We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - CARE-FRONTATIONS: Three Keys for Giving & Receiving Criticism
Episode Date: October 4, 20221. What happens inside us when we receive criticism–and how our brains ensure we’re always in the right (even when we’re not). 2. The three-ingredient recipe for a positive, productive “care-f...rontation” exchange. 3. The single biggest relationship killer (it’s not conflict) – and how conflict can bring you closer. 4. Amanda navigates a “care-frontation” with her son’s friend’s family – and Abby reevaluates her past relationship with criticism. To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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And because I'm mine, I walk the line.
Oh yeah, me. Okay, we've just been sitting here staring at each other.
Hi, yeah, I'm going to we've just been sitting here staring at each other. Hi, yeah. I'm gonna see.
I usually kick this off.
Welcome to We Can Do Hard Things.
We are Thrilled and Delighted.
Ha!
Okay.
God bless you and keep you.
That all the rest of you too.
Our hair, do you know that people say God bless you
because in the olden days, when people sneezed,
they thought that evil spirits got into your body
during the sneeze. And so people would say,
God bless you to make sure that the evil spirits didn't settle. It's just such horseshit.
Really? I thought it was because your heart stopped when you sneezed, which now that I just said
that I'm loud, I'm embarrassed I said, because that can't be true. You know, sometimes when I say
things out loud, I do wonder if I should check them
first because my dad used to tell me a lot of things that aren't true just to embarrass
me later like one time he told me that spam was called spam because it was used only in
the Spanish-American war.
Oh, like the meat.
Yeah, and I did say that.
The spiced ham?
Yeah, yeah, yeah. I didn't know.
I said that during a jeopardy game, during college, and everyone was like, you are an idiot.
And I was like, oh, no, that's true.
It's a Spanish American war.
So anyway, what's up?
How's everybody doing?
I'm good.
I just had a really, I've had a morning.
You have thrown your back out a touch,
hot squad, Glennon has been laid up a little bit and I'm good. I'm just running around. Sister,
how are you? I'm doing great. I'm excited about what we're talking about today. What are we
talking about today? We're talking about criticism feedback. What happens to us when we get it?
What happens to us when we get it?
What we might wanna pay attention to, what we might want to throw directly away.
In terms of business.
And it's wonderful.
And yes, and so we decided to talk about this
because of a situation that happened this summer.
So John, my husband grew up going to this place
in Connecticut in the summertime for a couple weeks.
His parents are New England people, so they wanted to be closer to their families for a couple
weeks.
And it is this little coast town.
There's nothing fancy about it.
In fact, it is the little beach looks directly across to a power plant.
Giant. That's the view. A across to a power plant, a giant, that's the view, a giant-ass smoking power plant,
which my mother-in-law used to pray to,
to in-thankfulness for why they could afford
their little cottage and in-thankfulness
that it kept away anyone who was snobby or self-important.
Oh, cool.
The point is, it's not like what people are looking for
on postcards, but we love it.
And so we spend some time there every summer.
It's like 500 houses, but probably like 200 families
because everybody's aunt and grandparents and cousin
is there.
So it's this little bit of town.
And we love it because it's like 15 blocks and so it feels like a
place for the kids to have independence. They just go on their bikes in the morning and they don't
come back till it's time and it feels like a good place to practice making mistakes
so that they can make them on a smaller level instead of a bigger one.
Yeah.
Anyway, we're up there.
And Bobby has this very close friend there,
and I'm gonna call him Charlie.
They play all the time.
I should back up and say,
Bobby was a kid who, when he was four,
playing basketball at the park,
would try to like get people to be thrown out of the game
for double dribbling. Like he's always been a very just intense. This is the way things should
be done. Type of boy. And let's do something. I tell him. Right. Do you remember when his father,
he comes by this natural age, you remember when his father, John busted into the kitchen.
The first time he met the first time he met Tish
because Tish was cheating at shoots and ladders.
Tish was three.
Yeah, okay.
He called her out and refused.
Came into the kitchen, told me that Tish was cheating.
John is a fucking hero.
Yeah, so cheating is not okay, never okay, especially at three.
Okay.
The first time he met her and she was three
and he came in just exasper.
Yes.
Well, first she came in and was like,
John won't play right.
And then he comes in and he's like,
Tish won't play right.
Yeah, anyway, yes.
He comes in naturally.
Okay.
I love it.
Bobby is now 10, right?
He should be picking up on a few more social clues.
So should have his 40 year old father.
But that's fine.
So he is playing with Charlie.
He loves him, but he starts to be kind of mean myself.
If he thought something was a strike,
he and Charlie wanted it to be a ball.
He would like perseverate on it and say, it was.
Why would you say that?
You're wrong.
You know, kind of just, it started to make Charlie feel
bad like Fabius being mean to him, exactly.
So this thing happened over the summer where the dad came to John.
I was like, I need to talk to you about something.
