We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - Date Nights: Why they Suck & How to Make them Great
Episode Date: February 11, 2025384. Date Nights: Why they Suck & How to Make them Great Glennon, Abby and Amanda delve into the nuances of salvaging a relationship’s spark or excitement and discuss the role of “date nights” ...in healthy relationships. Discover: -Why “date night” is NOT a panacea; -Jealousy’s role in our relationships; -Why many people have affairs; and -How to “unknow” your partner and what that means. To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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This is a Reese's Peanut Butter Cups sound experiment.
We're looking to find the perfect way to hear Reese's so you'll buy more of them.
Here we go.
Reese's. Reese's.
Reese's. Reese's.
Reese's. Hey, get out of here, you little stinker!
Reese's.
Reese's.
Reese's.
Peanut Butter Cups. Reese's. Reese's. Peanut butter cups. That breathy one sounded very creepy, am I right?
Since November, Abby, Amanda, and I have been planning, dreaming up ways for this community
to show up for each other, take care of each other, and continue building community.
But you know that several months ago, I quit social media.
And the effects of that quitting on my nervous system,
mind and heart have been as dramatic
as when I quit drinking.
It's been wild, and it's been extremely important
for me to experience.
Since that quitting, I have felt calmer, braver, and clearer, actually.
And in the midst of that, we have come up with some honestly terrifyingly realer and
more embodied ways to connect with you and as a community than on social media.
I want to keep showing up for each other and I want to keep building community now more than ever, but I don't want to do it on social
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you into something special and the invitation is first going to go to you
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and Abby and Amanda's invitations to new projects, new newsletter and all of my invitations
and Abby and Amanda's invitations to new projects,
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It will be me.
I miss writing to you directly.
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Welcome to We Can Do Hard Things. If you have ever wondered what the hell to do on a date night,
what the hell a date night is for,
if you've ever stared at your children and tried to think of something to ask them
or something to say,
if you want to know how to use time together
in a way that brings you closer,
I think that's what we're gonna accomplish today.
I think. We're gonna try.
We're gonna try.
Sister's gonna help us.
Okay, I just promised a lot of things, sister.
Do you think that we can do those things?
And is that actually what this episode is going to be about?
I mean, a good portion.
I think that, yes, it is using date night as a way to understand
what the hell's going on in our relationship
and as a way to get closer in our relationship
and with anyone that we love.
So it feels like we all know date nights good. People are like, yay, do date nights. But
over half of us are not doing any date nights. And so whenever something like that happens,
it's like, hmm, what's going on there? Because if we know they're supposed to be so good
and everyone says you should have
date nights, but over half of us are not doing date nights.
Something is afoot.
And I think that that's because date nights are broken for a lot of us.
And it feels like the prescription is date night.
That's the only prescription we have.
So everyone keeps writing the same prescription for date nights, but it's not actually fixing
our problems.
Yes.
And I have a theory about this that maybe date nights are actually making things worse.
And that's why we stopped doing them.
If we're not doing date nights correctly.
Yeah, I understand that because I remember
in a previous relationship, we would go to like,
okay, let's say the quote doctor, the therapist,
because you said it's a prescription, right?
We would go to the, and we would say we can't connect.
We don't have physical intimacy.
We don't have emotional intimacy.
And the therapist would say,
would write out the little prescription of date night.
And so we would go to a restaurant, which we couldn't afford,
sit at a table and stare at each other,
which only emphasized and made it more obvious
and horrific that we had nothing to talk about,
that we couldn't, it was horrible actually.
And also there's so many problems just to start off with,
like date night, why does it have to be at night?
I'm already out.
Why not date afternoon?
Right, okay.
This is true.
And I think what you're saying is exactly right.
And in fact, when we started a therapy,
like 1 million years ago, that was on the first day.
I was like, I swear to God,
if you tell me to have more date nights,
I will stand up and walk out of here. Because my problem is not the ability to plan a few hours
every couple of weeks. It's like, what I need you to do is get us to the place where we want
to have a date together. And that when we have, we'll be able to talk about things that are
different than the things that we talk about every night when we're sitting
at the table. So the date night isn't an exact replica of what you do every night, except
10 times more expensive because you pay the babysitter and you pay for dinner. And now
you're like, see, it's just as boring as ever. So let's not do date nights, which is why
50% of us don't do it. Okay.
Yeah. And then wait, wait, wait, just set it up more. Cause I want to talk a little bit about the challenges
before we move on to like all the solutions.
Also the pressure of date night,
because would you say the problem that most people
are trying to fix with date night
is like there's so much adulting going on
or there's so many distracting things
that you're not connecting on a deeper level,
whether that's emotional or physical.
And so that's the presenting symptom that gets you to date night. But what I always used to
remember too, was the pressure of the physical intimacy at the end of the date night. So you're,
it's like this prescription, like you're supposed to like, all I could think about at dinner was,
oh God, we're going to also have to make out afterwards.
