On Purpose with Jay Shetty - Matthew Hussey ON: How to Get Over Your Ex & Find True Love in Your Relationships
Episode Date: August 9, 2021You can order my new book 8 RULES OF LOVE at 8rulesoflove.com or at a retail store near you. You can also get the chance to see me live on my first ever world tour. This is a 90 minute interactive sho...w where I will take you on a journey of finding, keeping and even letting go of love. Head to jayshettytour.com and find out if I'll be in a city near you. Thank you so much for all your support - I hope to see you soon.Mathew Hussey sits down with Jay Shetty to talk about dealing with relationships. The way most of us struggle with finding the right person, when we expect too much from our partner, when we refuse to acknowledge that change is voluntary, and when the amount of energy we are willing to give to someone who isn’t at par with what we’re willing to give are the truths that are harder to accept.Mathew Hussey is an British life coach, a YouTube personality, and the author of the New York Times bestseller Get The Guy: Learn Secrets of the Male Mind to Find the Man You Want and the Love You Deserve. His podcast, Love Life with Matthew Hussey, offers practical tips you can use right away to improve all of your relationships – romantic, family, friends, career, and the relationship you have with yourself.Win a limited edition, signed sampler box full of Jay & Radhi's favorite teas. Enter today! https://bit.ly/3jladpuJoin the Sama Tea Founder's Club & enjoy exclusive perks and our private communi-TEA! https://bit.ly/37pPT0KWhat We Discuss with Matthew:00:00 Intro03:09 What’s your favorite story of love?06:22 The importance of reevaluating what is actually important in a partner12:44 It’s uncomfortable but maybe it’s teaching you something21:21 When all the special moves don’t work and your genuine self comes out23:56 The problem is people are falling in love too fast25:47 How can you be nervous when you’re valuing the right things?28:06 You obsess over what they could have been32:59 Don’t be upset when you lose a poet, the poetry is the relationship35:49 A moment where you genuinely are brave enough to let someone in and be seen39:03 When you come out of an argument bleeding every time44:31 People aren’t comfortable in being an area they can be criticized47:32 The culture you create will have an impact in the people around you50:53 Give an amount of energy you are willing to lose55:34 Experiencing the endless ocean of disappointment01:00:00 There is someone that uniquely vibes with your personality01:03:35 You can’t change a person when they don’t want to01:09:43 You’ve never been heartbroken, have you?01:13:35 Staying in unhappy for a long time makes it difficult to entertain the the idea of leaving01:18:40 The 30-Day Confidence Challenge01:22:25 Matthew on Fast FiveEpisode Resources:Matthew Hussey | TwitterMatthew Hussey | InstagramMatthew Hussey | YouTubeMatthew Hussey | FacebookHow To Get The GuyGet The Guy BookLike this show? Please leave us a review here - even one sentence helps! Post a screenshot of you listening on Instagram & tag us so we can thank you personally!See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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I'm Jay Shetty and on my podcast on purpose, I've had the honor to sit down with some of the most incredible hearts and minds on the planet.
Oprah, Kobe Bryant, Kevin Hart, Louis Hamilton, and many, many more.
On this podcast, you get to hear the raw real-life stories behind their journeys and the tools they used, the books they read, and the people that made a difference in their lives so that they can make a difference in hours.
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Join the journey soon.
What if you could tell the whole truth about your life, including all those tender and visible
things we don't usually talk about?
I'm Megan Devine.
Host of the podcast, it's okay that you're not okay.
Look everyone's at least a little bit not okay these days, and all those things we don't
usually talk about, maybe we should.
This season, I'm joined by Stellar Gas like Abbermote, Rachel Cargol, and so many more.
It's okay that you're not okay. New episodes each and every Monday, available on the iHeartRadio app,
or wherever you listen to podcasts. The therapy for Black Girls podcast is your space to
explore mental health, personal development, and all of the small decisions we can make to become the best possible versions of ourselves.
I'm your host, Dr. Joy Harden Bradford, a licensed psychologist in Atlanta, Georgia,
and I can't wait for you to join the conversation every Wednesday.
Listen to the Therapy for Black Girls podcast on the iHart Radio app Apple podcast or wherever you get your podcast
Take good care
Oh my goodness. I have been waiting for this day
Jay and I are so excited to announce that this fall we will be launching our very own hot tea brand called
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drink at night. Luckily, Jay is exactly the same, so we have a moment together every morning, every night
Sipinanti.
Over the last year, having a ritual that brings a little moment of peace, comfort and
presence has been so important.
It reminds me of being at home with my family in London, sitting by the fire, laughing,
Sipinanti, which is a feeling I have been missing a lot.
It's been hard to find that feeling of comfort and of acceptance in the chaos lately,
but honestly a cup of tea has most definitely helped.
There's so much more I want to share with you, but for now,
go ahead and sign up today at Samathee.com and enter to win a sign,
Limited Edition, Sampler Box, full of vibrant, delicious, fantastic teas
that will inspire moments of mindfulness.
If your listings are in an unhappy situation, I get it. I get how hard it is.
One of the things that can help is to say, this demon would come out with another person too.
Hey everyone, welcome back to on purpose, the number one health podcast in the world. Thanks to each and every single one of you that come back every week to listen, learn,
and grow.
And I am so excited to be talking to you today.
I can't believe it.
My new book, Eight Rules of Love is out.
And I cannot wait to share it with you.
I am so, so excited for you to read this book, for you to listen to this book.
I read the audiobook.
If you haven't got it already, make sure you go to eightrulesoflove.com.
It's dedicated to anyone who's trying to find, keep, or let go of love.
So, if you've got friends that are dating, up or struggling with love make sure you grab this book
And I'd love to invite you to come and see me for my global tour love rules go to jsheddytor.com to learn more information
About tickets VIP experiences and more. I can't wait to see you this year
Now you know that I love sitting down with experts, people that have dedicated their life,
their time and their years to understanding more about
human behavior, human dynamics,
and understanding how our mind works.
And today I'm sitting down with someone that I wanted to meet
for a long, long time.
I've watched his YouTube videos for years.
I've been a fan of his content for many, many years
on Instagram and other platforms.
We've been trying to get together and we finally made it happen.
I'm talking about none other than New York Times bestselling author,
international speaker, and dating expert Matthew, Hasey Matthew.
Thank you for being here, man.
Thank you, man. Thanks for having me.
I share the sentiment. I wanted to do this for years and somehow
they plan it's never aligned until now.
I know. I remember messaging with you on Instagram,
I think I was actually in London at the time,
a few years back, and there was a video
that we were gonna do together.
It was one of these dating videos that you were doing,
and you're like, oh, do you wanna, and I was in London,
but I don't know how we kept missing each other.
Yeah, we even had a brief phone call,
where we were like connected and got on really well,
and I know with both mutual friends of Louis' house,
and it just, yeah, it's fun though,
to finally be in the same room and do this, it's fun.
Yeah, and I feel like it's a momentous occasion
because England's playing in the final on Sunday.
We're like, we've been brought together,
it's too grit.
And have you decided where you're watching the final?
You don't know.
I have to be in true introverted fashion.
I have to be at home, like,
I like being with my family family because I do like the energy
of people who really care. What drives me mad is when you've got people who have no idea
what they're talking about yelling at a screen during a match. And I genuinely love hearing
all of the commentary. So like I'm one of those people, I'm a fight fan like boxing and
so on. When there's a big boxing match, I'm like, all right, everyone can come over,
but just, I wanna hear the commentary,
so I don't, I hate that bar environment
of everyone yelling at the screen.
Yeah, so yeah.
I get that, yeah, no, I've actually,
I lead a spiritual book club on Sunday,
and half of it is bang in the first half of the game.
So I'm only gonna get to what's the second half.
It's hard for me to imagine anything more different than the energy of English fans back home
than a spiritual book club. Literally, this is like a really, it's like a intimate, it's
a group of friends that I had a spiritual book club for, happens every Sunday and it's
11 to 1. So 11 to 12, I'm going to be doing, sorry, 11 to 1. And so the game starts at 12
here. Yeah, I'll get the second half, but no, thank you for being here, man
And like I said, I've watched your videos for years
Senior interviews senior books senior you know not senior on stage in person. I look forward to being able to do that
But I wanted to start with the question. I'm not sure if I've seen you been asked this before but I wanted to ask you like
What's your favorite love story ever?
Or is there one that you have?
Whether it's a real life, one, a client,
a personal experience, a book?
Is, you know, what's your favorite story of love?
That is a really tricky question.
There's a movie I saw recently.
It's a Japanese movie called Weathering With You.
I've not seen that.
It's an animated movie.
This guy, he created what was at one time, the biggest, grossing anime of all time.
But this movie, Weathering With You, is about a young guy and a girl who are, you know, in this kind of, this young love, there's this kind of
mythical story where she, it's constantly raining in Tokyo. And she has the power to make
the rain go away. They call her a sunshine girl. But, and everyone, she's so prized because
she's the sunshine girl. And so she's constantly called upon by people
who are running events or fireworks displays or whatever to come along and make it stop raining
only. And I spoil her alert for anyone who's not seen weathering with you, by the way. I'll come
back in three minutes. But every time she does it, she, she, a piece of herself starts to disappear.
And it gets to the point where she completely floats up
into the sky and no longer has a presence here on Earth
because she's given so much as the sunshine girl.
