We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - How to Fix Our Loneliness with Dr. Marisa G. Franco
Episode Date: February 14, 20231. How your attachment style determines how you make – or don’t make – friends and becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy. 2. How Dr. Franco’s work helped Glennon make healthy adult friendships ov...er the past year. 3. Why we’re lonelier than ever – and how that loneliness can make us sick. 4. Why platonic friendships are beneficial to the health of our romantic partnerships. 5. Learning to “trust the spark” when you meet a potential friend – and concrete steps to foster new friendship. About Dr. Franco: Dr. Marisa G Franco is psychologist, international speaker, and New York Times bestselling author known for digesting and communicating science in ways tha change their lives. She works as a professor at The University of Maryland and authored the New York Times bestseller Platonic: How The Science of Attachment Can Help You Make—and Keep—Friends. TW: @DrMarisaGFranco IG: @drmarisagfranco 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 to be loved we need to be known.
Well hello everyone.
Welcome to We Can Do Hard Things.
Today we're talking about friendship, loneliness, how the hell we do friendship, how we find
friends, make friends and keep friends. And before we introduce our guest,
I want to talk to you about why I was obsessed with her
and why I think this is just the perfect time and place
to talk about loneliness and friendship.
So last night I got back from a trip.
Half the people on this friend's trip are on this podcast.
Okay, so Abby's sister and then a few other friends.
We went away together for friend time.
We got back last night.
This is the second trip that this group has done together.
We went away last year.
When we went away last year together,
someone on that trip mentioned
some information from her life about eating disorders.
And it threw me into a tailspin after that is when I went into my deep therapy for
anorexia. This trip was with that group. During my first therapy meeting, the
therapist looked at me and said, so how is how you deal with food the same as how you deal with people?
And so I said,
oh, come the fuck on.
What we started to understand together is I avoided food and I avoided people.
I restricted myself from food and I restricted myself from friendship.
Just like food, I decided there was a few safe foods and a few safe people, my family,
and then everybody else was unsafe and I kept them away.
So while I'm working on my food avoidance pro-clivities,
I am also working on my people avoidance.
I have come to understand that I am not
some kind of different alien human being
who does not need friendship, sex, or food.
That I just wasn't doing it the way other people were doing it, which made
it so important to them. Okay?
Enter my friendship tutor. Who doesn't know that she's my friendship tutor. But who when
I read her book, I have actually a 10-page book report on the book.
Who has walked me through my first experiences with friendship.
Who I think has helped me keep them so far.
Dr. Marissa G. Franco is a psychologist, international speaker, and New York Times best-selling author,
known for digesting and communicating science in ways that change people's lives, which is so true for me.
She works as a professor at the University of Maryland and
authored the New York Times best-seller Platonic, how the science of
attachment can help you make and keep friends. And I just want to tell you,
Dr. Franco, that if this book can work
for me, there's no one it cannot work for. Thank you for being here. Wow, that was so
beautiful. Thank you so much for having me. Oh my goodness. We're going to do two episodes
on friendship because it feels so hard. So I would love if we could talk in this episode about why we're lonely and how our attachment
styles might keep us lonely and maybe how to find friends and make them.
And then maybe we can in the second episode talk about how to keep and deepen those friendships.
That sounds great to me. Dr. Franco, can we start first for the non-believers, like Glennon used to be,
why do friendships matter?
What is their power and why do we need them even if we think we don't?
So first, I'll start with why connection matters in general,
and then I'll go into friendships specifically.
But it's interesting that we focus so much when it comes to health on things like diet and exercise,
but actually research finds that our social connections predict how long we live even more so than our diet,
even more so than how much we're exercising. That loneliness, for example, is as toxic for our bodies,
as smoking 15 cigarettes a day. And yeah, so we need connection.
We need connection to be functioning well, to be functioning optimally,
like fundamentally being lonely is a chronic stress state.
Like your body's undergoing more inflammation, your sleep is poor,
because you're waking up to kind of scan for threats at any given time.
Loneliness doesn't just change how you feel.
It changes how you
receive the world where you perceive that people are rejecting you even when they're not.
And so it makes you want to withdraw and it sort of continues the self-reinforcing process
of loneliness in a really sad way. One of my students, Chris, he was like, it's like an auto-immune
disease loneliness. It triggers all of these thoughts and feelings that perpetuates itself.
But then when I think about the importance of friendship
in particular, I think about the ways
that each person brings out a different side of ourselves.
And so to know ourselves fully,
we need to interact with different people
who bring up different parts of us.
Like, you know, Abby, I happen to know
that you enjoy soccer. So you might have to be around
someone else who has the sort of depth of understanding of soccer that you might enjoy.
To really be able to have a deeper conversation about it, for example.