Maybe that was a personal problem.
Same underlying thing.
But I think we should start with the state of the date night union.
OK, let's just like set the table with that.
No pun intended.
The very expensive table that we paid a babysitter for. OK.
So 2020, they did a poll of 2000 parents of children aged five to 18
and three in ten. In 2020, they did a poll of 2000 parents of children aged five to 18.
And three in 10 could not even remember the last time they went on a date with their partner.
Okay, three out of 10 can't even remember it.
Then 52% of those spouses reported that they quote, never go on date nights with their
spouses or only go on a few times a year
48% had once or twice a month. Okay
Significantly spouses who have frequent date nights are
15% more likely to report being very happy in their marriages and
One out of two who frequently go on dates report that they are highly satisfied with their sexual relationship.
So we read those stats and we're like, oh, the answer is date nights.
Look at all those things.
They're happier.
The data shows three out of four report being highly committed to their relationship and
not having a divorce if you have regular date nights.
And to that I say, like, do we forget that
correlation is not causation? Exactly! So if maybe these people are already happier and more
connected, therefore they want to go on a date. Maybe they're less stressed out about money,
so they make date nights more affordable and interesting. There's so many factors here
make date nights more affordable and interesting. There's so many factors here that the date night
is not the panacea that we are hoping for.
And in fact, they find that simply having
this quality time together as a couple
is not enough to prevent a relationship from getting stale.
And as you said, this professor Cheryl Harjamukh, I think is her name, she studies this stuff.
And she said that if you're already bored
in your relationship or your relationship is stagnant,
your dates will be too.
So it's the same, I agree with you,
that I think that meh dates are actually hurting
our relationships instead of helping it.
Because if you're like stuck
in this routine and the same like old patterns
over and over again, and then you go into all the effort
and expense to try to get unstuck,
but you end up recreating the exact same thing
on your dates, isn't it just confirming your worst fear
that you can't connect in your board?
Yes.
If not even a date night, not even all of this money is going to help you connect.
So it's very tricky.
So I have dove into all those research and I think that this is the answer.
Ooh.
There are a few elements. One really main, main element that you have to have if you're
trying to do this differently.
Okay.
The big idea is that the point of dating early on is to get to know someone. The point of
dating long term into your relationship is to try to unknow them.
Oh, that's good.
Because if we already think, which many of us who have been with our people for 10 plus
years, literally what is the point if you already know exactly what's going to happen,
exactly what each of you are going to say, exactly how you're going to feel.
There is no point in going on a date.
Because there is no unknown. There is no surprise. There is no risk.
Novelty. Yeah.
But you have to try to set the stage to make it possible to pretend like you don't know
them. So the way you do that is novelty. You need surprise and you need novelty.
This person, Dr. Aaron studies this and so the same circuits in your mind that are that
puppy love situation are the same ones that happen when you do something new.
So they did studies of, okay, they had 53 middle-aged couples
and they saw how happy they were in their marriage, okay?
It's like just baseline, I'm so happy with this.
Then they made one group spend 90 minutes a week
doing pleasant and familiar activities, things they normally
do in their life, like going out to dinner, going to see a movie, whatever.
And then they had the other half do 90 minutes a week on exciting activities.
So they did things like go to concerts, skiing, hiking, dancing, something that was like totally
outside of their norm that they weren't even necessarily comfortable with.
And after 10 weeks, they took the test and the exciting people had significantly greater increase in their marital satisfaction than the pleasant people.
It was the excitement that did it. It wasn't the time, the exact same amount of time. It wasn't that they liked the activities.
I mean, the other ones were more comfortable for them.
It was the exciting factor.
They even had things as simple as if you walk across a room, making a couple walk across
a room back and forth, and then other couples have to tie their wrists and ankles together and crawl back across the room trying to push a ball. The people who
took part in the crawling with their arms together showed bigger increases in
love and satisfaction with their relationship than the people who just
walked back and forth. Okay, is it the vulnerability? Because when you say we do things that are comfortable
over and over again, that sounds very familiar to me.
In those comforting, same neurological paths, same,
we're not having any moments of vulnerability together.
Is it the vulnerability of a risky new situation,
whether it's a concert or just like crawling across a thing?
Is it shared vulnerability that creates more shared dopamine and connection? I mean, I
think it depends on what you think about when you think about vulnerability. I
think vulnerability is an element of surprise because for me it's more about
novelty and surprise. Yeah, same. But I think vulnerability is necessarily an element of surprise
because in surprise, there's always risk.
Yeah, risk.
And in something you don't know, there's always risk.
And precisely because you don't know how it's gonna turn out.
So to me, it just makes total sense.
Why are we attracted to strangers?
Why do like half the people end
up having affairs? It's because they don't know a stranger. It's because they don't know
them. And so your mind can be curious and wonder about all the parts and fill in all
the parts with all these other things that you don't actually know. Whereas the people
that we're with forever,
that coloring page is done.
