Lori Gottlieb: Stop Mistaking Calm for Boring! (Follow THIS Simple Rule to Build REAL Love)
When was the last time you felt truly at ease with someone?
Do you feel that kind of ease often, or was it rare?
In this special live episode recorded at the DAR Constitution Hall in Washington, D.C., Jay sits down with bestselling author and therapist Lori Gottlieb to explore the hidden dynamics that shape our relationships. Together, they unpack why so many of us feel the need to “perform” for love and how fear of rejection, perfectionism, and old emotional patterns can quietly erode connection. Lori shares how true intimacy begins with acceptance, not just of our partners, but of ourselves, and why showing up authentically is the only way to feel genuinely seen.
Through humor, warmth, and real audience interactions, Jay and Lori dive into topics like vulnerability, emotional safety, and the balance between “me time” and “we time.” They share how to stop trying to fix or control your partner, how to communicate without defensiveness, and how to build relationships rooted in curiosity and compassion instead of criticism.
This conversation is a reminder that love isn’t about finding someone who reads your mind, it’s about learning each other’s language, embracing imperfections, and creating a safe space where both people can grow.
In this interview, you'll learn:
How to Stop Performing for Love
How to Create Emotional Safety in a Relationship
How to Let Your Partner Be Vulnerable
How to Build Connection Through Acceptance
How to Communicate Without Getting Defensive
How to Balance “Me Time” and “We Time”
How to Love Without Trying to Fix
Love is not a performance, it’s a practice. It’s built in the quiet moments when we choose to listen instead of defend, to understand instead of control, and to show up even when it feels uncomfortable. Every relationship, whether romantic or otherwise, becomes stronger when we replace judgment with curiosity and fear with honesty.
With Love and Gratitude,
Jay Shetty
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What We Discuss:
00:00 Intro
00:54 Earning Love Through Real Connection
03:16 Why You Should Speak Up Early
06:51 Creating a Safe Space for Vulnerability
11:20 Can You Love Someone Without Loving Yourself?
13:55 How Acceptance Strengthens Your Relationship
20:37 Compatibility vs. Chemistry: What Matters More?
25:07 Do Couples Need Individual Therapy Too?
28:05 A Live Couples Therapy Session
44:06 Communicate Clearly Not Through Assumptions
47:08 Healthy Ways to Approach Conflict
51:28 Understanding the Many Forms of Love
57:46 Are Both of Your Needs Being Met?
01:01:44 Learning to Embrace and Communicate Differences
Episode Resources:
Lori Gottlieb | YouTube
Lori Gottlieb | Instagram
Lori Gottlieb | Website
Maybe You Should Talk to Someone
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Transcript
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Speaker 2 What are you doing this Thanksgiving? Besides overindulging and watching football?
Speaker 2 Well, maybe take the opportunity to reconnect with some friends through Facebook, comment on an old friend's post, or post to a Facebook group telling the gang you want to get together.
Speaker 2
I'll even write it for you. Hey, everybody, let's meet at mine for pizza and football.
Facebook offers a great way to connect, and a little connection goes a long way.
Speaker 2 Let's reconnect this holiday season with Facebook.
Speaker 2 Radhi, we're always talking about being intentional with our time and energy, right? What about gifting with intention?
Speaker 3
Apple Gift Card is perfect. They can use it for meditation apps on the App Store or audio books from Apple Books.
Whatever nourishes their mind best.
Speaker 2 Exactly. It's a gift of possibilities aligned with their personal growth journey.
Speaker 3 Visit applegiftcard.apple.com to learn more and gift with purpose today.
Speaker 4 We feel like we have to earn our love, that we're not enough just to be there, that we have have to somehow earn it through these external criteria.
Speaker 4 I have to be so attractive and so funny and so entertaining. And you do have to earn love, by the way, but you earn it by being relational.
Speaker 2 I'm so excited to finally share the live interviews from my very first podcast tour. This episode features my interview with Laurie Gottlieb at DAR Constitution Hall in Washington, D.C.
Speaker 5 Wow, wow, wow, everyone.
Speaker 2
I am so excited to be here tonight at the DAR Constitution Hall in Washington, D.C. with the one and only Laurie Gottlieb.
Give it up for Laurie, everyone.
Speaker 2 Now, Laurie has been a dear friend for the last few years and has been one of our most popular on-purpose guests.
Speaker 2 She's been on the show at least three times, and we're going to have her back on every year that she possibly can. So, Laurie, to do this in person when we're usually in the studio is a real treat.
Speaker 2 So thank you so much for flying out as well. I'm so grateful that you're here.
Speaker 4 Oh, I'm so happy to be here with this wonderful crowd in DC.
Speaker 2
I love it. So I want to dive straight in with you, Laurie, because I really want to dive into your mind.
You have so many incredible insights.
Speaker 2 And something we've been talking about tonight is this idea of being worried about what people think of us.
Speaker 2 And the hardest person's perception that we take the most seriously is our partners.
Speaker 2 And a lot of us can sometimes feel we're performing in relationships to try and get that validation, to try and get that attention, to try and get that affection. Why do so many of us feel that way?
Speaker 2 And what do we do about it?
Speaker 4 It's interesting, you know, I think in the beginning of a relationship, there's this joke that you're not you. You're the ambassador of you.
Speaker 4 So, you know, we're all trying to put our best foot forward. We're trying to impress the other person.
Speaker 4 But I think that once we're in the relationship, we all have some part of us that worries that we're not lovable.
Speaker 4 And maybe we're going through something hard, or maybe we're not feeling great about ourselves.
Speaker 4 The other person is going through something like they're having great success, and we don't feel like we measure up.
Speaker 4 And so I think what happens is we feel like we have to earn our love, that we're not enough just to be there, that we have to somehow earn it through these external criteria.
Speaker 4 Like, I have to be so attractive and so funny and so entertaining, and, you know, all the things. And what you do have to earn love, by the way, but you earn it by being relational.
Speaker 4 So people want to be in relationships with people who are relational. They don't want to be in relationships with people who can't listen, aren't emotionally generous, those kinds of things.
Speaker 4 But I think that, you know, when we think about performing in a relationship, That has to do with, I don't believe that you will love me if I don't earn your love.
Speaker 4 And that's a belief that we need to get rid of.
Speaker 2 How do we do that?
Speaker 4 Well, I think you need to understand that that's not the way that you earn love. So the way you earn love, as I said, is being relational.
Speaker 4
It's not about all of these other things that we try to do, like I need to look this way or be this way. The person cares about you.
They're with you. So you need to show up.
Speaker 4 And I think that that's really the answer is how do you how can you be in a relationship with somebody? You have to show up.
Speaker 4 Otherwise, if you're just in your head the whole time, you're not even there.
Speaker 2 So many of the people that I speak to, and I'm sure a lot of you can agree with this, I think a lot of people feel that at one point in their relationship, they find that their partner doesn't want to open up, doesn't want to talk about their feelings, isn't comfortable being vulnerable, and may actually be more closed off.
Speaker 2 So I often find in a relationship, there's one person who wants to talk about everything,
Speaker 2 and then the other person doesn't want to talk about anything.
Speaker 2 And so even though we want to be relational, you often find that one person doesn't, whether they don't have the emotional capacity, whether they don't feel they're ready, whether they don't even allow themselves to think about these things, what do you do when you're in a relation?
Speaker 2 Can everyone relate to that, by the way? Just make some noise.
Speaker 5 All right.
Speaker 2 When you're with someone like that, what do you do? Where do you start?
Speaker 2
Because you want to be with them. They're not being relational.
They don't want to listen to you. They don't want to talk about their life.
How do you navigate that?
Speaker 4 First of all, I think it's really important that you notice that at the beginning of a relationship.
Speaker 4 So many people will say, you know, oh, this person doesn't really open up or they're not really there, they're not really being vulnerable with me, but that's okay because that will come.
Speaker 4 And then you keep going and you think, okay, well, it will come later, but it's still not coming. Why do we do that? Why do we ignore that? Because it's almost like attribution bias.
