We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - 146. Esther Perel: Love in War

Episode Date: November 2, 2022

In this deeply intimate collaboration with beloved therapist Esther Perel, she dives deep in a couples therapy session with a Ukrainian couple torn apart by the war. The wife is compelled to leave th...e country for the sake of her youngest son; the husband and older son are compelled to stay in the warzone for the sake of their country. Miraculously, even amid unthinkable loss – and maybe especially amid unthinkable loss – love and connection are unrelenting. Love does impossible things. (Ukrainian and English language transcripts available at http://wecandohardthingspodcast.com)

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hello, Pod Squad, and welcome to a very special episode of We Can Do Hard Things. The conversation that follows is deeply intimate, brutal, and absolutely beautiful. It's a couple's therapy session led by the remarkable Aster Perrell, a friend of the podcast who has been a beloved therapist for more than 30 years. If you haven't already, please go back and listen to We Can Do Hard Things, episodes 42 and 43 with Esther. In this hour, Astaire dives deep with a Ukrainian couple, torn apart by the terrors of war. The wife is compelled to leave the country for the sake of her youngest son, and the husband is compelled to stay in the war zone for the sake of their country. This conversation, love and war, shows us that under every atrocity we can see on the news, there is an incomprehensible and visible
Starting point is 00:00:50 loss. And, miraculously, even amid the unthinkable loss, and maybe, be especially amid unthinkable loss, love and connection are unrelenting. Love and life are forged in the rubble. Refugees make music, couples dance from afar, brothers plan life after war. Please listen to this conversation and find solace in the truth that love does impossible things. If, in honor of this courageous couple, in honor of love, you wish to extend your support to the people of Ukraine, you can give toward together rising's continuing urgent response for these families at togetherarising.org slash Ukraine. Since Putin's attacks began, Together Rising has invested $2,593,046.12 in 14 Boots on the Ground Partner Organizations.
Starting point is 00:01:42 We've supported emergency evacuation of families of more than 1,500 children from Ukrainian orphanages and Bipak students who were being denied passage across the Polish border. We've funded 322 pallets of life-saving medical aid to hospitals, trauma-informed mental health care, direct cash assistance to individuals, and critical wraparound support for queer Ukrainian refugees, coats, blankets, hot meals, shelter, and resettlement services. We will continue to support these families and we invite you to join us. Every penny we receive at togetherrising.org slash Ukraine will go out the door in love, support, and solidarity with these families. Thank you to Esther for trusting our community, and thank you to you, the Pod Squad, for honoring and standing with this brave family as they do impossible things.
Starting point is 00:02:31 None of the voices in this episode are ongoing clients of Esther Perel's. Each episode is an edited version of a one-time three-hour counseling session. For the purposes of maintaining confidentiality, names and some identifiable characteristics have been removed, but their voices and their stories and their stories. are real. When we tell the stories of war, we often leave out what happens to couples, to their dynamics, to their intimate life. In this session, I wanted to look at what happens to love in war. Our lifestyle has changed so drastically.
Starting point is 00:03:15 He is going through air alerts five times per day. He has to go to bunker to save himself and our son. It was very hard to separate a family. He is in Ukraine with their 18-year-old son, waiting to be drafted, or more accurately, dreading to be drafted. And she, in Western Europe, as a refugee with their 16-year-old son. We have everyday meetings online, one day with children, one day just one-on-one. The first conversation was really tough because when I, asked, how are you?
Starting point is 00:03:54 And he said, I don't even know. I'm afraid to ask myself this question, because there is so much pain there that I don't even want to look there. My father, officer, and he like discipline, he said every time to me, you need to be strong. You need to be just defending your family and your feelings, no matter, your action matter.
Starting point is 00:04:19 And it's why I try to be, you know, just kept in America for my wife. They're trying to talk about their existential stress, but they're also trying to find a way to maintain their connection, which used to be such a powerful, cohesive force for both of them. They were a very intimate couple, a very romantic couple, a very sensual couple. During 22 years of our marriage, we would have weekly dates with each other. we were really close.
