Where Should We Begin? with Esther Perel - Esther Calling - I’m Afraid of Losing More Than Just the Business
Episode Date: September 15, 2025She’s watching the company she co-founded unravel—strained partnerships, family entanglements, and the weight of guilt, anger, and responsibility pulling her in every direction. Now she wants to a...sk Esther: how can she protect her relationship with her brothers but still free herself to move on to what’s next? Esther Callings are a one time, 45-60 minute interventional phone call with Esther. They are edited for time, clarity, and anonymity. If you have a question you would like to talk through with Esther, send a voice memo to producer@estherperel.com. Over the last few years, workplace culture has been transformed by remote work, inconsistent in-office presence, and an intergenerational workforce. Where Should We Begin? At Work is a new game designed to transform your work culture – one story and one relationship at a time. Brought to you by Esther Perel and Culture Amp, this isn’t your typical icebreaker. It’s a new data-backed game that will help you create community at work. Details at https://game.estherperel.com/products/where-should-we-begin-at-work Want to learn more? Receive monthly insights, musings, and recommendations to improve your relational intelligence via email from Esther: https://www.estherperel.com/newsletter Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi, Esther. The context of my question is that around 10 years ago, my business and I
established a company together. That company has grown and been successful across most of that
last decades, during which both of my brothers have joined and been promoted into leadership
positions. Around three years ago, my relationship with my business partner deteriorated.
We both had some personal issues which impacted our professional relationship. So I decided to
take a step back. I've taken a non-executive role. I've explored some other really, really exciting
opportunities. So whilst I retain a directorship and a shareholding, I'm no longer involved in
the day-to-day running of the business. That arrangement worked really well. We had some teething
problems, but the first year was pretty successful. But during the second year, the company has
unfortunately started to fail. I believe we've had a good strategy, but the implementation's been
and the relationships between my brothers and my business partner have also broken down at times.
We're in a position now where we hope to sell, but we may well have to close the business and
make the team redundant. And that's a process I'm really struggling with. Some of that's about
old stories and myself. So I feel very, very responsible for my family, for my team, for my
clients, for my business partner. I feel ashamed that I haven't done my job well enough to keep
the business thriving and successful. But I'm also struggling a lot with
a lot of sadness and some feelings of anger because I feel like I've placed trust in people
who I care about very deeply and I'm struggling with the fact that the business is now in the
position it's in due to decisions and actions that they have taken. So my real question is,
how can I best reframe my thinking to set up our relationships for the best, whatever the
business outcome, my family because I love and care about them very deeply and my business partner
because we'll continue to know each other in a professional context.
Thank you.
Support for the show comes from focus features
and their new film, Downton Abbey, the grand finale.
Glamour, romance, scandal.
Downton Abbey returns for one final.
unforgettable event.
It's 1930 and as a new era begins,
the future of Downton is at stake.
Lady Mary is thrust into public scandal
and shocking revelations
shake the family to its core.
This isn't just a movie, it's a moment.
The time has come to say goodbye
and everything has led to this.
See Downton Abbey the grand finale
on the biggest screen possible
only in theaters September 12th.
The support for this show comes from Nike.
What was your biggest win?
Was it in front of a sold-out stadium?
Or the first time you beat your teammate in practice?
Nike knows winning isn't always done in front of cheering crowds.
Sometimes winning happens in your driveway.
On a quiet street at the end of your longest run,
or on the blacktop of a pickup game,
Nike is here for all of the wins, big or small.
They provide the gear.
You bring the mindset.
Visit Nike.com for more information.
And be sure to follow Nike on Instagram, TikTok, and other social platforms for more great basketball moments.
Anything you want to add or clarify?
Yeah, the thing I thought, as soon as I sent that voice note off, and I thought, oh, I've ended by saying, I love my brother so much.
And my business partner is this guy I'm going to have to see forever, which doesn't do just.
to our relationship. The fact that it's broken down now is really sad for me. I don't necessarily
think it's recoverable, but he's still someone I really care about. So there is that professional
side of things, but there's definitely also a sort of personal sadness about that relationship.
I think since I sent the voice note, there's been one more call between the four of us, which
was quite a difficult call. It's probably the most sort of visibly angry I've ever been about the
situation so possibly just even thinking about it in the context of our conversation has kind of
helped me engage a little bit with my emotions around it other than that the situation remains
as it was we can focus on you because you have a lot of feelings and a lot of thoughts about
what has happened and that of course implies your relationship with each of these people
I think it's a good place to start, maybe,
because I will understand also your role
with your co-founder, with your brothers, with the family.