Speaker 4 You know, it's like you want to attribute certain traits to to the person that they don't actually have. And that's why I always say at the beginning of a relationship,
Speaker 4 you want to bring things up. People are afraid to for the reason that we said, you know, we want to be the ambassador of us at the beginning of the relationship.
Speaker 4
But actually, you want to bring things up early and often. And that's because relationships are like cement.
If you let the cement dry,
Speaker 4 and so you say, okay,
Speaker 4 this will change later. Then you're going to have to get out a jackhammer, dig everything up, right? It's really hard.
Speaker 4 But if there's still room, you can say to your partner, hey, I'm having trouble making contact with you. What's going on? Is there something about the way that we're relating? Why is it, you know,
Speaker 4 I really want to get to know you better, but I'm having trouble
Speaker 4 really understanding what's going on inside. And some of that is gendered.
Speaker 4 Okay, so some of it is a lot of times men feel like if I open up and be vulnerable, then I'm going to be perceived as weak or I'm going to be perceived you know differently and and there's some part of of women that we need to learn to provide space for men to be vulnerable because what happens is when when I'm doing couples therapy what I'll see is if it happens to be a man and a woman I will see that the woman will say to her partner, I'm so glad you're here.
Speaker 4
I really want to talk about all this stuff that we can't talk about. And I want you to tell me what's going on.
I want to really know what's going on inside of you.
Speaker 4 And then he opens up and then maybe he tears up, maybe he starts crying, and she's like, whoa.
Speaker 4 Right? So part of it is, I don't feel safe when you don't open up to me, but I also, in a weird way, and I can't explain it, I don't feel safe when you're crying either.
Speaker 4 So we need to make sure that we are providing the space for the partner who's not vulnerable to be vulnerable. We can ask them what would be helpful.
Speaker 4 and i think we just don't ask the questions and then we say well this person's not capable of it they might be very capable of it if you give them the space we're all looking for that safety yeah and we're so scared that if we showed our true selves
Speaker 2 then it wouldn't be a safe space anymore and that maybe that part of us will be too hard to handle too hard to hold too hard to embrace And so we just lock it up inside. And we never share that.
Speaker 2 We never show that. And the challenge challenge that happens is the other person thinks you don't have the capacity.
Speaker 2 And actually you're thinking, well, I don't think you actually have the capacity for me to be all of myself.
Speaker 2 And it really does require a lot from people to allow their partner to be all of themselves.
Speaker 2 How do we communicate?
Speaker 2 That we're ready to create a safe space for that person and how do we actually create the resilience in ourselves to have the space for whatever may come like I remember when I was talking to a couple a few years ago
Speaker 2 it was it was similar to the the gender
Speaker 2 play that you mentioned where she was like I want you to be really really open to the man
Speaker 2 and he was just like well if I tell you this I'm scared you won't like it and then he opened up about some of the challenges he'd had in his past And that really made her feel insecure about him, even though it wasn't to do with them.
Speaker 2 So it can be really complicated. How do we truly have emotional availability to make space for what someone has to say for us?
Speaker 4 That's such an important point because it's not just saying that you have the space, it's actually having the space.
Speaker 4
And that's where it's hard for us sometimes to separate out who we are from who they are. So they're telling you something about them and they're asking you to sit with them.
They're inviting you.
Speaker 4
to come closer. And we think, oh, they're telling me something that feels threatening to me.
So So when we talk about vulnerability, there's two kinds of vulnerability.
Speaker 4 There's vulnerability of, I'm going to tell you something about my past that feels delicate to me. But what really kind of triggers the partner sometimes is, I'm going to tell you something about
Speaker 4 you in relation to me that is delicate.
Speaker 4 And so how can we be vulnerable about something relational between us?
Speaker 4 And that's where couples get into a lot of trouble because instead of hearing the other person, they're getting defensive, they're feeling blamed, they're feeling criticized.
Speaker 4
When really the invitation is, please come closer. I trust you and I feel close to you.
So isn't it funny how we hear the opposite message?
Speaker 4
We hear like, something's wrong with you, you're damaged, I'm criticizing you. That's what we're hearing.
But actually, the invitation was the opposite.
Speaker 4
And that's because in any moment when there are two people in conversation, there are up to a dozen people in the room. And by that, I mean, think about who's in the room.
Like take attendance.
Speaker 4 Have any of you ever been talking to somebody else in the room and it feels like it's not just the two of you? Anybody?
Speaker 4 Where it feels like, wow, something else, I don't know what just happened with the other person, but that's not what I said, that's not what I meant, that wasn't, you know, like that, what conversation are they in?
Speaker 4 Well, That is because you need to say, you know, who's in the room?
Speaker 4 A parent, a grandparent, their parents, because of the generational generational patterns that have gone down through the generations a teacher who told you that you would never amount to something the teacher who told you you were fabulous
Speaker 4 you know and the first boyfriend or girlfriend you had like all those people are in the room but we don't know it so you have to if you're having a big reaction to something we always say if it's hysterical it's historical you are having a reaction that feels outsized to what is actually being said it's like you went from zero to 60 sixty in your body.
Speaker 4
If it's hysterical, it's historical. Who else? Who are these figures in the room? Take attendance, see who's in the room.
And then who do you want to invite in the room and who's not invited?
Speaker 4 And then tell the people very kindly, hey, mom, hey, dad, hey, grandma, hey, sibling.
Speaker 4 You're not invited into this conversation. So you go, and I'm going to come back into the conversation with this person that I'm talking to.
Speaker 2
Wow, I love that. I love that.
That's so powerful.
Speaker 2 It resonates so strongly with so many interactions I can think of. I wanted to ask you, Laurie, can you truly love someone if you don't love yourself?
Speaker 4 I get asked that question all the time. And I think the better question is, can you truly accept someone if you don't accept yourself?
Speaker 4 One of the most loving things you can do to yourself and to other people is acceptance. And acceptance doesn't mean settling or compromising.
Speaker 4 It means embracing the fullness of the other person's humanity and embracing the fullness of your humanity. So when people say, you know, will you love me if, right, it's, do you accept me fully?
Speaker 4
is really the question. And I don't think that you can accept someone else fully if you don't accept yourself fully.
Because, you know, we can't order up people a la carte.
Speaker 4 You know, like, like, we think we can just order up anything the way we want nowadays. Just with, like, you can order online, you can get anything.
Speaker 4 It's like, you know, what are your special instructions?
Speaker 4
You know, leave this on the side. You can't do that with people.
They just come the way they come.
Speaker 4 So you can't be like, yeah, I love everything about you, but I want to leave like your anxiety on the side. I want to leave your neuroses on the side.
Speaker 4 I want to leave that history that you have with that other person on the side. I wish that didn't happen.
Speaker 4
You can't do that. So they come fully formed, no substitutions.
It's the way it is on on the menu. That's how they come.
And you do too, by the way.
Speaker 4 So we forget, sometimes we think, like, I have to accept all these things about the other person. What about the things that they're accepting about you?
Speaker 4 Right? And if you are truly honest about it, not like in a job interview when people say, you know, what is your greatest weakness and you couch it as a strength, like, I work too hard, right?
Speaker 4
That's my greatest weakness is. I'm just a perfectionist and I work too hard.
Well, no, that's not on your list. The list has to be something real like, I can be really inflexible or
Speaker 4
I am still working on this one thing and that can be challenging for my partner. You know, whatever the things are, be honest.
You know what the things are that you have to accept.
Speaker 4 And once you accept those in yourself, what happens is something kind of miraculous. Not only do you feel more loved because you are more accepted, but they become smaller.
Speaker 4 So those things that feel very huge to you, once you've said, you know what, I'm not going to focus on them or obsess about them anymore, all of a sudden they don't take up so much emotional real estate.
Speaker 4 It's like, I just accept that about myself. Moving on.
Speaker 2 Yeah, that's super powerful advice.
Speaker 2 That resonates so much more, the word acceptance versus love.