Starting point is 00:04:53 To me, this man is one and only, and we are one like flesh. When we start our relationship, she three years said me no. For me, it's like treasure this beautiful woman. And a question we often have in acute stress is how much are we allowed to still want the little jewels of life
Starting point is 00:05:19 and how much do we have to put all of that aside because of the great havoc? That internal tension exists also between the two of them, and all of that is afraid at this moment. My man of my life is not besides me, and I was feeling lonely, and I need just to be loved, I want to be loved, I want to hear compliments, I want to be the same woman for him. my first reaction was, what are talking about? But compliment, we have war.
Starting point is 00:06:00 I have a feeling that whatever you're going to say, you are not the only one. By far, you will be speaking for millions of people who are experiencing what it means to live separated by war. Separated with you in Ukraine with one son and you in Western Europe with the other son. Just that image in front of me brings tears to my eyes. Yeah. Thank you so much. Thank you, sir. How many months have you been separated?
Starting point is 00:06:35 For five months since the end of February, I left on the third day of war. It was difficult to say I was difficult to leave. It was right like an open wound. But anyway, the decision should have been made because there was no option. also thinking about our children. And just because the older son could not leave the country, as well as Sandra could not leave the country, we had to make this decision.
Starting point is 00:07:01 And I had a hope in my heart that, okay, a few weeks, a month, okay, maybe two months, we can handle it somehow, and the war will be over. Now it's been five months, almost it's getting to the sixth months now. And I literally cannot imagine another month coming. It's just, yeah, like a deep wound and it's getting worse and deeper. One flesh that was divided in two parts, a surgery is being made
Starting point is 00:07:30 and no one, it's not done with the surgery, just an open wound bleeding. I had this visceral, strange thought, but I, you know, this kind of, when you have questions about life and death and you suddenly wonder, for who is it more difficult, for the one who leaves? or for the one who stays? It's a Faustian bargain, right? But what do you think are the specific pieces for the parent who stayed and the child who stayed?
Starting point is 00:08:10 And what do you think is unique to the experience to the parent who leaves? After the war started, I was looking for protect my family. It was my priority. and it was very hard to separate our family. But I know it's better for Alonan and line being the safe country. And I know I have responsibility in my country. Every day you go to bed and think about maybe in this night I will die. because you don't know what's going on in this night because every week we hear a special signal
Starting point is 00:09:04 like when Russian rocket come to Ukrainian, we have signal and we need to be in the safe place. And sometimes you can hear it. This I try to be helpful for my eldest son, Mark, try to. connect with him because I see here inside now, here not open. He's so focused in himself, not talk more, just say, okay, I'm okay, I'm okay, but it hurt because I understand he has struggle inside and you want to help him, but you don't know how you can help him. You just try to spend time with him and just do something. Be good, the dad, and his kids, for me, he's kids, 18 years old, but his kids for me,
Starting point is 00:10:07 it's so young to handle this situation. Because sometimes I can't handle this situation. I know I'm chief of my family and I need to be strong. I can't like, okay, guys, sorry, I have problem and just I need to be, I need to protect him, protect my wife, protect my youngest son. And every evening we talk in the Skype and it's better time for me because it's a little place of peace in our life. I mean, I listen to him and I get the chills because it's so common to hear men or conversations about modern masculinity be about power and control and abuses of power. And what I'm hearing him talk is I have to be strong because that is how I protect my family. And he brings back a certain essential view of his role as a man as he sees.
Starting point is 00:11:25 is it, which is I must choke my tears. I cannot be too weak. I cannot be soft. I cannot let myself feel fear because I have to protect the others of the fear that they feel. I try to live one day. It's, for me, it's... Day by day. Yes, day by day, because you think about one day, you have schedule in this day. We know what you need to do. You do it. and like the evening time you speak with your family, you see each other, you can like have a little funny time, just share about what's going on this day, up and down. It just, we just try to joke, try to support each other. And it's, yes, it's like we're together. Does your son know some of what you are experiencing?
Starting point is 00:12:31 Because if you don't tell him anything, and he may not have the language like you do, he may think that he's the only one, or he may think that he has to be okay because you keep telling him, I'm okay. And so that becomes the code of the house. Everything's fine with you, so everything must be fine with him.