That's Glenin. Glenin has the least knowledge of the game.
Yeah, so that's why research has sort of identified that there's actually three different
types of loneliness.
I think a lot of the times we think we only have this desire for like these deep intimate relationships.
And that is one type of loneliness called intimate loneliness.
But there's also relational loneliness, which is like, we want someone as close to us as a friend.
And if we don't have that, we still feel lonely, even if we have de-metamacy.
And there's also collective loneliness, which is our desire for a group working toward a common goal.
And so if we're not part of like,
I don't know a place of worship,
a sort of league, volunteering group,
we tend to be lonely for that collective that we're part of.
And so, I think we've always needed an entire community
to feel whole, but we've begun to vary that truth
with our narratives of just finding one person to complete whole, but we've begun to vary that truth with our narratives
of just finding one person to come to you,
and that's it.
And then that one person, it's too much.
I feel like I'm one of those Macy's Day Parade balloons.
And for too long, it's been like sister and Abby
trying to hold on to the balloon.
It's too freaking mother like being swept off the ground
every time the wind comes.
And now I feel like I'm trying to bring on more,
I mean, this is probably such a terrible,
like nobody wants to be a balloon holder,
but I'm just saying, I do.
I feel like there's so many more people
and I feel more tethered.
When I am making these connections, I feel more tethered to the earth.
I think that friendship is that though.
I want to hold the balloon of all of my friends.
I think that that is a really good sign of friendship.
And your research, Dr. Franco,
not only is it less pressure on the person,
you said that if in partnerships
where there's friendships outside of the partnership,
it actually makes you more resilient in it.
Absolutely.
That's fascinating too.
Yeah, like for example, if you get into conflict
with your spouse,
all of a sudden you're a release of the stress hormone
and cortisol is like off,
unless you have quality connection outside that marriage.
Or if I make a friend not only do I become less depressed,
my spouse is less likely to be depressed.
Or for women in particular who tend to have closer friends,
for example, they're more resilient and heterosexual marriages
when they have quality connection outside of that marriage.
And what we see from the research is that
if you only are so focused on one person,
what happens in that relationship just has such a strong impact
on your health and well-being.
Whereas if you have those tethers outside of that relationship,
you're able to stay grounded even
when there's ups and downs in that relationship,
which fundamentally is a resource for your relationship.
Yes.
Now you can come back to that relationship.
I'm not going to come at you in fight or flight mode
because I'm able to center from some of the stress we've been experiencing and
try to approach you in a gentler and kind of way because I'm more resourced.
And approaching friendship like a science experiment, which is how I have to do it right
now because none of it's intuitive to me right now yet, yet, so that weekend that I went
away a year ago with these people.
And I was terrified to go, I was like, what are we doing?
Why are we going on this like women's trip?
But I deeply respected the few women that were going, and I just thought, I'll we'll try
it.
Listening to one of the women talk about her life with food, switched something in me
that reading a million books, interviewing a million people about these very issues didn't
do.
When I read in your book that friendships expose us to new ways of being in the world,
like they show us another life as possible, that is what it is. And that's why you kind of have to
pick people that you want to be like, right?
I think so. I mean, there's the theory called
inclusion of others of the self,
which is like when we get close to people,
we include them in our sense of ourselves.
So if we are befriending people,
we want to be like,
it's like an expansion of ourselves
towards becoming the type of person
that we want to become.
Hmm.
Do you think that culture hides the power of friendship from us?
I mean, certainly there's no hiding of romantic,
since we're born, the world tells us the most important thing in the world is a romantic relationship.
One of the reasons I'm so interested in friendship right now is because I'm so into anything that capitalism has hidden from me.
I feel like that's probably the answer, right?
Like going towards, oh, rest.
If I'm not supposed to have it, that's probably the answer.
Love, friends. Anything that doesn't make me productive, I feel like that's probably where
the joy is. Is it because friendships hard to capitalize on, like marriage and dating and
engagement rings, once you get into a romantic relationship, you're basically financially
fucked for the rest of your life. Like, everything is, but friendship is outside of things you have to buy.
Oh, that is such an original thought.
I've never thought of friendship as anti-capitalist, but I love thinking about it that way.
I will say some historians have sort of speculated that basically friendship used to be valued
more.
In some ways people
love their friends more deeply than their spouse. The spouse was a practical relationship,
it was economical, it was for our reputation. And around the early 1800s, the genders were considered
so distinct that you could only have this deep intimacy with people that are from your gender.
So friends were writing love letters and carving their names into trees and experiencing all the
intimacy that we now consider traditional for like a romantic partnership. I think one of the reasons things changed
is that as women developed more rights and could own property and you know open up a credit card
and get a job, they weren't forced and almost coerced into marriage in the same way.
