The Viall Files - E976 Ask Nick - My Parents’ Big Secret
Episode Date: August 4, 2025Our first caller is dating her pen pal, but now he wants a break. Our second caller is wondering how to handle her divorced parents' secret re-marriage. And, our third caller job training has made her... mean to men. “There's a time and a place to ask yourself why and ask yourself what." Listen to Humble Brag with Cynthia Bailey and Crystal Kung Minkoff every Monday. Available wherever you get your podcasts and YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@humblebragpod https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/humble-brag-with-crystal-and-cynthia/id1774286896 https://open.spotify.com/show/4NWA8LBk15l2u5tNQqDcOO?si=c03a23d537f94735 Start your 7 Day Free Trial of Viall Files + here: https://viallfiles.supportingcast.fm/ Please make sure to subscribe so you don’t miss an episode and as always send in your relationship questions to asknick@theviallfiles.com to be a part of our Monday episodes. We’ve partnered with Mint Mobile to open a hot takes hotline to hear your scorching hot opinions! Give us your hot takes, thoughts and theories and we’ll read and react to the best ones on an upcoming Reality Recap episode! All you have to do is call 1-855-MINT-TLK or, if you prefer the numbers, that’s 855-646-8855 and leave us a message. To Order Nick’s Book Go To: https://www.viallfiles.com If you would like to get some texting advice, send an email to asknick@theviallfiles.com with “Texting Office Hours” in the subject line! To advertise on this podcast please email: ad-sales@libsyn.com or go to: https://advertising.libsyn.com/theviallfiles THANK YOU TO OUR SPONSORS: Firstleaf - Enjoy the fresh vibes of spring with wines you’ll love from Firstleaf. Go to https://tryfirstleaf.com/viall to sign up and you’ll get your first SIX handpicked bottles for just $44.95. BetterHelp - Talk it out, with BetterHelp. Our listeners get 10% off their first month at https://betterhelp.com/viall FIGS - If you're in healthcare—or shopping for someone who is—you can get 15% off your first order at https://wearfigs.com with the code FIGSRX. Caraway - You can shop Caraway Risk-Free! Enjoy fast, free shipping, easy returns, and a 30-day trial. Plus, if you visit https://carawayhome.com/viallfiles you can take an additional 10% off your next purchase. Article - Article is offering our listeners $50 off your first purchase of $100 or more. To claim, visit https://article.com/viall and the discount will be automatically applied at checkout MTV - Don’t miss The Challenge: Vets and New Threats. All new tonight at 8/7 Central on MTV. Timestamps: (00:00) - Intro (01:28) - Caller One (45:26) - Caller Two (01:15:18) - Caller Three Episode Socials: @viallfiles @nickviall @justinkaphillips @dereklanerussell
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You're crazy.
Oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh,
How's it going? Hi, I'm Shay, 29.
I dated my pen pal and now he wants a break?
What do I do?
All right.
What do you mean you dated your pen pal?
It sounds like very 1980s.
So we didn't even date for quite two months, but he has a lot of the qualities, I would say,
like the best qualities of other guys I've dated rolled up into one. But we're both going through
huge career changes. So I'm going from scientist to theater producer, and he's going from software
engineer to music producer. Obviously, we've never done this before. So the topic of how do you make a relationship work or grow a new relationship while also
building your business at the same time?
All my friends are entrepreneurs and have kind of the thought of like, you're going
to make it work if you want to make it work.
I would agree.
But as we got into it, it was clear that he didn't necessarily agree.
And it got to this point where-
And are you talking about career?
Are you talking about relationships or both?
A little bit of both.
Yeah, so like, can you build your career
and also build a relationship at the same time?
Was this like a philosophical question
you guys asked each other and like-
I would say it's a topic that like,
we're just always like a little unsure,
like can we do this?
How old is he?
He's 31.
Okay.
Fascinating that you guys are both going from like,
more business to the arts, both of you,
in an interesting way.
The path that you're both choosing, I'm curious,
like is it a financial, like,
you're like really chasing your dreams?
I guess what I'm saying is it's like,
are you less motivated by money
or still motivated by money,
but also like just choosing a different career?
I would say we're both pretty motivated by money.
Okay.
So we both have still our corporate jobs
to kind of like what I say,
like bankroll our side hustles for now
until we can build them up.
Okay.
Are you both, and so you,
but you both, both of your side hustles are like entrepreneurial,
like trying to start businesses.
It's not like- Yeah.
You're not quitting your job of, of, of science
and like doing like local theater
just because you want to scratch that itch.
Correct.
I mean, that is the plan eventually,
but when it makes money right right now that's like the,
you know, five to nine and I have a nine to five.
Very cool, okay.
So just walk me through like how this relationship started
and then what happened in this relationship.
I always, for me it's always a red flag
when like callers like yourself call in
and say things like, we started dating, we're no longer dating,
he or she had all the qualities I ever wanted.
Yeah.
And so you have, and I'm like, okay, well, apparently not.
Well, and I don't disagree.
And that's why I'm calling in because it's like,
I'm also science brain.
So I'm like, I only have a couple of data points
from this guy.
So no matter how good they are, they're only a couple.
There you go.
Yeah.
We started dating and things were just pretty good.
I mean, the fact that we are having
very similar career changes, I think brought us together.
We're both very creative,
but also like very math and science driven.
And then to me, the piece that I feel like I've missed in other parts is
like, I like stability, but I really like the idea of like, hey, like we could up and move to Europe,
and are you okay with that? He's very that way. But I was just, I've been kind of at my theater
producing longer than he has. And I'm also more of a planner and I stick to schedules and he hasn't figured that out
yet.
So I could fill him pulling away and I was just like, what's going on?
And he brought up his friends and he's like, well, my friends had asked me to hang out
the other day and I don't know if I'm going to do it because that's two hours I could
do music producing.
And I'm like, okay, walk me through this. In my
brain, I'm thinking when I hang out with my friends, they energize me. If I just sat in
a room by myself all day, that wouldn't make me better at any of my jobs. But he went and
hung out with them. I was thinking, oh, maybe this is positive. He comes back and he's like,
I'm glad I hung out with them. So now I don't have to see them for three months.
It's like, okay, what does that mean for us?
And he's like, I don't think I can be
in a relationship right now.
And I was like, okay.
How did you, how does this relationship,
when you said pen pals, like when does the relationship start?
So we just started dating normal initially.
And then now we're pen pals.
Like we're sending like postcards through snail mail
until October 10th, which is this like date
where we're gonna meet up.
So did you meet like on an app
or like you meet through mutual friends?
On Hinge.
You met on Hinge.
Okay, you met on Hinge.
So you met on Hinge, you started dating,
you bonded over your mutual like dissatisfaction
of your current like career and trajectory on life You bonded over your mutual dissatisfaction
of your current career and trajectory on life
and both kind of have an arts and entrepreneurial ambitions
and then that's where the, I guess,
maybe the similarities ended.
I mean, other than that, what were some of the,
when you started dating, what made him so special?
I just enjoyed being around him.
Like his energy is so positive.
I come from a little bit more of a dark and twisty
background and he doesn't and he just has this hope
and positivity about everything.
He's very curious about the world, like very empathetic.
And I also felt like sometimes when you date people
and like they tell you things that they like about you,
it's kind of like,
you could have just like told anyone
and this anytime he would tell me something,
it would be like very specific.
Like McKenna, I like you because you are so focused intentional about
the way you're going about this career.
I like you because of when you see the world, you think about whatever, right?
But we also talked about our future and what we wanted and like when we could like have
a family and things seem to line up again as much as it can, like when you have only
known someone for a short period. Yeah. I mean, I think that last part's really important that you're always kind of
throwing it at the end. And then where are we now? Like where are we at the, where's the pen pal?
Yeah, so where we are now is he wanted to like potentially like see each other for coffee in
this three month period and talk on the phone.
That feels situation shippy to me.
I've paid a therapist too much money to go do that.
And I was like, that's not gonna work.
But I was like, well, I can like send you a postcard
here and there.
I'm traveling a lot in the next few months.
And so we're sending postcards and letters
and we have like an October 10th,
we're meeting at X place at X time
with no expectations. Like he knows that I'm dating other people, but that we'll talk about
where we are. But he's also said he doesn't want to have to like build his whole career by himself.
He wants to set up what he calls systems, like the schedules, the timing, the routines, the habits.
That's my understanding. And then he feels like he needs like three months. Also in the back
of my head, it's like, is this going to take more than three months? Is it going to take
like eight months, a year?
What is he actively trying to do? I mean, I'm not trying to steal his business plan.
I'm just curious about like...
My understanding is he wants to be a music producer, but it's not like I know a lot about
that business and I mean, he's figuring it out.
So yeah, I mean, it's such a broad thing.
Yeah.
But I also feel like he's like pretty, he's even like this with like his brother.
It's like he, he doesn't, he kind of wants to like, how do you know his relationship
with his brother?
Cause they live together.
And so I like saw it. Yeah. Gotcha. And know his relationship with his brother? Cause they lived together and so I saw his brother, yeah.
Gotcha.
And so what is that dynamic like from your point of view?
I mean, I feel like his brother's honestly
a lot more like me, much more open
with how they're feeling.
But it's a good relationship, they enjoy each other,
but he's even told me he wants to spend less time
with his brother during this time
while he figures his career out.
Okay. I mean, more than anything, I think you just have to take him at face value.
You don't know this man well enough to make any significant proclamations about who he is as a
person other than he seems like generally a good guy. More importantly, like in terms of your two compatibility, a lot of what you
describe totally get why it made you feel good, totally get why it's
attractive to you, but none of that really has anything to do, nothing you
describe from what I'm hearing.
And maybe you left some things out,
have anything to do with how you two
would be in a relationship together.
Okay.
Yeah, a lot of, like, what you described,
a lot of it is, like, things you enjoy,
like in a honeymoon phase.
I mean, certainly as a relationship, you know,
you date and you, as things progress, like,
what this guy, if anything, this guy showed you a key indicator
of how he disconnects from anyone
when he feels a little stressed out
or he feels a little overwhelmed
and his ability to, I guess, multitask on some ways,
but yeah, just balance his emotional priorities.
He has shown, at least right now in this stage of his life,
an inability or a lack of a desire to do that.
Now, will that change over time?
I don't know.
You know, what you're describing, you know,
it definitely, it ultimately,
like and also let me ask you, how good is your bullshit meter?
Is this ultimately sound like a really thought out,
crafted, sincere excuse?
Or is it more just a really, at the end of the day,
it's just his version of being a fuck boy?
Yeah, no.
I'm with you. That's probably the thing
that I'm most hesitant of like, should we even try to see each other in October? Because I've
definitely dated guys that have, you know, it's like always the career, which is fine. But then it's like, let's not date.
Yeah.
His, I mean, I've really thought about this.
I feel like I'm obviously gonna be
an unreliable witness to degree.
I don't think so.
He's really laid out, hey, this is what my plan
is for the next few months.
This is what it is later.
This is what it is when like I'm more comfortable
having like community back in the picture. I mean. I think that's where you said, take him at face value. Essentially,
I almost feel like I have to trust him until he gives me a reason not to.