I seem to have understood that there is something
that you bring to the company
that mirrors a kind of role that you have had in the family.
There's a kind of a superposition
between the role at home and the role at work.
So can we start there? Does that sound good?
Sounds great. Okay. Yeah, absolutely.
So I'm going to listen a little bit and just take in the story.
Of course. So I'm the middle child and I'm the only girl with two brothers.
Everything was very happy, I think, sort of very happy childhood, all of those kinds of things.
Fantastic parents. I love my brothers. I also really like my brothers. I would say we are.
As people.
As people, yeah, as people. I would be friends with them if I met them tomorrow.
Are they friends with each other?
Almost all the time, apart from work.
I think it's really the only thing that's got in the way, certainly for the last 20 years, has been work.
Since we all became grown-ups, we've all been good friends with each other in every combination.
They are quite different people in some ways, in other.
the ways they've got probably similarities, which maybe at work without me in that dynamic,
they found themselves clashing in ways that when we all work together weren't such an issue.
But you feel a sense of responsibility?
Completely, yes. Tell me more.
Fundamentally, I think maybe it's on two levels. I think at work, essentially the buck stops with me.
I believe that. I'm a director of the company. I'm an owner of the company.
Like, fundamentally, what is my job if it's not to make sure the company is successful?
If the buck doesn't stop with me, what is the point? So I think that's, that feels very, very
true. And that feels still true regardless of the fact that I've taken that operational step back.
The difficulty now is I have far less control than I used to have. I don't feel less responsible,
but it feels like far less I can do about anything.
And is that a question that you have?
The question being, should I go back to a more hands-on role so that I can have what you call
control is basically the resources, the means to actually execute on my responsibility?
Absolutely not.
I would.
I would, for my own sanity, I would not go back over the last.
last maybe three to four months, I have been doing a little bit more because it was necessary,
but I would not go back on a day-to-day basis. I love my work life outside of this particular
issue, exactly as it is. So you have a combination of I'm actually really fulfilled and excited
by my new job or new career or new venture, but I need to.
to find a way to leave and to maybe close or sell in such a way that my new excitement
doesn't screw up a bunch of other people.
Exactly that.
And I think that's practical because I want to do the work that needs to be done with
the company that we're talking about on a very practical level.
But also emotionally, I feel so conflicted that 90% of my life.
is we're setting up a new company, we're doing this new thing, we have these new clients and that's
so exciting. And then I look back and I see my brothers and the team of the other company
having a pretty awful time. And I just, bringing the two together feels brutal. So I find
myself not talking about certain things and not kind of sharing the good times and the excitement
with them because it doesn't feel appropriate. But then, yeah, it feels like a huge conflict.
conflict or betrayal
of betrayal
yeah that's a good word
you seem to say
I feel like I'm betraying them
by having such a good time
somewhere else while their ship is sinking
yes exactly that
but at the same time I'm pissed at them
that the ship is sinking
because it shouldn't be sinking
because we were doing really well
and basically
they mismanaged
they took bad decisions
or they're not as good as me or what is it?
Yeah, I'm angry and I can't say that to them
because I know they are working so hard
and have never not worked hard,
but I'm really annoyed because I feel like I sat there in,
we meet monthly as a board which I sit on
and I sat there month after month saying,
guys, look at the numbers, we have a problem, we have a problem, we have a problem.
and I heard month after month, next month will be fine.
It's short, it's temporary, it's short term, it's short term.
So I feel like it is not that none of us saw this coming.
We talked about it and I allowed myself to be put off and put off and put off
until we find ourselves where we're at now.
I even before our most recent set of meetings, I went back
and I read or listened to all of the notes from all of the meetings for the last year
because I thought, am I going mad?
Did I not say any of these things?
Is this genuinely a surprise to them?
And it's just there, and it's infuriating.
And what did they, how did they react when you reminded them?
Throughout the process, they would say, oh, sure, but that was last month, this month is different.
Now we've reached the point where we're at where it's, it's undeniable where we are.
I think there's a huge emotional understanding they all have of it.
I think they get it, but it's difficult.
because what does getting it practically do,
I suppose we all feel probably like we don't have time
to process the emotional impact of it
because we're so busy trying to bail water out of the ship
that we just have to.
But it may not be that you let them kind of deflect.
It may also be that while you saw the problem growing,
you thought, I don't want to have to jump in to fix it.
Yes, that's probably.
I really did not want to jump in to fix it.
So you let them say what they said, even though you noticed, you've been appointed at it,
even though you told them.