Speaker 2 Because I think love kind of gets convoluted when you're having that conversation. Like, do I love myself? Do they love me? Do I love them? Whereas acceptance kind of gets to the heart of it.
Speaker 2 And even as I was listening to it, I was thinking about like,
Speaker 2 I was talking to someone else yesterday about this, and I was talking about me and my wife Radhi.
Speaker 2 And
Speaker 2
I was explaining that really acceptance is what helps our relationship work. We're very different people.
We have very different priorities.
Speaker 2 And we have a lot of different things that we like and engage with, but we respect that that's what makes the other person attractive to to us. Yes.
Speaker 2
So what I mean by that is when Radi met me, I'm the same person I've been, which is I'm mission-oriented. I'm very focused on my purpose.
It's my top priority in life, and I love it.
Speaker 2
And thankfully, knock on wood, in the last 12 years, Radhi's never said to me, you work too much. Because she knows I love this.
This is who I am. It's who I always was.
Speaker 2 And for Radhi, her top priority is her family. She loves them, a niece and a nephew, her grandma, her mom and dad, like her sister, like that's her top priority.
Speaker 2 And so she loves visiting them in England and going back, even though we live in LA.
Speaker 2 And I love that because I'm like, the reason why Radi is so lovable is because of her loving relationship with her family.
Speaker 2 And so it becomes an acceptance point of recognizing that what it's almost like you don't want to take away the secret source that makes your partner your partner, whether it's their ambition, whether it's the love for their family, whatever it may be.
Speaker 2 And when you respect it and accept it, it allows for things to blossom. Whereas when you try and take it away, you actually end up becoming their kryptonite.
Speaker 2 You're making them weaker by taking away the very thing that they value.
Speaker 4 Does that make sense? Yeah, I think of relationships as almost like a relationship is like a startup. It's like you're building, you're co-founding this, this, whatever you're building.
Speaker 4
And every single relationship, it's like a snowflake. It's unique.
There's no other relationship out there like it. There will be overlap.
Speaker 4 But the fact is, these two individuals coming together are creating something that no one else can create.
Speaker 4 And so if you take away something from one of the other people, that might be something that is really adds to the richness of the relationship. You don't want to change,
Speaker 4 you know, the person that you're with.
Speaker 4
There might change interactions between you. That's different.
So if you want to change the way that you relate to each other, but you don't want to change the essence. of the person.
Speaker 2 Yeah, I want to give another example of a weakness that I had that I had to work on which really helped me when it comes to this acceptance point.
Speaker 2
At one point in our relationship, I was always like, I was upset that Radhi didn't organize more vacations. And I was the one doing all the organizing.
Anyone can relate?
Speaker 2 If anyone's me in the relationship, yeah.
Speaker 2
And so I was upset about that. And I remember communicating that to her.
And I said, look, I'd really appreciate it if you also organize the vacations.
Speaker 2 And she said something that was so honest to me and it really, really resonated with me.
Speaker 2 She goes, Jay I would happily organize any of our vacations but the problem is if I organize it you'll have a million pieces of feedback
Speaker 2 but if you organized it I'll just happily do whatever you want to do
Speaker 2 and and it took me a second but she was spot on I'm like a perfectionist I want it done this way I want it and and I realized I was like actually she's the sweetest person in the world because when I organize a vacation she's happy to be a part of it and won't even ever say to me like, oh, I wish we did this or we should have done this.
Speaker 2 Whereas I would be like that the whole time.
Speaker 2 And it was such a like holding up a mirror to me.
Speaker 2 And I realized that I was the one discouraging her from taking responsibility in a relationship because of how I would respond. And that was a lot of self-awareness that I didn't have at that moment.
Speaker 2 And it was such a powerful thing to learn to accept that even though I thought she wasn't doing something for me, actually it was because of how I was behaving.
Speaker 4 That happens so often. I remember when I was seeing this couple,
Speaker 4 she was saying, you know, I want you to stop by on the way home from the gym. I want you to stop by to the market and I want you to get these things.
Speaker 4
And they had a baby and she wanted him to get organic strawberries. He did not have organic strawberries at Trader Joe's that day.
So what did he do? He got the regular strawberries.
Speaker 2 Oh, no.
Speaker 5 We know how this goes, guys.
Speaker 4 Now, I want to say hashtag first world problems, right? But at the same time, these are like the tiny, what do people fight about most? They're these tiny things that mean something much bigger.
Speaker 4 So for her, this meant you don't pay attention to what's important for me and our baby, right?
Speaker 4
And for him, it was like, no, I did. I did exactly what you asked.
And if I had done it my way, I would have gone to the other place and maybe they would have had organic strawberries.
Speaker 4
But I was following your directions. So I wouldn't get in trouble.
And then I got in trouble anyway.
Speaker 4 So these are the kinds of things when we try to control our partners, we're not giving them the autonomy to creatively do the things that actually would enhance the relationship.
Speaker 4 And when, you know, when we look at what is the number one
Speaker 4 trait, there are two, when we say like, what makes couples work?
Speaker 5 Okay,
Speaker 4 emotional stability, and that means like you basically, you know, have, you're working on your stuff.
Speaker 4 And the second thing is flexibility, that you have to be flexible. And so if you're the perfectionist in the relationship and you're trying to control your partner,
Speaker 4 that's going to make you very, very difficult to live with. And
Speaker 4
what will happen is you will start to lose control. Because now that person doesn't want to pay attention.
They don't trust you. They're going to try to go around you because
Speaker 4
it's kind of like we say that you need an aquarium in a relationship, also with parenting. But an aquarium is like, if it's a fishbowl, it's too tight.
It's like too constrained.
Speaker 4
If it's an aquarium, there's no rules. Nobody knows what's going on.
It doesn't feel good. It doesn't feel safe.
An aquarium is just right. Can you give the other person the equivalent of an aquarium?
Speaker 4 So they have room to swim, but there are also certain agreed upon rules in the relationship.
Speaker 2
Got it. That makes sense.
I've been dying to ask you this question, Laurie.
Speaker 5 You've
Speaker 2 coached couples in relationships for decades now and
Speaker 2 been in therapy with couples, individuals, everything. I wanted to ask you: what is the difference between compatibility and chemistry, and which one's more important?
Speaker 4 Let's do a poll.
Speaker 5 Let's do it.
Speaker 2 That's the fun of getting to do it with all of you.
Speaker 4 Who thinks that compatibility is more important than chemistry?
Speaker 2 Make some noise.
Speaker 4 Okay, and
Speaker 4 now the chemistry folks.
Speaker 2 Make some noise.
Speaker 5 All right, all right.
Speaker 4 There's a good amount for each, but here's the answer that I would give. And this is from seeing couples for all of these years.
Speaker 4 And I will say that I think that the most important form of chemistry is compatibility.
Speaker 5 So we're all right.
Speaker 4 And what I mean by that.
Speaker 4 So compatibility is,
Speaker 4 do we vibe?
Speaker 4 Do we have the same ideas about how we like to have fun? Do we have the same ideas about our goals for ourselves and for our relationship? Do we bring out the best in each other?
Speaker 4 That's like red-hot chemistry, right? But it's compatibility too.
Speaker 4 Some people would say that chemistry is, I always feel on edge with this person, but wow, that person's so hot, right?
Speaker 4
Well, the other person can be really hot. That's part of your compatibility too.
But you need the other things.
Speaker 4 If you bring out the best in each other, that is chemistry and compatibility all wrapped in one.
Speaker 5 Yeah, I agree.
Speaker 2
I love that answer. Yeah, go give it up.
There's,
Speaker 2 you reminded me of this amazing study that I read that I loved, which was talking about how when you meet someone and you feel the spark or the chemistry, really what it is, is anxiety and excitement at the same time.
Speaker 2
So it's like excitement and stress. I'll give you an example.
The excitement is, oh my gosh, they're hot, right?
Speaker 2 The stress is, do they think I'm hot, right?
