The Tim Ferriss Show - #810: Terry Real — The Therapist Who Breaks All The Rules
Episode Date: May 8, 2025Terry Real is a nationally recognized family therapist, author, and teacher. His book I Don't Want To Talk About It: Overcoming the Secret Legacy of Male Depression, the first book ever writt...en on the topic of male depression, is a national bestseller. His new book, Us: Getting Past You & Me to Build a More Loving Relationship is a New York Times bestseller.Sponsors:Cresset prestigious family office for CEOs, founders, and entrepreneurs: https://cressetcapital.com/tim (book a call today)Ramp easy-to-use corporate cards, bill payments, accounting, and more: https://ramp.com/tim (Get $250 when you join Ramp)Wealthfront high-yield cash account: https://Wealthfront.com/Tim (Start earning 4.00% APY on your short-term cash until you’re ready to invest. And when new clients open an account today, you can get an extra fifty-dollar bonus with a deposit of five hundred dollars or more.) Terms apply. Tim Ferriss receives cash compensation from Wealthfront Brokerage, LLC for advertising and holds a non-controlling equity interest in the corporate parent of Wealthfront Brokerage. See full disclosures here.*For show notes and past guests on The Tim Ferriss Show, please visit tim.blog/podcast.For deals from sponsors of The Tim Ferriss Show, please visit tim.blog/podcast-sponsorsSign up for Tim’s email newsletter (5-Bullet Friday) at tim.blog/friday.For transcripts of episodes, go to tim.blog/transcripts.Discover Tim’s books: tim.blog/books.Follow Tim:Twitter: twitter.com/tferriss Instagram: instagram.com/timferrissYouTube: youtube.com/timferrissFacebook: facebook.com/timferriss LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/timferrissPast guests on The Tim Ferriss Show include Jerry Seinfeld, Hugh Jackman, Dr. Jane Goodall, LeBron James, Kevin Hart, Doris Kearns Goodwin, Jamie Foxx, Matthew McConaughey, Esther Perel, Elizabeth Gilbert, Terry Crews, Sia, Yuval Noah Harari, Malcolm Gladwell, Madeleine Albright, Cheryl Strayed, Jim Collins, Mary Karr, Maria Popova, Sam Harris, Michael Phelps, Bob Iger, Edward Norton, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Neil Strauss, Ken Burns, Maria Sharapova, Marc Andreessen, Neil Gaiman, Neil de Grasse Tyson, Jocko Willink, Daniel Ek, Kelly Slater, Dr. Peter Attia, Seth Godin, Howard Marks, Dr. Brené Brown, Eric Schmidt, Michael Lewis, Joe Gebbia, Michael Pollan, Dr. Jordan Peterson, Vince Vaughn, Brian Koppelman, Ramit Sethi, Dax Shepard, Tony Robbins, Jim Dethmer, Dan Harris, Ray Dalio, Naval Ravikant, Vitalik Buterin, Elizabeth Lesser, Amanda Palmer, Katie Haun, Sir Richard Branson, Chuck Palahniuk, Arianna Huffington, Reid Hoffman, Bill Burr, Whitney Cummings, Rick Rubin, Dr. Vivek Murthy, Darren Aronofsky, Margaret Atwood, Mark Zuckerberg, Peter Thiel, Dr. Gabor Maté, Anne Lamott, Sarah Silverman, Dr. Andrew Huberman, and many more.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Hello boys and girls ladies and germs, this is Tim Ferriss welcome to another episode of the Tim Ferriss show my guest today
teaches people how to save themselves in their relationships when they are on the brink he is known as a turnaround expert and
What he teaches tactics and strategies are incredibly practical
I've used them in my own life his fans include dr
Peter Tia Kevin Rose and many others And he breaks all the rules of therapy, which is part of what makes him very, very interesting
to me because the results are undeniable.
Terry Reel is a nationally recognized family therapist, author, and teacher.
He's known for his groundbreaking work on men and male psychology, as well as his work
on gender and couples.
His book, I Don't Want to Talk About It, Overcoming the Secret Legacy of
Male Depression, the first mainstream book ever written on the topic of male depression,
is a national bestseller that really put him on the map in a big way. His new book,
Us Getting Past You and Me to Build a More Loving Relationship, is a New York Times bestseller.
And I've also featured snippets of one of his audiobooks, Fierce Intimacy, on this podcast before as a guest episode because
what he teaches can be applied immediately in all of your relationships, I would go so far to say.
Terry's Relational Life Institute offers training for therapists and workshops for couples and
individuals. And I will tell you in advance, chances are you are going to disagree with some
of what he says in this episode. So don't throw the baby out with the bathwater. If something gets your hackles up,
just breathe and continue listening and you will find something of value that you can apply in your life today or this week.
Sometime soon, I promise you. You can find all things Terry at terryreal.com.
That's t-e-r-r-y-r-e-a-l dot com. We're going to get right to a very wide-ranging
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$250 when you join ramp. Just go to ramp.com slash Tim. That's ramp.com slash Tim cards cards issued by Sutton Bank member FDIC terms and conditions apply. Terri, so nice to see you. Thanks for making the time for the show.
Oh, it's wonderful to be here, Tim. I'm a big fan.
And I am a big fan and it all started with two people. I would say, Peter Attia first on the topic of male depression
and then Kevin Rose on couples therapy specifically. So we've had, I suppose, indirectly and directly
a few years, or I've had a few years of Terry Real and I thought that I would share more
of Terry live and in person with my audience for a
number of reasons. And as we discussed before recording, I thought we would
start with some stories, story time with Terry and I will cue it with bread.
Pumpernickel.
Pumpernickel. Exactly. As all good stories begin, Pumpernickel. So could you fill in
the blanks with that particular story, please?
So as you know, Tim, my specialty, a couple on the brink that no one else has been able
to help. That's what I've been doing for 20 years and that's what I teach. So here's a
couple on the brink. The issue was that he was a chronic liar. I teach my therapist, you pay attention to what people report, you pay attention to what
they do in front of you and you pay attention to how you feel.
And he's one of these guys, I walk in and I go, the sky is blue.
And he goes, well, not really blue.
It's really, the guy is a champion evader.
So I get that he's an evader.
Then I ask a relational question. A standard
therapist would think, oh, where'd you get that? No. There's somebody else on the other
side of that habit. He learned it. So I say to him, who controlled you growing up? He's
an evader. Who was he evading? Sure enough, dad, military man, how he sat, how he ate, his
friends. I said, well, what did that little boy do with that controlling father? And Timmy
smiles and that's the smile of resistance. I like that smile, very mischievous smile.
And he says to me, ready? I lied. Dad said, don't play with Henry. I played with Henry and told him I was playing with Tom.
Smart boy.
I always teach my students be respectful
of the exquisite intelligence
of that adaptive little boy or girl that you were.
You did just what you needed to do to get by.
But guess what?
You're not that little boy.
Your wife is not your father. Maybe you're on
death's door here. Maybe it's time to change this up. That's it. One session. Of course,
I don't tell you that one session doesn't work. I don't tell you that one doesn't work. Anyway,
one session. They come back two weeks later. It's absolutely true. Hand in hand. We're done. And
they were. they were done.
Okay, there's a story here, tell me the story. Guy says to me, over the weekend his wife sent him
to the grocery store to get, say, 12 things.
And true to form, he comes back with 11.
The wife says, where's the pumpernickel?
I want folks to feel this.
He says every muscle and nerve in his body
was screaming to say they were out of it.
This is a moment my wife, wonderful family therapist,
Belinda Berman calls relational heroism.
Every muscle was screaming to do the same old, same old.
And I took a breath.
I thought of you.
He was borrowing my prefrontal cortex. I thought of you. He was borrowing my prefrontal cortex.
I thought of you, Terry.
I looked at my wife and I said, I forgot the goddamn pumpernickel.
And she looked at me, true story, and she burst into tears.
And she said, I've been waiting for this moment for 25 years.
That's the story. So in relational life therapy, the work I've created, we talk
about three parts of the human psyche. The wise adult, the part I'm talking to right
now, prefrontal cortex, the most evolved part of the brain. That's the part that evolved
last in the human species. That's the part that evolved last. Hey, you parents out there with ADHD kids, 26 years old,
chill, you got 26 years before they start to calm down.
Anyway, pre-pharmacortex, stop and think and choose.
But what makes life interesting and dicey
is there are two, we call them subcortical parts
of the brain, automatic, you know, knee-jerk
response.
The mature, wise adult, all the way, amygdala in the back is the completely flooded, wounded
child part, first moments of life to four or five, just flooded, just wants to crawl
in someone's lap and cry.
Between these two is what we call the adaptive child part.
And Tim, that's the part most of the people I see
have lived most of their lives in,
thinking that that's an adult and it's not.
It's a kid's version of an adult.
And the hallmark of the adaptive child part of us
is that it's automatic.
Fight, flight, fawn, I gotta get out of here
or the world's gone.
I gotta stand up for myself.
What is fawn?
Could you explain that to me?
Codependence.
Oh my God, Tim's feeling bad.
I gotta make him feel good
because if he doesn't feel good, I don't feel good.
Big for a lot of women, but not only women.
And it's not an adult,
let me see what I can do to make this relationship work.
It's an anxious compulsive,
oh my God, I gotta got to fix this guy.
Okay, what we teach is shifting out of that, we call it relational mindfulness.
This is the core skill from which all other skills depend.
The adaptive child part of us, you know, you played the losing strategies from fierce intimacy
and apoc…
The adaptive child doesn't want to use skills.
It doesn't want to be intimate.
Intimacy is scary.
It wants self-protection.
So, I'm going to control you, I'm going to scream at you, I'm going to withdraw from
you.
I will never get what I want in the relationship when my adaptive child is taken over.
And almost all of the people I see,
that's what happens.
Skills are great, but when you're flooded,
they go right out the window.
So the first skill, I call it remembering love.
Remember the person you're speaking to
as someone you care about, and you live with them, dummy.
It's in your interest, so get centered in that.
Somebody wrote, wait, why am I talking?
