Ten Percent Happier with Dan Harris - How Not to Ruin Your Relationships | Drs. John & Julie Gottman
Episode Date: February 14, 2024What 40 years of research tells us about how to cultivate good relationships in our lives.World-renowned for his work on marital stability and divorce prediction, Dr. John Gottman has conduct...ed over 40 years of breakthrough research with thousands of couples. He is the co-founder of The Gottman Institute and Affective Software Inc. as well as author of over 200 published academic articles and author or co-author of more than 40 books, including The New York Times bestseller The Seven Principles for Making Marriage Work. Dr. Julie Gottman is the Co-Founder and President of The Gottman Institute and Co-Founder of Affective Software, Inc. A highly respected clinical psychologist and author, she is sought internationally by media and organizations as an expert advisor on marriage, domestic violence, gay and lesbian adoption, same-sex marriage, and parenting issues. She is the co-creator of the immensely popular The Art and Science of Love weekend workshop for couples and she also co-designed the national clinical training program in Gottman Method Couples Therapy. In this episode we talk about:how to talk (and listen) to your partner in moments of conflictwhat to do before you start trying to solve a problem togetherwhy “there’s no such thing as constructive criticism” the details of John’s research findings, which have allowed him to predict with stunning accuracy whether a couple will get divorcedhow the Gottmans themselves do when it comes to operationalizing their findings/advicehow and why betrayal occurswhen a couple should consider separating the role mindfulness can play in healthy relationshipsand the role of humor in relationships.Related Episodes:Six Buddhist Strategies for Getting Along Better with Everyone | Sister True DedicationThe Science of Emotional Intelligence | Daniel GolemanImproving Your Relationships - Buddhist Style | Martine BatchelorSign up for Dan’s weekly newsletter hereFollow Dan on social: Instagram, TikTokTen Percent Happier online bookstoreSubscribe to our YouTube ChannelOur favorite playlists on: Anxiety, Sleep, Relationships, Most Popular EpisodesFor tickets to Dan Harris: Celebrating 10 Years of 10% Happier at Symphony Space: click here Full Shownotes: https://www.tenpercent.com/tph/podcast-episode/gottmans-418-rerunAdditional Resources:Download the Ten Percent Happier app today: https://10percenthappier.app.link/installSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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This is the 10% happier podcast. I'm Dan Harris.
Hello, my fellow suffering beings. How we doing today?
Given what we know about the importance, the primacy
even of relationships to a healthy and happy life, it is imperative that we understand
what science says about how to actually build and maintain healthy relationships. Today,
we've got two of the leading voices in this field, Drs. Julie and John Gottman are the
co-founders of the Gottman Institute. They have completed over 40 years of
research with more than 3,000 couples. Loyal listeners will recall that we had the Gottmans on
the show on Monday to talk about their new book called Fight Right, which is about, as the title
suggests, how to have healthy arguments with your partner. Today, though, we are dropping as a bonus.
My previous interview with the Gottmans, which makes for a perfect pairing,
especially as we come up on Valentine's Day here.
In this conversation,
we talk about the role mindfulness can play
in healthy relationships, the role of humor,
which is a double-edged sword, as you will hear.
We also talk about how and why betrayal or infidelity occurs,
when a couple should consider separating,
and how the Gottmans
themselves do when it comes to operationalizing their own findings and advice.
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Honestly, a million pounds and I still wouldn't introduce you to him and that's
for your sake.
Doctors Julie and John Gottman, welcome to the show.
Thanks so much, Dan.
Thank you, Dan.
Julie, let me start with you.
I'd love to hear a little bit of your collective origin story.
How did you and John meet and get into this work?
Great question.
John and I met at a coffee house in Seattle.
So I had just moved after getting my PhD to Seattle and John had moved
there also from University of Illinois. I'd moved from San Diego where I was going to school,
finished. And I walked in, I saw this super cute guy. He looked very sexy. He had on kind of dark glasses and a black leather hat
and black leather coat.
He was sitting and reading a book, of course,
because that's what he does all the time.
And I needed to get some coffee.
I was driving to a party,
and he asked me if I'd like to join him for coffee.
And I thought, I'd much rather sit with him
and have coffee than go to this party
of my mothers and stepfathers. So I sat with him, had coffee, and 45 minutes later, I think I was
in love. He walked me to my car afterwards, and I fell in love with his car, Dan.
His car was outstanding.
It was ancient.
It was red with big white blotches on it.
And he told me later, it had been voted the ugliest car
in the University of Washington faculty parking lot.
That was impressive.
I thought that was very cool.
She called him Bondo.
I called him Bondo because, the car that is, not John,
because it had been rusted out in Illinois in the snow.
He'd gotten some fellow to come to the door
who offered to put Bondo on it, patch up the rust.
The fellow did with big white blotches,
but then John never painted the car.
So it kind of looked like a red Dalmatian
if there can be such a thing.
And it was beautiful.
I loved his car.
And five months later, he proposed.
So that's how we met.
I was a psychologist working with folks who were deeply oppressed, deeply impoverished,
very depressed, getting no services.
I had worked with people who had been physically abused, sexually abused, emotionally abused,
and that was really my love, working with post-traumatic stress disorder and combat vets, torture victims as well.
So I kept my private practice separate from John's work.
He was doing only research at the University of Washington,
but fabulous research.
And I guess what, about eight years later? Eight years later, we were sitting in a canoe, Dan,
out in the Pacific Ocean. And John had just published some of his incredible findings again.
And I thought, God, why don't we do something to help people with all this great information?
don't we do something to help people with all this great information? That was the beginning of our working together, creating new theory about couples, new interventions, and the
Gottman Institute eventually in 1996, I think. Add anything, Love?