And there's a moment where he goes to save her
from up in the clouds because he realizes she can't, you know, even if she comes back down to earth
and never does another thing as a sunshine girl,
and all it does is rain all day, he still chooses her.
Wow.
And the, for me at least, I'm not saying the director meant this,
but it's so beautiful because it felt to me like a story of a person who
is accepting that even if being with you means that it's that it's raining, I still
choose you. I don't just choose you when the sun is shining. And there's something stunningly
beautiful to me about that because that's a it's a much more grown up kind of love
than the one that we tend to look for in our 20s. Yeah. Or as teenagers and some of us for the rest of our lives. Yeah, where, you know, we love someone as long as the sun is shining. But when when the chips are down and when things are tough. They start reassessing everything.
That was a beautiful answer. I love that. That was wonderful. I mean, I love movies too. So when you said a movie and I've not seen that movie So that sounds amazing. I love that. What a great love story and yeah, no, no, I don't know. Should I still watch the movie?
I really enjoy it. And there's another movie he did prior to that called your name. Okay, and
and there there's something very beautiful about his movies. Yeah, I would check them out. Yeah, okay. I'll take a look
Yeah, no, I love that.
And it's so interesting with what you refer to there, this idea of the view we have of
love and relationships in our teens and our twenties, or like you said, for some people
their whole life, how do you think your view of love has changed while helping people create
find, keep love?
I mean, you know, you've been on this amazing journey.
You've been doing this for what?
Decade now, 15 years.
15 years, right?
Okay, so you've been doing this for 15 years.
How has your view of love changed over the last 15 years
of actually working with people
and speaking on stages, being interviewed in all these places?
I suppose getting older myself,
and I realize I'm still relatively speaking a young man,
but getting older myself, it's become much more apparent to me the importance of re-evaluating
what is actually important in a partner. And we tend to our younger selves, we do have this list of things that we think we want
that seem important, might be charisma,
it might be the fact that someone is super sexy
because they can speak three languages
or that they've achieved a certain status in their life
or in a ward or whatever,
they can play the guitar and we rate these things
as these things. And when we think of losing someone, we look at all of those things and go,
I couldn't lose them, they're funny and they're charismatic and they're super fun to be around
and they're sexy and they can play the guitar and they can speak you know, speak three languages and it still is a kind of
Instagram profile version of a person. And someone recently said to me like, I'm in a relationship
with a guy and, you know, he plays the guitar and I find that really sexy and he's really good looking.
And I'm like, he doesn't need, in order to be in a relationship with you,
he doesn't need to be great at music.
He needs to be great at a relationship.
And if you wanna hear someone play guitar really well,
go to a John Mayer concert.
Like, go cheer and away.
You don't need that every day in your relationship.
What's important in a relationship is someone
who is really competent in a relationship
and has those skills and those skills are hard one. It's one of the reasons that
relationships with big age gaps don't work. It's not because there is necessarily a
chasm in the way these two people feel.
There is necessarily a chasm in the way these two people feel. It's that there is a huge chasm when it comes to their relationship competence and their
experience and that really does matter.
And if you're with someone who has a far lower level of relationship experience,
then they either have to learn through you,
which is gonna be a painful process.
They're gonna make a lot of mistakes,
they're gonna hurt you a lot in the process.
You're gonna have to be careful of avoiding
the role of teacher,
constantly in the relationship and try and be equals
in a situation that's inherently kind of unequal.
And you're gonna have to hope that they do learn those skills. You're making quite a big bet
on the idea that one day they will have that skill set. Some people take most of their lives to
get it and some people never learn it because they're not the kind of people that want to grow
and be self-aware and do the work. And so I have come to really believe that my
view of love has changed to the extent that I think firstly, the idea of, you know, is it about
meeting the right person or is it about being the right time? And I've started to wait my opinion far more towards time. That when you
have decided it's the right time for you to really meet someone, you go into love with
a completely different intentionality. Love isn't happening to you. It's not this wave
that's washing over you, which is super easy. When a wave's washing
over you just stand there and just bask in the goodness of how wonderful it feels to
feel that sort of drug. But that's not the same thing as intentionally. There's a difference
between winning the lottery and starting a business. When you start a business, there's
a method, there's a practical, there's a practical, there's
a pragmatism to it, the things you need to do in order to build this thing. And I think
that, that to me, it's, I don't think I've developed a less romantic view. I actually,
if anything, have more and more and more come to see a person who's in a place where
they're willing to actually do the work of a relationship
as romantic. And I think people consistently get burned when they're not factoring into the
equation of how right someone is, whether this person is demonstrating, they are also at a time
in their life where they're looking for the same thing and be that they have genuine
great relationship skills
like
You know, we're all gonna argue at some point, but how do we argue? Yeah, right?
That's that's just one area, but it's a huge thing
So that that to me would probably be the biggest shift. I believe in timing more these days
and I believe in timing more these days.
And I believe that we, we undervalue to an incredible extent,
genuine relationship skills, and we overvalue just kind of mindless attraction.
Yeah, yeah, I love that answer, man.
That's so fascinating to compare person versus time.
And yeah, I often say to my friends, like the most romantic thing in the world
is someone who's trying to build relationship competence,
like that, and sure.
That is the most romantic expression that someone can have.
I love the way you talk about relationship skills
and we're talking about relationship competence.
I find that actually, and I can say this
for my relationships too, before I met my wife
and with now, relationship competence always felt like both people didn't have it.
I don't think I was in many relationships where I had it and the person didn't.
I actually think for many years, we both, me and the other person, we both had zero relationship
competence.
How do you think people build relationship competence?
Because it almost feels like, and you're right, and, you know, I know we both agree on this, that you just expect to know how to be in a relationship,
and you kind of just, you're almost expected to know that, oh, yeah, you start dating,
and then you know what to do next, and none of us know what to do next, or now, tell us
about how you go about building relationship competence, and what are the skills that
you kind of break it down into for people to think about that?
Well, firstly, I had very much the same experience as you.
I always thought I was such a great guy in relationships.
I really did like, I always thought I was so, you know,
the line I was used to say about myself is, you know,
I, yeah, maybe I wasn't ready or maybe I wasn't in a place
where I wanted the same thing, but I was a great partner
while I was in it.
It wasn't true. No. I wanted the same thing, but I was a great partner while I was in it.
It wasn't true.
I was, I was,
what's the word?
I was a gentleman.
I was respectful.
I, in many, I've always been kind.
That's always been a through line of my life,
but you could be kind and dumb.
Yeah.
And you could hurt a lot of people when you're kind and dumb.
You know, and so I look back on myself and sometimes it takes someone who's better than you
at a certain part of a relationship, maybe not the whole thing, but they come along and
and you notice that they, you know, going back to that example, argue differently than you do.
You went into fight mode and they went into compassion mode
and said, look, babe, I know you feel like this,
but here's like the way you're reacting right now,
here's how it's making me feel.
And you go, oh, that was different.
What was that?
It's like you learned a new move.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. What was that? It's like you learned a new move. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
What was that move?
I haven't seen that one before.
I'm usually I've been in relationships where I say this
and then you give me the silent treatment
and then I have just, I feel justified in then being mean
because you're going silent and now we amp it up
and now all of a sudden you come across someone who takes you off road
and that's a scary moment and when someone takes you off road you have two choices. You can either
you can either be afraid of that. I know there's something uncomfortable about it because you're
not used to it. Even kindness can be uncomfortable if you're not used to it. Absolutely.
Right. But when someone takes you off road, that really is an opportunity to watch what someone
else is doing.
I think at the same, there's true in business, right?
It's you, you see someone else who just did a different thing, like in your industry.
Someone did, someone took a turn that everyone else didn't.
And you can either be the person who says, what are they?
What are they?
What's that? Why are they doing that? That's the stupid. Well, what are they, what are they, what's that?
Why are they doing that?
That's the stupid, what they think that's gonna work.
Like, oh, you can go, oh, that's interesting.
No one else is doing that.
Why are they doing that?
Let me check that out.
Like, you could be curious about it,
especially if you think, oh, there's something to that.
What they're doing.
Yes.
So I think that the exploring areas where someone isn't doing the same thing as you,
and it takes you into a different experience.
That's not bad.
It's like it almost feels like, oh, this is uncomfortable, but maybe it's showing me something
I'm not very good at.
You know, maybe they just, maybe they went out with their friends and I picked a fight
because I'm jealous
about something that I think is,
I've got this portrayal of what's going on and whatever.
I went out with my friends and they said,
hey, have the best night, babe.
Yeah.
And I'm like, oh, that's weird.
Everyone I've been with so far is,
when I go out with my friends, they get super jealous.
Yeah.
And that always makes me feel like I've got something to resist.
Yes. Yeah.
But now I just went out and they said,
have the best night. By the way, you look gorgeous.
And I'm like, okay, what's that?
Well, that's a new move, which is what's that one.
And you learn something and you pay attention
because you go, that was really interesting.
That made me, my God, that made me,
that made me when I was out, think about them half the time.
And think, what a sexy sexy confident person they are. Yeah, that's it
I want to make her feel that when she next goes out
Yeah, yeah, and that apparently that's how you do that. Oh, that's interesting
You learn from it. So I think that there's a learning that we get from relationships
But in order to do that you actually have to be in a space of
Of being willing to put eyes on yourself actually have to be in a space of being willing to put eyes
on yourself.
Yeah.
And in a constant student mindset, which most of us are not, you know, we do go into relationships,
a lot of us thinking we know it all, we learn it all from our last relationship, but there's
just, it's a cliche, but there's always another level.