Well, sure. You can trust that this is a person who is being sincere with his words and intention,
and he's not just giving you some very carefully crafted excuse of why
he doesn't want to settle down and wants the option to date other women while he's also
pursuing a business, right?
He said he wasn't going to date other people, but I would never hold it.
That doesn't really matter, right?
My point is, is like, you've known this guy for less than two months.
You don't owe him, I guess, the benefit of the doubt,
so to speak, you know what I'm saying?
And so, you're spending, you've heard,
you're spending a lot of emotional energy
trying to figure out what you should do going forward
with this man who ultimately wants to invest differently
in this relationship than you do right now.
And regardless if his intentions are sincere
or a little bullshitty,
ultimately I don't think you allowing him to dictate terms
on the cadence and how often you see each other
in the manner in which you communicate
is necessarily a good thing,
even if he has nothing but pure intentions.
Yeah, I mean, I agree with that.
He's the one that wanted to see me
and talk to me on the phone.
I was the one that said no.
But I guess is it even, and maybe we don't know this,
but based on what you know, do
you think it's even reasonable that he would
be at a place in October to have a conversation
about being in a relationship again?
I doubt, I mean, like, uh, I find that three
months is zero amount of time when it comes to
things like changing careers and starting a
business.
Um, usually those are things that take like like changing careers and starting a business.
Usually those are things that take like years to really feel, I mean, I don't know,
if I'm comparing like myself,
like it took me 12, 11 years to feel like,
now that's a little bit,
I would say it took me three or four years to feel like, now that's a, I would say it took me three or four years to feel like, oh, I found something
that works for me and I have something here.
And then, oh shit, I got, now that I have something,
as an entrepreneur, you never feel,
like, if you really have that entrepreneurial spirit,
you never feel comfortable in, like,
every level of success
is met with like, well, how do I either maintain this
so I don't lose it or how do I get to the next step?
So yeah, like that's another thing to consider is,
maybe he lacks the perspective
of what he's really getting into
because the emotional bandwidth he thinks he needs
to get things started is just the beginning.
Like right now he has nothing to lose.
Things get more stressful when you have things to lose
and you taste a little bit of success.
And so ultimately he needs to figure that out.
You're not his therapist, you're not even his girlfriend,
you're barely his friend.
And I think like you can't make the mistake
of playing therapist, of playing scientist,
of trying to figure him out and being stuck emotionally,
trying to figure out what his intentions are
or whether he's doing it the way you would do it.
You met a nice guy who checked some boxes early on.
Some of those boxes were based off of the time
in which you guys met, and that's more a chemistry thing.
I always say that chemistry is very hard to trust
because it can be manufactured.
Often chemistry is felt by sharing mutual things, right?
Like people who go on reality TV
will feel natural organic
chemistry with each other because very few people
can relate to them and they can relate to each other
and being able to relate to one another is chemistry
on some levels.
I think honestly it's more chemistry than compatibility.
Compatibility is like how you guys,
yeah relating is a point of compatibility but that's more like what do you do
with being able to relate to each other?
You can relate to someone and have nothing in common
with them in terms of like what you wanna do
on a daily basis.
And the things that you pointed out, like, oh,
he really knew how to compliment me,
that's a nice thing, right?
It's like, you're more describing someone who like, I don't know, best analogy I have right now, I'm always come up with? It's like you're more describing someone who like,
I don't know, best analogy I have right now,
I'm always come up with food,
but like you're describing like a really cool,
like a really tasty dessert that you discovered
and you're wondering if there's a really tasty dessert,
is this like something you should incorporate
into your diet every day for the rest of your life?
And it might just be like a really tasty dessert
that like really scratched that craving
and that itch in that moment once you ate it.
You'd have a really savory meal or whatever
and now you had a really delicious dessert
that paired well with that really savory meal.
But it's not something that like honestly,
you're, you is really gonna be good for you
to have every day and might not make you,
I don't know, it's not the best analogy.
But like it's like that's- Curious.
That's kind of what you have right now. He might have already negated this with the
fact that, like, he got stressed, he's this time away, and I deal with things differently, but
I felt like he was a person. We have very tough conversations that are honest, not like the easy,
honest conversations, like the,, honest conversations like the,
we're not sure we agree, but we're going to talk, like talk through this anyways.
To me early on, like if that grew, that was a pro in my brain. Also the way we really like our
independence. So I've always said, it's like, I want time to go solo travel on my own.
I don't want to spend all my time with someone.
I'm very career oriented, very driven.
He seemed to match up in that way.
Our past experiences with relationships, maybe things that didn't go well, seemed to match
up and like where the friction was around that.
So I mean, I hear what you're saying, but like initially there was more than just like the oooey gooey fun stuff. Yeah, I don't doubt that, right? But even what you just described there, it's just
like, but how does he like you bonded over exes and maybe commiserated
how you both felt in relationships in the past, right?
You were able to understand each other's emotional pain
and frustrations in relationship.
So like you both felt seen, you know, and I get it.
That natural feeling would make you feel like,
oh, well, if we dated, then you would be already sensitive
to my plight of feeling like this in a relationship
because like my last partners,
I never even got that far to get them to make me feel
like they understood where I was coming from
and this is a person who understands where I'm coming from
and also I'd like to see him naked
and like usually it's only my girlfriends
who understand where I'm coming from.
So yay win.
You know, like I get that thought process
but at the same time that doesn't tell you anything
about how he's going to handle himself
in a relationship with you when shit hits the fan
or things come up in his life.
What he has shown you is that when that happens,
he pulls away and you know,
it's something I repeated to Natalie over and over
when we were just like courting
and I was like having my own internal excuses or whatever, not
dating, but it's true.
It's just like, and I think men feel this way especially, but I think people in
general, but like relationships start when ex when, when, when you both accept
that you have expectations of each other and that you have to meet those expectations
and show up consistently for the other person
and with that, takes away your independence.
And that's reality, that is a reality
that he clearly sees on some level.
Now you're just like, well, wait, hold on,
I'm chill, I also like my independence,
I also like to travel, if you date me, I'm not, hold on. Like, you know, I'm chill. I also like my independence. I also like to travel.
If you date me, I'm not going to take away your independence.
But the reality is, is regardless of how you plan on carrying yourself.
And we talked about those expectations, but you're right.
I mean, to me, what I'm hearing and what you're saying is just like, we don't know.
What we do know is how he responded in this situation.
And we don't have enough of
like how we would connect during a fight or all this other stuff, because we've just never
experienced it. So I guess the question is, is like, then do I even like, do I even do anything?
Or do I just? I mean, that's really the question is like, do I even do anything?
Do I even do the pen pal October 10th, we're going and having a conversation thing.
Yeah, listen, it is hard for me to say you should definitely not do this or definitely
do this.
You know, mine and Natalie's origin story, a lot of it comes down to her being willing
to accept some things that she didn't want in the moment.
And then eventually she kind of figured out
what her boundary was, and that got pushed
a little bit here or there, but eventually
she set and enforced that boundary and got what she wanted.
So a lot of it is this timing.
It's just one of those things,
it's hard for me to play revisionist history
with my relationship and had she set and enforced
that boundary sooner than I did,
would we still been able to work it out
or would I have said no and fucked everything up
and who knows, right?
I don't believe in destiny and fate
and I definitely think there are consequences
to our choices and actions and things like that.
But I think as a general rule,
you're not ever putting yourself in a favorable position
to get what you want to accept less
than what you know you deserve in this process.
And most people won't wake up and just realize
what they've lost or what they're risking with someone
unless they lose that thing.
You know?
And so right now when he says things like,
well let's just, let's set a date in the future.
Part of it almost sounds romantic,
but in reality all it's doing is pushing you off.
It's like he's just rescheduling a meeting
that he doesn't have time for right now.
Yeah.
I mean, that's.
And I mean, yeah, I don't disagree.
He's probably like, yeah, she's cute, I like her,
she's really nice, I just don't have time
for this shit right now, I really wanna focus on this.
All being very sincere and earnest in his mind,
and he could really think that you're a great woman,
and you could be his favorite potential person where he really doesn't have any time
for dating other than maybe flirting at the bars
when he goes out with his buddies.
But again, if what you're telling me is true and sincere,
this is a guy who this thinks that he can't or shouldn't
be even bonding with his bros in a time where he really needs to like focus on his career.
And maybe that's just like his unique personality.
Like, you know, it's like often people describe me as unique.
That that's, you know, people often say that as a compliment and it is a criticism, you know, and usually it comes with both.
If you're unique, you're generally unique. And like sometimes like that uniqueness comes out
and like, oh, he really sees me for who I am
and really compliments me in ways
I've never been complimented.
And also it's like, you know,
he's so fucking weird sometimes.
Usually like they go together.
You know?
That makes a lot of sense, like,
especially when you were saying that, you know,
he's pushing off a meeting
in general, not even with him, but this is a conversation I have with my girlfriends,
is do you think, I mean, you were talking about the timeline of building your business,
right?
Do you think it's reasonable to start really new romantic relationships during that process.
And if so, is it just like,
you mentioned maybe this is just his personality, right?
Is it like a personality thing?
I guess what dictates whether that will be
positive or negative? It's such a loaded question.
Part of me wants to say, of course you can do both, right?
It should, depending on who you date,
it could add a lot of value.
At this stage in my relationship with Natalie,
I need her in my life.
She is, I mean, God, everything to me.
She is the person I talk to about,
from even just straight business standpoint.
I mean, I have my team of people
whose opinions I really respect
and are very knowledgeable
in things that me or Natalie know nothing about.
But Natalie, she's like,
yeah, I bounce everything off her more than anyone else
and things like that.
But listen, I don't know,
if Natalie, you know, if I woke up one day
and she took the baby and the dogs and left,
like that would really, that would put me
at a great risk emotionally to like,
you know, relationships are volatile.
You have to be vulnerable in the types of relationships
that people, you know, they want to pursue when it
comes to starting a family and getting married and settle down.
It requires vulnerability.
It requires you to let go and trust someone and lead with trust and not skepticism at
the risk of this person breaking your heart and fucking you up
and making it harder to get out of bed
and feel depressed for a period of time.
And that takes, if you go through that,
just takes every ounce of emotional and physical energy.
And if anyone's ever experienced that before,
you know, that's like what's
the one thing I don't want to feel while going through starting this business?
That would probably be it, right? Now that's a very like dark and like negative
approach to like considering the pros and cons but like it's definitely, you
know, it's not delusional, it's realistic, it's something to consider. So it's
really hard to say, you know,
well you should be able to do it if he's just like,
I don't know, like, if I were, if fast forward,
you know, 18 years and River's a, you know,
let's say she's a 20 something year old young woman
and she comes to me and says, dad, I really have this idea.
I really, I'm really, this is what I wanna do
when I grow up.
This is like, I wanna to be very career focused.
Maybe someday I want to have kids and settle down, but this is what I want to do right now.
I would talk with her about like, well, you know, these things you should prioritize.
And if it is right now, you know, and then she was like, well, I also like this boy, you know.
Fair enough. But like, you know, we might have a conversation about like, hey, be mindful where you invest your emotional energy.
I hope my kids are dependent.
When I think back, it all worked out.
But part of the reason I feel like my career
had the trajectory that it did,
my freshman year in college, I left every weekend
to go see my girlfriend at the time.
