We're Out of Time - Dr. Sonja Lyubomirsky: Why You Don’t Feel Loved (Even When You Are)
Episode Date: April 7, 2026On this episode of We’re Out Of Time, Richard Taite sits down with world-renowned happiness expert Dr. Sonja Lyubomirsky to break down the biggest myths about happiness—and why so many people feel... unloved, even when they are.Dr. Lyubomirsky reveals the science behind what actually creates lasting happiness, why money can make you happy (but only to a point), and the surprising reason connection—not success—is what truly fulfills us.They dive deep into the psychology of love: why most people struggle to feel it, how your conversations shape your relationships, and the simple mindset shifts that can create immediate change. From radical curiosity to vulnerability, this episode is a masterclass in how to build deeper, more meaningful connections.If you’ve ever felt unseen, disconnected, or like something is missing—this conversation will change the way you think about love, happiness, and the people in your life.
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Today's guest has spent her career studying something everyone wants.
happiness. But her latest work focuses on something even more fundamental. And that's love. Not just
giving love, but actually feeling it, receiving it, and letting it in. Dr. Sonia Lieba-Mirski
is one of the world's leading experts on happiness and human well-being. But what her work
continues to show is that underneath happiness, there's something deeper driving it. And that's
whether or not we feel loved and connected. She's the best-selling author of The How of Happiness
and has a new book released just last month called How to Feel Loved. Her work has helped
millions of people better understand how to create lasting change in their lives.
So one of the reasons I'm so excited to have you here today is because for 20 years,
I'd been teaching my staff
and really everyone
comes to me
that happiness in relationships
there's nothing to get
there's only to give
just worry about your side of the street
just that's all I care about
okay
how much more loving you can be
how much more attentive you can be
how much more nurturing you can be
how much more generous you can be
how much more present you can be
don't worry about her.
Okay?
And I would tell them that, you know, look, they're not always going to reciprocate.
That's none of your business.
But you get to be a loving person.
And that feels better than actually being loved.
And then I would say, I'll prove it to you.
When you were a kid in high school, is it true that there were people there that loved you that you didn't really feel it for?
but then when you love someone it felt really good right i said that's what and then the other day or
a month ago i'm i'm reading you're the authority on this and so i had to have you so thank you for
coming and welcome thank you know what we're writing what we write about in our book uh how to feel loved
just totally aligned with what you were just describing.
So very nice.
What do most people get completely wrong about what Ashley makes them happen?
Well, I wrote a whole book about it.
I called The Myths of Happiness.
My second book is called The Myths of Happiness.
And it's about myths or misconceptions about what makes us happy.
So, for example, we think, like, I'll be happy when such and such happens.
Like, when I have a baby, when I get a boyfriend, when I get that job, when I move,
to that city when I lose weight.
And all of those things do make us happy, but they don't make us happy forever.
Because we tend to adapt to most changes in our lives.
And so anyway, long, long story.
There's really three buckets of things that make us happy, like,
durably.
And one is anything to do with connection?
And we'll talk about that, right?
Feeling love, feeling connected.
The second one is anything to do with contribution or generosity, right?
giving to others, helping. And the third is personal growth, sort of growing as a person,
whether it's learning a new language or traveling or, you know, learning something. So, yeah,
those are the things that really make us durably happy as opposed to like buying a new object,
you know, becoming more powerful, attractive, higher status, you know, more famous.
Those things don't make us happy for very long.
Is happiness something we're born with or something we can actually build over time?
Well, it's both, of course, right?
Genetics influence our happiness, but also a big kind of bucket of what makes us happy is what we do every day of our lives.
Like, how do we behave, how do we think, you know, deliberate intentional action?
And so we could choose to be more grateful.
We can choose to be kind.
We can choose to spend more time with others as opposed to alone.
And so both, of course, are true.
This is the part that I really am interested.
it. What does the science say on the correlation between money and the happiness?
So, but yeah, of course money and happiness are correlated. Like, it's, it, money does make us
happy, you know, so that that is a myth that it doesn't. Of course it does. If you make more money,
there's a lot of things you can do that can make you happy, right? You can spend your money on,
on experiences and activities that you really love as opposed to like working all day and
having a lot of stress and all of that, making ends meet.
It serves as a buffer.
It allows us, yeah, allows us sort of to do things we want to do.
But the more money we have, like having even more doesn't make a huge difference, right?
So money is especially, how do I say, happiness inducing when it keeps us from being poor.
And, I mean, there's lots of nuances.
Actually, my favorite nuance comes from a recent study that showed that basically there's a correlation between money and happiness,
but only when you're happy to begin with.
So it's like if you're an unhappy person to begin with,
more money doesn't really make you happier.
But if you're happier, more money actually makes you happier.
And it's partly because I think that happier people spend money
on things that make us happy.
So what matters is really what you spend your money on.
In your new book, How to Feel Love,
you explore how people can actually experience and receive love more deeply.
What's one mindset,
shift that can make an immediate difference.
Well, I need to provide, thank you, that's a great question.
I need to provide some context for that before I jump into a mindset.