Starting point is 00:12:53 but if you were able to say maybe, you know, today was a very hard day and whatever the reason, then he can say it was a hard day for me too. Maybe some, maybe not big my fears. I share about it like something I've said today, like big question about life, about death, about killing, about bombing. because I have fears. I can die. And I can join to military
Starting point is 00:13:29 because I'm a reserve officer in the Ukrainian army. I could take invitation and go to war like my brothers. All your brothers I've been called? Yes, my own brothers was football coach for kids. He never was in military. but some days military department called to him and ask him come and say you need your country protect and he said yes I'm ready when he joined the military his officer said now it's your job we don't know when it's stop only when we are stop you go back home
Starting point is 00:14:21 You know, in this fears about your life, about you can share about maybe your close friends, because I try to protect. No, I'm not Superman. I'm not like Captain America. But I know God has planned for my life, and I just want to be right and do good decision. when I need to do because I know my wife have another opinion about what I need to do
Starting point is 00:14:59 when military department called to me. I don't have just meaning about join or not join because I'm Christian I should join if I'm called I have no choice I must go. In Ukraine you can't
Starting point is 00:15:17 say no but if you have if you in church If you have your belief, mean you can take the gun, you can say, sorry, I can kill people. I can. You can be a conscientious objector. But now my specialized, like, not like troops, like soldiers. I'm officer to protect sky like for missile. I need to strike missile.
Starting point is 00:15:47 my specialized like officer in reserve but if Ukraine army call to me I need to go to this department to protect sky protect our sky protects our city from
Starting point is 00:16:03 Russian bombing I think it's okay it's good idea and your wife says she afraid she just tried to be no no just safe
Starting point is 00:16:17 yourself, say you can't. I know it's hard. What do you think, maybe? I just think that everyone has his mission in life. And if you're talking about professional military, I understand that. That's your choice that you make when you're young, we're not really, but this is not a regular situation. That's a war. Surely to me, I understand that there are ways how to serve when you are in the army, how to help people. But to me, this man is one and only. And surely, from my side as a woman, I want to respect his decisions and I'm trying to, even though I don't agree. What we had, conflict in 2014, the revolution in Ukraine. And all the people went out to the streets to protest. It was in Kiev in capital. And I did not want Andrew to go. He wanted to go to the capital to
Starting point is 00:17:26 just show a peaceful protest that he does not agree with what government thinks. But those were really terrifying times because many people were killed. So I did not want him to go. But he went. I had to find peace in our relationship where it's him as an individual and that's his own choice. When it's about your conscience, I want him to be in peace with himself because he will be accountable to God in the end of his life. And I don't want him to sell his conscience for my ideas, even though it's really difficult to me. Yeah. We are trying to talk. I think everyone need to do what he believe.
Starting point is 00:18:24 In his worldview, he sees her leaving with their youngest son as the right thing to do. He doesn't question it. Whereas she questions, even though she respects it, she also questions his decision to stay, his decision to serve and his decision to put his conscience before his love for her. That's how she frames it. But she understands the structure, but she also finds it's very challenging because she's afraid to lose him. This time of year, I am always looking for my sweaters.
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Starting point is 00:19:50 365 day returns. Now available in Canada too. That's Q-U-I-N-C-E.com slash hard things to get free shipping and 365 day returns. Quince.com slash hard things. This show is brought to you by Alma. When I first tried to find a therapist, it felt like a scavenger hunt with no map, pages of names, long wait lists, voicemails that never got returned. I remember thinking, if this is what it takes just to talk to someone, no wonder people give up. So when I found Alma, it felt like someone finally turned the lights on. Alma, ALMA, is this beautifully simple way to find licensed in-network therapists without all the runaround. You can browse without even making an account. And you can filter for what actually matters. The therapist's approach, background, specialty, lived experience, whatever helps you feel
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Starting point is 00:22:05 The guide is free to you at net suite.com slash hard things. NetSuite.com slash hard things. Every day I ask God, what you know, what you want, open for me. And I don't know. In every situation, I will find a good solution. if you make a decision do you feel that it would be your decision or God's decision for you
Starting point is 00:22:36 I think every of of us have maybe destiny maybe and need to find what he live in this planet what he born
Starting point is 00:22:54 and if I leave I need to do and find my decision. Now I work in a logistic company and our mission to deliver product to grocery store. Our work very necessary for people
Starting point is 00:23:15 because if people see the product in the grocery store, it's okay. But if no product in the grocery store, it's like start panic in the people. And I know now it's my place. I work in this company. it's we do good job it's very important for society and I do what what I can do if another day someone called to me and say this work for you you need I will I will pray
Starting point is 00:23:46 I will look in my heart what I think what where is the best place for me when I can be helpful for people because now if you live in Ukraine every people Now try to find how we can help what we need to do to be closer. Every people in Ukraine like one big family. This I can do it is help people and you in the right place because you are here. You're like little hero. But I know people who are not Ukraine now, they're here too because he tried to save life, to try to support families.
