Where Should We Begin? with Esther Perel - Love the Child, Not the Father
Episode Date: October 14, 2024Theirs is an accelerated love story. They moved in, decided to have a baby, and are now struggling to weather the hardships of parenting together. She feels unsupported and like she's the only adult i...n the room. He is overwhelmed and constantly feels put down by her. They have split up emotionally but not yet physically. Esther helps them sort through the power, gender, and trust issues that so often arise with new parents to see if it's enough to help them find their way back. Esther’s two new courses on desire are now available inside The Desire Bundle. Go to https://www.estherperel.com/course-bundles/the-desire-bundle to learn more about Bringing Desire Back and Playing with Desire. 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
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COVID lockdown functioned like an unusual speed dating
and created ad hoc relationships
where people that barely knew each other
were often thrown together overnight, moving in with each other.
We started dating when it was not far before COVID hit.
We had an unexpected pregnancy at the very beginning of our relationship.
And I found out I was pregnant the first day of lockdown.
We made the decision not to continue with that.
And then fast forward maybe a year and a half,
and we had another pregnancy and we didn't want that.
This is how these two people met.
They got pregnant on the first day of lockdown,
but they moved in together just a few weeks before and they began dating just
shortly before that. So all of this was compressed with the big things at the beginning and then the
small steps of dating, of getting to know someone, following. And this instant face-to-face going deep worked quite well until the door opened and people began
to ask the question, do I even like this person? And in this case, she likes the baby,
but she doesn't like the man. I found within myself that I was not happy in this relationship
and ended the relationship, but we're still cohabitating. We have this beautiful baby together.
I have no idea, like, how we move forward.
Somewhere in there, things began to go off the rails.
It feels like over time, we increasingly don't like each other.
How do we shift to something that can be free of acrimony and friction?
How do we do it without our white knuckles clenched?
So we were just seeing each other a lot, even in the month before the lockdown.
And then when I think about our time together in the lockdown,
there was something that was intimate,
but without knowing this whole other side of each other that existed.
Meaning that you never saw each other in your respective lives?
Yeah, we hadn't met all each other's friends
or like known each other and how we are in sort of a normal life before the pandemic. And, you know, and I think the, you know, unexpected pregnancy was really challenging. It was in lockdown. And so I didn't feel like I had the access to the cares that I would normally have found for myself.
And I had to, you know, I had the pills, you know, so it was very painful and it didn't work.
And then I needed to go have a procedure done in person.
And, you know, of course, I was like entirely alone.
Yeah, I think emotionally it was hard to work through. Were you alone because ecologically, societally isolated and you had no supports?
Or were you also alone vis-a-vis him?
Yeah, I think that there was definitely like, I want to be there for you and I want to help.
And also just like, whatever you want to be there for you and I want to help and also just like whatever you want to do I think that that is maybe like what you as a male like are told that's what you're
supposed to do and and I think it felt you know there was a sweetness to just wanting to just
be there and and help but I felt I was putting it in your court
and therefore you were it was like whatever yeah it was like I think I did feel like alone and
making decision and figuring out you know the logistics of it and you know it's like you take
the pills and then you you wait because it takes a. And I think you were very anxious. And I remember being like, well, go take a walk.
And then I got mad because you took a really long walk and you weren't back.
And I was experiencing it.
And I think I felt like I'm orchestrating this.
I'm figuring this out.
May I ask you something?
Yeah.
Because you're describing it around this very challenging experience of making a decision to terminate, experiencing that on the one hand it's your decision, but then also that you are alone with the decision.
Wanting him to be present, but when he has feelings about it, you basically tell him as if he can't handle it so go take a walk rather than just it's anxiety producing
isn't it you wait probably two why does he take a walk you know so there is this notion
and i'm sensing it i I may be completely off.
You hate being alone, but you create situations that make you more alone.