And if friendship is a significant and valuable
and viable relationship that is equal,
what if all these women turn towards their front?
What if?
Discharge?
Discharge?
Discharge?
Yeah.
And so in some ways it's this devaluing process
that allows us to continue to be apart as women
in the traditional institution when there's no longer the same
Economic and structural incentive now. It's this very psychological incentive like you don't matter
You don't have any love without this. You're not a worthy person unless you enter into this type of partnership
Wow.
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 class a lot.
And I wanna 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.
I also want to know about where we are right now in terms of loneliness.
Are people lonelier than ever and if so, why?
So research finds that it's about 20 to 45% of us are lonely
and very sadly, the youngest generations are the most lonely.
It used to be that they were the least.
So Gen Z in particular, I'm teaching them right now.
And I'm concerned, also the rates of mental health issues
are like 50% of people are age,
have mental health issues.
And so if we look back into history,
it kind of started in the 1950s
that like our social connections started to go down
as people started to use televisions.
Before then, we spent our leisure time with other people
and all of a sudden people were spending their leisure time
indoors.
It triggered this sloth like state where it's like,
I'm watching TV, I don't feel like doing anything else.
And it takes energy to reach out to an interact with people.
In the book, bowling alone, Robert Putnam,
he looks at all the different factors
that predict disengagement from your community.
And he finds television is the most powerful one.
But this was in the 90s.
So imagine this book came out in the 90s.
Now imagine you have added smartphones
because around 2012, Lonely was beginning to spike a lot more This book came out in the 90s. Now imagine you have added smartphones
because around 2012, loneliness began to spike a lot more.
And what was happening at that time
was that the smartphone became more popular
and it's complex and it's complicated.
I don't want to simplify things
because there's this theory called displacement theory,
which is basically the idea that when we use our phones
and social media to displace in-person interaction,
like I'm just scrolling on TikTok all night,
we're a lot more lonely,
but if we use it to facilitate in-person interaction,
by like, I see you're at the third-hand post,
it makes me realize I wanna reach out to you,
let's get coffee or come on Facebook,
so I know what events are happening
and I go to those events, we're actually less lonely
than people that are not using technology,
but the problem is these apps were basically built
for isolation to keep us from them.
Maybe like Marko Polo or WhatsApp,
but most of these apps were not built in ways
to get us off of them.
And if we use them to facilitate in-person interaction,
it gets us off the app.
That's one of the reasons I figured out,
I have to figure out friendship
because I had this one birthday
where I was on social media and I liked it.
And of course, like there were a million birthday messages
because I have a lot of followers
and I got like four texts from my people, my family,
but no friends.
And that was my doing.
I had this, like, I'll put all my energy
into the intense little teeny circle of my family
and then disperse it at this other level
of, like, social media, but I didn't have
that middle community.
And I was like, by the time I'm 50, I want to like know that there's going to be a group of women who, of course, I'm going to know their birthdays, they're going to know mine,
whatever.
You like show up on those days.
But I guess I needed to use social media to plan things instead of to avoid things. I've heard you say that one of our issues is that we only have this one word
friend to refer to everyone we know who isn't our partner and I've even heard
people say things like I can't stand my friend who's always putting me down. Or my best friend is so terrible to me.
Are we using the word friend correctly?
And is that part of our problem?
Are those people actually our friends?
And are we having a vocabulary problem?
What is a friend?
Yeah.
Yeah.
I think we are having a problem.
It's both a definitional problem and a marketing problem.
I think friendship has a huge marketing problem
and that we think of it as like a happy hour every month
rather than you can do everything you do in this spouse
with a friend aside from sex.
So my definition of friendship, this came from,
I went to a friend's wedding and one of my close friends
her husband was there and he was talking about
for his bachelor party, half of his friends had canceled last minute. So everyone had to pay like double the price
and half the people didn't come. And he was kind of talking about his friend who lived in his
neighborhood, who he can never get in touch with and never reaches out to him. I was just thinking
like, that is not a good friend. That is maybe good company. Good company is someone who's company you enjoy,
and you like them as a person. But a good friend is, I'm committed to you. I'm invested in you.
I try to follow through with what I say to show up in your times of need, to show up in your times of
joy. It's intentional, and it requires effort. Just because we like each other.
Doesn't mean we're friends because we haven't necessarily made that commitment and that investment in each other.
Remember when Lovey said she uses the word friend more carefully than she used to because she doesn't say friend until it's someone that she wants to be responsible for in life.
I remember her saying that and being like, well, that's why I don't have any friends.
And I make a joke about that, but that is real.
And I think it speaks to what your book does and what your work does, which I find very tricky,
which is that it's about friendship.
Like, how can I make a connection with another person?
But all of your work is infused with this trickery,
which is about connection to self.