And be honest with you. Are you talking to nail your partner into the ground or prove
your then take a break? I'm a big fan of break. Wait until you remember you're talking to
someone you care about. And the reason why you're opening up your mouth is to make things
better. Now, what makes life even more dicey is that that adaptation, like the
guy in the story, lying, was born in a relationship. And what happens is when
people shift out of, I call, I speak about miserable, comfortable, happy,
uncomfortable. And when you move out of that into new territory, vulnerability,
risk-taking, courage, standing up for yourself for some, coming down and yielding for others,
when you move into intimacy, you lose that old relationship. And there's a lot of, not always, but there's a lot of unconscious guilt and loyalty.
So, part of the reason why we don't change is we're loyal to the relationships that we learn how to be screwed up in.
And it feels odd. I say we're immigrants. We leave the old country and the old people behind.
So, a story. So, a story.
Here's a story, true story.
The guy comes to me, he says,
you're my ninth therapist.
There's a challenge, gauntlets down, right?
Another notch in the belt.
You're my ninth therapist.
Eight therapists have tried to help me,
and he was screwed up.
The guy is an award-winning artist,
a celebrated artist.
You know, he's got a bad back, he doesn't go to the doctor,
he's got rotten teeth, he smokes too much,
he's just a mess.
Gonna die early at this rate.
What's his story?
Here's his story.
He was raised by a single mom, she died of alcoholism,
didn't know his dad. Her story was, when she was a single mom, she died of alcoholism, didn't know his dad. Her story was when she
was a little girl, her father beat everybody up in the whole house, mother and all four
sisters in her. As a little nine-year-old girl, this feisty chick, walks over to her
father and says, you lay a hand on my mother or my sisters and I'm going to call the police
and have you sent to jail. True story. Father looks at this little nine-year-old says okay you win I'm not
gonna lay a hand on your mother's sisters ever again I'm just gonna beat
you and he beat her every day of her life until she finally escaped at 16
Jesus then she became an alcoholic well Catholic. So here's what I say.
I say, well, I know why a therapist failed.
And he cued me.
He said, I said, what happens with your therapist?
He said, well, sooner or later they all care more about me than I do.
And then I ditch him.
I'm okay.
Got it.
He said, okay, I know why that happened. I say, your mother, who he adored, your mother was a sainted martyr.
What she did to save her family as a nine-year-old girl was crawl up on that cross and get crucified.
And guess what? You're up on that cross with her. And if you take care of yourself and live a life and get happy and successful and intimate,
you will leave her on the cross.
She's dead, by the way, but it doesn't matter.
You'll leave her.
And you ain't going to do that.
So you know what?
I'm not going to try and make you better.
I'm going to celebrate your sacrifice.
And this is a true story, Tim.
He looked at me and he goes,
my back is killing me.
Do you know a good doctor in New York?
And there we were.
So what do you do with that?
I got him a good doctor in New York.
I mean, once there is progress, you're moving.
I got it.
So at that point, he was ready to actually make change.
Yeah. I say, look, this is what you're doing. I
Admire it. I always side with the adaptation. I admire it by the way you're gonna die
Your mother's already dead. She doesn't care anymore, but what a loyal guy you are. Congratulations
You really want to live like this? And he
says, no, everybody else argued with him. You got to live. You got to live. No, I don't.
No, I don't. Why don't you crawl up on that cross and die with your mother? You're like,
oh, I don't think so.
Yeah. So, you know, one of the maybe differentiating characteristics that I appreciate about you and I can only
speak to my experience with you, but I'm sure it applies to therapists you've trained is
taking a position, right?
You're not playing the neutral mirror with all of your clients, which gets old very quickly
for me at least when I've worked with other therapists when I asked them what they think and they're like, well, what do you think? And it just becomes this game of
echo. Why do you think it is so uncommon to take positions and how can it be effective?
Oh my God, we're taught not to as therapists. We're actively taught not to. God forbid you
should, you know, thou shalt not take sides.
If you take a side, particularly if you side with a woman against a man, then you have
to go to your supervisor and talk about your mother for a while. You can go back into the
therapist. No, no, no, no, no. The idea is that all problems are 50-50 and common sense knows that's bullshit. Literally, I treated a couple, the guy was an untreated, bipolar, manic depressive, alcoholic
wager.
What was the woman's quote unquote contribution?
She was there, that was her contribution.
And this was the feminist critique of family therapy.
You don't say to an abused spouse, what's your 50% of this?
I mean, that's grotesque.
So in RLT, we call it like we see it.
Tim, you're a nut, and Mrs. Tim,
you're an even bigger nut, and here's why.
And here's what I think you need to do about it.
So some problems are 40, 60, some problems are 99, one.
We call it like we see it.
So I wanna bring up some other perhaps concepts
or ways of looking at common problems
that I think could help people.
Could you discuss objectivity battles?
Maybe paint a picture of what that looks like.
And this is something I found personally very helpful,
by the way, not just in intimate relationships, but in all relationships. So could you speak to this please?
Yeah, I'm glad you say that because relationships are relationships. We're doing a corporate
piece. We're doing a big thing for the general public and the same skills in work with your
kids with your dog. Although most people treat their dogs better than they treat their spouses.
But anyway.
Um.
Um.
Uh.
Okay.
What were we talking about?
We were talking about objectivity battles.
So what does it look like to do that the wrong way?
Actually, let me go big picture first.
Sure.
Here you go.
The essence of my work, the new book, Us, is about correcting what Gregory
Bason, the father of family therapy, husband of Margaret Mead, called humankind's epistemological
error, philosophical error. And here it is. We stand apart from nature and we control it.
We stand apart from nature, that's individualism,
we control it, that's patriarchy.
And by the way, control can be one up, that's male,
do what I say, or regulating up, one down,
that's traditionally the female, enabling,
don't set daddy off.
Both forms of control, all bullshit.
Nobody controls anything.
Instead, we offer a a map and then tools to
live it. But here's the new map. You're not outside of nature, idiot. You're inside
nature and you depend upon it. Our relationships are our biospheres. We
breathe them. You're an ecosystem. You can pollute your biosphere with a temper
tantrum over here, but your
partner will retaliate with cold distance over here. There's no escape. You're linked.
And the idea that you're not linked is diluted. So once you wake up to the fact that I'm in
it, I'm not above it, then all the rules change. Who's right, who's wrong, who cares?
So objectivity battle, here's the bitter pill.
Objectivity has no place in personal relations.
I'm sorry.
The relational answer or ecological answer,
there are two ways of saying the same thing.
The relational answer to who's right and who's wrong
is who gives a shit. What matters is how are you and I going to work this thing in a way that's
going to work for us. And proving who's right and who's wrong is not the way to do that.
Look, I've been married 40 years. When my wife and I have a disagreement over accuracy,
who remembered it correctly, whose feelings are more valid. You know, she's a very difficult person, Belinda,
and she has this nasty way of thinking she's right
and I'm wrong.
I don't know why she does that.
It doesn't work.
So, let me give you an example of the new world.
This is a true story, okay?
Totally heteronormative.
Her to him, you're a reckless driver. Him to her. You're overly nervous.
How many of us have been through this one? And then everybody starts marshaling their evidence
and arguing their case. No, you're nervous. You're nervous about this. You're nervous. No, no,
you're reckless. You tailgate. Okay, that's an object to be. Who's right? Who's wrong?
After one session with me, true story,
her to him, honey, start with that, change the energy, honey,
I know you love me, right or wrong. Maybe I'm overly nervous
or whatever. See, she just takes the whole battle off the table
by talking subjectively. Maybe I'm overly nervous.
Nevertheless, when you tailgate, and you switch lanes, and you speed up,
I get crazy, I get scared.
Now, when you're driving on your own,
I worry, but it's your life.
When I'm next to you,
you don't really want me sitting here being terrified
the whole time we're driving.
As a favor to me, could you please slow down
and drive more conservatively and
him to her be be be okay and he does what might have been a fight that lasted 40 years
is done in 15 minutes because it moves out of objective who's the authority who's right
who's wrong what's fair What's unfair and it becomes relational
We're a team you love me as a favor to me
Could you sure new world?
new world and new tools and just to underscore that I remember hearing you give an example and
Suppose the overarching point that I was going to underscore is there isn't a threshold past which your objective data wins typically, right?
So if you think if you think your wife is yelling at a server at a restaurant,
it doesn't matter if you have an audiologist sitting right next to you with various types of measurement equipment, it's still not gonna work. It's not gonna work. It's not gonna work, yeah.
Of course, applying a scientific method to your relationship,
but good luck.
Yeah.
So I'm probably gonna do a poor job of prompting this,
but I found it so fascinating when I heard you present it once,
and that was, in effect, the same way that people sometimes escalate problems where they say, da da da da,
then you always do this and it's reflective
of this character flaw, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah,
and you could lay it out much more eloquently than I could,
is the same way that you can deescalate something
if you apologize for it.
If you're out yourself.
Yeah, could you speak to that?
Because I just thought that was such a brilliant
turnaround technique when I heard it
that it stuck with me ever since.
Yeah, this is a step in the critical process of repair.
And either in this one or you'll invite me back,
I would love to lay out some skills.
You know, we did the losing strategy
that I want to do some of the winning.
And use a skill that's part of repair.
First of all, look, all of us,
when someone we care about confronts us
with something difficult,
we move into two orientations.
The first is objective reality.
Well, that's true, that's not true, that's accurate,
that's not, well, you gotta understand that.
And then we argue in our heads, it's not out of our mouths.
We don't listen, we rebut.
And then the second orientation we all go to is ourselves.
I can't believe I have to put up with this crap.
Belinda, I was just on the road telling thousands of people
how to love each other, and I come home and you,
this is, okay, let go of objective reality,
let go of you, and take a breath, and I want everybody to
write this one down.
Enter into compassionate curiosity about your partner's subjective experience.
Let me say it again.
Compassionate curiosity about your partner's subjective experience.
They're nuts, okay, but find out what kind of nut they are.
Nut feels bad, honey, help me understand.
Who sounds like that? But that makes peace.
