The Sex Expert (Esther Perel): The Relationship Crisis No One Talks About That's Killing Your Sex Life!

1h 29m
Swipe left, feel empty, and wonder why? Esther Perel reveals the hidden truths behind the dating crisis, loneliness, and the shocking decline in sex and intimacy.

Esther Perel is a world-renowned psychotherapist and relationship expert, widely recognised as one of today’s most insightful and original voices on modern relationships. She is the bestselling author of books such as, ‘The State of Affairs’.

She explains:

Why MEN Over 30 Aren’t Having Sex Anymore.

The SEX GAME that could Save Your Relationship.

How CHILDHOOD TRAUMA is Secretly Sabotaging Your Marriage.

Why Investing in AUTHENTIC CONNECTION is the key to a Fulfilling Life.

The ONE RED FLAG that Predicts Divorce.

00:00 Intro

02:29 Esther’s Main Concern About Human Connection

03:22 What’s the Consequence of Losing Social Skills?

04:19 Is Online Dating the Only Choice Nowadays?

07:13 The Value of Rejection

07:52 Rejection from the Apps

08:48 What to Do If Dating Apps Don’t Work for You

11:26 Is Too Much Choice Making Dating Harder?

13:01 How to Cope with Online Dating Burnout

14:30 The Changing Role of Masculinity and Its Impact on Society

15:57 Loneliness Today

17:17 Why Do People Have Less Sex Nowadays?

20:17 Importance of Deep Connection in Relationships

21:51 How Phone Use Affects Connection and Sexual Attraction

28:07 Questions from Steven’s Friends

28:53 Is It Always a Good Idea to Admit to Infidelity?

31:17 Attraction with a Partner

33:36 Is Long-Term Faithfulness in a Relationship Possible?

37:06 Importance of Taking Accountability

39:21 How People Are Energizing Their Relationships

42:59 How to Revive Intimacy When Gone for So Long

44:52 Ads

45:55 Do People Enjoy Sex Less Than Before?

48:15 Do I Have to Work on Myself Before I Can Have a Good Relationship?

49:49 Has the Culture of Self-Love Gone Too Far?

51:19 Are Men Emasculated by the Success of Women?

59:08 What Is Social Confidence?

1:02:56 What Gives a Traumatic Experience Meaning?

1:14:10 Would You Delete Mobile Phones to Help Connection?

1:17:08 Can Social Connection Principles Apply to a Workplace?

1:22:06 How Are You Going to Adapt to a World of AI and Robots?

Follow Esther:

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You can purchase Esther’s new 100 question game, ‘Where Should We Begin? At Work’, here: https://bit.ly/4kF0F7h

You can purchase Esther’s book ‘The State of Affairs’, here:  https://amzn.to/4l0KaSv

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Transcript

At Instacart, we know that back to school doesn't just mean back to school.

It means back to lunchbox packing, back to after-school snacking, back to soccer games, drama rehearsals, band practices, all back to back to back.

And if all of that's back, then it's time you get back to ordering through Instacart and do whatever it is that you need to get your life back on track.

Instacart, we're here.

So I messaged my closest friends.

Can you tell me what question you have that you wouldn't ever say out loud?

Give me a few.

How can I be satisfied with just one sexual partner?

I have

my partner.

Should I tell them?

I no longer find my partner attractive, but I don't know how to tell her.

We have a lot to talk about.

Are you gonna record me to him?

Okay.

Here's what I would suggest.

Esther Perell is regarded as one of the most sought-after relationship therapists in the world.

For the past 40 years, she's been helping millions of people with her brutally honest and wildly relatable insights.

People are having less sex.

Why?

Is the sex getting less interesting?

No, their life with each other is less interesting.

And what concerns me at this moment is the loss of social skills.

But they are vital to us.

And we have less and less opportunities to practice because we are pursuing connection beyond the human world.

People don't have partner sex.

They have sex on porn.

We also are surrounded by algorithmic perfections.

And that's creating warped expectations that we bring to our relationships.

And then there's the misery of the dating app.

Have you heard this story of the guy who swiped two million times to get one date?

Oh god.

It appears that you have many options, but you'll swipe, swipe, swipe and you're going to get frustrated because you don't get matched with anybody.

But don't make the app become the replacement where you can actually go outside, meet people and also deal with rejection because it's a major feature to develop relationships.

but we've never been more free but we've never been more alone and more filled with self-doubt so tell me how to fix it in order to have a great relationship there's a ton of really important things the first thing this

quick one before we get back to this episode just give me 30 seconds of your time Two things I wanted to say.

The first thing is a huge thank you for listening and tuning into the show week after week.

It means the world to all of us and this really is a dream that we absolutely never had and couldn't have imagined getting to this place.

But secondly, it's a dream where we feel like we're only just getting started.

And if you enjoy what we do here, please join the 24% of people that listen to this podcast regularly and follow us on this app.

Here's a promise I'm going to make to you.

I'm going to do everything in my power to make this show as good as I can now and into the future.

We're going to deliver the guests that you want me to speak to, and we're going to continue to keep doing all of the things you love about this show.

Thank you.

Thank you so much.

Back to the episode.

Esther, with all that you know and with all that you study, and with all that you research and write about and think about,

what is it that concerns you most?

What is front of mind for you when you think about mating and dating and human connection?

What concerns me most,

I think, is the fact that there is a unique moment in history at this moment where we are redesigning our communication, our ways of connecting, our ways of answering the big questions.

But specifically in the realm of relationships, it's social atrophy.

I think we are losing social skills.

And the word atrophy, for anyone that doesn't know, is that.

Atrophy is when you don't use muscles, they go numb.

Social atrophy is when you no longer know how to speak to people.

And what is the cost of that?

If we do lose that social ability to connect and to have happenstance, what price do we pay?

Why does life get harder and how does it get harder?

Because we are social creatures.

We are wired for connection.

We live longer because we are connected.

We don't live longer because we are master biohackers.

We need those connections.

They are just literally vital to us.

So

it's not that we have replaced this, you know, and our skills are still honed in.

We don't.

We have less and less opportunities to practice.

If you do sports and you don't practice your sport, you wouldn't be asking me what is the price.

You would know that if you don't play and it's been years of not playing, then that thing is out of your life.

Done.

But you can do other things, whereas you can't live without connection.

So many people are...

really dissatisfied with the choices they have for connection.

Now, I'm sure we're all to blame, but when I scroll through my feed on social media, one of the things things I've seen lately, I saw it just before you arrived and also a couple of days ago, was people so angry at dating apps.

And I've got friends close to me who are furious that their only apparent option to meet someone these days is

to go outside, go walk your dog, go run, go with a bike group, go to a go do life,

and you will meet people.

I mean, you create situations.

It's not, you know, where are the available situations, where are the options for meeting people.

You create options.

You know, you're at a coffee shop, you're ordering a coffee, ask the person next to you if you can offer them one.

Do something that actually invites relatedness.

And I know the anger at the app.

I get that.

You know,

I'm actually quite connected to this whole world of dating apps.

But I think that it's a tool.

Use it,

but don't make it become the replacement for the multitudes of situations.

Yesterday I sat on a plane.

I spoke for three hours with two people just because there was no Wi-Fi.

It was just an amazing conversation.

And all of us, the moment we landed, said to each other, wow, if we had had Wi-Fi, we wouldn't have talked to each other one bit or five minutes and then be done with this.

It's all these situations that we don't take advantage of.

We used to always talk to people.

And I think if you just rely on the app,

you will go through a loop, you'll go on it, you'll swipe, swipe, swipe, you'll respond with the least amount of effort possible because you've so burned out already from doing this that you don't really want to give much of yourself.

If you don't give much of yourself, you're not going to get the kind of responses that you want.

Then you're going to get frustrated because you don't get matched with anybody, but you don't look at your own laziness that is not particularly invited for someone to actually want to match with you.