Is that something that I'm sensing accurately, or am I off? Yeah, I think that feel very attuned to what others are feeling and it's hard for it to not supersede
what I'm feeling. And he has a lot of anxiety and I find it overwhelming. It feels like chaos you know and I see it as like oh I have to manage this so let me just
eliminate this chaos and this pattern that you describe I'm attuned to other people's feelings
they supersede mine but then I feel like I have to manage theirs so that I can finally maybe at some point attend
to mine. And that in itself feels overwhelming to me. And then I start to accrue resentment
because I feel like I'm always last and I never even get my chance.
Is he number one in your life that you do this with or this is an old school?
I think I did it in my family too. I
think I have three siblings and your number number two I yeah I think I just remember being a little
bit even removed from myself and just like observing around me what was happening and
just kind of understanding that like oh I just need to like not add to this
chaos but nobody notices me right yeah and that's the old voice right yeah no I here I am attuned
to everybody and nobody notices me that's the pain underneath the resentment.
Yeah.
That hurts.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I think I feel very unknown in this relationship.
And at home.
And I just created family.
And it's not uncommon that when we create family
our family history reappears full force too yeah it's like a memory bank that opens up
yeah oh I guess it just slowly started to not be okay um but I think initially you know in our
first date he just asked a lot of very, like...
He wanted to get to know you.
Yeah.
And he asked very curious questions.
Yeah.
And I, you know, I remember at the end of the date, I felt like, oh, wow, I just talk so much.
And that felt kind of unusual and nice yeah and then slowly it just started to
feel like he was just this more dominant presence in terms of emoting what felt like all over and
and it felt like a lot of negative emotions. And when you're pregnant, it's like everything is changing
and there wasn't a change on his side.
I started to think I'm going to have to carry so much of this.
And I think I was like, I can do it, I can do it.
And then just the resentment just started to really build.
You're sort of in this position where everyone's so excited.
And I was excited, but I wasn't feeling supported
and I wasn't feeling taken care of.
The first thought I have is what happened on their first date
and how taken she was by his curiosity, his attention to her,
and how it was opening up for her a deep yearning of someone really wanting to get to know her.
And when he then starts to have his own reactions and she starts to feel that he's not nearly present enough,
he becomes the representation of a lot of the deprivations
that she has experienced throughout her life.
And then add to that COVID
lockdown. I mean, I wrote a book called Mating in Captivity. This was Mating in Captivity,
the quarantine edition. If there ever was a time when we turned to one person to give us what once
an entire village is meant to provide, this was it. It's not that she could temper his absence
with the presence of other and the support of other,
that she could turn to other people.
It's that everything was turned toward him.
That compounded things and made the crisis come up
much sooner and much more steep.
And so as she was talking about how he started out as a beautiful listener
and he was so curious about her,
in a way we were doing the exact same thing in this beginning of the session.
I was taking my time to get to know her, to allow her to come forward.
And I was watching him re-enter his role as a curious person that
he is or once was, that I don't know yet.
You started out as a beautiful listener who asked questions, who made her feel like, wow, this is kind
of what I've always dreamt about.
You started out in a very privileged position, privileged as in unusual for her, special.
And then how did you get demoted um i think some of it goes to what she just was talking about in
terms of change throughout the pregnancy change as we emerge from the pandemic but one thing that
she said that was true and has been true is that i haven't changed there hasn't been much of a finger lifted to address the anxiety, to address the dumping on.
And so there's an element of this whole thing that, like, you know, where I feel at fault.
I feel responsible.
I feel that this could have been repaired or healed or the ship could have been righted.
And so that's part of it.
There's a recognition there.
And then with our son...
Take a moment.
Just stay with this for a bit.
Is this something you've said before?
Out loud. is this something you've said before out loud i think that she knows because she's watched me not that's not the same she knows but you're acknowledging what she sees is a different step
right it starts with acknowledgement
and then accountability and then reckoning.
Otherwise, you don't have a shared base from which to start.
Right.