Because I can't do any of this shit in your book, Dr. Franco,
until I figure out my connection to self-first,
that's what I think is true.
For example, I can't be authentic
until I figure out my defense mechanisms are.
So every time I try to use one of your strategies,
I have to go back three things and work on my own shit.
So my question is, this has to do with attachment style.
PS, this should be the new, like when you're in a bar
or in your whatever, and you're like, what's your sign?
It should be like, what's your style?
Like everybody should have to wear a name tag
with their attachment style on it.
This is how we should find each other
or avoid each other, okay?
Can you talk to us about attachment
and how if we knew what our attachment styles were
about ourselves and others, it might help us be compassionate with ourselves
and each other. And what an attachment style is and how we can use it to be less lonely.
Yeah, I love just the way that you describe it because I think you described it in such an
empowering way. Our attachment style is basically the sum total of our earlier relationships that have created within us this template for how we
assume people will treat us. And that template becomes more true than
the truth because most of friendship is ambiguous. Like we don't
actually know what's going on. So whatever our template is telling
us and reaching for in the light of the ambiguity is the ways that friendship actually impacts us.
So you have these securely attached people, they have this
history of healthier, loving, trustworthy relationships.
And they are so good at friendship.
Like they're initiating more friendships, they're having less
conflict when they do, they're working through it better,
they assume their friends will like them
They trust other people, but they also are not polyanna about it
They'll sort of adjust their expectations based off of the feedback they get in real-time
They start with optimism, but then adjust and so these secure people
Have the secure relationship with themselves because fundamentally
One of the ways that our attachment harms us is that our attachment style is a breakdown in our relationship with themselves, because fundamentally, one of the ways that our attachment harms us
is that our attachment style is a breakdown in our relationship
with our emotions, not just other people.
So, for example, anxiously attached people,
they always fear other people are going to abandon them
and reject them.
And so, what happens in their friendship is that they build
intimacy very quickly as a sign that you won't reject me,
but then it sort of blows up because it doesn't have much of a foundation or because they tend
to see rejection when it's not there.
Even in their brain, you can see that their amygdala is reacting were strongly to threat
than the other attachment styles.
And that they tend to experience more threat at the neural level in response to their relationships
than other attachment styles.
And so what you tend to see with these
angiely attached people is that they
tend to sacrifice themselves to be in relationship
with other people because they feel like they need
to otherwise people will leave them.
And so when it comes to friendship,
they're sort of marked by high effort,
but low reward.
They're putting in so much,
but yet their relationships are blowing up
and they're so fragile and they don't always know or understand why or what are the sort of behaviors that are coming out in your
friendships that may influence them in this way. And then you have avoidantly attached people
who basically don't trust anyone. And so they're kind of taking themselves out of the game of
friendship. They're not initiating, they're ghosting, they're withdrawing from people.
There's not a lot of vulnerability in their connections,
people that are close to them feel like they're kind of an enigma.
It's kind of low effort and low reward.
They tend to focus more on work than relationships,
and they tend to enjoy their friendships less.
And so you'll see what the void and they touch people.
Like, either they have few friends,
or they have friends, but it tends to be like very shallow,
like kind of like party friends.
And I wanted to go back to my point about,
like your attachment style to break down in relationships,
but it's also a break down in an internal relationship
to your own emotions because the insecurity attached people,
in some ways, this sounds like kind of victim blaming,
so I'll say it and then try to backtrack it a little bit,
but they're in some ways using other people as a tool to regulate their emotions because they
haven't learned that to do that for that and themselves internally. So anxiously attached people,
it's like, I'm constantly feeling this threat. I don't know how to sue that. So now I have to control
you. Now I have to tell you, you need to show up for me in this moment. Now I have to take away your
sense of agency and try to force you to reassure me and the ways that I need.
And the avoidantly attached person so threatened. So I'm trying to handle those feelings of threat
and lack of safety by now that shows up in my relationships as me pushing you away all the time
and keeping you at a distance all the time. And so I think becoming secure is like it's about how
we relate to our relationships. But it's also like we start to relate to our own emotions
and more validating and loving ways.
So we're able to let other people be full people
rather than sometimes needing to use them in this way
that we're using them to see their own emotional world.
Okay, so, all right, because the attachment
is you're got feeling about what's going on, right?
It's your interpretation of what's happening.
It's my favorite understanding of this is
a series of predictions.
The way you say it's a series of predictions of like,
well, this is what's going to be happening.
That's what you're doing.
This is what's next.
Right.
And so you seek what you shall find, what you seek you find.
So it becomes reality.
Pod Squares, this is what blows my mind. So let's just stay here for a minute. Let's take a specific
thing. Your friend doesn't call you back. You make a friendship. You take the leap. Your friend
doesn't call you back. A secure attached person thinks, oh, my friend's probably busy, right?