Well, first of all, and I think you already started with this, that a lot of us are loved,
but we don't feel loved, right?
And so that's really a problem.
In fact, we did a survey that showed about 70% of people, and I actually think that's
an understatement, say that they would like to feel more loved.
And so how do you do that?
Most of us think, well, if I wanted to feel more loved,
I need to make myself more lovable.
Maybe I need to sort of broadcast how wonderful I am,
show my positive qualities to people,
and hide my negative qualities.
Or we think, so we need to change ourselves.
Or we think we need to change the other person somehow,
you know, convince them to love us more.
And we actually have a solution
that's actually much more empowering than that,
and much more in control,
which is that you don't have to change yourself,
you don't have to change the other person,
you just have to change the conversation.
And when you think about a relationship
as just a series of conversations, right?
Especially if you define conversations broadly.
And so the first step in making yourself feel more loved
is to make someone else feel loved.
And so you asked about mindsets,
the first mindset that I would propose
that is really important,
we call radical curiosity,
is to show real genuine curiosity,
in the other person, make them feel seen and heard and really listen to, you know, really listen
to, valued, understood, and loved. And that's really hard to do. You know, when was the last time
someone showed like real genuine curiosity in you, right? It's so powerful and it's actually rare.
That was beautiful. I was just on a date. I'm not even kidding. And one of the things she said to me
afterwards was, you know, you didn't ask me anything about myself.
And immediately the first thing I said was, that's true.
I'm sorry.
And I was nervous.
That's it.
That's all that was.
I was just nervous.
Yeah.
That's a beautiful story.
It's funny because I've had that experience as well from both, I think, sides.
Yeah.
And, but it's so, you know, yeah, it's so powerful.
when someone shows curiosity asks questions and not just small talk questions, but deep questions.
So it turns out research by Nick Epley shows that we think that asking deep questions of someone
else is going to be perceived as like nosy or like we're prying.
It's going to be uncomfortable.
But on average, most of us crave to be asked those questions, right?
We want to be seen.
We want people to be interested in our inner life, in our experiences, and our thoughts, right?
And even in the details of our day, think of all those people that you know, you know,
you know the people who tell you all these stories about all the boring details of their day,
right?
Like, oh, they went to the airport and they were running late and then they couldn't find a parking space,
blah, blah, blah, blah, right?
It's really boring to listen to.
But it makes you wonder, though, people really want you to know, right?
The details of their day, like they're just craving to sort of to be seen like that.
So when we ask questions that show real interest in someone,
else about those things. It's very powerful. And truthfully, I appreciated her saying that because that was an
opportunity to be vulnerable and tell the truth. And it was sweet. It was sweet. All right.
And speaking of vulnerability, another mindset that we talk about in our book, How to Feel Loved,
is called the sharing mindset. And that is when you really share a little bit more of yourself to
others. And the idea is, if you want to feel loved, you need to be known. Because if you're not
really known, if you're hiding most of yourself, right, you have a wall, we all have walls around
us. They're there to protect us. But they also prevent us from letting people in. So if I have this
wall around me and I, how can I ever feel loved by someone, right? Because if they're, what are
they loving, right? They're loving this part of me that's just this little bit that I'm showing,
right? And so I really need to share more of myself to feel loved. And that's where sharing
vulnerably comes in. It doesn't have to be sharing my deepest traumas and secrets, or it's
certainly not all at once, but sharing a little bit more. Because we all know people who are like
very, they hold things very close to the vest. I think it's very hard to feel loved if you are
not known to the other person, which is also why you want to show curiosity in others, because
it helps you really know the other and help them feel loved. I love. I love.
We also know people that dump everything on the table in the first five minutes.
You did it out of the way.
So that's the opposite since you're oversharing.
And that's not good.
That's not good either, right?
Because people's walls come right back up, right?
If you're sharing too much.
So actually, all of this takes quite a bit of emotional intelligence.
Because you have to kind of read the other person.
You have to read the room.
Are they like when you're, when I'm sharing a story about myself, I'm sort of gauging your curiosity, right?
Are you, do you want to hear more, right?
Like, should I maybe ask you a question now?
So yeah, it's a sort of dynamic back and forth process that involves, you know, quite a bit of reading cues, right?
That's beautiful.
I think of it on a date.
I think of it in terms of tennis.
Yeah.
Right?
Sure.
Yeah.
Just be mindful of that so I don't over, so I don't just take over.
My story that's so similar.
Your story, I was on a date once.
And the guy just kept talking on and on and actually telling stories, telling really interesting stories.
He actually is an influence, like a TikTok influencer, very good storyteller.
But then I finally stopped him and I said, do you realize in the last 45 minutes you haven't asked me a single question?
Very similar.
And his response was great.
He said, I'm so sorry.
When I'm nervous, I talk too much and I tell stories because that's what he's good at, right?
And that was vulnerable and that forged a connection between us, right?
So kind of getting back, like usually when we meet people for the first time or even when not for the first time,
we try to impress each other, right?