I recognize something's off, and that it could be amended and potentially improved upon by doing
something and that something is not done. I mean I know that this is a piece of
this and you said it too it's like if I don't do anything I don't initiate
anything or make any kind of change and it's all left on you and that's
especially the case with him now. Once we moved into this phase where it was like the white flag
was flown and we're not together then it shifted into something else like an entrenched
war of attrition or something it feels like resentment bubbling and blowing up and then
resentment bubbling and blowing up and then i mean part
of it's because it was recent part of this because it was last night but there's a crystallization
there was an unfortunate nail on the head that you identified yesterday when i came home and and i was
overwhelmed and stressed and it was thing after thing and And I got home in time to join you guys for the bedtime routine,
which was all I wanted.
But I came in there with this energy that was not resolved energy.
It was built up.
And you said some things that were hurtful at the time,
something to the effect of, like, you're complaining, you're grousing, your bitching is like the soundtrack to so much of my life
that I just want to be away from or something like that.
And that hurt, and immediately where I went was like,
I want to shoot some arrows that are just as sharp back at you.
And I recognize that there was little to argue with there.
Like, who would want that?
Whatever it is that has me stuck,
I feel like instead of really actually responding to it in an effort to get unstuck,
it's like I will just divert that energy or those feelings
into, like, something that I can identify that's negative.
Like how shitty the Q train is at rush hour
or how corrupt these
Supreme Court justices are and none of that shit none of that stuff has
anything to do with what I'm feeling it's a lot of complaining yeah it's like
this externalization of what you're feeling and so like it doesn't even feel
like I need to be there
like it feels like you're monologuing about the world and and like in my head I somehow like
thought it was on me to like divert you into like what if we just focus on something else or what if
you you know did breathing exercises or yoga or therapy like I just think I spend so much time just trying
to help you and then I think you know since we've broken up it's like I just I don't have to that's
not on me anymore and I have like a baby to take care of and that is an inappropriate person for me
to take care of in that way and you are not I. I mean, what I said was honest. Like, you're just
going off. You're going off. And like, I'm there trying to like wrangle our son into his pajamas
and get him to drink some milk and read a book. And it's like, there's nothing about what you're
saying that is connective to me. it's also just like you blame me for
things like you start talking about the environmental things in your life that are so hard
and which is like the city that we live in which is the city that you hate and I am making you stay
here and it's my fault and you can't believe anyone would want to live here. And it's so, it's angry.
There's anger directed at me.
It's passive, but it's another thing
that you avoid your own feelings
by blaming it on everything else.
You know, I'm listening to both of you
and there is blame. You know, I'm listening to both of you.
And there is blame.
You switch from responsibility to blame very quick.
And the blame can be externalized, but you also blame yourself.
And then you blame yourself in such a way that it completely immobilizes you.
Because where to begin? Who would want to be with me?
This is fucked up and so one minute you are fucked up, you the world whoever is outside there and one minute I'm fucked up. And you go from contempt to self-pity.
It's a lot of both of those.
At this moment
you have both decided
that you're going to transition
into co-parenting
or you're going to transition into co-parenting?
Or you're pulling that ship?
I mean, I've heard different things from you.
Well, you started that ship.
You started pulling that ship in that direction.
And for a while, I wasn't on board.
I wasn't on that page.
I wasn't on that team. I wasn't on that team.
I've gotten there.
I don't know if we're in the exact same spot,
but I think part of why I've gotten there is because it's become so frequently contentious
that it doesn't seem tenable.
And so it's almost like I got pulled along
with that ship or something.
I didn't passively say, I'm, but.
But neither did you say, I know what I need to do.
It's not like she hasn't been clear.
It's not even like I disagree with what she's saying.
I'm going to fight for this.
And I'm going to do what it takes.
And the more you go passive,
and the more she resents the fact
that she has to make all the decisions,
but she continues making them,
and the more you'll blame yourself,
saying, that's really not what I wanted.