But then in order for them to recognize, it would have meant for you to become more involved again.
And is there a story about why you stepped out?
There is, there's two sides to it.
So one is there were other really exciting things happening.
and offers I was getting to go and set up other things.
And I was really excited about those.
And they weren't things that could be combined with the role that I was previously doing.
So that door was definitely open at a point when I was actually probably a bit bored of the sort of work that that company does.
So it was a good moment for me to look at those.
There is on the sort of more negative side of the piece, there is the fact that, yeah, my relationship with my business partner had
having been a really strong business relationship and I would say a really strong
friendship had started to break down essentially. It wasn't a good relationship for either of us.
That was about three years ago. Why? I mean, why does a relationship that is so good
and strong for seven years suddenly declined? Yeah, I think so it's all personal
things really so I went through a divorce and he went through a very major breakup at almost exactly
the same time so whilst when basically we'd been able to previously compensate for each other I think
if someone had a crisis or a personal issue the other could step in at that time neither of us
really could and we probably both felt that deficit and then from my perspective I'm sure he would
want to say similar, but from my perspective, I felt some of his behaviour during that period
towards me was just unacceptable. He would call me for two or three hours a day, not very sober,
tell me everything that was wrong with the world and with me, and that's fine for a while,
but it went on for months, and I started to find that really, really difficult and sort of an
imposition on my life, really. It was really tough, and our relationship, we, afterwards, we weren't
really able to talk about it. And I don't think the relationship recovered, really.
Have you tried since? I mean, are you polite? Are you just?
Yeah, we're polite. I think we meet in person and we're friendly. I think ever since he's gone
through that experience, I experience him as quite a different person. He'll do things like if we're
having a meeting online and the tone goes in a way he doesn't like or the topic turns to
something he doesn't like, he will just leave the meeting and not talk to any of us for the rest of
the day, for example. So it's quite difficult to engage on difficult topics. We're a fully remote
workplace as well, so we don't go and sit in the office together. So we've tried, we've gone out for
drinks together and we are friendly and professional when we meet in person. But starting that
conversation has proved really difficult. And what would he say if I asked him, what led to the
deterioration of your relationship, of this friendship, of this partnership?
I think he would acknowledge the bad behaviour.
He doesn't typically have a problem saying, yes, I behaved badly.
I just think he doesn't necessarily feel particularly guilty or like he needs to change
when he behaves badly.
I think he would acknowledge that.
I think he would say, and he would be 99% right, he would say, you know, she got tempted
off by the new shiny thing. She was bored of the work that we were doing together. She
just left us. And I left over the course of a year. I didn't walk out suddenly. But I think
he would say that she got bored, she got tempted, she left. It's fine. So that's the main
reason she left. She didn't leave because our relationship deteriorated. I think he would
understand that way, yeah. And there's truth to it. There is absolutely truth to it. I would
say it's about 50-50 personally.
So if I hear you well, there's something in your request that is, how do I do what I want
and not feel guilty about the effect that what my wanting has on others?
Yeah.
Yeah, that's a pretty accurate.
I mean, company nevertheless, but basically, if the company went well, then you would feel less guilty
and you would just say
I went to do what I care about now
but I left them in a good situation
and they're thriving and so
I don't feel that bad
because they're doing well
but now that this is not happening
so smoothly
I sit with this
duality that I want
to do what I want and that's not new
and I want to be liked
yeah
yes I like being liked
Yes, of course. So do I, by the way. It's not such an unusual thing. But it's very difficult
to want to do what you want on a regular basis and to still hope that people will continue
to like you. Yeah. You know, usually it's like two different realities may need to coexist. You
may want to do what you want to do and other people are entitled to their reactions. You're
entitled to do that and so are they and those two things can coexist so rather than wanting the
other people to accept why you chose what you chose as if it has no effect on them that makes
sense i think i felt absolutely like i say we had some teething problems but they were normal i think
for the scale of transition that we were making in that first year but until the business started
to have its current problems. I felt no guilt because I thought this is a win, win, win.
You know, I get to do what I want to do. Yep. And everyone else gets to run the company,
how they want to run the company. We're set up. We're successful. It's a small company.
It's always scrappy. It's always risk-taking. But fundamentally, we're set up for success.
We have a track record of success. I felt no guilt at all. And now I feel really guilty because
I get to keep doing what I want to do and they don't.
We have to take a brief break, so stay with us, and let's see where this goes.
Support for Where Should We Begin comes from Shopify.
Starting a business means that there's a never-ending to-do list,
so finding the right tool that can help you simplify everything can be life-changing.