Like I'm talking to you right now, Richard,
and I want you to think that I'm smart and interesting
and funny and virtuous, right, a good person.
And so I might succeed in impressing you,
and I might even succeed in, you know,
maybe you might start to admire me,
but that doesn't make me feel loved, right?
So we try to impress each other,
but that doesn't forge a connection.
What forges a connection is actually opening up a little bit,
you know, again, at the right pace,
not too much, and showing, really listening and showing curiosity and the other person.
Give me some other mindsets that will help.
We talk about five mindsets.
And I already mentioned the radical curiosity mindset.
I mentioned the sharing mindset.
So another one that's related, we call listening to learn.
So let's say you're curious about someone, you're asking them questions.
Then they start to share.
They start opening up.
Very important, right?
so you can get to know them better, make them feel loved.
And when they're telling their story, most of us are not good listeners, right?
Including me, we're not good listeners because we're mostly listening to respond, right?
We are literally sitting there and we're listening sort of with half an ear.
The other half an ear, we're formulating, you know, our next response, right?
We're sort of thinking what to say next.
And the person can sense that because you're not quite all there, right?
You're not quite attuned.
And so we argue in the book, this is based on research, lots of research, lots of research
on listening that that you should listen to learn instead of listening to respond, right?
So listen like you're going to be quizzed on it tomorrow.
Listen like you're just watching a film and you're just sort of taking it in and there's no response.
You know, you're just taking it in.
And yeah, so that's another mindset.
So you go, the mindset shift is during your next conversation, think of yourself as a,
listener, not a talker.
And I'm a talker, so it's like to do that.
You know what I love about that the most?
If you're listening, right, like you're kicking it in, like you're watching a movie and
you're kicking it in or listening to learn is what you call it.
You don't have to think about a response because it's just going to come organically.
There's nothing you need to prepare for.
But is it funny?
Maybe it's because when we were in school, like,
Like we're constantly, like we're sort of taught.
Actually, I never made this connection before.
You know, we all had at least 12 years of schooling, most of us a lot more than that.
And that's kind of what we do in school is like we're constantly, like we have to formulate.
We're teaching every day, all day, how to formulate a response, right?
And so it's hard to just kind of sit back and like let that go.
Let that go, like habit.
Let that go and just take it in.
So I already kind of mentioned this, but someone said it was really great advice.
when you're listening, imagine you're watching a film.
When you're watching a film, unless you're a filmmaker or you're writing a paper on the film,
like you're not formating response, right?
You're just watching.
Let's say there's a conversation happening in the movie in front of you.
You're just watching and you're enjoying it, letting it all, you know, letting it in.
So think when you're listening to someone, imagine you're just watching a film.
So I thought that was a great advice.
That's fantastic.
That's three.
Give me four.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Oh, sure, there's five.
Then when there's an open heart mindset, we call it the open heart mindset.
That's the one I think most people are already doing, are familiar with.
It's showing warmth towards a person, showing compassion, kindness, and believing in them.
There's something called the Michelangelo effect.
Do you know what that is?
The Michelangelo phenomenon.
This idea that the artist Michelangelo, he was said to,
he would look at a block of marble, and he would kind of envision the image of what
what he wanted to sculpt in the marble.
And so it was already there.
He already saw it.
And he would carve it to sort of set it free.
And the idea is that you have that perspective
on your partner or your friend or your child
where you sort of see what their dream,
you know, you sort of understand what they dream to become
and then you help them become that.
You believe in them.
So that's called the Michelangelo Effect.
So that's part of the open heart mindset,
sort of showing that belief in someone
helping them showing warmth in them.
So that's open heart.
Numbers five.
This is actually one of my favorites, maybe my favorite.
It's called the multiplicity mindset.
And I'm told that the word multiplicity comes from trauma research.
The idea that if you have a trauma in your life, it doesn't have to define you, right?
It's just, it's part of you, of course.
It's like we're a quilt of all kinds of things, positive qualities, negative qualities, right?
traumas, dream, you know, things that we did accomplishments, failures, right? It's all part of us.
We're a quilt of many, many things. And we accept that in other people. And we also importantly
accept it in ourselves. So when someone misbehaves or someone shows us a side of them that we don't
like or we're uncomfortable with, we remind ourselves that that one thing does not define them, right?
We're more than one trait or more than one behavior. And it's very hard to do because I think
it comes naturally for us to be judgmental, right?
And I often say, like, I think it's evolutionarily adaptive
for humans to be judgmental because in the past,
sort of in our ancestral past,
it was important for us to make that judgment.
Is that person a friend or are they a foe?
Right.
So we kind of make these quick judgments.
So we have to override that judgmentalness in ourselves, right?
To sort of, right, with deliberate effort,
is like to sort of see people as complex,
very messy human.
beings. Give me an example because I'm the most judgmental person alive. Oh yeah. Well, lots of examples.
I have lots of examples. Here's one example. A friend of mine, we have a fat friend group,
a guy. He wrote something really bad, really upsetting to a female friend. And we have this text.
And we were like, oh, my God, we were very upset about it. Like, I can't believe he did that.