There are so many levels to life, and it fascinates me,
because I'm always thinking that I'm just thinking,
my God, there are so many people that are so good
at so many different things.
Like, no, I'm not saying everyone's better than us.
They might be good at this one piece of the puzzle,
but you watch how they do it, and you go,
that's really interesting.
There's something to learn from that.
But if we're constantly trying to defend our own position and trying to feel like what we do is the
right way, we'll never, we'll never learn that. And I do, I'm a believer in, I'm a believer
in therapy or anything that gets you to be, to, to look at yourself in a constructive way.
And someone in front of you
who's not gonna give you the answers that you want.
I remember a long time ago,
me saying to a friend,
I was in this relationship and I was like,
this person wants to speak a lot.
And I've got this and I've got this and I've got this
and I've got this.
And I was expecting him to be like,
well, she sounds like a lot of work.
Like she sounds really difficult, man.
That's it, yeah.
Like, tell me about it.
And instead he went, I'm kind of with her on this one.
Yeah.
Like, actually, it's super important that you,
he was like, he actually said to me, it's not funny.
He goes, I go to the gym, one tenth of the time you do.
But I have a body like a bag of milk.
He said, so you get what you pay for.
You know, and in your relationship,
you get what you pay for.
You know, if you want it to be great, invest in it.
And that's that friend or that mentor or that therapist don't ever see them again.
Fire them immediately.
They're way in gold because we surround ourselves with, you know, people, you know,
men surround themselves with the boys club. Oh, man, she sounds different.
Oh, you know, they're so high maintenance blah, blah, blah.
And women surround themselves with their friends
who sit around and say, I can't believe he did.
I can't believe he said that to you.
I can't, and half of them sometimes
are sitting there going, you kind of seem like
the unreasonable one here.
But they don't tell her.
Yeah.
And then she gets further ingrained in this way of thinking.
In fact, they even might ampere up and send her back into a relationship charged now
and even more defined.
And now you get even more conflict.
So those to me are some of the key ways to learn and just to be open.
Always, always, always be open.
I love that.
I love that. I think it's so true
And I love what you said about how like it's not like you're gonna meet
The mentor in your partner or the coach or the guru, but like they're maybe just better at one thing
Uh-huh
Maybe great at just one area of a relationship and that's what you kind of
Mining and picking from my I when I look back at what you're saying in my relationship
I'm trying to reflect it in my teens. I realized I had a serious issue with, I just loved being loved.
And so I was kind, I identify with so much of what you said, I was always kind, I was
always a gentleman, I was always like generous, but I realized that in my teens, I would go
above and beyond to want someone to fall in love with me.
And that's all I wanted, all I actually wanted was for someone to fall in love with me. And that's all I wanted. All I actually wanted was for someone to fall in love with me.
And it didn't actually matter who it was sometimes.
Like it wasn't even that I really liked them
or knew them or understood them.
I just wanted that feeling of this person loves me.
And what would often happen is they would fall in love
with me because I'd be the perfect guy
by giving them gifts and remembering this
and whatever it was.
And then I would feel like they're not giving me anything back.
Now I feel like the one I'm the one who's doing all the loving
and there's no love back,
which I've only created myself because of my crazy cycle.
Totally relate to all of that.
And I was that guy too.
And those guys will often look at guys
who are kind of the textbook, the textbook jerk.
Yeah.
And be like, well, he's awful.
Yes.
Like, you know, he slept with her and he completely ghosted her and he never called her
again or he disrespect whatever.
He's easy to point to that guy.
And being like, what a piece of crap that guy is.
But we're more dangerous. I would then break up with them
because I didn't feel loved and then I'd feel like I was the victim and that I'd been the one
not treated well. And then my wife broke me because I tried to, I did the same thing with her.
I was always like, but she wasn't impressed by any of the ways I tried to love her,
apart from being me. And that was when it all kind of like unraveled. And I was like, oh, I finally found someone who actually
didn't want all the stuff I was trying to do to get her to love me. And so my wife was
the kind of person who broke through that barrier because she just didn't care about
the stuff or the memory or the gifting or the extravagant,
like she hated all that stuff.
And so all of a sudden my technique wasn't,
it wasn't even a technique, it was genuine in my delusion,
but it wasn't working anymore.
And that's when I had to really look at it
because I really loved my wife.
And I was like, oh, I actually have to really look at this.
And so she was the one who broke that
and taught me that idea.
That's beautiful.
Yeah, so it took someone who valued something completely different than the thing that
the weapon you were used to using, right?
Exactly.
The move that she liked took away all of your special moves.
Yeah, all the power was gone.
You have to fight this fight now with none of these special moves.
Yeah.
And then you're all of a sudden, like you say, it's like being stripped bare.
Now I get a chance to truly be loved for who I am,
not the performance that I'm doing in the beginning,
which as you say, it's not that it's not genuine.
Yeah, it wasn't like I was manipulative.
It wasn't manipulative.
It's genuinely about getting something for ourselves.
Completely.
As opposed to genuinely about discovering somebody else
or building something or whatever.
And I did the same thing.
And it's one of the great, you know, I deal with my God,
and my company we're dealing with, I mean, millions
of women a month worldwide, but tens of thousands in terms
of real coaching. And one of the biggest problems is people falling for people really quickly,
falling in love too fast, where it's because they went on a couple of great dates with
a guy. And they can look at the date and go,
he was amazing and you should have seen what he did
and how he was on the date and all of that.
And the thing I have to always break down is,
that may not have been about you.
It is about something he wanted you to feel
by the end of the date.
And not that, you know, I'm a, I kind of
loads this culture we have right now where everyone's a
narcissist. We call it was so quick to like label. He's a
narcissist. She's a narcissist. Like I'm like, not everyone,
like, we all have a narcissistic streak. Absolutely. And we
all exhibit narcissistic behaviors at time. That doesn't mean we're a diagnosable narcissist.
But a narcissistic streak we all have early in dating and to differing degrees is the desire
to impress rather than connect.
And so we go on a date with someone and at the height of it, if someone's really on
the extreme end, they will give the greatest date with someone and you know at the height of it if someone's really on the extreme end
They will give the greatest date of someone's life. Yeah, that person goes away and they're like this guy is amazing
or this person and
They they may have put on an amazing date, but you know nothing yet and what's cool about your wife say you know going
Going through that process with you is, you
know, I can imagine for her, it's almost like, well, I want to see how you are in week
four.
Or I want to see how you are in month three.
And until you've been there, you really don't know how great of a partner somebody is going
to be.
And that's what I mean by, you know know when you ask me about what I've really
learned about love and I talked about valuing the wrong things. That's one of the big ways that it
shows up. If you are getting crazy nervous on a date, you're already that's already a reflection
of the fact that you've valued the wrong things because you're valuing this person's looks
valued the wrong things because you're valuing this person's looks or their status or what you perceive them to be, but you can't, you're not valuing them in a relationship or in relation
to you, which is defined by how much they give, how they connect with you, how they relate
to you, how they see you. All of that stuff is completely, you're a zero. So how can you be nervous if you're
valuing the right things? You can only be nervous if you're valuing the wrong things.
If that to me is the key to eliminating early nerves in early dating is that there is, I
almost feel a little fatalistic about it, which is funny coming from someone who gives advice in this area for a living because, you know, I do believe that we can influence
situations with what we do, but we do have to have a bit of a dose of fatalism, that the
thing that didn't pan out wasn't the thing.
The person who's still great in week eight is showing you the right things.
But if they suddenly ghost you in week nine, then it doesn't mean they would have been great in week 16.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
They're like, oh, but they were the one and I just, I don't know, I need closure.
You have closure.
That action was closure.
What they showed you is they had eight good weeks in them.
Yeah.
I'm Danny Shapiro, host of Family Secrets.
It's hard to believe we're entering our eighth season.
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I can't wait to share ten incredible stories with you,
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Our 20s are seen as this golden decade.
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But what can psychology really teach us about this decade?
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I'm Munga Shatekudar and to be honest, I don't believe in astrology, but from the moment I was born, it's been a part of my life.
In India, it's like smoking. You might not smoke, but you're gonna get secondhand astrology. And lately, I've been wondering
if the universe has been trying to tell me
to stop running and pay attention.
Because maybe there is magic in the stars
if you're willing to look for it.
So I rounded up some friends and we dove in
and let me tell you, it got weird fast.
Tantric curses, major league baseball teams,
canceled marriages, K-pop!
But just when I thought I had a handle on this sweet and curious show about
astrology, my whole world can crash down.
Situation doesn't look good, there is risk to father.
And my whole view on astrology, it changed. Whether you're a skeptic or a believer,
I think your ideas are gonna change too.
Listen to Skyline Drive and the I Heart Radio app,
Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts.
That's interesting.
Yeah, that's interesting.
And it's the same as you'd say in sport.
Like, if you, I'm just thinking about sport,
while you were saying that.
And it's the idea of like,
a player may have one good season in him or her.
And then that player may have had 10 good seasons in him or her.
And sometimes we have these players where we're like,
oh, she's gonna be the next or he's gonna be the next.
And then all of a sudden, they don't give you that season.
And in sports, we get closure by just going,
all right, they had potential, but they didn't make it.
But you're right, in love and life,
it's a lot hard to have that mentality of like,
they gave me eight good weeks, but they didn't make it.