This is not going well
with the boys and Bobby is being mean to Charlie and we need to work it out. And so John
tells me, I write to the parents, we talk to Bobby, our family goes over and talks to his
whole family, we come up with a plan, we come up with like words that Charlie can use,
if Bobby's slipping into it.
And to me, it was just so wonderful.
I felt so thankful to be given that
because I feel like at home,
that wouldn't have happened.
I feel like at home,
it would have been like those parents would have said
Don't play with Bobby anymore
Just ignore him just or they would have said something to other people and you know that kid
We don't want them hanging out and and so it just felt like such a great example of
being able to to deliver something with the believing in being
able to invest in that it could be better.
And I just received it as such an investment in us.
I felt so grateful for it.
And it really turned out really well,
and I feel like we got closer for it.
And so I just thought it would be an interesting
to talk about like when it works
and when it doesn't work.
And yeah, can I ask how to do that?
Do you follow up questions?
Like what do you think is the difference
between the community that you spend
a few weeks during the summer at
and maybe your home community,
where in your mind it wouldn't have worked.
Like what do you think made it successful?
I think because we are all invested in that being able to be there for a long time, it's
a small place.
And so if you are deciding to write someone off,
you're writing them off for the next 10 years.
It reminds me of our Dr. Becky Goodinside situation.
They came to us with this idea of like,
we know that Bobby is good inside and he is just acting in this way
That isn't working and we actually want this to work first all the small town big town is huge here
It's like when you're in a huge city
It's you're yes, what in a small town? You don't flick off somebody in a car
Because you're gonna run into them at the grocery store in an hour
Yeah, in a big city you're like whatever I them at the grocery store in an hour.
In a big city, you're like, whatever I'm never gonna see you get.
I mean, granted's probably been like,
it's like an accident, thank you, next.
Yeah, yeah, everybody's disposable.
There's no accountability.
Because in a small town, it's not just that,
oh, we want to like be together.
We don't want to write and we went off.
It's like, no, no, no, if I don't figure this out,
it's gonna make my life harder too.
Because I'm going to have to avoid this person.
It's the stuckness that forces relationship
because you have to go through the hard stuff together
so you don't make your life in that small place
of living hell.
But what I'm interested in is the way you're saying it now
is different than what you said the dad said to John.
Okay, what did I say?
Because now it's been a long time.
So you said that he said Bobby's being mean to my kid.
And yes, so like, but the way you're saying it now
made it sound a lot more open.
And we know Bobby's a good kid.
Sounds like it was presented differently
than just like Bobby's being.
Oh, that's funny.
So I have interpreted it differently in light of how it eventually went down than it was
presented.
Yeah.
Okay.
So that's interesting because that's a way I remembered it.
There's a progression here.
This is good.
So, yes.
Bobby is being me and to Charlie.
And so how did John receive it and how did John like relay that information to you?
Was John pissed?
Like was he defensive? Were you pissed? Were you defensive?
So he said, thank you, and he was frustrated with Bobby.
And I think he felt like Iki, but he was grateful.
And then I felt Iki just at the big picture in this event.
You know, I was like, oh God,
we're being called out by somebody
and for being mean, especially that.
That's very off-brand for your family.
Exactly, exactly.
This is devastating to our case.
But then I felt seriously so grateful
because it's so clear to me that this is something
because it's so clear to me that this is something
that had it happen anywhere else, we wouldn't have had this opportunity.
This opportunity to hear it from people who genuinely like us,
hear it from people who genuinely want,
probably in Charlie to be friends,
and who are willing to make this investment,
because it was a risk.
Like they didn't know what total risk.
And one of the reasons why you were probably open to hearing
this, or you weren't immediately defensive to,
is that you recognized some truth in what the people were saying.
I had both experiences where somebody said something to me
about my kid and I was like, uh-huh, I've seen that.
That sounds like that.
That sounds like that.
That sounds like that.
That sounds like that.
That sounds like that.
That sounds like that.
That sounds like that.
That sounds like that.
That sounds like that.
That sounds like that.
That sounds like that.
That sounds like that.
That sounds like that.
That sounds like that.
That sounds like that.
That sounds like that.
That sounds like that.
That sounds like that.
That sounds like that. That sounds like that. That sounds like that. That sounds. Yeah. You're exactly right. It wasn't a shock to me.
We suck at a lot of things as a family for real too.
But we have really tried to be intentional
about being open-eyed to all of our imperfections
and challenges.
And I've been like this a bunch in my life
when you're like holding relentlessly
to this myth of perfection,
when someone else gives you feedback,
it feels like a threat to your identity.
And so you have to reject it.
That's fragility.
That's parental fragility.
No, my kids perfect.
So I want to, I so badly want to be a good parent
and have a good kid
that I will not do what it takes to be a good parent
with a good kid.
I will not stay open to feedback because the way that we see our kids, you know, I've read
recently, like the more you stare at something, the less you see it.