He's a horrible person. I'm not going to go into what he wrote. And one of my friends,
said, you know, when I see that text, I see the little boy inside of him, the teenager inside
of him, who used to be rejected by women or girls. And he was somehow triggered, you know, by
this friend. And so all this stuff came out. Now, it's not condoning his, what he did. It's not
justifying condoning or excusing it, but it does help you understand, maybe show some compassion
towards him. By the way, it doesn't mean that I want to hang out with him, but I now understand
him in a more complex way.
I need to know what he's there. I need to know what he said, Matt.
Well, okay, I'll show you. I'll give you another example. Another friend, a guy that I introduced
to a female friend, and the whole time, we were sitting at a coffee shop, and the whole time he's
boasting. So this is what he's doing. He's just boasting all about himself, blah, blah, blah,
this and dropping names and boasting, boasting. And I was sitting.
there and I was so embarrassed and that because I'm introducing him to this friend of mine.
And so after he leaves, I say to my friend, I said, I'm so sorry, you know, that he's boasting
this whole time. And she said to me, I'll never forget it. She said, Sonia, if you had more compassion
for yourself, you'd have more compassion for him. And I was like, really? And she's like, look,
this is what he can do right. He can't. It's like, he doesn't have the capacity.
Like this is what he was able to do.
Of course, he was trying to impress her.
He's like, if he could stop boasting, he could, but right now he just can't.
And again, it's not an excuse.
I don't really want to hang out with him.
I don't want to hang out with someone who boasts nonstop, right?
But it gave me some understanding where he's coming from.
So those are more extreme examples.
Often someone just does something you're upset about.
Maybe they snap at you.
Maybe they're rude.
And you're like, well, maybe they had a rough day, you know.
You know what I mean?
So it's things like that, like seeing people in all of their complexity.
All right.
I got two things to say about that.
Number one.
Okay.
I want to date that woman.
Yeah.
The wise one.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
That was true because she knew he was just nervous in that moment.
She was just going to let him talk himself out until he was comfortable and not being a pain in the ants.
Yeah.
That's all.
Very well.
I love that.
What a beautiful story.
She's an magnificent.
I agree.
She happens to be a, sorry, turn to interrupt.
She happens to be a coach, and she's a brilliant coach, I think, because she has this wisdom, you know.
So anyway, thank you.
What's her name?
Let's give her flowers.
Yeah, I would love to.
Her name is Emily Ritea, R-I-T-E-A.
I mean, Emily with, like, I-E, she's French.
And, yeah, I mean, she's a brilliant coach.
And if anyone, you can find her on the web.
R-I-T-E-A is her last name, Emily.
No, and she actually coached me as well a while ago,
and she changed my life because she would just have
these incredibly wise, you know, reframings or perspectives
on my situation.
I'd be like, oh, my God, you know, I never thought of it this way, you know.
So, yeah, thank you.
Thank you for that.
I'm happy to promote her as a coach.
Emily Biteya.
In your research is feeling loved more about what others do for us
or how we interpret and internalize those actions.
Well, it's certainly both.
But we, you know, again, we make the point in our book
How to Feel Love that, you know, lots of people are loved,
but they don't necessarily feel love.
So that means that other people are showing love to them.
Well, what is that?
Let's go back.
Well, what is that?
Why do people not feel loved when they're being shown love?
Okay.
I think that's a very complicated question.
that is a little bit above my pay grade,
but I will give you one answer to it.
So imagine that we have a cup of love.
Here's my cup of love.
And people in my life are showing love to me.
They're expressing love.
It's like they're pouring love in the cup of love,
but maybe there's a leak at the bottom of the cup.
And so it's leaking out.
And so I'm never really quite feeling as loved as I want to be, right?
Because it's sort of leaking out.
Or maybe the lid,
only has a small opening.
So it's not quite getting in, right?
So it's sort of like not quite all getting in.
And so that's actually a metaphor for people who are anxiously attached who have the leak
and maybe avoidant dismissive who are a little bit.
That's one metaphor for that.
And they're not quite letting it in or maybe even distancing themselves from it.
So that's one answer is that I think attachment style can make it hard to feel loved.
I mean, I think there's other answer is like, and again, I'm not a clinical psychologist or therapist.
So I don't have as much to say about that, but it's a very important question.
The book that you wrote is not what's taught in school, but it really is the most important thing when you think about it, right?
We only have one go around here, right?
We only get one shot at this life.
We're all here on loan.
Okay.
And if you could tell people, and I know it's a, it's a habit, right?
And it's, it's, it's a way of life.
But if you could tell somebody who was not as happy as he should be and he had a thirst for
knowledge and he came to you and he said, Sonia, I'm unhappy, okay, I don't know what's wrong.
my I've got a good relationship.
I've got good kids.
I've got a good job.
Why am I so intently unhappy?
What would you tell him to do to turn that around?
Yeah.
Well, that's a really hard question because, you know,
there may be a number of roots to this person's unhappiness,
including biological.
I mean, maybe they are depressive, right?
Including something in their background.