And then when they tell you, you did this, you did this, you did this, acknowledge it.
Don't deny it, don't minimize it, don't rationalize it.
Yeah, but that's not an apology.
Yeah, but I did it, land on it.
And if you really wanna get slick, here's the deal.
Ready, this is the advanced course.
You went right to the PhD, Tim.
Here's what I want you to notice.
Generally speaking, functional moves in a relationship
are moves that empower your partner
to come through for you.
Nobody gets this.
Functional moves in a car make the car go.
Dysfunctional moves stop it.
Functional moves in a relationship empower the other guy to give you what you want.
Dysfunctional moves render them helpless.
So what we do because we're trying to get heard is we go,
you did this and last week you did that and ten years ago you did that and you always and you never.
The normal escalation is from this moment to trend to character.
And I teach people to stay particular and not do that.
Because every move up that ladder renders the person you're speaking to more
helpless and they're either just going to get mad or leave. You did it, you always,
you never, you are a, you're a slob. Okay. All right. So stay particular if you're the
disgruntled one, but if you've been confronted, B is yes, I did it. Here's an A. You walk
up the same ladder I'm telling him not to do as the disgruntled one. I did it. Here's an A. You walk up the same ladder I'm telling you not to do
is the disgruntled one.
I did it.
It's not the first time I've done it.
Tell me, the kids and I were waiting for you.
You knew dinner was at seven.
You come waltzing in at 7.45.
You don't call, you don't text.
It was really rude.
You're right, I did that.
And I can be late.
It's an issue, we know that. And when can be late, it's an issue, we know that.
And when I do that, I'm being thoughtless.
I get caught up in the moment and I stop thinking about the impact I'm having.
That's really kind of selfish of me.
I do have some selfish tendencies, I'm working on it.
Holy shit, now that's an apology.
So, if your
partner outs you, you did it before you often do it, you
never you always as terrible. But if you out you, oh my god,
your partner is going, wow, there's hope. This is great.
It's a funny thing.
Yeah, it makes me think of, I think it was hurt locker and the
bomb defusing.
It's just like, you know, it's like, wow, nice job, nice job with the diffusing.
And then of course, ultimately you should be working on this issue that you say you're
going to work on or pay attention to.
Tell me if this is geotechnical bullshit.
Yeah, actually, I'm sorry, but I have another story.
One of my clients told me this. It's two stories.
He said, on his wedding day, and I say this, no offense, but particularly for men, on his
wedding day, his father-in-law said, let's go for a walk. Okay. He said, son, I got two
things for you to master. You master just these two things, your marriage is going to
be great. He said, okay, pops, I'll buy it.
What's your guy?
He goes, you're really sorry.
And you're going to work on it.
I imagine that that'll give you a lot of payoff over a lot of miles.
What is a another term that I'd never heard before being exposed to your work?
Normal marital hatred. I got this from Ed Tronek, infant observational researcher.
Ed along with Barry Braselton was the first generation, you know, since Freud,
what we said about child development all came from listening to adults. We didn't
watch any kids.
And he was one of the first people to actually plunk
a video camera in front of mothers and infants
and then fathers and infants
and actually look at what happens.
And what he came up with I borrowed
and it's central to RLT which is
the essential rhythm of all relationships
is harmony, disharmony, and repair.
Closeness, disruption, and a return to closeness.
That's where the skills come in,
how to move from disruption to repair.
Our culture doesn't teach it.
Our culture doesn't even acknowledge
a good relationship is all harmony.
Just like a good body is yours.
A good body is like a 20-year-old's body.
A good sex life is like you
know what you had when you were two weeks into the relationship. No, all harm is
bullshit. Bullshit. One of the things I like about you Tim is you tell the truth. You
know what? You go to a cocktail party and you're, oh there's Harry and Shirley.
They're in their 80s. They still have sex. They love each other.
One of these days, I like to go to a cocktail party and hear, there's Harry and Shirley.
They actually split up for a year. He fell in love with another woman. He couldn't take it
because she was such a drunk, but then she got into A and got sober. And the two of them are really
doing reasonably well. Aren't they cute? Just once, I'd like to hear that. So we don't deal with reality. You know, the father of couples, Sarah B.
back in the 50s said, the day you turned to the person who's next to you, it was assumed
it was your marriage, and you'd say, this is a mistake. I've been had. This is not the
person I fell in love with. That said, frame, oh, is the first day of your real marriage.
So here's what I want to say about this harmony. Ready? It hurts. It's dark. You can really,
really feel like what the hell did I get myself into?
This is such a disappointment.
And guess what?
Your partner's probably feeling that about you too.
So I talk about normal marital hatred
when you're in that dark face.
You hate your partner, that's okay.
Don't kill yourself or her, that's okay.
I'll teach you how to get through it,
but it's part of the deal for many of us.
And here's what I like to say,
I've been going around the world
talking about normal marital hatred for,
oh my God, what, 30 years.
This is true.
Not one person has ever come backstage and said,
Terry, what do you mean by that?
And so.
It's okay, kids, don't sweat it. You can get
through it. It's normal. Relax.
Just a quick thanks to one of our sponsors and we'll be right
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isn't a bank. The APY is subject to change. For more information, see the episode description.
What are some of the first steps or tools that you would recommend to someone listening who agrees
with what you're saying but has had no models for repair, has never learned how to use any
type of approach for repair.
And this is something that your direct help and then also your books have really helped
me with because I did not grow up in a household with repair, right?
It was basically one person screams, then the other person goes to fix, which they don't really want to do, but it's their,
their attempt to basically quell the disaster and fury. And that's it. Then everybody's kind
of upset and it never gets addressed. That was the model growing up. What do you suggest to people
who want to start with repair? You know, of course, I'm tempted to say,
so are you a screamer or a fixer? But I won't, I'll leave that alone.
I'm a fixer. I'm not a screamer. Oh, okay. Lucky for your partner. But
the problem is the resentment that builds up. Yeah, exactly. Yep. Yeah. Okay. So repair. First
of all, here's, I like to say I have a number of bitter pills to swallow,
but if you swallow them, things will be a lot better in your life. And here's one of them.
Repair is a one-way street. Everybody gets that wrong. It's not a dialogue. It's not,
well, these are your issues with me. Well, these's my issues with you. No You have your turn but not then take turns
So if you have a disgruntled partner, you are at their service. That's the first thing to master
You know, I like to say Tim you're at the customer service window
Somebody comes to customer service window. It says my microwave doesn't work. They don't want to hear you say, well, my toaster doesn't work.
They don't want your excuses.
Fix the goddamn microwave.
Tend to your partner and bring them back
into repair with you.
Tend to them.
Put yourself aside and tend to them.
What does that look like?
Two things.
First, do I get it?
Listen.
Don't argue, don't rebut, empty the well.
I'm sorry you feel bad, that's beautiful, compassion.
I'm sorry you feel bad, I love you,
I don't want you to feel bad.
Help me understand what feels bad, what's it like for you?
Okay, then you reflect.
This is what I hear you say, did I get it?
Yeah, good enough, good.
Two, is there something I could say or do right now
that would be helpful?
What would you like?
Who says that?
And then if it's anything short of jumping off
the Brooklyn Bridge, give it to them, be generous.
Those are the basics, I could be more specific.
But that's the basics.
Let me ask you a follow-up, which is related to this.
When someone is attempting to do this, but they're having trouble
biting their tongue because.
You ask what's upsetting someone or you ask them to describe their feelings
and they say, well, when you did this, this and this
and you disagree with
their assessment of reality, we already talked about where objective reality doesn't exist,
but nonetheless, it could trigger visceral response.
What is your advice to people who struggle with that?
It's like, that isn't a reflection of reality, come on, and they want to rebut, but they're
not supposed to.
How would you suggest they table it?
What should they say to themselves?
Or do you have any other pieces of advice?
Well, we both know you're a nut.
Let's investigate exactly what kind of nut you are.
Let's get curious.
And actually, let's get compassionate.
You know, one of the things I say is,
no one's a nut to themselves.
The paranoid who's crouched under the desk
because the Russians have put germs
in the ventilating system knows that we're all going to die.
And if you knew that there were germs, you'd be under there with them.
No one doesn't make sense to themselves.
They don't make sense to you.
So let go of you and see if you can enter into the world of the person.
When you show up to our interview with a t-shirt, these are the rules of speaking.
I make up.
We teach people to say what I make up is.
No objective reality.
What I make up is, you have a very casual feeling about this interview.
Don't you know that you're talking to the great Terry Riel?
I've had a little formality and I feel really insulted.
All right, you're sitting there going,
fuck you, give me a break.
If we were partners, you would take a breath
and you would go, okay, help me understand,
what is it about the t-shirt that was so upsetting to you?
And then, okay, so you think it was disrespectful,
did I get that right?
It's like, I know you're a nut,
I know that Russians didn't put germs in the ventilating system, but I want to understand you.
Look, I'm sorry that hurt your feelings. I didn't mean to be overly informal. And then if you really
want an A+, this is really parking your ego at the door, I can understand how you might feel like.
parking your ego at the door, I can understand how you might feel like. And really what it is is I can understand praying, thinking the nutty things you think, if you think that way that you would
feel like that. So give it to them, be generous. I can understand how you might feel like that. Is
there something I could say or do that would help you feel better? Got it. All right. Very helpful.
I wanted to shift gears just a little bit and we can go in a lot of different directions. We can could say or do that would help you feel better. Got it. All right. Very helpful.
I wanted to shift gears just a little bit and we can go in a lot of different directions. We can also come back to repair because as you said already,
I mean this is practically universally neglected in terms of any type of
education that people tend to receive, but we'll park that for a second.
I wanted to know what types of
deal breakers exist when you work with clients and that could include addictions, psychiatric
conditions, etc. But I wanted you to maybe run us through what that list looks like because I might
want to double click on a few of them. So if you go to my website, and I'm supposed to put in a plug for social media, you can follow me.
May I say how? Of course.