No, that's it, really. It's a combination of a researcher who didn't have a clue how to
help anybody and a clinician who had a great deal of sensitivity, especially for people
who had other kinds of problems that made relationships very difficult. So the two of
us together really hammered out this theory that we tested over
the next 26 years and refined and as we discovered what needed to happen to make the theory better
and better. I want to get into the theory and some of your research findings, John. But can you
describe briefly how you got into this
field of research? What was so interesting to you?
Well, I think it was based on my complete incompetence in relationships. Most of this
research was done before we met Julie about 25 years before I met her. My best friend,
Bob Levinson, who is a psychology professor at UC Berkeley,
and I were assistant professors at Indiana University when we met.
And our relationships with women were not going very well.
We both went from one disaster to another.
And so we had no hypotheses at all.
We were kind of clueless.
And we decided, let's do research on this and we love working
together. And so we just brought couples into this laboratory that combined Bob's expertise
in looking at physiology with my interest in looking at interaction in relationships. And I was the one coding the emotions and the tapes,
and Bob was synchronizing the video time code
to psychophysiological measures we were getting.
So we just thought, let's just start completely afresh.
And we were among the two or three laboratories
in the 1970s that were doing observational research on
what makes the difference between couples who are happy and stable and couples who are really
miserable in their relationships or eventually going to break up and divorce. And so Bob and I
teamed up as two clueless guys with no hypotheses and just collected data. And we were quite stunned that
we were able to predict with such high accuracy, over 90% accuracy, how our relationship would change
over a three-year period. And we just did that same study over and over and over again with gay
and lesbian couples, with couples across the life course. And I was trained as a child psychologist.
So I was really interested in,
how do relationships affect babies and children?
How do children affect relationships?
So that was an interest of mine.
And Bob became very interested in old age
and various forms of dementia
and looking at relationship components to study emotion during
frontotemporal dementia and Alzheimer's dementia. So we sort of went different ways eventually,
but Bob was able to do a 20-year study of a group of couples who were in their 40s or in their 60s.
And I started the research with him, but Bob's tenacity allowed us to study
those same group of couples for 20 years,
bringing them back into the laboratory six different times
over that period.
And so I would say, you know,
Bob and I were quite surprised
that what we measured actually made a difference
in relationships.
When you say you can predict with 90% accuracy whether a couple is going to stay together,
what are the variables that allow you to make that prediction?
Great question.
Our best prediction was in the area of conflict.
So when couples are disagreeing with one another, and we interviewed couples about their worst conflicts,
and we try to have them resolve their worst conflict
in the next 15 minutes,
just because we thought it would be interesting.
And it turns out that couples who are sort of
the disasters of relationship,
who would stay in unhappy relationships or break up,
talk to one another in a particular way. They would
start with criticism, blaming their partner's personality for the
relationship trouble. They would escalate to contempt, sort of insulting their
partner's personality and character, and blaming their partner for all the
troubles. They would sometimes, you know sometimes get defensive when their partner mentioned
something that they wanted changed, or they would stall wall.
They would actually withdraw from the interaction.
We wound up calling those the four horsemen of the apocalypse because those four things
predicted relationship demise.
Whereas the masters of relationship were not as defensive,
took responsibility for even a part of the problem,
were gentler in the way they brought up the issue,
had a better sense of humor,
especially gay and lesbian couples
had a better sense of humor.
And they were less likely to withdraw emotionally
from the interaction.
They just stayed in there and kept working.
And the physiology itself predicted.
So the couples whose relationships wound up
getting worse and worse over time.
When they talked about a problem had much higher heart rate,
faster blood velocity, higher blood pressure.
They sweated more and jiggled around more in their chairs.
They were more in fight or flight
when they were talking about a problem.
Whereas the masters of relationships
wound up being able to self-soothe and stay calm.
So looking at those things, in addition
to just simply the ratio of positive to negative interaction,
we found the masters had a ratio averaging five to one,
five times as much positive as negative interaction
during conflict.
And the disaster is that ratio positive to negative average,
0.8, so a little bit more negativity than positivity.
And just that set of variables allowed us to predict
within 15 minutes the future of our relationship
with almost 90% accuracy.
So Julie, John's the quant jock, the nerd, the numbers dude.
You're a little bit more the way I'm wired, which is a more qualitative, skills-based
as I understand it.
As I listen to John talk, I sort of flash back to my moments of conflict in my marriage
and previous partners and even friendships and business partnerships.
And I think that I am, I have tendencies toward disaster and I'm wondering, can one train oneself
toward mastery?
Absolutely.
Absolutely.
First of all, it's not all skill-based. We do a lot of kind of emotional searching also,
helping people to connect with their own hearts,
their own spirituality to some degree,
their own existential sense of purpose, life purpose.
But to your question, Dan, absolutely,
people can really change dramatically.
So if you're teaching yourself how to do this,
what one has to do is basically learn a different way
to speak and a different way to listen.
So when one is speaking to their partner,
particularly regarding conflict,
the big mistake that people make
is they'll describe their partner rather than themselves.
They'll point out the personality flaw, the cracks in their partner's perfection when
they're trying to bring up some kind of issue.
That doesn't work because it will sabotage you getting listened to.
The partner will become defensive and feel attacked,
so they're not going to hear what you have to say.
Instead, what we need to do is describe ourselves.
This is the formula for it.
Here is what I feel about what's the situation,
not what about the personality of the partner,
but what's the situation that's eliciting feelings in you, and what is your positive need?
Positive need means what is it that your partner can do to shine for you? What do you really want
them to do as opposed to what you resent they're doing or you don't like?
That's the formula I feel about what and I need. The listener is very helpful then if the listener
can oh just summarize a little bit of what they hear their partner saying. And then ask some significant questions
to understand the deeper subterranean level
of what the speaker is trying to convey.
Questions like, are there some values or ethics
or kind of guidelines that you're following?
Some beliefs that are important to you
in this position you have.
How about your childhood?
Is there some background history
that's a part of your position on this issue?
We have a beautiful intervention.
We love it.