Is that what a securely attachment? An anxious person thinks
my friend hates me and I have to fix it. And an avoidant person thinks I hate my
friend. That's great. I knew that person wasn't a real friend. Yeah. You said that
we act in ways that fulfill the prophecy of our greatest fears. Yeah. So what's
the greatest fear of an avoidant person and an anxious person?
Yeah, the anxious is that you're going to abandon me.
The avoidant is that you're going to hurt me.
It's like if I let you in, you're going to do something to harm me.
Both of them have trouble feeling safety.
I think both of them really share this underlying fear of rejection. For anxious people, it's on the surface more. For avoidant people, it's like
repressed. I'm not actually scared of you rejecting me. I just don't like you in the first place.
Like there's this extra defense mechanism that happens with the avoidantly attached.
So avoidant manifests the same fear, but with aloofness. Yep. An anxious manifest the same fear but with clingingness.
Exactly.
It's like two different strategies.
And I think it's important to mention,
because I don't want to end on a victim blaming note,
that these are coping strategies.
Right.
Hello.
We developed them to cope with something.
It was an effective way to cope of coping.
Like, if you're with someone who you cannot
trust fundamentally, it is adaptive to be avoided. It is adaptive to withdraw from them.
The issue is not that you have this coping mechanism. The issue is that you use it indiscriminately,
so you don't notice that sometimes people will accept you or sometimes people are safe.
So some signs you might be avoidant.
Ghosters.
Yeah. Ghosting is my best strategy.
So is ghosting avoidant?
Yes. Yeah, ghostings linked to avoidance.
I have a new friend, you and she have been my friendship tutors.
And early on in our friendship, she understood my avoidant situation before I did.
And she said to me one day, I want to make sure that you just don't leave in a relationship that you just don't leave.
And I went home with Abby and was like, did you hear that shit?
I can't promise that.
I can't promise that I'm not going to leave.
And Abby said she didn't say just don't leave.
She said don't just leave.
Meaning don't just leave without trying something else first. So would it be an
avoidant strategy to when a conflict comes up in a friendship? Like somebody's hurt my feeling,
somebody's done something, an avoidant person just leaves instead of trying something else first.
An avoidant person is out of there.
What would an anxious person do for people who are listening?
How do they find themselves in this?
How do they know who they are in the friendship?
So the anxious person probably thinks, it's my fault.
It's my fault that there's a problem.
Let me stay engaged because it's my fault.
And they continue on in the relationship,
even though they feel uncomfortable in it,
and they don't address the problem
until they start to boil over,
or there's like passive aggressiveness
that starts to come out.
And so at some point, there's like this volatility
that happens where their friend might be like,
what happened, like, why are you so upset?
I didn't even know anything was going on or happening.
The avoidant is kind of just ghosting earlier on.
Avoidant is linked to being more likely to end friendships and in is kind of just ghosting earlier on. Avoidant is linked to
being more likely to end friendships and in these indirect ways like ghosting. The anxious
is holding on for dear life. Sometimes we do see anxious people use avoidant strategies
to where if anxious people feel they're being rejected, they kind of may try to reject
first too. The secure person, first of all, they're not assuming something's wrong until
they have enough evidence that something's wrong.
And then, and this was my hardest thing,
when it comes to attachment, like conflict
in friendship is definitely the piece
that makes me feel most anxious
because I felt like it's my responsibility to get over it.
And if I'm not getting over it,
like that's me not being a good friend
and the growth that I experienced in Platonic
was just reading about how people that address
these issues with their friends, they have more intimacy,
they have more closeness.
There's this psychoanalyst Virginia Goldner
who talks about how you could have flaccid safety,
which is like we're close because we pretend
there's no problems or you could have dynamic safety,
which is like we're close because we rupture
and we repair and we rupture and we repair. And whenever there's a rupture, we know that we can repair. And so,
literally, I needed to read all this research that said, people that have opened and packed
the conflict, have more intimacy in their relationships. And I was like, okay, if the research says,
I guess I will try to actually address the problem with my friend, even though I'm so scared,
because I think she's just gonna reject me
and or be mad at me for it.
And that's the other problem
that anxiously attach people, right?
They confuse addressing conflict
and how you address conflict.
So often in anxiously attached person,
they'll address the conflict,
but it's boiled over so much
that they're at the point of attack.
And it's like antagonistic, fight or flail.
You're a bad friend, how could you do this to me? And then
their friends pull away and they're like, Oh, I guess I can address conflict.
It's the self-fulfilling prophecy. I guess I have to pretend that I have no
needs and keep sacrificing in my relationships. But not knowing that it's not the
fact that you brought it up. It's how you brought it up because
securely attach people. They'll use conflict as an active love and reconciliation.
