Stuff You Should Know - The Science of Break-Ups
Episode Date: February 26, 2019Breaking up is hard to do. Your brain might even think you're getting over a cocaine addiction. Learn all about the science behind break-ups today! Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.ihe...artpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called,
David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses
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If you do, you've come to the right place
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Welcome to Stuff You Should Know
from HowStuffWorks.com.
Hey, and welcome to the podcast.
I'm Josh Clark.
There's Charles W. Chuck Bryant over there.
There's Jerry, rush, rush, rush Jerry.
This is Stuff You Should Know.
The breakup edition.
Three people who've never broken up with one another.
No, that's true.
The last three.
Great point.
Modern triad.
Yeah, the triad.
So hey, before we get going, we wanna tell everyone,
at the end of this episode, and before listener mail,
actually instead of listener mail,
we're gonna have in a couple of dudes
from New Show on our network.
And they're gonna break up in front of us.
No, their show's called How to Money.
And these guys are local,
and they were big Stuff You Should Know listeners,
Matt and Joel.
And they were like, we wanna start a podcast
about finance and money matters in life.
That's sort of like what you guys do
that's approachable and real,
and just like a couple of people talking normal.
What about money?
Yeah, and it's really, really good.
So we're gonna have those guys on
at the end for a few minutes.
But it's a show I think everyone would love.
So, stick around for that.
Cool.
So I picked this one out because mainly it,
this is a refrain we get an email a lot.
We hear from heartbroken people a lot.
Sure.
More than you would think, that are just like,
I'm so sad.
Lots of broken hearts up.
And you guys have helped me with this show
as a distraction, which we will learn
is one of the official ways to get over a breakup.
Yeah, look over here.
Yeah, exactly.
So it just got me thinking about like,
is there any science behind breakups
and the emotions that go along with it?
And it turns out there's a lot,
like a disturbing amount of study has been done.
I know.
When you look at it, you're like,
oh man, maybe you should have allocated
that money toward research toward other things.
Yeah, like cancer.
Yeah.
Although social psychology couldn't do anything about cancer.
No, and it's, you know, it's not like they're like,
oh, well, we'll just, it's all taken from one big pool.
We'll just allocate some of this breakup money
toward cancer research.
Sure.
It's not how it works.
Well, you could allocate the money,
but the mental energy, I guess, is what I'm talking about.
Yeah, but this, there was just,
it seemed like study after study.
And also, we should point out too,
that I think there was one case in here of one study
where they looked at homosexual couples,
but most of the study is like cisgendered straight couples.
Yeah.
Through that lens only.
They're not doing a ton of research outside that.
I found one that tracks,
it correlates the likelihood of breaking up to time.
And they had it broken out by same sex
and straight, married and unmarried.
Those were like the four categories.
So, some people are doing it.
Sure.
But yeah, for the most part, no.
And I think one of the reasons why Chuck is,
a lot of this is from the mid 2000s, early 2010s.
Yeah.
And that was, you know,
that was about the last,
the last, like the tail end of that.
Now, I think it's starting to change, fortunately.
Right.
Because people of all genders
and sexual orientation break up and get dumped.
And we're here to help all of you.
So buckle in, grab a hankie and let's get through this.
Yeah. I mean, let's,
we should go ahead and start out by saying,
I guess that in theory,
more people are breaking up now
because people are generally waiting longer to get married.
Right.
So, if you could extrapolate that,
if you're not married for 10 more years,
then let's say our parents were.
Right.
Then maybe you've gone through
a couple of more breakups along the way.
Yeah. We should give a shout out to Kristen Conger
of Unlady Like Media.
Yeah.
Who wrote this article.
Our old pal.
She points out that typically means
that you are going to find somebody who you work with
rather than rushing into it.
But it also, as she puts it,
like leaves the window open longer for heartbreak
to be dumped.
Yeah.
One thing I saw, Chuck, this is mind-boggling to me.
85% of people, according to this one study,
will be dumped in their lifetime.
Will experience being a breakup in their lifetime.
That means 15% of humanity won't.
That is, those are some interesting people.
15% have not had a breakup or been broken up with.
Will not in their lifetime.
Oh, okay.
You're just going to either never have a relationship
or the first time they're gonna hit it out of the park.
But that doesn't mean like.
Or settle.
I've never been dumped.
Yeah. Like they'll never have gone through a breakup.
But I've been through breakups.
I've done, I've been the dumper.
Right. I know what you're saying.
No, I believe that they will not have experience
to break up in their lifetime, either way.
Well, that's great.
That means they met the person that they love
when they're young probably.
Again, or it means that they decided
to live their life alone, just fine.
Right.
Or. Or both.
They, like I said, they decided like,
yeah, I'm just going to stick with this person.
Yeah.
I don't want to, I want to be what,
I don't want to ruin my record, my spotless record.
I think it's very interesting here
that supposedly, and this is very hinky,
how they found this out about the spikes
and breakups from like.
That's a Facebook data poll.
Social media.
That doesn't count social psychology.
Doesn't count.
I agree, but it doesn't make a little bit of sense.
And I could see this being true that generally
dumping someone or getting broken up with
can happen on any day of the year,
but there are spikes in early December and early March.
Yeah.
Because of Christmas holidays and spring break.
Yeah, and technically.
I could see that being true.
There has, I'm sure it's true, at least on Facebook.
And yeah, this is a pretty big data poll,
but it's like, that's so lazy.
It's lazy, but I could see it because it's,
it makes a little bit of sense
that you would not want to go through the holidays
with someone that, and you said a thing too,
and this is important to point out,
like when the breakup happens,
when that talk or these days text message
or phone call happens.
It's not okay.
That is the end of something for,
maybe both of you, but definitely one of you.
Yeah, sometimes, most of the time.
That actual act of saying, we're breaking up.
That's at the end of many, many weeks or even months
or even years of contemplation
about whether or not you want to still be with this person.