We finished it.
We got all our data.
We colored it in.
It has been done.
And we've been looking at the page for a long ass time.
Right?
And so there is nothing to be curious about.
And so it's not our fault.
But we need to figure out ways to set it up
so that there is some element of surprise. It's like adventure.
We went on an adventure last weekend.
And I just felt like there was a different vibe in the whole car ride there.
And even the whole car ride back.
First of all, we had never done this thing before and we didn't know how
it would go and it was just for an overnight.
So like I love an adventure.
We do all become different people in different scenarios.
I think the identity is much less solid than we think it is.
It's always changing and fluid.
And that makes sense that if you get people into different places and with different people
and with different experiences, they become different parts of themselves well up.
And then we get to see our people fresh and new.
And so it does make sense that it's like before we change the person,
maybe we try changing the conditions and seeing if a different
person emerges that excites us.
But also a different person inside of us emerge.
I think it's the same.
It's not just about feeling boredom with your partner or knowing them fully.
It's also feeling boredom within yourself.
Totally.
I mean, think about it, you guys.
This is not rocket science.
It's why it's like a shtick and a meme
that middle-aged people are constantly searching Zillow.
It's not because we're gonna buy a different house.
It's this idea that maybe something could be different.
Maybe there could be a change.
Maybe there's something about my life and my future
that I don't already know how it's going to be. And that is what we want in our partnerships. Like the stagnation
and the we already know everything there is to know is the problem.
So how do we unknow our people? I love that framework. Let's figure out instead of
the prescription of date night, how it's been
done, which does not help us unknow our person.
How do we create time and experiences that help us unknow each other?
Exactly.
Exactly.
And if there's not a particular person in your life, like a partner, or if you have a partner that is unwilling to
do any of this with you, the really good news is that what Abby said is exactly
right. It is the introduction of novelty and surprise and excitement into your
life that is a factor of change. So if you can get it within your relationship when both
parties are having it, amazing. If you can't and you bring it into your own life, that
then affects you and your relationship. So you can do any of these things on your own.
Or with your kids. They don't have to be with your partner. Or with your kids. Or with your kids. They don't have to be with your partner. Or with your kids or with your friends.
Exactly.
Okay, so these are some of the ideas that people had.
Ooh.
First of all, if you've fallen in love
at some point with your partner,
you can go back to what that was that you used to do.
There's like a memory spark, there's a whatever.
You can go back to the original time and like recreate what you used to do. There's like a memory spark, there's whatever, you can go back to the original time
and like recreate what you used to do together.
That is something that if you have that.
The other thing, something that has some excitement to it,
something that has some risks.
So physical things like ice skating,
snorkeling, roller skating, camping,
even things that seem ridiculous,
like throwing a ball back and forth and just talking. It's like something to shake you
out of your normal routine. The vulnerability piece of trying something new together that
you don't already do, like painting or drawing or pottery class, or even going on a hike
so you're seeing different things that they're
not in your normal purview.
They had the idea of a surprise date where one person plans it and surprises the other
person.
I mean, for me, the elements are physical, moving my body in a different way
than I normally do.
That changes things up for me.
And having out of my comfort zone physically
and or out of the predictable from a conversation standpoint
because I just check out, like I'm not even here anymore
if it's not interesting.
So we got like cards to ask questions.
It's not like, oh, I'm coming up with them
or he's coming up with them.
It's just like a neutral third party has made this thing
because honestly, even bad surprises
I think are a net benefit.
Totally. Is that true for you like when
you're like I'm surprised and I don't
even like that thing about you but it
feels better than feeling like I know
everything there is to know about you.
Even negative new information is
intriguing. I feel like you just got some new
negative information or at least like negative
seeming information
on our conversation on the car ride home the other night. And I feel like that that was
net positive.
Oh my God, tell me, are we allowed to know?
I can't.
Unfortunately, no.
Okay. But I kind of want to say one sentence about it. Okay. So it was information about, I'll just say like past relationships.
Okay?
Okay?
That normally I would think would make me crazy and jealous and I don't want to talk
about it.
And a little bit it did, but it also made me feel very zingy.
Like, oh, I see you.
I remember you were a full human being
before our adulting life wore us down.
And also that you're capable of being jealous.
Yes.
That is a little bit of passion and unknown
of being like, oh, I kind of want to kick her ass.
Yes.
Look, I'm also alive.
I know what that is. That's a liveness.
That feeling. Exactly. And there's really cool ways of, as we've already established,
you can spend $300 on a babysitter and a dinner and have it be a total fucking dud. You could
also spend $5 on a walk to get ice cream,
and it can be really perfect.
That is the upside downside.
But I think at least if you're in a rut,
it's got to be pretty dramatically different.
And sometimes it can't be when you're not able to connect,
it can't be like you two staring at each other, hoping to magically
fix the problem in the next two hours.