So we have these stories about our kids and we filter out every single bit of evidence that
doesn't fit our story. And it applies to us too. It Yeah, it applies to us to us too. I mean, the
same exact thing. If I am like desperately trying to be perfect and someone calls me out,
that is devastating to me. Whereas if I know my flaws, like I actually used to, when
my friends would joke with me about like, oh, Doyle's never going to text you back. I
used to feel like a sting and a hurt by that because I didn't like being that.
I didn't like being labeled as that.
But then when I came to actually just understand that that is true about me, I received that
kind of joking with me as actually feeling good because it feels like I am a person who's
known and loved, even
if that's true.
That's sweet.
But that took like an acceptance by me to be like, you're exactly right.
I am a person who is never going to touch the back.
And actually in the science of this stuff, it's really interesting because I think we come
by it really honestly, that initial kind of, you know, freak out when we get criticized.
And neuroscience shows that our brains go out of their way to make sure that we always feel like we're in the right, even when we're not.
So when you receive criticism, your brain tries to protect you from it, and it receives that as a threat
to your place in the order of things,
how people perceive you.
And so if you think about the hierarchy of needs,
you would think that would fall into self-esteem,
but it actually falls into the much more essential needs
of a human, which is safety and belonging.
Sure.
So when someone tells you that,
it hits to the core of you.
That is the immediate, like, Ick.
And that's important for people, because it feels
narcissistic to feel like, why am I so upset about this criticism?
Because I have to be liked by everyone.
Why do I have to be liked by everyone?
But actually, what's happening is much deeper.
What's happening to you is not a desperate need to be liked
necessarily.
It's a desperate need to be safe.
So you have very security in the order of things
is being threatened, which is why it's like
straight to fetal position.
That's good.
Exactly.
I recognize myself so much in that even more,
I think this is fascinating because it's one place,
Glenin, where I think maybe we cannot trust ourselves.
Mm, we're always saying like
trust your instincts, trust yourself, trust your knowing.
But actually what happens to our brains when we receive criticism is that first of all,
we're shocked by it and we're in opposition to it.
So that's what you just said.
If that is not correct, that's wrong.
Second, we don't even recall it accurately.
We do not remember accurately what has been presented to us.
And then we never forget it.
Is this so?
This is why whenever we get an argument with criticism, Abby,
it's like half the thing is like, but you said this
and you're like, I didn't say that.
And I'm like, but you said this.
It's because we're adding the story
to what was said, we don't even remember it.
Exactly. Our brains don't remember or retain our mistakes as a feature of our
interlansking. So when we get a criticism, it comes out of left field for us. So it's shocking.
And then be when you hear information that conflicts with yourself image, your instinct is to change the information as opposed to changing
yourself. So your brain is going to work really hard to manipulate what that information means.
That information really isn't that. It's really not about my thing. It's really about this
person's thing. Our brains have totally set up for it wiring for when you receive something that you that you
view as negative or bad, then something that's positive. So the circuits handle
negative information way more thoroughly than positive information. Our brands
are wired to do that. And so almost everyone remembers negative things more
strongly and in more detail than positive things.
Of course, that's like, oh my God,
every time 40,000 people can say something nice
and one person says something negative.
And that's the only thing that sinks in. I'm Jonathan M. Hevar.
I'm a podcast producer and someone who likes fancy things.
But I grew up working class.
My parents were immigrants with factory jobs.
And because of that, I think about class a lot.
And I want to talk about it.
That's what we're doing on my new podcast, Classy.
And what did you all eat?
You know, trailer food.
I was like, girl, we're not doing that anymore.
You'll hear from people who told me awkward,
embarrassing, and strangely intimate things
about what class means to them.
She said, you know, for the house cleaner,
I hide the tag on the $6 bread.
And I just thought, don't you think she knows
that you're wealthy?
You're hiding the tags from yourself.
Classy, a new podcast from Pineapple Street Studios.
Available now, wherever you get your podcasts.
Wherever you get your podcasts.
What is definition wise? What do you all feel like is a criticism?
Because I have like an issue with the whole idea of criticism,
even though I got a lot of it as an athlete for so many years. But when we were talking about this, we got into the conversation of like, is it even necessary?
Why are we so concerned with criticizing other people?
Are we supposed to be doing that?
Well, let's go back then to a sister situation
and talk it through,
because that was a situation that was necessary.
They're parenting.
This is two kids in their backyard.
They're seeing this dynamic.
And they're like, this, these kids need help with this dynamic, right? So they go to John,
John goes to you. Then what happens next?
Then I immediately write to both of them and thank them for giving us the feedback and to tell
them what we've already done, which was to talk to Bobby about it and
to separate conversations where we explained that his impact was not consistent with his
intent and what all of that meant. And then actual things that he could say and do differently.