For millions of businesses, that tool is Shopify.
Shopify is the commerce platform behind businesses around the world
and 10% of all e-commerce in the U.S.,
from household names like Mattel and Jim Shark to brands just getting started.
They have hundreds of ready-to-use templates to help design your brand's style,
and they can make marketing easier by creating email and social media campaigns.
And best yet, Shopify is your commerce expert with,
world-class expertise in everything from managing inventory to international shipping to processing
returns and beyond. If you're ready to sell, you're ready for Shopify. You can turn your big
business idea into a big success with Shopify on your side. You can sign up for your $1 per month
trial and start selling today at Shopify.com slash ester. Go to shopify.com slash ester. Shopify.com
Support for Where Should We Begin comes from Thrive Market.
Thrive Market lets you stay stocked up on everything you and your family needs to thrive.
You can find the kids' favorite snacks for school lunches,
protein bars for your work bag, or non-toxic cleaning supplies for the home.
And Thrive Market is discerning with products they offer.
With over 1,000 restricted ingredients, you can shop without worry,
knowing you're only getting high-quality, nutritious groceries.
And with their on-site filters, you can filter out artificial dyes, processed sugar or seed oils.
I've ordered from Thrive Market myself.
And this month, I got some unreal dark chocolate coconut bars,
which are perfect little sweet treats that I made without any artificial sweeteners.
And then I ordered endangered species fair trade dark chocolate with sea salt and almonds,
because I love my chocolates.
You can go to trivemarket.com slash begin to get 30%
send off your first order and a free $60 gift.
Support for Where Should We Begin comes from NPR's Life Kit.
Life doesn't come with the manual.
Instead, it's more like an endless stream of contradictory advice and occasional scolding.
And when it comes to fitness or career or parenting or just staying sane in this world,
it's hard to know who's right and who's full of it.
Well, Life Kit is not just another self-improvement podcast.
It's a show with real stories, relevant insights and clear takeaways to help you through those
decision-making moments with confidence and clarity.
You'll hear conversations and real-world advice on things like finance, career, parenting and relationships,
things you might already be interested in if you're listening to this show.
No matter where you are in your life, whether you're just starting out or you're in your
twilight years, we all need a little help being our best selves.
Life Kit seeks to help you develop strategies for meaningful, sustainable change, and it comes from NPR.
Listen now to the Life Kit podcast from NPR.
So since I don't think this is the first time you have this conflict in life, I would say.
How have you dealt with it at other times?
What have been ways that you have been able to integrate this tension?
Yeah.
The example that springs to my mind first, which is completely in my personal life,
but it's probably when I did get divorced, my ex-husband didn't want to.
I did, and I never drawn this equivalence before at all, but it makes complete sense.
And essentially I was like, well, you can't stay married without me.
So off I go.
And your ex-husband had similar thoughts and feelings as your co-founder?
Even though totally different reality?
I think my ex-husband was just really confused.
Blindsided.
Yeah, yeah, exactly.
And likewise, I think, would acknowledge that there were ways in which he behaved badly,
but would say, fundamentally, you went off to find something new, didn't you?
Yes, you were bored and you went to the next.
shiny thing. Yeah, exactly the same. Yeah. So how did I, I suppose, how did I navigate that?
Firstly, the next shiny thing is really good. So you can lose yourself in that. That's probably not the
healthiest mechanism in the world. But fundamentally going off to do that, new shiny things are great.
But otherwise, I suppose I sort of looked at it as a, again, it's a slightly dramatic way to put it,
but it's like, you're sort of like born alone and you die alone.
And fundamentally, sometimes you have to make the decisions that are right for you
and you cannot carry everyone else's weight.
Did you feel bad for hurting him?
Yes.
Okay.
Yes, of course.
I felt horrible.
It's okay, you know, it's, those two can coexist too.
I am going to leave.
I've made up my mind.
I don't want to be here and I feel really bad about hurting you, leaving you, in some sense, betraying you.
And again, I hope you will be well because if you are well, it lessens the guilt, the burden, the responsibility.
But it's an important thing to be able to continue to have empathy and awareness of the reactions
that people have about your decisions,
while at the same time making your decisions.
What sometimes happens is that in the name of wanting to do what we want,
we cut ourselves off of how it affects others
so that we can maintain our oomph,
so we can stay the course and proceed with the decision.
As if we actually looked to the side for a moment
and saw what effect it has on others,
we won't have the guts or the strength or the confidence to actually pull through with it.
Yeah, I can completely see it.
I'm quite good at once the decisions made, as in both cases.