And then you say, Now I'm tired of this.

So now you get off the app for six months.

You take a break, you say, I'm done with the apps.

And then six months later, you say, I do want to meet someone.

And what do you do?

You go back on the app instead of thinking of the multitudes of situations where you can actually meet people.

And it's become so weird to talk to somebody.

You know, you can sit next to someone

at the counter and it's like you're a weirdo if you start talking to me instead of, you know, why not?

Because even in the situation of your plane ride, if there had been Wi-Fi, those people wouldn't have wanted to talk to you.

So really, regardless of your attempt, you would have been met with, you know, rejection to some degree, social rejection.

Maybe, maybe, but you know, the original app, if you really want to understand the gamification of that, it was really done as a way to not have to put yourself out and have to deal with rejection.

But do you know rejection is a major feature of relationships?

Learning to live with people who say no to us

is essential.

Have you heard this story of the guy who tracked his Tinder swipes?

And the story is that he swiped 2 million times to get one date.

And you can kind of see, this is him here.

This is the image of the swipe.

So it says, this guy swiped 2 2,058,000 million

times.

He got 2,000 matches from that,

which turned into 1,200 chats, which turned into one date.

Such a system is failing a huge percentage of people.

This is the chap.

On what up?

On Tinder, I believe it was.

Here he is.

I'll put him on the screen so everyone can see.

And you can kind of see the photos that he led with on his dating profile.

He probably shouldn't be holding a massive fish.

I'm not sure many women are into that.

Oh, he's got a fish picture.

Yes, yes.

For people like him, what's the honest advice that someone like him needs?

Because clearly dating apps aren't going to work for him, which is a lot of us from what I've heard.

How many hours he should also have put on the amount of hours that he's done?

Oh, he does have that.

He has the hours too.

So it has the amount of time he's been a member of the apps.

Right.

Just over five years, almost six years.

Yes.

I mean, the first thing, if you sat in my office and you told me this, I would not spend my time discussing what you're doing on the app.

I would discuss what you're doing off the app and if you ever are even off the app.

I mean, have you...

The amount of hours of swiping that you've done, obviously this is not yielding anything.

Why are you continuing?

Five years is an enormous amount of time in your life.

I feel sad for you.

You know, have you tried any other ways?

Have you...

Have you been with your friends?

Do you have friends?

Have your friends introduced you to people?

Have you gone to places where you are more likely to meet people?

I don't know what you're interested in, but if your fishing is one of those things, you know, maybe even at the fish market you could meet.

But I mean, more of it isn't going to give you more of it.

It's just going to make you more frustrated.

So if you were sat down.

There's a rigidity to this.

It's like, what are you trying to prove?

You know, go try something else.

If you're trying to park in a space that you can't get in, at some point, don't you go look for another space?

Is there an element of this where, you know, from what I heard from dating apps, there's only a small percentage of men that basically get all the opportunity?

If I heard, I'll put the numbers on the screen, but yeah, I know the whole

proportion of women get lots of opportunity because lots of men swipe for but opportunity for what to be swiped?

Does that mean there's and then what?

The main thing is: can we have a conversation about emotional capitalism?

You know, I go, I try,

I try to get the best, I try to shop, you know, I try to maximize my chances.

But fundamentally,

the app originally was broadening your circle.

It gave you the opportunity to meet people that you would otherwise not meet.

There was something very beautiful about that.

From that, it became a commodification.

People treat each other like shit.

People ghost each other left and right.

People tell each other things and then disappear.

People don't have to say, I'm not interested in seeing you again.

They just close the shop.

And the misery is not because they haven't met someone.

The misery is the treatment that this kind of semi-anonymity enables you.

You don't have to be polite anymore.

You don't have to treat people with minimum decency.

And that's what hurts people.

That makes people bitter, angry, doubting themselves.

A lot of things like that.

It's part of the challenge that I have so many apparent options now as someone on these dating apps.

It's kind of like going to a, when you go to like Asia or Thailand and you get the menu and that menu is so big, they'll like make anything you want.

So you find it hard to choose.

And also any choice you make, you realize that it's come at the cost of so many other things you could have had.

So it's less special, it's less scarce.

And in a world of Instagram and dating apps, it appears that I have a hundred thousand options.

Yes, it appears that you have a thousand many options and it appears that you have a paradox of choice and it appears that you constantly are dealing with the FOMO of what else is around the corner.

But the interesting thing is, when I work with people, I spend a lot of time reading, reading what they actually post.

Even a peacock is more creative than us, you know, in how they attract people, in what you say, in what...

But hey, what's up?

Wanna hang?

Is that giving you any energy in your body?

Okay, I mean, this is half the messages.

I'm watching, I'm chilling.

Okay, well, keep chilling.

It's like, where is the energy?

Where, you know, there's something about called flirting, attracting someone, showing an interest, etc., etc.

What's a better thing for us to say?

Oh, man, you know,

show interest.

I saw something in your picture.

I'm wondering, you know, if we went to listen to music, what's the first band we would go to listen to?

Something that says, you are a person with a life, with interest, with curiosity.

Show curiosity.

It's probably the first thing that you do when you are drawn to somebody.

I guess if I've been rejected so much, as you said, I've been kind of demoralized.

The energy has been taken out of me.

So now it's just become this sort of cycle of.

Well, then don't do it.

Then do something else for a while.

Don't stay in that pattern.

It's really depleting.

But the thing about the choice is that we also are living surrounded by algorithmic perfections and predictive technologies that are trying to deliver us always, you know, on demand, delivery of our every delight, always on, without any friction.

And that is creating warped expectations that we bring to our relationships.

That very same expectation for perfection and for sycophantic responses, you know.

So the more we are interacting with AIs and the more we are receiving a different kind of response, the more challenging it will be for us to actually deal with real people.

And to face what you call rejection.

Not every refusal is a rejection.

I mean, this guy didn't write how many times he wasn't interested.

He only tells you what's happening to him.

He gives you the victim story.

It's a statement of this thing doesn't work for me, and men don't get answered on the app.

And you get this whole plight, but there's no context.

I can't give you an,

and I don't think anybody should actually respond to this without knowing all these other details.

Is there an issue when you mentioned men there, is there an issue that gender roles have shifted?

And when we think about the plight of men, they are,

you know, I think the single biggest killer of men over the age of 45 is themselves.

And the gender roles have shifted so much that often men have less purpose, feelings of purpose and worth now than they used to have.

Women and men have got gotten closer to a point of financial equality.

They've gotten closer than the past, which now kind of also means that the role of a man, if we think historically, is less clear than the role of a man maybe 50, 100 years ago.

To understand masculinity, you have to understand the broader spectrum of relationships.

So relationships used to be about duty and obligation, loyalty and community.

And happiness came not from what you do for yourself, but happiness came from having fulfilled your role and your mission and your obligation to the people that you owe to.

Your family primarily.

That model is still the prevailing model in most parts of the world.

We shifted that model from duty and obligation to option and choice.

And so now we have zero clarity and a lot of freedom.

And we've never been more free, but we've never been more alone and more confused and more filled with self-doubt.

How long have you been working with

men and women in a relationship, love, connection?

40 years.

Yes.

So what have you seen change in the conversation around men and masculinity?

Like what are the different problems that men are talking about when they speak to you, that they weren't speaking about when you started your career?

I mean, you can start with the subject of loneliness.

Loneliness, which is a general societal issue at this point, is definitely a major affliction, even more so for boys and men.

Okay, loneliness was not

the story of men in the 19th century.

Men hunted together, men hiked together, men gathered together, men went to the bar together, men had conversations with other men, men

met.

So

there is nothing inherent about men that sets them up for more loneliness and isolation.

That is

really important to understand.

Men, boys till the age of four and then till the age of seven are highly emotional, they can articulate, they can, so

these are cultural phenomenons, these are social developments, this is not biological, this is not intrinsic to men.