Let me get it right. You can follow me at all socials at capital R real, capital T, Terry,
capital R real. So at real Terry real or
You can go to my website Terry real comm anyway
So I have an article about this should I say or should I go and the tool I use is what I call a relational
reckoning and
It's a question you ask yourself. Here's the question. Am I getting enough in this relationship to make grieving
what I'm not getting worth my while? Let me say that again. Am I getting enough in this relationship
to make the pain of what's missing okay with me? And if the answer is yes it is okay then stop whining and embrace
what's good you know work the change to get more but embrace what's good and
stop walking around like a big angry victim if the answer is no it's not
enough then do something about it lean in and fight and if it doesn't work drag
your partner to hopefully an RLT, they're the ones I believe in,
and get an ally and get some help.
And if that doesn't work, you're done.
So, okay, so in answering the question,
what's a deal breaker, let me be clear.
Deal breakers come only after you've dragged your partner
to a couples therapist and one that actually helps.
And you know, you've heard me say,
I don't think most do, but get one that will side with you
and be an ally and take that person on.
Okay, deal breakers.
Basically, do they wanna work or not?
If you wanna work and they don't, you could be done.
And that could be an addiction,
could be sexual acting out, could be anger, could be lying, could be withholding in passive aggression.
But if you're not getting what you want and the truth of the matter is your partner isn't going to do the work of giving you more of what you want, you're done.
And there are a lot of variations on that. Obviously, if somebody's got an
active addiction and they don't want to work on it, I would not...and people do. People
go to Al-Anon and manage, but I'd prefer you break up. If somebody's a rager or mistreating
you, if they violate contracts, particularly monogamy, if they're chronic liars, and if they have an
untreated psychiatric condition, anxiety, depression. And then this is interesting,
and I would really not trust yourself, I would only trust a professional. If there's a massive
difference in the maturity level of the two people,
the evolution of the two people,
the immaturity of the un-evolved one
will start to feel too painful to the more mature one,
and they should leave and find a different partner.
So when you, I guess a few questions related to everything you just said, the first is,
I have to imagine that in many instances, it's one partner who not necessarily drags the other
person but convinces them to do therapy. They're not equally enthusiastic about perhaps being in
front of the therapist. So I would imagine there's a grace period of sorts to enlist the other person.
One session. One session. How do you do that? If one person is more resistant or stoic and
the other person is the one is more enthused to sort of initiated that first session. It's sort of carrot and stick.
I talk about leverage, negative and positive leverage.
Tim, your partner is saying to you this, this and this,
she's pretty fed up.
Are you fed up, partner of Tim?
Yeah, I'm fed up.
How fed up are you exactly?
Do you believe her?
Why should he believe you?
And what I'm doing is I'm amplifying the negative consequences.
There they are, but you're not looking at them.
So my first move is to empower your partner to be firm and speak up to you, and I use
that as leverage to get your interest.
So this is the negative thing that I can help you avoid, and here's the positive thing I
can deliver.
Would you like a happier, warmer, sexier partner?
Okay.
And if you have kids, this is a big one.
Hey Tim, what kind of father did you have?
What kind of father do you want to be?
I got bad and good news.
If you don't do this work, you're going to do some version of what got done to you, to them.
You want to do that? Would you like to be a better father than the one you grew up with?
Okay, well, you got to let me help you.
And a lot of particularly men who won't do this hard work, this work, they won't do it for themselves, they won't do it for their witty wives.
They will do it to spare their children.
So I get buy-in, and it's a combination of,
this is what's gonna happen to you if you don't change,
and this is what could happen for you if you do.
Here's the consequence, here's the reward.
And when you're talking about deal breakers,
could you just clarify in what sense they are deal breakers?
Does it mean that you will not work with them as clients
until they address one of those deal breakers?
For instance, they have addiction to alcohol or gambling
or whatever it might be.
I found it interesting that you mentioned
the anxiety and depression,
because one of the topics I wanted to talk to you about
is male depression.
And I guess I'm curious
if you work with some of those in tandem or if people are kind of left to their own devices to figure it out.
No, never, never do that.
I never confront somebody and then let them swing in the wind.
I'm always right next to you, telling you,
okay, this is what you're doing that ain't working.
Let me take your hand and teach you what does work.
And that's different than a lot of other therapies.
We roll up our sleeves and get granular.
Tim, this isn't you.
I'm just, Tim, do you notice that your face
is kind of frozen when you talk
and you're speaking a monotone?
And your wife is out of her mind right now because nobody's ever said this to you, but
she's bored as hell next to you.
Look, this is what I want you to do as we learn for you to start speaking about your
feelings.
I want you to go like this with your face.
Animate it.
I want, yeah.
Let me see a little oomph here.
I mean, that's what I call micro coaching.
And we roll up our sleeves and get right next to you
and teach you how to do it better.
We call them preconditions.
Addiction, acting out, psychiatric conditions.
Acting out either violence or sexual acting out.
We will not take couples if there's domestic violence.
You go off to a safety program, you go off to a perpetrator program. I don't ask people
to tell the truth to power if it's dangerous. You know, safety for... About the others,
sexual acting out, addictions, psychiatric disorders, RLT therapists will meet with the couple
but only to talk about the issues. What are you going to do about your
depression? What are you going to do about your womanizing? How are we going to
settle this? The idea is it would be bullshit for me to pretend that I can
help you and your partner get closer while you're still engaged in this stuff.
So sobriety first, I will meet with the couple,
but to deal with what you're not dealing with.
Then we can work on your relationship.
So let's double click on your first book.
I don't wanna talk about it because I know
Peter Tia, who's
an old friend of mine, of course very well known doc these days, is a huge fan
of this book. I have not yet read it, I apologize for that, but I would love for
you to perhaps describe what people get wrong about male depression or we could
dive directly into covert depression because I'm wondering how many of these preconditions might be explained by depression as opposed
to being separate problems.
First of all, for those who haven't, please read Peter's book out there.
It's great.
In the last chapter, it was about his work with me and Esther Perel about his own psychological
work.
And also if I may, Peter had a podcast that we did together,
and he talked about his work with me.
It was very moving.
So look those two things up.
Male depression.
When I wrote that book, it's 30 years old.
It's selling as well as my new books, by the way.
It's really been a keeper.
Depression was seen as a woman's disease, and I argued against that.
And what I said is that a lot of men have the same kind of depression that we normally think of. I
call it overt depression. But a lot of men, unlike women, have what I call covert depression. You
don't see the depression. You see what the man is doing to defend against the depression. You don't see the depression, you see what the man is doing to defend against
the depression. And many of the problems we think of as typically male may be fueled by
depression. So self-medication, rage, philandering, radical withdrawal, all of these may be a symptom of an underlying depression. A
lucky guy gets what we call a dual diagnosis. You're, you know, forgive me I
can't be, you know the joke, you're terminal, I want a second opinion, okay
you're ugly. It's like, okay the bad news is you're addicted and the worst
news is underneath the addiction you've got a depression. Lucky guy gets a dual diagnosis. Unlucky guy gets one or the other. If you
stumble into an addictions person, they'll clean up your addiction but they won't deal
with them. If you go to a psychiatrist, they'll give you a meds for your depression but you're
drinking like a fish. First, you have to deal with the defenses. When they settle down and move into some level of
sobriety, then the underlying depression comes. You don't even have to go after it. It comes up.
I say the cure for a covert depression is an overt depression. Once the pain comes up,
you deal with it. But I think part of the reason why that book has lasted for 30 years
But I think part of the reason why that book has lasted for 30 years is there's a third piece,
which is not only do men express depression differently,
but the etiology is different.
Girls and women get depressed
because they famously lose their voices
and blame themselves and turn inward.
Boys and men get depressed
because of what I call normal
boyhood trauma under patriarchy. We are taught at three, four, five years old to
deny our vulnerability, to disconnect from our feelings, to disconnect from
others, all in the name of autonomy. We cut off half of our humanity,
the feelings, the vulnerability, connection,
really in some ways the most rich, nourishing parts
of what it means to be a human.
And that cutoff, which is imposed on boys,
I have story after story, that cutoff is traumatic and it also renders
you isolated and lonely. So there's a lot of trauma, that trauma becomes
depression, that depression becomes acting out or self medication and if you
really want to heal someone you hit all three layers.
First the defenses, then the depression,
then the childhood trauma.
How do you think about teasing out when, for instance,
addiction is paired with underlying depression,
maybe downstream of it versus independent because I suppose there's a risk of
Asking a barber if you need a haircut in the sense you go to the surgeon they tell you need surgery you go to the
Fill in the blank right they tell you that you need whatever their specialty happens to be
Just like you mentioned with getting the single diagnosis versus the dual diagnosis
So how do you determine if something is actually paired with underlying depression, since that's the sort of example we're talking about in men versus independent?
It's really simple. When the person starts to get sober, do they get depressed?
And the depression that they get looks just like psychiatric depression. I see what you're saying.
So if they're workaholic and they pare that down,
does the depression then have room to breathe
and express itself basically,
when the coping mechanism is removed in some capacity?
Yeah, as opposed to you remove the coping mechanism
and oh my God, I'm so much better.
However, you can cut out the middle piece, depression, but 99 out of 100,
you go from sobriety to trauma. You have to deal with the underlying trauma. My great
mentor P.M.L.D., a great legend in the 12-step community, ran the Meadows for 70 years. First the addiction, then the personality issues,
and then underlying childhood trauma. If you don't deal with the underlying trauma, it's
going to be hard for that person to stay sober.
What type of approaches or modalities do you favor for working with trauma when you get to that layer?
We like to do trauma work with your partner
sitting next to you, and we're unique in that.
And I gotta tell you, I've argued against
what I call toxic individualism in this culture,
and psychotherapy is up to its eyeballs
in supporting individualism and supporting patriarchy.
I wanna ask you about this word patriarchy
because you have so many messages that I think I want to convey to not just a male audience,
but I have a very large male audience. And I feel like patriarchy can be a very loaded term.