It's called the dreams within conflict.
It's where the listener asks those kinds of questions,
six in all.
A couple of others are what would be your ideal dream here?
And is there an underlying purpose or goal you have in your position on this issue?
The listener doesn't bring up their own position on the issue until
they've really understood the speaker's point of view.
Then the roles reverse.
Then the listener can now become the speaker, bring up their own position on the issue and the first partner now
will summarize a little bit of what that partner is saying,
and then ask those same questions.
What's absolutely pivotal, Dan,
is that people have a deep understanding first
before they move into compromise and resolution.
And once they have that understanding, we have a way of talking about compromise
in which each partner separates out what they are inflexible about versus what they're more
flexible about in their position on this same issue. Because when people are asked to compromise
on something that is so essential to them,
it's like giving up the bones of their body,
they're gonna get rigid and not compromise.
But if that part, that belief or core need or ideal dream
can be preserved for each person as part of the compromise,
then they can be flexible around the edges
and reach a compromise.
That's how it looks.
I have a million questions
because what you just said was fascinating.
You said that a cardinal rule here, as I understand it,
is really to use what some people might call eye language,
to talk about your own feelings, your own situation, as opposed to launching into a
damning diagnosis of your interlocutor or partner.
But is it never appropriate to kindly describe a problematic or challenging behavioral trend
or pattern of thought in your partner?
It's not gonna work. There's no such thing as constructive criticism. Hmm. That's what we've found out
so
Let's see. Let me give you an example if I were to say John
I love you deeply. You're absolutely wonderful, but you always leave the kitchen a mess.
Okay, he's gonna feel defensive.
He's gonna respond by saying,
I don't always leave it a mess.
I cleaned it up like six months ago.
That's good enough, right?
So always and never are criticisms.
He's not gonna be able to hear that.
But if I say to him instead, honey, I'm feeling annoyed and frustrated because the kitchen is a
mess. Would you please clean it up this afternoon? Yeah. Totally different. Totally different response to it.
It's kind of like you're saying I, I, I,
as opposed to you, you, you.
You're the difference.
That's all it takes.
Right, and another blueprint that we've devised
that is an important part of this approach to conflict
is a way of revisiting past regrettable incidents
or past fights that have driven an emotional wedge
between partners and revisiting that regrettable incident
and reprocessing it so you can understand your partner
better and how you miscommunicated
there and really put those past regrettable incidents in the rearview mirror.
And so you get past them.
Can you have a successful conflict when only one side is following the rules,
your rules, you probably don't like the term rules,
but is working within this context of constructive conflict,
or did both sides need to be engaged in the right way?
I think I would say that it's not quite so black and white.
Typically, what we see is if one person is really following
this blueprint, let's call it,
for how to bring up a problem, how to explore a problem,
how to work on compromise,
there may be a few partners out there
that don't hear the changes and thus don't change
themselves.
But what I've seen, at least, is that oftentimes the other person will soften.
They'll back down a little bit.
They won't be quite as obstreperous.
They won't be as dominant or belligerent because they're not pushing against something.
It's like trying to push against a cloud.
There's a big difference between pushing against a cloud and pushing against a raging bull
that's charging at you, right?
So it no longer is very functional for that partner
to just keep pushing away at you or stalking you.
They're not gonna do it typically as aggressively
as you would think.
And so one person changing the system
can actually have, I think, a moderating effect
on the entire system between partners.
Coming up, Julie lays out the Gottman's comprehensive theory of healthy relationships,
and I ask both Gottmans how good they are at following their own advice.
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John, before you reference this term, the theory or your theory, what is the theory?
Well, we call it the sound relationship house theory.
And it's a house that has, if you can imagine a drawing of a house that has
seven floors, seven levels, and two weight-bearing walls. The weight-bearing
walls are labeled trust on the left side and commitment on the right side. And
part of the theory that Julie and I devised,
a disconfirmable theory.
So we can measure everything on the theory accurately
in a clinician's office or a laboratory.
And we have in the theory basic suggestions
for how the levels relate.
So the first three levels of the sound relationship house,
the bottom levels, are the components
of friendship and intimacy.
And they're called love maps, build love maps,
build fondness and admiration
at sort of respect and affection system.
And turn toward your partner's attempts
to connect with you emotionally,
your partner's bids for connection.
And those three form the basis of connection and intimacy in the relationship.
Our theory says that if those are working well, then your overall perspective on the
relationship tends to be much more positive.
And you're in the positive perspective rather than the negative perspective.
Kind of your cost-benefit analysis of the relationship is much more on the positive side than on
the negative side.
You're more likely to give your partner the benefit of the doubt when your partner is
grumpy, for example.
And then the next level of the same relationship house deals with conflict.
How do you deal with conflict? And what Bob and
I discovered was that 69% of conflicts in a relationship are perpetual. They don't ever
get resolved. They're just based on personality differences between partners. And you have
to really learn to accept your partner's differences. And so that's where the dreams within conflict,
blueprint comes in as very important, 31% are solvable.
And then there are six skills that we've discovered
that facilitate the goal of conflict,
which is mutual understanding.
Conflict is not dysfunctional,
it really gets it, being able to understand your partner
better.
And then the next level of the sound relationship house is making life dreams come true.
And the final level is building a sense of shared meaning and purpose together.
So we can measure all of this.
And our basic idea in building the theory was if you can measure it, you got a better
chance of being able to build it than if you can't measure it.
So once you know what you're talking about, then you can build something like you, we
know how to build trust.
We know how trust is eroded in a relationship.
We know how people build commitment, a sense of this is the love of my life, a sense of cherishing this person
as the love of your life versus betrayal.
And we understand how betrayal happens as well.
So the great thing about the theory was that,
first of all, we were mostly wrong in our hypotheses
when we started building the theory.
And then I kept track of my hypotheses
and I'm 60% wrong in my own intuitions about relationships.