One shift that's taken place, which I'm keen to get your perspective on, is

relates to sex.

One in three men under 30 in the US reported no sex in the past year.

That's triple the rate from 2008.

Millennials and Gen Z's are having less sex than any generation since records began, despite more access to the dating apps we talked about.

In Japan, over 40% of young adults are virgins, and many say that they have no interest in sex.

And lastly, married couples in the UK and the United States report a steady decline in sexual frequencies since the early 2000s.

Yeah, I wrote about that in Mating in Captivity that came out in 2006.

That's 20 years ago.

Yes, because in order to have sex with a female partner, if that's the man you're talking about, you need to be able to approach her.

And so social atrophy is directly connected to what is often called the sexual recession.

I mean,

in mating 20 years ago, I have an entire chapter where someone basically says to me, I'd rather have the security of an MBA than of a relationship.

Okay?

And at that point already, you began to see that adolescents in the United States, it's not everywhere in the world, but certainly in the US, and we're more and more

going in groups.

and having less and less pair bonding and less and less romantic relationships that accompany you through your adolescence that develop with you and you basically develop sex as part of a plot and not as something that at some point your hormones force you to do.

But a story, a story, a relationship is a story.

And then suddenly you arrive at a certain age and now you're looking at this other person with whom you want to have sex and it's like this unknown continent that you have to conquer.

But you've never spoken with those people.

You have very little female friends who are just friends, who help you understand what happens with your girlfriend.

You know, there's an entire social map that has dissipated.

So the sex is the last thing on the list of all these disconnects that then of course lead you to have this kind of statistic.

And that means with partners, they have plenty of sex maybe with themselves and others, other,

but it's partnered sex here that is involved, right?

They have sex on porn.

They have sex.

They don't have partner sex, you know do you understand when I say to you this is a you can add that to your statistics too that the majority of men who come to sex therapy today for erectile dysfunctions are young men in their 20s

not old men after prostate issues really yes why

because they spend an enormous amount of time with themselves Watching porn and masturbating.

Yes, because in order to be able to maintain erections with a partner,

it's an attunement, right?

It's a resonance.

It's grooving together.

But if you've always just been by yourself, then you only know how to kind of be connected to your own physiological responses.

I've worried about this before.

I've worried that if I watch pornography, that I will like desensitize myself to the real thing.

Depends how much, depends if what else is there in your life.

I mean, it's not an all-or-nothing thing.

But what what I'm saying is social atrophy,

the gradual disconnect of the multiple touch points between people leads to then the challenges that are also sexual, leads to the kind of social isolation, leads to people confusing friends and friendship so they can have a thousand virtual friends but no one to feed their cat.

You know,

it's all para.

No one to feed their cat.

Yeah, who would pick up a prescription at the pharmacy?

Who may pick me up at the airport?

Who will go check on someone I care about if I happen to not be there?

Yes, who shows up for me?

Because it's foundational to trust.

Who can I lean on?

Do you have my back and I rely on you?

So do you think the partnered sex is in decline because because they're still having sex, but they're doing it on their own now with influencers?

Why did sex is in decline?

Because social connection is in decline.

Because people have less friends.

because people, the statistics on who you call to when you are in trouble are

really terrible.

People have no one to confide in.

So, how does that impact my sex with my partner?

Well, you won't have a partner usually.

What this statistic says is that there is no partner.

Young men between the age of 30 don't have sex with partners.

This one here from the British Medical Journal says that married couples in the UK and US report a steady decline in sexual frequency.

Yes.

Since basically the internet.

Yeah, so here's how this works.

How much time do you spend in front of a screen during the day?

Nine hours.

All right.

And then you sometimes think, now I'm going to go home and I'm finally can close the screens.

Yeah.

But then you're so tired that all you can do is watch TV.

Yeah.

And then while you watch TV, you're also scrolling on your phone.

Yeah.

And then while you're watching TV and scrolling on your phone, there may be somebody sitting next to you that does the exact same thing.

Yeah.

All right.

And then somebody may even say something to the other person who goes, uh-huh.

Doesn't look at them.

Uh-huh.

Very interesting.

And you really wonder why people are having less sex?

It is, it's hard.

It's hard.

I'm going to say it is hard.

Right?

So people are experiencing at that moment what I've come to call ambiguous loss.

Ambiguous loss is when I'm actually with somebody, but I don't feel the closeness, the intimacy, the connection from actually being with that person.

I don't know if you're here or not here.

Ambiguous loss is actually a term that was developed by Pauline Boss, a psychologist, who talked about it when you have a person who has Alzheimer or dementia, and they are actually physically in front of you, but they are emotionally or psychologically gone.

Or people who are deployed or have disappeared.

or miscarriage where people are no longer physically there, but they are emotionally very, very present inside of you.

In both cases, you don't know, are they here or are they not?

Do I say goodbye or do I hold on?

When I am doing this

and I have like a still face and I'm barely responding to you who said something that may be quite important, you don't know are you here, but you're not present.

I'm with you, but I'm not experiencing any of the things that one experiences from the closeness of being with you, like Alzheimer's dementia, physically there, but psychologically elsewhere.

Because it's not just that you're not here, it's that you're in another world.

You've gone somewhere.

You may be talking to who knows.

And I guess this is the, from reading your work, this is the crux of many an argument.

The argument might sound like, oh, you didn't put the toilet seat down, but it's actually linked to

something else, something deeper under the surface.

I just see, you know, specifically when me and my partner have been away from each other for a long time and then we come back together.

I always know we're going to argue for the first like one or two days.

It's not even going to be an argument.

It's going to be

there's going to be a problem.

And the problem is usually around expectations, which is I come in and my head is still da-da-da-da-da-da.

Like I'm still a million miles away, maybe on a different frequency thinking about lots of things.

And I think she comes into that space expecting connection and I let her down.

And we've tried to like call it out and say, listen, when we come back together, let's just, you know, both make an effort in that direction.

But going back to your point of ambiguous loss, it's like, it's almost like she's trying to test if I'm connected to her.

And I sometimes don't do a good job of that because of how I come into that space.

Like, for example, right now I'm filming Dragon Stem, which is a TV show in Manchester.

And so I film three or four days a week, morning till night.

The minute I get off from it.

I'm back with her.

So you can imagine everything hits me at once.

do you have

yes like all of my team all the to-do lists everything steve we need you to sign this off all at once but then i'm back in front of her

so i'm she's experiencing that ambiguous loss and the expectation was that we haven't seen each other for a while so

this is you know

so the question is

can you carve out a half an hour that's clean

an hour that's clean to connect yeah but don't do that just for her you have to imagine that when you do what you do and it all is bleeding into each other and all your roles collapse into the same space, that it actually is doing something for you, to you, not for you, to you.

And that to actually close the phone,

tell people to call you in an hour, you won't miss a thing.

And to actually drop in

is going to give you

a level of energy, of oxytocin, of well-being that is way more important or as important as every supplement you may be swallowing.

Yeah, because it's true, I see.

Not just for her.

Yeah, I am excited to see her, and I am excited to connect in here.

I just, you said it right, you said it correctly.

Like, I just multitask, I try and multitask and I let everything down.

Yes, the boss, the podcaster, the this, the that, and the boyfriend is all in the same thing.

Um, it's an indigestion.

So, you're a fan of scheduling clean time to do things?

Oh, yeah.

Oh yeah.

You can call it scheduling, you can call it demarcation, you can call it delineation.

We are social creatures who really orient ourselves in time and in space.

When everything happens to us at the same time, we get headaches.

They're not always experienced as headaches, but in fact, we get a confusion inside.

We're not here, we're not here, we're not here, we're not here.

Okay, so you can call that scheduling, or you can call it that, you know, when you go to place, when you go to the gym, you basically put on certain clothes, you prepare yourself for that.

It's an activity that comes with a role, that comes with a set of things, that comes with a delineation of time that makes you go to a certain space

where you're going to go do that thing.