Starting point is 00:24:30 He tried to protect children. They try to protect children. And it's very important too, because maybe we are distance, but we are united. We're just together, every mission, outside, inside. I think, let me tell you what I heard and tell me if I heard it well. I am in the Ukraine, you say, and I'm in the front line, and I am here feeling the every day of what is going on. And my mission is to do for the good of everybody. My purpose is to make sure that there is food in the supermarket so that people have some sense of normalcy and eating.
Starting point is 00:25:17 And I bring my logistic skills to the store. and my sense of family is that I can get through the day if I feel like I've done something helpful for others and for my country. And when I look at my wife and the other people who are outside the country, sometimes it seems to me I'm adding this part, that they may not understand as much
Starting point is 00:25:42 that feeling of doing for everybody else because they went away, they also are doing for other. but they're not seeing the effect every day of the war the way that those of us who stayed behind are doing. So yes, they are helping us. They're sending money. They're taking care of the children.
Starting point is 00:26:03 They're protecting the family that isn't home. But they are more into, I want you to take care of yourself. I want you to protect yourself. I want, and you are saying, I can't protect myself if it doesn't protect the people around me. And so the circumstances and the vantage point that each of you has, you being in the country and you being out of the country, is complementary and meets in this unity,
Starting point is 00:26:34 but is also different because one of you is focusing on the comfort and the security and the safety, and the other one is focusing on the duty and the collective and the conscience and different. find security through that lens. Something like that? Yes. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:26:58 Absolutely. Yeah. You've been listening a lot. I'm going to invite you to say something. Yeah. We share a lot. We have everyday meetings online one day with children, one day just one-on-one. Because at some point we realize
Starting point is 00:27:19 that after having just everyday meetings, just four of us, like a family, I realized that I have this big gap, I don't know, intimacy on emotional level that I need one-on-one talks more often. The first conversation was really tough because when I asked, like, so Andrew, how are you? And he said, I don't even know because I'm afraid to ask myself this question because I'm afraid there is so much pain there that I don't even want to look there. On the other hand, from what you have just shared, which is absolutely true, I was kind of feeling being, you know, in France, somewhere looking at the couples. I was feeling lonely.
Starting point is 00:28:06 I was feeling not love. There is like my man of my life is not besides me. I don't hear anymore so many compliments that is my need in relationships. I don't hear this, I don't hear that, and I understand from my perspective. So our needs were different. And then we decided, no, we need to talk even more because we had this habit in our family. Like during 22 years of our marriage, we would have weekly dates with each other. We were really close, but just because of the war and because our lifestyle has changed so drastically,
Starting point is 00:28:44 we were kind of afraid to approach each other. I was afraid to hurt him because I knew that he's going through air alerts five times per day. He has to go to bunker to save himself and our son. And I need just to be loved. I want to be loved. I want to hear compliments.
Starting point is 00:29:08 I want to be the same woman for him. my first reaction was what are talking about but compliment we have war we have difficult situation I tried to do something helpful
Starting point is 00:29:23 for my country for my family for compliment but then I just thinking about it because I think she just go through
Starting point is 00:29:35 difficult time now she has needs it's like like Bible said, it's my part, it's my body. My wife, it's like if my hand have painful, I want to protect, I want to just heal my hand. If my wife need good words, like compliments, say, you're so beautiful today, I love you so much. And it's very important for her. Andrew, it's not just important for her.