So when my husband and I broke up and with the business now about thinking about going back into that day to day,
I can just tell that both are just an absolute no for me.
I think because I don't get sort of tempted back to revisit my decision and that kind of thing,
I hope I am able to sort of look those other emotions in the face and go,
okay, I'm going to do this anyway, but I still have all of this, this awareness.
I suppose the difficulty I think that I'm facing now and the difference with those scenarios is,
I see my ex-husband at two weddings and a christening every year and not the rest of the time
whereas I have to be so careful in this position
because this is my whole family.
If I don't get this right, it's my whole family.
So that's the stakes this time.
Yeah.
Is that you can't have a leaving
that basically has these people exit your life.
This leaving is a partial leaving
and your brother stay in your life.
Your co-founder is maybe a different story.
So what's the conversation between you and your brothers?
I think there was a real turning points, rather, about three months ago, something like that,
where I think we'd always spoken in terms of, you know, how can we save the business,
what can we do to change things in a way we'd sort of never really allowed for the idea of failure,
would not really discussed it.
And we were able to have a meeting between the four of us.
us, as I say, about three months ago where we just said, look, this is the position that we're in,
and we have to talk about it in these terms now, because if not, what we're going to do is
enormously let down our clients and our team by heading into a catastrophe, which is unplanned.
We have to plan for it. That was a really good conversation. Who led it?
I did the pivot because I essentially said, look, I can't do this. If we can't look,
this truth in the face, I can't have this conversation anymore. And once we turned that
corner, everyone engaged fantastically in that conversation. But this is what you said. And
where would they? One of my brothers had found it really, really difficult to consider the
possibility previously. He would very explicitly say, look, I can't think about failure. Because
if I think about that, then I will just, you know, fall off a cliff. I cannot be in the mind
set for that, so I just can't look at it. That's where he was. And then my other brother,
who's maybe, I don't know, a little bit more of a sort of, he likes to look a problem in the
face as a guard against it. He takes that approach. So maybe he's considered a bit more
negative about it. So I think he found it a sort of easier transition to go through. So they
came from two quite different places. But I think we're now more aligned than we have been for a year.
between the three of us at least.
It's interesting that when you have kind of a family business,
you name the people by their family tie,
my brothers, my brother one, my brother two.
If you were not a family business,
you would be saying my operation person,
my finance person, my marketing person,
they would be identified by their role,
not just by their family tie.
Would that change it for you?
Yes, because I think if I used that language,
I would find it easier, probably both inwardly and outwardly,
to hold them to account in a professional way,
whereas probably what I've done is not held them to a
account sufficiently in that way and therefore we find ourselves in a worse position than we
would have been. I think by keeping it too personal, I probably haven't done the best
professional job I could do. You have known that? Or this is new insight? I tend to agree with you.
I thought before that I should have done a better job around accountability. It's one of the
things that I feel embarrassed about, ashamed about. I've never linked it to the language before.
That's a really new insight for me and that makes total sense.
I mean, the language defines, emphasizes the relationship and we have a different relational
expectation and business. Actually, we have a different business expectation because of the
nature of the relationship. And if you constantly emphasize the family tie and the
loyalty and the middle child and the desire to have your brother stay in good terms with
you, there's a good chance that that will influence expectations around accountability.
I definitely, I think I would, two sentences, so if I say, oh, my brother's working really
hard, they're just not performing the role so well at the moment, for example, I find it
very easy to let them off the hook. Whereas I would never, in one of my other companies, I would
never say, oh, my marketing director is working really hard. So even though it's not working,
it's okay. I would, I would never say that. That sounds crazy to me. But I would absolutely,
and have done it the other way around. The intention is good and the work is hard, but the
quality is not there sometimes. Makes no sense without a familial tie.
I mean, this is not set so that you can take a hammer and start banging on yourself.
Right?
Don't turn inside into instant criticism.
No, I understand that.
That is a tendency I definitely have.
I will try not to.
It's hard to sit with it.
It's like, whoa, you know, because that's not what I would have done.
But it's very good food for thought.
And it's a lot of good information for the future.
Because I'm assuming you're trying to think
how they could continue with you in the next venture.
Definitely not the next one.
But you feel like you need to help them
find the next place to land?
I feel absolutely I would continue to have professional relationships
with them and work with them.
Definitely, I don't want to work in the same way again
because right now the stakes feel so high.
in a way I recognize as extremely patronizing,
I think, oh, it's my responsibility to make sure that they both land on their feet
and get the right jobs.
Why?
Why?
