and unhealthy
because I don't think this is a puritanical definition of health.
It's just, this is the issue,
is that is it problematic or is it additive?
That makes sense.
It's more than is it healthy or unhealthy.
I think healthy and unhealthy doesn't help us in this moment.
Is it hurting you or the relationship or is it supporting the relationship?
Yes, yes.
So you thought it was four ways.
Yes.
What's the other three then?
So let me ask you, when do you find yourself most drawn?
What would you say? To Martha Martha I find myself drawn to her
I mean from for me I feel drawn when she loves and accepts me for who I am when she's affectionate
when she um is a pre you know sharing appreciation with me and gratitude with me when she's joyful and her most expressed self like just pure energy and love and fun and play um
i have a lot of appreciation and admiration for her when she is living her dreams also like she's
doing what she wants to do fully and i'm like that's inspiring you know it draws me to her
doing what she wants to do fully.
And I'm like, that's inspiring.
You know, it draws me to her.
What else?
I think the fact that she is so in integrity with her word draws me to her because I feel more and more connected and grateful and appreciative
and safe in the environment.
So, I mean, sexually, so many different ways that I'm drawn to her.
But, you know, when I say the first four, it's just simply because I've gone around the world asking this question.
And I just began to see themes, right?
The first one is when I see my partner in their element.
Yeah.
Doing their thing.
Doing their thing.
Competent, radiant in their element.
It could be on stage at work on a horse
on a slope um you know but it is basically when they are self-sufficient and when they are radiant
and they're in their element and they're passionate about something and they are alive
and all of those things also mean that i am not needing to be burdened by a certain form of emotional caretaking.
She doesn't need me.
They don't need me.
That's it.
And when they don't need you, you can want them.
Yes.
If they're always needing you, how does that affect the relationship?
So let's wait a second.
So they don't need you in that moment.
And that not needing you clears the pathway for desire.
It allows you to want.
Because if you were needed and you need to take care of them, then you are loving, but you're not necessarily desiring.
And what happens over time when people say this, and the admiration is extremely important here, because I think it's much bigger than respect. Admiration involves a certain idealization and it means that there is a sense
of otherness. She's different. She's other. She's her own thing. And in this space between her and
you, between me and the other, lies the erotic élan. And when people ask about sustaining desire
in the long haul, this is the place.
In their element, in their own way.
Yes.
Not reliant on each other to be.
That's love.
Love and desire, they relate and they also conflict.
And herein lies the mystery of eroticism.
So that's number one in her element.
When she's joyful, when she makes me laugh, those two.
It's like there's a sense of aliveness, of vibrancy, of vitality, of energy.
That is erotic.
That is erotic.
That's the number two.
And usually it means when there is an element of surprise.
Yeah, she's very adventurous.
Because it's unsolicited.
But sometimes people say when my partner is vulnerable.
And I say that is because it's not usual, the case.
Right.
So it's a surprise.
It's a surprise.
If they were always vulnerable, it would not be on the list of when am I most drawn to my partner.
It's because it's different.
It's the side of them I don't get to see so often.
It's the side of me that they don't get to see that often.
So when they accept me fully and I can open up in a different way because it's different, it's unusual, it's out of the ordinary.
That's number two.
Number three is when I see my partner through the eyes of the others.
That's the jealousy piece that you described.
So when you see others admiring or respecting or attracted to sexually or any of those things.
But what does it mean?
It means my partner doesn't belong to me.
It means that other people can look at them too, can fantasize about them too.
I always say your partner doesn't belong to you.
They're just on loan with an option to renew.
Right.
Every day, right?
Exactly.
Interesting.
And the fourth one is when we are apart or when we reunite.
So that desire is also rooted in absence and in longing and not just in being there.
How important is creating space in a relationship, whether you're dating or in a marriage,
and creating day apart, days apart, weeks apart?
And has it ever become too long apart for a relationship to stay
growing if it's months apart or something so the first question is how important is distance
in a relationship I will also add something that I learned from the poet David White
this week when we had a conversation together and he talked about the importance of silence in a relationship not always having to speak or yes or the importance of being able to
be with yourself while being in the presence of the other what would that look like like
reading a book and the person's in the room could be that could be that you go away for
a few weeks because you want to go do a meditation retreat or a project that you're interested in or you know it's the notion that or the or the fact that you
keep certain things to yourself but that you stay in dialogue with yourself and a dialogue that
isn't always shared with your partner when you mean silent with yourself you mean like not speaking
at all for part of this time?
Yes, but you're taking it literally.
It's literally, but it's also the metaphor of it.
So I'll explain the context.