And if I didn't collect data, I would think I was 100% right.
But I now know from actually looking at the data, most of my ideas are just baloney.
And it's really the laboratory that informs our knowledge and that has made this theory work over time, both
clinically and also in our research studies testing the effectiveness of this theory.
I want to go back over the sound relationship house because this seems like your unified
field theory of love and get you and Julie to go through these seven levels here because you
ran through them pretty quickly, which I appreciate, but I think there's a lot more to say.
Just to recapitulate a little bit, I'm looking at a drawing of the house.
It has these two load bearing walls, as you referenced, they are trust and commitment.
And then the space of the house is taken up by these seven levels, the lowest of which
or the first of which is
build love maps. Julie, what does that mean?
So, yeah, let me describe each level for you, Dan, and for our audience. Build love maps
refers to how well do you know your partner's internal world? How well do you know feelings, needs, beliefs, values,
childhood history, most embarrassing moment in childhood, favorite novel, favorite movie, favorite
tree. The way that we do that is to ask our partner questions. You might remember that when you first dated,
you asked your partner things like,
what brought you to St. Louis?
What do you like about being here?
Where did you grow up?
We asked those questions in the beginning,
but then if we commit to one another,
start living together and or have children,
all of a sudden life has taken up
with an endless to-do list
and we forget to ask each other those kinds of questions.
But the reality is that over time,
each individual is evolving into a slightly different person,
different feelings, thoughts, needs and so on.
So we have to keep asking those questions throughout our time
together to understand how our partner is changing. So love maps means being able to map the internal
landscape of who your partner is. That's the first level. Then comes create fondness and admiration. And the big one about that is that all of us,
no matter how long we've been together,
we need to hear words of care, of fondness, of love,
of respect and admiration.
We need to hear the words.
We need to feel the expression of it in touch.
So that doesn't go away either.
We need to keep expressing our fondness, our care, our love and our respect for one another.
It's got to come out of your mouth or out of your fingertips.
Never stop doing that.
We need lots and lots of that. That's the second
level. The third level, if we're going up the house, the third level we call turning toward.
And this is an incredibly simple thing to do. What it means is how do you respond to your partner's bids for attention, bids for interest, bid even
for a deeper need.
So for example, if I'm looking out this window and I say, wow, John, look at that gorgeous
bird that's sitting right there in the tree.
He has three options of how he can respond to me. He can either totally ignore me and keep reading his mathematics book.
He can say something hostile like,
stop interrupting me, I'm trying to read.
So we call that turning against.
The first one was turning away with no response.
This hostile one is turning against.
Then what he can also do
is he can look up, look out the window, look at the tree and say, wow, that's it. That's all it takes
turning toward. Just a response. It's a little positive response to your partner's bid for connection.
We call that turning toward.
Now your partner may want to express deeper needs like, honey, would you please do the
dishes tonight?
I'm exhausted.
Or would you please drive us to the beach because I'm scared of driving at night. We can ask for things like that.
We can ask for, would you please clean up the kitchen? How does our partner respond
to those needs? We found in successful couples, they responded to each other's bids for connection 85% of the time right?
It is sick. I always get that wrong.
Ding it. All right, and the folks who did not
Do so well in the future who are more the disasters they responded 33% of the time
So big difference between 86 and 33.
But it takes such a little thing like wow or ha.
That's all it takes.
That's a positive response.
So that's turning toward the third level.
The next level we call either the positive or the negative perspective.
Now that one really is not one
you work on directly. It's related to what comes above it, which is more conflict related,
or below it, these three levels I just described, which are part of friendship.
If you're in the positive perspective, you give your partner the benefit of the doubt.
perspective. You give your partner the benefit of the doubt. Let's say that I come downstairs, I had a bad night, and I feel really grouchy, and I snap at John. Well, if he's in the negative
perspective, he'll get defensive, he'll get angry. If he's in the positive perspective,
If he's in the positive perspective, he'll say to himself, huh, bet she didn't sleep very well last night.
I think I'll just give her a wide berth.
And he'll say, can I make your coffee for you this morning?
Perfect.
That's the positive perspective.
He's giving me the benefit of the doubt.
He's not thinking I'm just a mean rotten person.
He's thinking something must have gone wrong. Therefore, I'm not doing so well today.
That's giving me the benefit of the doubt. So that's the positive perspective.
When you're in the negative perspective, the opposite, your partner can look at you with
a big smile and say, God, you look gorgeous today.
You'll hear it as criticism. Well, you didn't say that to me yesterday. Why didn't you
say it yesterday? You know, I mean, it's just you can't win when you're in the negative
perspective. All right. So that's that fourth level. Now, the fifth level we've already been describing,
and that's manage conflict.
So create good conflict management.
So that was part of how do you bring up an issue?
How do you deepen your understanding of the issue?
How do you build compromise?
Also, how do you process past regrettable incidents,
you know, those terrible big fights you had in the past
that created emotional wounds?
How do you get past those?
And we have a five step process that's just beautiful.
I've never seen it fail actually
to really create healing around those past regrettable incidents and do some
healing of that emotional scar that got left. Also, in this conflict management, we also really
teach how to take a break when your physiology goes through the roof. When your heart rate is above 100 beats a minute, you
flip your lid, as our dear friend and colleague Dan Siegel would say, and you cannot access
the part of your brain that can problem solve, that can listen well, interpret accurately, creatively problem solve. Instead, you simply feel attacked and you go into fight or flight.
That's what happens when you could be sitting there as calmly as John and I are, but your
heart rates are above 100 beats a minute or if you're athletic above about 80 beats a
minute, then you're a mess.
You're in fight or flight. So you need a break ritual, a way to take a break
and back away until you can self-soothe
by telling your partner when you'll come back to talk
before you take the break,
then self-soothing without thinking about the fight.
If you think about the fight, you'll stay flooded.
That's not going to help you.