When you sit there and you obsess over someone
who just left you going, you obsess over
what they could have been.
Yeah, that's what it is.
It could have, you know, this was so promising.
They were everything that I was looking for.
This could have been, and anytime you,
someone breaks up with us, you know,
the heartbreak is the loss of the life we thought
we were gonna have with someone.
This is, this is what it could have been.
This is what it should have been.
Yeah.
And my answer to that is, it would have been, this is what it should have been. Yeah. And my answer to that is it would have been, if it should have been and could have been.
Yeah.
Then it would have been, you're literally, you're grieving over something that was not,
by definition, it wasn't meant to happen because it didn't happen.
Yes.
Yeah. Yes.
It didn't happen.
So this idea that it was supposed to or it should have is myth is a fantasy, it's science
fiction.
But I feel like in relationships, we have this fantasy mind that's already written the
script and the book and the trilogy before the second
date is over. And so it's almost like relationship seems to be like the one
area of our life where we write decades into the future and we can't help
ourselves because we almost think that that and it's almost like you're living
what you're saying is you're living off the fantasy not even of the reality
that's right in front of you. And so even when you're on a date with them, you're not even there because you're in
your fantasy land of what you think it is.
And that's where in so many ways, everything that you are, you know, your expertise in mindfulness
and everything you've learned there is so important in dating.
Because in dating, you have to be on the date you're on.
Mindful dating is beyond the date you're on.
Don't be on date too, but really, you're not.
You're on date 32.
Your mind has to be on date too with your body.
Yes.
And when people don't do that, that's where
they start constructing a fantasy of where this relationship is going, a fantasy of who
this person is. They know 5% of someone and they've built the other 95% of extrapolation.
He was really sweet in that moment. You know, I bays good with kids. I bays this.
I bays that. I bays, you know, I bays an amazing family man. I bays, you know, and, and, and we've all
had the experience of meeting someone who is incredibly charming, fun to be around. You know, you went
away from like, as men, we sometimes go out and we meet another man and it's like, we've been a date
on a date with that man and you come home and you go, he was so great.
You know, I loved him to bits.
And he really charmed you.
And then six months later, that person has really lost their shine.
Because they're flaky.
You realize they don't actually show up when you need them to.
You realize that it's, they kind of, you know, in the talented Mr Ripley,
there's that great line.
Oh, that's a great movie.
Great movie, there's a great line
when Matt Damon is like, you know,
he's become the new chosen best friend of Jude Law's character.
And his name, Jude Law's character's name's Dickie
and Matt Damon is feeling suddenly shut out,
like out of nowhere, he feels shut out.
When five minutes ago, he was like, disguise my best friend and he loves me.
And he said to Matt Damon's girlfriend at the time, he's expressing how he feels.
That, you know, or, no, he's not even expressing.
She sees the look on his face that he's sad that he no longer has this like
friendship that feels real to him.
And she says the thing about Dickey is
when he puts his attention on you,
it's like the sun is shining on you.
And then the attention moves on and it's very cold.
And that's the experience of a lot of those people.
But when you're taking the 5% of the sun shining on you
and you use it to build the 95% that you cannot possibly
know. You can't know who this person is when your brother gets sick and you need to travel
to the hospital to be with that person and you need support in that moment. You can't
know how that person is when you're having an anxious moment and you need someone to show
love and compassion towards you and this anxiety that you can't seem to control
and what you really need is a loving teammate to be there with you and not to judge you.
You can't know what this person is like in year three of a relationship when the, you
know, you need to make a shift in your sex life because it feels like that part has become
stayed, but you need to work together to figure out.
You don't know what that person is like in those stages. So thinking that you have all the answers,
because you've been on even 10 or 15 dates with this person
and had a wonderful time, is a fallacy, a fantasy.
There's a great...
The relationship itself is about every stage of it
and the effort that's put in.
And there's a story from Bukowski
where he slept with a prostitute,
every romantic story begins this way.
He slept with a prostitute and he woke up
to her having stolen his poetry.
And he was so upset, so mad.
So mad.
And he wrote about it.
And he wrote a piece that was all about how you could take anything,
take my money, take the other stuff in the apartment,
take it all, but please not my anything but my poetry.
And the whole piece finishes with the line.
And then God said crossing his legs, I see where I've created a great many poets, but not so very much poetry.
And the idea is that, you know, the person who has potential in a relationship's a poet. Not many people writing poetry.
Writing is the more difficult part.
A lot of people who are great on a date,
very romantic, very charming,
they're a poet on a date.
The poetry is the relationship.
And you shouldn't, you know, Bukowski was upset
because his poetry was taken, the things he'd worked on.
And that's how it should be in a relationship is,
don't get upset because you lost a poet.
Poets are a dime a dozen.
Poetry is rare.
People who are willing to write the poetry of a relationship,
people who are willing to stick it with you
for a year, two years, five years, 10 years,
that's really rare.
And we need to start valuing the poetry
far more than we value the poet.
Yeah, I love that.
What a beautiful analogy.
Let's talk a bit about that poetry
because I feel like what's amazing is
we convince us of more of the fiction
when you are lasting after that person's looks,
fame, prestige, whatever they have
that you're attracted to.
It's almost like, then even if they do a million bad things,
like you said about the guy playing the guitar
or whatever it is, it's like, you're like,
oh, but he's so, or she's so whatever.
But tell us a bit about what to look out for.
So when people are out there,
and I know what I love about what you do is that,
and I love this conversation by the way, so far,
because it's philosophical
and it's real, but you're great at getting practical too, and I see that in all the work
you put out.
What's some of the practical things that people can look out for?
I know so many friends who are in early relationships or just started to date someone or finally
met someone.
What can they look for in those moments? Or is it looking
for anything? Maybe that's even the wrong place to start. I think it's so we have a duty early
on to bring our best to the table and as much as we can. We're all going to make mistakes. We're all
going to have anxious moments or jealous moments or moments where we let our insecurity get the
better of us, moments where we let our anger get the better of us, moments where we let our
anger get the better of us, everyone's going to have these moments, but we want to try and put our best
foot forward. But I always think that we learn a lot in the moments where you have your first fight,
where you have your first fight, or you reveal something about yourself,
and you see how they react to it.
You know, do they react with compassion?
Or is there immediate judgment?
And I don't mean a moment where you kind of try and perform.
I mean, a moment where you genuinely are
brave enough to let someone in and be seen. Does this person, do they see you?
Do they acknowledge you and do they show compassion and curiosity about why you
are that way and what's happened in your life to get you there. Are they
looking to figure you out and who you are?
Is a wonderful, wonderful sign because a lot of people are just in a relationship
in their sleepwalking.
Yeah.
They're just, they're enjoying it.
They're enjoying the fruits of the relationship.
But you don't get the impression someone's really trying to get to know you.
You don't feel seen by that person.
The person who's actually asking questions of you,
the person who's looking to understand the good and the bad in you and who elevates the good and soothes the bad,
that's something very beautiful to look out for. The person who can come back and say sorry
as of course, and I apply the same standard to both sides. But the person who can come back and say, sorry, as of course, and I apply the same standard to
both sides.
But the person who can come back and say, sorry, you know, again, we all, when I, with
one of my staff in my company, when I say, you know, when I give them a difficult piece
of feedback, I don't expect them to smile in that moment.
I don't expect them to like take, you know, in that I would hope that they don't expect them to smile in that moment. I don't expect them to like take, you know, in that,
I would hope that they don't react in a really negative or toxic way,
but I don't expect them to have an easy time with that.
But if that person can go away over the next few hours or days
and then come back and say, you know, I really thought about what you said
and I'm going to work on that, that's something to look for.
Because you can really like that person. Because you can really, like that person,
if you're both that kind of person,
you can work with that person.
There's someone you can genuinely have a relationship with
because it's not a relationship that's based on perfection
or never having an argument,
but it is based on two people who are humble enough
to genuinely own their mistakes
or to own the areas where they want to get better.
I'm always looking at the ways people argue and whether they're trying to do damage in
an argument or whether they're trying to rebuild in an argument.
And if you're with someone that every time you come out of an argument,
you feel like they lasterated you. And there's that you're you're you come out of an argument
bleeding every time. You know, and you're like, why did they have to say that incredibly nasty thing?
And it's one thing if they come back to them an hour later and say, or even a day later and say, I truly regret having said that to you. And I will do better. But if they won't even acknowledge
that that was a really toxic way to have an argument. And that was a really nasty thing to say,
then that's a problem. Because this is a relationship that's not going to soothe you. It's going to
create more and more wounds. So that, I would would say is an important thing. And two people genuinely, genuinely at the core of it operating as a
team. What do you, what do you need? And can I tell you, you know, you're working really
hard right now. Can I understand what your goal is in doing this and seek to understand that and where that's coming from
for you and why that's important?
But can I also voice to you that I'm not feeling
very loved right now and that I'm, you know,
maybe it's just my insecurity or maybe that, you know,
but I, or maybe I don't have something enough
as many things going on in my life right now
as you're doing yours, but I know one of the effects is it's creating some anxiety for me.
And it's making me feel like you don't love me as much as I love you, you know.
You want an environment where you can have that real conversation.
And it, it, then to me, a relationship is no longer about right and wrong. It's about the conversation.
Can the conversation be had? That to me is one of the greatest signs of a relationship you should hang on to.
Is can the relationship be had? And can it be had in a beautiful and productive and loving way? Yeah. Because that's all that, you know, David Brooks said marriage is a 50 year conversation.