It'll look like I want to be close to you.
And so I want to bring this thing up
because I don't want it to pull us apart
because you're so important to me.
And this is how I felt in this situation,
but I also want to understand what was going on for you,
what were you feeling in this moment?
Like, how can we navigate this in the future
so that we can stay close?
That's what conflict looks like for more securely attached people.
Um, how do we get this way?
As a caregiver of children, I'm like trying to see their attachment styles, right?
And I'm like, are these kids just born this way?
And I'm making them this way?
Is it genetic?
I need to know because I feel very confused, not just dealing with my own attachment styles,
but like looking to my children as their caregivers.
It's complicated.
Like I think a lot of the attachment research has like traditionally focused on early
caregiving relationships, but now we see that there is a genetic component to it.
We've also seen that secure attachment has been decreasing over time.
And so I think that technology use honestly plays a role
because you're not getting that time alone with yourself
to develop that ability to regulate your emotions.
Like that time to feel is like part of what keeps you secure.
But in caregivers that foster more security,
we tend to see a lot of responsiveness,
which means if your kid has a need,
you try to meet it instead of being like,
well, why do you have this need?
Or you shouldn't cry, or you shouldn't be sad,
but you don't try to dismiss,
you kind of treat your kid like you would
another adult with needs instead of trying to suppress them
in your kid, you encourage your kid's emotional expression,
you validate their
emotions, those sorts of behaviors that in terms of the ways that parent treat their kids. Whereas,
you know, attachment gets transmitted intergenerational because someone who is anxiously attached,
for example, might take their kids' actions as an affront to them. And then are reacting from a
triggered space. Like, you know, my kid needs to distance
themselves and that's an attack on me. And so I'm going to sort of escalate this, whereas
the more securely attached parent can de-escalate with the kid and try to be the source of emotional
regulation for the kid. But that requires them to be regulated themselves.
And then there's this pattern, you said, the rich get richer. That's how I've always thought about
attachment. Like, if you are a secure person who's just always walked around believing that people are good and that
they're gonna like you and that most people can be trusted, then you go into relationships like that and then guess what?
People like you and they trust you because when people feel trusted and liked,
you because when people feel trusted and liked, they like you. And so then your entire life is like, you're a young white man and you just keep investing money over and over and then it keeps growing.
You're like, what? Like it's hard. Like, but if you're an avoidant person and you go into things
thinking, I can't trust them, I'm going to get hurt. Then they feel that energetically. They don't feel trusted.
So they become more distant. So it's constantly your whole life,
a self-fulfilling prophecy. So it's not just your caregivers. It's like the relationships you
choose later because of that first seed of what you believed about the world. Exactly. Exactly.
Like, securely attach people,
it's not just that they relate to themselves well. They also then choose relationships
that foster further security in them.
Like, secure people will not choose to be in a relationship
that someone who's anxiously attached to might tolerate
because they think they have to.
Whereas a secure person, if you're not treating me
in ways that align with how I feel about myself,
I'm going to go find someone that will. And you're right that our attachment, we don't recognize the ways that it's a self-affilling prophecy.
So one of the tips that I share for making friends, and this comes from the securely attacks, is that they assume that people like them trying to remember to make that assumption.
So that when you're deciding, should I reach out to this person? And part of you is like, oh my god, they're going to reject me and think I'm weird.
You have another voice that says, what if they accept me? What if they might like me?
Right. And and that according to the research, when people are told to make this assumption,
when they go into a group, even when this is this is false, like, so there's no evidence that
you're going to go into this group and be liked, they actually become warmer and friendlier and more open toward other people. Whereas we
see that people that are rejection sensitive, which is a quality of anxious attachment where
you see rejection when it's not there. When someone, for example, is maybe a little bit
more tired than usual, they tend to respond by being cold and withdrawn. Like these people
that always fear rejection are consistently rejecting other people and
not realizing it.
And then they're getting rejected back.
And that's why I think understanding attachment style is so important not so that we can be
like, well, I guess I'm doomed and good for all those people that had those healthy relationships.
But so that we can be like, oh, I didn't realize how my fears were manifesting in how I treat other people
and that I can treat other people differently
and get a different result.
Like, it's not hopeless for me.
That's so good.
And in fact, there's a likability fallacy, right?
It is, if you're thinking what she's saying
is probably true for most people, but not for me,
people don't like me, it's true that we underestimate
that people will like us across the board.
Yes, so this is called the liking gap.
It's this research where strangers interact,
afterward they're asked, okay, how much do you like them?
How much do you think they like you?
And so in a bunch of different settings in the lab
and the community center, the researchers have found
that we underestimate how liked we are by other people.