There needs to be maybe a third party.
Like we just went on, my friend suggested it.
She went on a date with her husband to a tree climbing zip lining place.
And I thought it was the cleverest thing, probably cost as much as dinner.
And they didn't even go to dinner, they just went to do it.
And then we did it last week and it was amazing.
And I actually like, I was watching John try
like the hardest one and I was like,
damn, that's pretty hot.
He's trying the hardest one.
And I was pushing myself and like, it was cool.
You know when you never think that?
Looking across at your partner and being like,
she's eating linguine again.
Like that doesn't do it.
And it's also like, it makes me think a lot about teaching when kids...
That is so right.
Because it's so true.
Oh, she's ordering fucking pasta again.
Here we go.
I wonder what will be dessert.
And meanwhile, I'm calculating,
I'm doing the hours of the babysitting in my head every time.
I'm like, if we order dessert now, we can get the hell out of here
and it won't be an additional 20 bucks.
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I think about what we learned about vulnerability and child development, right?
And for many reasons, the idea of parallel play, like how people learn how to connect
with each other is kids don't sit across from each other staring each other in the eye and
together come up with a mutual plan of how to build a Lego.
They sit next to each other and they're both, their bodies are engaged.
And then like little moments of connection and spark come and it's so precious you can see it happening.
But we forget that, like I'll never forget when my kids said,
I used to think when we need to have a serious talk,
or any kind of real talk, like a family moment where we got together,
we should all sit down on the couch, stare at each other, call it a family meeting. And
nothing shuts down my family more. The second I sit everybody down on the couch, they start
going, are we getting divorced? Is somebody getting divorced? Like it brings up trauma
of the hard conversations in the past. It shuts down people, especially if you are a person
who's struggling to connect with your partner. Both partners know that. That is the underlying
like thing bubbling in the relationship. So when you sit down at a table and stare at each other,
people panic and you don't even know you're panicking,
but you see it as a test of your relationship.
It's not loose, it's not free.
The person who thinks that they're the reason
they can't connect panics more and can't open up
because they're in fight or flight.
So I think if we measured all of the bless their heart
couples who are out to dinner,
we would see that their nervous systems are frozen.
We would see that all their shame is rising up and we would see how disembodied it is.
What you're talking about with like the movement and the walking, you know, how they say every
emotional problem can be solved physically. Like it's makes sense that movement parallel play
would foster the conditions to let the connection come
instead of the forcedness of staring at each other
in the eyeballs.
Yes, yes.
If you can't figure out how to enjoy each other,
you can both parallel play, enjoy something together.
Yeah.
And you are doing something together. I remember such a fun, quirky thing. John planned a date
one time where we live outside of Washington, D.C., like two miles. And he planned a date where we
took the on-off tourist bus all over Washington, D.C. And it was so much fun.
And you know, there was people from India and Texas
and whatever, they're like, where are you from?
We're like, see that house.
We're from right there.
And it was so fun.
And we learned all this stuff about our city
that we'd never learned before.
It was so cheap and it was great.
We both came back like so happy
and we're just sitting beside each other.
Like, it's not like we were talking about anything.
So there's fun, fun things that you can do that way.
You unknew your city.
You dated your city.
Yes, we unknew our city.
Yeah. That's right.
That's really cool. That's right.
I think it can be a vicious cycle or a virtuous cycle.
Like the vicious cycle is we have nothing to talk about. We're
so bored. I guess we need a date night. We go on a date night. We still have nothing
to talk about. We're still so bored. So we realize, I guess that's just our life and
our relationship. And I'm going to stop magnifying and illuminating that by going on date nights. Yes. You have confirmed your spheres, vicious cycle.
Then you can have a virtuous cycle, potentially,
where you are just, it's gonna be so fucking awkward.
It's gonna be so awkward.
I'll tell you what is really awkward.
The first time John and I did a couples meditation together,
we sat down staring at each other's faces.
Oh wow.
With our eyes open. And I was sweating and I was trying so hard not to laugh. So awkward,
awkward, awkward.
I don't think that we would be able to do that.
Amazing.
I don't think that you'd be able to stare in my eyes.
Extended eye contact is tricky for me. I won't lie.
Yeah. Oh my God. It's eye contact is tricky for me, I won't lie. Yeah.
Oh my God.
It's crazy.
But that was so unexpected that it was interesting.
I think I have a suspicion that people's problems are not that they don't like their person
as much as they're not interested in them.
Yeah.
And the reason they're not, you know what?
People say like, I don't know, are you,
oh, I'm interested in him, I'm interested in her.
That means I wanna get with them, right?
I find them interesting, they interest me,
therefore I'm paying attention to them.
If someone doesn't interest you, they're not capturing your attention. You're not giving
them attention. They're not interesting to you because you think you know everything already.