Speaker 2
The excitement is, oh my gosh, I got their number. I'm going to text them.
The stress is, are they going to text me back?
Speaker 2
The excitement is, I thought we had a great date. The stress is, do they think we had a great date? And so that's what chemistry chemically actually is.
It's stress and excitement.
Speaker 2 Now, what's really interesting what this study said is that over time, when you get to know someone and you've spent time together, your stress goes down. Because now you're used to being around them.
Speaker 2
You know they like you. You know they like being around you.
You know they're going to text you back.
Speaker 2 And so because the stress goes down, excitement kind of starts to diminish and you now think it's boredom when actually it's peace.
Speaker 2 Right, so it's this really weird idea that compatibility is boring and chemistry is exciting but really real great compatibility is a sense of peace that we actually feel peaceful around each other I now don't feel on edge around you and I don't have to worry about whether you like me and that's why it's so interesting how so many relationships go through this boredom era when you've got to actually check in with yourself and say are we bored or have I just lost the stress of them liking me and texting me back and messaging me.
Speaker 4 Right, but what you get instead is you get the dopamine of this person loves me, right?
Speaker 4 Like there's something, all of the people who are dealing with what you said of, you know, the date went well, did they think the date went well?
Speaker 4 Did, you know, I got their number, are they gonna call me back? You know, all of that.
Speaker 4 That is, so when people are going through that, you know what they say in therapy when they tell you what they're really feeling? They say, all I want is to feel safe. I want peace.
Speaker 4 I want all of that, right? I just want to feel good and I know that this person likes me and I want to have fun with them. That's what they want.
Speaker 4
And And then when they have that, they say, oh no, I want the other thing. I want that other thing at the beginning.
You weren't happy at the beginning. You were stressed out all the time.
Speaker 4 You were like, is the person going to call? What's going to happen? What did it mean that the person waited this many hours between the text and the time that it, right?
Speaker 4 Nobody enjoys that. They think they did in retrospect, but at the time, when they're reporting it, they're like, I hate this.
Speaker 2 Yeah, that's so true. That's so true.
Speaker 2 We forget very quickly
Speaker 2 how anxious and nervous and stressed we were at the start when we were dating someone
Speaker 2 and what that looked like.
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Speaker 2 This episode of On Purpose is brought to you by Chase Sapphire Reserve. I believe that travel is one of the greatest gifts that we've ever been given.
Speaker 2 And Chase Sapphire Reserve has been my gateway to the world's most captivating destinations. Every time I travel, I find a part of myself I didn't know was missing.
Speaker 2
I remember being in this small town, completely unplugged, and for the first time in a while, I felt still. Travel does that.
It grounds you, expands you, and connects you to something deeper.
Speaker 2 That's why I'm always looking for experiences that go beyond the typical.
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Speaker 2 Cards issued by JP Morgan Chase Bank, NA, member FDIC, subject to credit approval, terms apply.
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Speaker 2 So you don't have to feel like wellness is out of reach. It's truly accessible to everyone, no matter where you are on the journey.
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Speaker 2 Before we go on to something really exciting and interesting, I want to do with the audience, I wanted to ask you one more question, which is this idea of should couples in therapy also be going to individual therapy?
Speaker 2 And how do you you're happy to ask that question, yeah.
Speaker 2 How do you figure that out? Like, do you go individual therapy? Do you also do couples therapy? Do you only do couples therapy? Like, how do you figure that out?
Speaker 4 I think that in a lot of ways, couples therapy is individual therapy, and at least the way that I do it. And what I do is before people come into therapy,
Speaker 4 I say to each person separately,
Speaker 4 if you are going to be the best version of yourself in this relationship, regardless of what the other person does,
Speaker 4
what do you want to work on? What is one thing that you want to work on? And I ask each of them that. They don't tell each other what it is.
It just,
Speaker 4
that's their sort of individual goal in the therapy. And so no matter what happens in the therapy, the whole time they are working on, each of them is working on that one goal.
And guess what happens?
Speaker 4 As each person is kind of doing their individual work, you don't change another person, but you influence another person. So now, oh, I am being more aware of this now.
Speaker 4 And look at the effect it's having on the other person. It's a virtuous cycle.
Speaker 4 So instead of like the vicious cycle of, well, we're doing this dance and what I do upsets this person and what they do upsets me.
Speaker 4 It's like, I'm doing something different and they're responding well to it now they're responding well to it and they're responding well to me it keeps going back and forth and I think that's so interesting because you know often in a relationship
Speaker 4 we have this this way of thinking like if I snap at you it's because I was tired and my boss was really demanding today if you snap at me it's because you're disrespectful and you don't care about me
Speaker 5 Right? That's real, yeah.
Speaker 4 So what happens is we have context because we know in our own mind mind why we did what we did. And we think we know why the other person did what they did, but we have zero context for it.
Speaker 4
We don't know. And because we feel hurt by it, we don't ask.
So I think it's really important to consider that we don't know the whole story.
Speaker 4 And so when you're doing couples therapy, you're working with the individuals at the same time. You can't just work with a couple and you can't just work with like, here's our problem.
Speaker 4
It's like, here's my stuff. Here's my history.
Here's like all the 12 people I'm bringing in the room. Here's you, your stuff, your history, the 12 people you're bringing in the room.
Speaker 4 Let's disinvite the people who don't need to be here. Let's talk about what is going on underneath the problem of who's doing the laundry.
Speaker 2
Yeah. Well said.
Well said, Lori.
Speaker 2
Amazing. All right.
Well.
Speaker 2 You know the joy of doing this live with all of you usually we're in a studio the joy of doing this live it first of all I would just want to say how much this means to me because I absolutely love this.
Speaker 2
I wish we could do every podcast like this. Like, it's so fun to see what resonates with you, and what connects with you, and what you relate to.
But I just want to get a show of hands.
Speaker 2
How many couples do we have in the house tonight? Raise your hand if you're with your partner tonight. Okay, amazing, quite a few.
I love that.
Speaker 2 Now, look, every couple, as I was sharing with me and Raleigh, too, every couple goes through disagreements and things like that.
Speaker 2 I want to give someone the opportunity to have and do an exercise with Laurie on stage right now. So if you have any couples that would love to join us on stage, raise your hands.
Speaker 2 I'm going to come out and talk to you. Raise your hands.
Speaker 5 Hello.
Speaker 4 This is going to be fun.
Speaker 5 Hi.
Speaker 4 Hi. It's going to be super fun.
Speaker 5 All right.
Speaker 5 Okay.
Speaker 4 Well, first of all, thank you guys.
Speaker 5 You guys are so brave. I'm talking about the relationship.
Speaker 2 I'm just saying here.
Speaker 4 We might bring Jay in for some mediation. So, okay, tell us your names.
Speaker 6 I'm Stephanie.
Speaker 4 Stephanie?
Speaker 5 Nico. Nico.
Speaker 4 Okay, so how are you guys at acting?
Speaker 5 Not very good.
Speaker 4 Okay, well, we're going to do our best.
Speaker 4 He's He's terrified.
Speaker 5 No, no. I think behind closed doors, I think I'm pretty good at it.
Speaker 4 All right. So I'm casting a play,
Speaker 4 and you're playing Nico.
Speaker 4 You're playing Stephanie.
Speaker 5 Nico.
Speaker 4 Okay.
Speaker 4 What is this person's name right here? Everybody say it?
Speaker 5
Nico. I'm Nico.
Good.
Speaker 4 What is this person's name over here?
Speaker 2 Stephanie.
Speaker 4 All right.
Speaker 4 So I want you guys to hold with a non-mic hand, hold hands.
Speaker 4 And we do this a lot in couples therapy because your nervous system calms down. It keeps you connected.
Speaker 4 And
Speaker 4 Nico,
Speaker 4 can you tell me what the issue is with Stephanie?
Speaker 4 And when I say what the issue is, not just what the issue is, but what does it make you feel? What comes up for you?
Speaker 4 I guess just like worry and stress, just overwhelm of emotions. Yeah, but what's the issue?