But I would ask him, you know, do you feel love?
by your partner, by your kids, you know, by your friends.
I do, but not the way, and he would say I do, but not the way I feel I should be loved or not the way I want to be loved.
Sure. So and that's what, that's really what our book is about is like, what do you do that, you know?
And that, that, that, so my advice would be, um, to, to start, to start, and again, the advice is, if you don't feel loved, you want to go first and start by making,
other people in your life feel loved. It sort of seems a little bit unfair, but that's how it works.
That's beautiful. That's beautiful. Elaborate on that because that's the best thing.
Yeah. Thank you. So basically, you go first.
So you make, and this happened to me too, actually, with my family members too, or I didn't feel
loved with one family member. And I thought, okay, I need to make her feel more love by showing
an interest in her and asking her questions. And anyway, so first try to make your partner or the
children or your friends to feel more love by showing curiosity in them, by listening.
listening to them, by letting them share with you and you share with them by accepting,
and by listening to them with warmth, that's the open heart mindset, and acceptance, that's
multiplicity mindset. And then most of them, most of the time, they will reciprocate. Not all the
time, but most of the time, because reciprocity is an incredibly powerful norm of human behavior.
It's very hard not to reciprocate. They'll reciprocate and they'll start showing curiosity in you
and listening to you. It doesn't always happen, but.
it mostly will happen. So that's that's my advice. And when it doesn't, you get to feel like a loving
person, right? You get to be the loving person. Exactly. That's what you said at the beginning of the
hour. And actually, that's one of the most common questions I get asked. You know, when I give talks on
this, they'll say people, everyone, invariably someone will say, you know, I've done that. And then the
other person doesn't reciprocate. And they don't ask me any questions. They don't show curiosity in me
or they don't share and or they don't let me share they don't care you know and and then I say I mean it's it's hard for me
I mean I'll tell you what I say I say well maybe you've you've chosen poorly and maybe that's not the right person you're with a narcissist
possible right you maybe you're yeah maybe you feel the maybe or maybe sometimes it's a family member you can't
quite walk away from them maybe you walk away maybe you pause maybe you just accept that this is how it's going to be
and this is not the person you want to put all your eggs in that basket, right?
Yeah, there's probably more answers to that.
You know, maybe there's other things you can do to try,
but some people are just not going to reciprocity,
at least not at this time.
And again, as Emily, my former coach used to tell me,
she's like, if the person could, they would, but they can't.
Like right now, say they're not listening to you,
they're not showing curiosity in you.
If they could, they would.
They can't.
They lack the capacity for whatever reason.
and you have to accept that.
But sometimes it's just they don't know.
Right. Well, then hopefully, then if you communicate that to them, then they will change.
But of course, yeah, that's the easy, that's the easy part.
You know, they don't know.
Or like you said the woman who said, like when you realize, oh, I'm not asking questions because I'm nervous,
you can try to overcome that.
And some people, but maybe it's because of narcissism or whatever.
Some people, for example, are so, they really lack the social skills.
And when they're having a conversation, oh, and I used to be like that when I was younger.
Like all of my mental energy was on talking.
And or me, like, you know, I had to focus so much on what I was saying and how I was making an impression that I would not have the extra resources to kind of ask the other person a question, you know?
And so maybe it's sort of a lack of social skills.
Lots of reasons for this.
All right.
Well, here's the question I really want to ask you.
And I don't know if it's going to be above your pay grade or not.
but it would be, you know, bordering on the criminal not to ask you this.
Social media, how does it affect our happiness?
No, it's a great question.
I think the answer is nuanced.
It's not just like, oh, all social media is bad or it's all good.
Because actually, I was asked by another interview or something like,
if we could delete all social media tomorrow, you know, would we all feel more loved?
And I said, well, I think if we replaced it with face-to-face, you know, in-person contact, then yes, absolutely.
But there's some, there's some positives from social media.
People, some people, some people, some people, many people feel more connected.
I think overall it probably has more harms than benefits.
So because, but you can, you can show curiosity and listen and share on social media.
I just think it's a lot more powerful for someone it's face-to-face.
And when it's one-on-one, I kind of don't love the kind of communicating to lots of people, you know, because you don't really, like if you have a lot of followers, you probably feel admired and respected, but not loved.
I don't know.
I would say that's not really a feeling of loved.
It's really that face-to-face sharing, enlisting, and curiosity that makes you feel loved.
Do you know what this young rapper is?
told me once when I was interviewing him.
He told me that views were the new currency.
And I'm like, what the hell does that mean?
Yeah.
And he said, it's like rolling up to the club in a Bugatti.
And I'm like, shut up.
No way.
And he's like, yeah, that's the thing.
All right.
And that can't be good for your happiness.
Yeah.
Yeah, I'm running this down because that,
that I agree.
Well, not for everyone, of course.
I mean, I, not for, it's a generational thing in part.
It's funny because I often say that texting is the new currency of relationships.
It's kind of similar, right?
Like you're texting, maybe they're not texting back.