I mean, she took up so much emotional energy
my freshman year.
I didn't even have a college experience that most had.
I invested in that relationship.
That affected friendships, it affected my studies,
it affected my interest in athletics
that I participated in, and honestly,
it took over my life.
But at the time, I'm thinking, I'm gonna,
I was a 19, 20-year-old kid who was trying to replicate
what my parents had, who settled down early,
and that's all I knew.
And that is a reality, it all worked out,
I recovered, whatever.
But it's more of a philosophical question that you're asking, it's just like, I recovered, whatever. But it's more of a philosophical question
that you're asking, it's just like, could we,
so the philosophical part doesn't really matter,
but it was fun to talk through it with you,
but you're not gonna change his mind.
And you shouldn't wanna change his mind.
And this is where he's at in this stage of his life,
and this is what he wants to do.
So you just kind of have to accept it and move on.
And the only thing you can do is to like slightly
kind of play the game or not play the game
by deciding do I meet his terms in terms of the cadence,
how we meet, you know, do I like show up at the future,
at the meeting he wanted to reschedule?
And that's what I was gonna ask is like,
so I go live my life for three months, right?
I don't need to rehash this with friends.
I do all my things.
I mean, frankly, like it's not like he's like
the only busy human, like we all have our stuff.
Do I answer the phone?
Hypothetically, at a later date.
I think the best answer is to do whatever the fuck you want and what you need to try
to do is stop planning for the future with this guy because that takes energy.
Live your life, focus on your business, get on the apps, date, do what you're doing.
Don't commit to anything with this guy, don't plan anything in the future.
If he wants to plan something with you,
it's like, you know, I mean, I don't know.
Maybe I'll be available, maybe I won't.
Like, you know, we're not obviously dating,
so like, I don't know, like, you know, call me whenever.
Like, you were great, obviously.
You know, it's like one of those things,
it sounds like you already did,
but like, it's like, when you play the game, right?
Like, first you have to, you have to have that vulnerability,
which is like, I always go back to me and Natalie.
Natalie, very quickly, very, you know, early on,
was this like, I like you, I think we should date,
here's why.
That was vulnerable of her.
She put herself out there, she was like,
bam, bam, bam, bam, bam.
Then she got the no, and obviously it was like,
so she was bummed, right?
But at least she, she stood her ground.
She drew a line in the sand about this is what I want at the risk of feeling
rejected and being vulnerable.
So that's always important to do.
Cause then you walk away saying like, I wanted this, like you didn't find.
So then going forward, when you enforce your boundary or don't meet like their
requests, they, you don't meet like their requests,
they, you don't have to explain yourself every time.
You're just like, you know, I'm busy, you know?
So I just think there's a middle ground.
You don't, you just, you don't, you don't plan anything with him.
If you happen to be available when he calls, pick up the phone.
If you happen to be available when he asked you to meet up and you got nothing
else going on, you don't have to like tell him that. But asks you to meet up and you got nothing else going on, you don't have to tell him that, but you can meet up.
But he shouldn't feel secure in his planning
for the future with you.
And it's like if there's an important meeting I have,
or a half-ass important meeting using in those terms,
and whatever, I was like, I don't know if I wanna go
to this meeting
I definitely should meet with this person. I
Was kind of interested in what they had to say, but like right now I just don't have time for it
Let's see if field or let's see if they're available to meet in a few weeks and if that person's like, yeah, no problem
Yeah that that works. I feel I can emotionally kind of put that away, right?
You know if that person was like well, I honestly like, I'm available right now.
I don't know if I'm gonna be available in the future,
but just like, call me then, like no hard feelings,
but I'm just not in a position
to schedule anything in the future,
because I just, I got a lot going on.
I would feel like that changes my decision tree.
It's just like, okay, well, I still have to decide
in that moment whether I want to keep this meeting
or just risk the fact that this person's unwilling
to set a meeting with me.
Because again, that person who's unwilling
to set a meeting in that moment is communicating
their value and their, you know.
So if you think of it in those terms, you know.
I really, I really, yeah, this is making a lot of sense.
This is making me feel just like more confident, like I got this
and hopefully I didn't do it in a mean way.
But I, I did lay that out of like, well, I'm, I'm here now, but I have no idea where I'm going
to be in three months. Like who knows? And yeah, I like what you said is it doesn't
have to be cut and dry, black and white.
It's just like, I go live my life.
If I have other stuff or whatever life has happened
and then however many, you know, I'm not available.
Great.
And if, like you said, if I don't have anything
going on and I want to answer the phone, then
answer the phone.
Call it a day.
Okay.
Like it.
In the meantime, we get out of your head about what you think he is as a partner and you
don't want to do the thing that we all do, which is paint a picture in your mind about
who you think he is and take your brief interactions together and then write your story in your
head about how,
there's just so much to learn about this guy.
And then again, in these moments where he pulls away,
that's where our egos take over, right?
So your ego is saying, it's not you,
these are valid excuses, you also have a business too,
you're not being rejected here. Don't worry about that.
And there might be truths to some of that
or things like that,
but that is also your ego potentially lying to you
and masking the truth,
because if you were just taking your ego
and your feelings out of the equation,
like I'm kind of seeing this,
you would look at this more objectively
and be like, I don't know.
I don't, he said, I don't know.
He said some nice things, I really liked what I learned
about him, he certainly made me feel good about that.
None of that really tells me how he would be
in a relationship other than like, he's just like,
he's good at being present for periods of time,
you know, which is nice.
But how does it, like, so much about a relationship
is the consistency of showing up every day regardless of other priorities
and prioritizing what's in your life.
My biggest priority is my wife and daughter work.
I'm sure she feels like at times is my number one priority,
but it's really just for them.
And there are often, that's always the priority,
the family, and that's very clear in our relationship
where things stand.
On a day-to-day basis, there might be,
but we both have that clear understanding.
And so much of being in a relationship
is just knowing where you stand with that other person
in their list of priorities.
Which is why I think a lot of people
just have a hard time connecting nowadays in this age.
Because again, I empathize with someone
who's career driven, because I am as well.
But I think right now, younger people are just
having a hard time having their cake
and eat it too.
You know?
And I think back in the day it was more like get, like find someone, build a life together.
Now it's build a life for myself.
Exactly.
Then find someone.
And then try to fit someone into it.
Yeah.
A million percent.
Yeah.
And I mean.
It's harder to do.
Even my friends, like, and they're, like, and they're just friends, right?
It's not even family.
They have stuff going on, but they've made it clear,
hey, my friends are a priority
and I will make time to whatever with you, right?
Yeah.
It can be done.
It's not necessarily convenient, but.
But this is where you need to be careful.
When I see it in myself, when I'm seeing you,
is this like, having the therapy sessions
in your head with yourself about someone else.
Okay, yeah.
You know, you, I bet you could talk to yourself
the next two hours getting off this call with me
about how like, he doesn't understand
what you and I just talked about. And it's so simple and like you could literally be
having a therapy session with him in your mind.
I'm with you but it's pointless.
Very. Yeah.
Okay. So is like a key to just keep away from that other than you telling me just don't do that
is to like make sure I'm just like
filling my life with other things, going on dates, et cetera.
Yeah, I mean right now this is like,
and I wrote a chapter about this in my book
and I should probably reread it to refresh myself,
but there's a time and a place to like ask yourself why
and ask yourself what.
Right now you're not asking yourself enough what questions,
you're just asking why. Why did this happen?
Why, how can I figure, you know, but like what happened?
You know, he doesn't have time for me.
You know?
He doesn't wanna be in a relationship.
He doesn't wanna be in a relationship.
He doesn't even wanna like, he doesn't have to,
he doesn't prioritize his friends.
Why?
It doesn't really matter the why he chose to do it,
but he did.
And the what right now is very important.
And there's a time for why I'm not remembering it.
I'll go look it up.
Yeah.
What happened is really important right now.
And you're kind of ignoring some of the what.
What, you have more information about how,
what he's doing now is more telling
about how he would be in relationship
than him saying to you,
you know what I really like about you?
And let me give you some very specific details.
Like that's-
I'm with you.
Definitely nice, don't get me wrong. It's like, and...
I mean, I did tell him this when we had our last conversation. I was just like, this makes me very curious how you would be if anything else ever came up if we were together.
Sure. Yeah.
We're married, we have a kid, something's wrong, and you're just like, oh, I can't right now, so I'm just gonna leave. He doesn't see it that way. He's probably thinking, well, I would be different
if you were my wife and my kid, you know?
I don't think that's what he would think.
But, you know, he doesn't know, you know,
we always give ourselves the benefit of the doubt
by saying we would actually step up
if this was different, if things were different,
but we don't really know until we know.
And I don't think it's an apples to apples comparison
because again, he is not wrong on some level to be like,
I can't afford for this girl to fuck me up
emotionally right now.
I don't know, and maybe she would.
Like maybe he, maybe this empathetic caring king
that revealed himself early on is the type of guy
who like, you know, has been walked over in past relationships,
really emotionally invest in relationships.
That's my understanding.
Is that like he very much lets the other person
kind of dictate it and this is his like,
putting my foot down. And that's been really burned before
and he doesn't know how to balance that.
And right now he knows that like to do what he wants to do,
he can't risk, you know,
just being caught up in a relationship.
That might be very valid. But it doesn't risk just being caught up in a relationship.
That might be very valid.
But it doesn't make it any less valid for me to.
As it relates to you.
Go to my stuff.
No, it's not permission for you to make exceptions for him.
And yeah, your best course of action is to,
you can be chill about it, you can let things play out,
you don't have to set some like,
don't ever call me again rigid boundary,
but you just don't accommodate to set some like, don't ever call me again, rigid boundary, but like you just don't,
you don't accommodate him trying to,
you know, reschedule plans with you
and have any sense of security
that you are waiting around
or that you are available,
that he, you know, that it's,
you know, call me when you're free.
I may or may not be around.
I like it.
Okay.
Appreciate you, Nick.
Well, keep us posted.
I'd love to know how, let me explain.
This was honestly really helpful.
Like I feel like I just needed,
I needed that outside perspective.
I appreciate what you said,
especially in the way you described,
like the setting a business meeting, pushing it off,
that sense of security that you feel
and asking the what questions.
I'm gonna write that down somewhere. All right. Well, thank you for what questions. I'm going to write that down
somewhere. All right. Well, thank you for the call. That was helpful. Please keep us posted.
We love an update on where things go with the business and the sky. Awesome. Thank you, Nick.
All right. Take care. Thanks for your call. Bye.
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How's it going?
Hi, my name is Kate.
I'm 30 years old and I need help on how do I handle
my divorced parents secret remarriage.
All right, so does that mean that your parents
at some point in your childhood who got divorced
decided to behind your back,
reconnect and marry each other again?
Yes, actually it's recently.
So a little background information is, um, my parents never really got along.
They constantly bickered, like the earliest I remember is elementary school.
They would just argue.
My mom would ignore my dad.
Um, they would just threaten divorce all the time, like to the point where, like,
they would actually contact divorce attorneys and then threaten the papers and different things like that.
To each other?
To each other, yeah. So it would just like constant toxicity and like it would be right
in front of all of us. And so it was very, it was just apparent that their relationship
just was not successful. And so this just continued.
