We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - WTF with The Five Love Languages?
Episode Date: November 17, 20221. The good, the bad, and the ugly of Gary Chapman’s The Five Love Languages. 2. How expressing the way we give and receive love can identify misalignments with our partners, friends, and family. 3.... How to explore – beyond our “love language” – our deep fears and needs underlying them. 4. Glennon, Abby, Amanda, and Pod Squaders share the specific, hilarious things that make them feel most loved. 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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Welcome to We Can Do Hard Things. This is take two sweet pod squad. You should know we
just did this entire introduction to you. And somehow in the first 45 seconds, I mean
I got a huge fight. I just ruined it. I was trying to be fun and then you thought it was serious and I wasn't.
And so we got in a fight. An argument and the energy is so weird.
Is it recording? I think we should just clear the energy. I love you.
I love you so much. I feel like the energy is totally fine because again, I was actually totally kidding.
Okay. I have a question. Well, you both are are gonna get a thank you note in the mail from me because you really just
teed up this pod we're doing today on love languages just perfectly because I mean,
can I just say one better than a misunderstanding?
What's better than that?
I would say that one of my communication pet peeves is when someone says something and
then they, and you feel it and you want to respond and it was a big deal or it was something
that, you know, was a hurtful or whatever.
And then the person says, Oh, it's okay.
I was just kidding.
But I was just kidding.
JK, JK, JK, but you're kidding.
I was kidding.
There's still truth in the story.
No, no, there is no truth in it.
I was just trying to be funny.
Okay.
And just to put the pod squad out of your,
what the hell just happened, misery,
the whole thing was Glenn and asked me how I was doing.
And I answered, and then she started to talk
and then she came back and said, Oh,
honey, I'm sorry.
How are you doing?
And then Abby said, Oh, it's always all about sister.
How is she doing?
Not about me.
Okay.
That, that was the seismic argument that we had.
And then Glenin tried to dig in and say, oh my gosh, what is this
about? Abby said she was kidding. Glenin refused to believe she was kidding. Abby said she
was kidding again. Glenin again refused to believe she was kidding. Okay, so that is the
entirety of what you miss.
So you have just witnessed a alert level red, less the in argument.
Okay.
In my relationship, let's just say that would not have registered on the Richter.
But here we are.
And it is big fixings for Glennon and Abige.
Okay.
All right. Take that to our therapist later.
But today.
I'm sweating. That's so good.
Isn't it ironic?
We are discussing love languages.
How we offer love and how we receive love best
and how sometimes someone could be offering us love.
But if it's in a language we don't understand, we don't necessarily receive it as love.
So let's hear from our Pad Squad about their love languages.
This is Lisa and my love language is yes and.
If I say let's go to dinner,
I hear yes and it should be Mexican food or yes.
And I want it to be fun or yes and let's get a baby
to sit there and leave the kids at home.
This is Kara. My
love language is being home alone all day. Maybe the dog can stay, but an empty ass house
and some garbage television. I don't get that. On a semi-regular basis, I'm just depleted.
And if I feel guilty about it, but it's the truth.
An empty ass house.
Hi, I am Kira.
My love language is remembering things
about people's schedules and days and upcoming things
and having people do the same for me.
This is Kaleigh.
I'm 20 in college and my love language is, okay, it can sound weird, but my feet are all
like cold.
I love to shove them on this because of the legs.
So if people make room for my feet under their legs when they're sitting or they cover my feet.
That's Scott's My Love Like.
Scott.
My name's Gina and if my husband offers to go to the grocery store, God forbid Costco,
I mean, that is as hot as things can get around here.
I mean, it's amazing. My name is Kate, so mine includes
when people will have a dance party with me, when a left one will eat ice cream with me,
or let me give them a full recap of RuPaul's Drag Race. If you just let me go off on that,
or one of my other like favorite things.
Also, when my cat just wraps her face on me because she wants to be pet and
attention. I don't know if that counts but I can tell you that because that's one of the ways I feel most
loved.
I really appreciate make room for my feet under their legs.
Just that little jig, you're a little, you're on the couch. And that's a level of intimacy that is underrated.
Like I'm gonna take the liberty to squeeze my little titsies
right under your leg where they're gonna reside
for the remainder of the movie.
But that's a beautiful thing.
I wonder would they feel this way
if the person who is sticking their feet
Under the leg had restless foot syndrome. Oh, I
Yeah, they just move their feet constantly. Yeah, that is a real thing. That's talking
Well, you may have noticed that this episode about love languages will not necessarily be
Framed completely around where we originated this, which was from Gary Chapman's book, what was it called, the five love languages?
There's something.
Yep.
It was 1992 book, and his idea is that everyone has preferences about how they would like
to give and receive love.