And then I asked them if we could come over to their house. And our
family came over and met with their family. And we talked openly about it. Bobby apologized to
Charlie for the way that he acted. And then we just talked about strategies. Like I said, this isn't
going to be changed overnight. This is a habit. And I don't expect it to.
And so let's think of like some things that if you're comfortable, you can say to Bobby
when he starts to do it. And then Bobby can know that if you're over at this house and
you start to act that way, you will be asked to leave because I'm asking those parents to ask you to leave when you
need that. And if you're at our house, you can expect you will also be asked to leave. You will
also be asked to leave. How did Bobby receive all of this? Yeah, yeah, yeah. Because I think that the
the way you approach criticism, there's two parts. There's the telling and then the receiving.
Sure, yeah. And like both are so crucial to having it be successful. You're right, because I could have been defensive and I could have been like, oh, they're so sensitive
with the hell.
Like, you two kids, you know, but I think truly that criticism has, it's a weird word,
word.
So I think it's about more like whether you choose to invest in something or whether you don't. Because
super easily in my head when I heard that, I was like, these people could have chosen not to
trust us and not to invest in us. They could have told their kid not to hang out with their kid.
They really could have. It would have been awkward because it's a small town, but 100% could have done it. Mm-hmm. And I think if you are choosing to invest in something,
the way that that feedback works the best
is when the person who receives it knows
that the person giving it has the person's best interests
in mind and is invested in that person.
So when I got that, I knew, okay,
their investment in us and these boys relationship is actually a huge best interest of me and my son
because if this kid is feeling like this, there's probably a lot of kids who my son is friends with
yeah who he doesn't want to make feel this way right And I don't want him to wake up in five years and have no friends
because we have failed to coach him out of something that isn't working for him and his friendships.
What an incredible opportunity for somebody to learn like this, you know.
I do want to say one thing though, for all the people who are listening who have not
had this evolved of experiences with other families. I'm going to tell you a very quick story
and I'm going to say it quickly and it will not go further than this podcast. Okay. When one of my
children was younger, that child was a sensitive little being, okay?
And there was a kid at this child's school who was being mean to the kid.
So let's say I am I am the parent, the other parent in your scenario.
I was Charlie's parent, okay?
Oh, okay, okay, okay.
Right, no.
Glennon was a parent, Charlie's parent.
There was a kid that was being awful to my kid.
And it just kind of got reported to me in a few different ways and then it continued
and I was less evolved than I am now. Because I want everyone to know. I was a teacher. I understand that all kids are good inside. I understand this. But something happens to me when it's my
kid that I lose all of my intelligence. Okay? I just lose it. I have no sense in me. Okay?
What happened, honey? Well, it's your brain's wiring. Yes, my kid is not safe. Like it's right.
I did let myself marinate, okay,
in all the negative ways that no one would say is healthy. You know, all the horrible things
that this family's awful,
this family's awful,
I did the opposite of what Charlie's mom did, okay?
And then I did march my child over to these people's home,
And then I did march my child over to these people's home, knocked on the door the mother answered.
And I'm just going to tell you that the conversation got so heated that this woman had to kick
me off her front porch. But she had to kick me off her a thing property with my sensitive son, who I was trying to
save from meanness and bullying walked behind his mother so that we could mean bully another
mother and a child.
And I still, I've never told, I mean, besides Abby, I don't think anybody knows that story. I'm chased us. Yeah
Chase knows that story. He hasn't told you anything. So anyway
I just want to give a shout out to things that happened when we were less evolved
Also a shout out to that feeling of like I know all the things, but I also
That like I want to throw things, but I also that like
I want to throw down want to throw down mama bear. Yeah, but
that's a difference like that. I think is important because
what you just described. You weren't looking to invest in that.
If we take the positive. What is positive and helpful feedback
quiz that I just said about best interest in you have the
person's best interest in mind and you're investing in it and you bringing the
thing to them is a form of investing in either that person a project that
you're doing the relationship neither of those things were true. No you didn't
give one shit about that family. No and you had no interest in investing. What
you were looking for was justice and accountability.
Justice and accountability.
Fists of fury.
I wanted them to say, we are wrong.
You are right.
We will have a town square in which we will have a truth and justice reconciliation.
That's right.
I mean, truly, that must have been my end goal. And it was accountability, justice, and punishment.
Right, which is not the same as feedback.
Feedback is very different.
And so I think that's actually a good point.
If you're looking for that, that's awesome.
And so it's like, go get it.
But that is not what this is.
So I think it's helpful to ask yourself,
like if I'm looking to give someone feedback,
are those two things true?
And if not, maybe don't give it to them.
Because I think people, when they receive it,
they know whether those two things are true.
That's right.
And if they've done work on themselves
enough to a, not be totally shocked, or b, even if they
are shocked, look at as an opportunity and a trust in them that they're going to handle
it, right?
Then I think it's helpful.
So this is like criticism in the form of parenting.
And I know that it gets a little bit more dicey and interesting when we talk about relationships.