I actually have four siblings
and so there's quite a few of us in our house.
And so we would listen to like the arguing,
the bickering, all the different things.
And as I got older, so like middle school, high school,
my dad actually started to like confide in us more and more
just about like his relationship
and like my mom's kind of toxic bipolar behaviors
and the way that she reacted on things.
And like we saw that as kids and we very much so
like tiptoed around her because she was very bipolar.
And-
Has she been diagnosed?
No, she does take like certain medications
and stuff for like her anxiety,
but she just has always just been very like explosive in her reactions and the different things that she does.
Is there a consistent volatility when she is triggered or is it again, we're not
doctors here and so I don't know about that, but, or is it more like there are
seasons or periods where she's just one person and then all of a sudden there's like episodes where it's more volatile.
Yeah.
She, um, it could be just like small things that just set her off completely.
So it was kind of, um, but that's consistent.
Yes.
It depends on the day too, for her, like it could be one day great, the next day,
not great.
She's just kind of all over the place.
Um, so we all just kind of were on edge our whole life
of like, okay, what personality are we gonna get from her?
And so my dad actually has owned his own business
his whole life.
And so he started like confiding in the different
like financial choices that he was fighting for my mom
to all of us.
And I think it was out of fear that like someday
he knew that they were probably
going to get divorced, but he didn't want to expose like all of his finances. And so
he would hide like different things from my mom about like the purchases that he had,
or just like the things that he would do in his business, or how much his business was
actually making. And so it was just super unhealthy unhealthy because like, as I don't know, a 12 year
old, I probably shouldn't be hearing about all of that.
Um, and so, um, in high school, he started to really open up and say, the only
reason he's staying with her is because of us kids and he wanted to keep us,
um, all together in one house because it would be easier.
And he was worried about custody and, and all of those things.
because it would be easier and he was worried about custody and all of those things. And so their relationship just continued to be super toxic.
Through college, my dad actually broke his leg and my mom just treated him horribly,
like wouldn't take care of him.
I actually went back from college to like basically escape him out of the house because
he called me and was like, Hey, can you come
move me into my parents' house because I got to get out of here. And then he exposed that
he had like a secret hidden like stash of money because it was an escape money that
he could take if he needed to go like start over. And so it was kind of an awkward position
for me to be put in because like, obviously, I know my mom's personality is, you know,
very toxic, but I also don't think that
that was my responsibility to hide those things from her.
And so about two years later, they ended up separating locationally, not legally, like
no legal divorce.
They just decided to move, my mom decided to move to a different state, but they ended
up actually getting back together after that.
And then eventually they divorced two years later officially.
And the divorce was so stressful on my dad
that he actually had a heart attack during it.
And so, yeah, it was pretty just drastic.
And my mom actually was like calling him and saying,
like, I wish you would have just died
after the heart attack because yeah, it was just very toxic.
And so during the divorce, my dad actually has a pretty large investment that he invested
in like years ago that my mom didn't know about.
And they contacted him and said, Hey, now's a great time to like cash out.
And so he actually hid $11 million from my mom during the divorce.
Yeah. hid $11 million from my mom during the divorce. Popped off dad.
Yeah.
Did you even realize he was worth that much? No, not until he told me, but then also holding onto that information, knowing that and knowing
that he hid that, I just didn't know what to do with that information. And so flash forward to
a year later, I actually announced that I was pregnant. My husband and I were expecting a baby and so my mom decided to move back
because she wanted to be a grandma and wanted to be a part of everything.
And so she moved back and then during the time apart that they were divorced, my dad had been dating,
just super happy, like was just like full of life again.
But once she moved back, they kind of got roped back together. And we knew that
they were kind of like seeing each other, but we didn't know
to like what extent. And then a year later, my brother got a
text from one of his friends and said that he saw in the newspaper
that my parents got remarried. So my brother ended up texting us
and being like, Hey, they got remarried.
Did you guys know this? And none of us siblings knew.
So all five of us kids still to this day,
they have not told us that they got remarried.
How long ago did that happen?
Two years ago.
Two years ago.
Two years ago, yeah.
And so I think like right now,
I'm at this like point in my life.
I just had a baby three months ago.
So now they have two grandchildren
and just the relationship in general.
It's very hard to be around
and to be in the same room as them knowing what I know.
So what do they, so they pretend,
do they live together, do they not live together?
They live together now.
And do they, you know that because you've been snooping
or they've been upfront about that they've been up front about that.
They've been upfront about that.
At first they were sneaking around.
Um, and like my dad's car would be like not at his place.
Like if I would drive by and it would be at my mom's place.
And then they ended up living in the same house.
My dad's 61 and my mom is 59.
So what can I help you out with? your parents? Living in the same house. My dad's 61 and my mom is 59.
So what can I help you out with?
I think what I'm seeking is like, do I confront them about all of this?
Do I expose what I know?
Um, and-
Well, can you explain to me what, from your point of view, what the difference between confront and exposed look like?
I think confronting is just being honest about what I know, right? Like I don't need to like
out a bunch of different things, but I just think that like basically confronting them and saying
like, Hey, here's what I do know about you guys. But I don't know what to do about like the money
financial part too. I don't want to ruin their relationship with my kids,
but also at the same time, they're just super toxic
and they still continue to be toxic.
Yeah, my answer is pretty clear.
My opinion is by all means confront your parents about common decency.
Their kids at a minimum should probably know that their parents
are back together and married,
and it feels a little icky for your parents
to not be transparent about the dynamic of their relationship,
at least whether they're married or not married
or things like that.
The fact that they feel like they have to go around
and snoop in that regard, it just doesn't seem like that makes a ton of sense.
Especially if the kids are also talking about it.
But short of that, their relationship is none of your business
at this point in your life.
I definitely wouldn't stick your nose in
where it doesn't belong.
I wouldn't insert yourself in their relationship drama.
You've painted a pretty colorful picture about your mom and your guy's ability to trust her
emotions and things like that. I'm not trying to condone what your dad did or didn't do, but
I'm not trying to condone what your dad did or didn't do, but, you know, sounds like he had his reasons.
I don't know.
Saying I wish he would die of a heart attack
is a pretty dark thing to say, you know?
That sounds like a very volatile person,
but like you're also, your dad is an adult person
who's decided to get back with your mom
and remarry her again.
I just think, again, like that's just drama.
You know, that's just you being,
that's letting your parents getting caught up.
You know, it wasn't fair for your dad to like,
like you said, dump this on you.
And whether you were 12, whether you were in high school,
that wasn't fair.
And I'm sure on some level, like you don't,
you didn't know what to do with it then.
Now that you're an adult woman,
you better understand maybe even the conversations
that your dad had with you when you were 12 and now you probably feel more equipped to
like, I don't know, workshop it, deal with it, hold your dad accountable, even if you're
understanding your mom is right.
I understand where that comes from, but I just don't think there's nothing to be gained
from it.
You know, at the end of the day,
you're not like in charge of your parents,
you're not their caretaker.
Yeah, they're older, but you know, 61, 59,
like they still got a lot of life left to live
and they are certainly old enough
to make decisions for themselves.
It's just like, yeah, like they deserve
to like communicate to their kids
some honesty about the dynamic of their relationship, you know?
And I think the way to make them feel safe about that is to not go any further than you
need to when it comes to like what you need to know.
They'll have their excuses, right?
We didn't tell you because we thought you would feel a certain way and blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. Right.
And so that's like,
they're like blaming you because they weren't sure how you could handle it.
And if you could handle it. So like you,
you will have more legs to stand on.
Um, if you don't take the bait of inserting yourself into the drama,
right? Because if, if step one is, hey, mom and dad,
I know that you're married,
I know that you haven't been upfront with us, boom.
You set that lie and that's just like,
but this is your life, we are your kids,
we would like to know, at least if our parents are married
or not married, it's just, we don't need more than that.
If you guys have relationship problems, get a therapist, talk to a friend, we're not those people.
Nice to know you guys got back together.
Obviously we love you guys,
and so if you guys are happy, we're happy.
But the moment you say, oh, and oh, by the way, mom,
dad's got some money you don't know about
and blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, Then you're, first of all, you're inserting problems
in that relationship.
Then you now have made yourself part of the drama.
You know what I'm saying?
And then you become responsible for the drama
and then you're like, and then you say,
oh, I'm also here to have you guys unload your drama on me
and play judge and jury and take sides or not take sides.
That's a whole nother can of worms
outside of being like, mom and dad,
I know you guys are married and I think your kids
like at least deserve to know the truth about that.
Does that make sense?
Yeah, so do you think like,
so a couple of my siblings live in like a different state,
but do you think it should be like one person?
Do you think, I don't want it to feel like a gang up.
They get really defensive about a lot of things, especially
mom with just her reaction.
So I think even if I say what you said, like it could go
turn a different direction.
So do you think it should be like a group?
Um, what's the consequence of your, at this stage in your guys' life,
what's the consequence of your mom being unpredictable
and volatile and reacting however she reacts?
And I say that because like the,
me asking that question when you were in high school,
when you were 12, there's a lot, there's consequences.
Like, I don't know, like I would feel,
as a 12 year old girl, I would feel unsafe and scared
that I don't know, like, you know,
there's a lot of consequences to parents being unpredictable and volatile around like their adolescent children
but right now what is the consequence other than
If you choose not to be a part of it if you choose to set a boundary and enforce that boundary
What actual impact can your mom have on you in?
What actual impact can your mom have on you and your family and your kids and your partner and your siblings if you guys don't allow her to have an impact? Yeah, I think that's a good point because I think that's where I've been missing is like, what is the boundary?
Because I don't think I ever had a boundary my whole life.
And so now, like as an adult, it's like, I don't know how to set that boundary of like, when do I push, when do I not push?
And there isn't a consequence, I guess, for me,
other than she wants to be around my kids,
but I just like, she doesn't have boundaries
when it comes to her reaction still.
And so that worries me too.
It's not her boundaries.
These are your boundaries, right?
Like that's the difference now.
Like again, the parent-child relationship dynamic
is very, it's one that people struggle
with a lot, which is what a lot of people will call in
for different reasons about this dynamic, right?
Because first 18 years of your life,
you have to listen to your parents.
Sometimes you don't even know the alternative
not to listen to your parents
because they are your caretaker.
Like not feeling safe and secure from your parents,
like, you know, again, trauma, like all these things.
But if you're one of those lucky people,
and you seem like you are,
that in adult life you've made a life for yourself,
you aren't reliant on your parents
for anything other than, I guess, love,
then it's up to the child at that point
to kind of, you know, to, at some point, you know,
like some people do it, shit,
some people do it when they turn 18 and say,
I no longer have to listen to you,
I'm gonna start making decisions for myself, right?
Other kids, you know, they're very privileged
and fortunate enough to have wonderful, caring parents
who are always there for them and do their laundry
and pay for their college and even at 25 years old, when shit hits the fan,
their first call is their parents
and their parents are like, we got you.
You know, and that's more difficult to leave
that kind of security blanket.
But at some point, every adult person has to have
that moment where it's just like,
this relationship has changed from
I need you to you are a part of my life.
You don't dictate my choices or how I feel and I set the boundary now.
And that's really the change, right?
Your parents, when you're a minor, your parents are always setting the expectations, the rules
and the boundaries, right?