You think you know exactly what they're going to fucking say. You know exactly what they're
going to do. There's nothing to be interested in. You've exhausted it. But if you can force yourself into awkward situations,
if you can ask questions you've never asked
and be okay with the answer, it gets more interesting.
Well, what's curious about that
is that it's not even about the other person.
It's like, how I want to feel is interested. Yep. It's not even like, do I like that? Is that
person blah blah blah? Is that person blah blah blah? It's like, oh no, actually this
is about how I want to feel, which is makes sense if you throw yourself into a vulnerable
situation, it's about how you feel in that moment. Okay, so one of the things I feel like
that's a challenge for us. Us meaning you and me? Yeah, and maybe all couples is
that there's usually like a realm where one person is way more vulnerable and
the other person is not. Okay, so for a very obvious example I would give you
throwing a ball back and forth.
When you say that to me, I'm like, okay,
I can tell who will be really vulnerable.
And I, as a person who did not
during the early years of my life,
learned to have a lot of agency in my physical prowess.
I'm joking about it, but it's real.
It's like, if I'm at a soccer game
and the ball comes to me on the sideline as a mom,
I have a full-on internal panic.
I don't know how to kick this back
and not look like I don't know what I'm doing.
Also, my ideal date would be like going to a museum.
There is a vulnerability in that, that Abby has,
but I wouldn't, you know, so like,
I get confused about for whom,
sometimes the vulnerability is only for one person
based on the kind of date you're choosing.
Yeah, no, that's a really good point.
So you have to either try to pick something that
is neutral ground, especially if you have a power dynamic issue in your relationship,
it certainly wouldn't fit to have the one person bearing all of the novelty and the
vulnerability. So either something that is brand new to both of you or something that
is more balanced. It also brings up another point, which is that I can buy the prescription for date night
for this reason.
And you touched on it earlier about like the expectation.
So the research shows that often the ineffectiveness
of date nights comes from it being a one-off thing
because it's like so much pressure that we
think we're going to go on one date night and it's going to do these wonders for our
relationship and it's going to reap all these rewards that the benefit of having it be like
a set thing in your life is that it one can be kind of a dud, but you're not looking at
that as confirmation that you shouldn't do date nights. That it's a regular part of your
life so you're not setting it up to confirmation that you shouldn't do date nights. That it's a regular part of your life,
so you're not setting it up to these unrealistic expectations.
And it can also be a way that maybe you alternate.
Maybe there's something that you're being vulnerable
the next time it is the painting class
or the next time it's whatever.
I also think that it totally depends on the relationship.
Like you're saying, I'm gonna be too vulnerable
in that throwing the ball situation.
And that's like, you are paying the price for that.
There are some relationships where being the vulnerable one
who isn't as good at the thing
is actually really good for your relationship
because you're watching your partner kill it
in something that you aren't very good at and that's good.
That is good.
When I was watching John do the ropes course
and I was like, God damn, look at that.
Yeah, that is good.
I can't do that.
That's cool.
Like I needed to see him do something better
than I was doing.
And that was good.
That tracks.
That's really cool.
I also like the tip of it not having to be at night.
Truly, that sounds silly,
but it's also anything that feels prescriptive
and doesn't fit you.
Like how many of us are not at our best at nighttime?
Like that is just a totally arbitrary.
This can be date breakfast.
It can be date mid afternoon.
It can be date 3 PM.
And then also one of my favorite suggestions, which is less, a little bit less
And then also one of my favorite suggestions, which is less, a little bit less relevant now to me, but was always the...
This maybe this isn't a problem for anyone else, but it's like the anticipatory mandatory make out session after...
Can kind of put this weird pressure on the whole thing, especially for couples that have intimacy issues. So if that's a goal I really like,
this is so crass, but the fuck first.
It's called fuck first.
It's like, if that's an important part of it,
and there's like kind of a loaded thing around it,
just if it's important to you, just do it first.
Then go off on your thing without that.
Got to get back in time because
also it's going to be like one
o'clock in the morning by the time
I get to go to sleep.
Yeah. And then it's like,
are we connecting enough
during this to make that feel natural?
Is this successful enough to make it feel
like it's the cherry on the Sunday?
Or is this even a Sunday enough to make the cherry?
It's too much.
You know, I also think that just underscores the fact that we think that date night is a silver
bullet and if that isn't happening, if it feels obligatory, then it's the wrong type
of date night.
Yeah.
Also, if that really is the point, if that is your ritual that you do that after date
night and the date night isn't happy for either of you, then maybe you could just not do the date night
and have the conversation and say like, wait, are we just doing this to like mark the calendar
essentially for when we're going to make out?
Cause if so, like, why don't we just make out and then decide what we actually want to
do?
Yeah.
And maybe it's different shit.
Maybe it's different things from each other.
But I do feel like I should mention there are other reasons other than novelty that people
desire date nights. And you might see yourself in other reasons. Like for me, it's that idea of
change from the ordinary. But some people's desire is like demonstrating appreciation,
like devoting the time.