So there's a preferred language that everyone
speaks. And it's either gifts, quality time, words of affirmation, physical touch, or acts of
service. And the point is that that's how they express their love and that good partners, successful
partners will take the time to figure out how to express their love in a way that translates
to their partners' language. That is the jest. We have scruples, we have scruples, but it has no doubt been a worldwide phenomenon.
It's sold like 12 million copies. It's so interesting when one of these books by a conservative fundamentalist
type Christian pastor, which is what this man is kind of leaks out into the general population.
It happens every once in a while, Purpose Driven Life, did it with Rick Warren.
Oh, my mom gave me that book. Yeah, yeah. Yeah. Thank you mom. I gave for the book that
Ellen you gave her Ellen's biography and she gave me purpose. Battle of the ideologies.
Battle of the ideologies. So I would like to speak to this phenomenon a little bit because I myself
was in this world, this Christian world where there is certain media that you're encouraged to consume.
It's almost like propaganda, sort of. It's like how to keep you on the straight and narrow of the
Christian faith, this brand of it. You have your own Christian bookstores. Just as an aside, my books,
of course, stopped being carried in Christian bookstores, but when Carrie Ann were, they came out,
they said, we'll sell it, but we put a big stick around
of this as, read with discernment.
Get out of here.
Do you see what that saying
all about all the other books?
What is discernment mean?
It means be, think hard when you read it.
Okay, so it's hilarious because basically what they're saying
is all these other books don't think
while you're reading them. The rest of these just please mainline them in your
system and commit them to memory. But this one you should have to think which is by its
nature automatically a dangerous proposition. And that's the whole purpose of reading.
It's to think why you're reading, but not in these necessarily in these places. Truly, one of the goals is to put out this kind of information to keep people in the institutions
that make the larger institution run.
The larger institution being the Christian church, the smaller institution being marriage
in this case.
So Gary Chapman was not a therapist.
He was a pastor who because of his pastoring job,
started seeing married couples,
men and women because that would have been
the only kind of couple that was allowed in this church.
Then just decided to make up these love languages
to what he would say help
these couples connect. What I would suggest possibly is that the goal was not
necessarily to know each other deeply but to keep people in Christian marriage.
For example, there's a lot of majorly problematic ideas in these five
level languages, which were problematic just in the book, but also the way they were disseminated
by all the other pastors. First of all, they're so heteronormative. But also, well, if your husband,
if the way that he needs love is by physical touch, you just do it.
Yeah. And let's back up for a minute to talk about what you're saying. This guy's a Christian
minister. He has no formal training as a counselor or a researcher. The whole five-level languages is
not rooted in any psychological research. No. In fact, it's never been able to be empirically
validated in subsequent research that came out after this became just a worldwide phenomenon.
So his book is absolutely rooted in Christian doctrine and heteronormativity and in these
binary gender roles that are weaved throughout that entire book. And subsequently thanks to
a lot of great research that was done by Slate and LA Times and Scary Mommy. So I'm so glad to be here. I'm so glad to be here. I'm so glad to be here.
I'm so glad to be here.
I'm so glad to be here.
I'm so glad to be here.
I'm so glad to be here.
I'm so glad to be here.
I'm so glad to be here.
I'm so glad to be here.
I'm so glad to be here.
I'm so glad to be here.
I'm so glad to be here. I'm so glad to be here. 2013, a mom wrote in to him based on her son coming and saying that he was gay and he wrote back
quote, men and women are made for each other in God's design. Anything other than that is outside
of that primary design of God. And he advised her to quote express your disappointment and or lack of understanding."
And quote, so my dude who is words of affirmation, etc,
is suggesting that the best way to love your kid is to express your disappointment.
When they show you who they are. And I just want to emphasize that that's what I mean.
That there is no true, no each other,
complicated, messy meeting each other.
It's no keep everybody in their role.
I don't want this conversation to feel like
I'm like, oh, those people,
how could they think that way?
Because I used to think that way,
not with the homophobic shit,
but I used to read mainline and this stuff.
I was so afraid.
I felt like I love my family so much. And I was indoctrinated
in these places that told me that the only way that you will keep your family safe is if you follow
these rules. I remember sitting in on my porch and reading these books, there were these books
prayers for your kid. And the idea was you will keep your kid safe if you pray these prayers.
And I used to just like sit on my porch and just like write them all down and say them
over and over and over again because I don't know.
I was, I was, it's so tempting this, this idea of they tell you that you need to be scared.
You know, who was it?
It was like somebody that said that, that, that the churches are like the mafia. Like you don't even know you have a problem. They come to your door. They're like, you're to be scared. You know, who is it? It was like somebody that said that the churches are like the mafia.
Like, you don't even know you have a problem.