And this happens when you go out at night, when you go out for dinner, when you...

The same thing is for home.

If you are going to spend a moment with her, however short it is, if it's clean and present, not just kind of semi-dere, ambiguously present.

It will change a lot of things for you, for her, and for the two of you.

Before we sat down today, I messaged a group of 10 of my closest friends.

I put them all in the group chat, and I told them I was going to be speaking to you today.

So I said to them, Can you tell me what question you have for Esther Perel?

These are all my 10 of my best friends that you wouldn't ever say out loud.

How can I be satisfied with just one sexual partner?

I have been unfaithful with my partner in the past

and I feel guilty about it.

Should I tell them?

I no longer find my partner attractive, but I don't know how to tell her.

I love her, but I don't find her attractive.

Those are probably the most interesting ones.

I think the one that I would probably

address is also

about the infidelity and about your guilt.

That's that, and also to this person, read state of affairs, because I spent many years writing this book about infidelity and trying to offer a very nuanced perspective on this very subject.

But here's the thing:

to tell somebody something just because you don't have a clean conscience and you feel guilty isn't always the kind thing to do.

Ask yourself what will happen to your partner or to your relationship for that matter if you speak about this now

and who are you doing it for.

I think honesty sometimes is extremely caring and at other times can be very cruel.

It cleanses you and it destroys another person.

Deal with your responsibility and deal with your guilt and face the consequences of your behavior.

and treat your partner with all the good things that actually say, I now am willing to really invest in here and make up for what I did without having to destroy the narrative of the relationship.

Because everybody has a story about their relationship, everybody has a set of shared assumptions about their relationship, and you are going to come in and just say, Last year, or two years ago, or five years ago, I did X, Y, and Z, and from that moment on, you rob the other person of their narrative.

You may think you did something that was honest, and sometimes that is the case, but many times you actually create an enormous amount of hurt.

If you feel guilty, it's not bad.

Deal with your guilt.

Face it.

Take your responsibility and make your relationship the best relationship you can and honor your partner in that way.

Don't honor them by putting your dirt onto them.

That is a different way of saying and that is not for everyone but I think that it is an important perspective to include here because we live in this era where transparency supposedly is the best model for everything and people dish stuff out on other people that destroys them

in the name of.

And when you're no longer attracted to your person, you know, ask yourself, what is that about?

You know, is it...

Are you paying attention?

Are you...

I think people often just think that attraction is something something like I look at you and I should just instantly have a response,

you know.

And sometimes it's also because I haven't really taken a good look.

And sometimes it's because what I'm looking at isn't necessarily anymore what draws me in.

And sometimes it's not, you know, attraction is a very fluid thing.

It comes and goes.

When I'm angry at you, I'm not nearly as attracted to you as when I'm looking at you being so kind to someone and I say, what a great person you are, and I just want to come and I run over and I want to hug you and I want to hold you.

That's attraction, too, right?

We're not just talking about the attraction to have sex with somebody.

Attraction is

part of a story, it's part of a context.

You know, if you think that you're just going to watch Netflix for three hours, scroll on your phone for another two, and then turn around and say, Oh, you're so attractive, and I'm so turned on by you,

you're off, you're off.

This is not the way that it works.

And then

it's easy to replace the person and to just think, you know, new shiny object, we will be very attracted again.

But attraction is a part of an interaction.

These two words have the same etymological root.

If there is zero interaction, now, if you have a partner who neglects themselves, a partner who, you know, there's lots of things that people also do that diminishes them.

There was a woman in

an event I just did, and you know, there had been some hurt in the relationship, and so she said, I'm no longer attracted, which is not the same as I have no desire.

Basically, she had no desire.

And she said, But I've worked talked, we've talked everything out, we've discussed it.

I said, Yeah, you may have discussed it, but your body is shut down.

Your body carries the anger, your body carries the hurt, your body carries the feelings, and your body doesn't want to open.

So, obviously, it's not over.

You know, so that too is attraction.

It is one of the most popular things that men whisper to me in silence, which is they can't seem to get their listen, I'm saying men because the majority of my good friends that would whisper to me are men.

So, it might be the case for women too.

I just can't speak to that.

Is

that they are unsure how they could possibly be faithful for a prolonged period of time

and have one partner for a prolonged period of of time.

I think that would be an interesting thing to tell your men friends.

Women get bored with monogamy much sooner than men.

Really?

Yes.

That's not what men think.

No, men think she's not interested in sex.

And what they should probably replace it with is that she's not interested in the sex

she's going to have.

In order to want sex, it needs to be sex that is worth wanting.

For women to remain interested, it needs to be interesting.

And so the fact that women don't necessarily experience the same liberties, at least historically and culturally all over the world, that men do.

So they remain in their homes and they are not as unfaithful because there's been a double standard around infidelity forever, everywhere in the world.

For this particular friend of mine, where is that message?

What should I say to him when he says, how can you be satisfied with one sexual partner?

That's literally, just so you know, that I'm not just...

I believe you.

But some people at home might think that it's like me as a proxy of a...

But

maybe you're not.

Maybe you're not.

Maybe you want to have more partners.

Maybe you want your partner to have other partners too.

That's not always so the case, right?

He doesn't want to lose her.

That's right.

They've been together, I think, 25 years.

So, you know, it won't...

You may have sometimes frustrations.

If you it there's a few options, right?

You either say we have a relationship that can welcome other people, we're not exclusive.

But she's gonna leave then

it because she doesn't want that.

Yeah, okay.

So then the next thing is as best as you can, make it as interesting and as fun and as pleasurable as it can be.

And my first question to you is, have you been doing the same old for God knows how many years?

And with that in mind, I wouldn't be surprised that you're not that attracted or that she's not that interested for that matter.

So if you want to be satisfied or more satisfied, I mean, you have a dialogue, you know, and the more satisfied means

bring more of yourself and make this experience more erotic, more pleasurable, more playful, more fulfilling.

You may remain frustrated and you may say, I would love to have other people.

And for that matter, maybe your partner would want it too, but that's not the kind of relationship that she wants.

That doesn't mean she hasn't thought about other people.

And it certainly wouldn't mean that if she fantasizes, she fantasizes about you.

So everybody is keeping their secrets here, you know.

And then the next thing is, Are you putting more emphasis on the fact that you're not as satisfied having one sexual partner?

Or are you putting more focus on the fact that you're going to make this sexual experience with your partner as pleasurable and rich as can be?

If you find yourself more on the complaining side, then you're going to be constantly more unsatisfied, dissatisfied.

I think much of it is actually

he and many others want the best of all worlds.

And in life, we're not willing to accept trade-offs.

So in your saying, you're saying, make a decision.

If you want that life, then be honest about that life.

If you don't want that life, then

you invest in that thing to make it better.

Yeah, that's the other alternative which you have.

And and and and cook at home and make it more rich and more interesting if you don't want to have the same dinner every night in the house.

The question is, what are people doing to make their relationships more vibrant, more erotic, more alive?

I mean, this is really,

by the way, it's not about having more sex.

You can have more sex and not feel much.

It's about making it more alive and vibrant.

That is what much of my work is about, is cultivating the eroticism and the aliveness in relationships

on the personal front.

And you ask ask people, what do you do to make it rich and interesting?

And you find the laziness, the complacency, the constant same old, same old, and then the complaint about it.

And then you say,

that is really self-defeating.

Are you frustrated with people, Asto?

No, I smile at it.

I just...

I smile at the way that we can lie to ourselves.

I smile at the way we can complain about others and as if we have no implication.

I smile at the way we don't want to take responsibility for actually getting the things that we really want.

You must see the same patterns over and over again.

Those ones I do.

Not all, but this kind of pattern,

which is actually why I've expanded from only working in the romantic sphere to working also in the workplace, because relationships are richer than just this.

And I think that this friend,

I would have a five-minute conversation with him.