Dr. Michael O'Brien And that there are matriarchal or matrilineal,
there are patrilineal societies, both of which
function pretty well. And I'm just wondering how you think about using versus not using that term
because I feel like there's a risk that you might turn off men who actually need to hear a lot of
what you have to say. How do you think about that? It is what it is. So let me talk about what I mean. And then we can talk about the marketing
of it.
I'm making decisions between what I call political patriarchy and psychological patriarchy. And
political patriarchy is the oppression of women by men. It's all over the globe and,
you know, it is deadly in some cultures. It's a very real thing.
Psychological patriarchy is basically
traditional masculinity writ large, oh, double back.
But psychological patriarchy, traditional masculinity,
guys, listen up, is a system that does damage to everybody, everybody, and does deep, deep damage
to our relationships. What do I mean by that? Let me just take traditional masculinity.
The essence of traditional masculinity under patriarchy, the overarching system, is invulnerability.
masculinity under patriarchy, the overarching system, is invulnerability. The more invulnerable you are, the more manly you are, the more vulnerable you are, the
more girly you are, and that is not a good thing.
And of course, we both know there's been a huge resurgence, you know, a backlash.
Don't tell us we're bad people.
I'm not talking about not being powerful.
I'm talking about not being dominant. There's a difference.
Rhianne Isler talks about power over versus power with.
I want men to be powerful.
I also want women to be powerful.
I want all of us to be whole.
And what patriarchy does,
what Carol Gilligan calls the binary,
these human qualities are feminine,
a good man has none of them.
These human qualities are masculine,
a good woman has none of them.
And it's what Olga Silverstein called the having process.
You take a whole human being,
you draw a line down the middle,
half of humanity say goodbye to.
That is not healthy. That's not good for anybody. lying down the middle, half of humanity say goodbye to.
That is not healthy.
That's not good for anybody.
So vulnerability, for example, what we do,
the way we quote unquote turn boys into men
under patriarchy is through disconnection.
We teach them to disconnect from their feelings.
There's hard research, three, four, five.
Little boys have more feelings than little girls, actually.
They're more sensitive.
But by three, four, five, they know better than to open their mouths and say anything.
They've read the code.
So, no vulnerability, no emotion, not too connected to others, you're independent.
Great. Here's what I say.
I would say to you if you showed up in my office.
Tim, the things you learned as a boy about what makes a good man are the very qualities
that will ensure that by today's standards you'll be seen as a lousy husband.
Across the board, I'll just deal with heterosexuals for a moment. Women want men's hearts. They want connection. Tell me what the fuck you're feeling.
Open your mouth and share with me.
When I come to you with a feeling, be compassionate and not dismissive.
Well, guess what?
All of that goes against what was imposed on you as a boy
about how to handle yourself as a man.
But one of the things I say is, moving men,
women, non-binary folk into true intimacy is synonymous with moving them beyond traditional
gender roles, beyond patriarchy. Men have to move into vulnerability and open their hearts. Women
have to move into assertion with love, not with harshness, but with love. And doing that on
both sides moves beyond anything that this culture teaches us. It's pioneer work.
All right. Thank you for unpacking that. We might come back to it. I'm happy to talk about
them more. I have follow-up questions, but I don't want to take us off track with the trauma
question because you were talking about one of the defining and unusual characteristics by conventional therapy standards is that
RLT does trauma work with the partner present. That's where I then took us on a side quest
with the question about patriarchy. You know, as a relational therapist who argues against
exaggerated individualism.
Look, here's the thing.
We've never wanted more from our relationships than we do right now.
It's historically new.
We don't think historically, so we don't get this.
But our parents, grandparents, a companionable marriage was plenty good enough.
But we want more.
We want real intimacy and sustaining.
We want to hold hands, walk on the beach,
have heart to heart, have great sex in our 60s and 70s.
We want to be lifelong lovers.
This is new.
Marriage was never built for that.
Don't go into Western literature
and find me a passionate marriage.
All passion is adulterous.
It's new.
Yeah, it's new.
But we live in an anti-relational culture.
That's patriarchy.
We live in a culture that's about up, down,
win, lose, right, wrong, no.
We have to wake up to ecological wisdom.
We're a team, we're in this together.
What do you need, honey?
It's in my interest to keep you happy. That's the new world
order. And you know, not to dis on men, but I do get these big burly guys and they say, why should
I have to work so hard to please my wife? And I go, knock, knock, you live with her. It's in your
interests. That's what I teach people is in your interest to learn how to do this stuff.
And also I would just say for clarification
that you mean to keep someone happy
but in a interdependent, not codependent way, right?
Cause it's easy to go into that fixing mode
and people think they're making someone happy.
You're right.
And I didn't say it's in your interest to make them happy.
What I really say is it's in your interest
to take care of your biosphere.
If you ride in the one up,
at some point we should talk about this.
If you're more in the one up
and you're more entitled, demanding, dominant,
you don't listen,
you gotta come down off your high horse.
If you ride in the one down like a
fixer, oh my God, oh my God, my partner's upset, I'm codependent, you need to take a breath.
What your biosphere needs is for you to be assertive and be more conflictual and fight a little
more, stand up for yourself. So you have to correct what's off. It's not one size fits all. It's
what's off for you. If you're one up, come down. If you're one down, like a fixer, then assert
yourself and take some risks. But both are vulnerability. When we think of vulnerability,
we think of sensitivity. But for a fixer like you standing up for yourself and oh my God, they may get mad at me,
that's vulnerability for you.
So what does my biosphere need?
Carol Gilligan says,
there can be no voice without relationship.
So come down off your high horse if you're dominant.
There can be no relationship without voice.
So I would work with someone like you
and I would have you, okay,
I want you to identify what you're feeling.
I want you to identify what you want and need right now.
Don't worry about pleasing them.
What does Tim want?
And I want to teach you how to articulate that
in a way that might get listened to.
May I hypothesize about you?
Sure, go for it.
This could be wrong, but here we go.
What I make up, as we say.
So you have this dominant, I'm assuming, father.
Yeah, it was father.
And this codependent, unhappy mother.
This is what I call the unholy triad of patriarchy.
You wonder why so many men are love avoidant or avoiders.
Well, here's why.
You have an irresponsible or shut down father.
You have an unhappy mother.
You have, and I guarantee this was you, a sweet, sensitive, big-hearted young boy.
The mother doesn't have to do a thing to enmesh him, to use him.
That boy looks at his unhappy mother and says,
what can I do to make her happy? And he lets go of what he wants and needs and becomes her caretaker
emotionally. Grows up and his template for relationship is, I'm a caretaker, I'm a fixer,
I got to take care of them. My needs, nobody gives a shit. So what that breeds, maybe you, maybe not, is
what we call love avoidant. You live behind walls. Because relationships mean I surrender
my needs and care to take them. I'm a human, so I need relationships, I pull them in. But
once they're in, I got to keep them in arms left, or they'll eat me alive. So you live
behind walls to protect yourself.
That's that adaptive child.
How am I doing?
I mean, you're 100% spot on.
I think at the very end, I had a question in my mind
as to whether I have those types of walls
because I don't know what they might look like.
So perhaps could you give me an example
of what those might look like?
And then I could tell you.
How good are you at identifying
what you want in a relationship
and assertively going after it?
I'd say pretty good at identifying.
Could be a lot better at proactively going after it
and requesting it.
Tend to be very indirect.
That would be accurate to say for sure.
Yeah, and the cost of that indirectness
is you don't get your needs met
and then resentment grows and then whatever.
So I have eight things-
Make him progress, make him progress.
I've improved a lot.
I can feel that by the way, I can feel that.
I would teach you,
the cure for love avoidance is negotiation. I would teach you to identify what you want
and lean in and have the daring, break the rules and say, hey, you know what? I don't
want to eat Indian tonight. I want to eat Japanese. And the last two nights we ate what
you wanted and tonight we're doing Japanese. Well, don't like that Tim. Well okay. And you know for your fixers I say let the bad
thing happen. You know that adaptive child part of you is petrified of
conflict. You don't want to make dad angry and you don't want to make mom
unhappy. You're a fixer. You're a good boy, and you want to bring peace. Well, this is
where trauma enters into our relationship. That adaptive child part of you has no model
for healthy conflict. It's either yelling and screaming or giving in. And you know,
we children, we look at mom and dad, we go, I'll be that one. You looked at mom, I'll
be that one. I don't want to be dad. I
don't want to be that aggressive. So you don't have a healthy template for healthy aggression.
Didn't have that model. Yeah. Yeah, me too. I had a violent father.
I would teach you how to have healthy conflict and feel good about that, but it would be very scary initially.
So you nailed a couple of things that I want to revisit. So the first, and this will come back into the patriarchy thing too, because what you do, Terry, is so powerful and so important. I want
as many men to listen to it as possible, which is why I'm talking about the patriarchy piece.
It's not because I disagree with a lot of what you're saying, although I do have some clarifying questions. So one thing you said
is you hypothesized, right? The story you make up is that I was very, very sensitive
or I was a very sensitive young kid, which is true. I was very sensitive, much more so
than my schoolmates. And then for a host of reasons really also including some pretty terrible
childhood abuse not from my family ended up.
Yeah, I've written about it extensively.
But yeah, maybe another time.
But the upshot of it is that I turn that off, right?
Emotions, insensitivity, or liability.
So I completely compartmentalize that locked it, put it away.
And that continued to be the case,
and I paid a lot for that.
There was some upside, there's some upside.
I had a very high pain tolerance,
I could handle certain things,
I could be very aggressive and take a lot of shots
in the course of doing various things,
competitive sports, business, whatever.
So I had some quote unquote success from that,
but there was a lot of collateral damage.
And then around 2013, for a number of reasons,
including a relationship I thought was gonna end
in marriage and kids coming to a halt,
decided to reopen the doors
and sort of reactivate that sensitivity.
So that's been a project for the last 12 years or so.
And-
Brilliant and courageous both.
Congratulations.
Thank you.
And so that's been an incredibly rewarding
and challenging path thus far and it continues.
I don't regret having done that.
My question, I suppose,
and this might seem a little
out of left field, is that when you're talking about men being available to their partners and
emotionally attuned, and I know I'm using different vocabulary, I agree with all of that.