Right, and that's why being broken up with
is almost across the board way harder than breaking up.
Because by the time, like you said,
by the time the person who initiates the breakup,
initiates the breakup,
this is at the end of a long road of decision making.
Whereas the other person might have been blissfully unaware
or at least willfully ignorant
or not willing to address the issues.
And so they are one way or another largely caught off guard
by being broken up with.
So the person who does the breaking up
has already gone through all these stages of grief
of separation, whereas now it's this person,
the person who's just been dumped,
it's their time to go through it.
Right, so if you're doing the dumping,
like the hour after you have that conversation,
you're like, what a relief, I'm starting over.
Let's go get some gin.
Whereas the dumpy is like,
let's go get some gin.
That begins their process.
Although the only thing I'll take issue
with that whole line of thought though
is that a lot of people even that might get dumped
aren't like, what?
Like they may have known
and just didn't want to admit it
or weren't brave enough or strong enough
to do it themselves.
And I agree with you on that.
I think that there's still a thread
that they had not been preparing themselves
just by being in, say, denial
or unwilling to address it, face it.
Now they have no choice but to face reality,
whereas the person who did the breakup
was like facing reality and coming to terms
with it quietly and then now it's your turn.
Right, which brings me back to my original point,
which is Christmas and spring break
make a little bit of sense because the person
who is desperate to get out of a relationship
and break up with somebody,
they're staring at those Christmas holidays
and that first week of December rolls around,
they're like, I got to do this now
because I don't want to travel a lot of town
with this person and go through the whole gift thing.
And the holidays are just,
it's tough to be in a relationship that's a lie.
Well, sure because-
Around the holidays.
I mean, the holidays are so about connecting
and feeling and warmth and all that.
And if you're faking it or have to fake it,
some people are like, I'm not going through that.
I also saw an explanation in Harper's Bazaar of all places
that some people may do that because of the pressure
of coming up with a really good gift.
Sure.
That the relationship is not worth,
the pressure of coming up with a good gift
outweighs the value of the relationship to those people
or there are some people who don't want to put
their significant other through that
so they just break up proactively.
Right.
Which also means that they didn't value
the relationship that much either,
but at least in their mind,
they're not doing it for themselves,
they're doing it for the other person
because they don't want to put the other person
through that pressure of having to get the perfect gift.
Yeah, I've never had that thing either
where you start dating someone
and it's like a couple of weeks for their birthday
or Christmas and then that pressure of like,
oh man, how do I play this one?
You know-
After a couple of weeks?
Yeah.
Oh yeah, that's a pass.
You really like this person
but how deep do I go on this gift?
Here, I don't really know you so I got you a basket of socks.
Everyone loves socks.
So here's an Amazon gift card for 3850.
Right.
Yeah, after a couple of weeks,
that's a little close.
Yeah, I think so.
Come up with a perfect gift or even be expected to.
And I did mention breaking up by text or whatever,
like you would suspect,
if you were born before 1975, like myself,
you break up in person supposedly about 74% of the time.
Not bad.
Post 1984, if you were born less than 50% of the time,
you're gonna do that in person.
And they say generation Y, whatever that is.
I think it's millennials.
Is it?
I'm pretty sure.
When did they name them?
Do they know what like,
does my daughter have a generation already?
I don't know.
Like a name?
I'm sure somebody out there is named
your daughter's generation.
Yes.
So annoying.
But your parents are in.
Right.
Well, you got a pigeonhole folks.
Let her grow up.
Yeah.
Be her own person.
But if you are Gen Y,
you're more likely 30% to do it over the phone.
And of course, this is a searing instant message
or an email, I think these days you would call that a text.
An email is the lowest percent wise and compassion wise.
4% of people.
That's the worst.
Break up by email.
What was it on that?
Text is pretty bad.
Email is as bad as it gets.
Was it sex in the city where it was a sticky note?
No, I don't remember.
I feel like it was a sticky note.
In the movie or the show?
I didn't see the movie.
Sticky note break up.
I think so.
Should we take a break?
Yeah, let's take a break, man.
This is going really well so far.
Okay.
On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called David Lasher and Christine Taylor.
Stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses and choker necklaces.
We're going to use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it and now we're calling on all of our friends to come back and relive it.
It's a podcast packed with interviews, co-stars,
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Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s called on the iHeart radio app,
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Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast, Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
The hardest thing can be knowing who to turn to when questions arise or times get tough
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All right, Chuck.
So we've talked about when people break up, how they break up.
Why do they break up?
Well, actually, there's one more.
Oh, OK.
I think pretty important thing about the how, which is men and women, women tend to present
of, and this sort of makes sense too, if you want to be stereotypically, you know.
Stereotypical.
About it.
Women tend to present a list of grievances.
You're selling things wrong with you, Bob.
Pretty much, whereas men, it's a little more supposedly a little more nebulous.
Where'd the magic go?
Yeah, there you go.
That's apparently the difference is as far as like rationale for breaking up.
And these are so macro level and broad and how we talk about it.
It's a little embarrassing to even do.
To talk about this stuff?
Yeah.
I know.
I was.
Men do this and women do this.
Right.
No, it's absolutely true.
But I feel like when you talk about this, people can find themselves in the contours of all,
if you put all this stuff together.
If you just took one study and said that this was definitive, people should punch you in the kidney.
Agreed.
But not really, don't punch anybody.
You know, everyone, over the last almost 11 years of stuff, you should know.
I've said a lot of things that make it sound like I'm inciting people to violence.
Friendly violence, though.
I was joking every single time.
Why, someone said something?
No, I just want to make sure that everyone knows that I was never, ever actually serious
in saying hit somebody in the head with a tech camera or punch someone in the kidney.
I can't do that a lot, actually.
I'm kidding all the time.
Except for when you recommend that you pants somebody in front of you.
I was kidding even then, too.
In front of a classroom or.
That's psychological abuse.
It is.
It's physical, but it's more psychological than anything.