Mm-hmm.
Right?
Is that conversation, does it feel good?
Yeah.
Doesn't always feel comfortable, but does it feel like this is a conversation that is making me better?
Yeah.
Or is it a conversation that's always making me worse?
Yeah, I love that.
And I think it's such a vicious me worse? Yeah, I love that.
And I think it's such a vicious cycle though sometimes because I find that you get into
an argument, like you said, which I think the first argument is such a great market to
put down as let's reflect on this.
I think that's such a great way of putting it that you said.
And if you look at that, often what happens is the person reacts badly,
it's natural, you react badly too.
And then you're waiting for that person to make up
and that person's waiting for you to make up.
And then maybe you go ahead and put the first hand in,
but then now they deal with the second bad
and now you're waiting again.
And I feel like we get lost in this like waiting game.
And I kind of got to a point where I was just like,
I want to make sure
that I am leading this conversation.
So a conversation that me and my wife always have is, I'll always check in with them and
be like, is this relationship going in the direction you want it to go in?
Like is this going in the direction?
Is this relationship what you want it to be?
And if it's not, what do you want it to be and what are you willing to do to get there?
Because, and I'll always be like, well, this is not how I want the relationship to be. And this is what I want it to be and what are you willing to do to get there? Because, and I'll always be like, well, this is not how I want the relationship to be.
And this is what I want it to be. And I find that conversation for me is really healthy.
And I'm always happy, one thing that I've got to you right now, and I think my wife has this
in different parts of our relationship. I'm always happy to take the responsibility
for the quality of the relationship, because I'm in it. In the same way as I'm with my company,
in the same way as I'm for this podcast, in the same way as I'm with my company in the same way as I'm for this podcast
And the same was done for anything. It's like it's easy to
It's easy to sit there and go well, what are you bring into the table?
and and I realized at one point where I was like if I care about stuff
I've got to be okay
with
Grabbing onto the reins and the funny thing is I started to realize that actually there are plenty of times when my wife does that,
she just does it in different areas
that I don't notice.
And so it can feel like I'm carrying the burden,
but actually that's not true.
I'm taking responsibility where I thrive.
And actually she's taking responsibility
where she thrives and I don't even notice that.
And that's when I started to feel healthier
rather than like, I was like,
well, where are you show up? Like, what are you doing? And I remember when I was a monk, the, the teachers
would always tell us that, you know, you may sit in a class with a non charismatic teacher.
Like some of the monks are not going to be the most charismatic, the most attentive, the most like dynamic teachers of the texts
and the spiritual scriptures.
And they were like,
but if you're a student that's 10 out of 10,
even if the speakers are one out of 10 in presentation,
you're gonna get lots.
But if you're a one out of 10,
and the speakers 10 out of 10,
then they're lifting you up.
But by the way, if you're at a one out of 10
and they're at a one out of 10,
that's all you're gonna get.
And it's kind of like what your friends said
about the bag of milk.
You know, the idea of like taking your own responsibility
for if you wanna be in a relationship.
I'd love to hear your thoughts on that.
Yeah, but that's a big again.
You're so right, Jay, and it's truly beautiful
that you have that in your relationship.
And it's also brave,
because talking,
those conversations are not easy.
And people can say things in those conversations
that can scare us, they can say,
well, I'm not happy because I want it to go
in this direction.
Yeah, I've heard that too, yeah.
Like, you know, I didn't realize you were unhappy
in that way, or I didn't realize you felt like that.
That takes a lot of bravery to have conversations like that.
And I commend you for that.
And I think that's one of the things a lot of people aren't willing to do is step bravely
into an area where they could be criticized.
But I think it is one of the most important aspects of a relationship is being able to do
exactly that. So no, I think it's a stunning thing.
Well, it's uncomfortable, like you're saying, it's not, and I'm not sharing it, it's like we've
affected it, we've got it right. I'm just saying that that's what we've had to do in order to,
like, you know, we're only at year five, year eight in our relationship, year five in marriage.
But it's like, that's what we've just, I've had to find these,
what you're saying, like the 50 year conversation and the idea you're saying of having these,
like, I've noticed that without these things, you could go years without changing anything.
But speaking of what you said with the idea of the monks, that to me goes back to the,
you know, what I was saying about timing being important.
I do believe when you go into a relationship with genuine purpose.
And even when you go into dating with genuine purpose, you go on a dating app, because
a lot of people out there listening to this won't be in relationship.
They'll be right now in the crapshoot of dating apps trying to figure out how to navigate. When we're intentional,
we bring a different energy to the things we do. We bring a different energy to a person.
And in a relationship, in early dating, I think that when you're really intentional and when you
really are like, I'm looking for a real connection here, you don't actually judge people as quickly.
like I'm looking for a real connection here. You don't actually judge people as quickly.
You don't dispose of people as quickly
where you just go, wrong, wrong, wrong, wrong, wrong, wrong, wrong.
You start actually looking for what could be right.
You start, and I'm not saying ignoring
of you, Siv and toxic behavior.
I'm just saying those superficial things,
we just decide, no, they don't meet this checklist,
they don't meet this one or they don't meet this one,
we lose that because what we're looking for is deeper and we start genuinely seeking to, like,
we're on a date and we start going, let me really find out who this person is.
Yeah. Like, let me really see them and let me not be judgmental of them so quickly and look
to understand them and the reward for that is that this person now actually
feels seen by you.
Yeah, that's great.
And they now give you a different energy
than they may have given on the last 10 days.
Yeah.
Suddenly, they blossom on the date differently
because of the energy in front of them.
There's a Mitch album wrote a line about,
if the culture isn't serving you, then you have to be brave enough to create your own culture.
And in dating, for so many people, you know, I get all the complaints about dating these days.
You know, it's superficial, it's no one, everyone's flaky, no one goes on real dates, no one's
trying, no one's really committing, no one's a real relationship. It's like, okay, so what you're
describing to me is what you perceive to be a culture that's not working for you.
But if that culture isn't serving you,
then create your own culture that surrounds you.
And your culture can be powerful,
not that the world necessarily,
because in for that, there needs to be a combined cultural
shift. But in your micro life, in your micro problems and opportunities, the culture you create will
have an impact on the people around you. And the same way, you know, I said, if you go into a
room at a party and you say, I hope this party's good.
Well, now you're a victim to however this party is.
If everyone seems kind of closed off and mean
and there's cliquey and it's like, oh God.
Then you go home and you say, oh my God, that party was so,
it was one of those horrible parties.
But if you go in and you say,
I'm going to, at the very least, be responsible
for a part of this party.
Yes.
I'm gonna go in and I'm gonna give the love and the energy
and the compassion and the authenticity
that I would love for people in this room to join me
in giving.
Some will, some won't, and by the way, that's also good
because it will help you find your crowd, right?
So you find your crowd by being the thing you want to be, not by hoping that your crowd
elicits it from you.
You found your crowd online by going out and being an energy that you wanted to be first.
And then that crowd noticed you.
It's like a lighthouse.
So all the ships start knowing where to come home because they see the, you know, they see the lighthouse. That,
that for me is, that's one of the most beautiful things about giving energy early on. I see dating, you know, not just relationships, but I see people in dating these days, it's the game is who can
try less, who can be cooler, who can be more indifferent. And that's honestly not the way to do it.
That's certainly the way to attract someone
of a lower frequency.
I love that, yeah.
Right, you can certainly attract someone who wants the game,
who wants the, who's got the demons
that make them chase someone who's not into them, you know.
And there are plenty of people with those demons,
but you don't wanna be in a relationship with a person like that.
Because for sure, a person like that,
the moment you stop playing hard to get
and you turn around to meet them,
they're not gonna be interested in you anymore
because their demons will tell them,
this person likes us now.
They're not, this person is no longer cool to us.
Yeah.
They were only cool to us as long as they didn't like us.
So you can't ever.
It's so messed up.
Yeah, but it's, you know, it's that,
that crowd-toward marks thing,
I wouldn't want to be a member of any club that would have me as a member.
Yeah.
That describes dating insecurity amongst people like that is I want to, that person
doesn't want me.
They must be a catch.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Exactly.
And, and so what we have to do is give, when we give a little more energy in dating,
and say, you know what, this person who I've
known for five minutes, maybe I'm not feeling much energy here, but I'm just going to give
some energy. I'm going to give an amount of energy I'm willing to lose. That's a key
way of looking at it. What you don't do is you keep trying with someone who's not giving
you equal energy back. That then becomes massacistic. But giving an amount of energy you're willing to lose.
I always think about that in every interaction.
That's so true, yeah.
Give an amount you don't mind losing.
Yeah.
It's like going into the casino and playing like roulette.
It's like, all right, I'm in Vegas.
I'll give like a hundred bucks.
Yeah.
And then I'm not spending anything else here
in these casinos.
That's it.
For me, it's normally like ten bucks,
because I just, I have not a gambler,
but you just decide, why am I happy to lose?
And it's the same with energy.
I'm dating right now.
I wanna find someone amazing, someone beautiful.
I'm gonna give to everyone I interact with,
an amount of energy I don't mind losing.
And some people, I'm gonna bring out I'm going to bring out the people who
now are willing to give it back because all of a sudden they might be joted out of their
little coma that they've been in because they're disillusioned with dating and they feel
like no one's trying. And so they went into their shell, but they now they see you with
a different level of warmth and playfulness and just positivity. And they go, huh, who is this?