Speaker 4 What is the issue that you guys are disagreeing about?
Speaker 5 I guess the worthy
Speaker 5 of
Speaker 6 yourself.
Speaker 4 Meaning, so what happens between the two of you when you're disagreeing about...
Speaker 6 I guess I just don't like sometimes feel like I level up to the expectation of how I should be.
Speaker 4 Oh, how Stephanie wants you to be.
Speaker 4 Tell me more about what you think Stephanie, what Stephanie wants from you. What does Stephanie want you to be like?
Speaker 6 I guess just like the best I can
Speaker 6 do in any aspect, like as a mom, as a partner, just to be able to be present for the other person.
Speaker 4 So, Stephanie wants you to be a good
Speaker 5 listener.
Speaker 5 You're Nico.
Speaker 5 I'm confused. You're Nico.
Speaker 4 You're Nico.
Speaker 4
Right, so you're Nico. It's okay.
It's hard to get into the mindset of
Speaker 5 middle school also. So you're Nico.
Speaker 4
I'm Nico. Okay.
Okay.
Speaker 4
So I'm going to say that. And Stephanie, and Stephanie is not listening to this.
Okay. Okay, so you're Nico, and you're telling me what you feel like you can't tell Stephanie
Speaker 4 about
Speaker 4 how does she make you feel about whether you're
Speaker 4 living up to her expectations.
Speaker 4 I'm kind of confused.
Speaker 6 So this is as so I'm Nico and I'm communicating.
Speaker 4 So you're Nico.
Speaker 4 And what is going on with you and Stephanie?
Speaker 2 What is what is what are you feeling like Nico's perspective? What are you seeing as the challenge?
Speaker 6 I guess just like the overwhelm of supporting for the family.
Speaker 6 and letting Stephanie know that I am doing my best
Speaker 6 to take care of myself and you,
Speaker 6 but I also need to focus on like my mental health.
Speaker 4 And what does it feel like when you feel like Stephanie
Speaker 4 doesn't feel like you're doing your best?
Speaker 6 I guess just like annoyance
Speaker 6 that they're not understanding of what I'm feeling.
Speaker 4 What does Stephanie not understand?
Speaker 6 That I also need to have me time.
Speaker 4 Okay, and what happens?
Speaker 4 Why do you think Stephanie has trouble giving you the space to have me time?
Speaker 6 Because I think she also wants me time
Speaker 6 and that understanding that there is a balance. And if you get this, I have to have that too.
Speaker 4 Okay, so it has to be sort of equalized
Speaker 4
in Stephanie's mind. Yes.
but not in your mind.
Speaker 5 Right. Okay.
Speaker 4 All right, Stephanie,
Speaker 4 what's going on for you?
Speaker 5 So,
Speaker 9 right, I can see why this is hard to switch into that mindset.
Speaker 8 Yeah, so, you know, Nico works from home and
Speaker 5 he
Speaker 9 goes to his computer early in the morning, and I have to,
Speaker 9 you know, obviously help out with Natalia, our baby girl, and
Speaker 9 you know, I might see him that he might go for a run in the middle of the day, and there's something that, you know,
Speaker 9 and I think that Nico does that because he just wants to clear his mind and he wants to provide for his family. But,
Speaker 9 you know, maybe if I do something that's not necessarily me being glued to my desk, then Stephanie might or Nico.
Speaker 9 I get upset if maybe I don't see Nico if he's not 100% working at his desk and he might be doing something that he might be dedicating time for him and I'm not getting that and I'm
Speaker 9 you know, I also want to be doing my things and
Speaker 9 I'm not able to do that and I'm jealous that maybe Nico is doing that.
Speaker 4 You know why you guys are having so much trouble remembering who the other person is? Because you have the exact same complaint.
Speaker 4 That you both feel like the other person doesn't give you enough me time
Speaker 4 and the other person doesn't understand
Speaker 4 why you need it.
Speaker 4 Right. So, this is interesting because normally when I do this with couples, one person has one perspective on something, the other person has a completely different perspective on it.
Speaker 4 You guys literally have the same complaint.
Speaker 4 So, what I want you to do is I want you to imagine while you're in your roles how
Speaker 4
you come across to the other person. So I'm going to bring you back to your actual selves.
So you're Stephanie, you're Nico, okay?
Speaker 4 I want you to act out, Stephanie, how you think and make it really big and make it really, you know, like, like exaggerated.
Speaker 4 How you come across to Nico when you're frustrated with him and you want me time or you don't don't like him having me time?
Speaker 4 I feel like I sometimes act like a child.
Speaker 4 Well, let's see it. Let's see.
Speaker 4 Actually,
Speaker 4 go for it.
Speaker 4
And by the way, this is we all, we all have these moments. They're normally not on a stage.
So please know that every single person in this audience has done this just in the privacy of their own home
Speaker 4 or on my couch.
Speaker 6 Goodness gracious, babe. You don't listen.
Speaker 6 I need to just do me, have a moment for myself, stop thinking about yourself, and just listen.
Speaker 8 Baby, I have a lot of.
Speaker 4 Okay, but no, no, don't. I'm not as you're gonna respond.
Speaker 5 I'm ready. That was a great performance.
Speaker 5 Okay,
Speaker 4 Nico, tell Stephanie what it feels like when she does that.
Speaker 4
About you. Oh, you're only gonna talk about you.
You're not not going to say you, this, or you're going to talk about yourself. I feel.
Speaker 8 Yeah.
Speaker 9 Baby, you know how I like to be approached. I'm very just big on
Speaker 9 thinking before you say something.
Speaker 4 No, no, no, you're telling her or you're telling her.
Speaker 9 I don't like triggering words. I don't like it when.
Speaker 4 I'm going to give you some multiple choice. Okay.
Speaker 5 Okay.
Speaker 4 Because we don't know. We need like, it's almost like, you know, we don't, we didn't get a lot of training on like what are the feelings, right?
Speaker 4 We know like mad, sad, happy, but we don't know anything in between. It's like we know the primary colors but we don't know the shades what i saw here was i i feel angry i feel shame
Speaker 5 does that resonate yeah okay tell her about the shame
Speaker 4 it's like how i'm trying to fix this no just tell her what it what the shame is like i feel how it feels when you feel
Speaker 2 When she says that to you, when she acts in that way to you, how does that shame feel to you?
Speaker 9 Yeah, I just I feel like I'm I'm trying to juggle a lot and it doesn't make me feel like hurt or
Speaker 9 my point of view is being listened to.
Speaker 9 You know, I just wish that it was more of a conversation instead of like an attack.
Speaker 4 I want to go back to the shame only because I think that that's sort of the core of
Speaker 4 What does it mean if you disappoint her?
Speaker 4 So she's disappointed by you, rightly or wrongly, I'm not going to get into that,
Speaker 4 although I do have an opinion about it.
Speaker 4 But
Speaker 4 she's disappointed.
Speaker 4
And she's saying, I want to feel safe. I want you to provide.
I want you to use your time well. I want you to be productive.
Speaker 4 And you feel like
Speaker 4 if I don't do that for her, then I feel bad about myself. Tell her about the part that makes you feel bad about yourself.
Speaker 5 Oh, okay.
Speaker 9 Yeah, Vivi, you know, I'm very supportive of you, and
Speaker 9 I do feel bad when I see you stressed out in those situations. And
Speaker 9 I do want to make sure that you get as much time as possible. It's just hard for me to.
Speaker 5 But you're talking about her,
Speaker 4 and I want you to talk about you. And this is really hard.
Speaker 4 But what is it, what happens for you when you feel ashamed? Like, I'm not, I can't measure up to what you want, so I'm going to shut down. I'm going to stop listening to you.
Speaker 4 What happens to you?
Speaker 9 I do shut down.
Speaker 9 I guess it's hard sometimes to have that conversation and listen, and I just,
Speaker 9 yeah, I shut down. I don't.