Like partnerships?
Yeah, because I think that I know for me,
criticism and business, like I can take criticism
when it feels professional all day long.
Yes, okay, cool.
But when it comes to like my most important relationships,
I go into a wicked, like shame spiral, death trap. I don't know
what the fuck that's about. But like that's the one thing that I've done the most work on
in our marriage. Yeah. What is the difference between like the parenting criticisms
for the community? Because sisters talking about community, community,
and the community criticisms versus relational. It's like anything if you have a neighbor and are community, because sisters talk about community and criticism. Yeah.
Communities versus relational.
It's like anything, if you have a neighbor,
and you need to work something out with your neighbor,
if there's a teacher at school
where you actually need to work something out,
whatever it is in your life,
other than your most intimate relationships,
I think that best interest and investment situation works.
And, but yeah, so criticism and relationships,
the way that they talk about it.
First of all, the got the gotman research
that where this research and couple
can see a married relationship and observe it
for just a few minutes.
And with a 90% accuracy rate,
they can predict whether the couple will remain married or be divorced.
So amazing.
And they have these four categories that are called the Four Horsemen, that if they observe any of these four things,
that's what predicts it. And one of them is criticism. And the way that they talk about criticism is
that criticism goes to the heart of someone's character.
So it isn't that I never call you out on things.
It's that when I do, I come to it with like,
this is what your behavior means about you
as a person is your character,
whereas if you just have a complaint,
that's totally different.
And a complaint is an emotional bid. I have an
emotional ask of you through this complaint. I would like you to be home early
because I really want us to be able to have dinner together. I want more
time with you. I am craving the connection. Whereas criticism is you only
think of yourself. You never, you never prioritize our family. You're all about
you. Therefore, you're always late.
So it really has to do with similar to the community one.
I'd like to give an example of like what you're saying is, if we have a criticism, which
maybe we'd call more of a carefrontation, with the community member, right?
Because criticism feels like you're doing something that is wrong when really all that's subjective.
A carefrontation is like we together are having this issue that like I feel like we both want to work out.
It could be you, it could be me, it could be the connection between us, but there's like this thing that I bet we both would want to figure out. And then it's assuming goodness.
Okay, I think that that, like when I think about the situation
with that I just told you about, there was no assumed goodness.
I was like, they are bad. They are bad.
And that was because of my thinking over time, you know,
when you perseverate on something, you perseverate on something.
And then so for me, it's not just about saying the thing.
Like you go to the teacher that you're having a problem
within, you're like, I know that you are working your ass off
and that you are trying to meet the needs of all of these kids.
And my kid just has this thing,
and I, you actually have to believe it a bit.
Mm-hmm, yeah.
Because if you say it, and they say the wrong thing and you actually
are believing bad intentions, you switch over like that. Well, it's what you said and
untamed about the cup of coffee. Like when you get bumped, whatever's inside, you spill
out. Exactly. When you're dealing with someone and it's sensitive as a situation as a carefrontation, you're gonna get bumped.
So you gotta be careful of what you have in your cup.
Exactly.
And if what you have in your cup is actual disdain
and contempt,
even if you're trying to say the right things
it's gonna come out.
So all I'm flagging is for me,
prior to the carefrontation,
there actually has to be some like thinking about the other person's perspective.
Yeah.
Because that's not completely always natural to me.
It actually has to be intentionally done to be able to bring compassion to the situation.
And that's why I think, you know, to be totally realistic, this actual magic, it's not forcing every situation
into this magic formula.
It's saying, if you don't have this magic formula
of actually believing in, it's in the other person's best
interest, believing that the other person is good,
wanting to invest in your situation, getting better together,
then that's awesome.
If you don't have that, it's just something else.
In that case, you're doing a different thing.
You're going to try to procure change.
You're gonna go to the principal instead of the teacher
because you have a situation.
You're going to go to the parent and say,
there's new boundaries now.
My child can only play with your child
if this other person isn't present.
You're doing a different thing.
I feel like part of our problem
is that we're not actually honest about our intentions
and we bring something to someone
and they don't handle it the way we think
they should handle it precisely because
the ingredients of the formula weren't there.
So, of course, they're not gonna handle it.
Yes. because the ingredients of the formula weren't there. So it's not going to handle it. Nice.
Yes.
So what we're doing right now is we're saying there are situations that are ripe for a
carefrontation.
Yes, okay.
And those situations are situations in which
you have a problem with another human being.
Whatever that problem is.
You have gotten to a place where you assume
that that other person is good and doing their best
and yet this problem persists.
And you have decided that you trust yourself and this other person in the scenario enough and you want something in the future. There's a future, that's right. You want something.