This makes me feel good.
And then they come out a little bit and all of a sudden
you see who they are.
You wake them up a little bit and then there's a bunch of people
you won't and that's okay because you were willing
to lose that much energy.
Yeah.
But what people do instead, they do a far more dangerous thing
of being afraid of the rejection from people that they approach or talk to in the
first five minutes. God forbid I get rejected in the first five minutes. But then they'll
meet someone where they have a bit of connection and chemistry, but who isn't trying, who isn't
giving them equal energy. And they'll keep pouring energy into that person month after
month after month when they're not getting the same in return.
And they think that's safer than going out there
and getting rejected by a new person.
But actually, this is the dangerous one.
The being rejected in five minutes
by someone who doesn't even know you
who on an app, how much can someone really reject you anyway?
And we all know our experience.
We've all chosen people in life who on an app
we might have swiped right past.
Absolutely.
Right, so we know from our own personal experience that if we get rejected on an app it doesn't
even mean that person wouldn't like us in real life.
Totally.
Right, but we're so afraid of that rejection. That's more to fear is that rejection and yet
continuing to waste months or years on someone who's giving us unequal energy,
is something people happily do.
Expand that time like it's nothing.
Because that's the really interesting thing.
Because it feels safe.
Because it feels like there's something at least.
There's some connection, there's some comfort, there's a couple of things.
Firstly, it's comfortable, right?
It's what I know.
Doesn't mean happiness and comfort are very different things. It's not happy. I'm not happy. I'm not getting my needs met. But it's comfortable, right? It's what I know. Doesn't mean I'm happiness and comfort are very different things.
It's not happy.
I'm not happy.
I'm not getting my needs met, but it's comfortable.
Yeah.
Right?
So I'll stay in it for that reason.
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It's the fear of I'll never find anyone again, which is a fallacy because you found this person.
You did it already, you know.
And by the way, this person's not so unique
that they're the only person in the world
that's gonna find you attractive.
Yeah, yeah.
They're attracted to you because you're attractive.
Yeah.
But that's the crazy thing, right?
We have this massive paradox between,
there's now unlimited choice, more than ever.
You feel like you have way more choice
than you had before.
But then we have limitless fear to go with that,
that we may not find anyone ever again.
Like it's like weird thing, right?
Like it's the idea of like,
I don't, so I've never had to online day or update.
I became a monk when I was 21
and then my wife's with the early person I've been with since I left. So I, the online day or at day, I began my month when I was 21 and then my wife's with the early person,
I've been with since I left.
So I, the last day,
it was a really impressive age to become a monk.
By the way, I feel like that's uniquely impressive,
is becoming a monk at 20.
Well, I started at 14, so I had seven years
of being a single lord of runways.
To go in and tell you.
Becoming a monk at 80?
Yeah, yeah, yeah. I think telling you. Becoming a monk at IT? Yeah, yeah.
I'll take that.
I think I did it because of having to, having to figure out some of this stuff, but, but
the last time I went on a date was, apart from my wife was about what, like, I was going
to like 12, 13 years ago, so I never had to date from an app.
The closest thing we had was high five.
Do you remember high five?
No.
High five was like an early Facebook where it'd showed you 200 to 300 friends in your network.
God it.
And it was Facebook, but it was,
most people, most guys in their teens used it for dating.
But the idea of,
you feel there's so much choice now.
Like you just, like you said,
you're just swiping away,
you're looking at profiles, everything.
But at the same time, you feel like
you'll never find
someone again.
What's happening there?
What are you seeing there when you're speaking to people?
I think there's a combination of things.
It's people are experiencing, for a lot of people,
they're not experiencing what they see
as an endless ocean of choice.
What they're experiencing is an endless ocean
of disappointment, of constantly talking to people
without not going anywhere.
Wow.
Being ghosted.
Talking to someone and that person never actually
takes them up on going on a date.
So it's like we're living a computer game version
of dating, but I'm not actually meeting up in real life.
Or, you know, meeting someone seems to be going well
for a few dates and all of a sudden they disappear
and, you know, they're, or they they're not interested anymore it fizzles out. And so it's it's a lot of
disappointment but the but the ironic thing about that is that on the flip side people experience
that choice in a negative way. So what they feel is the person I could be going I'm going on a
date with had a list choice. Wow. And and brings out all of my insecurity, because I feel like I'm never, how can I possibly
compete with what Boba Burnham says is everything all the time.
I can't compete with that.
I can't compete with you having access to everyone in a 10 mile radius,
or more if you choose to have more,
that's something I, how do I possibly live up to that?
And that to me is at the root of so many people's lack
of confidence, even their lack of authenticity
when they go on a date, because they're trying to be,
they stop trying to connect and they start trying
to be something they think the other person
wants them to be and now it's a departure from themselves.
Now to me the lesson here is the same as
You know, I the one other things I really enjoy about working with people in their love lives is that there is
It's so transferable and universal to other domains
So if you look at this this problem of we're afraid,
you know, we can't live up to the choice that somebody else has,
that's actually true in business too.
It's true in content creation, right?
Like I've had it in the last couple of years.
I've had moments where I look at just how many creators there now are.
And just how much video content is pumped online every day.
That I feel like I've overeat and I'm wanna be sick.
And I'm like, it can get to a point where,
even though because in one sense,
being good at something creates confidence, right?
If you feel like you're a good partner and you're attractive and you have good qualities
and so on, then you feel like a version of competence.
And the same is true in content creation.
I've been doing what I do for 15 years.
I feel very competent when it comes to speaking into a microphone, going on TV, going on
stage, making videos.
And yet there's still moments where I've had
just this little feeling of like,
do I need, like does the world need another voice?
Yeah.
Everyone is speaking all the time.
Mm-hmm.
And I mean, this is a side note, Ren.
But like, you know, it's so funny I was watching,
there was like some thumbnails for a major podcast. And this is no slant on it because I understand what happens with this,
but it was so funny because I was like, there was one thumbnail that was like,
you know, be kind to yourself. And then the next one was, um, achieve through suffering.
There's like another one that's like push past your limits and and ignore the realistic
and there's another one that's like motivation is BS and it was all the same podcast. But it's like
every next thumbnail is like a piece of wisdom that contradicts in some way the last piece. But
that I think is just I think we're all force feeding ourselves content at the moment.
That I think is just, I think we're all force feeding ourselves content at the moment. Right.
Just untenable.
But when you're a creator in an environment like that, you can get to a point where you're
like, just the world need me.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Like, if I just stop talking, does it matter?
Everyone else is saying it anyway in a thousand different ways.
And what I tell myself is there is someone that uniquely vibes with my personality and the way
I deliver the message.
I need, it's not about me worrying, how do I grab that person's audience or how can I appeal
to everybody.
It's just about me saying, you know what, Williams Insor,
there's a wonderful book for life and writing.
Someone once said to me,
every book on writing is a book on life,
but there's a Williams Insor wrote
one of the seminal books on writing,
which I forget, I think it's on,
how to great writing or something.
If you look up Williams Insor, people will find it,
but he says, you know, when you go to,
he said, you may be a aspiring travel writer
who when you think about going to Tokyo to write about Tokyo,
you think but thousands of travel writers
have been to Tokyo and written about Tokyo.
What do I possibly have to add?
And he says, but the world hasn't heard
what your lens on Tokyo is.
The world hasn't heard your take on Tokyo.
And that might contain some idea or way of looking
at things that other people haven't actually done,
or that you may say the same thing,
but you may say it fresh.
Yeah.
And so I tell myself that when I'm creating content
that it's not about appealing to everyone,
it really is about saying,
I might take on this is interesting for its own sake,
to the people that vibe with me,
the same is true in dating.
That you, there is a specific audience for you and it doesn't have to be 99.999% of people.
If you're looking for a serious relationship, it just has to be one.
Those are amazing odds.
That's a great analogy.
I love that. That, that, it resonates
your soul right on both levels. And, and your spot on, it's, it's weird that in dating two,
we want to be attractive to everyone. Yeah. We want everyone to feel just as a content creator.
You want everyone to feel a certain way about you. And so, I think that's such a great way of
looking at it. And yeah, I love the idea, the, the right to you mentioned around the voice on Tokyo. Yeah, I always feel that I'm like, we need more faces and more
voices. And because there were just so many people that you can connect to, that I can't
connect to and vice versa with everyone else. And I see that all the time that whatever,
and whatever field you're in too, right? Like I always say, like, there's enough space
for the best athletes, the best actors, like there's so many actors, there's so many actresses, but there's always a new
person that kind of makes it in and wins the upcoming actor award. That's really true.
Actress award because you kind of want to discover and you also want the idea of discovery.
And I think people almost make it like I think we've always made it about like,
oh who's your top three, who's your top five?
And the people that actually are watching,
and listen, they don't see it in a hierarchy,
they just are like, oh, I listened to this group of people.
That's usually how people think about it, I feel.
Like, even if someone asked me,
like, who are your favorite authors?
I don't have a categoric like number one author.
There's a group of authors that I love reading from.
Yeah.
And I feel like that's how people,
and in relationships,
obviously, like you're saying,
it's a much smaller pool,
but you having that intention
is gonna be much more clear.
But tell me about your take on changing people.
I wonder how much you get people saying,
I'm with someone, I met someone,
they have potential, I think I can change them.
There's a quote from, I think it's Jacob and Broad, where he says, consider how hard it is to change
yourself and you'll understand how foolish it is to think you can change somebody else.