Speaker 4 Can you act out for her what a different approach would be for her to say what she wants to say,
Speaker 4 but it doesn't look like the way she approaches you.
Speaker 8 How I would want her to.
Speaker 4 Yeah, what would you like her to say to you instead?
Speaker 9 Baby, do you think I can,
Speaker 9 you know, between one and two
Speaker 9 have some me time?
Speaker 4 Well, when she's feeling like there's a contest between who gets more me time,
Speaker 4 what would you like her to say to you instead?
Speaker 9 You know, baby,
Speaker 9 I need me time to focus on myself.
Speaker 9 This really helps me as a person and just mentally, and I think it would help our relationship more if, you know, maybe I just had an hour here to meditate and listen to my Jay Shetty podcast.
Speaker 1 Me time, all the time.
Speaker 4 Okay. And so I want you to say that to him right now? That's what he wants you to say to him? Go ahead and say it.
Speaker 6 So baby, I think I need this one, the two hours to really focus.
Speaker 4 Wait, I don't think he said two.
Speaker 5 I don't think he said two.
Speaker 4 I don't think he said two. I'm saying three now.
Speaker 4 I think he said one, and I think that was generous.
Speaker 1 One is good.
Speaker 6 So, I need this hour to focus
Speaker 6 on myself and my mental health, and it'll make me
Speaker 6 listen to the Metchi Shetty podcast.
Speaker 4 And the question might be: is that okay?
Speaker 5 Is that okay?
Speaker 4 And
Speaker 4 what can we do for you to have that? So I'm adding to that.
Speaker 6 So is that okay? And what can I do in order for that to happen?
Speaker 4 What does that feel like to you when she says that? Does that feel different from how it normally goes?
Speaker 8 A little bit, yeah.
Speaker 5 Yeah? Yeah.
Speaker 9 I'm also on a schedule, right? There's a lot of things that I'm trying to manage. And
Speaker 9 when it's just like, hey, like, I need an hour here and I'm just like well I want to give it to you but I don't you know I have a meeting at nine and then I have to get work done from the next three hours and then I you know I'm more of like on a schedule and it's it's tough for me to
Speaker 9 maybe just step away from my desk or just do something just randomly in the day of like an hour of
Speaker 4 okay so what you're requesting the two things I want you to take away from this one is how does the approach differ it helped a little bit you said and then also
Speaker 4 what are some of the practical parts of this? Like, for example, when you approach me, I can't necessarily just drop everything on a dime.
Speaker 4 So you're smiling because it sounds like that's what you've been asking for, right?
Speaker 5 Yeah. Yeah, okay.
Speaker 4 So you can understand that he's trying and he wants you to have me time and he needs some me time,
Speaker 4 but what's not being taken to account is he can't just do it spontaneously like that.
Speaker 4 So can you find a way to, so that he doesn't then argue back, well, I can't, and this and that, and then you feel shut down, and then he feels shut down, and then it's like we didn't even do this interaction.
Speaker 4 So
Speaker 4 you're going to ask differently,
Speaker 4 and you're going to make sure that you ask maybe the night before, like, hey, here's what I'm thinking. Does this work? And I want you guys to see what that would be like.
Speaker 4 And I want you to see what happens when it's a request and not a demand. Because when you acted it out, it was a demand.
Speaker 4 When you did what he said might work better better and it worked slightly better, that was a request. So here's one example.
Speaker 4 Normally, people have very different ideas about things, and it really helps them. These two have exactly the same issue.
Speaker 4 So this exercise was a little bit different, but I hope these two takeaways are going to be helpful.
Speaker 4 All right, thank you guys for coming up.
Speaker 4 How do you guys think they did?
Speaker 2 Very, very, very brave to come and do that in front of 2,500 people.
Speaker 2 It takes a lot and as you can see I love what Laurie was doing because
Speaker 2 it really shows us like we don't get to sit inside of these exercises we only get to sit inside of our own and when you're inside someone else's therapy exercise you start to recognize just how we don't have the emotional vocabulary.
Speaker 2
We don't have the communication skills. And it's not our fault.
It's because no one's ever taught us them. And so a lot of us are learning.
Speaker 2 And so having that bit of grace when we're with our partners to recognize
Speaker 2 that
Speaker 2 we can't expect people to have these emotional skills. We often expect people, Laurie, to just get us.
Speaker 2
Right. We expect our partners to just get us.
Like, it's common sense. You should get it.
Speaker 4
And we don't. Well, it's so interesting because we believe that that's the true test of love.
Like, do you just get me? And it's interesting because you think when we're babies, we don't have words.
Speaker 4 And the only way that we can communicate is by crying. And the parents are dancing around, like, oh my gosh,
Speaker 4 are you hungry? Are you cold? Are you hot? Are you tired? Do you need a diaper change? Right? We don't know what it means.
Speaker 4 But then we grow up and we expect our partner to like solve the problem in the same way. Except now we do have words and we can use those words.
Speaker 4 But our first loving experience was all about how much was my parent or caregiver, whoever, able to guess, like we want our partners to do what i needed in that moment wow wow and wow and now
Speaker 4 and now what we have instead is so then we have words and we can say hey i'm hot i'm cold i'm hungry i'm thirsty i'm tired right and we learn how to do that somehow with our partners we think i don't need to tell them that they should just know because it's our early experience of loving it's our earliest is of being loved.
Speaker 4 And so now what we have instead is we need to learn the operating instructions of our partner. So everybody comes with, you know, their history, the things that work well with them.
Speaker 4
Don't push this button, do push this button more, right, with our partners. We all know that about our partners.
But then we think, well, they should just guess.
Speaker 4 Why don't you just tell them so you can get what you want?
Speaker 4 Right? Why do we make it so hard on our partner? Just tell them, these are my operating instructions. What are yours?
Speaker 2
I want to give a big shout out to Nico and Stephanie for having the courage to do that. And I want to take it out to all of you.
I want to take some of your questions. Me and Laurie are both here.
Speaker 2
Would love to answer your questions. Paige, where are you, Paige? There you are.
Paige from my team. Give Paige a round of applause, everyone, please.
Speaker 2 Paige from my team is going to come around and hand you the mic if you have a question. So raise your hand if you have a question, and Paige will come and find you.
Speaker 2 This episode of On Purpose is brought to you by Chase Sapphire Reserve.
Speaker 2 I believe that travel is one of the greatest gifts that we've ever been given, and Chase Sapphire Reserve has been my gateway to the world's most captivating destinations.
Speaker 2
Every time I travel, I find a part of myself I didn't know was missing. I remember being in this small town, completely unplugged, and for the first time in a while, I felt still.
Travel does that.
Speaker 2 It grounds you, expands you, and connects you to something deeper. That's why I'm always looking for experiences that go beyond the typical.
Speaker 2 Chase Sapphire Reserve makes traveling a breeze, earning eight times points on all purchases through Chase Travel and granting access to Sapphire Lounge by the club at select airports nationwide.
Speaker 2 No matter my destination, travel is more rewarding with Chase Sapphire Reserve. Discover more with Chase Sapphire Reserve at chase.com forward slash Sapphire Reserve.
Speaker 2 Cards issued by JP Morgan Chase Bank, NA, member FDIC, subject to credit approval, terms apply.
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Speaker 5
Hi. Hello.
Hi. What's your name?
Speaker 2
I'm Priya. Priya, nice to meet you.
What's your question?
Speaker 11 My question is more of a scenario.
Speaker 11 If you were going somewhere with your partner, and let's say you had a disagreement and there was something that really bothered you, what's the best way to handle that situation so that you're happy and your partner's happy?
Speaker 11 And do you speak when you're upset or do you wait? And how should you communicate that? What's the best way to communicate that?
Speaker 4 I feel like when
Speaker 4 something happens, we feel like we have to resolve this right now.
Speaker 4 And if we don't resolve it right now, it's going to live with us all night and it's going to ruin our time. But you're so worked up about it that you haven't thought about it.
Speaker 4
You haven't processed it. You aren't giving the other person grace at this moment.