But I suppose some people listening might feel like men and women might be positioned as equivalents in a lot of ways,
sort of emotional doppelgangers.
And I'm just wondering if you feel like there are any patterns in terms of male and female
differences that you spot again and again that don't need to be fixed, that they're
actually just, whether intrinsic or otherwise, sort of differences to embrace.
And I'm just curious what your thoughts are there.
I tend to think there are,
but I'm curious what your position is on that.
I don't know.
Who are we beyond our socialization?
I don't know.
What I do know is that the bifurcation of men and women
under patriarchal culture,
which is virtually ubiquitous in the world,
is so strong. You gave up your sensitivity because your sensitivity was punished.
And the playground is the greatest enforcer of traditional roles. You learn. Three, four,
five-year-old boys learn to keep their mouths shut or they're going to get
punished. And for the guys out there, I got to say, for a girl to cross into boy land is like,
no, she'll get some shit. For a boy to cross into girl land evokes violence, emotional and,
I'm sorry, at times even physical violence. It's dangerous to break the rules.
It's dangerous to stand up for being whole in this culture. And I talked to parents about
having their boys be literate, gender literate. Can I tell you a story?
Of course. I love your stories.
So when my kids were little, I've got two kids.
One's a massive jock, Justin, and one is a gay doctor, ballet dancer,
danced professionally and just got by.
Anyway, they were both amazing and very, very different kids.
And we went off to vacation, like the Dominican Republic,
and they had cornrows put in their hair.
The kids did that.
My little one, Alexander, who turned out to grow up to be gay, did his whole head in cornrows
and they were like green, pink and gold, his favorite color.
His older brother, Justin, the jock, had a couple of like Keith Richards cool rock and
roll, you know.
All right, it's time to go to school. We're back from vacation.
Belinda and I sit him down and go, here's the deal.
If you go to school with that in your hair, you may get crap from the other kids.
If you don't go to school with that in your hair, you may feel
like you've missed out on expressing yourself. And
it could be the kids are going to love that stuff in your hair. I don't know. What do you guys want to do? It's not my decision, it's yours.
And we talked to boys about, do you want to express yourself and deal with the crap you're
going to get? Or do you want to comply and deal with the inauthenticity of that? Is your
choice not ours? I don't make those choices for my boys, but it's
on the table conversation. So they both said, sure. And as the older one, Dustin, the key
three, puts his foot in the car, he goes, I can't do it. And we wind up cutting his
hair. It looked terrible. His brother, Mr. Pink and Gold, was like the toast of the town, but it could have gone another way.
So I would teach young Tim
how to negotiate his sensitivities
so that when they were welcome, they were overt,
and when they were unwelcome,
you put up a shield of toughness to protect yourself,
and having some sense of which moment is which.
How did you navigate that with your boys? Like how did you raise your boys? I'd be so curious
to hear more about it because there is a time to, it's not limited to men of course or boys,
but I think there's a lot of value placed and I don't think this is necessarily a bad thing
on competition and winning and so on and so forth.
And I'm just so curious,
since you mentioned the jock in particular,
how did you think about raising those two boys
and did you raise them any differently?
I did.
No, they were both raised similarly to one another,
but they're very different from the culture at large.
It's funny, we just had our first
relational life therapy annual conference and my son got on stage with me. but they're very different from the culture at large. It's funny, we just had our first Relational Life Therapy Annual Conference
and my son got on stage with me
and the older one, Justin the dog, was very funny.
He looked at the crowd and he said,
you know, being the son of two therapists,
the way I grew up, you want to talk to me
about how your nanny had sex with you when you were five
or your deepest anxiety on there, no problem.
It took me into my 20s to learn how to sit on a bar stool, have a beer and talk to guys
about a game.
Nobody's perfect.
You know, the thing is, I want whole people.
And going back to people who may be turned off
by what I'm saying.
It absolutely kills me when people describe my work
as Terry's trying to feminize men.
No, I want whole human beings.
I want smart, sexy, competent women.
I want powerful, big-hearted, compassionate men. We don't need to have ourselves in compliance
to the world order. We can be whole. And the issue is whole and adaptable. What is this
moment going for? And I got to tell the story. This is one of my favorite stories.
Please.
calling for and I got to tell this story. This is one of my favorite stories.
Please.
So I had the privilege of going to Mass Island in Tanzania
with another family who knew this particular compound,
these guys very well.
It took 10 hours of driving to get to them.
They were remote.
And this is the real deal.
I mean, you know, we're talking, you know,
earlobes down here,
and everybody had, and they have spears, and they kill lions, and these are real warriors.
So I had a men's group with the elders for four nights running, and we talked about everything.
So I go like this to them. In the United States, there's a debate about what makes a good man, Morani warrior, or one word.
What makes a good Morani?
Some people say a good Morani is sensitive and thoughtful and kind.
Some people say a good Morani is fierce and tough and no bullshit.
What do you guys think?
Which is it?
True story, Tim.
So this little guy has got to be four foot three and a thousand years old, crooks his
finger and he sounds like he's totally pissed at me. And it goes from Maasai to Swahili
to English to Swahili. This is what he says, I have no interest in talking to you about what
makes a good Marani. I could care less. But I will talk to you about what makes a great Marani.
He said, when the moment calls for fierceness,
a good Morani will kill you. Don't mess with him. I mean, he'll kill you. When the moment calls for
tenderness, a good Morani will lay down his sword and shield and be sweet like a baby.
A great Morani is a man who knows which moment is with. That's good. Yeah, that's very good.
I want whole people who can adapt to what's in front of them. That's health.
How did you and your wife think about changing how you would raise your kids from how you
were raised? How do you think about that?
And just be curious to hear you approach that
from whatever angle makes sense.
Well, as you probably know, both my wife and I
came from terrible trauma, terribly violent families.
I wouldn't wish it on anybody.
Four bucks, 40 years, here's probably been
my single most famous quote.
You know, they say it's the height of attention
to quote yourself.
I'll do it.
Family pathology rolls from generation to generation
like a fire in the woods,
taking down everything in its path
until one person in one generation
has the courage to turn and face the flames.
That person brings peace to their ancestors and spares the children that follow.
Belinda and I made a rock-solid commitment that we were not going to leak the kind of
reactivity and violence that we grew up with on our kids and we didn't.
We did it on each other.
We had a real rock-em-sock-em marriage for years.
We were both fighters.
But we spared the children and they know that.
And they're really robust, radiantly healthy boys.
I am the son of an angry, depressed father.
He was the son of an angry, depressed father.
I have two boys, neither of them say that,
and neither were their children.
And that is the greatest achievement of my life.
I mean, it's an amazing achievement,
and I'd love to get a little more, not microscopic,
but granular in the sense that
a lot of people say they wanna change.
A lot of people have near as resolutions
and they say, you know what,
I'm not gonna be the diabetic my parent was
because I can fix it, I can change it,
and they don't change.
So I'm wondering how,
especially since you had the rockumem-sock-em experience in your marriage, what were the actions you took or the strategies you
had to check yourselves and ensure that you weren't letting those older inherited behaviors
bleed into your parenting? Well, first of all, get help.
Men don't get help.
In the book one, I said a man is about as likely
to get help for depression as he is to ask for directions.
If you come from a tough background,
I say this to the people I work with all the time,
you can't come from what you came from
and have the happy, healthy family you want without
doing a shitload of therapy, a shitload of work.
Men's groups, women's groups, 12-step groups, therapy, but therapy that works.
But the first thing I want to say is, thank God you don't have to do this on your own
because you won't know what to do.
Get help and get help that helps.
So you guys had help?
Years and years of spiritual work.
I've been meditating over 50 years
and all stripe of therapy work.
There's a saying therapists are people
who need to be in therapy 40 hours a week.
I became a professional therapist to heal myself.
And then I became a family therapist
to learn how to have a relationship.
I mean, I was so far behind the starting gate. In 12 Step, one of the things folks say is the
last phase is gratitude. I was so on the ropes. Unlike a lot of people, if I did my defaults,
I'd be dead now. That's true. A lot of my friends that I grew up with are dead.
my defaults, I'd be dead now. That's true. A lot of my friends that I grew up with are dead.
If I did what I learned, I'd be dead. I had no choice but to go under or reconfigure myself.
And that's a gift. The same with Belinda. And we are, we're reconstructed human beings. Belinda calls us retreads, you know, like a tire. And I love reconstructed human beings, we have a lot of depth. And if I can do it,
you can do it. There's a way to do it, no matter where you come from. But
you got to be willing to do the work and it's hard goddamn work.
What do your group therapy experiences look like? I remember, I don't think you
would mind me saying this, I'll double check with them after we finish recording, but Kevin went through a group, I want to say, for lack of a better way to describe it, sort of therapy experience with seven or eight people. He didn't tell me anything.
Men. Men's group.
Men. And he didn't tell me anything about the content, of course, but it had a really big impact on him. And I'm curious what the format was, what the rules looked like for a men's group like
that.
We start off with check-ins.
How's everybody doing?
What's on your mind?
And then either we move into a theme that emerges.
So my practice is 10 full pay people and four pro bono at any given time. And the 10 who pay
are, they tend to be high rollers. So here's a group of some of the bigger mover and shaker
guys in the world right now. We had a hilarious time talking for two hours about how we were
all petrified of our wives. So sometimes a theme will emerge, father's anger, self-medication, being afraid of our
wife.
And or as the check-in evolves, one person will like pop.
And I'll go, Dave, do trauma work with you?
We're not going to do it.
Just go around anyway.
But if you were in the group, at some point I would say,
I wanna go back to that little boy
who learned how to be a fixer.
How old were you when you first adopted that?
Four or five is whatever it was.
Close your eyes, go into your body,
find that four-year-old boy.
Ask him to come out and sit in a chair facing you.
What's he look like? How do you feel toward him? What do you want to say to
him? What does he need to hear from you? What's it like for him? How does he
respond to what you just said? And I get into a dialogue between you and this
little boy. Of course it's very emotional And it ends always with you saying to that little part of you,
I'm here now. I can take care of you. Your angry partner may not be available,
and that's frightening to you. But I'm available. We don't need her. You turn to me.
but I'm available. We don't need her.