Yeah, you're invested. You're willing to invest the time, energy, ego, displacement, all of the
things that this care
frontation requires. And you think the care frontation is the best interest of
the other person too. Yes. Okay. Okay. It isn't just getting something for
yourself. In those three things, I think are that is a recipe for really good
exchanges. Okay. If you're on the receiving end of that,
it expects yourself to be feel totally icky and shitty,
expect yourself to need a minute to even entertain
that this might be true,
because your brain is not predisposed
to receiving this kind of information.
And then ask yourself these kinds of questions like,
what would happen if this person hadn't brought this to me?
Mm.
And possibly think of it as,
how would it have been easier for this person
to not bring this hard thing to me?
And what would that have meant for me?
Because I think often, like, we miss what a gift that is because the person doesn't have
to do that.
They could handle it all in their own.
And when they're handling it all in their own, guess what?
It's not usually working out in your best interests. Yeah. When they invite you into that process, it's a trust. It is a building on the relationship.
And so, I think if you can kind of consider that, this person hasn't brought me a problem.
This person has invited me into a better outcome for myself and my people.
And the way the person brings criticism or feedback, I think that that to a better outcome for myself and my people.
And the way the person brings criticism or feedback, I think that that will show what their intentions are, right?
If somebody comes in like you did, Glenin,
that person knows immediately,
oh, there is no intention
for possible future relationship here.
So that's gonna be dealt with and it's gonna feel different.
You're gonna receive it different. And so I bet that this dad who showed up with John
and I bet you he was kind and honest and truthful and away full of contempt. Yeah. And I think that
the way you deliver hard criticisms can show what your future and is. So let's talk about that because I agree,
like when you were talking about that,
it made me think of Dr. Yaba Blay
and how she told me once that if she's offering feedback,
that should be such a freaking gift,
because she only offers feedback to people that she cares about and that she trusts
to take it in because otherwise, why would you waste your time?
Unless you're looking for justice and accountability, which is a totally different thing, right?
But if you are actually bringing something where you're opening yourself up like that. And you're saying, this hurt me,
then that is a risk that that deliverer is making.
Yes, they're making themselves vulnerable.
They're always in trouble.
They're making themselves vulnerable.
Okay, so we have the prerequisites for carefrontation.
If we don't have those things,
then we're not going into the carefrontation.
But there's not just the prerequisites,
but there's the language,
the script, what you actually say in a carefrontation.
So can we just talk about that for a minute?
Like what kinds of things make it
easier for the other person to
feel the vulnerability instead of the accusation?
Well, there's a whole separate kind of scripts if this is like a business situation.
There's a tremendous data that even using just this sentence when you're delivering business
feedback saying, I am giving you this feedback because
I have very high expectations and I know you can reach them.
Just that in a business setting, the data shows that your feedback is received exponentially
better than if it's given it another way.
Because that's saying you're good,
you're good at your job.
The reason I'm coming to you is because you're good at this,
not because you're bad at this, right?
That's the difference in criticism.
It's like, I know that you are so good
that this thing feels out of character instead of,
this is part of your character.
Which, by the way, goes exactly to the relationship issue.
If those people had come to me and said,
your child is mean. That would have been very, very different than we have an issue in which
we love these boys' friendship. And Bobby is being mean in this way. And how can we work on it?
So it's exactly the same thing. It's exactly the same thing in relationships.
Everything works out the same way.
If I could easily not bring my concerns
about my relationship to my partner
and that would be less conflict.
But when I bring my issues to my partner, it's because I am invested in a better outcome.
I want better for us.
I believe that they're good.
And I believe that they can do better.
Right.
And that we deserve better.
So you start with, if you are actually assuming good intention,
the other person's good and that the thing you're bringing
to them is out of character and not matched with their character,
that's what you're going to start with.
You're going to start with some personal version
of what you said about work.
Right.
Right.
You're going to be talking about the actual behavior about how you feel when the actual behavior
happens because of what you want. You're going to, you are going to phrase it as an emotional
bit. This, I want a deeper relationship with you. I want this time with you because I love you.
a deeper relationship with you. I want this time with you because I love you. And so,
let's deal with this behavior. Yes, instead of yourself-ish and you don't love this family, and that's why you're never spending time with me. Right. And I think that everything goes back
to this idea that that family could have not brought that thing to us.
And written, Bobby off, and our relationship
would have been over.
Same thing with supervisors who just are like,
oh, it's not worth it, I'm not investing in that person.
And we'll just like weed them out in a couple of years.
And same with relationships, intimate relationships,
don't die because of conflict.
Actually, conflict has nothing to do
with predicting whether relationships will last.
You can be super high conflict in last,
super low conflict in last.
They die because of a lack of connection.
And so the bringing the feedback to someone is a desire to connect
on something to make it better, whether you're in a relationship, whether you're in a business
situation.
Yeah.
I think that this is important for me because I'm kind of one of those people that I've brought more criticism and feedback to this marriage more than I've ever brought to any relationship
in my life.
And I think what I got wrong before is like, I just wanted people to be themselves.