And I would ask him these very questions.

I would ask the partner also those very questions.

And I would have a few ideas.

It's not uber complicated.

You're going to record me to him?

No, I'm just.

Okay.

What would you say to him?

What's his name?

I should call him.

Or a name.

Let's call him John.

John.

So,

yes, John,

we are not necessarily curious only about one partner.

Many people would like to have other partners.

In the context of your relationship, that is not an option for you, as I understand.

So, if that is the situation and you really deeply care about your partner and your relationship with her, then the next question is:

What do you do to energize your relationship, to bring playfulness, curiosity, imagination, eroticism, as in life force, as in aliveness, not as in sex, to your relationship?

Are you bringing the leftovers home and the best of yourself goes to work?

Or are you also bringing your creativity, your energy, your curiosity to your relationship?

My sense is that if you do that, there is a good chance that you will actually have a more satisfying erotic connection with your partner.

That doesn't mean you won't have interest, curiosity, fantasies about others, but it will free you from this position in which you just kind of say,

I'm bored, I'm not satisfied, I would like a little more diversity and all of that.

And just for you, do not imagine that you're the only one in your relationship who thinks this way and wants this.

It's just that you may have a partner who doesn't want the consequences of it.

That doesn't mean she wouldn't fantasize about the plurality herself.

I'm going to send that.

Please listen

to the ad hoc intervention.

Yeah.

Just need an

honest response.

Have you ever done that?

On your podcast?

And Perel said women are often more quickly bored with monogamy than men.

And that is the secret that people do not understand.

That means that in order for her to remain engaged, it has to remain more engaging and interesting and fun and pleasurable.

And if it's just to get it done and just to do it for the sake of doing it, then she really can often spare it.

And while men are much more able to remain, actually, contrary to what he describes, to remain interested, that doesn't mean they don't want others as well, but they can remain more interested in their partner without having to change it like that and it is interpreted as women are less interested in sex

rather than women need more in order to remain interested

they need more of the emotional stuff

not necessarily not only they need more imagination more risque more connection more attention more of a lot of whatever is her thing right okay

it's it's one of the the most important things I learned actually that that kind of turned it around for me me, because once you begin to look at it like that, it plays with this classic gender division.

Men want, women doesn't.

It's boring.

It's like it becomes true just because we say it all the time, but that doesn't mean it is.

This is true for a lot of these gender things.

Esther, my friend replied, and the essence of what they said, yes.

He said, she's right, full stop.

The intimacy in our relationship has died, and it died so long ago that I think part of me doesn't feel like I can revive it anymore.

We're so used to the relationship being off.

Okay,

put the mic on.

Okay.

Yeah.

All right, John.

Here's what I would suggest.

I think that you can just simply say, I, you know, Steve approached me and asked me if I had a question for Esther Perel.

And I just threw out this thing.

At first, I was just kind of flippant about it.

I just thought, ah, what do you do when you, you know?

But in fact, when she answered, I realized, you know, that this is a bigger thing between us.

And this is an emptiness and a gap that we allowed to create and that I have contributed to.

And I don't just want to leave it at that.

So I thought, I'm going to sit down and actually write to you.

I want to just write some of my thoughts because I think when we sit, we avoid the subject, we circle around it, or I avoid it, or I'm defensive about it.

Anyway, whatever it is that I've done, I don't know you enough, John, to know the details of that.

And then you just really say, you know, something died a long time ago and I feel awkward about it, but I miss it.

And I miss you and I miss us.

And I would like to know if you are willing to re-engage with me and for us to rekindle.

It's desire goes through intermittent eclipses.

It's like the moon.

It disappears, but it can reappear.

And I would love to invite you to re-engage with me to bring back the light, the spark inside of us, because we can do it.

We are more than just this.

And because just living side by side, I don't think it's going to be enough for either of us.

And I'm prepared to do my part.

Would you be willing to do yours?

That was beautiful.

That was beautiful.

And then let's see if it still answers us beforehand.

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Not more than before.

I wrote a book 20 years ago that was all about the dilemmas of desire.

You've always heard it.

I always heard it.

No, I don't think that there are fundamental changes around that.

I think the changes are the fact that people are spending less time together where they are actually attentive to each other.

They're half there.

Their attention is fragmented.

They're multitasking all the time.

That's what is changing.

And if you have less connection, less attention, less intimacy, less interest, why do you think that people are suddenly going to be turned on?

But is the sex getting less interesting?

No, their life with each other is less interesting.

And this last time when I spoke to you like this, you told me, what are you shouting at me?

Their life is less interesting.

The sex is the consequence of seven other things before.

God, they haven't said anything interesting to each other.

They haven't laughed, they haven't kissed each other, they haven't looked at each other, they haven't barely touched each other and suddenly the text, the sex needs to be, you know, all hot and

passionate on what freaking basis?

Their life is not interesting.

Their communication, their interaction, their conversations, their attention to each other, the fact that they matter, the fact that their presence means something in each other's lives.

That's what is all connected to long-term sex.

Long-term sex doesn't come just from because I look at you and

I'm all hot.

It's a different mechanism.

So you're asking a question that happens here.

And I am telling you, if all of this is rather boring and

unengaged,

it's like at work.

You know, I'm doing a lot of this stuff around work now.

It's like if the engagement is low,

on what basis do we think people are going to perform?

The performance is here, but the performance is a response to the engagement, which is a response to the culture, which is a response to the quality of the relationships between the people who work together.

It's the same in the personal realm.

What element of responsibility do I have in making sure that my relationship with myself is great?

in order to have a great relationship with someone else?

Because a lot of people like to blame.

I think the premise is inaccurate.

Okay, fix my premise.

The premise is that

it's time for us to begin to question the intense level of individualism and self-thinking.

Self-love, self-care, self-fulfillment, self-awareness.

It's all about the self in front.

And the presumption is that if all those levels of the self have been attended to, we will be better able to attend to other people.

So, what do you think about this culture of self-care and self-love?

I think it's gone overboard.

I think it's a distortion.

I think it feeds consumerism.

I think that there's a lot of elements of it that are highly important, but we have completely lost the fact that what actually is at the root of well-being, happiness, longevity, meaning is in our relationships and our connections with others as well as with ourselves.

When you give to others, you will let's depressed.

When you feel like you make a a difference in other people's life, it makes you feel better chemically too.

If you go on the street and you make some, you give compliments to people and you tell them that they look really great or this is beautiful, what they're wearing, and you made a smile on someone's face, your oxytocin levels go up too.

Doing for others makes us feel better about ourselves as well.

Not all the time, not every circumstance, but that voluntary connecting and being engaged with other people.

Whereas being engaged with oneself, have you seen at the gym how people are super engaged with themselves, lifting, but nobody is interacting with anybody?

And many of these people go home and there's nobody there, it's not like they're doing this for someone that's waiting for them.

Relating to yourself is not a goal in and of itself.

It is a step to something, but it's not in and of itself an achievement.

The goal is relating to others.

The goal is, yes, is having meaningful relationships, meaningful connections with other people and other causes that are beyond yourself.

Part of why we are so miserable and so unhappy

is because we are so constantly focused on ourselves.

There's a world, there's nature, there's politics, there's climate, there's people, there's poverty, there's a ton of things to be interested in.

There's art, there's creativity, there's a lot of things that are beyond us.

That is beyond maximizing and optimizing and hacking and focusing on myself and navel-gazing.

And I am a therapist, and I work with individuals who I am helping to have a better relationship with themselves and deal with what stands in the way to relate to others, not what stands in the way to feel good about me.

Period.

With gender roles reversing, have you seen men get increasingly emasculated by the success of women?

in your practice?

And have you seen also the woman get sort of frustrated with the man because he's now not the breadwinner?

There was this stat I saw that said, again, rough numbers, 70% of women expect the man to be the breadwinner.

But then there's this bigger social narrative that actually no 50-50 or you know equality is the case.