So the more passive you go,
and the more contentious she will be,
and the more contentious she will be,
and the more passive you will become.
And by the way, that doesn't change
once you just become co-parents.
I mean, at this moment,
you want a relationship by design.
You want to create a particular kind of arrangement
that's a designer model.
And so there is sex, there is there is food there is people there is
professions there is time there is your child those are dimensions of a relationship they all
will continue some of them even if it's not sex with each other it will be other partners so
all of this is part of the conversation. Some of it is very concrete.
It's not just psychological.
Some of it we are talking psychologically.
We're looking at some patterns.
But what happens is that the conversation about the practicality gets mired with the conversation about the psychology.
And then there is no conversation.
Right.
Right. Right.
Like, I think I understand.
Like, we had a fight about laundry where...
Oh, I forgot the laundry.
Where...
I forgot the...
And the gardening, maybe, as well.
And the garbage.
Yeah.
And the dishwasher.
There's a few more.
And, you know, for a long time, I doing all the laundry and he was doing his laundry.
And then I said, you have to do the baby's laundry.
And then we just recently did like an overhaul of clothes to give away and season change.
And there was just a pile of clothes that were going to laundry and then it's growing.
And he's getting stressed and he's like, that's way too much laundry.
I can't.
And so it's like this choice that I then have to like either just keep the pressure on and say, well, this is what needs to be done to say like, I'll just do it.
How about I trust you will figure this out?
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, you are both, as far as I can see, adults.
I mean, that does, that plays into it.
There is a lot of ways in which it's like...
No, but you're not talking to an adult.
I feel like the adult.
Like, I feel like I'm the adult.
May I ask you what you do?
Yeah, I work at a hospital.
I'm a social worker there.
Oh, you're an adult.
Yeah.
When he is stressed or anxious or rigid or whatever,
you instantly play into it.
I'm sure you'll figure it out out is what one says to an adult.
Yeah.
I do that sometimes and more so now.
But without resentment.
Yeah.
I think I just got tired of being angry all the time.
And so, you know.
But the anger is partly because a part of you thinks, do I persist or do I relinquish and take more on on me?
So you're also in an either or.
But also just the fact of being someone to complain.
You know, it's like you didn't say it was going to be this much laundry.
It's like I am not the CEO of this company.
I love to throw surprises.
Yeah.
You understand?
You're trapped in the, you didn't say, no, I didn't know.
Just, you know, I wanted to make sure that you get some unpredictability in your life.
It's good for the rigidity.
Right, right.
It's like there's an absurdity to complaining about it.
So why not respond with that?
Exactly.
We got it.
Do you understand?
Because then you don't step in yeah yeah it's like i need
to protect my energy in that way too like it's exhausting or you may just enjoy absurd theater
it's like you take it literal he says you didn't tell me and now it becomes a conversation about
you didn't tell me and should you tell me and how would do it? And you didn't measure it and you didn't have a weight. And play with it almost in a way that says, yeah, I know, I get it.
But you know what?
I wanted to make sure that you remember that life is filled with unknown.
Give him some existential, you know.
Yeah.
And it doesn't become, like, everything just is everything, you know. And so it's like, oh, you're cheap because you're not willing to spend more money at the laundromat and you're putting it on me because you're just become this sort of passive person in our relationship.
And like also, oh, you're seeing this as outside of your purview because it's not your clothes, even though it's your son's clothes. Even these mundane tasks become this whole narrative of what feels like what went wrong.
Things that I just absorbed for so long and then got so mad.
This is not about the laundry or any of the items. This is about, can I rely on you? Can I trust you?
Who's taking care of me? If you do this laundry, it's not that you wash the baby's clothes,
it's that I feel that I have a partner and I'm not alone. This is not an uncommon story
in relationships in which one person is in the role of the adult, wants the other person to be more of an adult,
but actually treats them in a more infantilized way,
which makes the other person then respond exactly in kind,
and it becomes a confirmation bias.