You turn to me.
And that's transformative.
So I do deep trauma work in the men's group
or we do a theme or we just all hang out
and talk about what's going on in our lives.
Any or all of you both.
Are there any guidelines for how people can respond
to what someone else says or discloses?
I'm just thinking there's sometimes rules
in organizations like the entrepreneurs organization and in forums and things like this and these
smaller sized groups.
If somebody was thinking about creating something like this for themselves, and I know it'd
be good to have a professional involved, of course, but are there any other any other
rules or guidelines that you think are helpful in these types of groups?
As you know, I have 8 million sayings. Here's one of them. Generally speaking,
unsolicited advice doesn't go very well. So we all learn to have good boundaries in these groups,
which we can double back and talk about. The core principle of RLT is what we call
full respect living. I may disagree with how you think, but I hold you in respect.
It's a part of the culture of the group that we speak to one another with humility, this
is what I'm making up to him, and with respect.
No one in these groups says, what a fucking asshole, how can you do this?
We just don't talk to each other that way.
And I never had to make that explicit, it just happens.
When you were talking about identifying the age
of the little boy and having him sit in the chair,
for some people listening, they might hear echoes of say,
internal family systems, IFS.
Does your approach, is it similar to that?
Does it differ from it?
How do you think about that?
Let's do this briefly, because this could be a whole,
there are some similarities.
For example, there's a three part part of the psyche.
What I call the wise adult has some correlation
to what Dick calls self.
What he calls protectors and managers has some correlation
to what I call the adaptive child
and his exiles my wounded child. So there's some similarities, but there are also some very distinct differences.
I don't believe that the adaptations that you learned as a kid are all defensive or
are all about protecting the wound. And I believe there are bad parts. Dick is almost
a religious fervor that there's no such thing as a bad part.
No, there are grandiose retaliatory parts of you that you really need to corral.
And there's also entitlement and privilege and it's not all
grouped around protecting a vulnerability. We think that in psychiatry too.
We think all grandiose behavior is a defense against shame.
No, some grandiose behavior is just entitlement and hatred.
That's part of our humanity.
I don't think Hitler killed millions of Jews because he was protecting a vulnerable part
of himself.
There's more to it than that.
So we take on some of the issues of grandiosity and entitlement and some of the less savory parts of our humanity in a way that I don't think IFS quite does.
Broadly speaking, do you think there are any new or particular challenges with modern relationships?
Oh my God.
Whether it be dating or marriage, anything that is relatively kind of
new on the scene in your opinion? Well, polyamory is interesting. Yeah, let's talk about it far away.
Well, Linda and I spent three months in Costa Rica and amongst the young expats who can't find a
monogamous couple anywhere. And polyamory is a real challenge.
Monogamy is the challenge too.
I used to say, monogamy is unnatural
and open marriages, wow, hold on.
So people trying to, there are people experimenting
with different models of intimacy.
And okay, open the doors and there are challenges.
Yeah, I remember I was chatting with someone who had experimented with every variant of
polyamory and she referred to it as poly agony. That was her label for it. But I would love to know,
are there challenges for monogamy now
that didn't seem to exist 20 or 30 years ago
or that are just much more exaggerated now?
Yeah, a number of things.
First of all, we men are trying to figure out
what the hell we are.
And someone wants to describe my work
as women have had a revolution and now men have
to deal with it and no one knows what to do. Women have had a revolution and they are speaking
up and they are insisting on intimacy from us guys in ways that are exactly in conflict
with our traditional role as men.
You know, Eric Erickson said, it's a sign of a healthy culture
that socialization practices in childhood equip you
to succeed in your adult roles.
And it's the sign of a culture and tradition
when there's a disjuncture between the two.
And for men, there's a disjuncture.
What traditional masculinity
teaches you as a boy, whether you want it or not, often through punishment, by today's
standards will give you problems in your relationship. You've got to be vulnerable. You've got to
open your heart.
Literally, you have to reconfigure masculinity in order to be a good partner these days.
People need help with that.
The cultural response to feminism and women's empowerment has been a big backlash.
The Manosphere and that sobering movie, Adolescents, there's a big resurgence of, I'm a man and
I'm tired of being told I'm bad
and go screw yourself. It ain't going to work. The toothpaste ain't going back in the tube.
So what I say is, I don't want women to stand down. I want men to stand up and meet these
new demands. Look, I've been saying this for 40 years and research has finally caught up with me. Relationality, intimacy, open-hearted connection, the ace that we RLT therapists have in our
back packet is that's what we human beings are designed for. We're designed to be intimate.
Not being intimate, I know you do a lot of great work with health on your podcast.
Not being intimate is as bad for your body as smoking a pack and a half of cigarettes
a day.
This is a hard black and white research.
We are born to be intimate.
Moving beyond traditional gender roles is the only way to get there.
So stop whining, stand up, and learn a few relational skills.
It's good for you. It's good for your body. You'll live longer.
It's good for your marriage and it's good for your children.
And let me help you learn how to do this better.
That's revolutionary. You've got a lot of people out there.
I'm so happy to be on this podcast with you, truly.
You've got a lot of people out there. I'm mad as hell and I'm not putting to be on this podcast with you truly. You got a lot of people out there
I'm mad as hell and I'm not putting up with it. We men need to reclaim our power and
No, we need to open our hearts and listen and listen. Here's a simple way. You don't like patriarchy
Here's what I teach the men I work with to learn to become family men
Here's how you're a family man You decentralize yourself Teach the men I work with to learn to become family men.
Here's how you're a family man.
You decentralize yourself.
I wrote this and I don't want to talk about it.
A boy's question of the world is what he got for me.
A man's question of the world is what's needed here.
And I teach men to show up as men and not boys.
What's needed here?
You know, research on happiness is, I like black
and white research. If you get a gift, you're happy. You get happier for a bit. If you give
a gift, you're even happier and longer than if you get it. good for us to be empowered, be assertive,
and also to be connected and show up
and ask ourselves what's needed here?
How do I need to show up here?
That's a man.
I like that framing, the questions and how they differ
for boys and men.
It does, I think, perhaps to some listeners sound like
men have a lot
of heavy lifting to do and women have had this revolution and all is well in woman land.
Is there such a thing as toxic femininity? Are there, is there collateral damage to all
of these societal shifts?
Yes. I'm glad you brought this up because in family therapy, we talk about first and second order change.
First order change is just a rearrangement.
Tommy's true in, yet Tommy not be true in,
and then Sally starts pooping her pants.
It's like, okay, well, rearranging the furniture.
Second order change is a revolution.
No kid has to be symptomatic.
In our culture, there's a lot of what I call individual empowerment.
I was weak, now I'm strong, go screw yourself.
I am woman, I have found my voice, hear me roar, no.
And you get a lot of, I'm going to get into trouble, but too bad,
you get a lot of people in that traditional feminine side of the equation.
Doesn't matter what body you're in,
you're as a fixer on that feminine side.
You get a lot of the people on the feminine side
move from disempowerment to individual empowerment.
I call it, I was weak, now I'm strong, go screw yourself.
And everybody will cheer.
Mom, dad, therapist, 12 step sponsors, your man's group.
No, relational empowerment is the next step.
I was weak, now I'm strong.
I'm gonna go toe to toe with you.
I'm gonna tell you just what I want and need.
Now listen to this.
What could I give you to help you do that for me?
Who sounds like that?
We're a team.
I love you.
What do you need?
Let's work together.
That's the next step.
And a lot of women, early stage feminism, move from disempowerment to individual empowerment.
As a couples therapist, often the bane of my existence is an individual therapist who's individually empowered their client right out of a workable relationship.
No, I was weak. Now I'm strong. I love you. We're a team. Let's roll up our sleeves and
work on this together. That's the new world order. We've covered a lot of ground. I'm looking at all
my notes. There's a lot that we I'm, could cover, but are there any other tools that you would like to cover?
Yes. I want to go back and talk about relational empowerment versus individual empowerment.
Because here's how I say it. Under patriarchy, you can either be connected, that's you, the fixer, accommodating, self-sacrificing, peacemaking,
or you can be assertive, that's more traditionally, quote unquote, masculine, independent, competent,
aggressive.
But you can't be both at the same time, because power is power over.
When you move into power, you break connection.
That's individual empowerment.
I was weak, now I'm strong.
I don't care how I sound.
Just listen.
No, you do care how you sound or you're not going to get listened to.
I teach people, and particularly women in this one or whoever's coming up from the
one down, what I call loving power.
And could you just, for the sake of revisiting,
just describe one up, one down one more time,
because people may not have gotten that.
It's what Peter called my great mentor,
coming out from under the great lie
that a human being could be inherently superior
or inferior to another human being.
Healthy self-esteem, which I have to teach people
in this culture, comes from the inside out.
You're here, you're worthy, you're lovable,
you're a good human being because you're breathing, period.
And your essential worth can't be added to,
it can't be subtracted from.
This is democracy, this is one person, one vote.
We're all equal under the law until recently.
Anyway, this is democracy, but we don't live like this.
We live in the world of patriarchy, which is one up, one down, superior, inferior, better
than, less than, all day long. And the one down, shame, inferiority, helplessness, defectiveness,
unlovability. For 50 years, my field has focused on helping people come up from that one down.
Good. But we've almost totally ignored helping people come down from the one up. Entitlement, anger, judgment, contempt,
self-righteous indignation, all forms of grandiosity. There's a lot of ink now being
spilled on the so-called narcissistic partner, which is almost always a man. And the idea is
they can't be treated, leave them, bullshit. That's more individual empowerment. We treat grandiose men breakfast, lunch, and dinner in RLT.
Come down from that entitlement. Come down from that contempt. It's poison for you.
Let me teach you how to do it. You'll be happier. And we do. We effectively help people come down
from the one up. Trey Lockerbie How do you do that? Just because people probably do this is very unfamiliar territory, as you mentioned, right?
50 years of bringing people up from one down.