So you have to do something distracting and calming like reading a magazine, reading a
book, listening to music, going for a run, doing meditation, doing some mindful meditation is wonderful for this particular problem of
people getting flooded so that when you come back, you're in a much more composed state,
calm and gentle where you can really hear your partner better and speak in a kinder way to your partner about the issue you were discussing.
That's all part of that fifth level of conflict management. Then the sixth level
is honor each other's dreams. I love that one. So in that one, that's actually a part of conflict too.
in that one. That's actually a part of conflict too. Because oftentimes when we are really esconced in our position on an issue that we just can't give it up, there's usually an underlying
dream in there. Something that's really important to you, like getting to have time alone or being able to connect with friends more than you actually
have, you know, whatever it is, it's some core need or core dream. And when you work on conflict
and work on compromise, it's super important to understand each other's underlying dreams and then
important to understand each other's underlying dreams and then
Try to build a compromise that honors each other's underlying dreams That's a very important piece of the work that we've really given to folks
Finally the upper level the seventh level we call
creating shared meaning and here's where this comes from. There's a big myth out
there that you've got to have exactly the same interests, the same mission, the same goals,
the same purpose. It's not true. That's not what we mean by creating shared meaning. What you have
to do is be able to talk about those and describe those
with one another and have a partner who's curious about what gives your life meaning and purpose
and a partner who wants to share what gives their life meaning and purpose even if it's confused, they're feeling lost, where are they traveling internally?
Every person is a philosopher. Every person is on a life journey. We humans are meaning makers,
right? And so talking about this upper level of the sound relationship house,
what gives our life meaning and purpose,
is some of the strongest glue that bonds two people together.
That's it, the seven levels of the sound relationship house.
Well done. I'm curious,
you certainly don't have to answer this
if you don't want to, but how well do you feel
that you each do in keeping up these seven levels yourselves
after all these years of studying and teaching?
We're much better than we were at the beginning.
You know, I have to say this, Dan,
we are absolutely not gurus. We do not
belong on a pedestal. You know who does? All the couples that came into our research lab,
they were the teachers, they were the ones who taught us what successful couples do.
what successful couples do. So, you know, we're all in the same soup. So sometimes we do it well,
and sometimes we don't. And then we have to process. We have to talk to one another and
just bring up our hurt feelings, our resentments, or bring up an issue that hasn't been resolved, try to do our best with it.
Kuli and I process a regrettable incident in every one of our workshops, a real one that
we've had.
And we've been doing this for 26 years, whenever at a loss for a regrettable incident to talk
about to the audience.
That's so true.
To say, hey guys, we're just like you.
We struggle and that's what relationships are about.
It's about doing that work so you can really keep understanding each other over time.
True enough.
The more I hear you talk about your own fallibility, the more I believe you. Glad to hear it. We'll talk more about it if you want.
That's not a bid for unnecessary self-disclosure. I don't want to make you a doctor.
Let me tell you about what he did last week. I drove him in nuts.
Coming up, the Gottmans explain how and why betrayal or infidelity occurs in relationships
and how to avoid it.
They also talk about the double-edged sword of humor, something I've wrestled with, if
you can wrestle with a sword.
And they share some stunning data about the stakes of getting your relationships right.
I'm Afwahirsh. I'm Peter Francopane. And in our podcast, Legacy, we explore the lives of some of the biggest characters in
history. This season, we delve into the life of Michael Gorbachev. This season has everything.
It's got political ideology. It's got nuclear Armageddon. It's got love story. It's got political ideology. It's got nuclear Armageddon.
It's got love story.
It's got betrayal.
It's got economic collapse.
One ingredient that you left out, legacy.
Was he someone who helped make the world a better place,
saved us all from all of those terrible things?
Or was he a man who created the problems
and the challenges of many parts of the world today?
Those questions about how to think about Gordbv, you know, was he unwitting character in history or was he one who helped forge and
frame the world? And it's not necessarily just a question of our making. There is a real life
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it's a bit of a different picture. So join us on legacy for Mikhail Gorbachev.
it's a bit of a different picture. So join us on Legacy for Mikhail Gorbachev.
When I say the word history, what do you think about?
Horses and buggies and dust and a bunch of white dudes
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I've been taking some notes here because each, as I listen to you speak, you say things that I want to circle back to.
So I want to circle back to a few things that you've little nuggets you've dropped along
the way that I think might be worthy of further explication.
John, at one point many minutes ago, you said something about, in your research, you came
to understand how and why betrayal happens.
Right.
Can you talk about that? Sure.
And this knowledge is built on the lifelong work of a woman named Carol Russbolt.
And Carol really taught us about commitment.
And what she wound up unveiling is that there's a choice point in a relationship.
That happens quite often when things aren't going well
between two people in a relationship.
There's a choice point where you can either say,
you know, I'm really going to talk to my partner about this
because I'm disappointed or I'm angry or my feelings are hurt.
I'm going to talk to my partner about this issue.
Or you can decide to talk about your partner to another person and complain to another person about
what you're suffering. And that choice point turns out to be very critical. If you give
voice to your complaints, you're really showing that you've invested everything. All your
eggs are in one basket. They're in this relationship. And you're going to go you've invested everything. All your eggs are in one basket.
They're in this relationship.
And you're gonna go talk to your partner.
So if I'm really upset with Julie,
I'm gonna go talk to her about it.
And part of what goes along with giving voice
to those complaints when the chips are down,
when things aren't going well,
is that I cherish the things that I love about her.
And nobody can replace her.
She is the love of my life.
So I'm gonna talk to her about what's making man happy.
Whereas if I go talk to somebody else,
that nice lady down at Starbucks who has such a nice smile
and is so welcoming and has the funny umbrella
and I complain to her about Julie,
what I'm doing, Carol Rustbull showed, is that I'm thinking, you know, I can do her about Julie. What I'm doing, Carol Rustbull showed,
is that I'm thinking, you know,
I can do better than Julie.