They come to your door.
They're like, you're going to hell.
And you're like, now I have a problem.
And they're like, OK, but here's the solution.
Right?
And so the solution is all of these things
that really actually seem more like superstition than faith,
because they're all these things you have to say and do.
But the goal is not to free yourself and free your people
and live in this messy humanity together
and take care of each other.
The goal is to keep everybody in their little bottle
so that the system can continue on the way it always has.
This has obviously been a worldwide phenomenon
for very good reasons.
People aren't coming to this
because they want to uphold
the institution of heteronormative Christian heritage. They're coming to this because it is a
possibility of solving their deep personal needs. But the motivation matters as to why it was created
and what it intends to uphold. So physical touch element,
where that was defined as a love language in the book. And there was a woman who, in one
chapter, her relationship has turned toxic and arguably even borderline abusive, and he counsels her in this that she needs to offer herself sexually to her
husband regularly for six months, even within the confines of that toxic relationship. And then
he, you know, ties it up together with in the next six months, and saw a tremendous change in Glenn's attitude
and treatment effort.
As if your treatment depends on you checking this box, even if it doesn't feel safe or
like it's meeting your needs.
And if you do that, you'll start getting treated better.
So there's a lot of ways that this not only has been a superficial approach to love, but also
actually damaging people. I spent my whole life not necessarily
researching everything that I read and or figured out what where it started, the origin of it, like you two. You guys are much more intentional and
discerning. Discerning. I have to just say this because I came across this book years and years ago.
And it was really helpful for me. Even though I knew that it was super gaudy. Like, it still kind of gave me some parameters for me
to start the process of thinking about how to relationship.
Yeah, how do we get to the end?
You know, same.
Yeah, I still want to pull out the goodness of it.
And I think that that's kind of what we're talking about here.
We want to take the goodness of this.
Yes.
Make it up.
That's exactly right. That's exactly right.
That's exactly right.
That's what we want.
Everybody and how we really do receive this,
offer love and meet each other and know each other
because none of this is about knowing each other.
This is about like words, we say,
things we do on the outside.
It's very like acting that these love languages,
it's very like say these things, do these actions, but it's not
about like really getting inside and knowing each other.
It's like relationship 101. It's like the very basics.
Like, it's bad. I don't even know if it's that. I don't even think it's one of one. I think
it's deeper than that, but it is a behavioral plan as opposed to an emotional plan. And so
it's, it's a lot like Dr. Becky was talking about
with you can memorize the word say XYZ to your kids
and they will do one, two, three,
but it isn't getting to the under that,
which is the relationship on which that exchange is based.
So I think that I'm exactly the same as you Abby.
I read it like it was a revelation.
It was really, really helpful to me.
And I think I've been thinking a lot about this.
And I think that the re, I think there's three reasons
why that book has had such a seismic cultural shift.
And I think the first one is that it very strategically
kind of reduces this untamable mystery of love
into a formula, which is a very, very compelling promise.
Love that formula.
And so that's tempting, especially people
who are desperate for a connection.
It's like, oh, you mean I can just perfect. It's math. It's math. I
add your level language and you add mine. Perfect. It's time. But the second
thing, and I think that the next two things that it did are really
pointing towards what is a super helpful thing in relationships and that I think maybe if you come in for five
love languages, stay for attachment because the second thing it does is it kind of offers
this simple shared language, acknowledging that there's something happening under the
thing that's happening in your daily lives. Right.
Other than just incompatibility.
Like you're looking at your lives, you're like, this isn't working.
And the way that he comes in and says, oh, there's something under that.
It's that you're not speaking the same language.
That is just a helpful way to start to understand that there's always a thing under the thing.
And to have a language about it.
And then the third thing is I think it provides this kind of schema for how you can have a fundamental
misalignment in how each partner gives and receives love so that you can both be loving each other the same amount
and with equal ferocity, but you are utterly missing each other.
And that at the end of the day is I think where people need to get, where I have found the
most actual relief in relationships relationships is to be like,
wait, so I'm rushing toward conflict because that's how I love you.
And I want to benefit our relationship by like entering into that conflict.
You, because you love me and want to benefit this relationship, are sprinting as far away
from conflict as possible. So we are
doing the opposite thing and trying desperately to love each other. And I think that's like the path
that people should go on from this very simplistic situation. What to take from it.
I'm Jonathan M. Hevar. I'm a podcast producer and someone who likes fancy things.
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There is this thing that this book does that reminds me so much of what religion can
do, which is like there's this messy wild thing,
whether it's faith or whether it's love.
And it's so powerful in our lives
and we don't understand it
and we want to be able to control it
and they're uncontrollable forces.
So we're all terrified of it
and so there are these people that are like,
we've figured it out.