And I was sat here with a guy who runs the men and boys clinic.

I think it's called the men and boys Institute or something, Richard Reeves.

And Richard Reeves was a stay-at-home dad.

And then his partner, you know, and doing all of this work about men inequality, that, you know, a self-proclaimed feminist, I believe.

And then his wife turned around to him one day and was like,

you know?

And I've heard this quite a lot.

I've heard from my successful female friends that part of the reason they think they can't find a man is that men feel emasculated by their success.

And on the counterpoint, I'm wondering if it goes the other way.

Can I take this a little differently?

Sure, please, whatever.

Emasculation is a word that doesn't exist in the feminine.

It's always been a masculine concern.

Which is part of why I said to you that masculinity is an identity that constantly has to prove itself.

If it was so solid, it wouldn't have to constantly have to show you that it really is serious and it's the real thing.

There is, you know, those things do not translate on the feminine side.

The word loser doesn't exist in the feminine either.

And this is historical, this is not new.

That men have had the challenge with powerful women is not new.

That women have wanted men to be both powerful and nurturing is not new.

That fathers have often been as tender to what they're...

I think that there's a...

For me,

the engagement with some of your questions is that it plays into a whole discourse about men and women that at this point somehow puts them completely apart,

each one kind of more and more angry at the other side.

And I don't really want to participate in that.

The women are talking about the useless this, and the men are talking about the bitches that, and I don't find that helpful.

People, I don't think it's true.

I think there are fathers and men all over the world doing everything they can to save their family, their wives, their, you know, it has nothing to do just with how much they earn.

The world is filled with people who want to give a better life to their family and to their children, men who work

day and night in order to provide.

And I think that to turn this conversation into that section

that we are referring to, it's true, it exists, but it is not a fair rendering of men, of masculinity, of fathers, of brothers, of husbands,

and of wives.

That there is a group of women who are out-earning the men.

Yes, women have out-earned the men for a long time in all kinds of industries, not just at the higher levels.

That men

have not been home as primary parents.

I think gay couples have shown us a whole new range.

It's time to kind of move on a little bit.

Do you know when you say that

we need to know how to relate to each other?

And I think you said that it starts with being aware of ourselves.

Is that roughly what you said?

That it starts with having sort of a self-awareness of

yourself?

I think that it's a constant combination because what I'm saying is that in order to have self-awareness, you need to understand your connection with others.

Your self-awareness is not developed here alone by myself.

You get to know yourself through your relationships with people.

It is in the presence of another that we discover ourselves.

And this is in part why I'm asking these questions, because I think for a lot of men, we've understood who we are by how we relate and the role we play for others historically.

So, like, I kind of understand much of who I am when you see me with my partner.

Yeah.

Because I will grab the door, I will grab the bags, I will help solve problems in a more logical, like, I'm very like, tell me how to fix it.

And you understand the, I understand myself by being how I relate to her, taking care of her is part of my identity to me.

So, in in such a world, I think the question becomes like what is it to be, what is it to be a man?

And if I don't know what that is, I find it harder to relate to others.

One of the things I love to do, but that's not on a societal level, that's me in my work, when I do retreats, relationship retreats, like

we have one that I'm going to do in October in Greece.

And I have...

I do fishbowls and I put all the men in a fishbowl or all those who identify as men for that matter.

And I have the women just listen, the people around.

And for an hour or more or two, they talk about everything you just brought up, their challenges, their frustrations, their hopes, their aspirations, their losses, their self-doubt, their shame, their shadows.

And people listen without judgment, without

opinions, just receive the gift of having somebody be willing to expose themselves like that.

It's extremely moving.

It's very beautiful.

And you learn a ton.

And you learn how much of your projections are, you know, standing in the way, how much you make assumptions without really knowing, how hard it is to truly listen.

That's when it becomes to me beautiful, worthwhile, and things change, things become softer.

And people start to weep.

in front of total strangers and you realize humanity is bigger than gender.

Gender is important, super important, but there is another layer that is just our humanity.

And at this moment in our society, where there's tons of uncertainties, that connecting on a human level to me supersedes some of these gender wars.

There's lots of it.

I don't, and I leave it to others to comment on that.

But my work is to create alternative conversations, better conversations.

Are you hopeful?

Honestly.

In those moments, I'm very hopeful.

But are you hopeful when they leave the retreat and they go back onto the algorithms?

I hope that some of them will do that and some of them will actually experience a profound change.

You know, but in the moment I feel like I can do something.

I'm hopeful when I can do something, when I can contribute, when I can create something that's really special.

That's that you know, I'm not hopeful when I'm helpless, when I'm passive.

So in those moments, I am hopeful because something really beautiful is happening.

You know, when people connect at a deeper level, it is very, very meaningful, be it at work or be it at home.

I mean, it's anywhere at this point where I can create these connections.

People, I mean, that's a sentence that I take with me all over the all the time.

It's the quality of your relationships will determine the quality of your lives.

And my work is about helping you have better relationships, relationships, be more confident, be more connected.

I can analyze a lot of these statistics, but I don't know what to do with it.

Be more confident?

Yes.

What is confidence in that regard?

Confidence is when you are able to see yourself as a flawed person and still hold yourself in high regard.

That's from my friend Terry Riel.

But it is a great definition of confidence.

It's not when I know, when I'm sure.

It's none of that.

It's actually when I see myself as flawed,

but I still hold myself in high regard.

That means I'm confident.

And is there work one can do to get to such a place?

Yes, of course.

Work and life experience and maturity.

But for a lot of people, their work and life experience knocks them down to make them think

they're just a...

flawed person.

That's what I taught when I was in my 20s and 30s too.

And if I made a mistake, I could obsess about it for three weeks.

Now it's three hours, sometimes three days if it's really bad.

But you know,

you learn to accept.

You make mistakes, and life goes on, and you try again.

So there's no shortcut to confidence.

No, no, no, no.

Is there anything that accelerates it?

It builds on itself.

The nice thing about it is that it builds on itself.

It adds layer by layer, step by step.

Is there anything one can do to accelerate that process?

Why?

So that we can become more confident quicker.

No, that's called arrogance.

When the 22-year-old, you know, sometimes it's arrogant.

I mean, listen, there are things you can feel confident about very early on.

and you've tried them.

And then there's other things.

It's also not, I am confident.

I'm confident about certain things.

You can trust me on some things.

You should not trust me to get you to a certain place.

Neither on time, neither without getting lost.

So I have zero confidence in that area, but I'm quite confident in some of the things that I do.

And confidence doesn't mean that I know or that I'm right.

It's that I'm prepared to do things and be mistaken and not know and try again.

Two different people can go through the same experience and one of their confidence can build and the other one can lose confidence.

Yes, that is the biggest mystery question.

Why two people with the same story, for one, it becomes what brings their resilience and what gives them the drive and what makes them

be

people that are engaged with life and the world.

And for the other person, it's what broke them, it's what crushed them, it's what makes it so impossible for them to actually put one foot in front of the other.

And if you can ever tell me why this versus that, you know, why this person,

it is one of the great mystery questions for any therapist for that matter, and in general, why the same circumstances build the strength of one and become the weakness of the other.

There's clearly some kind of a pair of sunglasses in between what happened and how I perceived it or something.

There must be some kind of thing.

You know, there's lots of things, but what we do know is that for many people

who have major adverse circumstances but manage to

use them and turn them and really make a beautiful life for themselves,

Usually there was one defining factor that differentiates them from everybody else who had similar circumstances is that they had somebody who believed in them.

A coach, a teacher, a neighbor, not necessarily a family member, actually,

because the adversity is often in the family.

Somebody who believed in you when you didn't believe in yourself and didn't give up even when you were fucking up.

I had a lady called Dr.

Lisa Feldman on the podcast recently, who's a neuroscientist.

And one of the things she said to me has really stayed with me.