There's a relationship out there
that compares more favorably.
And I magnified Julie's faults when I do that.
Whereas if I talk to her about my issues,
I really magnify her positive qualities and cherish those.
So Carol showed that we don't decide to be loyal
once at the wedding ceremony or the commitment ceremony.
We're deciding it every day, all the time,
to really cherish what we have
or think the grass is greener somewhere else.
And so betrayal is actually built over time
and loyalty is also built over time.
And it's really either cherishing your partner
or trashing your partner in your mind.
And that's the central thing that's going on.
It's really, in some ways, it's a slow process.
Betrayal doesn't happen overnight.
It gets built over time andal doesn't happen overnight.
It gets built over time.
And loyalty doesn't happen overnight.
It gets built over time.
And so the same thing with trust.
We've also learned that trust is about thinking for two
all the time, thinking about not just what benefits me,
but what benefits my partner and looking to maximize benefits for
both of us. Whereas you erode trust by just thinking about what you need, regardless of what your
partner needs. And then it becomes a zero-sum game, you're maximizing your benefits, regardless of what
whether it hurts your partner or not. So that's kind of what we've learned about commitment and trust.
And knowing that, we can actually see how couples build trust and commitment over time.
And so we can help people when it's eroded how to rebuild it.
I assume that you're not saying that in a successful relationship,
there's never any inner trashing of your partner,
In a successful relationship, there's never any inner trashing of your partner, but that instead when you notice in a successful relationship that the trashing is happening, you try to
bring that to your partner in a constructive way rather than venting unconstructively to
others which would sow the seeds.
Exactly.
Yeah, that's what Carol Rustbult found.
She called it an investment model.
You know, if I've invested everything
in this relationship, you know,
Julie's the love of my life,
nobody can take her place.
Then, if I'm unhappy, I have to talk to her about it.
I've got to tell her what's really bugging me.
And I don't give myself permission
to complain about her to somebody else.
You talk about investment and what my mind immediately went with that is to a type of
bias that psychologists have noticed, which is the sunk cost bias that if you're...
I've already spent $5 on this, so I might as well spend a million more because I'm already
invested.
Right.
But aren't there times when we should divest
from unhealthy relationships and how do you talk to people
who you think might actually be better off separate?
If folks are in therapy and one person
just has absolutely no feeling whatsoever
left over for the partner. And I'm saying they're not
angry, they're not hurt, they're not furious, they are apathetic, they have no feeling.
Then that's a time when a couple ought to separate. Another time is when one person is a batterer, the other person is a victim.
And domestic violence is an interesting category. John, with his colleague Neil Jacobson, did a
nine-year-long study on domestic violent couples. And they found two types of domestic violence.
Only 20% of those domestically violent couples were what we call characterological domestic
violence. Those are the ones that need to split up. What's happening there is the perpetrator takes no responsibility for the violence,
blames it on the victim, causes major injury, terrible injury, and possibly even death to the
partner or to the partner's children or their own children. And no matter what the victim says, the violence doesn't stop.
But that's only 20% of domestic violent couples.
The other are 80%.
So in the other situational domestic violence,
the violence is not typically a major violence.
And the violence occurs because the partners
both get flooded.
So there's that physiological flooding showing up again.
They get so upset that they both go into fight or flight
and they don't have a way to take a break.
They don't, they stay engaged, they stay together.
And because of that, the quarrel gets more and more escalated
to the point where they collide physically.
They both really wanna change.
They're both taking full on responsibility for it.
That's 80% of our domestic environment.
And we can treat those.
I'm sorry, sweetie.
And we can treat those calls.
Yes, I was gonna say that.
Thank you. He's from New York. I'm sorry. And we can treat those calls. And yes, I was gonna say that.
Thank you.
He's from New York.
I'm from Oregon.
I talk really slowly.
He talks really fast.
So if I pause, he thinks I'm done.
I'm not done yet.
Hey, wait, you're describing him.
That's right.
So what happens then is that we created actually a treatment
for couples with situational domestic violence
that not only eliminated the violence
at the end of the treatment,
but a year and a half after the treatment ended.
There was still no violence,
hostility was much lower,
there was greater friendship and so on.
Julie, I want to go back to something you said very earlier in the conversation.
When I use the term skills-based, you said not everything we teach is skills-based.
Sometimes it's deeper work.
And it kind of went over my head in the moment.
So I'd love to hear more about what you meant by that.
Okay, so a lot of people mistakenly think that we're behaviorists. It's a form of psychology that just works to change behavior or learn new skills. So you're trying to make the couples better mechanics. Well, we do much more than that.
You know, a lot of people who come into therapy not only have relationship problems, but they've
got a lot of old baggage, old pain, old trauma from either earlier relationships or childhood
backgrounds or some, as I mentioned earlier, were combat vets.
They've lived life and they are covered with scars.
So can you just change somebody's skills and expect to have a great relationship?
Well no, because that individual oftentimes has a very troubled relationship with himself, herself,
or themself that is agony for them.
And that agony is manifesting in what Martin Buber would call the between, that can either be a beautiful golden warm sphere or a fragmented sharp barbed
fence.
So one has to work in relationship therapy with what is the person bringing into the session internally, each individual.
And to draw that out so that there's greater understanding
of the other partner for this person and vice versa.
So we have to dive deep.
Also, it's really wonderful to help couples develop ways
of connecting with themselves at a deeper
level.
So mindfulness is one of the ways to do that, meditation, different ways of calming and
connecting with the most internal, deepest parts of themselves, so that when they go to connect with their partner
and speak to their partner,
they're not just speaking superficially
using the right proper language.
They're also able to express their deepest vulnerability,
you know, their soul, if you will,
so that the other person can respond
with more compassion to where that speaker is coming from.
That's what I mean by we're not just skill-based.
Got it.