People might feel like the way I know that I'm important and prioritized for my partner
is that they make time for a date night with me, or they demonstrate that they are grateful
for me by thinking about what I would like to do. So that is not like, hi, I'm my list of priorities,
because I already have that in my life.
But people, if that is like your thing
that you feel like is missing,
they do recommend that harkening back to the early days
of falling in love, like plan a new date
based on your best
old dates that we used to do. And that is like reconnecting to those core memories
of when you first felt like super appreciated, super known, et cetera.
Also like playing the game of I imagine a perfect date for me would be X. A perfect date for me would be Y.
Like saying that allows the other person to know
and also allows you to learn something more about them
and use that in the future.
And then like a favorite things date
where you can plan a date or they can plan a date
around some of your favorite things that shows
that they're paying attention, shows that they know you.
I like the idea of over time, if there were pod squatters listening that would maybe want to like juice it up a little bit and try the idea of novelty, which in itself is tricky.
As someone who tends to think what I want to do is spend my time with my people in comfort.
Like for me, comfortability is so what I tell myself is the most important,
which leads us to do the same things over and over and over again,
which I have noticed.
I'm a person who wants to watch the same movie 60 times
because I know how it ends so I can relax.
But I have noticed that memory making, if I do the same things with my cozy family like
30 nights in a row, I love it.
Happy happy happy.
I don't remember shit.
The memories, what crystallizes are weird times when we did something different.
So there's something about memory. If making memories is important to you with your people,
this is a surefire way to do it. And it's almost like sometimes when I'm doing something
novel with Abby or the kids, I tell myself, I don't know if this is fun right now.
I don't know if I'm having a good time,
but in retrospect, this is gonna be great.
There's some kind of like retrospect benefit
that doesn't feel always like in the moment,
joy and perfect and comfort,
because doing something new isn't comfortable, right?
Right, anything could be comfort. perfect and comfort because doing something new isn't comfortable. Right? Right.
Anything could be comfort.
Something bad and not good can be comfortable because it's predictable and known.
Exactly.
That is the risk of things that like everything collapses into a long gray line.
Right?
In life.
Yes.
The long gray line.
In relationships.
And if it's everything collapses behind you
in a long gray line,
then everything in front of you looks like a long gray line.
And when you mix it up and like you present these,
whether they're challenges or just mixing it up,
you are bonding.
There's a little like proof of life like, bing!
Like a medical chart on the long gray line.
And when there is those and you can look back and see them,
then the future looks like it might have those too.
One thing that while listening to you both talk,
I think that it's really important for the pod squad
to hear me when I say this. As a spouse, especially
somebody who came in later to a three-children family, one of the things, one of the challenges
I feel at times is that the thought process and the dedication towards creating and cultivating these lasting memories
with our children, that feels to me like it's so much on the forefront of your mind.
And I think probably, Sister, this is relevant to you too, that you're so obsessed at creating such a beautiful existence and
creating these novel experiences for the kids that I do feel like sometimes that our relationship
does get put on the back burner and that it is secondary to the kids experience.
Totally.
I know exactly what you mean.
I feel like that's totally true of my life.
Yeah, and I think that probably a lot of husbands
might feel this way, that they become secondary
or even like fourth place in the thought process
of a family dynamic.
And being a person who sometimes has that thought like,
oh, and of course life happens and things are going on
and I understand
it's understandable why that happens. But just like if you could bring the spouse to
like the second position every once in a while and be like, shit, okay, what did they want
to do? What is their best interest? And to just even talk about it with your spouse. I think it would make a world of a difference.
Cause when you do have a family, there are these like the ways in which we all think
about our children, we think about our spouse.
It's always in flux, but if you feel like you're never in the position of like most
important, the thing that occupies the mind
of your spouse, like I do think that that could go
a long way in the planning of these dates
and the planning of just like the family to single out
this one-on-one time so that you two can create this moment
that goes black and white and crystallizes
this memory forever.
I think that that would go an incredibly long way with your spouse.
And I think what we're saying is that it's like all the birds at one time, right?
I think I used to think like, okay, got to put some date nights on the calendar.
So we're like checking that box over there.
And then I should probably do something that makes me come alive because I know that's
important and I know that none of my relationships will work out
unless I have like a little bit that comes alive.
And gotta make sure that John is like
doing some of that on his own
and cause then if he dies inside, then we're all fucked too.
Like it's like, wait, what?
No, all of those things are one thing.
Yes.
They can be.
If your date night is not satisfying you, stop fucking
doing it. And if you're not doing date nights because they haven't been satisfying, start
doing it and do it in a very different way. Go on a walk with your dog. And the rule is
you can't talk about anything that you've talked about before. But that feels like if
we just took away the date night thing, because date night speaks to me like you are saying.