In straight couples, it plays itself out around gender,
but in all couples, it's often also an issue of roles.
The one who watches what needs to be done and then assigns and does,
and the one who's waiting to be told what to do
and then has their complaints about the assignment.
And I think the most important piece is not to get sidetracked by the item at hand,
but really by the dynamic.
The power issues, the gender issues, the trust issues.
It's all those things that are being discussed, disguised in the laundry pile.
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When he complains about the size of the load,
just tell him that you carefully chose a few more pounds.
Yeah.
If the two of you find yourself with that little bit of a smile,
you will change your life.
Yeah.
This is not about conflict resolution.
This is also about keeping perspective. You have a little one. You need both of you to reconnect with the lightness of being, because
you could be arguing about a lot of stupid stuff that you take as something extremely important.
And so from one to ten, how important is this one?
This is very basic things, but they are actually extremely powerful.
You need to, first of all, remove the crust that's sticking.
Yeah, the crust, that's an image that feels like it lands.
I mean, I think that's what this is.
Like, the crust builds.
It just builds.
It sticks.
Yeah.
The main thing is it sticks.
And that's the rigidity.
The patterns become narrower, faster, and more rigid.
What used to take 10 minutes to build can take 10 seconds.
You do your thing. She does her thing. you do your thing, you do your thing.
Done.
So if you had a pool of benevolence, that's the word I came to use.
There needs to be some benevolence.
And this I say more to you.
Yeah, yeah, I hear it too. Because you go into that state of what's wrong,
and I should do, and I don't know why I don't.
Well, and that it's pretty easy to say,
okay, yeah, it's partially me, but it's also partially you.
Yeah, it's 100% each of you.
It doesn't matter.
Right, right, right.
Your blame system is going to undermine you.
It's the most miserable way
to think about relationships.
Well,
the rigidity
is the biggest part
of the whole thing.
I think that if you talk
to people that knew me
in previous
little sections
of my life,
rigidity is not a word
that...
What about pettiness?
Pettiness wasn't...
I think it all...
It all came together.
So, how shall we name that part of you that goes rigid and petty?
Well, there's a narrowness.
There's an assumption that the world should be one way.
And if it in any way deviates from that, then fuck somebody, me or somebody.
I'm looking for a name as in a metaphor.
I know we've described it, but, you know,
the important piece here is this is a part of you.
This isn't all of you.
It wasn't always you.
So at this moment, instead of having a conversation with her,
you need to have a conversation with it.
And just on occasion say,
today I don't really want to have you there.
I mean, I'm going to invite somebody else for dinner.
Because you're about to ruin my life, my relationship, my fatherhood.
The recognition of the absurdity of all of this.
Just a couple of days ago, I was riding my bike,
and I was headed to a friend's house, and I got caught in a downpour.
And I was pissed.
I was muttering, and was upset and then and then
there was just like a light switch it was like this is not changing any of this and for some
reason that light switch is so much harder to access so this is so much less frequently
accessed these days but it was this moment it was this glimpse of like
that felt metaphorical like who am i pissed at the sky there was nothing i could do to change it
and i feel like that is what so often i play with this stuff the the rigidity and the seeing the
laundry load get higher and higher and want to undo that somehow
and bring it back to a place that is understandable and recognizable and familiar and manageable.
When he goes into that performance, I would love you to become a theater spectator.
Yeah.
And tell him this is a six.
It is like a monologue.
I got it.
It is like...
I think you should edit
a few pieces
because it's just a six.
Yeah.
He does have
a theater background.
He is a trained actor.
Wonderful.
Ask him if he could help you,
serve you something
that you enjoy.
It could be tea
water or whatever drink you want so i'd like to watch could you start from the beginning
and basically become a spectator of this performance because it's a performance it is yeah okay and grade it or review it that's probably a better word
but you see where i'm trying to take you in for a moment and this you can do to all you know
bad script bad script needs a rewrite needs a rewrite. Needs a rewrite. So instead of being ex-partners,
I would like you to become joint playwrights.