Starting point is 00:30:08 It's not just important for her. because you too feel this. But if you allow yourself to connect with those feelings, it's even more scary. If you remember how much you love her and how much you miss her and how much you would love to touch her and how much you would like her to hold you,
Starting point is 00:30:29 you will connect with a different set of feelings. At this point, you respond from the heroic position of I'm fighting for my country and it's crucial. But there is also, I'm deeply connected to you and I don't want to lose you. And so if you make it that she wants to be loved while you are expressing the love of the nation, you're missing the point for yourself, not for her, for yourself. But your fear, if I know something, Andrew, if I understood you well, is that if you allow yourself to connect with that part of you,
Starting point is 00:31:06 it will increase the fears and it will make it. you less strong? Yes, it's like you just save yourself for pain, just and be like maybe be focus and the real action because something, I can stop this situation. I can like make, say my wife come to me and be with me because it's like it's, because it's not safe and maybe, maybe Maybe, I don't know, maybe it's like... Say it in Ukrainian. Andrew, say to her in Ukrainian. This is too deep to say it in English and she will translate for me.
Starting point is 00:31:57 I think, yes, that I, I, never, within, puttage, or any other things, or some kind of things, to this
Starting point is 00:32:11 disloco, this pain and, I just not want to I just not want to
Starting point is 00:32:20 think because because it, I know that I can't not even
Starting point is 00:32:25 can't make maybe Trasipis. Andrew said that this pain is so deep
Starting point is 00:32:33 and so hurtful, painful that he doesn't even want to give it a thought.
Starting point is 00:32:40 And all he can do is just act and do something to not go to that place because the pain is just overwhelming. I'm going to let you respond to him. I feel like it's really difficult to unblock this because at this time, he's always vulnerable and he can easily cry. But at this time, it seems like he's frozen. there are some days when when andrew can share a bit deeper yeah he's always ready to hear my crying my pain because he's still the close he is he was and he is the closest person to me in life i have many friends that's fine but it's different but i sometimes feel i don't know how to approach what questions to ask because I am afraid that if I start unfolding this pain,
Starting point is 00:33:47 then I will not know how to help him because he is far. I can't hug, embrace, you know. In the moment I'm mostly numb and can't handle things. Numbness is not always the moment. It's not always that you can't handle things. Numbness is sometimes an adaptive response in the moment. Him saying to you, it's too painful if I allow myself to feel how much I miss you, that is not numbness. That's actually being in it, even if he doesn't cry like you do, do he did before.
Starting point is 00:34:38 Why feel? Because I can't do anything about my feelings. I can't bring my wife back, but I can get food on the shelf in the supermarket. So logistics is doable. Love is painful. They both are in survival mode. They both are into fight, flight and freeze. And when she describes how she goes numb, of course the question is, Is this numbness a problem or is this numbness in the moment actually adaptive? Because in hindsight, we often wonder why we react at certain ways and we leave out the fact that in the moment those were adaptive responses. This show is sponsored by Midi Health. Perimenopause and menopause aren't personality flaws or phases. They're medical transitions.
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Starting point is 00:38:57 Yeah, I see some couples who are together, Ukrainians. And you get jealous? Yeah, I'm jealous. I can't... I don't know, even... Why do they get to be together? Yeah, and then I try to find answers, mostly logical because my heart does not want to accept this.
Starting point is 00:39:18 And then you go into, why is this country more important than me or us? Absolutely. And then you get into a triangle where it's you, him and the country? Absolutely, yeah. Do you talk to him about the jealousy? I did not probably call it jealousy, but I talked to him. sometimes when I heard some men saying, but I'm here to protect my family, that's why I left. And I feel, but doesn't he protect our family?
Starting point is 00:39:54 I mean, I don't believe he does not. So, but yeah, you're absolutely right from what you were saying that those are heavy feelings. I sure, I just know that there is no easy way out. we don't, I mean, I respect his decision. I mean, men cannot legally leave the country. So only if you have three children, you can't live the country. I said about my wife, if you come to Ukraine one day and after nine months, you will pregnant, just two babies, yes, I have a chance legal live country.