And through being themselves and not matching with what my needs were and me not voicing
those needs, that's when the connection ended up falling apart. And I wouldn't be able
to build a relationship. I actually believe this. Most people don't like conflict. You and
you, sister, you guys are conflict pro.
Yes, I feel like conflict is connection.
But I do think that there's a way to like get into the heart of what criticism really is.
Because at the end of the day, I struggle with this.
Criticism feels like such a big word.
Conflict feels like such a big word. I'm like, I feel I'm sweating right now, just like talking about it.
And like my point is, is like, who,
and I think this is important in relationships,
who made the person who's bringing the conflict
judge and jury.
Yeah, this is so interesting to me too.
Like, why does that person to be right in this scenario
or whatever it is?
Well, exactly.
Well, that is precisely why the stance that would you come to it
is important.
Let's give an example.
Okay, should we give an example?
Yeah.
So let me just explain to you why Abby just said that
because we went on a long walk yesterday
and we were talking about criticism and relational stuff.
Carefrontation in community got it. I really do. Like I understand what you're saying and all of that makes sense. The intention, the script, all of it.
To me, the marital or relational romantic
The marital or relational romantic
Carefrontation is is a little bit more complicated or deeper or something because
The community carefrontation feels like it's easy. It's like this behavior. That's not working for us
But what we've discovered
Low so many times in our romantic relationship is that a lot of the criticism we have for each other
really does come down to identity and who the other person is.
For example, I have a discomfort
that wells up in me.
Every time Abby's
bigness manifests in a social situation.
So what I mean by that is,
Abby is really comfortable
with being like the center of attention or louder,
louder or being the one who's talking the most
or like reflecting attention to her.
That makes me very uncomfortable.
Okay, why?
Well, we know from all of our other pods that I must have learned
at a young age that the way we stay safe is we don't draw too much attention, that it's
selfish, that it's, you know, what makes us unsafe. So sometimes, when we're in a social
situation, my criticism of Abby would be, can you please give someone else a chance to
talk? Can you please just not take up so much space? Can you please just not be so loud?
But actually, and PS, I did that for three years.
Okay. Like, how that worked out for you. Tough times.
Not great. Not great. What I'm trying to say is, in a marriage, I actually do feel like
families have a diagram and you do have to give everyone talk time
and all the things.
But basically, what I'm saying is,
I have a problem and you're the problem.
And so you have to change.
I was opposed to saying, I have a problem.
Why do I feel those things?
Marriage is such a mirror in a way that I'm not sure
that every community situation is,
where it's like, wait, I could criticize you to death
for the rest of your life about being the center of things
and being having this bigness.
Or I could be like,
gladden, why is it so important to you that you and Abby
are like small in situations?
What is this bringing up in me?
Instead of being critical, I could be really curious.
And then that curiosity and inward could heal me in some way.
Like does criticism, is it an effort to not have to heal ourselves?
I think in some ways.
I think in some ways it is.
And I also think in other ways, what I've told you
and what my dreams are for my best self,
for my best and highest self.
And one of my insecurities is that I talk too much.
I have a need for attention. It's an insecurity of mine because I get because she's been bothering about it for three years.
I've worked hard on that. Yeah, but I get my worthiness with attention and that's been
something I'm trying to actually work on. So she's breathing into a little bit of what I'm wanting
to see as my best self.
And I think this is an, and both situation where you're right,
this is bringing up something inside of you
that you're thinking, maybe this is actually my problem.
So this is where I get a little bit confused
with feedback and criticism.
Is like, who made the critic the judge?
Yeah, she's like, what made you the person
who decides who gets to talk and who has talk time?
I think that that is a great point
because I think it actually,
it isn't just related to couples.
I think that you've identified what is a prerequisite
before you have any kind of carefrontation.
I mean, what you are talking about right now
reminds me exactly of what we talked about in episode 128
where we're talking about untethered soul with the idea
of instead of saying that thing is bothering me,
we ask ourselves what part of me is being bothered by this.
So we really, really need to do that in any situation before we make it somebody else's
problem.
In that situation with Charlie and Bobby, if it had been something where, okay, Bobby was
just winning at the baseball games more.
And that was really upsetting to Charlie.
And that was really upsetting to Charlie's parents.
They would have to ask what part of themselves
is being bothered by this.
And that would have been ego.
And that would not have been Bobby and our family's problem.
Similarly, with what you're saying,
you have to ask yourself what part of yourself is bothered by this? And if you determine that that's something that you
need to work on internally and not bring to your partner, or if it's something that you are struggling
with so much that you have to present in a way that just says, listen, I know I have an issue with this. I am still trying to work out what part of it is mine
to process through and what part of it might be something
that we need to work on together
and what part of it might be your issue.
But I just wanna say, I know you can sense my anxiety
around this and I feel it too.
And I just wanna call that out
because I want to share
what I'm going through with you. I don't want you to receive my anxiety as a criticism of you.