Maybe they're not texting back enough of what you want to hear because that's what a lot of relationships are when you're not, you know, in person, right?
What do you have?
But viewers are, but yeah, with the social media, again, well, here's a thing.
When I show curiosity, Richard, when I show curiosity in you, and I ask you a question,
Like, tell me, like, let's say tell me something about your parents.
And I say the three words everyone wants to hear.
It's not I love you.
It's tell me more.
Tell me more.
Like, what was that like?
How did you feel when that happened?
And that really makes you feel special, right?
It makes you feel loved.
It makes you feel seen.
But what if I ask that question or tell a story to all my followers, right?
No one feels special, right?
Because it's directed towards many people.
And so I think that's something really critical that I'm directing it to you.
Actually, when social media first came out, I remember before social media came out,
some friends and mine and I, we would sometimes share, like, stories or jokes,
and we would, like, maybe email each other or text, you know, one person or sometimes a few people,
like five people say, oh, you'd really appreciate this joke.
And then people just started to post it on Facebook.
And so I just went to everyone.
And so I don't feel special when someone posted a joke on, I mean, I might enjoy the joke,
but if a friend says to me, hey, Sonia, I really thought you in particular would enjoy that joke, like, because I see you and I know what your sorts of humor is like.
You know, it's like a gift that's customized for me.
So that's something that's very special with one-on-one face-to-face communication as opposed to social media that goes out to, like, lots of people.
That's such a true statement because every morning I send out to two of my employees, my longest standing employees,
I send them every morning the song of the day.
Every morning.
And honestly, if I put that on social media, they would not feel special.
It's like our thing.
That's what we do every morning.
That's beautiful.
That's so beautiful.
Isn't that sweet?
So yeah, and we could try to create, I mean, your listeners, viewers might be encouraged to create
to create rituals like this, whether it's with a romantic partner or a friend or a child or a
colleague, right, like something you share specifically for them. Again, like a gift that you've chosen
for them and you wrap it for them. That's what matters, right? Is that you have them in mind
and they feel seen, right? I don't feel seen when I look at social media, right? Because it's not
directed at me only. My 12-year-old told me a story that also shows emotional intelligence in a
different way, but it's very relevant to our conversation. So she said, oh, mom, this classmate of hers
has this interest in this like, I don't even, it's an obscure sport that I haven't even heard of.
And she's so excited about this sport.
And so she said, my daughter said, she told her like a month ago about this sport.
And she said, and I remembered, and like a month later, I asked her about it, right?
So this is exactly what radical curiosity is about, right?
So you remember someone's something, someone's deep.
And she asked, and so I remember to ask her about it.
And then the girl just went crazy.
She was so excited, right, that she was asked about this obscure thing.
And she just went on and on.
And she was so excited about this passion for it.
Anyway, so this is another example of how we can try to like, yeah, try to notice and remember what people really care about and then ask them about it.
And hopefully, you know, with a genuine, you know, genuine interest.
Do you know what this reminds me of?
This reminds me of good gift givers.
Right?
So when you have a good gift giver, it's they know you so well that they're going to find the one thing that you actually care about.
Like there's no way that I've never been given a gift that I haven't regifted.
Okay?
Maybe a handful of them.
So hard.
Yeah.
And every time somebody does that, that feels like a successful radical curiosity.
I totally agree.
So hard to do.
I know, and I feel like I'm not good at that.
Anyway, I totally agree with you.
Yeah, it's because it makes the person feel, again, seen and heard and understood.
Like, you really know me.
Sometimes they gave you a gift that you didn't even know that you wanted because they know you was like better than you know yourself.
You know, anyway, I love that example.
Yeah.
But then again, sometimes you have people that are.
given something like that and then their first thought is, oh, shit, I didn't get you anything.
I'm a should you get, right? I'm the worst. I'm there. You ever get people like that?
Well, we all have the self-critic. And remember, reciprocity is a powerful norm. So you really feel,
you feel indebted and you want to reciprocate. If you haven't, then it makes you feel guilty.
But yeah, we all have the self-critic, right, inside of us. And so, and we have to remember,
it serves an important purpose. It's good that we have the self-critic. We should be grateful for
the self-critic because they've got us through lots of things. We're better people, you know,
but sometimes it gets out of hand, you know, and you want to kind of, you know, I've heard this from
therapists, right? It's like, you just want to kind of like give them a hug and put them in a chair
and let them sort of sit there and not bother you for a while, you know. I kind of like that.
What are the biggest behaviors people do often unconsciously that block them from feeling loved?
Well, I mean, I can start with sort of the myths about feeling love, right?
If you're too focused on to feel loved, I need to make myself more lovable, show other people,
show the person how wonderful I am, try to pursue things like more accomplishment, higher status, fame, beauty, power, money, right?
Because I think that's what's going to get me to feel loved.
That's not going to work, right?