But how do you bring someone down a step back to baseline from grandiosity?
You have to wake them up.
There are three phases to RLT.
The first we call waking up the client, which is loving confrontation, which most therapy doesn't do.
Once we get what you're doing that will never work,
and if you ride in the one up, your grandiosity,
then we move into trauma work,
what set you up to do that,
and then we teach you skills, it's all three.
IFS doesn't teach skills, by the way.
A lot of trauma people think you remove the trauma, you don't need to teach skill and
wishful thinking.
Anyway, so first we confront what you're doing, then we go back to your childhood roots and
where it came from and help you with that, and then we teach you new skills to replace
it with.
Why should you come down from your rage and dominance
and control? Why? Well, how's it working for you? I talk about poison privilege. And let
me say this, and this is particularly true for men. You know, God in her wisdom has given
me access to the dream. The real American dream is that if you have money and fame, it will
transmute you. You'll become a demigod and you'll be happy. I treat those people, they're
not happy. They've done well in the world, but they're not happy between their ears and
they're miserable to live with. Some so-called expert got on the television and
talked about aspirational masculinity and Elon Musk. Go to the moon, great. Be the richest man
of the world, great. You want to be married to that guy? You want to be that guy's kid? Good luck.
All of the people I treat are incredible successes in the world and a mess inside.
Why?
The first thing I teach is the difference between gratification and what I call relational
joy.
Gratification is pleasure, short-term pleasure.
You make a million bucks, great.
Pretty girl flirts with you, great.
I like pleasure in its place.
Relational joy, which many of the people, the grandiose
people in particular, have no idea what I'm talking about. Relational joy is the deeper
down pleasure of just being there and being connected. And many of the grandiose people
I work with simply don't know what relational joy is. They've lived their whole life for
gratification and it's empty, and they feel the emptiness,
and the people they live with are fed up with them,
and they certainly feel that.
So what I have to offer is relational joy.
That's the ace in my pocket,
because that's what we're born for.
That's the only thing that will make you happy.
Let me teach you to come down off your perch and enter into being a human being like the
rest of us.
And let me teach you to really look at what you've been doing.
Can I tell you a story?
Yes, always.
A guy came in and he was quote unquote depressed.
Another one of these guys with five therapists under his belt.
Nobody's been able to help him and
He's on the break of divorce And I listen to him and I go I can't help you with your depression, but I can save your marriage
Okay
But you know you have a very this is a guy he literally you go to work come home flop on the couch
His wife would be running around they'd all have dinner, she'd do the homework with the kids,
she'd put them to bed, then he'd slump off the bed
and go to sleep, get up the next day and go to work.
She'd be ready to divorce him.
So you have a very mysterious depression.
It goes into remission at 8.45
and it comes roaring back at 5.15.
When you're at work, you manage the function.
When you're at home, you're on the couch.
A million people have tried to help you
with your depression.
I can't, I'm not gonna try.
You're depressed, sorry, been there.
Here's what I wanna tell ya.
It's true.
Here's what I wanna tell ya.
Says what?
Get off the couch.
Go do homework with your kids.
Go help your wife with the dishes. You manage to pull yourself out of yourself from nine to five.
You give yourself a pass when you get home. You're going to wind up divorced.
And you're going to do great damage to your children. And he looks at his wife
to your children." And he looks at his wife and he says, I realize I've really abandoned you in this family and I made excuses for myself all these years. And he starts to cry.
That's remorse. That's open-heartedness. I say, he's come out of the coldness of outer space into the warmth of connection through remorse.
Oh my god, I see what I've been doing to you. I'm so sorry. And I looked at him and I said,
as I say to so many people in that moment, I say to them, welcome to the planet Earth,
welcome to the human race. It's been really lonely up there, hasn't it?
Well, Terry, you have a lot of resources and a lot of books.
Who should start where?
In other words, do you suggest people start with any particular book or resource if they
have a particular challenge or issue?
Where would you point them?
How can we provide a roadmap for people who want to explore more of Terry Real?
Do the social media thing at real Terry Real. That covers all the social media at
real Terry real. Go to my website terryreal.com. I'm pleased to say we have
a lot of offerings now online for the general public. A course on self-esteem,
a course on healthy boundaries, courses on relationship skills. We have little mini courses,
how to come back from infidelity. We have particular topic courses now that are followed
up by online groups that you can join. So if you're coming back from infidelity,
here's a three-hour workshop and here's an ongoing group you can be part of. you're coming back from infidelity, here's a three hour workshop and here's an
ongoing group you can be part of. We're doing more and more of that. In terms of books,
I like Us, the new book, I like I Don't Want to Talk About It, the old book, and I like
Fierce Intimacy. I like all three of those.
Yeah, Fierce Intimacy. it is quite funny because I loved fierce intimacy and
I wanted to find a Kindle edition to highlight. And could you explain why there isn't one at least as
it stands right now? It's audio sounds to ask me to, you know, it's one of those things God was
with me. I sat in a booth, no notes. And I just talked for three days. And that's first thing to me.
It's insane for people who want to listen to it.
You know, there's certain people, maybe at that point,
the spirit was at your back.
And similarly, I remember at one point,
I was using a meditation app designed by Sam Harris,
and he had this interlude, which was this commentary,
and it was five or 10 minutes long.
And I said, could you please send me the text?
Could you send me the Google doc? And he said, what text? I said, what do you mean? What
text? He goes, I just got, got in the booth and riffed for 10 minutes. And I was like,
okay, their levels and then their levels. So nicely done on fierce intimacy. Thank you.
Yeah. Just a few more questions and everybody should go to terryreal.com. I'm sure that
the socials are also available from terryreal.com and we'll link to everything we've discussed in the show notes.
Outside of your own books, are there any books that you have gifted frequently to other people
or reread more than once yourself that come to mind?
I'm a big fan of Jim Gilligan's book, Violence.
It's not an easy read.
What was the name of the book again?
Violence. Oh, Violence. It's not an easy read. What was the name of the book again?
Violence.
Oh, Violence.
Yeah. Jim was the medical director of the Bridgewater Hospital for the Criminally Insane.
And he worked with serial killers. He worked with like Hannibal the Cannibal. And he starts
off as a young man taking this over and he says to himself if I can figure out the dynamics of these guys I
Can figure out what violence is and he does in the book. So that's been a great inspiration to me
Why has that been an inspiration to you?
I deal with male violence. I deal with violence and both Jim and I agree that violence is
the shunting from the one down to the one up, from shame to grandiosity,
from helplessness to attack. And so it's really, it took him 25 years to write that book and it
shows. You know, not to drift, but when 9-11 happened, I wrote an op-ed piece that nobody published.
In the piece I said, this is the first time we've been hit on American soil.
This is a national trauma, unlike anything we've faced before.
And as a trauma expert, I know that you have two choices.
You can tolerate the discomfort of sitting with the vulnerability and pain of that
trauma and maybe asking some tough questions about why and what needs to happen. Or you can escape
that discomfort by a flight into one-up grandiosity, judgment, contempt, and attack.
And my hope for this country is we join together
in the vulnerability rather than escape into attack.
Nobody published that.
Two weeks later, we were in Iraq.
So I like the book.
I want people to resist the temptation
of flying from discomfort into one-up superiority, contempt, judgment, and
attack.
On all sides, the left and the right.
The left is not shy about moving into self-righteous indignation and contempt either.
We talk about full respect living.
I'll put my body on the line and be on the streets
protesting your agenda and still hold you
in regard as a human being.
I don't have to dehumanize you in order to fight you.
Gandhi knew that, Martin Luther King knows that.
That wisdom is being lost all over the globe right now.
It needs to be rekindled.
Any other books that come to mind besides violence?
David Gerrold
I like Raymond Chandler.
Tom Bilyeu 16
Yeah, Raymond Chandler is amazing.
Where would you have to go start or do you have a favorite?
David Gerrold
You know, I love lines. Blinda made my day by giving me a book called The Great
One-Liners from Noir. I like Noir.. The big sleep I got. There's a great line
when Humphrey Bogart meets Lauren McCall playing Sam Spade, she says, oh, I see you met my little
sister. He says, yeah, she tried to sit on my lap. I was sitting up at the time.
Now that's writing. All right.
So speaking of one liners, just a few more questions and then we'll wind to a close.
If you had a billboard, metaphorically speaking, just to get a message, a line, a quote, a
question, anything like that to many, many millions of people, what might you put on that billboard?
Have the courage to move beyond the defaults
you were handed and do it with help.
Terry, thank you for taking the time today.
It's so nice to see you again.
I really appreciate you carving out the time,
being flexible on start time
and covering so much ground as well.
You're a wonderful interviewer, Tim, and I'm sure you're going to edit this out, but if I dare say even the little,
I know you have grown fond of you.
I'm rooting for you.
So what a service you're offering.
And thank you for having me on.
Yeah, absolutely.
Thank you, Terry.
And to everybody listening, we will have links to everything in the show notes
as per usual at tim.blogslashpodcast. Just search Terry or Terry real, and it'll pop right up. Hey guys, this is Tim again, just one more thing before you take off, and that is Five Bullet Friday.
Would you enjoy getting a short email from me every Friday
that provides a little fun before the weekend?
Between one and a half and two million people
subscribe to my free newsletter,
my super short newsletter called Five Bullet Friday.
Easy to sign up, easy to cancel.
It is basically a half page that I send out every Friday to share the coolest
things I've found or discovered or have started exploring over that week. It's kind of like
my diary of cool things. It often includes articles I'm reading, books I'm reading,
albums, perhaps, gadgets, gizmos, all sorts of tech tricks and so on that get sent to
me by my friends, including a lot of podcasts guests and these strange esoteric things end up
in my field. And then I test them and then I share them with you. So if that sounds fun, again,
it's very short, a little tiny bite of goodness before you head off for the weekend, something
to think about. If you'd like to try it out, just go to tim.blog slash Friday, type that into your
browser, tim.blog slash Friday, drop in into your browser, tim.blog slash Friday,
drop in your email and you'll get the very next one.
Thanks for listening.
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