Yeah. That's good. Because I think in the end, when we talked about this on our walk, like,
I think in the end, as we grow older, like I can see myself as an 80 year old woman
and still talking and enjoying and inserting as much
energy and fun into life as I can.
And Glenin being 80 also and looking over at me
and just kind of like shrugging her shoulders,
going, that's who she is.
That's who she's always been. You know?
That's what we want to get to. That's what exactly. And we should talk to Melody
Bede about this when we have a conversation with her. It could also be a good dependency
issue. The fact that you are uncomfortable with the way Abby's being and the fact that
you believe that Abby is a reflection of you. Oh, totally. You need to change that.
As opposed to being like, that's my wife. And you need to change that. Oh, totally.
As opposed to being like, that's my wife.
You might love it about her.
You might think it's annoying.
I think it's a little bit annoying, but that's a different person than me.
Yes.
And by the way, that's a different person than me.
And by the way, what I also want to say is it's unbelievable.
And maybe this will be relatable to anyone on the podcast because that is what her doing that is what makes our family beautiful and fun
Yes, it's like none of my kids would want it to change Craig wouldn't want it to change. It's the beauty of our family
Right if it were up to me what Abby and I would just sit silently waiting for someone else to talk all the time
You literally kill joy
I'm a killer literal A literal kill joy.
I will kill it.
I will edit it out to a palatable level.
Because it's this beautiful thing that's like, wait, it's just that what we come back to
get it again, that the thing that we are attracted to, that we fall in love with each
other about, that's what I wanted.
That beautiful bigness and exuberance and like light and all of that.
I chose it because I needed it and I need it for myself.
It's like what Dr. Becky said. Instead of saying,
why are you acting like that? Instead of me trying to smush it in
Abby, what I should be saying is, how do I grow this in me?
In real life. I mean, everyone's like, please God, how would you talk more?
But what I'm talking about in real life, not on the podcast.
As long as I'm not stifling the kids in any way,
that was an important criticism that you brought early on to our marriage.
I was such a talker and I'm better now.
But I would like interrupt our children.
Nobody talked for two years. Nobody else talked for two years.
I would interrupt them. And she eventually had for two years. Nobody else talks for two years.
I would interrupt them.
And she eventually had to sit me down and say,
listen, like, our dinner time is so important for our kids
to like tell us about themselves and their lives.
So there's also really important beauty
that can come out of that.
And I think that the way that you approach it,
I have some trauma around abandonment.
And so any
criticism, no matter what it is, she has to come to me with,
okay, I don't want to leave you. I want to spend the rest of my
life with you. And I need to talk to you about this really
hard thing. Which is a perfect segue into our attachment
episodes that we're going to be doing because all of that is about attachment styles.
And so criticism fits perfectly in that. I can't wait to continue the discussion there because
what we need and demand and the way we react to being called out or called in has everything
to do with attachment. So hold that thought, Abby, we'll get there.
That makes sense.
Good job.
Okay, so do we want to hear from our pod squadder of the week?
I sure do.
I haven't had one for a while and I miss them.
I miss the pod squad.
Hi, my name is Susan and as I finished the podcast,
your daughter's song started playing
and I was looking in the mirror getting
ready for bed, putting my breathing strip on my nose, helping me breathe better while
I sleep. That's right. Miling at that. And I just began moving. I was once a dancer and
I just began moving with my robe and looking at myself in the mirror with pride instead of criticism and appreciation
instead of shame. So I just had a beautiful moment of truly seeing myself for the beautiful
self that I am and no one there that I needed please, or get appreciated by, I was just there to
appreciate my true self.
So thank you.
Let's just end with that.
Let's just all hope for one moment of pride instead of criticism and
appreciation instead of shame. Thank you Susan. Pod Squad, we love you. We've got
no criticism for you. We think you're effing perfect. See you next time.
I give you Tish Melton and Brandy Carlisle.
I walked through fire, I came out the other side.
I chased, desire, I made sure I got one's mind
And I continue to believe
That I'm the one for me
And because I'm mine, I walk the line
Cause we're adventurous and heartbreak So man, a final destination
And we'll stop asking directions
Some places they've never been. And to be loved we need to be known.
We'll finally find our way back home. And through the joy and pain that our lives bring
We can do a heartache
I hit rock bottom, it felt like A brand new star
It felt like a brand new star
I'm not the problem, sometimes things fall apart
And I continue to believe
The best people are free And it took some time, but I'm finally fine
Cause we're adventurers in heartbreak's a map A final destination with light
We stopped asking directions
So places they've never been
And to be loved we need to be known
We'll finally find a way back home
And through the joy and pain that our lives bring
We can do a heartache I'm a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little And heart breaks on my way Mike lost, but we're only back
Stopped asking directions
Some places may have never been
And to be loved we need to be long
We'll finally find our way back home
And through the joy and pain that our lives bring
We can do hard things.
Yeah, we can do hard things.
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