And I think about it a lot and I talk about it a lot, which is

she said to me, she told me the story of a young lady who grew up and had some...

an aggressive uncle who would like beat her.

And this young lady, she was good in school, she slept well, everything was fine.

And then many years later, this young lady was watching Oprah Winfrey's show and it was about domestic abuse.

And there was women on there crying and talking about their trauma and all those things.

And essentially, this young lady suddenly started to experience the symptoms of trauma,

unproductive in education, couldn't sleep as well, and visibly traumatized.

The trauma hadn't appeared,

wasn't symptomatic up until she watched this show with Oprah.

And it made me think that is there a possibility that some of our trauma, not all of it, but some of it, is

like contagious?

Are you we give meaning to it when someone tells us the meaning of what happened to us.

Like, are we giving meaning to the things that happen to us?

And it goes to what we were saying here about you can go through the same two thing, but interpret it differently.

Do we inherit the meaning externally from somewhere?

You know, it's interesting because I think about this a lot with things like anxiety.

I'm like, it feels like, you know, I know the world has changed and we're less connected, but it does feel like

Had I not known that anxiety existed, I probably am unsure whether I would have personally experienced it.

I think that the anxiety culture actually kind of made me anxious.

It made me label the feeling.

And I'm just wondering if you have a perspective on this idea that we like give meaning to

our experience and then that.

Yes, of course, all the time.

We give meaning to everything.

We are meaning-making machines.

And if you don't do an individual meaning attribution, you get a collective, cultural, social attribution.

In our society, we may call it anxiety.

In another society, we may call it the ancestors are unhappy.

Somebody is, a spirit is knocking at your door.

Somebody has not been properly mourned.

Somebody is being degraded.

So there's every

ill-ease, every disease.

has a story, has a meaning, has an attribution.

The words change.

That's on a cultural level.

I think it's very important to not just individualize these things and think, I give meaning.

We give the meaning that our culture has taught us to give.

So you've kind of become, you're part of the anxiety generation.

So you give words of anxiety, stress, burnout.

There's a whole lingo

that didn't exist 40 years ago, by the way.

I mean, those words existed, but they were not nearly in the vernacular of the moment.

They were not part of the the therapy speak of du jours.

You know, they were not on TikTok.

So there were other words that were people who used.

And, you know, every century has certain names.

Hysteria, we don't hear much about hysteria these days.

That was a 19th century thing.

It's mental health now.

You know.

So we change the words, but we still are trying to give meaning to our

ill-ease.

I guess this is a question of identity as well, which is who do I think I am?

And who I think I am will probably become who I am, at least as it relates to relating to people.

No.

No.

Who do you think you are is part of who you are, and how other people see you is also a part of who you are.

We are constantly looking at ourselves from the inside and from the outside.

We do not exist without the integration of also

the gaze from the outside in.

And it's a two-way street all the time.

So if I think I'm a late person, you said, you know, get there on time,

then I'm likely to be late

often more because I've identified with that, becomes part of my character, it starts to become how I predict my future.

And Lisa Fohman was saying to me that the brain is this prediction machine.

So it's like predicting

what it will do next based on the past.

So my identity is like a prediction of what I'll become.

And, you know, the same, I think of this, maybe the same in relationships.

Your behavior may be a prediction, but that doesn't mean your identity.

Don't confuse identity with behaviour.

It's it's it's they are connected, but your identity is a lot more than your behaviour.

You know, at GFK there are three lines at the airport.

Yeah.

One is for the tourist, one is for the American passport holder and one is for the resident alien.

The tourist may have been been living in the States for years,

but they don't have the papers.

So the internal definition is not recognized by the external.

The American, you may have been living your whole life abroad, but you were born in the US.

So you have the papers, you have the external recognition,

but the internal one doesn't match.

And then the resident alien is the one who has been there a long time, but doesn't have the,

is a guest of some sort, right?

And I find that a fascinating moment to understand identity when you stand there.

What is internal, what is external, what is seen from others, how others recognize you and think and how others define who you are and how you define who you are.

And these are conversations.

The question that you're asking about trauma is a whole, it's a different question

because

the trauma is not the event itself.

The trauma is often in the experience of the event without an empathic witness.

Without an event.

Yes.

What makes an event traumatic is often the fact that you experience something without an empathic witness.

It's not the fact that

it's not the event itself.

And so what happens is she sees the Oprah show, and it's not just that she sees the women tell their stories, but she sees Oprah with her unique kind of empathy

respond to the women and give value to their experience and acknowledge it and express the sadness that comes with it and the devastation that they may have experienced.

And she is the consummate empathic witness who gives not just meaning to your story, but because before you can give meaning, you even have to acknowledge it.

You have to recognize that it even happened.

And in many of those situations, it's the lack of acknowledgement that is the most traumatic, not the thing itself.

Or not only the thing itself.

It's the fact that nobody even admits that this took place.

So as she's watching this empathic resonance in front of her, something opens inside of her that allows her to finally

recognize, weep, cry, you know, do her own acknowledgement and realize what was done to her.

And that's a different way of interpreting.

and I have no idea if that is true, but just to give you another reading of what may have happened to this woman,

and for a while she will not sleep, and for a while she, because suddenly,

in order to finally come to admit something, you need to feel safe to let it happen.

And when you watch the opera show with those women, this is, I just did the opera, so I had the people, and I see how she, it's an amazing moment of being held and experiencing a container that allows you to experience the pain that you've been holding in.

Interesting.

It's a very interesting alternative perspective, especially this idea of the empathic witness.

And the minute you see empathy shown to your experience in such a way,

Yeah, maybe you have permission to feel in a way that you didn't get to feel, but also in that environment, I imagine there was a studio audience and they were providing empathy, and there was Oprah, and they were providing empathy.

And then you had someone she could relate to who, in that scenario, was

being held and had a label, like an implicit label, attached to their experience.

But she does it without audience now, and

it's just, it's.

I think it was a long time ago.

So we used to have a show many decades ago.

I was my first time on the Oprah Show in 87.

87.

With a studio audience?

Yeah.

How was it?

It wasn't

a very powerful experience for a woman, a young woman as I was back then.

It was just like, well,

this is quite embarrassing for me to admit.

But if you know me well, there's something that you know about me, which is a function of my personality.

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I've lost my wallet, I've lost multiple passports.

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I think B2B marketeers keep making this mistake.

They're chasing volume instead of quality.

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But that noise rarely shifts the needle and it's often quite expensive.

And I know, as there was a time in my career where I kept making this mistake, that many of you will be making it too.

Eventually, I started posting ads on our show sponsors platform LinkedIn.

And that's when things started to change.

I put that change down to a few critical things.

One of them being that LinkedIn was then and still is today the platform where decision makers go to, not only to think and learn, but also to buy.

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So if I made you president of the entire world and your job was to prevent the social atrophy, this decay of social connections and relationships, and you had to take three steps on a global basis to they can be drastic steps.

You can delete mobile phones.

Oh, God.

They can be any drastic step you want to take.

I think that things are lived in the details, not in the big things.

Okay.

You know,

where was I recently?

I went to a place and I remember making the comment.

Everybody says hello.

People said hello.

People were friendly.

When you went into a place, when you were on the street, when you went...

It was just like, I said, oh, my God,

I have not been in a place.

It felt small enough, but it wasn't small.

Where people kept saying, hello, have a nice day, this looks very good.

You know, so it's that basic.

So, you'd make it a law.

No, you have to say hello.

No, I don't legislate these things

at all.

I think it's more of a

cultural shift.

It's a return to

practices that still are prevalent in many other parts of the world.

Talking to strangers.

Yes, talking to strangers.

Okay, so you're going to make it illegal to say that.

It's an incredible thing to talk to strangers.

So Esther Perrell makes it illegal not to talk to strangers.

Illegal.

No, no, I said don't bring the law into it.

It's much more art than law.