Like this is the rule, if you don't follow this rule,
I'm gonna enforce the boundary by putting you in a timeout
or you're grounded or I'm gonna take the car away
or you can't hang out with your friends.
That's your parents enforcing a boundary, right?
And at some point when you become an adult,
your parents, a lot of parents will like,
through whatever it's maybe manipulative,
you know, or things like that,
it's through more just emotional,
like I'm not mad, I'm just disappointed.
Like the ultimate parent, like manipulator card of like,
you know, I'm not gonna punish you,
maybe because I can't, but I am disappointed in you.
Kind of a loser.
But at some point in adult life, we say,
hey, mom and dad, thank you for your feedback.
I respect your opinion.
I'm going a different direction.
I certainly would love for you to get on board,
but ultimately don't really care.
Gonna do me.
And that you're not waiting for their approval,
you're the one who sets the boundary and rules.
And if it happens to be a boundary when it comes to now that you have kids and she
wants to be a grandmother, you have the option to enforce a boundary.
Not that you're looking to do that.
As your parents get older, they will get lonelier.
They will become more reliant on you guys for community and support.
And you have various levers to pull, you know, and it's definitely a dance. they will become more reliant on you guys for community and support.
And you have various levers to pull, you know?
And it's definitely a dance between parents
and adult children about like,
and I still have that dance with my parents too, you know?
Like everyone has their ways of feeling seen and heard
and things like that.
But I think your big thing is to really just recognize
that like you and your siblings,
and maybe this is a conversation you have
with your siblings about like,
hey, we all kinda got a little fucked up at mom and dad,
and maybe it was mom more than dad,
but let's just be, let's us siblings A,
be on the same page and be a family.
Let's all of us have each other's backs,
and maybe the ways mom and dad didn't,
not to point the finger. I think we all agreed that we feel lied to.
I don't think you guys need a gang up on her.
Honestly, like sending a text.
We know you and dad are married.
If your mom wants to freak out, be dramatic.
Let her go, be dramatic.
Let her throw her temper tantrum on her own.
Humans are humans, right?
So it doesn't matter if you're 59 or 16.
Sometimes when we get triggered, we go to our child brains, right? So it doesn't matter if you're 59 or 16, sometimes when we get triggered,
we go to our child brains, right?
And we get in that fight or flight mode
and we have a temper tantrum.
And you're afraid that your mom is gonna have
one of her classic temper tantrums.
Let her have her temper tantrum.
It doesn't literally affect any of you guys.
You don't have to allow it to affect you.
You know, mom will be fine, certainly not her first
temper tantrum, won't be her last temper tantrum.
She's a woman used to having temper tantrums,
let her have her temper tantrum.
You guys make the mistake of acting like as if
there's something that you guys need to do about it,
or you're supposed to respond, and like,
that she has some sort of power over you guys
that she doesn't have.
The kids need to get together to understand that
and how you guys handle mom and dad,
specifically mom, is just to just say,
you know, just treat us with respect.
We're all adults, literally.
So like, yeah, it would be nice to know
like if you guys are married.
We're, if you guys are happy, we're happy.
Obviously it's cool that you guys got,
we're not here to re-litigate the past.
We're not honestly here to have an opinion.
Ultimately, we wanna have healthy relationships
with the both of you.
We want you guys to have healthy relationship
with our children and that's all we care about.
And we want you guys to be around as long as possible
and like stay out of their drama.
So as far as like, I like all that,
because I feel like I already knew that answer,
but it's nice hearing it out loud.
But what, as far as like the relationship with my dad,
like my dad and I have always been really close.
And I think it's almost like a trauma bond
over like the experiences that we've been through
with my mom, because like, we always kind of were
on his side with the things,
because we saw what the reactions are.
But like our relationship has really started to like
just kind of separate ever since they got back together
because like in my mind, like yes,
sure I want them both to be happy,
but do I like agree with it?
No.
So like, how do I handle that with him?
Well, part of it is I'm guessing that the disconnect
has started when the fact that like your dad
started dating your mom.
He correctly assumed you would feel a certain way about it.
He used to confiding you about his frustrations
with about your mom.
So now that he's more in a like pro mom position
for whatever reason, maybe he feels stupid,
maybe he like feels like a hypocrite,
maybe he's afraid of what you might say,
and so he just doesn't say it.
Part of it might not even be coming from a conscious place.
Maybe your mom is like, we can't tell him,
we can't tell him, and he's just like, I don't know,
I'm not gonna tell her.
You have to let, it's really up to you, right?
If that's the case, if I'm right,
and I suspect there's some truth to what I'm saying, you're only going to be more and more in charge of your relationship with your parents.
The older you get and the older they get, you'll have more and more power and more and more control.
Because the older they get, the closer they get back to diapers type of thing.
And the older you get right now, you're becoming more independent, more financially secure, more just like further away
from you remembering what it was like to be that 12 year old
who listened to their dad complain about their mom.
So yeah, so you need to dictate terms with your dad, right?
So like talk to him about shit that's outside of your mom.
You know, you have to reach out to him and catch up with him
and see what's going on in his life
and make it easy for him.
You got you to, you may in some ways
have to reconnect with your dad
to find things to bond over
that aren't bitching about your mom.
Because if so much about your relationship
was bitching about mom
and he doesn't want to bitch about mom
and you don't want to bitch about mom
because you're like, I just want to have a healthier life
and then what are you going to bond over with dad, right?
So you have to find that, right?
And because he's the one married to mom
and you're not married to mom,
whether you agree with it or not,
there's something to be said
that if your dad is married to your mom,
that he is trying to protect his wife,
that he is going out of his way
to consider her feelings above anyone else's,
and that's a good thing.
At least he's doing it right, right?
It would be worse if he got back together with mom
and was still complaining to you about her. So there's that, right? You, it would, it would be worse if like he got back together with mom and was still complaining to you about her.
So there's that, right?
And I think he's like hiding it now too, cause he'll make like little
sly comments, but not to the extent that he wants to did.
It's not your problem.
And I think next time you're dad, you're just like, dad, you're a big boy.
You're 61.
I didn't tell you to get back together with her.
I didn't tell you to remarry her.
Obviously, like I love having a relationship with you.
I don't wanna talk to you about everything else but mom,
but that's a you problem.
You made your bed.
I'm not saying to sound cold,
but and just be like mom and dad,
you guys are like a high school couple.
Whatever, it's fun, it's entertaining,
but it's also just not our problem.
Yeah, that's all valid.
I feel like just setting the boundary.
And so you suggest just sending like a text to them
and just letting them know, or do you think-
I definitely don't need, my opinion based
of nothing but my opinion is,
I don't think a lot is accomplished
by the kids getting together
and having some kind of mini intervention being like,
we know you guys are married.
Your parents sound dramatic,
and that's just more of a, like this isn't like some,
like they're just being messy.
It's not really your problem.
They're not alcoholics or like they're not, you know,
like they're not on the verge of,
like this isn't like a required intervention.
And like what's an intervention accomplish?
You know, you're not gonna,
you guys aren't playing therapists with them.
You don't even know a lot of the details about the inner workings of their current relationship.
They just haven't been upfront with you guys,
and that seems a little fucked up.
And I don't think that requires a whole,
it's like a lineup.
I think the kids need to get together
and be on the same page.
I think more than ever, this is about,
listen, not to sound like whatever, but we
have each other.
And like, despite all our parents' flaws, we have a family.
Sounds like you guys are relatively close.
There's a lot of good things that came from this dynamic despite mom and dad's drama.
So like, focus on what you do have.
You have each other.
Make sure you guys are on
the same page, make sure that like despite mom and dad's flaws that like they raised a family that's
ultimately fairly close with each other and lean on that and come together with like we, we, let's
not make mom and dad's problems our problems. Like it's just, it's, you cannot, you're not going to change them
at this stage in the game and magically like make them like
make healthy decisions when it comes to their romantic
relationships.
So just let them be toxic and then hopefully there's some
money left over at the end of the day, you know?
But that's really still not your problem.
I don't know.
Like I don't. No like, I don't.
No, I like that though.
I think that just kind of setting that boundary
and just not feeding into it,
because I think all of us have lived in this state
of like feeding into it our whole lives
because we've been around it,
but now that everyone's older, I mean, I'm 30,
my older brother's 34, like we're all old and on our own.
So we don't need to.
Drama loves an audience.
I think we have to remember that, you know? An audience loves drama, but need to be. Drama loves an audience. I think we have to remember that.
An audience loves drama, but more than anything,
drama loves an audience.
And if drama doesn't have an audience,
then it's really not that, it's not fun.
Yeah, yeah.
And so don't be the audience,
don't let you and your siblings be the audience
that your parents, I think, sometimes crave
when it comes to their drama.
They just don't know anything other than that.
Cause that's what they've always done.
So I think that's good to set the boundary and just get all the siblings on page.
Yeah.
I think the way you said it best was very like, is it will be a great, I
guess, not boundary, but safeguard, which is like, there is a huge difference
between what did you say, either confronting your parents about the truth
they've been hiding and exposing your parents for the lies
they've been living with each other.
And it's none of your business.
And I think that's very dangerous territory
for you guys to enter into.
And it doesn't really accomplish anything.
Okay, okay.
No, that's good.
It's good to hear an outside perspective
because when all of us siblings talk, we just spiral and feed into the drama, like you said.
So just kind of setting that boundary and avoiding feeding into it, I think will be much healthier
for all of us. 100%. Yeah. It's this hard because drama is fun. It's just, we want to feel as humans
and most things in life right now are very numbing
and drama scratches that itch.
Yeah, makes it exciting but also not exciting.
Yeah, but yeah, don't let your parents,
don't take that from your parents.
Okay, okay, no, that's great. Great advice, I appreciate you giving that.
All right.
Well, keep us posted.
Definitely would love to know what happens
when you guys tell mom and dad you know they're married.
I will for sure, yeah.
And I just wanna say before we hop off
that I'm a huge fan of your show.
I've listened to it for the last four years
and I just, I love you guys.
I love your reality recaps on everything
and I'm a huge housewives person.
So it's great to hear your-
Well, thank you so much for saying it
and thank you for listening and sticking around.
And I'm sure, you know, telling your friends about our show,
obviously we wouldn't be here without you guys.
So I appreciate you saying that.
Thanks Nick, I appreciate it.
All right, take care, good luck.
Yep, bye. Article, we. I appreciate it. All right. Take care. Good luck. Yep. Bye.
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How's it going?
I'm good, how are you doing?
Good, what's your name?
I'm Joelle, 26.
How can I help Joelle?
I don't know.
So I've come into a bit of a problem.
Training for my job has made me really mean to men
and I need help with what to do about it.
What's your job?
I'm an air traffic controller.
Oh, wow. Okay. Cool.
Yeah.
So just mean to men, not just mean to people?
Yeah. A little bit of both, I guess.
It definitely bleeds into my dating life,
I think more than my real life.
Okay.
Tell me more.
What do you mean by that?
So like the training for ATC is quite intense.
It's pretty much just like military training for your brain.
And you're the one up in like the dark booth in the sky,
like letting, telling planes when to land and take off and all that stuff.
Yeah, I'm in the sky, like letting, telling planes when to land and take off and all that stuff.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, I'm in the dark booth.