I chose the word performance,
not as a dismissal.
I could have used the word enactment.
I didn't know yet that he was an actor at the theater.
But if it's a performance,
it's less an intrinsic part of you.
And it's more a scene that you get into,
a part of you that takes over.
So what I'm looking at with them is
how much flexibility is there.
A real diagnostic is when I come up with something that is light,
but that brings perspective, humor.
And if the people join me, if they instantly laugh at it,
it means that they too have some distance to not take all of this so seriously.
So can I help them not fall in the traps,
avoid these pitfalls,
even if they choose to only be co-parents?
And so I decided to locate myself there.
I think it's helpful because I think it prevents me from taking it on.
Well, you get sucked into it too, the seriousness, the weighty, leady.
Yeah, it's a real downer.
It's the release of the thoughts.
It's a release of the thoughts, but it's not even really connected to what you're feeling.
I don't think you feel better after doing it.
After the performance?
He actually used a very interesting word.
He mutters.
On the bike, he was muttering.
So, put him in front of the mirror and just say, take a look.
I think you may want to put a little bit more accent there.
And then go do your thing.
But I am trying to unstick you.
Because that's part of the crust.
This is a play.
A relationship is a story.
You're right.
It needs edits you've gone down a path where the story
is just an absolute downer yeah and it's becoming real it starts to feel like it's not a story but
that's the truth yeah yeah and it feels like this like heteronative nightmare. That's an old story.
Yeah, yeah, exactly.
It feels so tired.
And so what are the main lines of that heteronormative nightmare in your script?
Just a childlike man.
I already have a kid.
I don't need another one.
Yeah, and this sort of humorless woman who's
like not even given a full character she's just a resentful bitch yeah is that the words yeah
i've been there it's okay it's not like yeah my part in that play you know right and i like i Right. And I really resent feeling like that. Yes. Because I don't think that I...
What happened to me.
Right.
That's not who I am.
Right. How did I end up this person?
Yes.
To not focus only on the big decision.
How do we move out?
Yeah.
Because if you stay in what you have called your heteronormative nightmare,
then it doesn't matter under what roof he sleeps.
Yeah.
Or you sleep.
Yeah, we still have the same problems.
So I am going a little bit less upstream.
Yeah.
Closer to where you are.
Yeah. And trying to give you movement so that you can react differently,
which will change the perspective, which will change the tone,
which will change the reorganization of the relationship.
If there is more lightness or laughter,
as in you don't get hooked into everything.
And every moment is another cortisol shot of stress.
Yeah, yeah.
It's like this intolerance I have for other people being unhappy or other people being agitated.
So I'm giving you some very, very concrete tools.
Yeah.
You will learn to disengage.
Yeah.
Without having to cut off.
You will learn to differentiate, to separate yourself from it, and then decide how you want to react to it rather than be instantly sucked in
and then resentful to him that, you know, he complains,
but you are doing the resentment piece. So this is bad theater.
Yeah, it's bad theater. And you have to respond to it like you have the editing power. Yeah.
What I'm noticing, and is often the case in reactive couples, is that they are symmetric.
Each one may think the other one is rigid,
but in fact, they both are.
As much as he has become the complainer,
she has become the person who cannot hear him say much without instantly translating it into,
he's my downer, I cannot pay attention to him.
I need all my energy to stay focused on my child.
So she's as stuck as him.
And introducing lightness is introducing the ability
to have a space between action and reaction
to decide how do I want to interpret this?
What will I do with this?
And that is actually extremely liberating.
If I can make fun of something or light of something,
then I start to feel like I have a lot more control.
I don't feel like the other person is pulling me down
because I don't let myself be pulled.
And honestly, I do not think that these complaints need to be taken so seriously.
I think that her need to feel that he can be there for her is important and serious.
The feeling alone and not feeling that one can put one's own feelings in the center
because the partner takes up all the real estate, that's important.