John, as you know, we're coming up on Valentine's Day, and I know that you and Julie like to
talk about what you call small things often.
What is that?
Yeah, that's a very good question, Dan.
Part of what we've done, you know, by having a laboratory with three cameras bolted to
the wall is that we can see moment to moment couples either connecting or failing to connect. And they're just,
they're very tiny moments. There are moments when, you know, one person really wants to
have more affection or wants to say something nice to their partner or moments where one person is
annoyed or irritated. So there are these emotional moments that a lot of times people don't really attend to,
but if you actually attend to what your partner is asking for in that moment and thinking about
what your partner needs and also getting in touch with your own feelings in that moment,
expressing your affection, your admiration for your partner, or just gratitude for small
things. That habit of mind, of noticing what your partner is doing right and expressing
gratefulness is very powerful. And Julie and I are always saying things like, thanks for
making me the coffee or thanks for making the bed,
or boy, you look really hot this morning.
I'm having all these lewd thoughts about you.
Or I enjoyed the conversation at dinner.
Or, you know, baby, I really need an adventure with you.
You know, I wanna just leave this rainy climate.
You know, let's go somewhere sunny.
Maybe the summer, let's take a vacation to Arizona
or someplace that's sunny.
And these small expressions, these small moments
of connection, positivity, gratefulness really mount up.
They actually seem to build kind of an emotional bank account.
It's like depositing into a bank account
but you're depositing something.
You're creating a cushion basically for leaner times,
you know, when things aren't going so well.
So just a bit of mindfulness really leads
to a habit of mind where you're noticing all the stuff
your partner's doing that you don't notice.
That's why that positive perspective is so important.
And research that was done by two women
having observers in couples' homes,
just looking at positive things they did for one another
in an evening.
Robinson and Price discovered that the problem
in not happy relationships is not that people need
to be more positive. It's that people need to be more positive.
It's that they need to notice the positivity that's already there.
And that was just a brilliant study because therapists initially thought, well, if a couple
is unhappy, they're probably not doing nice things for each other.
But turns out they are, but their partner is just not noticing it.
They're brushing it off. So the small
things often is about not only doing small things, but noticing what your partner is doing,
that is a contribution in your life. And it becomes a habit of mine. Small steps toward one
another often really builds this emotional bank account.
Julie, I've tried to be good here
about not asking too many selfish questions as the host,
but I do want to ask one,
which is an area where I have struggled,
I think it's both a sort of a strength and a weakness.
And I suspect this is not rare, is humor.
So I can use humor in a way in my marriage,
but in lots of my relationships to put people at ease
and often to make fun of myself a little bit.
But it can also be a little sharp
or it can be dissociative.
In other words, I'm trying to avoid
what somebody's trying to point at.
And so I wonder if you could talk a little bit
about this double-edged sword of humor.
God, what a great question, Dan.
So you're absolutely right.
I mean, humor is actually one of the strongest connectors in couples when both people share
a similar sense of humor.
So one person really gets the other's sense of humor.
gets the other's sense of humor. However, there can be time when humor is used to deflect away from a sensitive topic that goes deeper. And typically, that topic is something that
is anxiety-provoking or painful for the individual who's using the humor to brush it off, to
minimize it, to not feel it.
That's that dissociation.
Don't want to feel it.
The other person then may feel literally brushed off or minimized or distanced, kind of pushed
away.
And so it's a way of disconnecting from the other person.
And the way the partner can respond to that is simply saying,
you know what, this is serious for me.
Can we not use humor right now?
Now notice the use of we, can we not use humor right now. Now notice the use of we. Can we not use humor? By saying it
that way, the partner is not finger pointing at you and blaming you for
doing something bad. They're just saying, let's get humor out of the picture, okay?
Because this is a deep topic. When your tendency is to use humor, if you can be mindful of that as a distancer and
say, God, I really want to tell a joke right now, I think I must be anxious in talking about
this and translate the urge to crack a joke
into what emotion is beneath this urge to crack a joke.
That is what you're needing to say instead.
The other thing that I wanted to say about humor
and relationships, how it's a two-edged sword,
it can be a great connector,
but also probably the trickiest sharp edge of humor
is sarcasm.
And when you use sarcasm at the minimizing of your partner,
at the kind of attack of your partner,
we call that contempt. It's actually a way of really putting down your partner. We call that contempt.
It's actually a way of really putting down your partner from a position of superiority
and using your sarcastic humor or mockery as a way of putting down your partner.
Contempt is one of our four horsemen of the apocalypse, one of the big predictors.
In fact, it's one of the biggest predictors
of relationship demise over time.
And not only does a contempt predict relationship demise,
it's like sulfuric acid also for the immune system
of the listener.
The number of times the listener hears sarcastic contempt in, let's say, a 15-minute conversation
correlates directly with how many infectious illnesses that listener is going to have in
the coming year. So it's one really has to watch yourself, you know, if that humor becomes sharp-edged.
I think Julie's absolutely right, but let me say something in defensive humor. I don't know.
So shared humor is very interesting because it really lowers
physiological arousal and
very powerfully.
So, being able to laugh at yourself,
being able to get your partner to laugh with you
is really a wonderful thing.
And it's especially powerful during conflict
to reduce physiological arousal.
So we were really wondering,
how could you get people to laugh more at themselves during conflict?
And it turned out that the answer was in those small moments often.
It's that turning toward your partner.
If you increase the turning toward that sort of mindful sensitivity of what your partner needs,
or just noticing the positive things your partner does,
if you increase the turning toward,
you automatically get more humor during conflict.
We've talked about so many aspects
of healthy relationships,
and I just wonder if you could articulate
what you believe the stakes are here for society
of the work that you are doing?
Well, it's a great question, Dan.
There's a field that developed very much in parallel
to Bob and my research called social epidemiology,
which discovered that the basis of health and longevity
is the quality of people's closest relationships,
their friendships, their relationships with their family,
and their love relationships.