And like that breaking bad scene is kind of like
the apocalyptic kind of result of,
is this like, will they show you a training?
If it all goes bad, this is what it looks like.
Pretty much, yeah, yeah, yeah.
And they like during training,
they just drill that into you nonstop.
And you kind of have to like give up any aspect
of normality during training.
Okay.
Um, you're not allowed to have any like social.
Well, you're allowed, I guess you're not
at all, but you're not really able to have
any social life or anything like that.
Um, how old are you again?
26.
Okay.
So I started training, I would have been
about 22, 23, and then it was two and a half
years of training and then I got licensed.
So I've been licensed for over a year now.
Okay.
So now you're just, you're now, you are just an air, not just, but you
are an air traffic controller.
Correct.
Yeah.
Gotcha.
All right.
Yeah.
And so like my last relationship, my last real relationship and my only
real relationship happened like six years ago now and it was
one day less than a year so that's really the only like real relationship I've had and then I did
the training couldn't date during that or anything and then I got my license and then now I've been
trying to date for the last year but it's like my job is pretty much just telling old men what to do
all day.
And so it leads into the dating world pretty brutally. Will you say who are the old men
you're telling what to do, like pilots?
Yeah.
Okay.
And what was the first thing that you noticed
on a date or in a dating situation
where you felt like you were bringing work into your life.
I mean, cause I'm a set, like ultimately what I'm hearing
from you is this like, at some point while on a date,
you're like, am I being kind of a bitch?
Oh yeah.
Right, you know?
And so what was the moment where you felt that way
versus like maybe you just had a justifiable response to,
I don't know, maybe you're just better at calling out
bullshit that other people aren't, I don't know.
Yeah, so that's kind of the problem is like,
I don't know if it's justifiable or not.
I think it goes even before the first date,
like making plans with someone.
If it's like, if there's any kind of like wishwash,
oh, should we do this?
Like, should we?
No, I'm out.
Do you know what I mean?
So like goes to that beginning stage.
Like I just don't have like the patience,
but I think that in order to like maintain something
healthy and long lasting,
I'm gonna need to find patients one day.
Yeah.
Obviously, but then I don't know if like my inability
for patients in those kinds of situations is justifiable
or if it's just me being a bitch.
I mean, but in the past, I don't know, in the past year and a half of you dating, what's the most
meaningful, like have you gotten to the first date? Have you hooked up with any guys? Has there been
a guy that like you hung out with for a few weeks and then bailed? Like how?
Yeah, there's been a couple like situationships.
Okay.
I've found that like one of the situationships, the guy was lovely, like just wanted to take
care of me and bake me muffins and super great, but like kind of feminine in a way.
And I feel like at my work, I'm so like in my masculine that it became like really tough
for me because I wanted to like step out of my masculine
Outside of work, but he like wanted to be more of like a fan. Like I don't know. Does that make any sense?
Like he wasn't even feminine. I don't really know how to explain it. But for sure
I will so like was he really making muffins and baking for you the dude baked like every day. It was crazy
The dude baked like every day, it was crazy. Cause like I like to cook and like Natalie, like she'll cook, she makes amazing food for
her river, but I'm kind of like, I cook cause like I'm, it's my kitchen type of thing.
And to me that is an act of service and I do, you know, I joke with Natalie that I make a good little housewife
because I do a lot of domesticated things inside the house in addition to maybe mowing the lawn.
But I, yeah, so it's hard for me to say whether like,
just because he bakes, that means he's like giving off
a kind of a feminine energy versus you decided
that baking just equals femininity.
But everything else in his life is pretty like, you know.
Yeah, to be fair, the guy also referred to himself
as sleepy kitty, so.
Okay.
I don't know.
That's aggressive.
But like it did get to the point where,
like a really nice thing, he texted me being like,
hey, I just baked banana bread,
do you want me to bring you some?
And my response to that was,
I would literally rather you deliver a chicken breast
to my door right now.
So like kind of an asshole move with me.
Do you know what I mean?
Yeah, I mean, the response was probably unnecessary,
but I think more importantly,
maybe like it was just a sign that like not your guy.
Yeah.
You know?
So that was the problem with that one.
But then I like, after him, I started seeing another guy
and he was kind of like the opposite side of the spectrum,
like super classic, just like masculine guy, like wants to do nothing but sports and whatnot
all the time.
But then he was super like wish washy in regards to plans, not even wish washy, but would just
kind of like, oh yeah, let's do this this day.
And then I don't know, we didn't really like set a plan.
But then I will bring up the expectation like I'll plan the entire plan out of my head. Like I'll be like, okay, we said we're gonna hang out this day. So we're gonna do this and this and
this and this and this and then I don't communicate that obviously that's my first problem. But yeah,
I don't communicate that and then it's like all planned out in my head and the minute someone
will like say something that's not part of the plan,
like in my head, we're meeting up at seven, but I haven't communicated that with him.
And then he'll be like, okay, no, let's meet up at tomorrow instead at nine.
And then I'm just like, well, you're out.
And that's like, I don't know.
Does that make sense?
Kind of.
Yeah.
I think, listen, I think you're, it's like, uh, Listen, I think it's like a, not I wanna say an identity crisis,
but you have a unique job, right?
Period.
And in this unique job,
it is a job that I don't know,
are a lot of people in the industry mostly male?
Yeah, no, it's definitely a male-dominated industry.
So you're working in a male-dominated industry,
and you enjoy it, it fits your personality.
You're developing a lot of unique life skills, right?
I mean, most people just aren't good at confrontation.
Most people aren't direct communicators.
They say they are, but they're just
kind of beat around the bush.
But you kind of have a little bit of this identity crisis
because being direct comes pretty naturally to you.
And it's also a requirement in your job to just like be a very direct communicator because lives are literally on the line, right?
And you just don't have a lot of patience for bullshit.
That's like kind of rooted in your DNA and then amplified by your profession.
But you're still a lady and you're just telling me that you have some traditional feminine needs and wants
that you prefer, right?
And you kind of play, it sounds like you're playing
this game in your head about when does work stop
and the other person come out, right?
And so far, you've decided that letting him figure,
letting him plan and just taking the lead
because I don't wanna have to take the lead
is the best way to do that even though
it's probably too extreme because you're like,
well, it probably would be helpful to him
to just communicate a little bit about
what I'm thinking and feeling so that he can
take it from there.
And then you just lose patience and then you'm thinking and feeling so that he can kind of take it from there. And then you just kind of lose patience
and then you kind of move on and things like that.
I don't know if that's helpful at all to you.
100%, that's like nail in the head.
Yeah, I mean like, just speaking in general terms,
I think the average, I don't know how many studies
about this, but I think when you're talking love languages,
I think a lot of men would say acts of service
is their love language.
It's at least up there, right?
Like men generally, like what makes them feel manly
and masculine is to take care of the people they love.
And by some people's standards,
that is like the definition of positive masculinity
is to like show up and care for the people you love,
and that's a lot of men feel masculine about that, masculinity is to like show up and care for the people you love, you know, and
that's a lot of men feel masculine about that, especially in like a civilized,
progressive general society in 2025.
Back in the day, men used to like go to war and punch each other just to prove,
you know, like we don't do that now, but how do you show up and fight those like
battles day in and day out, you know, and make you feel like you're the hero of your own household
by providing, taking care of yourself,
taking care of your loved ones,
taking care of your kids, and things like that.
You're also someone who can take care of herself, right?
And I think you're probably, from an identity standpoint,
struggle a little bit of like,
when do I let a guy take care of me?
I can do it on my own.
And then since you're so good at taking care of yourself
on your own, not only taking care of yourself,
but honestly like taking care of other adult men,
you're just having a hard time probably finding that line.
And yeah, so the word ick, I'm sure you've heard, right?
It's become more and more prevalent
in our kind of society and culture.
And I've been fascinated by the saying,
try to understanding what it means for people.
And it's also like a word more commonly known
or used by women to describe their feelings
towards men or about men.
And I have, it seems like the phrase the ick
is like a really profound pet peeve that women have
about men that just really feels like,
like the thing you described was just like,
he, like I think for a lot of ways,
like you know, that's where like I think,
I don't know, like being philosophical, like I think society a lot of ways, that's where I think, I don't know, being philosophical,
I think society's struggling,
I think women and men are, in heterosexual relationships,
I think a lot of men and women are struggling
with defining their roles and their roles of their partner
and where we're dealing with cultural,
we're dealing with people testing
what it means to be masculine or feminine
and what society is telling us what
to do and how to do it. Nowadays, men or women, regardless of who you are, it's just like,
go get a job, be independent, yada, yada, yada. Okay, cool. I want to do that. You wanted to do
that. Okay. But maybe there's a part of you that you're saying, I don't know, I wanna feel taken care of. I wanna have a man in my life who makes me feel
that sort of feeling of I can be taken care of
and he takes care of me however I wanna be taken care of.
You know, and I think you're not the only one,
and I think men struggle with that too.
It's just like, all right, well,
I don't wanna be this toxic masculine guy.
I'll start making banana bread.
And then all of a sudden, she's just like,
ick, I don't know.
We were joking the other day,
we were watching Beyond the Villa,
and she was like, can you lift as much as that person?
I'm like, I don't know if I can lift 225 pounds these days.
And she was kinda like, that's disgusting. And she was kind of like, that's disgusting.
And she was kidding and joking,
but she also kind of wasn't in a way.
Like that was kind of her like almost toxic femininity.
If you want to like, you know,
if there's toxic masculinity,
there's gotta be toxic femininity.
And like, I feel like the way the word ick has been used
and interpreted is like,
and ick is this like a, from what I can understand, a pet peeve
that is kind of silly and a little superficial often
and has nothing really to do with the character
of the men that women are often describing,
but it's often interpreted as like a non-negotiable
or something that's wrong with this guy it's often interpreted as like a non-negotiable
or something that's wrong with this guy where it's just like a, you know, you notice something
and it's, I feel like it's deemed as like some valid reason
not to like someone.
Yeah.
If that makes any sense.
And I don't, I mean, you don't have to like anyone
who don't want to, but I guess my point to you is, you know, I've said this all the time, it's really important when you're deciding who to like, you don't have to like anyone who don't want to. But I guess my point to you is,
I've said this all the time, it's really important when you're deciding who to like and who to invest
your time and energy in is to not confuse pet peeves and non-negotiables, right?
Too many of us will ignore non-negotiables, we'll make excuses for people who don't show up on a
regular basis, who over promise and under deliver, who, you know, get a little gas
lightie, who aren't good communicators, who say things like, I don't want a relationship right now,
but do you want to still hang out in a week, you know? And then when it comes to pet peeve,
we'll treat those like non-negotiables because it's like, ew, he can't believe he like got clumsy
and fell and tripped over his feet.
And honestly, like I just think I can't look at him
the same anymore because like I just can't have sex
with a guy who doesn't know how to walk.
Valid.
And that's funny and we all have to laugh
about those things but like, you know.
Behind closed doors, all men are, you know, silly, goofy, dumb, gross. You know, it's doors, all men are,
you know, silly, goofy, dumb, gross.
You know, it's just like, what do you want from us?
Do you want us to like show our feminine sides
and be proud of it and like not be judged?
Or do you wanna call us pussies?