And not only that, the people that are most critical of themselves, they're liking gap
is most pronounced.
Wow.
So what that means is you might think that the ways that you are so critical for yourself
are the truth, but they're distorting the truth even more, like people like you even
more if you're very self-critical of yourself than you think.
And that comes to the self thing.
So if I go into being an avoidant person, I was an addict for a very, very long time. And I can look at alcohol and food and all the things
as avoidance of self.
I suppose they could also be things
anxious people would use to numb self.
Yeah, regulate.
When I'm reading your work and when I'm reading
about attachment and I think,
I have to have a connection to myself
when I was on this weekend.
One of my friends needed tampons, okay?
So I remembered she needs this.
And then I was in my room and I was like,
I'm gonna bring her this.
And I told Abby when I came back, I was walking to a room
and I was saying to myself,
I am a thoughtful person who does thoughtful things.
I'm thoughtful friend who does thoughtful things. I'm thoughtful friend. I'm a thoughtful friend who does thoughtful things.
Like, and it actually helped me.
I was like, look at me.
I am doing a thing a friend would do.
Is that that shit crazy?
And like, is this internal talking to yourself
like a friend and liking yourself?
Because if we think everybody doesn't like us
and that makes people not like us,
then would liking ourselves,
believing we're likeable really inside,
not just acting like it,
would that make friendship easier?
And how do we like ourselves more
and be more connected with ourselves
and not avoid ourselves?
Yes, yeah.
So there is this theory called self-verification theory,
which is the idea that we look for people that verify
our sense of self, whether positive or negative.
Ooh.
So people that have a more negative sense of themselves,
they actually prefer to interact with people
who see them more negatively because they feel more understood,
because they don't feel like an imposter,
because they don't feel like an imposter,
because they don't feel manipulated.
If someone is like, I love you so much,
and you don't feel lovable,
you're like, you're lying to me.
Or you're stupid.
Yeah, you're stupid.
Or it's only a matter of time
that you find out the truth.
And I don't want to be in this relationship
where I feel like I need to play pretend.
So even though all of us want to be loved,
if we don't love ourselves,
we can't believe that we're loved.
It becomes very, very hard. And so that's why I think this is, even though all of us want to be loved, if we don't love ourselves, we can't believe that we're loved.
It becomes very, very hard.
And so that's why I think this is, you know, an idea for an textbook that, you know,
the work on the self is really required to build those healthy relationships with other
people because we need to work on ourselves so we can actually receive the healthiness
and the love that's out there.
And like I say, in Platonic, like avoidant people,
when people are loving toward them,
they think there's an ulterior motive.
They're trying to get something out of me
versus secure people who are like,
this is an active love.
Now I feel closer to you.
The avoidant is like, I feel threatened by you
because you're trying to get close to me
so that you can harm me more.
And that comes from lack of self-love and self-esteem, because
you must have an ulterior motive since I'm no good. If I were secure, I would think,
of course this person wants to be good to me because I am good. Why wouldn't I?
That was the part of your book that blew my mind the most. Those two things that if over time,
if you're being in a state of self-protection by not sharing yourself,
it actually becomes self-harm
because your biggest resources
for getting through things
is your ability to connect with people.
So the self-protection turning into self-harm
and then the second piece
that goes exactly to what you were just saying,
Dr. Franco, if you have this imposter thing, Well, that's great that you like me or love me
But the only reason you like or love me is because you don't know this thing about me that as soon as you did
You would not anymore. So you can't actually really love me or like me, but that becomes
a ceiling to
How much love you can actually receive.
Because you internally believe there's no way
that your love for me is real
because I haven't shared with you this thing.
And so the sharing of yourself is the key lever
that dictates how much love you can accept in.
You're so good at putting, I love,
like I love what I wrote being flossed through you.
I'm like, yes, yes, yes, that's it.
It's the ceiling.
It's that if we're never vulnerable,
if we're never sharing ourselves,
if there's these parts of ourselves
that feel so full of shame,
then we will never trust love
because if you don't know me,
how can I trust that you love me?
And I think for a lot of us who maybe have a lower sense of self worth,
it's like, we don't let people know us because we feel like if we do,
they're going to reject us.
That's the avoidantly attached strategy.
And glad I honestly like talking to you about it because I think a lot of the times
you see avoid an attachment manifested as I just don't like people.
I just don't think people can be trusted or I just don't really need people.
And I see you going that one step further and saying, well, actually, there is these fears
that manifest as that desire to distance myself from other people.
And there's this underlying vulnerability or fear or work that I need to do on myself.
And I think a lot of people don't get there. They just stay in the place of,
I can't trust people. I don't need people. What value will they bring to my life? And it's like,
you actually don't know the value they will bring to your life if you never allow yourself to experience it.