So that is not the time to try to resolve it.
Speaker 4
What you need in that moment is to say to each other, hey, we really care about each other. We're having this disagreement.
We know, we are confident.
Speaker 4
And you have to have confidence that we know how to resolve things. We're going to resolve this later.
Let's go have a good time.
Speaker 4
And people think, I can't do that because I'm going to be thinking about it the whole time. Well, that's your choice.
But I want to say it's a choice. It is a very volitional choice.
Speaker 4 People say, I can't help what I think about. Yes, you can.
Speaker 4 So a lot of times in relationships, you have lots of choices that you can make. You choose not to make them.
Speaker 2 Yeah, well said. And Priya, I would say that,
Speaker 2 you know, for me, there's two things that come to mind. One thing is what Laurie's saying, this idea that sometimes I'll get some friends call me in a panic, like, Jay, I've got an issue.
Speaker 2 And maybe I'm on stage when I'm getting it. And I'll be like, call me back in three days.
Speaker 2 And the reason why I say that sometimes is because unless it's life or death, usually in three days when I mess with them and go, hey, what about that issue? They're like, nah, it's all right now.
Speaker 2
You know, it was just this panic moment. And so I think there is something to be said for that.
For me and Radi,
Speaker 2 I talk a lot about, in my book, Eight Rules of Love that I wrote, I talk a lot about fight styles. And I realized, it took me a while to realize that me and Radi had different fight styles.
Speaker 2
So my fight style is the venter, the talker, the fixer. Like, I want to fix it now.
So if I'm on that date, I want to fix it right now. And Radi's is the hider.
Speaker 2
She wants to think about it, reflect, introspect, and have time. So I want to talk about it right now.
She wants to talk about it in three days.
Speaker 2 And what we had to realize was, like Laurie said, have the confidence to say, okay, we're going to meet in the middle. We'll talk about it tomorrow, right?
Speaker 2
We're going to go out and have that great time. We're going to meet in the middle.
I want to talk about it now. You need three days to process.
In one and a half days, we'll take a look at it.
Speaker 2
Because right now, it's not worth our time. You're not even ready.
And actually, even though I want to fix it now, I actually don't know enough to do that.
Speaker 2 And so recognizing the different ways in which you approach conflict, because what I used to think before is, well, if you want to talk about it in three days, that means you don't care as much as I do, which isn't true.
Speaker 2 She's actually saying, well, the fact you want to talk about it now means you don't care as much as I do because I want time to think about it.
Speaker 2 So you've got to build up that understanding of the way you both respond to conflict and taking Laurie's advice, recognize that now is not the time or the place.
Speaker 2
And we're probably going to be in a better mindset if we let this go and deal with it at a proper time and place. So I love Laurie's advice.
Right.
Speaker 4 And also you have to realize that the connection is not severed. Just because you have a disagreement doesn't mean that the connection has been damaged in any way.
Speaker 4 People are going to have disagreements all the time.
Speaker 4 And it's kind of like when you start a new exercise and you start building up muscle, you need to build up the muscle of we know how to resolve differences between us.
Speaker 4 And so the more you do it, so the first time it might be a little shaky, the second time it still might be a little shaky, but every time you learn something new about how we resolve differences together, together, and then when you resolve differences all the time, it's like, oh, yeah, we had a difference.
Speaker 4 We're going to still have a good night because our connection is strong. We're confident we can resolve it later.
Speaker 2
Thanks, Bria. I hope that helps.
Thank you so much for your question.
Speaker 2 Hey, man, what's your name? J.
Speaker 10 Eb Snail.
Speaker 2 Snell, nice to meet you.
Speaker 10 My wife's not here today, but I came with my sister.
Speaker 4 Then you can tell us everything. Exactly.
Speaker 10 She's not here, so it's a free game. No, but my question is like sometimes, you know, we
Speaker 10 don't communicate. Like we're just sitting there and I'm going to give a scenario, but you know, sometimes I'm really trying hard to understand, you know, but there's no communication.
Speaker 10 And the biggest thing that I struggle with is, you know, the love language is gifting, right? Like, what, you know, what to get her on her birthday or what to get her for, you know, a certain event.
Speaker 10 And then you spend so much time and then you get her something and you see the reaction on the face and it's not always perfect. So
Speaker 10 but sometimes I hit it, right? It's like
Speaker 10
sometimes I get it and sometimes I don't. But what do you do to kind of really understand what is it that that other person wants? Right.
And yeah, that's my question. Thank you.
Speaker 10 I know my wife's probably going to watch this video my sister took, but
Speaker 2 thanks for that question, Laurie.
Speaker 4 So this goes back to the mind reading that we were talking about, that people think somehow, you know, if you loved me that much, you would know what gift I want, and you would not get it wrong.
Speaker 4 But I think there's something so beautiful to kind of turn it around and kind of turn it on its side is to say, I love you so much that it hurts me to disappoint you.
Speaker 4 And so if you could give me a list of like five things, and I will surprise you with the one of them.
Speaker 4 But at least now I have some idea of you want all of these things, you will be happy with all of them, and I can show my love by getting you exactly what you want.
Speaker 4 You won't know which one it is, so it's still kind of a surprise.
Speaker 4 But I think that we have to understand that there's different ways to love people, and one way to love someone is to say, making you happy is my way of loving you.
Speaker 4 So, can you help me with that?
Speaker 2 Yeah, yeah I completely agree I think
Speaker 2 that so so when me and Radhi first started dating my love language was gifts as in I like receiving gifts but I like surprises and this all goes back to childhood my mom we didn't have a lot growing up but my mom would surprise me with the one gift I always wanted on my birthday right and it could be the smallest thing but I remember it so well So when I first started dating Radhi, and I hadn't really thought that through and I wasn't aware of that, I wanted her to surprise me with a gift.
Speaker 2 So she kind of knew that I I wanted a tablet, right?
Speaker 2
And my birthday came around, this tablet-sized box was there, it was wrapped up in gift wrapping, whatever. I open it up.
I take it out, it's a tablet box. It's an ASUS.
Speaker 2 What the hell is an ASIS,
Speaker 5 right?
Speaker 2
And I'm mortified. I'm like, I'm like, what's an ASIS? Like, I was trying to read it.
I'm like, am I even reading it right? Is it SUSE? Is it ASIS? Is it like, and I'm like, tablets are iPads, right?
Speaker 2 Like, there's an iPad, well, there's nothing, like, there's nothing else. And so I am mortified that she got me an ASUS.
Speaker 2 And I remember talking to her about this, and then she was like, but she was like, yeah, but I spoke to my dad and my brother-in-law.
Speaker 2
And, you know, they were telling me ASUS is the best deal, and the spec is really good. And I'm like, my mom doesn't care about what the best deal is.
I just want the best tablet.
Speaker 2 And so I've been there. I know what that feels like.
Speaker 2 And gifting in our relationship was a long time conversation and it really did take that where it got to a point where I was like I'm setting up the person I love for failure.
Speaker 2 I'm literally setting them up for failure by wanting them to guess, wanting them to get it right, wanting them to know the perfect thing. I'm setting them up for failure and guess what?
Speaker 2 No one wants to feel like a failure in a relationship.
Speaker 2 And so when you can openly say that to someone, to Jellic and saying, hey, look, like what Laurie was saying, like, I don't want to feel like a failure. Like, I love you.
Speaker 2 I want you to have the best birthday ever, but I need you to help me understand what that looks like for you and what that means.
Speaker 2
And yes, I hope that one day I will be able to understand because we've talked about it so much. But without the communication and without that, I just won't know, right? I just won't know.
And so
Speaker 2 it's hard in your situation because you're on the receiving end, you're the radi in the relationship.
Speaker 2 But that's where we got to in the end.
Speaker 2 And I realized, and obviously over time I realized how wrong I was for my approach and my perspective on it and it made me realize how much our childhood as Laurie was saying earlier has programmed us to believe what a perfect birthday is now.