That's going to backfire.
that if you believe you need to hide your shortcomings, I guess has one answer is sort of like
you're sort of focused on the wrong thing. I think we already covered so much, right? So this idea
people, a lot of people are loved, but they don't feel loved. And why is that? Why do they feel
that way? People think they need to change themselves. I need to change the other person. I already
said we have this very simple and empowering message. You don't need to change yourself. You don't
you just change the other person, you just need to change the conversation. So then our book is all
about how to change your conversations with those people you want to feel loved by, by embracing
different mindsets. When you embrace a different mindset, you can think of it as like putting on a coat
or putting on glasses, right? So like, in the next conversation, I'm going to come into it with the
role of being a listener, not a speaker, or I'm going to wear my radical curiosity glasses, or I'm going to
wear my open heart coat and show warmth and accept as multiplicity coat towards others. So it's
really all about how do you have those conversations with people? And then the other thing that we
already talked about is, but counterintuitively, if you want to feel loved, you need to go first
and make the other person feel more loved. And so that's really important. And then here are the
steps to do that. Show curiosity. Listen, share. You know, listen like you're going to be quizzed on it
tomorrow. And then a couple of things we have. And then I guess to reiterate, what's the key,
I guess the question is like, what's the key to feel loved? The key to feeling loved is being
known and truly knowing the other person. So again, if you don't know me, Richard, I won't ever
feel loved by you because I'll think like, I don't, you know, if you really knew me, you wouldn't
love me or like, whatever side of me you love, that's not me. Like, that's just kind of some kind of
wall. And so one of my missions, like in the world, is to help people lower their walls. You know,
we all walk around with walls around us. Again, they're there to protect us, but they prevent other
people from really, truly getting in. And by the way, when you notice it, it's everywhere, right?
You notice all friends, family members, colleagues, neighbors, we're all working around with these
walls around us. And so I have a friend group where we're very open. We still have walls,
of course, we all do, but we're much more sort of into sharing and listening and curiosity.
We're like, we share a lot with each other and I kind of wish more people were like that.
So that's, again, one of my missions is sort of, again, feeling the key to feeling loved is being known and knowing the other.
And then, and we're kind of going backwards here, why do we care about feeling loved?
Why is it so important to feel loved?
Well, it's evolutionarily adaptive.
Like, feeling loved is, you know, if we were, if our ancestors didn't feel loved, that
means they didn't belong. That means they could have, they could have died, right? They
couldn't have found a mate where they can reproduce. So that's why not feeling loved or feeling
lonely, it feels so evasive because in our ancestral past, we could have literally died if we were
lonely, right, if we didn't have someone that we felt loved by. And now, today, it almost feels like
dying, right, when we don't feel love, when we feel lonely. So feeling loved is so important
in an evolutionary sense, it's really why it's the key to happiness.
Sonia, what would be the perfect first date?
Okay, I got your question.
What would be the perfect date?
Okay, and by the way, I'll preface by saying, I go on a lot of first dates,
and I never go out to dinner or have drinks.
I'm into what I call deep intimacy.
You don't need to go out of dinner, you know, spend money having drinks.
I just go on a walk or I just sit on a couch, have tea,
talk, right? So it doesn't matter because you're the situation at Malice, you have quiet,
right, so you can really talk. So, so the perfect first date would be you show, both of you
you begin by showing curiosity and the other. And hopefully it's genuine curiosity, right? Because
you can tell if someone's just kind of asking questions, they're just kind of interviewing you.
It's like an interrogation. They don't really care about the answer. You show curiosity. But it's a nice,
you take turns, right? I share. So I show curiosity. So I show curiosity.
in you, you start to open up a little bit. I'm really listening, right? I'm not trying to respond.
I'm listening. And then you ask me a question. And then I open up and you really listen.
And you show acceptance and warmth if I share something uncomfortable. And it's this sort of back
and forth dynamic process. So again, it's really showing those five mindsets throughout the date,
but at the right pace, right? So again, I want to ask you about your background or what's been
on your mind lately, you don't just trauma dump to me right away, right? You kind of read the
room. And that's what it is. And by the way, that applies to so many other settings. Imagine
talking to someone on a completely across a political or religious divide, right? And they completely,
they, they, they, they, you don't understand them at all. They believe things that you just
completely disagree with. Imagine bringing the five mindsets on a conversation to them.
Instead of yelling at them, we're just like shutting them out, avoiding a lot of people just avoid
people they disagree with, you show curiosity. Why do you believe what you do? You truly listen,
you share the study that just came out where people of like opposite political extremes shared
vulnerably with each other. Like, I'm really struggling with my son. And the other person says,
you know, I'm really struggling with my kid also. They started to like overcome some of that
prejudice and some of those assumptions about each other. So anyway, those five mindset is bringing
on a first date or bringing to like many different kinds of conversations, I think.
are is incredibly beneficial okay if you ever wanted to know when i started loving you that was it
okay that was it that solves the polarization of the country if you had to give someone a simple
daily practice to help them feel more loved and connected what would that look like
Can I tell you what it would look like?
Well, you're going to answer the question.
We'll both answer the question.
Well, what it looks like to me is how you just looked at me when I was emotional about what you just said.
It was the most warm, loving exchange.
You were perfect.
That made me feel so good.
Thank you.