I have to do all, I have to play, I have to come alive,
I have to be human, and then I also have to eat linguine
on Tuesday afternoons, Tuesday night, and stare at my partner.
It's a different, it makes it feel like it's this thing,
this box we have to check.
If we just called it like playtime together,
how do I play with my husband or partner or?
I think that's because that's so varsity for a lot of people who don't even know how to
talk about something other than like who's going to do pick up and drop off.
I think play is so intimidating that there you have to like take steps to get to the
place where you know not that the prescription is date night, but that the prescription is
trying to get to a place where you crave spending time and playing with your partner.
I guess it takes away the emphasis of talk to me.
Like even that you said, like talk,
it doesn't have to be about talk, talk, talk.
It can be something you feel like playing around with
that you would do in your own human time to explore?
It's totally arbitrary.
This whole date night thing.
I mean, I think we call it that because traditionally and typically there are two people outside
the home working all the time.
And so the only time you have is nights and you don't want to cook.
So you go to dinner.
Like I think that's why we call it that.
But it's very similar to the idea
of the play date phenomenon with children, right?
This was like an invention of the 90s.
This never happened before.
The reason why this happened
is because we stopped having free play.
Right.
Because we became so over-scheduled and so over-structured
and we stopped being in community. And. Because we became so over scheduled and so over structured and we stopped
being in community. And guess what we know? Guess what happens on play dates? Exactly
what you think is going to happen. The kids know exactly what's going to happen because
the play date has been set up by the mom and the mom says, I'm going to pick up at this
time and then I'm going to take them to the pottery class. And after the pottery class,
they're going to go to that playground for half an hour and then I'm going to give them
popsicles and send them back home. Okay. They know exactly what's going to happen.
This is not exciting. This does not have the elements of play that are beneficial to kids,
which works with risk, collaboration, unknown. Okay. What we need in our relationships is free play,
not play dates and not date nights.
So we need to be able to not know exactly
what's gonna be said, to open our minds to the possibility
that we don't know everything about our person
and that our person doesn't know everything about us.
And we don't even know everything about us
because that is where the excitement in life happens.
And that's when there's a future
that makes any goddamn sense
because it gives us a window to figure all that out.
Yep. So here's how I would do this practically to overcome because there is this thing we
all know, everything you just said, this is correct. This is exactly it. Okay. And then
when you try to put it into practice, your exhaustion, your inertia, your tendency towards
the most comfortable thing kicks back in. And you're like, I remember that idea, but no,
thank you. It's going to be, you know, Netflix tonight. That's what happens. So in order to
take what we know and not unknow it and add this back in. I think it would be cool to over time with your person,
whoever you're doing this with,
whether it's a friend or your kid or your partner
or whatever, to like brainstorm a bunch of weird things
you could do together, okay?
Just 25 things, 30 things, whatever.
Thinking none of these things I have to do today, right?
Just like, whether
it's throw a ball outside, walk the dog together, take a bungee jump, whatever the hell. Okay?
And then I would put them in a bowl. And then I would pick one each week.
Would you put bungee jump in a bowl?
I would not. That's a different episode, but no, I'm not going to fucking bungee jump ever.
I don't care how vulnerable it is. There's a difference between vulnerable and stupid.
Okay. Life is terrifying enough without throwing yourself off buildings.
If she ever agrees to budget jump, you know, your marriage is in real trouble.
She's desperate as hell.
Do you know what I mean? I cannot and will not deal with any more decision fatigue in my family.
I cannot talk about what we're going to have for dinner tonight. I cannot talk about even what we're
going to watch on Netflix. So the same thing with food. Let's have 25 things that we all like in a
bowl and we pick one out. That's right. That's what we do. Like I can be creative and think of
myself in a certain way as someone who does something new for like an hour on Sunday,
which is the time that I can make up all these little pieces
of paper that go into a bowl.
We could do that on Sunday and then you pick it all out.
You pick out for the week and then you can go
to the grocery store and get it.
I love this idea.
Same idea for date night.
Like it's too bad.
Nobody sits and decides what they feel like doing this week
because you're never going to feel like roller skating with your person or whatever. No one feels like Rollerskating with your person. No one feels like doing anything. No, no one feels like doing anything ever
But it's like this idea that I just can't figure out in my life ever. It's like always I want to be free
I want to play I want to whatever I want to be wild and open
Which requires discipline?
It's true. It's so weird.
There is a discipline that goes into requiring of yourself
to make time for play.
Yeah.
Until you catch up with yourself and to crave it.
Exactly.
It's like exercising where you force yourself to do it
until your body's like,
ooh, you know what would feel good right now?
Lifting those weights.
Yeah, but here's the thing.
I also think that like there's still never a day
that I want to go work out, but I am always 100%.
I'm so glad that I did that.
And I think that this is the same thing.
It's like, you might not feel like going to do something,
but I think with like date nights
or whatever we want to call this,
I think that afterwards you're like,
oh, that wasn't the worst thing in the world.