Starting point is 00:40:39 Come to Ukraine, spend the weekend with me, let's make love, get pregnant, and then you can get out. Feels like a plan. My dream was two boys, two girls. Yes, we have two boys. We need two girls. When you say I respect his decision, do you think he feels that? Does he feel that I respect? How deep is there your questions?
Starting point is 00:41:13 Your questions. Each question is like, whoa. I can even be more honest with you. Please. I think you would like to respect his decision. But I'm not sure you really do because there's a part of you that thinks differently. And these are not questions that can so nicely be allowed. aligned. You have had your disagreements, I'm sure, in the history of your marriage. But these are
Starting point is 00:41:45 deep existential, religious convictions that take you in different directions. And so you would like to say he needs to be able to be at peace with his conscience. He needs to be able to be between him and God and at the end of his life, know that he did, you know, you have the right words. You You think well, but I'm not sure that your feelings are aligned with your thoughts. It doesn't come true. Not with you. You agree? I do.
Starting point is 00:42:20 I agree. And when you ask this question, the first thought that came to my mind, I'm not sure. I want to align my feelings to this respectful attitude, but sometimes it does not happen this way. It for me is like two ways. One way I need to be with my family and another way I need to help my country. And it's like how I can connect this good both goal in my life and I need to be honest with myself and hear my heart. But every time when we have this situation, it's not easy for us to find peace and find because we have different opinion. But if I may, I think it's not just that you have different opinions from each other.
Starting point is 00:43:22 So you're in 2014, there's a revolution, you decide to go to the demonstrations, and there's a part of Aliana that says, I wished that you didn't go and that you stood by us. but at the same time, when I know what attracted her to you, your character, your strength, your integrity, your deep sense of commitment and devotion to the family and beyond, so I can only imagine, it's not just that she says don't go, is that she is not just in a conflict with you,
Starting point is 00:44:02 she's also having an internal conflict between, the fear of losing you and the wish for you to stay, and at the same time also the respect and the admiration for you, that you go and that you do what you're doing. It's both ends, but that's inside of her. Do you understand? Does it feel right what I said? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:44:27 To me, yes. I think that sometimes if you could speak from both places like that, he also would feel like you get him. And if you were able sometimes more to talk even about the pain about not being with her, she would feel less alone that she's the only one who misses the compliments and the sensuality and the connection because you are busy with the country. There is a bridge and you're not walking across it enough. How do you say in Ukrainian, do you understand me?
Starting point is 00:45:10 Understands? You're not. You're like in Polish. You're not. Yeah. You're not. Yeah, I understand. Yeah, I understand.
Starting point is 00:45:19 Yeah. So, it's a resume. You're just. I'm just. I'm not. But I think, mainly for Alona, she lost her dad, her mom, and her brothers now in not good condition, like healthy.
Starting point is 00:45:40 And me, maybe, our family for her is like all, and she tried to save it. It's why for her is painful. You are her family in every sense of the world. She no longer has her mother or her father. Her brother is in ill health, and you are it. and the thought of you going to the army leaves her with a dreadful feeling
Starting point is 00:46:09 that she could be all alone with the two boys. Yeah, exactly. Last year, when my mom passed away, I felt so uprooted in every sense of this word because I lost parents who gave me life. And I remember when Andrew came back home and he hugged me and said, mom is not with us anymore because her neighbor called Andrew not me because she was afraid to call me
Starting point is 00:46:38 and I said you are the only person in this world there's no more no one who can be closer and sure I'm super communicative girl I have lots of friends and stuff but it's very different the closest person is Andrew unlike maybe for Andrew is different because his parents are alive His brother is okay. I mean, he's okay. I mean, in good health. And he's alive. I have a drug addict brother.
Starting point is 00:47:10 And plus my children who are turning almost 17 and 19, kind of losing everything and feeling super lonely in the country where I am now. Just I understand that he's going through his struggle. I'm going through my struggle. We are trying to be there for each other for sure as much as we can. you're always clear that your place is with your younger son in Western Europe? Or you think sometimes we could reunite, but we'd have to be in the village together? This is the question I'm asking myself now these days.