You ever been pantsed in front of people?
Yes.
Really?
Yes, and I can tell you it's psychological abuse.
I don't think I've ever been pantsed.
Boy, I can't imagine anything more horrifying than being pantsed without underwear on.
Well, I can confirm that because I can't remember being pantsed.
I just remember that I have been pantsed.
So I think I just immediately blocked out everything.
Sure.
Yeah.
So no story there.
No.
No.
Okay.
So if you get broken up with, you will feel, and we're going to talk about the science
of a lot of this because it's very similar to overcoming addiction sometimes.
But of course, depression and anxiety, sometimes suicidal thoughts.
Sometimes homicide.
Oh, sure.
That's an outcome, a worst-case outcome, that and suicide of breakups.
But they are directly related to breakups.
That's how bad breakups can be.
Yeah.
And apparently, when people do write in about getting dumped and stuff, I always say it's
the most trite thing in the world, but time is the only thing that really helps.
Yeah.
Like ice cream and stuff like that is good.
But it really does decrease over time.
However, in studies, eight weeks after being dumped, in this study, 40% of people still
had signs of clinical depression, and 12% appeared moderately or severely depressed.
So it depends on the relationship, how long you're in it, how much it meant to you, what
kind of person you are, but it can stick around for a bit.
It can.
So the thing is, though, there are things you can do to help accelerate the healing process.
And we'll talk about those at the end.
How about that?
OK.
We'll make y'all wait.
All right.
So where are we at, Chuck?
Are we at the?
Well, the attachment styles, I think, is interesting because we did talk about gay, straight,
cisgendered, you know, on the gender spectrum.
Maybe none of that matters.
Maybe what matters is what they call your attachment style.
That's what this says pretty plainly, that's what it comes down to.
How you attach yourselves to other people.
You can be a needy, clingy dude, you can be a avoidant woman, or you can be either one
of those things anywhere on the gender spectrum.
That's the thing.
The idea that women are clingy and men are distant is fabled, or it's at least ham-fisted.
Yeah, I think so.
It's sort of that thing in social science that bothers me, which is like you're either
this or this.
Right.
Like one thing or the other.
And really, all you are is a white college student.
That's what they really mean.
Yeah, you had a little time on their hands.
Right.
You needed extra credit.
But there are two supposedly, again, two things.
Attachment styles, anxious attachment and avoidant attachment.
Conger points out like that's two ends of a spectrum and you can fall somewhere on there.
There's actually a, it's pretty straightforward.
It's the OIS, I believe, or OSI.
It's a scale where you pick how your relationship is best described by a series of Venn diagrams.
One circle is you and one circle is your significant other.
And they're just increasingly together from just barely touching to almost completely
merged into one single circle.
And you just circle the one that best describes your sense of what your relationship's like
and that supposedly gets your spectrum replacement on the spectrum of attachment across.
Oh, interesting.
So it's real subjective and self-reported.
So that is to say not scientific.
Right, unfortunately.
Supposedly, two-thirds of women initiate divorces and in this article it says that
might give them a statistical edge over getting over a relationship.
Because they initiated the breakup, so they've been in the process already.
Maybe.
That's what I think she meant.
I think so.
I'm just not so sure that just because a woman initiates a divorce, it may have been after
years of systematic abuse, which may not mean she's so ready to get over this quicker than
he might be.
Right.
Yeah, no.
I mean, you can't just say if X, then Y with this stuff.
It's relationships.
They're as messy as humans get.
It's a relationship.
Yeah.
That's all you need to say.
Well, let's talk about the brain a little bit because this is where it does get a little
more interesting, I think, and slightly more scientific.
Okay.
There was a study in 2011 by neurologists at the Einstein College of Medicine, which
sounded totally fake.
Totally.
But it's not.
I have sounds made up, written down.
It's in the Bronx.
Yeah, there's also.
Reputable.
There were also anthropologists from Rutgers and SUNY to legitimize things in this study.
If Rutgers is legitimizing things, then we're in trouble.
Oh, really?
Is that really, I thought Rutgers was all right, or am I confusing it with Tufts?
You're probably thinking Princeton, both New Jersey schools.
I thought Rutgers was the public ivy.
Okay.
Sorry, Rutgers.
I tried.
I can't wait to hear from them.
They're going to be so mad at me.
I've hung out at Rutgers.
I've been there people.
So you know what you're talking about.
I know exactly what I'm talking about.
Is it like the Detroit of New Jersey colleges or something?
That's not untrue.
Okay.
All right.
He don't disagree.
Boy, we're going to get killed.
That's okay.
So this study from Einstein College of Medicine found that just looking at a photograph of
an ex-partner caused the second somo somatosensory cortex in the dorsal posterior insula.
Nice.
Geez.
And these areas process physical discomfort.
They start lighting up.
The same thing as happens is when you get physically injured basically.
Right.
Like you are in actual legitimate pain as far as your brain is concerned in the midst
of a breakup, at least when you're stuck in an MRI machine and shown a picture of your
recent ex.
Which is a big deal now with social media because every modern article I read about
breakups and getting over them talked about what a deletrious effect social media will
have on your recovery process.
Are you taunting me?
Because this stuff's everywhere now.
It used to be easy.
You could just throw everything in a shoebox and set it on fire and send it down a river
and a little boat made of rage.
Sure.
But you can't do that anymore because they're everywhere.
No, but that's tip number one from psychologist Guy Winch, author of How to Fix a Broken Heart.
Stay the H off of social media.
Do not stalk your ex on social.
Do not check in.
Just separate.
I imagine that would be really hard because in the old days it was just left to your imagination
to think about how much fun they were having with the nine new boyfriends that she has.
But yeah, you're right.
Or maybe it helps some people.
I don't know.
I think it's imperative that you not do that to help.
It's not like watching them on social media will prevent you from ever getting over it.
I think no matter what you do, you're going to eventually get past this.