Those are the issues.
But to address them, we need to clear the space first.
And that I am trying to do in this case by watering the field with a different perspective.
And it seems light, but it actually runs very deep.
We are in the midst of our session, and there is still so much to talk about.
We need to take a brief break. So stay with us.
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I have the power or the positioning to respond to you differently
when I feel like there's a dumping happening, that I can see it.
I can not fall into this narrative that we have of resentment and trappedness.
And instead, I can help rewrite I can help step back and
I guess have grace for you in that in those moments and not feel sucked sucked into it and
I don't know I just keep going back to responsible if it's like it's absurd that you're complaining
about the supreme court and I'm like feeling burdened by it like that's that is an absurd thing and that's a way to be benevolent to you and to
bring benevolence into our dynamic yeah And I was playing a role and I've got one note and then
we just, we were both playing our roles. I don't know, the whole play metaphor,
I think it's a little uncomfortable for me.
It's a little uncomfortable for me, too. But I also feel like I can access it through practice, through some rehearsals.
But this idea that we aren't etched in, that actually there is some buoyancy and some malleability and that it can change.
And you just change the costume.
I'm not saying it's that simple, right?
I know it's not.
There's even some peril to going through life thinking that you're a character who can just
change hats.
You're not going through life.
It's just that the parts you've been playing are deadly.
And boring.
And if you continue and boring and feel like, how did I get there?
The illicit grief.
I once was.
What happened to that person?
Where did she go?
So this is one attempt.
And it feels awkward at first.
But you know what's bizarre?
Is that what you're doing doesn't feel awkward.
I mean, it does.
It feels awkward to have like a monologue go on and have to pretend to respond to it.
It's not authentically like, oh, tell me more.
It's like, all right, do I try to like puncture the anger or do I snap back or do I walk away?
I'm still deciding what is my next move as this actor.
Could you do a little venting?
Yeah, you want to give me something to vent about?
No, no, just, I don't think you need help.
Would you do a little vent?
That comes so natural to you, so.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Are you okay if we try it?
Yeah.
I mean, you could just talk about what you were doing last night.
You got too much.
You want me to just recount yesterday?
Too many, yeah.
All right.
Yeah, today was fine, or it was fine until around lunchtime when I looked down and I only have one pair of pants that don't have holes in them.
And I wore them today and then a pen exploded in them and it looks like I'm walking around like a cartoon.
So then I had to, I forewent lunch and I had to go to the store and I had to buy another pair of pants.
And then what's-his-name came and he was late.
And so then I ended up just staying late and I was racing home.
And, well, then I didn't race home because because I was late,
I figured this is the time to go to the grocery store.
And that particular grocery store, like every single grocery store in this town.
You don't have to freeze.
You can literally stop him at any moment with the most discontinuous line.
I was walking in there.
There's no end to this.
It's not like this will end.
No, I was shoulder to shoulder with everybody.
And then I'm packing all this stuff up.
And nobody's going in the same direction.
There's no flow.
I'm trying to listen to music, trying to calm myself.
And then I know that these bags are getting heavier and my back is about to break.
And then I get on the train.
Nowhere to set anything down.
There's a dog.
It's really good.
Yeah.
And so I look at people and I'm like, if I look at you and you have four bags on your back,
maybe you're in the same boat as a pregnant person or an elderly person.
Maybe you should pretend to be pregnant.
Maybe I should pretend to be pregnant. Maybe I should pretend to be pregnant.
If you were in the theater, you'd be watching this and you'd think this guy's good.
At home, you'd think this is unbearable.
Yeah.
The actor thing is really hard for me.
It's like, there's this like stepping into performance that happens fluidly.
And I'm always grounded in like, how do I respond to this?
Like this is happening without me here.
So, you know, you wouldn't respond to someone on stage.
Like there's a dominating factor to it where it's like I walk away and I've just absorbed this performance.
I don't feel it as like, oh, my partner's having a bad day.