And this field was started by a guy named Len Seim
at University of California, Berkeley.
And it turns out that in modern society,
the basis for longevity is really the quality of your closest relationships.
It actually predicts how your immune system functions because in unhappy relationships,
we're chronically secreting our stress hormones.
Court is all in adrenaline and it's wearing away our ability to fight infection.
So relationships turn out to be really important,
you know, when there's a pandemic, for example,
that compromised immunity,
a lot of times comes from a relationship
that is not working very well for either person.
And if you can help people really improve
the quality of their relationships and get closer,
then you're actually extending their life
by an average of 17 years.
It's a very dramatic effect.
And not only are people healthier,
not only do they live longer,
but they recover from illness more quickly.
And they're less susceptible to infection.
And in fact, all through their bodies,
there is less inflammation going on in their heart,
in their lungs, in their GI system, and in their genitals.
So they're functioning better,
so that relationships turn out to be very powerful
at predicting physical illness
and mental illness as well or health.
It's fascinating.
And it's a great way to think about the stakes of this work.
In our remaining moments,
I wonder if I could get both of you
to describe some of the resources that you have on offer
for people who might wanna investigate further
and operationalize some of your insights.
At the Common Institute,
we have many different resources for couples.
We have online courses for learning all of the ways
that you can improve your relationships,
strengthen your relationship.
There is an online course called the Art and Science of Love
that's easily accessible and wonderful.
We're also developing an app, and that app is called Gotman Connect.
And it is absolutely wonderful.
It has ways built into the app where you can either assess your relationship as if you were in the love lab itself, but
now just in the privacy of your own home, a therapist isn't necessary, and you'll get
full feedback about how your relationship is doing, the strengths and challenges, and
you'll be pointed to particular interventions or exercises that are on the app
that will strengthen your relationship.
We're pretty sure.
Those include little videos of John or I teaching a little bit
about that particular exercise and why it's necessary, as well as
hilarious videos about how not to do the exercise, as well as how to do the exercise.
In addition, we have lots of books out there. Eight Dates is our latest book that we just love,
and it's not just for couples who have recently met and are wanting
to have interesting conversations. These are chapters of structured conversations you can have
no matter how long you've been together to learn much more about who your partner is regarding
things like money, parenting, how you prefer to do conflict.
You're not having them in these conversations, but how you prefer to manage your conflict.
Spirituality, adventures, fun and play, there's all kinds of things. We have at the Gottman
Institute as well a whole set of free card decks that are an app.
And those card decks are wonderful.
They lead you right into some of the ways of managing your relationship in a much better,
healthier way.
So those are free and easily accessible at the Gottman Institute.
And probably one of the best primers, I guess,
for everything that we've ever done
is the book that John wrote
called The Seven Principles for Making Marriage Work.
That's a sweet one, but eight dates is great.
We've got lots of books.
If there's Betrayal, a wonderful book
is What Makes Love Last,
which describes how we get to betrayal as well as how to heal from betrayal.
And also, if you're really looking for a therapist at the Gottman Institute,
we have what's called the Gottman Referral Network that has a map showing
Gottman trained therapists
where they practice all over the world actually,
but especially all over the United States
and some in Canada too.
So that's all at the Gottman Institute.
Gottman.com.
Gottman.com, right.
Well, this was a delight.
Thank you both for coming on. I really appreciate it. Thank you, Dan. Thank you, Dan. This has this was a delight. Thank you both for coming on.
I really appreciate it.
Thank you, Dan.
This has been a great interview.
Thanks so much.
It was fun.
Thanks again to John and Julie Gottman.
They are pretty amazing.
We've done many, many episodes
about the importance of relationships.
And we've posted some links in the show notes to
interviews I've done with folks like Daniel Goldman, Sister True Dedication, and Martine
Bachelor. So go check that out. Also, go check out the newsletter where we sum up the learnings from
the week's episodes. Thank you for listening. Really appreciate that. We could not and would not
do this without you. Thanks as well to everybody who worked so hard on this show. 10% happier is produced by Gabrielle
Zuckerman, Justine Davy, Lauren Smith, and Tara Anderson. DJ Kashmir is our senior producer.
Marissa Schneiderman is our senior editor. Kevin O'Connell is our director of audio and post
production. And Kimi Regler is our executive producer. Alicia Mackey leads our marketing.
And Tony Magyar is our director of podcasts.
And finally, Nick Thorburn of Islands wrote our theme.
If you like 10% happier, I hope you do.
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Being an actual royal is never
about finding your happy ending,
but the worst part is if they step out of line
or fall in love with the wrong person,
it changes the course of history.
I'm Aresha Skidmore-Williams.
And I'm Brooke Sifron.
We've been telling the stories of the rich and famous on the hit,
Wondery show, Even the Rich.
And talking about the latest celebrity news on Rich and Daily,
we're going all over the world on our new show, Even the Royals.
We'll be diving headfirst into the lives of the world's kings, queens,
and all the wannabes in their orbit throughout history.
Think succession meets the crown meets real life.
We're going to pull back the gilded curtain and show how royal status might be bright and shiny,
but it comes at the expense of, well, everything else.
Like your freedom, your privacy, and sometimes even your head.
Follow Even The Royals on the Wondery app or wherever you get your podcasts.
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Today, hip-hop dominates pop culture,
but it wasn't always like that.
And to tell the story of how that changed,
I wanna take you back to a very special year in rap.
88, it was too much good music. The world was on fire.
I'm Will Smith.
This is Class of 88, my new podcast about the moments,
albums and artists that inspired a sonic revolution and secured 1988
as one of hip hop's most important years.
We'll talk to the people who were there.
And most of all, we'll bring you some amazing stories.
You know what my biggest memory from that tour is?
It was your birthday.
Yes, and you brought me to Shaday!
Life-sized artwork cutout.
This is Class of 1988, the story of a year that changed hip-hop.