Anybody who these days can make people laugh or sing together is doing a holy work.

So go sing with people or go

because when you sing together,

you create a collective resonance.

You actually are bringing that resonance that it is very empathic, it's very kind, it's compassionate, it's caring, it's playful, it brings out a whole set of other things in people.

And the third thing would be teach people how to have conflict.

You asked me before

when you argue with your partner,

I think that the majority of our arguments are about three basic things.

And this is based on Howard Markman's work, but you know it's not the issue you're fighting about

actually what you can often ask is what is it that you're fighting for

and what people fight for when they argue whatever thing they're

spat about they fight for power and control who makes the decision and whose priorities matter most they fight for trust for care and closeness.

Can I trust you?

Do you have my back?

Can I lean on you?

Can I rely on you?

Will you show up for me?

And they fight for respect and recognition.

Do you value me?

Do I matter?

And does this all translate to work?

You've now started doing a lot more work with businesses and companies around sort of their working culture and connection and relationships in the workplace.

All of those things you just listed there, are they also the reasons why our relationships are successful or unsuccessful in a work environment?

Absolutely.

So I actually have been working with corporations and in the business world for quite a while and have been talking and speaking

with corporations and companies.

But what is new is that I became an advisor to a number of companies, in particular in this case with Culture AMP.

And the reason that became such a wonderful collaboration is because I brought my clinical expertise and they're bringing massive amounts of data science, people science, 1.5 billion experience survey points.

I mean, it's just like, so it's no longer just my intuitive sense, it's backed.

And we created this card game because my original card game, people wanted the corporate was demanding for it, but every time they had to take out the cards with the pink triangles, which were the sex questions, in order to make it work safe.

safe for work.

So I said, okay, let's create a game just for the workplace that will create meaningful relationships at work.

And what's fascinating is that what the research showed is that there are four major relational pillars that actually sustain this quality of relationships in the workplace.

And they are directly connected to these three things that I said we fight for.

So one was trust,

one was belonging.

Okay, so on trust, how do I know what is trust in specific terms?

What does that mean?

Trust is a leap of of faith.

Trust is a sense that

it's an active engagement with the unknown, says Rachel Botsman.

It's like trust is not I know for sure.

Trust is I don't know for sure, and I'm willing to believe it.

That's the definition of the word trust.

And in a work context, what does that mean?

It means that I can rely on you,

on my team, on my manager,

that

you have my back,

that you're not going to betray me, you're not going to put your interests ahead of mine, you are not going to take credit when it's not yours,

that you care about me and that we are part of something together.

So trust then connects directly to a sense of belonging, that we are part of a group, of a company, and

I get a certain sense of who I am by virtue of my sense of connection to this group and the group defines me and gets my contribution.

So it's a mutual experience.

Mutuality is essential to living organisms, be it in nature or in social ecological systems.

And there is recognition.

It means that there is respect, that I feel valued, that I feel that I contribute and that it is recognized.

This is essential because I could achieve and perform and meet the productivity goals and all of that, but if nobody pays attention to it, it doesn't really meet the needs.

But the biggest one is the collective resilience.

To me, that's the one that really stands out because

resilience isn't an individual matter only.

It's not just a set of traits that exists inside of you and that you need to tap into in order to

face adversity and all of that.

Resilience is how we, at this point in particular, are able to respond creatively and adaptively and flexibly to all the changes that are happening.

The workplace is in massive flux, massive flux.

And from a relational point of view, it's huge.

And it is basically at this point becoming no longer just the soft skills.

It's becoming the new bottom line, basically.

Esther, thank you so much.

Thank you so much for the work that you do.

When I've met you the first time, I was convinced that you're in fact an alien from another planet because you have an ability to understand situations

at a deeper, more intuitive level than anyone I've ever met, specifically as it relates to just like the human condition and the way that we are, the excuses that make, the patterns of a human.

And it really like shocked me.

You were able to see through me in a way that I did not like,

but I appreciated.

And it's really remarkable.

There's very few people I've ever met that are like that, that have that ability.

It's a really, really special thing.

And it's been the cause of so much healed and cured and fixed problems for so many of us.

We have a tradition on this podcast where the last guest leaves a question for the next guest, not knowing who they leave it for.

The question left for you is:

How are you going to adapt to a world of AI and robots?

I am going to

use AI as a tool, as I just did an hour before I came here.

I was in a meeting and we were generating ideas.

And

one of us asked the AI

exactly this.

What would you see is the next step in the collaboration between, what would be bold collaborations between Esther Perel and Culture Amp?

the very company with whom I created the cards.

And the AI gave us incredible ideas, but it was both.

We had AI and we had the people.

The people could use the AI.

The AI became way more relevant because it had the people.

So, as long as I can use it as a tool

to

foster the communication and to generate ideas

between me and others, I think that

I am still shaping it and it is helping me.

I would hope that it doesn't just begin to shape me or us all and make us into a species that none of us can yet imagine.

Some people are very much looking forward to that new species.

I kind of like the ones we've been.

We are imperfect creatures.

We're unpredictable.

But there is something fascinating about human beings that has been the core of my work.

Thank you.

Again, I'll link the cards below for everyone to go and get a pair.

I think I'm going to use them

at the very start of the week with my teams.

So just to kind of

create a bit of a space where we can connect with each other before we get into more difficult work.

But also, there's other sort of work environments when I have new investments and stuff like that.

It's really, you can do it one-on-one.

You can do it onboarding.

You can do it off-site.

But there is something about the weekly meeting, all hands-on deck kind of meeting where we do a card, one person each.

And I can tell you, and especially when it's remote, which you are not, but everybody knows

the lackluster attention that you can get in a Zoom meeting with everybody doing five other things at the same time.

You just need to track the eyes.

But once people start to tell stories like this, people get the others are interested and are listening.

It changes the whole dynamic.

So it's a beautiful ritual to have your weekly start with a few cards.

Esther, thank you so much for all that you do.

It's so wonderful to see you.

I feel like you helped correct me

in an important way.

What was one of them today?

When you were talking about the dementia and the Alzheimer's and the

ambiguous loss.

I felt that.

Because I think

sometimes

I create that impression.

And one of my ex-girlfriends said that to me.

She said,

even if you're sat next to me, I feel like you're a million miles away.

And I remember thinking, it's such a horrible way to make someone feel, you know.

And my girlfriend, what a wonderful thing it is for someone to want your attention and to want you to hug them and to want you to care about them and to look at them.

What a wonderful privilege that is.

And to like insult that privilege by being a million miles away, I just thought it was a horrible thing it is that, you know.

How often during the day do you send just a little sweet nothing?

I know, I need to do that more.

I don't know.

Do you know how much it changes a person's.

Yeah, just to say that you're thinking about them as well, because I do think about them, but I just don't, I don't, you know.

So you're saying it to me.

Yeah.

Yeah, exactly.

I need to say it to her.

I'm going to say, I'm going to tell her now, Esther, okay?

Life is lived in the details.

It's all these small things.

It's not, it's like when you ask about the changing of the world.

I don't think in these big things.

And this,

you know, when it's done authentically,

it's not big and it

yeah

okay okay

that puts energy into a relationship she said ah with a little heart face she said sweetheart

and she's typing

okay you got it

the hardest conversations are often the ones we avoid but what if you had the right question to start them with every Every single guest on the Diary of a CEO has left behind a question in this diary.

And it's a question designed to challenge, to connect and to go deeper with the next guest.

And these are all the questions that I have here in my hand.

On one side, you've got the question that was asked.

the name of the person who wrote it and on the other side if you scan that

you can watch the person who came after who answered it 51 questions split across three different levels the warm-up level the open up level and the deep level so you decide how deep the conversation goes and people play these conversation cards in boardrooms at work in bedrooms alone at night and on first dates and everywhere in between i'll put a link to the conversation cards in the description below and you can get yours at thediary.com This has always blown my mind a little bit.

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