And that people should really let that sink in because in the beginning of January,
60, 70, 80% of the world decides they want to get fit and healthy.
Yeah.
How, what percentage of those people get fit and healthy?
Yeah.
Those are people who want to change.
They didn't make that resolution for nothing.
They made it because they want that.
Yeah.
It's not someone saying to them, you should really lose weight and then going,
I'm fine, that's someone saying to themselves,
I should really lose weight.
And they still can't do it.
Now, consider being in a relationship with someone
who's not even admitting that they need to change
and thinking that they're going to change. It's hard.
It would be on your heart or behalf, and I'm not saying it would be wrong to trust someone
when they say this, but it's still speculative if you were I in a relationship and you say, Matt, I'm gonna change. That's still speculative for me.
You might.
It might be too hard.
But it might be worth me staying
if we have a lot of love between us
and you're saying I'm gonna change
because I say, you know what,
that's if you're really committed to this,
then game on, let's do this.
But in order for that to this, then game on, let's do this.
But in order for that to happen,
you have to first acknowledge there's something to be changed
and then show desire to change it.
And frankly, to have any real credibility,
show a plan for changing it.
Yeah.
When two people are in a relationship
or two people break up, and a woman comes to me and says,
two weeks later, he came back and he said,
he'll never, he wants me back and whatever
and he's not gonna hurt me again.
I always say an important question to ask is,
why would it be different this time?
Not from an emotion, not from a like charged person.
Like a real curiosity.
I get that you're telling me,
yeah, has that person even thought about that part?
Right, like two weeks later,
which is a suspect time anyway, right?
Because this is like, you're very much in the panic stage
of I'll say anything to get you back right now.
That's not considered, but fine,
this is where I would two weeks out from our breakup,
you're telling me you want me back and you'll never hurt me again.
I get you want me back. But what is it that's different this time? That's what I need to
understand, to feel safe, to go down this road with you again. And so I think people can and do change, otherwise you and me would be out of a job.
But change, if you are not the author of your own change, then the idea that your partner
is somehow going to will you to change, you know, it's like telling your partner, I want you to do therapy.
Yeah. Then we're going, okay. Yeah, exactly.
I'll go. And that's the reason most people do go. Right. I find at least from people that
I speak to or work with like, you hear that so often, the number one reason people do go
to therapy is because their partner kind of forced them into it and they kind of agreed to it. And that's a problem because you're hoping that they will see the value in it once they
get there and they buy it.
But someone needs to have some skin in the game.
And so I just think that here's what I will say because there are so many people in relationships or in situations
if you want to call them that, that are convincing themselves, they're conning themselves that
somebody else is one day going to be different.
And at that point, you have to say to yourself, on what basis have you decided this? What is it that this idea that they
are that some grand change is imminent? What is that based on? Is it based on them having
said to you, hey, I know that in these last few months or years or whatever, this has been a big problem in this relationship,
and I know that's because of me.
And this is something I am committed to changing.
Yeah.
Have they said that?
Because if they haven't, I have to ask,
where is the logic here,
underpinning your argument that they're one day going to change.
Yeah.
Oh, this isn't about them that they're going to change, or that they've even expressed
a desire or a willingness or a commitment to change.
This is about your demons calling the shots.
This is about your fear of losing someone, because maybe they don't want to change
But what what's really happening is you don't want to lose someone you don't want to be on your own again you don't want to
Take the risk that there's something else out there where you can get your needs met on a higher level and then it becomes
About exploring yourself and saying, well, this person's been
this way for years, and I've complained about it for years. So is this still about them?
Can I really keep saying this is about them?
That's so powerful, man. That really hit a chord, and I hope that everyone is listening
and watching, you know, that drops and sinkscs in for them as well because what you just said there, I think that's the dilemma that most people
are in, do I stay or do I go? And you've just answered like, you know, that's how you know, like,
that's, it's clear. You know, I sometimes look at videos of myself from years ago,
I'm like, you know, it's not what I'm saying might be factually right.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
But the way I'm saying it, I always once,
just looking at old hairstyles, it's the same thing.
Just like looking at old fashion sense, old hairstyles.
Oh, I thought that looked good.
Yeah, yeah, I thought that, yeah.
I was in Beverly Hills when I first got to LA, I was about 25
and I was making a video in front of the Beverly Hills sign. I was like, I'm going to get the Beverly Hills sign I first got to LA, I was about 25 and I was making a video in front of the Beverly Hills sign.
And I was like, I'm gonna get the Beverly Hills sign
in the background.
And it was a video about getting over heartbreak.
And I think it was like the three tips
for getting over heartbreak, right?
Which by the way, as soon as you say three tips
for getting over heartbreak,
you already don't understand. Because anyone who's deep in heartbreak is not coming to you going,
what are your tips?
They're going, save me from this existential doom.
I am in, where life doesn't feel worth living right now.
You know, and I was making this video,
and at the end of the video, a guy came over,
it was like a three, four minute video,
because of course you can sum up
how to get over deep, deep, loss in three minutes.
He came over and he said to me,
you've never been heartbroken, have you?
Someone was just watching, just in the middle of it.
He'd listen to the whole, I didn't know he was listening,
but he was like in a shot the whole time,
and he was like, you've never been heartbroken, have you?
Now, 25-year-old, no, it all me.
I was like, in my head, because out loud, I went,
no, I have, and yeah, I have.
Yeah, and I like, sort of shuffled on.
In my head, I went, who do you think you are?
Of course, I've like, what does this guy know?
Like, oh, you know so much more than me, or what?
He was right.
I had never been truly, I'd had time.
I'd had things that like hurt me.
Yes, sure.
I'd never been like crushed.
Yeah.
And having had that experience in my life now, the video I make is very different.
How I talk about that is extremely different. And the reason I say that is because I am aware
that these things we're talking about here, it's very easy from a distance to say to people,
this person hasn't changed in a long time.
What makes you think they're gonna change now
and why you're still there?
And the why you're still there is because
this stuff is so hard, change is so hard,
leaving a situation. so hard. Change is so hard. Leaving a situation.
Doing it, changing anything is hard. This is one of the things that I sort of
one of my gripes I suppose sometimes with some of the self-development rhetoric is that it makes things sound so much easier than they are. And it sort of,
it trivializes what are really difficult things. You know, most people, if they could just turn off their depression or their anxiety, if there was just a switch where they could go, they would do it.
Yeah. And it's a terrible thing to feel. So the fact that they are feeling it must mean it's very difficult for them to not feel that.
Yeah.
And the same is true of a relationship.
If someone has stayed in an unhappy situation for a long time, that must mean it is incredibly difficult
for them internally to make peace with the idea of leaving.
And what's happening, of course, is in this moment where it's evident to all of their friends and family that they should leave and that they should never look back,
their abandonment issue that's been around their whole life is screaming at them. Yeah. Screaming. Using any tactic it can to get them to stay. And when they
were in the relationship, the where the tactic it used maybe was to go into
people, please, amode. And even though this person not treating me right, I'm
going to do anything I can to make them happy. Make every compromise, make every sacrifice,
bend over backwards, subjugate my own needs
to try and serve you all in order
so that I can keep you.
And then at a point where you get so unhappy,
and you say, oh my God, this person's terrible,
I've had to lose myself in this relationship
to make them happy.
I'm gonna leave just at the point of leaving,
just as your friends are like, thank the Lord.
They did it.
They left.
You go home that night and that abandonment demon
realizes a different tactic has to be played.
So it says, maybe they weren't so bad.
Maybe like we're asking for too much.
Maybe like, you know, they did have really great qualities,
didn't they?
I mean, they were loyal and they were a lovely person,
a lot of the time and they're this and that, and that voice
starts using a different tactic with you.
Because the only thing that voice wants is don't be abandoned.
And they'll do anything in its power to reach that goal.
It will ruin your life to achieve that goal, because it only has one goal, and the goal
is not make you happy, the goal is make sure you're not abandoned
Yeah, and and so
this stuff is so
difficult and it's why people
Should that in those moments if anyone is listening to this and and if you're listening to this and you're in an unhappy situation
I get it. I get how hard it is and
situation, I get it, I get how hard it is. And taking the time to really say, one of the things that can help is to say, this demon would come out with another person too. So it's
not really about this person. To that extent, at least, I can depersonalize this and go, it's not really about losing this person.
It's just about losing a person.
Yeah.
And I'll, I can carry this demon with me to the next one and the next one and the next one.
So, but I, I think people, people should be compassionate to themselves, but if they're struggling to end something difficult, but extend that compassion
to your future self. Because extending your compassion to your future self is doing something
that gives him or her a shot at a happy and a peaceful life. And if you know that all the evidence has told you,
you, it does not reside here,
then compassion towards your future self is leaving,
even if for your present self, it's deeply painful.
That's so powerful, man.
That's amazing.
I'm so glad that you brought it to that
and your reference to just have people
switch it off.
That, I remember when I read that statistic the first time
that we have 60 to 80,000 thoughts per day,
but 80% of them are repeated.
And that was the one that really hit me.
And I was like, yeah, that's what's happening.
Like, if someone's saying that to themselves,
what you just said about abandonment, the idea of,
if someone keeps repeating to themselves
without even knowing subconsciously,
don't be abandoned, don't be abandoned,
don't be abandoned, don't be abandoned, don't
be abandoned, don't be abandoned.