But all you're doing is prolonging the process unnecessarily.
And then also when you were on the FMRI machine and they did brain scans from people who had
been broken up with recently, they found that very much similar to people overcoming an
addiction to cocaine in that same circuitry of overcoming addiction is just lighting up.
It's that potent.
Yeah.
So far with this MRI study from Albert Einstein came up with is that you were in physical
pain from the breakup.
And the same centers that are activated by addiction cravings, withdrawals, are activated
by the breakup as well.
That's astounding.
Yeah.
And this weird mental cycle happens basically when you do look at like a photograph of what
they say, a former lover, like the Burger King laying on a rug, fair skin rug.
But you'll see the photo and the weird thing is you'll immediately get a reward.
You will get a dopamine hit, like a pleasurable feeling by seeing this person that you love.
And then you realize, oh, wait.
Then you get sad.
All right.
Immediately afterward.
And then that sagness, sagness, where did that come from?
It is a little saggy feeling that triggers the brain's ventral, a tegmental area in
the nucleus, acumen bins, acumen bins.
I think so.
I know we've run into that before.
We used to talk about the brain a lot more.
Acumen bins.
I think we figured out the brain though, right?
So we stopped.
Yeah.
We were like, it's done.
But these two things working together, regardless of how I mispronounce them, they trigger the
urge to see that person.
So you get sad and then your brain lights up in two areas and then you go, hey, like
remember that dopamine hit you get from looking this picture?
Why don't you just give them a call and see what's going on?
Right.
You want the real stuff.
Go get them.
They also, those two areas apparently also are analytical as well.
So they're responsible for rehashing the relationship.
But apparently they're not very realistic because most people when rehashing the relationship
highlight the good parts and forget about all the bad parts.
I kind of have tended to do that.
I think everybody does.
I don't understand why.
I don't know.
I don't agree with that.
Like Emily, and we've of course been married so long, the subject never comes up anymore.
But I was always like, oh, with the old girlfriend, what was so bad there?
And then if I really thought about it, I would remember where she's always like, oh, that
was awful.
Oh, really?
Yeah.
Gotcha.
Well, she's smart.
Yeah, maybe so.
And I'm a dumb dumb.
But okay, so even, and you're not a dumb dumb, even if like you represent a third of people
or a half of people who do when rehashing only think about the good stuff and forget about
all the negative stuff, like what is that?
Why does that even happen?
It's bizarre if you think about it.
A personality thing.
Like if I tend to be optimistic maybe here.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I guess that's a pretty good explanation to tell you the truth.
What I was going to say is if you look at relationships or romantic love as a evolutionary
drive to pair and mate successfully over and over again and to stay together, that would
bring you back to this person that you've already connected with rather than making you
go look for another mate.
That makes sense.
So maybe it's kind of like a backstop or failsafe for breakups, evolutionarily speaking.
Right.
Like I was so close to having nine babies, like I really want to start all over again.
Right.
Right.
Which is funny because that means that Emily's more evolved than you in that sense.
Yeah.
In every sense.
That's awesome.
And the end of that mental cycle basically though is those areas light up that say go
back and see that person, then you are immediately unsatisfied about the fact that that's not
happening.
Right.
That's when your prefrontal cortex trips into gear and that's when you get angry and
it's just that mental cycle that starts seeing that photo on a social media platform and
ending up upset in the end.
But the same study led by Helen Fisher found that after over time, the same process is
greatly degraded.
Sure.
I think they did a follow up in months, Congress says, found that the whole process and all
of the neurochemicals and the brain regions are much less active, which again, just time.
Give it time.
Right.
If you give it time and you do the thing where you do get back together, that can be great.
Sometimes you can work it out and people can change.
But there's a big caveat there.
Well, right.
Go ahead.
No.
No, no, no.
You say yours.
Okay.
All right.
Because I think I'm talking about something else.
So what I saw was that if you get back together, rather than saying like this is a fresh start,
we're going to try this over again, we're going to really make a go of it.
If you do that, all you're going to do is just walk right back into the same pitfalls
and pratfalls because the separation probably did nothing or virtually nothing to your individual
personalities, which are the source of all of your conflicts.
So it's not like you just magically worked your conflicts out and you're getting back
together and everything's fine.
That's just a charade.
But if you get back together and say, I decided I love you the way you are and I don't want
to be away from you and I just accept you for you and I accept our relationship with
all of its problems, you're probably going to have a successful reunion.
If you go into it like all of our problems are solved because we broke up, you're just
going to do the same thing again down the line.
That's apparently a fairly frequent thing that something like 60% or some crazy percentage
of the younger generation, generation Y, I guess, the process of breaking up, the majority
of them, that breakup involves getting back together multiple times, not just once.
So you're getting back together and just going through the same pattern.
I think there's a field of thought and psychology called the scripts.
These are scripts that we're playing out one another script.
And if you don't alter the scripts, you're going to go through the same script over and
over again.
You're working out the same things from your past or from your childhood against one another
and you're not doing it the right way.
So all you're doing is creating conflict and that doesn't just magically go away because
you spent a couple months apart.
You have to just say, I love you for who you are and we're going to just keep going.
Yeah.
I think what I was going to say was don't they think though that that also depends on just
what kind of person you are in terms of thinking either people can really make substantial change
in their lives or they can't?
That's how you deal with the breakup, which we'll talk about in a minute.
That sounds like a good place for a break.
I think so too.
All right.
On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called David Lasher and Christine Taylor, stars of
the cult classic show Hey Dude bring you back to the days of slip dresses and choker necklaces.
We're going to use Hey Dude as our jumping off point, but we are going to unpack and
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Before we get to that, what we were just talking about before the split, this is one piece
of data from the same sex couple community, supposedly from studies, they do think that
same sex couples are better at staying friends after a breakup, which particularly lesbian
couples and then gay men and then straight couples are like forget about it so long.
Yeah, it's an interesting thing.