Thank you.
All right.
Now you can answer a lesson.
impressive. Well, when we ask, when you, thank you so much, Richard. I, when you ask the question,
I was thinking of a daily practice that you do alone, right? And so, and what you describe is
something you're doing, you know, with some, with another person, right? So you're, I do think,
like, truly seeing someone, right, looking into their eyes, actually eye contact is so important
that we don't do enough of, you know, we kind of look away, you know, it's so intense.
And I don't know if you ever done like an eye gazing exercise, you know, that's very powerful. So
eye contact, warmth. I think warmth is so important.
Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait. What is the eye? What is the eye gazing exercise?
Well, there are various exercises where you, you might go, you might be in a, like, a workshop
with several, the number of people, and you pair up and you look at each other's eyes for, like,
say, three minutes, nonstop. And it's really hard. And you just, you don't break
eye contact and try this with anyone. Try this with your, with a, you know, partner,
a friend, colleague. It's very powerful. Like, you really feel, you can, you, you,
might get emot. Some people, I did it once with a guy and he started crying and he ran out of the room.
I actually don't know what happened to him. I never saw him again. I think something triggered in him.
I think he's okay. I actually asked the workshop like facilitator and they said he's fine.
But yeah, anyway, and sometimes you see something in the other person. You see, you see pain or you see
happiness. Anyway, so when you're with other people, I do think like really looking at them and
showing warmth and kindness is so powerful.
your question, I interpreted it as like you're alone every morning, say, and how do you start the day?
And to me, it would be gratitude, a gratitude practice. And it sounds so hokey or so kind of obvious,
but it's so powerful to really feel it, like right, like to really experience it. Like I'm so
grateful because really, even with all the horrible things going on in the world, we have so much to be
grateful for. What you're grateful for. And then also, I text people, you text people, you text or
email or call them or whatever, and I tell them that I'm grateful for them. And it's so powerful,
the little text, it's so easy, it takes 10 seconds to write. And actually, I got a text the other day
from someone who said, I just want to let you know that I really value our relationship.
It was so beautiful. That was all. That was it. And I do things like that. Like I say, I really appreciate
you. I'm so happy we're friends or whatever. And so that would be my answer. It was a gratitude practice,
is both kind of internal, but also sharing it with someone else that you're grateful for.
And it is, and it does sound hokey, but the reality is you can't be unhappy and grateful at the same time.
It's just not possible.
Exactly.
In fact, I say this that actually my research shows, other people's research shows is that gratitude is like a, it neutralizes negative emotions.
You can't be grateful and resentful at the same time.
You can't be grateful and bitter at the same time.
You're not usually grateful and anxious at the same time.
So it's sort of an antidote to negative emotions.
emotions. That's exactly right. I guess what I wanted to say is, and this is just sort of just to get
people to learn about it, the website is called how to feel love.com. So it's very easy, just the title,
How to Feel Love.com. So I want people to find it. And also, we have a quiz that we created,
because there's five mindsets. And the quiz just takes five minutes and it's on that website,
how to feel love.com. And the quiz will tell you which of the five mindsets, whether it's curiosity,
sharing, listening, multiplicity, which is your strongest mindset?
Richard, you should take this too.
And which is the one in most need of improvement?
And then we give some tips on that.
Oh, we're going to do that right now.
Let's go through the five mindsets, given me.
Well, you have to sort of, I don't have the quiz in front of me.
But there are basically just five questions.
So again, radical curiosity.
And it basically says, like, I, and you take the quiz,
you think about a relationship in your life that you care about.
So you pick one relationship, you know, whoever it is with.
And then you do it the quiz for that relationship.
You can do it repeatedly.
So again, sharing mindset, listening to learn mindset, radical curiosity mindset,
open heart mindset, and multiplicity mindset.
Which one's the oversharing one?
Well, oversharing.
Well, sharing mindset is you're very good at sharing.
I presume if you're oversharing, then you're not so good at that, right?
If you're undersharing.
Right.
So you're not extra good at it.
No, no, oversharing would be less fewer points.
All right.
Where can people find you and buy your book?
So go to how to feel love.com.
That would be the easiest.
And to find me, actually, the easiest way to find me,
if you just Google Sonia with a J and happiness,
you should be able to find me.
But I have a website, sonia lubomirsky.com.
But most people can't spell my name.
So that's okay.
So you can just put in Sonia with a Jee.
and happiness and you'll find me.
They can't spell L-Y-U-B-O-M-I-R-S-K-Y.
Well, not everyone is as smart as you, Richard.
So, yeah.
Good.
Yeah.
All right.
Listen, this has been a blessing to me, to the viewers.
Everybody wants to know how to be more happy and how to be happier in our relationships.
And you're the authority on it.
and thank you for coming here and doing this for us.
I am immensely grateful.
I'm so grateful too.
It was lovely, lovely conversation, very meaningful today.
So thank you, Richard.
Good luck with everything.
I can't wait to see this or hear this when it's out.
Let me know.
See you next Tuesday.
I can't believe she did that either.
We're out of time.
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