Because the more you tell me that, it implies, and that's a subtle thing,
that you actually don't think they're capable.
And therefore, you need to boost them in one way or another,
or lessen your expectations,
or not demand the same level of accountability.
And now I need to understand that.
A, you don't really, and I don't know if it's a day
or one more than the other, or it's a package deal.
Is there a message you were given that you need to...
I don't think so.
That you're not allowed to succeed beyond them by yourself
and that this has to be a triad?
No, no, definitely not.
I think I was at a younger age, the most academically successful one.
One of my brothers is now definitely in advance of me on that,
but sort of age-for-age equivalence.
And that was celebrated by everyone, including them, which was fantastic.
I think I try to get to the bottom of it.
And I think it's difficult for me because I know it's,
It's, you know, I just said, you know, it feels really patronizing. When I look it in the face,
I think, I don't, they're both adult men who are incredibly capable, competent, clever,
hardworking human beings. They do not need me to solve their problems. They absolutely don't.
Do you really believe that? Because the patronizing part of you doesn't believe that.
I think it's probably doesn't predate working together. I think.
working together in this business, when I set the business up, I've been working in this sector
for a while. They were both new to both the sector and to sort of start up life and all of those
things. And I've done all of those things. And so I think when they first joined, we probably
ended up in this position of not I know everything, but I know more than you. I know more about the
sector. I know more about the company. I know more about how to do this. And therefore, you know,
It's my job to be that sort of guide.
And then we've had that period where actually, you know, it's fantastic and they've both
got specialisms I have no idea about and I love that.
But I probably just have never left behind that whole like, hey, you know, newbies.
I want to make sure you have a fantastic experience here and you grow and you learn all that
you want to.
And that's my job, which maybe seven years ago, it was my job.
It's not my job now.
And they don't need me to do it.
They really don't.
I think it's that probably doesn't predate our professional lives.
We'll be back with a session right after this.
And while we love our sponsors, if you want to listen to this session ad-free,
click the try-free button to subscribe to Astaire's office hours on Apple Podcasts.
Support for this show comes from Robin Hood.
Wouldn't it be great to manage your?
portfolio on one platform? With Robin Hood, not only can you trade individual stocks and
ETFs, you can also seamlessly buy and sell crypto at low costs. Trade all in one place.
Get started now on Robin Hood. Trading crypto involves significant risk. Crypto trading is
offered through an account with Robin Hood Crypto LLC. Robin Hood Crypto is licensed to engage in
virtual currency business activity by the New York State Department of Financial Services. Crypto
held through Robin Hood Crypto is not FDIC in short or CIPIC protected. Investing involves
risk, including loss of principle.
Securities trading is offered through an account with Robin Hood Financial LLC, Member SIPIC,
a registered broker-dealer.
Support for the show comes from Focus Features and their new film, Downton Abbey, the grand finale.
Glamour, romance, scandal, Downton Abbey returns for one final unforgettable event.
It's 1930 and as a new era begins, the future of Downton is at stake.
Mary is trusting to public scandal and shocking revelations shake the family to its core.
This isn't just a movie, it's a moment.
The time has come to say goodbye and everything has led to this.
See Downton Abbey the grand finale on the biggest screen possible only in theaters September 12th.
With AMX Platinum, $400 in annual credits for travel and dining means you not only satisfy your travel bug,
but your taste buds too.
That's the powerful backing of Amex.
Conditions apply.
Are the parents involved in this story?
They are probably to the extent that they're very good
whenever any of us talk to them about work.
The others never hear of what they say.
So they're pretty, they're good sort of secret keepers.
They're not gossipy, which is perfect.
I find it currently very difficult to speak with them about the situation, not because I don't trust them, but because it feels too difficult to, it feels like I would end up blaming or being very embarrassed or...
But difficult means I worry that I would either be blaming my brothers or blaming myself.
Yeah, exactly that.
It's either anger or shame.
Yeah.
Yeah, I find it very difficult to talk about this entire situation without one of those things, unless I'm in complete professional, let's get things done, mode.
I have no middle ground right now.
I get it.
And you came to me for the underground.
Yes.
Not for the middle ground.
Exactly.
Because you see what happens is you have a particular situation and all these reactions and feelings and behaviors come up.
But then when you look at them, you begin to notice how they reflect similar behaviors in completely different situations.
It's like you get a bit of a rorschach of your coping strategies, of your style of dealing with these kind of situations.
Something I try to do where I depend on other people.
I typically am not somebody who so easily depends on other people.
I go out myself.