Can you really be friends after, and it all depends on how intense and how long and how
kind of a person you are, but yeah, it's interesting when I meet people that legitimately are friends
with people that they seriously dated years later.
It's pretty rare, I think actually.
I think it is too.
I think it seems less rare because you see it on like TV shows a lot, you know, and it's
also almost aspirational, like, oh, look at how like, how laid back and like with these
people are that they can be friends after this, you know, I think it's pretty rare actually.
I think it's an idealized form because people like to, you like to think that like you're
on good terms with everybody in your life.
I think that's usually the person breaking up though, there's like, I'd like to still
be friends.
Right, sure.
Whereas the person getting broken up with this, like, or you could get hit by a car.
Right, yeah.
And that would solve the problem.
And then sticking with the whole same sex straight thing, are we saying straight still?
I don't know, that doesn't feel right, does it?
It doesn't.
So let's just say same sex and hetero.
Yeah, hetero.
There's a clinical name for it.
Oh boy.
So the time and marriage seem to be the two greatest indicators, at least as far as this
one study I saw went for the likelihood of staying together over long periods of time.
All relationships, same sex and hetero, man, woman, all of them are at the greatest risk
of breakup within the first year or two.
And then it starts to drop precipitously.
I think married hetero couples have a fairly low rate of, a low chance of breaking up over
times pretty much flat the whole time.
And then with same sex couples, the same thing happens.
The chance of breakup is pretty high at the beginning and then it starts to come down
and then it's basically tracks with hetero couples for marriage.
So marriage is kind of the factor.
Time is the second factor, but then time stops being a factor after like 30, 40 years for
unmarried couples, both hetero and same sex.
They start to break up after a year like 30 or 40.
Like the chance of a breakup increases, yeah.
But once you get married, once you get a ring on it, over time, over like, you know, decades
is what we're talking about.
Your chance is almost nil of breaking up.
All right.
Like less than I think a percent.
But that doesn't sound right because they're like half of all marriages end in divorce.
Yeah.
This thing was way off.
But maybe that's when taking into account, maybe that's front loaded by all the divorces
that happened in the first five years or something like that.
Yeah.
Okay.
That would make a little bit more sense.
Yeah, it does.
They do find that your chances of getting over a breakup or adjusting to that new post-breakup
life really centers around regaining your sense of self that when you couple up with
someone, it's not saying you can't have a sense of self anymore because it's very healthy
too.
Sure.
But there's an inevitable absorption and morphing that happens and a little bit of your sense
of self goes away when you couple.
Yeah.
All the same friends, the same phone number.
Yeah.
And the same adre, yes.
Yeah.
Boy, what about couples that share the email address?
Yeah.
You mean I have one?
Really?
Sure.
Never had one.
But you have your own too.
Well, yeah.
We each have our own, but we have our shared one too.
I think I'm talking about the people that just have the shared address.
Sure.
I've always found that interesting.
Yeah.
I'm judging.
I don't know anybody who just has a shared address.
I don't get why people would have the same one, I guess.
I just always, Emily sells a mindspring address.
Wow.
Is it Emily at Mindspring.com?
No.
And that is the truth, because I'm not saying that just to keep people from emailing her.
But she had it for so long, and I make fun of her all the time.
Sure.
Because she still pays like $20 a year for this.
What?
And she was like, I've had it for so long that I just can't give it up.
Well, that's why people stay on Facebook.
Yeah.
Like I'm not changing my email address.
There's like so many memories there that it's like, or even that just her contact list
and every email like, I don't know, I just think it's funny.
I was like, where's that money going?
Right.
She owns what used to be Mindspring.
Todd Mindspring, the heir of the Mindspring fortune, he can count on $20 a month from
your house.
You get the couple pack of cigarettes every month because of Emily.
Oh, man.
And then for recovery, the whole stress related growth thing that can happen with recovery,
which is, and I think women tend to be more apt to do this than men, but like, all right,
you know what?
I'm free now.
I'm going to do all those things that I lost while I was with him.
Right.
I didn't have time for my friends anymore.
I lost connections with them.
I didn't do, I didn't fly model airplanes or RC airplanes anymore.
I'm going to drop some weight and start eating healthier.
The post breakup weight loss is a huge, huge thing.
It is.
And partially from stress, but partially just because like, I'm going to make myself
the best I can be.
I think I'll show her or him.
I think it's also like, just as simple as like more free time.
Sure.
Yeah.
And something to do that is, you know, exercise is also stress relieving.
You might not be eating as much because your stomach is tied up into stress knots.
Right.
But there are a bunch of reasons for it.
But here is that, here's where that, that part you were talking about earlier, I said
we would get to kind of kicks in is how much of the self you identify with does relate
to how well you handle a breakup.
How much of your, how much of the you is the we in the relationship.
And what they found is that that's a huge part of it, but more significant is the amount
of growth that happens while you're in a relationship.
Like you can share a tremendous amount of the same self with your significant other
and grow as a person as a result.
And if you do that, you're actually going to have a harder breakup because that we that
super attachment that led to that personal growth is related to that other person who's
now gone.
Whereas if you were, even if you were totally in mess with another person, but you didn't
grow much personally, if you experienced a burst of growth after the breakup, you're
going to have the easiest breakup of all.
Even though you were super in mess with the person, you weren't growing, but then you
grow afterward.
Now that period of non growth is related to that person who's gone and you can be like,
so long, zero, I'm going to make myself a hero.
Yeah.
Do you see?
Sure.
Did they come across?
Yeah.
Because sometimes I'm not the best at explaining things, which is pretty funny if you think
about it.
It really is.
In 2000, they did a study at Northwestern University where they did find out though that
they asked people, I believe, how bad do you think this breakup is going to be if you're
in a relationship?
What if you broke up and then they found out that they weren't as bad off as they thought
they would be, which is encouraging.
It is.
But also think about this, Chuck.
These vultures who are running the study, we're like, you're in a relationship, just
we're going to study just in case you guys break up.