You know, when we don't, I don't know,
what do you want, you know, type of thing?
And I think that's a criticism for society in general,
but like I think you're actually struggling with it right now
for yourself trying to separate those two, right?
And I think the solution is, you're obviously a very smart
and self-aware person.
I think you just have to ask yourself,
it's like any of your job,
how do you help people be successful, right?
You have to find that balance even at work.
Am I doing their job or am I setting them up for success?
You seem like right now you're someone
who doesn't want to set anyone up for success
and you almost are daring them to fail
and they're doing a good job of that.
As opposed to meeting a guy that you like
and like making it easy for him to be successful.
I always talk about how Natalie,
like Natalie's I fucking hate receiving and giving gifts.
Like if I could eliminate it
from the love language chart, I would.
I just like, I don't honestly like,
giving a gift gives me anxiety,
receiving gifts gives me anxiety,
I'm in the point in my life, if I want it, I'll buy it.
I don't need to like, ugh.
Like it's like, I hate it, right?
But not my wife fucking loves it, right?
Like especially receiving gifts. You know what she does? She makes it easy for me to make hate it, right? But not my wife fucking loves it, right? Like especially receiving gifts.
You know what she does?
She makes it easy for me to make her happy, right?
She gives me fucking links
and she lets me know how I can shop for her.
And it's a love language of hers.
And honestly, thank you.
Thank God my wife makes it easy
because it would make it extra hell
if she was like, well, if you paid attention, you would love me.
And it's like, oh, Christ, I mean, I do pay attention,
but I'm not, you know what I'm saying?
She knows that's a fault of mine, right?
And so she's setting me up for success
and she's making it easy for me to be successful
in her relationship while also giving me
a little bit of grace.
She could decide to make it even harder for me
to meet her love language if she wanted to.
And she chooses to make it even harder for me to meet her love language if she wanted to. And she chooses to make it a little easier.
So how do you, with the people that you like,
just set them up for success
a little bit more than you're doing already?
While maintaining a talent that you have
that a lot of people don't have,
which is to sniff out bullshit
and not let men who are used to like dragging their feet and feeding bullshit
and ultimately stops you from enforcing a non-negotiable,
like don't lose that, right?
Like keep that while finding the ability
to not allow the icks or the just like your pet peeves,
you know, dictate like who you really invest your time in.
Yeah, I don't know.
I think like another thing too is just like
the minute I find the ick,
it's just kind of an immediate out.
And then my friends and family around me are all like,
oh, you're afraid of commitment.
It's been like six years kind of thing.
But I think it's more so just the,
or just the fear of like being out of control
in the situation.
Are you dating men your age, older than you, all of the above?
Pretty much around the same age for the most part.
Okay. This is just a general suggestion and there are a lot of immature older men, but
you clearly are immature. I would guess a lot of 26-year-old men aren't going to cut it for you,
even if you didn't have the profession that you have.
And so you might be more drawn to the emotional maturity
than men who might be five to 10 years older than you.
You're still gonna run into a lot of bad eggs,
regardless of what age you date in.
But you might be more likely to find,
one, like a lot of 26 year old men
who don't know what they want to do with their lives,
they're not financially secure,
they're still chasing their dream
and that for someone like yourself
is already gonna be a turn off.
Men feel the most, I guess, attractive to themselves
when they have purpose in their life.
I think women are often attracted to men
who have purpose in their life and have a path
and they know how to take care of themselves.
So that, you know, I feel like,
correct me if I'm wrong, I don't wanna speak for women,
but there's a difference between,
everyone wants to take care of their partner,
but they don't want to be the reason their partner is alive
or has a job, you know?
It's just like, Natalie makes me better at my job
and makes me feel like I'm more successful,
I feel more successful as a result of her being in my life.
But I had this before she showed up.
I would have some level of success without her.
She's just making it that much better.
And I feel like everyone wants to add
that kind of value to their partner.
And I think a lot of women in your shoes,
or at least your age, are dating men who,
they're still, again, chasing their dream.
My daughter's a year and a half,
and I feel like she's really advanced for her age.
And then we just meet other girls her age.
They're like, oh, she's just like,
and then we meet boys her age, and They're like, oh, she's just like, and then we meet boys her age and they're like,
oh, not the same.
Women are definitely, you even see it at an early age,
just how quicker girls learn and progress emotionally
and I think that carries on through life.
And I think you are, you're mature for your age
regardless of your gender.
And then, so you dating a bunch of 26, 27 year old men, I think you, I think that
adds to it.
And you have a guy making you banana bread because he, you know, he sees you
kicking ass and he, the only thing he can kick ass in right now is his bread.
Yeah, no, that makes sense.
I guess like the other thing too, is I got a job transfer to a new city.
And so, and everyone in my industry right now
where I'm working is at least 10 plus years older than me,
kind of like family settled down.
So meeting people has been really tough.
So my own kind of-
I'm guessing you don't want to
meet another air traffic controller.
No, absolutely not.
So that would be the only, you know, yeah, that's normal.
But when you moved to a new city,
I've found that when I moved to a new city
in the age that you are,
I gave myself more permission to be more adventurous.
I think when we live in the cities that we grow up in,
where we have already friends, you know,
like how long have you lived in the place that you live now?
Is it like where you grew up?
No, no, no, I've been here like two years.
Oh, you've only been two years.
All right, so like when you moved to this city,
were you like more adventurous?
Like, you know, like I just find most people
when they live in the like the community they grew up in,
like they're like,
I would never go to the movies by myself.
Ooh, I wouldn't go to a restaurant
and have dinner by myself.
It's like, ew, I'm a loser
because I'm supposed to have friends to go
and do these things with. And then when you move to a new city by yourself, you're like, I don't know, I need and have dinner by myself. It's like, ew, I'm a loser, because I'm supposed to have friends to go and do these things with.
And then when you move to a new city by yourself,
you're like, I don't know, I need to get out of the house.
I'm just gonna go sit at the bar and have dinner,
or I'm just gonna go see a movie.
And we judge ourselves less,
because we have a built-in excuse of like,
I don't know, I just fucking moved here.
I don't know anyone.
Like, I can't be a loser, I just started here, right?
Like, the only difference is you're judging yourself, right?
And so, when you move to a new city,
take advantage of the fact that your ego
isn't gonna be judging you as much
by joining out extracurricular activities,
coed leagues, whatever it is,
just get out there and be social and meet people and get on BumbleBeeF, whatever.
Just like you meet people.
Just say yes to things.
And when you say yes to things,
you'll meet friends through friends
and shit will happen.
You just have to be open to meeting people,
having short-term friendships,
realizing maybe that's not a person you fuck with,
but the person you met through them
is someone you're more in line with,
and then they have a friend over a friend,
and then you guys go out,
and then you run into some dudes, I don't know.
Or you get on the dating apps, whatever.
But yeah, I think try to get out of your head.
There's that.
And yeah, there's a little bit of like,
for you, it sounds like maybe being demure isn't like a,
something that comes naturally or you lead with,
but the part of you that likes the more traditional,
masculine and feminine roles,
I think there is a time and a place for you to showcase
that demure side of you when you want.
It's like, you know what I'm saying?
Like when you want a man to be a man,
whatever that means to you,
that will be a good time for you to like
lean into your feminine side of things
because it's a kind of yin and yang.
Men feel more like men when they have someone
who's like, take care of me.
And men feel less useful when you're like,
shut the fuck up, I got this.
I'm like, okay, cool, you got this.
But you know what I'm saying?
So if you want a guy to feel good about that role,
you kind of have to give him an opportunity.
Again, sending him up for success.
So do you think in the early stages of dating someone
I should pull myself back from kind of being boss mode and being like, hey, think in the early stages of dating someone, I should pull myself back
from kind of like being boss mode and being like, Hey, let's do this now.
Yeah.
To a certain, you know, again, it's, it's a very fine line.
Cause I want to be clear that I'm not telling you to don't be someone you're not.
Yeah.
And you can be direct and you can be someone who like doesn't put up with bullshit, but
yeah, like that, I think that's more just making sure someone's not wasting your time,
but if you want a man to plan things,
then let him, yeah, I think yeah,
you could be a little bit more chill.
Communicate, yeah, this is what I like.
See if he takes the bait.
Then you really have, if you're just like,
hey listen, I like it when a guy does this,
I like it when a guy does that,
at the right time, maybe it comes up naturally.
But yeah, it's definitely a recipe for success
to set expectations in your head and tell no one
and then hold other people accountable
for the expectations you have in your head.
Definitely a recipe for disaster.
Yeah, that makes sense.
Do that at work and see what happens.
You're like, you know what, I know what you should do,
I'm gonna keep it to myself because you should be smart
enough to figure it out.
You went to pilot school, so fucking figure it out.
And then they don't and you're just like,
you stupid motherfucker.
That's kinda what you're doing in dating.
A really interesting way to look at it
and it makes a lot of sense to me.
And I imagine when you deal with pilots,
there are certain pilots where you're like,
you fuck with them more and you respect
how they carry their business and their other pilots
so you're just like, why are you flying planes?
Yeah, 100%.
So then you're saying in the early phases
of dating someone, it's okay to just be like,
hey, I wanna step back and kinda let you take the reins
on planning things and whatnot
and that's what I'm looking reins on planning things and whatnot,
and that's what I'm looking for?
Sure, I mean, I wouldn't lead with that on the dating app.
Get their vibe, I don't know.
Listen, I think nowadays, I do think in general,
regardless of your personality, your job or whatever,
I just think men, and this is not to let whatever men
off the hook for whatever behaviors that,
but I think when it comes to young men,
like men your age or younger or whatever,
I think a lot of them are very confused
about the role they should play in the relationships.
I think they're very confused
what healthy masculinity means.
And then, you know, it's like, let's think,
it's like, you're online,
then you have all these very, very toxic men
in some dark spaces, like red pill, online, then you have like all these like very, very toxic men in like
some dark spaces like red pill.
And then, you know, they're, they're the only ones talking about masculinity, but it's the
worst kind of masculinity, you know?
And then like the good guys, I like don't have a lot of healthy spaces to go to.
I guess what I'm saying is like, yes, I think it would go a long way for you to just help
the men that you're interested in be successful and see if they're self-aware enough
or equipped to pick up on your cues and take it from there.
But letting a guy know what you're attracted to,
what you're into, what you'd like him to do,
and see if he does it.
Because then that's at least someone with potential.
That's someone you can train a little bit, right?
We all wanna be able to train on some level,
our partner to like love us the way we want to be loved, right?
Like, hey, these are my level languages and what are yours?
And what makes you feel loved?
And someone who's interested in adapting, even in the bedroom.
All right, what turns you on?
What doesn't turn you on?
You know, what do I like?
What do you don't like?
So like, it's very helpful to like give people the playbook and then let
them ask the follow up questions and things like that so that they can really be successful
in making you happy as opposed to making someone guess and if that proves anything.
Yeah, that's interesting.
I think with my, like the one guy that I did date, I had to do a lot of training,
and I think that kind of made me afraid to do anything
like that with someone new, so.
Early on, new employee, whatever,
like there's always some training,
but you eventually hope that people pick up on things,
that they're listening to you, right?
That like you're not re-explaining yourself
over and over again, you know?