And if it doesn't work, then I'm stuck between what they did wrong
versus what I did wrong or vice versa.
I did wrong and I blame myself.
Suddenly it gets decontextualized and it becomes highly personalized
and it's no longer about startup world and this and that.
It's about them, mostly.
my brothers and my co-founder or me.
One of us sunk the ship.
Yeah.
You know?
And it's not about responsibility
as much as about blame.
It feels like that now.
But that is not the only time
you've done it this way.
When you come with such a set structure,
usually I think, you know,
this is part of your own relationship resume.
This form
has already existed in other situations as well.
It also accompanies people
who live with a very strong sense of responsibility
and personalize.
If it goes well, it's me,
but if it doesn't go well, it's also me.
There are other people
when it goes, well, it's me
and when it doesn't go well, it's others, you know?
So we can do the same as you did with the divorce.
What do you recognize?
Indeed, somebody must be at fault.
And I vacillate back and forth.
Sometimes I think it's me and what I didn't do and how.
And then I went back to listen just to make sure that I really had warned them.
The signs are out there.
The company is not performing well.
But part of me feels that if I had really taken this seriously,
I should have gone back to fix it.
but I didn't want to
and so I saw them
and they didn't do it either
and here we are
yeah
yeah
I really didn't want to
I am very clear on that
but it's very important piece
because that really didn't really want to
is like I rang the alarm
but I didn't
rang it that intensely
because I knew that
if I really follow
the thread
it will land with
I have to step back in here
because there's something I know
that can actually fix this
or so I think
but I didn't want to do it
so I thought
let them do it
but part of me knew
they can't do it
yeah
I think
a lot of what you've just said
it really really resonates
it's the piece about helping.
No, I like to help people.
I don't like to get help.
I don't like to get help.
I like all of those things.
And for me, it's part of the same story.
I suppose it sounds really self-aggrandizing.
But I look back and I think there are very few things that I couldn't make right.
that if I tried hard enough and I brought my energy to bear, there are a few, and yeah, I might be
about to have the first one, but, you know, sort of few major failures that I've gone through
and realistically, my sense is it's properly cumulative.
So I've gone, okay, we had this issue and I've been able to fix that through working insanely
hard or whatever and we've had this issue and I've been able to solve this and this issue and I've
been able to solve this and probably what I have ended up with is an enormously swollen head
about the kind of problems that are personally solvable by me and actually life was always going
to run me up against something which which wasn't personally solvable by me in our case market
conditions have changed and those external factors are true. They're absolutely true.
There came a point during a previous meeting where I just said, I don't want to hear about
the market again. What a stupid thing to say on reflection. Of course we have to think about the
market. But I'm trying to think where does it come from? Kind of like what's the oldest
story I can think of? Or not that old.
Shall I give you a clue?
please I have no idea if it's a good one but it's the one that popped into into my head
I think I could fix this problem but I don't want to and so I get mad at you for not being
capable to do so and you're not being able to do so then puts me in a position where
I feel guilty bad that I am not doing something that I know
I know I could do because I don't want to.
And so I enter into a tension between what I should and what I want.
Why can't you do the thing that I don't want to do?
If you did it, I would be fine.
But if you don't, then the wanting gets into conflict with the should.
I fear we may be back on my poor ex-husband again.
for that because that you may need to go and have a closure conversation with your
and an apology to him I yeah no indeed I think it's and tell it to me if you can
with inside and not with a bat you're harsh you're hard on yourself which is part which is
part of what prevents you from thinking sometimes.
Yeah.
And from having the awareness and the inside, because when you do, it's so instantly
morphs into criticism and a bat that you just don't want to do it.
You don't want to continue the thought.
So I know something just clicked.
Let's just explore it together.
I probably realize.
that I didn't want to be married really early.
To him.
To him, to him.
And once I got through a period of...
What is really early, by the way?
Within the first year.
Okay.
It's not uncommon.
So after I'd sort of...