And so they would get that info, that self-reporting info about how bad the breakup would be.
And then they swooped in, upon the breakup, they're like, how bad is it?
Tell us.
And the person was like, well, this is as bad as it is.
And it was almost across the board, not anywhere near as bad as the people thought it would
be when they were in the relationship, which is pretty surprising.
And what was even more surprising is the more in love you are, the easier it's going to
be relative to how bad you think it will be during the relationship.
Which makes sense if you stop and think about it.
Yeah, I thought the other interesting thing too, when we were talking about getting over
a breakup and your sense of self, that's closely tied to how you feel about rejection.
And there are a couple of ways, I mean, more than a couple of ways, but if your reflection
of how you think about rejection is tied heavily into how you feel about yourself.
So there's some people that might be rejected and it might devastate them because they start
to analyze themselves and what did I do wrong and what's wrong with me.
There's a whole other camp out there and I think this goes into personality and ego
and all that stuff.
You call these people healthy.
Or sociopaths.
Oh, you think so?
Maybe.
We just put both of our cards on the table, didn't we?
But the people that are like, yeah, I got broken up with and I got rejected, but you
know.
S happens.
That happens in life.
People get rejected.
It's not because of me.
I thought.
Just not everyone can be together.
So you find this quote sociopathic.
I learned that two people can both be quality individuals, but that doesn't mean they belong
together.
That's sociopathic to you?
That was, oh wait, it says he said that it was dead Bundy.
Patrick Bateman.
No, no, no.
I don't think it necessarily means you're a sociopath, but I think someone with that
is a true sociopath would probably be way more apt to be like, oh yeah, well.
It was them, not me.
Yeah, it's like, it's fine.
People just break up.
There's a subgroup to that sociopath as you call it camp and they are like, well, break
ups happen, I heard what the other person said and there's some things I feel like I
need to work on.
Like I was a terrible communicator, so I'm going to work on becoming a better communicator
as a result.
That's called stress related growth is what that's called.
Were you growing out of this horrific experience and that's healthy, that's super healthy.
But the key is what's unhealthy is to say this was all because of some fatal flaw that
I have.
Right.
That's part of my personality that I'll never be able to get rid of and so all I'm going
to do is poison every relationship from here on out and I'm just going to build walls and
keep everybody at a distance and that's what some people do as a result of a breakup and
you can't do that.
Even if your brain starts to go that way, this research says, stop it, don't.
You have to disassociate yourself, become the sociopath, I guess if need be, to say
this is not because of an inherent flaw in me that's uncorrectable.
Even if the person was right, even if they're like, you're a terrible communicator and you
have serious mommy issues, that doesn't mean that you will always be a terrible communicator
with serious mommy issues.
You could work on those post breakup and become a much better SO to the next person or whatever.
The key is not being a fatalist, like there's nothing you can do to change and then also
you should evaluate whether the person was saying that in anger, how much faith you put
in their opinion of you.
There's a lot of factors that you need to take into account before you take on that
kind of thing that just puts you in the bottom of a well where you could conceivably hang
out for the rest of your life if you're not careful without copious amounts of therapy.
Yeah, agreed.
We're turning to drugs and alcohol, which is a big thing that a lot of people do.
Gin cuts both ways.
Should we talk about some of these tips from this guy?
Psychologist Guy Winch, remember, number one is don't check up on them on social media.
Good luck with that.
Here's why.
He says that this will reinforce your ex's presence in your mind and will make it harder
for you to stop fantasizing about your broken relationship.
You're basically just like literally keeping them right there in front of your face through
social media, which is why it's a bad idea.
Number two, avoid creating mysteries about why the breakup happened.
Again, this is along those same lines of just keeping your ex like forefront in your mind,
which is hard.
I mean, it's going to take a little while.
Sure.
He says avoid.
No one expects you the next day to pop up and just be like, well, they're out of my
mind.
That's sociopathic.
Yeah.
Even if you're the breaker upper, you know, it doesn't mean that you don't have a process
to go through as well.
Sure.
You know?
But that's why he says avoid creating mysteries.
Like it's probably going to happen, but like be mindful when it's going on and be like,
enough.
Right.
I'm going to go work out.
Yeah.
Or go drink some gin.
Or both.
Number three, make a list of all the comprom- Oh, this is a good one.
Make a list of all the compromises that you had to make that you don't want to make again.
Start to think about like, yeah, you know, when I was with this person, I felt like I
could never really have my real sense of humor out in public because they thought it was
loud.
That counters that rehashing that just focuses on the positive.
Yeah.
It cuts the legs out from under that.
That and legs.
What about number four?
Do the things that used to bring you enjoyment is kind of what I was talking about earlier.
Even if they don't seem interesting now, that whole thing where like, geez, I used to
really love pottery and throwing clay and I just quit doing it once I started dating
Josh.
Yeah.
I'll have this me talking.
No clay throwing in my house.
And Josh hated it when Chuck went to the potter's wheel because it reminded him of Ghost and
Josh hated that movie.
So he wouldn't allow me to do it.
But you know what?
I'm going to reclaim that pottery wheel.
Yeah.
Which is ironic because I was always walking around our house just like Patrick Swayze in
that scene.
But I still hated that movie.
Oh, that was more like the Chris Farley Chippendale and the Patrick Swayze version.
Number five, remove reminders.
This is the box that you will burn, which is now just your laptop in the fireplace in
your smartphone.
And then like reconnect with your friends.
Like, yeah, you left them in the dust years ago, but they're still alive.
They probably wouldn't mind hearing from you.
Yeah, the problem here is, is if you truly do have a mix of friends that you both love
and it's not like I didn't leave behind all my old friends or the worst case scenario is
like all of my friends are from you.
Now what do I do?
Go down to the YMCA and make some new friends.
I guess so.
I found this one last study I thought was interesting, the best way to get over a breakup
according to science.