That's it. I didn't know. When I said Dr. Franco, I don't need friendship.
I was right because the way I was doing it was, I always said, it's just a burden.
It's just like another thing to do.
It's another burden.
And the way I was doing it was because I would get together with someone and they would
share themselves and I would offer my best to them.
And then they would ask me how I was and I would give them what you call package
vulnerability, which is a story about something that I had already just solved.
And so it was nothing but a burden because it was no help to me.
It was no figuring out, oh, when my friend talks to me, I should say the thing I'm really thinking and really struggling
with in this moment because my go to was I'm supposed to be vulnerable. So I was bleeding
and I was 10 and I was alcoholic. Here's my vulnerable story. It's vulnerable as shit, but like not
because it's not right right now what I'm thinking is I'm really scared. I don't know how to do this.
Are you going to like take over my life?
I feel like I'm losing control of my time.
Are you going to call me every time you need something?
How does this work?
And I've struggled with mental health my whole life.
And I think that one of the reasons your work is so important is because I have always
thought I don't have time for friends because I just have to spend all day not losing my shit. I have all of these mental health strategies
and I have to do all the things every day to just stay on this side of the abyss. I didn't
understand until this past year when I've been experimenting with friendship. My time with friends has helped my mental health
more than spending all day doing all that other shit.
And I say this like it's a science experiment.
Like I was a big skeptic.
You know, this friendship just had another thing
to my to-do list.
I figured out I was in an accent. I figured out all these
actual things through exposure to other healthy women's lives and through their support
that I'm in a better place a year later than I ever have been after decades of mental health
strategies that are isolated. It's really something because, you know, we just got back from this trip.
And Glenin has a regimen.
Every single lady she goes on her walks.
She's reading, she's doing yoga,
doing the things that-
But, breathing for two hours, like all the things.
She's doing the things that are regulating her emotions.
And then we go on this trip this last weekend,
she doesn't have to do a single thing except talk. I actually one night we
got back in the room, I said, I can't believe how much you're talking and you're still
engaged and I can see that like there's a part of her that's coming to life like it does
when she meditates for an hour. But she doesn't know I'm back in the room going, okay,
let's see. Here's Platonic.
OK, I'm on page 49 now.
She says this, I say this.
Let's stop here and come back.
Because I want to talk the Pod Squad through your advice
about how to find friends, how to make friends.
Because I actually have followed a lot of it and it's working.
And I don't like that we have considered
so much of this intuitive.
Because for many of us, it is not all intuitive.
For me, recovery from eating disorders,
like don't tell me to fucking eat intuitively.
If I could do that, do you think I'd be in this place, right?
Like I need you to tell me what to do first
until it feels natural.
And that's what I feel like your work does.
And as a little teaser, we've
been talking about how the cap on the love and the friendship that you can receive and that feeds
your mental health relates to your vulnerability and authenticity. And no one knows what the
fuck that means. But Dr. Franko says authenticity is who we are without defense mechanisms.
is who we are without defense mechanisms. Okay? Just marinate on that for a couple days and come back because that is the stuff
that we're going to talk about. Defense mechanisms, how that is your blocker to your authenticity,
which is your blocker to your, and love in your life.
But I mean, Dr. Faker probably won't come back
because for sure she's gonna abandon me
in the next hour.
Okay.
Okay.
Okay.
Before we head off, I just think it's actually
really incredible because I would call myself a secure
attachment.
Yeah.
And the fact that you're my best friend
and the fact that you're such an avoidant,
would you say you're avoidant or anxious?
Well, I wanna talk to Dr. Franco about that
because I think I could be both.
Yeah.
But one of the things that's so hopeful about all of this
and what you repeat over and over again in your work
is that this is all totally changeable.
I don't know if I would have been willing
to go look at friendships if you hadn't proven to me
over the last, however, the how long many years seven years that all of my ideas were wrong,
this person can be trusted and isn't going to abandon me and you're changing my predictions
about what's going to happen our relationship is and that's allowing me to test more people.
We can do hard things from sweating. We'll be back with Dr. Franco next time.
Love you.
I give you Tish Melton and Brandy Carlyle. I walked through fire, I came out the other side.
I chased as I er, I made sure I got once mine. It was mine And I continue to believe
That I'm the one for me
And because I'm mine, I want the line
my
Cuz we're adventurous and heartbreak So
a final destination
Stopped asking directions
Some places they've never been
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.
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 and heartbreak
So man, a final destination
With that we stopped asking directions
So places they've never been
And to be loved we need to be known
But finally find a way back home
And through the joy and pain
That our lives bring
We can do a heartache This world finished her rose and heart breaks on my mind. We might get lost, but we're only in that Stopped asking directions
Some places they've never been
And to be loved we need to be loved
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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