And that's just repeating over and over again, when you hear the advice of like, oh yeah,
you should be able to leave or walk away.
Of course, it's hard because that's one thought amongst 60,000 thoughts or whatever it
is.
And so it's a complete rewiring that needs to take place and it's not just about cutting
the wire, right?
Like we're so, we're just like, oh yeah, I'm just going to cut that thought out and it doesn't
work like that. It's completely shifting it around and so I love what you just said that,
you know, I'm so glad that you took this conversation there because without that,
actually it's not even possible to rewire because you were just trying to cut a wire that can't be cut.
It's not possible to cut it. And even if you cut it in the form of ending
this relationship, the issue's still there,
and you'll latch onto the first person
you find on the way out.
Exactly, exactly.
Matthew, we've talked about so many things today.
I wanna ask you, is there anything that I haven't
asked you to share before we dive into the final five?
Is there something that's in your heart,
in your mind that's intuitively there for you
that you feel like you need to share with everyone today before we dive into the final fight.
I suppose if I may, there's a, I've been working on something recently that I know these
subjects can, as you said, seem very abstract. Even when you talk about, when we talk about
confidence, it's a very hard thing to latch
on to and figure out, well, okay, I want to be more confident. I want to be confident
enough to leave or I'm single, but I want to be confident enough to approach that person.
It's a very hard thing to grab onto. What does it mean to be more confident? How do I actually do it?
I put together something that I said, if in 30 days, I wanted to, if I had a gun
to my head and it was you have to improve someone's confidence in 30 days, what would you
do? I said, well, maybe I'd create five challenges that were specifically engineered around
psychology of confidence. And my theory with this is, if you can give yourself a genuine, not like, you know, completely
transformed everything about your confidence in 30 days, because we all know that just BS.
No one's, the world is full of these kind of hyperbolic promises.
But if people can, I believe that when you can create like a crack in the doorway and that shows you what's
possible, that momentum leads to something bigger and bigger and bigger.
I don't think someone starts by saying, I know I can be a millionaire, I think someone
starts by saying, I made two grand this month.
I bet I could make two and a half next month and then making two and a half and go, I think
I see a way to four.
You know, that to me is how belief is built. I made two grand this month. I bet I could make two and a half next month. And then making two and a half and go
I think I see a way to four. You know that to me is how belief is built is incremental. And so I said if I can get people a 30 day
Significant incremental shift in their confidence then whatever goals they have this year
That will give them the momentum to charge into those goals differently. Yeah
That will give the momentum to charge into those goals differently. Yeah.
So I put together a place where I've got, there's an initial kick off call that I'm doing
with everybody, where I'm going to take them through those five challenges.
I love that.
We're going to go through them together as a blueprint for 30 days and then the timer
of the 30 days is going to start and everyone's goal as a community is to do those five
challenges over those 30
days.
That's awesome.
Literally engineered them based on the psychology of what I've learned about confidence
over 15 years.
If I may, I would say I'd love that where can people sign up?
If you go to mhchallenge.com, that's my initials mh and challenge.com. There's a place where people can sign up
and they can join that challenge.
But we already ran it once,
and it was the results have been really beautiful
because everyone's writing in.
Just kicked off this challenge.
I just did this.
So it's been a very unifying thing for people
and we're running it again now.
So people can come and join at MH Challenge.
I love it.
Everyone who's listening and watching,
make sure you do sign up at MHchallenge.com.
I don't want you to miss out on that.
That sounds awesome.
And it's so much more fun doing it with other people
and taking it through these five challenges
and doing it.
And we know our life changes by those practical things.
Thousand percent.
Thousand percent.
Like I've never changed without being, I've always said to everybody, there's three things. 1000% yeah. 1000% like I've never changed without being, I've always said to you, there's three things.
Coaching, consistency and community, like those are the three things.
If you want to change any area of your life, if you don't have coaching, you don't have
consistency and you don't have community, you're not going to change it.
And so that's exactly what this is.
So MHChallenge.com is the place to sign up everyone.
And Matthew, I've got the final five for you.
So these have to be answered in one word or one sentence maximum
Sentence I don't know what the official definition is but I make it seven to ten words
So one word or one sentence one word or one sentence for each of these okay
So Matthew actually these are your final five the first question is what is the worst relationship advice you've ever heard or received?
Find someone who loves you more than you love them.
Oh, yeah, okay. Great. Good, good answer. All right. Question number two,
what's the best relationship advice you've ever heard received or given?
Make a list of the things that are truly important for you to find in a partner
and then be that list. Love that great advice. All right question number three
one word to one sentence again define love for you. Generous interpretation of
other people's behavior. That's a great definition.
I was not expecting that.
That's awesome.
That is a great definition.
All right, question number four.
How would you describe your current purpose in life
to make people feel less alone in their suffering?
That's beautiful. I love them. That's really special.
All right. Question number five, if you could create one law in the world that everyone had to follow, what would it be?
I don't think I can be the golden rule.
The confusion, you know, due to other people or treat other people how you would want
to be treated. I don't think I can be confused.
I love it. I love it. Matthew asked everyone, please, please, please, go follow Matthew on
all social media platforms, YouTube, Instagram, Facebook. Go and check out the mhchallenge.com.
Don't forget that you're getting five challenges in confidence
with Matthew for that as well.
So make sure you go and check out MHchallenge.com.
And please tag me on me and Matthew on Instagram,
on Twitter, on any platform that you use
with your biggest takeaways from this episode.
We want to see them.
You know that I love sharing those insights
and leave a review as well with your big takeaway
from Matthew's episode. Matthew, thank you so much for doing this. I hope this is the first
of many that we get to do this for. I do too. And can I say it's been an unbelievable pleasure
to do this and you are incredible at what you do and the way you bring yourself, even to an interview like this, is people don't
realize the level of pro in the way you interview the way you listen, the way you like, I sat
here learning about listening from watching you listen. And that's exactly what we talked
about in a relationship, right? You see something in somebody else that's that they're doing
really well and you go, wow, I want to, I want to be as good a listener
as J is right now.
And, and to watch you, you know, we have mutual friends,
but to watch what you have done over the last few years
is a, is a truly extraordinary thing to, to behold.
I know what kind of resourcefulness and initiative and
proactiveness it must have taken for you to build this thing that you've built
which is just extraordinary. And you know, I don't I'm sure you hear it many
many times a day but it is you know from one creator to another
I look at it and it is it's something very special what you've done
So congratulations. Well, thank you, man. I appreciate it. It's very kind that really that means a lot to me
And I've thought how genuine that was and well, I the way reason why I was listening so well is because you were speaking so
This is easy to listen to I was just sitting there going, this is great.
I'm like, this people are going to love this.
This is going to make sense.
And so it was easy to listen to.
That's great.
And I think that's part of a relationship.
You want to sit down with someone that makes it easy.
You enjoy the conversation with it.
You enjoy the conversation that you're with.
So no, and the feelings meet you, man.
Like I remember, I've been watching you for years and years and years and to see what you've created and the evolution of your
work and just also just what I really appreciate is the dedication to what you do and who you
help and how you help them.
I think it's so, you know, I think we live in a world where it's so easy to like, you
know, you know, now I'm a crypto influencer and now I'm a, you know, NFT influencer, whatever it is.
And it's like, to dedicate your life to something
that is big enough to be dedicated to,
but to just see you so focused.
And even in today's conversation, I can see that,
you know, it's like, you can tell when someone's really well
read in an area and has really thought about it
from like pop culture to history to, you know, that,
I love that. I love meeting someone who's immersed in there in their space and you demonstrate that beautifully.
Thank you thank you for that.
Thank you for dedicating your life to and especially you know helping people suffer less in their relationships which can be such a great source of suffering.
Thank you man.
Appreciate it.
So thank you, man. Appreciate it, man.
Thank you.
Did you hear the latest T We Spilled?
Well, actually, I make the T. J spells it.
I don't know how we allowed Radeon to the podcast,
but we did it because we're so excited to announce
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We wanted to create a T that doesn't just taste good,
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And we knew that tea was the best way to do that.
Now Rathi, tell them the other big news.
Well guess what? We want you to be a part of this T journey with us. So we've actually created
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worth of T. Yes it is, a year's worth of T. They'll also receive exclusive merch, experiences and discounts.
At Sama, we consider our founding members to be the heart of our community.
You can sign up right now before this of expires
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We cannot wait for you to be part of this journey with us
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Let's all cuddle now!
What if you could tell the whole truth about your life, including all those tender, invisible
things we don't usually talk about?
I'm Megan Devine.
Host to the podcast, it's okay that you're not okay.
Look everyone's at least a little bit not okay these days. And all those things we don't usually talk about,
maybe we should.
This season, I'm joined by stellar gas
like Aburmate, Rachel Cargol, and so many more.
It's okay that you're not okay.
New episodes each and every Monday,
available on the iHeartRadio app,
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I'm Danny Shapiro, host of Family Secrets.
It's hard to believe we're entering our eighth season,
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The variety of them continues to be astonishing.
I can't wait to share 10 incredible stories with you,
stories of tenacity, resilience,
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Listen to season eight of Family Secrets
on the iHeartRadio app Apple Podcasts
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Hi, I'm Brendan Francis Nuneum.
I'm a journalist, a wanderer,
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but mostly a human just trying to figure out what it's all about.
And not lost is my new podcast about all those things.
It's a travel show where each week I go with a friend to a new place and to really understand it, all about.
radio app or wherever you get your podcasts.