This was actually published in the Journal of Experimental Psychology, and they tested
a bunch of strategies for getting over a breakup, 24 heartbroken people, ages 20 to 37, that
had been in at least a two and a half year relationship, so pretty significant.
Some were dumpies, some were dumpers, and they said there were three strategies.
One is to negatively reappraise your ex, like just think about all the bad things.
The other one was called Love Reappraisal, which is believe and read statements like
it's okay to love someone I'm no longer with.
It's all right.
And then the third was distraction, literally the ice cream and movies trick.
The black mirror trick.
And then there was the fourth prompt, which was the control, which was don't think about
anything.
Of course, means you're thinking of the state of March of Elements.
Don't think about anything.
Really just undermine the science of that study.
Clear brain.
So, those were the four prompts, then they showed everyone, they hooked everyone up to
an EEG machine, showed them photos of their exes, and they measured the intensity of emotion
in response to that photo, and then had them use these different prompts to see which one
works best.
When they looked in, the people who were not thinking about anything, they were bleeding
out of their eye sockets.
They were.
And according to the readings, all three of the strategies significantly decreased their
emotional response to the photos relative to the control.
If you looked at your ex in a negative light, that first one, like they were such a jerk,
you had a decrease in feelings of love, but you left in a worse mood, like that judged
up bad feelings.
Like you wasted your time or something on that?
Maybe, or just like, just really took me off thinking about all that stuff, so now it's
a dumb study.
Got to go throw some clay.
That's right.
Distraction made you feel better overall, but didn't that have much of an effect on
how you really felt about them?
You just didn't leave in necessarily a bad mood, you just got ice cream and watched a
funny movie.
Good enough.
Which is fine, but they said that that doesn't do anything long term to help you recover.
Just like a temporary whatever.
Does it prolong it though, do you think?
I mean, you know as much as the people conducting the study.
It said it's a form of avoidance that is shown to reduce the recovery.
Okay, so it would prolong it then.
I guess so.
Everybody stop eating ice cream and watching Black Mirror.
And then love appraisal showed no effect on your mood or how you feel about them, but
it did dull the emotional response a little bit.
So there's really nothing to do.
Doesn't sound like it.
I saw a couple more tips.
One is you could write a letter that under no circumstances will you ever send.
Yeah, that's a good trick.
Set it on fire.
Not for love relationships, but just like anything bothering her.
It also really works well for grieving too.
You just write a letter.
Sure.
And you say whatever you want because you know for a fact that the other person will
never read it.
Dear jerk.
You can say whatever you want and it's just like a cathartic process that can help hasten
things.
And also, why do sad songs feel so good when you're going through a breakup?
Why do people seek out sad songs?
And the best explanation I saw, the best theory is that a song is a little capsule of emotion.
When you're seeking out a sad song, you're confronting the very emotions that you're
probably stifling right then.
And confronting it in such a raw form forces you to express those emotions, i.e. cry.
And that helps you process them faster because you're not pushing them off any longer.
You're expressing them.
You're sorting through them.
So that's what sad songs make you do.
That's why people seek out sad songs when they're down.
And it actually helps hasten recovery.
Lady in red.
I don't think that's a sad song.
They're standing with me.
That's the saddest song.
You're like sailing, takes me away.
Sailing by Christopher Cross, Lady in Red, and then Dan Fogelberg's same old angzine.
Three saddest songs.
Jerry knows that song.
Those were two Christopher Cross songs?
He's got two of the three saddest songs.
No, Lady in Red's not Christopher Cross.
I think it is.
No.
Five dollars.
Jerry, we're all nodding now.
Five dollars is on the table.
All right.
I'll look it up.
Well, you guys will find out next episode whether I was right or not.
I remember the guy's name.
It's Christopher Cross.
Oh.
Jerry's doing one of her rare speaking parts.
She says, Christoph Waltz.
That's the actor.
You know what's funny is I mistyped something and it changed my search to Lady in Red Wings.
Like Red Wing boots.
The boots.
Must be a fetish site.
I guess so, yeah.
Well, while Chuck's doing that, if you want to know more about breakups, go read about
them because that's way better than going through them.
And since we said that, it's time for a listener mail.
Well, no, no.
Oh.
First of all, that is Christa Berg.
Who is Christa Berg?
It's a man singing.
Christa Berg.
Oh, I got you.
Not Christa Berg.
Well, I'm sorry.
But I think he was a one hit wonder probably.
He's British.
Okay.
Art Rock performer, Lady in Red, 1986.
Wow.
So Christopher Cross did not have that song.
No.
He's great though.
Yeah, he is.
No, no, no.
No listener mail.
Let's get the how to money guys in here.
So here we are, everybody, as promised.
We have a very special non listener mail, listener mail segment.
Instead, we're going to hang out with Joel and Matt, the dudes from how to money.
So welcome, guys.
Hey, thanks for having us.
Yeah, we appreciate it.
Yeah.
Thank you for being here.
Listen to those voices.
I know.
They've got podcasty voices for sure.
We've been working on them.
It takes a while, you know, to develop a voice, this golden, but it takes time, but you get
there, you know?
You guys know.
I've just learned the English language, so.
So how this all happened was my friend from high school is a mutual friend of yours, Matt.
Keogh Stan Todd.
He got in touch via social media and said, hey, I got these friends.
It was sort of that thing that everyone dreads, which is like, they have a podcast, would
you have coffee with them?
And then I listened to the show and it was great and I was like, you guys are sort of
doing a stuff you should knowy approach to finance and would you join our network?
And it was kind of that simple.
Yeah.
Well, the thing is, it wasn't a mistake, right?
Like we've, I've been a fan of SYSK for years and the approach of just talking about things
that you're interested or that you find, you know, a curiosity in was a huge draw to finding
a way to talk about money in a way that was helpful to folks out there needing help with
their finances.
Yeah.
That's the key.
Isn't it just to like be actually interested in what you're talking about?
Yeah.