There's gonna be duds and it's gonna suck. I know I just said walk the dog, but
we tried to do a date once where we walked the dog and it was one of those worse than
not going on a date because the dynamic of the dog trying to get to heel and the whole
time I was like, oh my God, this is the worst thing that's ever happened.
Hold on a second. Did it bring up like, because this is the typical date night to me.
So you're like, I want to connect with my person. We're going to take the dog for a walk.
And then the dog can't walk right. And it's pulling. And you're,
and then all you're thinking is this is right. We never know how to train people.
This is an example of why we are not a good couple.
The thing that you're doing highlights all of your problems. Right. So everything is not going to like, that is something we shouldn't do as date
nights anymore. We're not doing that. Or that's not a date for us. We're doing something other
than that without being like, you got to give yourself a break and not be like, this is
a receipt for how shitty proof that we should never be doing it. You gotta expect you're gonna have some strikeouts
until you find something that is.
And I love your little bowl idea.
And I think even better, you could make it
as you ease into this, things that have parameters.
Like has to be maybe at first something
that takes half an hour or less and $30 or less.
Something within it that so you have to like little bites,
little bites to make you hungry for more.
I like that.
So like you could code them.
The blue index cards are ones that if we have a half hour,
the green ones are if we have a hundred dollars extra.
And then here's my other tip,
because this is with any like new thing that I'm trying.
This is what I tell myself because I have a double consciousness always of I'm in a
moment, but then I'm judging the moment.
I'm saying, is this working?
Is this worth it?
Are you still doing that?
So what I tell myself is if I'm trying something brand new, like therapy, a new therapy or
a new way of life, whatever.
I will give this six months.
I will not judge these things by one thing at a time.
It's like putting yourself out of a job.
It's actually quite wonderful.
I will just, because you can't, these sorts of experiences are cumulative.
You can't expect that you're going to go do this sort of situation and an hour later, you're gonna feel
so bonded, you're gonna be whatever.
But it is this sort of thing that if you commit to it
over time, you might notice six months later
that you have a little more softness
or that you're a little bit lighter
or that you, you know, despise your person a little bit.
Whatever you're going for, it might happen over time.
Whatever's your particular threshold.
So it could be like, we're going to try this for three months, six months,
whatever, and let's just tell ourselves that we can judge the shit out of this.
On this date, but that we don't have to even think about that before.
That's smart. I like that.
Thanks babe. I love it.
I want to go on a date now.
Great. Let's make a bowl.
I really am excited about this.
And then also let's do this. I think that this could be a great wide service to the
pod squad. I really think what if we had people write
in or call in about what they're putting in their bowls? The date ideas. Yeah. Cool. Because we
shouldn't have to just all do it all ourselves. Also can you send in dinner ideas? Okay let's
do that in a different episode. But also movie ideas please because every time nothing makes me
more crazy.
There's I never watched TV.
I never watch movies.
And then we have a chance.
And it's as if all the TV and all the movies have disappeared.
I need a bowl with those.
So we just reach in and we don't spend a half an hour talking about it.
Now I'm tired anyway.
I'm going to bed.
That's so this is a really good app.
Somebody make this app where it's like you log all of these ideas and it keeps them in
the buckets and then it just like pulls out the ball or the thing and it tells you.
And then it takes away responsibility of I want to do this, you want to do this.
It's like no this is what we're doing. Okay call in 747-200-5307. Tell us your creative, bonding, enlivening, unknowing your partner or your kids or your
friends activities. What do you do to unknow your people better?
And also if there's things that you know that make you come alive a little more, throw those
at us too because if they work for individual,
they will work for joint.
Yeah, which reminds me of something
Esther Peraly used to always say,
which is like,
we look to our partners to like turn us on, right?
Where she always says,
how do you turn yourself on?
Your job is not to come to your partner
and stare at them and wait for them to turn you on.
Like, well, it's not working.
Yeah, you could do that, but good luck, right?
It's like, what turns you on
and then you approach your partner already turned on.
And like, I don't necessarily mean like erotica,
although great if that's it.
But also like maybe creativity, maybe rest, maybe I don't know what it is that makes you feel alive
and then you approach your person. But like your turned on-ness is your responsibility.
And that feels like this a little bit. And if you already know what is missing, if you already know rest is missing, if you already
know the one thing you would really love to do is go to the library or the bookstore and
wander around and find a book and you're not doing that because you think you need to invest
in your relationship, I can guarantee you that that knowing and not doing is a major
problem in your relationship.
And the skipping over it to try to devote the time to the relationship, you can't trick yourself.
So just go to the library or to the bookstore and roam around and do that. And I guarantee
your relationship will be better than going and doing some boring ass date night because you
feel like that's what you should do even though you know you want to go to the library.
There he is eating his fucking linguine again.
Pod squad we love you.
We'll see you back next time.
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