Starting point is 00:47:55 Can I handle another five months being in the situation like that? Maybe it's better just go back home and die together and not, struggle so painfully because it's huge. I can't bear it. And then all the traumatic experiences appear at the moment when I'm thinking of coming back home. Because I've had many panic attacks and lots of things that I was going through anxiety and depression. And then I can't picture myself sitting in bunker. I can't picture myself having severe anxiety. while going to bad because it took me about five years to recover and I'm okay now. I mean, a year before the war, I felt like thanks to a lot of different things,
Starting point is 00:48:46 breathing techniques and lots of stuff, I could bring myself back to a normal state where I can handle myself mentally. I'm okay. I'm just thinking now about coming like for a date, for a week or two, just to see each other. and see how it feels. Do you work there? Do you have a life there? Or are you in temporary mode every day wondering,
Starting point is 00:49:12 maybe I'll go back tomorrow? And so you never really settle because you keep thinking I'm going home soon. Yeah, thank you so much for asking this question. Because this is the biggest challenge for me nowadays. Because I see at this time, like five months since the war has started, I see many families or even individuals, they start to settle. They start to live a new life at the place where they are.
Starting point is 00:49:41 And I'm jealous, like you said, thanks for just giving it a name. I'm jealous because I can't see myself settling somewhere without Andrew. Because to me, being a creative one, I am a creator. I create big projects. I love vision. And I can't give myself a permission to have this vision. Because once I have it, I need to start creating something by myself. But I cannot picture myself settling somewhere.
Starting point is 00:50:12 So it was a temporary place for me to just wait when the thunderstorm and the rain is over. But the rain is not over. It's a pouring rain. And I'm there standing in the middle of this pouring rain thinking where I can go now. If I go back to Ukraine, I can't work. I can do my business there now because. it's just closed, something that I do I can do now.
Starting point is 00:50:37 I know what I want to do. I clearly know what I want to do. I clearly know who I am and how to be self-realized, but I can't give myself permission to settle. And so now what I see, I see many families and individuals trying to start, find jobs, finding some ways of how they can, you know, give education to their children. Your son goes to school?
Starting point is 00:51:02 my son goes to school here he's okay his younger one he's much easier for him to adapt so he's okay with he found his community let's say he he goes to school here and he sees himself somehow staying here so i kind of potentially can feel that i can't settle somewhere but i can't see myself settling without andrew it's so interesting when this year started i thought we need to have vacation, whole family. This dream, this picture, that someday we be together, whole family, we will spend vacation. Because I don't know when it will, when it will, but I know it will.
Starting point is 00:51:54 I know someday we will together and we will have a vacation, new vacation. It's beautiful. And you know, in my kitchen, yes, in our kitchen, we have calendar, paper calendar, every day new page, every day new page. And this page stopping February 23, its last peaceful day. And I said, when my family will together in the kitchen, in our apartment, we change this date. It's a beautiful picture to hold as whole. hope, as hope, you know, that when we will meet again, we will travel again. And it gives you, I'm sure, a lot of strength to wake up in the morning and to go to bed at night.
Starting point is 00:52:47 Do you want her to come home or do you want her to stay? I don't know. It's a difficult question. Yeah, because I know her feelings. I know her fears. but what's inside her is very important. I know it's for her be in Ukraine now, it's big suffering and maybe it's not good for your health.
Starting point is 00:53:16 I don't judge you and blame you. I want to just help you to find your decision. Because it's your decision and yes, Inside, I want to be she with me in Ukraine, but I know she feels not safely in this. But we try to find good decision. It may be pieces of a decision. She may come home for a week or two
Starting point is 00:53:51 and hope that it gives her more clarity. There is also a part of you, Eliana, that if you start something where you are, that doesn't mean that you never go back. It just means that this takes much longer than you ever imagined and you have no idea when the war will end. And in a way, you may be more helpful to the family by creating something where you are.
Starting point is 00:54:22 And then you have a younger son who, if he stays in another year, may decide that by then he's almost finished high school, that that's where he wants to stay. So the whole destiny of the family is no longer clear the way you thought it was going to be. And that means being open to very different trajectories. Maybe one option is you do go home for a couple of weeks and you may find clarity and you may not. And then the question will be, do I stay here? or do I leave?