So like what are some of the topics you guys cover typically?
Yeah.
So we cover all sorts of topics, really more than anything, stuff that interest Matt and
I.
And so we cover, we just realized that every time we got together, what do we end up talking
about?
Money related issues.
That's just kind of what we care about.
And so we wanted to help people figure out how to handle their money better because that's
like a huge issue, right?
And so we talk about tax refunds, we talk about student loan debt.
We talk about how investing is like so much simpler than you think it is.
There's this concerted effort to make it seem like it's a really hard thing.
And people, they get their, they get their panties in a lot because they don't know how
to invest and they decide not to do it at all because it's so hard, right?
And so we want to just help people make it easier.
So it's like a public service, basically.
I mean, hands off to you guys for doing that because there is a lot of like scary thought
and just fear of the unknown for sure with finances and a lot of people have problems
with money.
So to go out there and do that, to explain it, to whip it into shape for people is that's
hands off.
Yeah.
I mean, there's just not conversation happening around personal finance.
Right.
Fewer folks are talking about it than need to actually be discussing it, right?
It needs to be talked about more.
And I think by leading, by example, to a certain extent, by talking about it and having conversations
about it, like that alone kind of demystifies these financial topics and principles.
And if we can do that and encourage conversation through the show, through the podcast, then
we see that as a huge win.
Yeah.
I think the danger for especially like younger listeners and millennials that they just sort
of shut it down because they might think it's boring or it's scary.
And so I don't even want to like go there.
And you guys do it in such an approachable way that it demystifies it and makes it accessible.
And it really kind of is like a public service in a way.
Yeah.
So I think it's so, for Matt and I, to do this show, right?
At first, it just came out of what we generally talk about.
We're like, hey, what do we do when we get together?
We drink a beer and we talk about money.
And so on the show, we drink a beer too, which is part of our kind of approach, like let's
just be normal human beings that talk about money, that care about this stuff.
And so it's been really, honestly, it's been super cool to see the listeners respond, to
see them taking action, to hear the sorts of moves that people have made in their financial
lives already.
And the cool thing, the best part about the whole thing is that at the end of the day,
they've empowered themselves, right?
They've made a change in their own lives that makes their future self so much happier.
And even, honestly, their self today, because as you start to kind of take the reins of
your own financial life back, there's something that's so freeing.
It's so beautiful, right?
Getting out from under debt, there's like no better feeling than that.
You feel like the man doesn't own you anymore, like you're not indebted, literally and figuratively
at that point.
Yeah.
But it's like, how do I start?
How do I even get the ball rolling?
That's what keeps people from sitting on the couch and not doing anything.
And so, yeah, we want to be that motivating factor, but also kind of explain some of those
things that typically are shrouded in secrecy.
Well, you said you guys talk about beer a lot on the podcast, or it's a part of it.
It's like a third host kind of, another character, right?
It's the Jerry of Haltamanias.
Exactly.
So the beer may or may not exist, I guess.
I wish Jerry was a beer.
So do I.
She'd be long gone by now, though.
So what beer have you come across that is expensive but worth the outlay, in your opinion?
So one of the reasons we have the beer on the show is that it's an example of us focusing
on enjoying life now, while also balancing saving for the future.
Yeah, that's important.
Yeah.
So a lot of times folks get too caught up in compounding interest calculators, and they
look ahead and they say, man, if I don't spend another 10 bucks this month, like that
can be thousands and thousands down the road, and what happens is folks end up just depriving
themselves of things that they enjoy now.
Yeah, you turn into like Gollum or something, but with money in general, so they're going.
Yeah, exactly.
And so pretty much any beer that we know we want to have on the show, certainly there's
some that are better than others, but we enjoy every single one that we have on, because
it's an example.
It's an illustration of us taking time, taking time for ourselves, you know, like we don't
do that enough.
But really, it is a huge part of the show, and we felt that it was always important
that we maintain that in the podcast.
The fact that you don't discriminate from beer to beer, I just, I love both of you.
Hats off to you again.
Well, I mean, you guys are demystifying the process.
You're making finance interesting and funny, and I feel great that you guys thought of
us as an inspiration for doing that.
And I think you really are doing a great service, though.
Like if you're out there in podcast land and finance scares you or bores you, like listen
to how to money for real, because it can be a great sidekick and a teacher for you.
Thanks.
Thanks, guys.
We appreciate it.
And yeah, we're just glad to be a part of the network, and we love what you guys are
doing.
You guys are doing great, too, man.
Thanks, man.
Thanks so much.
It's a lot of fun to be a part of the family, for sure.
And so they can find you guys what on Apple Podcasts, on iHeartRadio app, everywhere they
get podcasts.
All the places.
Okay.
Great.
And when do you publish?
Mondays and Wednesdays.
What's your social?
Oh, let's see.
How to money pod?
Pretty much everywhere, I believe.
Yes.
And the best part is our Facebook group.
So if you want to join in there, there's over a thousand people asking each other questions,
commenting, and that's the community.
Super fun.
Yeah, the fact that the community has sort of formed around the show and there's folks
helping each other out and asking questions, answering other questions of stuff that they
do know about.
That is super cool.
Like, between that and the emails that we receive of folks explaining how they have
created a budget for the first time ever, or I'm starting to set aside money towards
putting money in my 401K, finally accepting the employer match, like just different things
like that.
It's so rewarding and it's huge.
I wish I would have had the show because I was a late bloomer in knowing anything about
finances.
So if I would have had the show in my 20s, I'd be a lot further along than I am today,
guys.
If only we could time travel.
Exactly.
We'll get in the way back.
The way back machine.
Yep.
Yep.
I'd be richer and slimmer.
Thank you for coming by, you guys.
We appreciate it.
If you want to get in touch with me, Chuck, or Jerry, you can shoot us an email to Stuff
Podcast at HowStuffWorks.com.
For more on this and thousands of other topics, visit HowStuffWorks.com.
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