Our conversation was called, because that's your question about how important is distance.
I would say distance is very important in a relationship.
But the way I define it is this.
in a relationship. But the way I define it is this. Every relationship straddles freedom and commitment, togetherness and separateness, connection and independence. Every relationship.
In every relationship, there is often one person who is more inclined to the connection
and one person who is more inclined for the separ and one person who is more inclined for
the separateness one person more afraid of losing the other and one person more
afraid of losing themselves mm-hmm one person more in touch with the fear of
abandonment one person more in touch with the fear of suffocation we all have
both but we organize our relationship in which one of us will take on the fear of suffocation. We all have both, but we organize our relationship in which one
of us will take on the role of this duality. And it might evolve seasonally too. Completely.
So we need connection and we need distance. We need the things that are
joint and together, and we need the things that are separate. The separateness doesn't mean that there is deadness in the relationship.
So when you ask how long can we be apart,
it depends what you do with the space in between.
If you keep the space in between alive,
we are away, we have been together five, six years,
and you have to go do a project, and you're gone for three months.
But during those three months, you have a whole letter writing experience where you are communicating in a very different way than the usual everyday communication.
Every two days or so at night, you sit down and you write a letter, not just what you've done, the catch-up of the day.
not just what you've done, the catch up of the day, but then you create an aliveness to that space in between that can be even richer than when we are living together and we're standing
in the kitchen every morning. That's interesting. That's powerful. Yeah. What would you say was the
biggest challenge that you faced internally throughout relationships that you had to face yourself oh I think you know I
met my husband Jack when I was 22 you're what you're 35 now yes I like it and actually 35
years together yes really 35 years together married yes. Really? 35 years together? Married, married.
Wow, that's amazing.
Now we're together even more than that.
Wow, that's powerful.
You know, but I probably swallowed the romantic ideal quite a bit as a young girl too.
Are you going to meet the right man with this man?
If you meet the right person, you will never feel alone again.
You will never feel lonely.
You will never be sad.
Seriously. feel alone again you will never feel lonely you will never be sad you will seriously you know
whatever you feel you will feel again until some of it you may feel until you drop dead but but you will if it changes it's not because the magical potion of the other person is going
to suddenly sprinkle its dust over you so that was getting rid of some of the myths
how long did it take for you internally to to let that go or evolve or heal those myths ah yeah i
would say the first decade you know um it's slowly over time you begin to you know um you begin to realize that.
I think, you know, I looked up to him.
I still look up to him.
He's a very smart guy.
And I really wouldn't let any idea leave the house
before it was vetted and approved by him.
Interesting.
Is this smart?
Is this good?
Can I publish this?
Getting approval.
Getting approval, you know, from the mentor. Interesting.
That was the first 10 years. Yeah, no, maybe a little bit less than 10, but
certainly five years. Okay. I really needed him to, to, to check everything I would write and
to validate and say it's, it's good. Cause he had the PhD. I don't, you know.
And then finally I was told one day, you know, I have my own things to write.
He said that.
I'm not going to be your professor.
I've got to work.
Yeah, yeah.
And I was just like, oh, who's going to help me?
Who's going to help me?
You know, and beginning to write without depending on him that much was a major transition.
Mating in Captivity was written completely on my own. Without his approval of every chapter. I had an
editor that I hired who was phenomenal but it was no longer, it was not an
emotional dependency, it was a professional relationship. So that was a
major transition. I think also understanding the difference between equality and equity what
is the difference it's not 50 50 the relationship is not no no relationship no it's a hundred a
hundred you know and and complementarity there are certain things that i will never do that
i rely on him and certain things that he will never do and he relies on me and they balance each other out and there's a fundamental sense of fairness
complementarity you know I if I want to go do something it's just go do enjoy
be the best you know this complete generosity and that generosity towards distance or freedom or individuality
this is a very important thing so here's a question for you and for your for your listeners
as well ask yourself you can do it in relation to work you can do it in relation to love to me
that was a very important question i I understood early on that I needed freedom. No, I mean, but differently. I could tolerate the lack of security better than
I could tolerate the lack of freedom. You needed freedom more than security.
So I understood early on that I'm going to be self-employed. Uh-huh. Meaning I can tolerate not knowing when the next check is going to come from,
but I prefer that than somebody telling me when I can take a vacation.
And this was back in the 80s, right?
Yes, yes.
This is my 20s, early 20s.
Yeah, yeah, wow.
I just...
But then I applied it to relationships.
Interesting.
I knew that I need to be with someone to whom I can say, go do your thing.
And someone who says to me, go do your thing.
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