worked up the courage to look that in the face, which I'm very glad I did on the note of not
being too harsh with myself. I think that was, it was, I did it quite quickly. It felt quite
brave. But then I had that something really resonated in what you said of that kind of,
if only you could do this, then I could realize that I do want to be married. And then all of
our problems will be solved that you aren't aware exist yet. You know, if only, if only you could,
be this or you could do this or you could what kind of this give me a couple of
examples there was some stuff around his drinking for example which I didn't love but
was realistically well within the kind of you know sort of realms of toleration
there were I'm just and again quite early just just
things that annoyed me, just sort of bits of snobbishness and pomposity, which realistically
we'd been together for years by then, I should have worked it out earlier, or I felt like I should
have worked out earlier, so I felt very guilty about sort of setting these. He must have been
really confused because suddenly things that he'd been doing for years, I could not live with
anymore. And I would say, you know, just, you know, if you could just do this, and I would feel awful
about asking because I knew it was unreasonable and I knew it was absolutely about me and not about
him. I'd changed. He hadn't changed. But I was speaking. Yeah, but I was speaking, right? Everything
became source of irritation. Exactly. But fundamentally, I wanted it out and I'd had the bravery
to look at in the face and I hadn't had the bravery to do it. And again, trying to be kind to
myself, I also think I, part of that was about compassion and thinking, no, I have to,
I have to try. I think at the same time I was picking, I was also trying to, you know, to do better
and to be better. But we went to one session of marriage counselling and the therapist said in
the session, she was like, there is basically no point you being here because you do not want
to be in this marriage. She was more professional about it than that, but fundamentally she said,
look, there's not much of a conversation to have here.
that was the penny sort of clicked for me. I thought, you know what, that's true. And it's
actually not kind of me to keep doing this. This is not a good life for him. This is not a
good life for me. I'm not being kind here. We just have to move on, which we did very quickly
after that. So the conversation that I imagine needs to happen with your brothers is not about
the company and not about the market. It's a conversation about the family ties.
and it may be with both of them at the same time
or if you don't call them as brothers,
then you probably won't have them one-on-one.
Yeah.
If they were named by their role,
you wouldn't bundle them.
Yeah.
But in this instance,
it is a family tie conversation
as much as a company conversation.
But the company conversation you have,
it's really the family tie.
I realize this is challenging for you.
what have you been thinking?
Where do you see yourself go from here?
Is there something about our relationship
that is affected by the company changes?
Either we sell or we need to close.
And it's a relationship conversation.
As we've been speaking now, I've just realized
I don't think I've ever said to them explicitly
what I said in my very first question in the voice note to you,
which is just I want to come out of this.
as we'll always love each other.
I want to come out of this as
as good friends as we are now
and that's not to say
that there won't be emotional responses.
Of course there will.
I appreciate it might be a really bumpy time
but fundamentally my biggest priority
is to come out of this
with these relationships intact
from all of us being able to do that.
And I think I've never said that that explicitly to them.
It feels like maybe a start.
Yes, yes, very much so.
Do you think they even think that, they know that, or they think you're selfish?
I hope they know that. I think that may co-exist with thinking I'm selfish. That's, and that's, that's fine, but I hope they know it.
Okay. So this is, you have a great place to start. You have a great place to start. You matter to me dearly. Companies come and go. You are my brothers for life. And we're going to go through a difficult transition.
What do we need to do as brothers and sisters for us to come through this?
So it's not just an I, it's a we.
How do we stay together?
We maintain our bond.
We each have our own feelings about what we're going through.
We don't have to be in unison.
This is not a choir.
But at the same time, we have a unified goal, which is to maintain, do we have this unified goal?
it's definitely mine
and what do we need for that
what do each of us need
because you may have needs from them too
it's not just them from you
I'm sorry you may have to actually ask for something
don't make me
just did
no I love that as a question
I love that as an introduction that doesn't feel like
it's not scary
that feels easy yeah it doesn't feel scary
It's exactly, and the fact that you instantly connected it to the voice question is perfect.
It's the dots that needed to be connected because you're not going to talk about failure.
You're going to talk about the persistence and the perseverance of the bond that exists between the three of you.
That's the most important piece.
It's the most important thing.
And then potentially what they each will do or how they see themselves, you know, go from here.
and the fact that it's not just a failure either, all three.
Is that a good place for you to pick up?
Yeah, that's a great place.
That's a great next step.
Thank you so so much.
Your pleasure.
Bye-bye.
Thanks.
Bye-bye.
If you have a question you'd like to explore with Astaire,
could be answered in a 40 or 50-minute phone call.
Send her a voice message, and Astaire might just call you.
Send your question to, producer at esteraparelle.com.
Where should we begin with Esther Perel is produced by Magnificent Noise?
We're part of the Vox Media Podcast Network,
in partnership with New York Magazine and The Cut.
Our production staff includes Eric Newsom, Destri Sibley,
Sabrina Farhi, Kristen Muller,
and Julianette.
Original music and additional production
by Paul Schneider.
And the executive producers
of where should we begin
are Esther Perel and Jesse Baker.
We'd also like to thank
Courtney Hamilton, Mary Alice Miller,
and Jack Saul.