Speaker 2 I've changed my views on what a perfect birthday is because of that negative experience because of making the person I've love feel that way And so I hope that stays with you to take Laurie's advice to really communicate that to make that point that hey I want you to have the best birthday.
Speaker 4 I don't want to let you down I I don't want to feel like a failure I want you to have something amazing but I need your help because I can't read minds I wish I could but I can't and no one else can by the way not even Radhi can and you know Jay said that you know he's kind of like you so hopefully that helps too and I think that that childhood stuff is so important because we think you know if you were someone who got everything your mom did it perfectly then you think well that's what that's what feeling special is like so if she doesn't do that then she doesn't think I'm special Or if you did get the gifts that you wanted because you think my parents didn't really know me, like I was an artist and they got me like a baseball bat.
Speaker 4 You know, it's like, what?
Speaker 4 Like, do you even know me?
Speaker 4 That's what you, then you project that onto your partner. It's not that your partner doesn't know you, but, you know, the fine-tuning of it, sometimes they need some help.
Speaker 2
Absolutely. And I realized I did tell my mom, she was just sneaky at finding out.
Yeah. Like, it's not like she knew.
I would tell her. I was like, I want a Power Ranger.
Like, it was very bad.
Speaker 4
Yeah, that's sneaky, Jay. It was very bad.
That's really sneaky.
Speaker 5 I want a Power Ranger.
Speaker 2
But it's like you did. Like, they didn't read your mind either.
Like,
Speaker 2 find out in a multitude of ways. All right, next question.
Speaker 13 I actually had to write mine down because I thought I was going to get nervous.
Speaker 13 Okay, so my question is: am I being selfish or showing narcissistic traits for needing more time and attention in a relationship?
Speaker 13 Or is it a valid, or is it valid to simply express what I needed to feel feel connected and valued?
Speaker 4 So if you were to ask Instagram this question,
Speaker 4 you guys all know what the answer on Instagram is, right? No, you're not a narcissist. You should have all the time and attention that you need, right? That's the Instagram answer.
Speaker 4 I have a slightly more nuanced answer. And I think that we have to really understand that being in a relationship is relational.
Speaker 4 That the person that you're with has needs too.
Speaker 4 And so when you, when they, when for them it feels too demanding, the question is, is
Speaker 4 are they getting their needs met too? Because usually when they think the other person's too demanding, it means that there's not enough room for both of you in the relationship.
Speaker 4 So that's really your guide. Like, do both of you feel like you're getting your needs met? Do both of you feel like there's enough room there?
Speaker 4 So it's not just a cut and dry, you know, well, they should, of course, all of my needs should be met for how much time I want to spend with them or, right? It's a conversation and it evolves.
Speaker 2 I think it comes down to a few things. The first thing I'd say is,
Speaker 2 are you clear about what that means?
Speaker 2 Like, for example, if it's unclear, like, I wish that person would message me all day, call me twice a day, be there for me every evening,
Speaker 2 you know, it's like that can be a and it may not be clear. Whereas if it's clear, like, hey, I just want to spend two hours with you on a Saturday afternoon and have it just be us, right?
Speaker 2 It's really clear, it's really specific, it's really organized. Or is it like, hey, I just need you all the time?
Speaker 2 And so much of this comes down to our attachment styles and how the other person makes us feel as well.
Speaker 2 I think the challenge we have in this, in your question, is we don't know enough about the other person in the relationship.
Speaker 2 And often I've seen it that if the other person's prioritizing a bunch of other stuff stuff and you don't feel prioritized and you're not a part of the priorities and the schedule, then that's unfair, right?
Speaker 2 If you've had a conversation. But that's why it comes down to having a conversation, setting expectations extremely clearly, being really specific, and then looking at the reality of their lifestyle.
Speaker 2 Like I meet a lot of people who say to me, I really want my partner to be ambitious, but I want them to be really available. And I'm like, those two things just don't go together.
Speaker 2 Like the reality is that person doesn't exist It's really really hard for someone to be super ambitious and super available because that comes with certain give and take I'm not saying it's not possible to have someone who's slightly ambitious and available I'm saying that having both in their most extreme form is unrealistic and so I think it's really looking at the complete person rather than this one area of them because they may be really great at a bunch of other stuff and they need to improve in this area or they're not great at any of it and they're not good at this area and then you've got to really look for what you deserve and not settle for less.
Speaker 4 And I want to say one thing: you used the word narcissist, it is not narcissistic to have needs.
Speaker 4 So, a narcissist is someone who is all about themselves, but that doesn't mean because you have needs and you want to spend time with your partner, even if those needs are maybe more than that partner wants or can deal with, you're not a narcissist.
Speaker 4
You're human, that's human. We want to connect.
We have needs.
Speaker 2 Absolutely not a narcissist, for sure.
Speaker 2 it's good we're clarifying that uh we'll take one last question i really love you jay you're researching
Speaker 14 i love you too kaylin i'm learning about you i really appreciate you um it we're talking a lot about couples and relationships and everything that you've talked about today
Speaker 5 um
Speaker 14 how does that apply to uh couples that are experienced neurodivergence because when you're saying you know in the role play earlier i was thinking, yeah, like an hour would be great.
Speaker 14 I'm like, but if you're a neurodivergent like myself, it is really hard to go from one task to another, to another, to another, to another, like a switch, you know, task switching and executive functioning.
Speaker 14 And so you're talking a lot about,
Speaker 14 it just feels like...
Speaker 4 Caitlin, in this scenario, you're the neurodivergent person or your partner?
Speaker 14 My question is, how do you, everything that you've, all the
Speaker 14 advice that you've given for couples, how would that be different or the same for a couple that has someone with
Speaker 14 with one person that's neurodivergent or both because they're my husband is also neurodivergent so it's a it's a learning curve and it's wonderful but it everything that you're talking about applies differently
Speaker 14 and so
Speaker 14 oh hello
Speaker 4 so I'm just understand trying to understand what that looks like you know I think that we are all, neurodivergence is on a spectrum, and we are all, whether we have a diagnosis or we don't have a diagnosis, you know, we're all different from each other.
Speaker 4 And whether you have a diagnosis that makes it a little more challenging,
Speaker 4 regardless, we still have to learn who the other person is, what are some of their strengths, what are some of their challenges, what are some of our strengths, what are some of our challenges, and how do we communicate about them.
Speaker 4 And we've had, you know, I see so many couples where you know someone will say well my partner's on the spectrum or my partner deals with this or that and
Speaker 4 it's the same you know there's like specifics to a specific diagnosis but at the same time the same kind of human issues around how do we communicate about our differences what do we do with these challenges that maybe are a little bit more challenging because of this person's neurodivergence But I don't, I don't, I think when people kind of try to label and get kind of stuck in, because because of this, this is why I'm acting this way, or this is why my partner acts this way, we lose the person behind the diagnosis, and we never, ever, ever want to do that.
Speaker 4 You will lose so much about the person if you see everything through the lens of their neurodivergence.
Speaker 2 Unfortunately, that's all we have time for today. For the questions,
Speaker 2 I want to give it up for Laurie. Got leave, everyone.
Speaker 4 Thank you.
Speaker 2 Please make some noise.
Speaker 2 So, so grateful.
Speaker 2 Thank you, Laurie.
Speaker 4 This is so great. Thank you for joining you.
Speaker 5 You're amazing.
Speaker 4 Thank you.
Speaker 2 Give it up for Laurie, everyone.
Speaker 4 Thank you so much. Thank you.
Speaker 2 Hey, everyone.
Speaker 2 If you loved that conversation, go and check out my episode with the world's leading therapist, Laurie Gottlieb, where she answers the biggest questions that people ask in therapy when it comes to love, relationships, heartbreak, and dating.
Speaker 2 If you're trying to figure out that space right now, you won't want to miss this conversation.
Speaker 4
If it's a romantic relationship, hold hands. It's really hard to argue.
It actually calms your nervous systems. Just hold hands as you're having the conversation.
It's so lovely.
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