Because like this is someone who wants to be good at,
you know, it's like whether it's a job or a relationship,
if they give a shit, they'll be invested.
Whatever they prioritize, they'll go out of their way
to not sit around and wait for being told what to do.
They will be proactive.
The muffin guy was just proactive in ways
that you didn't appreciate, but he didn't fucking know
because you weren't there to like tile him.
He's like, I guess I'll just make fucking muffins.
I don't fucking know.
So.
Yeah, no, you're not wrong.
Yeah, and maybe he's just really into muffins,
but maybe he was just like, I don't know, man.
Like I'm dating this bad ass woman, she's got this job.
I'm still figuring out my life, but like in the meantime,
really good at muffins, But maybe this guy's like,
like selling at muffins has showed his potential.
It's like muffins today, you know, I'm really good at roller.
Dude, if you're like, he worked in fire,
so they bake muffins and stuff at the fire hall.
So you gotta have to do it.
When I met Nellie, I made her record me roller skating.
Now that's an ick.
Why did you do that?
Well, you know, it was the pandemic, I was really good at roller skating. I that's an ick. Why did you do that? Well, you know, the pandemic,
I was really good at roller skating.
I was just like, I needed some fucking content.
She was there, she could hold the camera.
I didn't give a fuck.
I was obviously lack of self-awareness,
not giving a fuck, you know.
I don't care.
I didn't care what she thought of me, I guess.
But like, my point is, it's like,
he definitely could have been a guy
who just like tapped into his feminine side.
It definitely doesn't define who he is.
It's one side of things, but it's the only side you allowed him to get to know.
And then he became the guy you called Muffin Man to your friends.
Oh, 100%.
Probably just not your guy.
I forgot what the kitty thing was.
That's weird too.
But you know what I'm saying?
It's like the more masking you act,
you're probably gonna honestly like get more feminine energy
from the men that you date.
Again, because I think there's a yin and a yang.
I think there's a little bit of balance.
And it's like, all right, well.
Yeah, and that's the problem that I've been having for sure.
But I think setting, not boundaries,
but kind of setting people straight early on.
Yeah.
I think the biggest thing is one, remember you're only 26.
All right.
So like you can, you can chill out a little bit when it comes to like your dating life
and things like that.
You're moving to a new city potentially it sounds like, and that is a cool and exciting
opportunity to just like free yourself up from any like self-limiting beliefs of like
why you shouldn't
put yourself out there and that will just allow you to meet more people in general.
And then when it comes to dating, I think you should just have a more just like more
open-minded in general, open-minded to maybe dating a little older, trying that out, seeing
how you feel about it.
But like, you know, you're going to meet a lot more frogs until you meet your prince
most likely.
But like, when you do meet someone you like, try to set them up for success and give them a little
bit of a leash and knowing that you probably are someone who is a little more prone to noticing
X and looking for things to like turn you off because you're just kind of you know good at that just be self-aware about that cool because you know the guy who might ask
you to videotape him roller skating might be like also someone who like
provides a whole this cool life for you you know and and and really like takes
care of you in ways that like you doesn't reveal you know you just never
really know and I'm guessing you're hoping you're meeting men
who are not just hyper masculine guys
who have to grunt all the time and hunt
just to prove their masculinity.
That you probably want a guy who can honestly,
my man makes muffins and they're really fucking good,
but he's so fucking good in other areas of your relationship
that it becomes a cute anecdote about your partner and not the thing that defines him
in your brain about who he is.
Yeah, definitely need like an even playing field with that.
But you're only 26, so.
Oh, feels like time's taken, but thanks.
Sure, well you've also grown up fast
and you've been very mature, so in your mind,
you've had your shit together for a long time for you to go to school at 22 with a very clear path of what you want and a very
set goal, your dating challenge honestly is going to be finding that match.
Because I think now more than ever, I think people are growing up slower, especially men.
And I think there's a lot of confused men about what's their... I think people are growing up slower, especially men. And I think there's a lot of confused men
about like what's their, you know,
I think people in general are having a hard time
finding jobs and just purpose.
And so like someone like yourself who has purpose,
who has that emotional maturity,
it will be a challenge for you.
And I'm not trying to discourage you,
but it's just more just why you need to be more intentional about who you date.
And that's when you offer yourself grace. And instead of like getting frustrated at yourself
or blaming you, there is going to be a level of patience that you're going to have to incorporate
in your dating life and know your value and being like, listen, I'm a badass. I got a lot going for
me. Most people are not at my level and I'm not looking for anyone. I'm looking for one and it might take some time,
but mixing a little bit more grace
and what can you control?
You're calling in because you're just like,
there's some unnecessary hurdles I'm putting up
as making my pursuit of love harder than it needs to be.
And so you wanna get rid of those
while maintaining the standards that you do have.
And so when things do feel a little discour while maintaining the standards that you do have.
And so when things do feel a little discouraging and tough when it comes to your dating life,
you're making sure that's only the result of your exceptional standards that you have
for yourself.
And you're just not going to lower their standards for like men who just like haven't grown up
fast enough.
And then when you do meet someone who has that potential,
you don't push them away by making it impossible
for them to meet your standards.
That's good advice, appreciate it.
I think you, and I've said this before,
you really wanna pursue men who have a job,
one, and like their job.
Yeah, that's huge.
I think you meeting a guy who doesn't like their job. Yeah, that's huge. I think you meeting a guy who doesn't like their job
is almost, you had zero chance, maybe not zero.
No, I could actually never be with someone
that didn't like their job.
That's like my number one thing.
I don't care if someone's a bartender,
but they better like going in,
being passionate about that job.
Or just like, yeah, or just,
just the whole like, I don't know what I wanna do and I hate my fucking job. Or just like, yeah, or just, you know, just the whole like, I don't know what I wanna do
and I hate my fucking job and blah, blah, blah,
is just like, they have a lot of reflection
and growth before they're at your level.
I think that's where like you always,
I think you hear a lot of women like in your shoes,
like I think there's a common like,
I think there's a lot of successful women out there
who feel like a lot of men are intimidated
by their success. And I think there's certainly some truth to that, but who feel like a lot of men are intimidated by their success.
And I think there's certainly some truth to that,
but I think if you were to drill it down more accurately,
it's just like I think a lot of those women are dating men
who like just aren't at their level, you know?
And there are more men not at their level
than at their level.
If you say yes, the guy whose face you like
and whose profile you think is funny,
but they also hate their job,
yeah, they're probably gonna feel emasculated by you.
They're gonna feel emasculated by their male friends.
They're gonna feel inadequate by people
who are more successful than them.
That's just how usually people are.
I think it's less about, oh,
you don't like a woman who's successful.
It's just like, they don't like anyone
who's successful right now.
They feel like, you know, not compared to them, you know?
And you're looking for your equals.
So like for you to start going on a date with a guy
who's just like still finding purpose in his life,
well, you have your purpose, you have your job,
you have things you like.
You're just looking for that guy to round out your life.
You have to make sure that you're finding and dating the people who have like, are
similar points in life, regardless of their age.
That means-
Yeah, I'm not looking to whip someone into shape or be a mom.
Yeah.
So.
So I would just be very mindful of that.
Those should be your non-negotiables.
And if you meet someone who like loves their job you're attracted to and has a good personality and they also make muffins, then so be it.
Alrighty.
Alright.
Cool.
Was this helpful?
Well, that was helpful. Hopefully no more muffin mans. I feel like you're kind of willing
that into my life right now, but other than that, really helpful.
It's not about you.
You want those things that, like every guy,
you want a guy to have a feminine side.
You want a guy who can be empathetic
and has that nurturing side.
And I don't know if you want kids someday,
but like, I, you know, I think a strength of mine
is that I've always been very comfortable
about showing my feminine side in any space that I'm in.
Around other men, around other women. I've been judged before in my life. I mean I
am a man who hosts a show, listen to primarily about women, talking about pop
culture and reality TV. Never thought of that for myself. I'm fine with it. It
still brings criticism and judgment. I'm also very confident about my masculinity, right?
I've never been into cars or hunting or fishing.
That's not how I show my masculinity,
but I've always been very confident
about the masculinity I present to the people I date.
And it might not be for everybody,
but I'm very confident in what I bring to that table.
And I think that like you would,
like a lot of people would want that, right?
Because I think that also like makes me the type of father
that I am, right?
And how hands-on I am and how like attentive
I hope my wife feels I am to her emotions and needs,
you know?
And I think that comes from my ability to connect with women
and show that feminine side and things like that.
You don't want a man who's so insecure
about showing his feminine side because he's that. You don't want a man who's so insecure about showing his feminine side
because he's afraid how his buddies
or other women are gonna judge him.
I think that's the consequences of like
the whole ick culture and things like that.
It's a funny anecdote,
but like I think there are a lot of guys out there
who are just like afraid to show that.
And like that brings out that toxicity, right?
Like that-
Yeah, I feel like, well, a big part of masculinity
is having the ability to step into your feminine
to some extent and be like,
go into those emotions and stuff.
I think that actually like goes into being masculine
is having that ability. 100%.
Because when you're confident in your masculinity,
you can do that.
Yeah, and so this guy, not to keep beating a dead horse,
maybe he's a really masculine guy,
but you just only saw a certain side of him
and you were just kind of very much,
you were in your masculine energy,
you were just being this business woman,
busy at work, didn't really make time for him,
didn't really give him a roadmap,
and he was like, he wants some muffins?
And just like, he hasn't had a chance to show you
his masculine side, because again, hasn't had a chance to show you his masculine side because
again you've never really wanted to show up with your feminine side that created a space for him
to like all right this is where i'm gonna step up i'm gonna be my be a man so i should slide back in
i don't know i don't know i know you know yeah no no what you're saying makes total sense it's
definitely like a two way street.
If I want someone to be able to step into their masculine
and do those things, I need to kind of tell them
what I'm looking for and also step back for myself a bit
and let go, let people take the reins a little bit.
Yeah, it's a lot easier to, yeah, you get it.
It's an equilibrium in a relationship
and balancing each other out.
And whether the energy you bring, you know,
and things like that, it all kind of intertwined. Alrighty. Alright well good luck congrats on the
relocation and thank you. Don't get in your head. You're gonna I think you're gonna be
fine I think the fact that you are already like conscious about that I
think is a good signal and I think a lot of people in your position would become
like that whole jaded like oh men are just like intimidated by my success.
Like you know maybe, maybe some men,
but like you're not looking for those men.
You're looking for the men who aren't intimidated
by your success, but also need a little bit from you
to give you the type of dynamic that you're looking for.
Cool?
Cool, thanks.
Take care.
Give us an update on how things play out.
Oh yeah?
Yeah, I don't know, it's like in a few months,
if you've, whatever you've implemented after the move.
I think there's a lot of women who are listening to this
relate to you, right?
Okay. On some level.
I think we have a lot of very successful,
very talented career women who are out there
struggling to find love and for whatever reason,
maybe in some similarities, have felt that, well,
a lot about what we're talking about. But I think I'll control what you can control,
try to change your approach, see what you notice, report back and see if you notice
any meaningful changes. Okay. Sounds good. I'll just, I'll just an exercise.
Great. Yeah. All right. I appreciate the call. Well, thank you. Have a good day.
You too. Bye.