Starting point is 00:55:04 And then it will be my health versus my relationship. And all these impossible binaries, these are impossible binaries. You are a resourceful person that starts with visions. Usually you start with a big vision. Maybe this is an invitation
Starting point is 00:55:24 to start with a smaller vision and a temporary vision. A vision for the moment. Not a vision for life. war makes everything become in the immediate because if he lives day by day you're going to be living day by day too in some way your vision has to be a vision for the moment
Starting point is 00:55:50 I mean I am not saying this because I have certainty and I know I'm trying to think out loud with you and see if there's a way to take you out of your victim stuckness everybody else seems to know where they're going but me. Everybody else has their partners but me. Everybody, you know, you're in that thing and you spend your day there.
Starting point is 00:56:18 And that's separately from him. That's true. When you say, I'm that kind of person and I start this way and this is how I work, I would add at the end of the sentence, in peaceful times. But in war times, all your definitions of yourself and all, all the ways that you have constructed the world and reality around you changes. In a way, it's about how you each help the other in the world that the other is in. And then once a week, you have a date on a fantasy island or a fantasy place where you do not touch any of these subjects
Starting point is 00:57:11 because they're so big and difficult and painful and they're filled with uncertainty. Maybe you don't talk. Maybe you listen to music together. Maybe you watch a movie. Maybe you each dance in your own places. But with each other, crazy stuff that people do when they are in forced separation.
Starting point is 00:57:40 Do you like to dance? You both smiled when I said that. Yes. Yeah. So. Yeah. We dance together, actually. When I met Alona, I just saw like she danced, and she was beautiful dancing.
Starting point is 00:58:00 I like dance. She liked dance. Beautiful. So imagine. We are crazy when dancing. So imagine you even, you know, you each make a playlist and you just put the music on and just dance for an hour instead of talking about these impossible huge existential quandaries just to give yourself hope and energy and poetry it doesn't answer the big questions but it keeps you connected at a different level that is also very important freedom comes
Starting point is 00:58:39 through our imagination, especially when you can't feel free in reality. Your mind and your body are the two, you know, means, vehicles through which you can stay connected with the world of possibility, in a reality in which it feels that every possibility could be life and death. You also need places for joy and for celebration
Starting point is 00:59:08 and for connection in the midst of the tragedy. I sensed that there was a need for permission. It's the permission that allows us to stay connected, to hope, to joy, to celebration, because that's actually part of what allows us to face the war. And at one moment I thought, on what basis do I know anything about this? I'm not from there. I'm not living in a war. I never have. But my parents did. And my parents each spent about four to five years in concentration camps. And so did their entire group of friends
Starting point is 00:59:59 and community that I grew up in. So I spent many years asking people, how did you do it? How did you wake up in the morning? How did you maintain hope? What kept you going? Did you ever laugh? Did you ever have fun, those things that are irreverent that seem to be taboo to talk about when people are in the midst of suffering. And yet, it is humor and playfulness and curiosity and joy and all the strategies that intensify joy from the sense of awe when you look at the sky to the gratitude for what you still have in front of you, to the people that you think about that you hope to reunite with. Those are very precise strategies that are beyond mindfulness and beyond breathing. People have experienced existential stress forever and have developed long-standing practices and
Starting point is 01:00:56 traditions to counter that. Music, prayer, singing, poetry, composing in the midst of all of that, creation, creativity, art. All of those things are the hardware. for facing hardships. Esther Perel is the author of Mating in Captivity and the State of Affairs. She's also the host of the podcasts, Where Should We Begin, and How's Work? Love and War with Esther Perel is produced by Magnificent Noise in partnership with the International Trauma Studies Program. This episode would not have been possible
Starting point is 01:01:52 without the generous support of Elizabeth Vertwangler and Johann Berg. And a very special thanks to one Ukraine. One Ukraine is helping Ukrainian couples and families affected by war by organizing community support groups. Learn more at Oneukraine.com. Or to contribute to their initiative, you can donate through PayPal at donate at oneukrain.com.

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