Like, I want to help.
I feel it as like, oh, there's a performance of discontent and it's directed at me.
And I don't know how to be an actor.
I'm not trained that way.
I don't.
So the idea of like stepping on stage with him, I get it.
I think there's a lot of opportunity to pull him closer to me off stage.
The goal is not to bring him closer to you.
The goal is for you to create a boundary.
Yeah.
Where his monologue doesn't become your internal life.
Yeah.
It's really about experiencing a separateness.
Yeah.
Because you dream separateness, but you are invaded with everything he has just said.
Right.
It's like he colors your entire interiority.
Yeah.
But I feel like I have relationships in which people share deep, intense emotions.
And you don't have that issue.
I don't have that issue.
And I've attributed to like, well, they're sharing their experience
and they're being vulnerable and I can hold space for that.
But this is not that.
So how do I maintain that space with him?
The fact that I don't need to do this with other people is great.
And then there is also the fact that sometimes with our partners,
we end up experiencing what we felt at home more than with anybody else.
There's only two relationships that resemble each other.
The one you grew up in and the one you then have a romantic tie to, even if it's an undone tie at this point.
So it's about, you know what, I prefer the one of yesterday.
Yesterday's was better.
It's that level of comment. It's not entering you know what, I prefer the one of yesterday. Yesterday's was better. It's that level of comment.
It's not entering the stage with him.
So it's not like breaking him off of it.
None of it.
It's just about.
It's all about you.
It's about me.
It's all about you.
That's the whole point.
It's about, you know, it's amazing the level of detail with which you observe people on the subway.
It's so great because most people these days don't look at anything.
You should write that down.
Yeah.
He may not even smile.
Now he's smiling.
He may not smile, but you won't get sucked in.
Yeah.
This is the first level of operation.
I'm doing real micro surgery here.
Those little lines, they preserve you.
They create a boundary.
It would be great if he didn't do what he does
and he did what the other friends do.
But it's not happening that way.
So you need that agency that you described.
I have a way of actually not having your whole day become my day.
Yeah.
That is fusion.
Yeah.
And I'm giving you one little tool for differentiation.
Because now I'd say I'm going to my root.
I'm shutting down.
That means that the only way I can have a boundary is if I disconnect and I cut off
and I completely leave.
That's okay. But that's one piece in the
repertoire right right and most of the time by the time i've closed my door that whole shtick
is inside of me anyway yeah walking down the hallway it takes me god knows how long before i
can cleanse that out yeah whereas if he goes into his thing and you just give him what's a line it you know a response
that actually preserves me right because he can blame me for whatever but i don't have to
accept that that's true you're in it yeah you're in it saying i don't want to be in it
yeah but you're in it and so you're in it and I can't leave it
unless you change unless you go to therapy that's all fusion yeah I need you to change versus if I
don't want to do this I don't do this yeah fusion is when I need him to change yeah in order for me
to not have to feel what I feel yeah that's how intertwined we are yeah if I want to not have to feel what I feel. Yeah. That's how intertwined we are. Yeah.
If I want to be able to hold on to myself in his presence,
I need to create that line, that delineation.
This is very profound, what we're saying here.
It's one of the most challenging things in a relationship.
I'm doing it in this pseudo-playful way,
but the underlying of this is a real restructuring
of the whole relationship,
which you're going to need
no matter what model you opt for afterwards.
It's so tempting to want the other person to stop doing what they do so that we won't feel what we feel. And yet there is so much more power and agency if we find a way to disengage
emotionally in a way that preserves us without having to leave the other person completely.
What I'm talking about with her is actually a way to stay connected to herself, to not let his day
become her day, to not be hijacked, but also to not have to sever the entire connection.
I'm not only interested in this between him and her,
but I also know there is a child in the picture.
And because this is intergenerational,
the chain goes on. 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,
Destry Sibley, Sabrina Farhi,
Kristen Muller, and Julian Hatton.
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.