It's just a formula.
We have simplified it.
Follow these rules and you'll be safe.
It's what I wanted for my family.
I was so scared of fucking it up.
I wanted someone to promise me if I do A, then B.
We'll happen.
And that's what this feels like.
It's all external because if you can give your partner sex,
but there's nothing in this that talks about what if when you're
giving your partner sex because that's what they want, you feel dead inside. You feel that
it's not real. You feel that it's not really connection. It doesn't matter. Just do the thing,
and then the other person does the dishes, and then there's nothing. There's no, like,
you know, acknowledgement of what's happening on the inside. There's nothing that's integrated
about it. I think what you're saying is so important,
and I think that the way to understand that
in how it plays out, it's a behavior plan.
I do the dishes.
You make yourself available sexually,
but it doesn't acknowledge like this underlying fear
or story we're telling ourselves
That makes that behavior feel desperately needed and it doesn't acknowledge the givers underlying
Issues that are preventing you from wanting to make yourself available for
sexually and so it's just not an emotionally based approach. It's a behavior based approach and
if you're just addressing behaviors, if you're just addressing symptoms,
then you're never gonna get to the underlying
emotional stability that won't require
this constant influx of behaviors
to keep the fear at bay.
So if you're in a relationship that is,
that is not as strong as it could be,
it's like everybody has a headache, okay?
And the prescription is you keep feeding each other pain meds.
But like no one's getting to the why you have a headache.
So you just have to feed the beast over and over
in order to keep the headache at bay,
whereas if you just went in and were like,
why do you need X?
Why are you so desperate for words of affirmation?
Is it because you don't feel seen?
Is it because you have a fear of your whole life
going through and never really seen or known?
Why do you have such a desperate need for sex? Is it because it's the only place in this relationship
where you get reassurance and comfort and closeness? Okay, well then if you just
address those underlying things, then then the behaviors will either take care
of themselves or they won't be so desperately needed.
Ooh.
I like that.
I also think it's interesting that the physical touch is the one kind of love offering and
receiving that doesn't require language, language, language.
Women are more conditioned to communicate that way.
And it's interesting that what you said, maybe the one place I feel loved, the one place
I don't feel incapable, the one place I don't feel
Incapable the one place I don't feel like I can't keep up with you
Right is this place that doesn't require me to have all of this language to express to you my love and receive love
It's also this snowballing problem because if I don't
If I don't get to the place where I truly understand
the thing underneath your desire for sex, then not only am I just checking a box, no pun
intended, to like show up for that, but I also am doubling down on my resentment and a strangenment to you because all I can think about is we have no
closeness and intimacy in our relationship and yet you want this thing.
Yes. So therefore intimacy with me is not even required for us to access.
If a partner comes and says, my love languages physical touch, therefore,
I need more sex. As opposed to a partner comes and says, my love languages physical touch, therefore I need more sex.
As opposed to a partner coming and saying, our relationship is so devoid of intimacy
in all of these levels, that when we have sex, it's the only time I can feel assured that
you are not going to leave me. It's the only time where I can
feel assured that we can reconnect in a real way and therefore my need for it feels very high.
You're going to go into that situation with a totally different perspective.
Of that is that person's desire to be intimate with you, not that is just a
outside of me, random need for sexual contact.
It's like the wrapping paper instead of the gift. It's like, do I want to do acts of service for you?
Do I want to make out with you? Because we have constantly worked on this thing where we desperately
know each other. We feel connected to
each other. So those things are just natural outpourings of this internal knowing that is love.
I'm just doing those things, hoping the other thing follows, or the way that I see it's done so
much in the church, which is just do those things. And it doesn't matter if the real love connection, deep thing ever happens.
Because the goal is just to keep this institution moving, not ever to get to
the depths of each other.
And it might not be automatic because like the research that has happened
after this became a phenomenon does show that the love languages, you know,
what is described in there of quality time. First of all, every relationship needs quality
time. That's a problem.
That's a problem situation. And words of affirmation, etc. that those do reflect behaviors that are vital to relationship maintenance. But there
is no correlation between any relational quality, so how you feel your relationship is going
to you're being aligned at level languages. None. So words of affirmation may not come naturally to me. It's important
for me to be reminded of that because so I can expand my repertoire of showing my love.
Okay. Words of affirmation don't matter unless the words I'm saying reflect that I
know you deeply. I just walk into them. I love you, honey. That means nothing to me because
I know you're just saying this thing.
How the words of affirmation are meaningful when they reflect that you know me so deeply
that the words you are saying are ringing in my soul.
Physical touch.
Just having sex means nothing.
Unless what we are doing in the bedroom or wherever I, we are reflects that you know
my body and you love me and you
are, we are knowing each other through this whatever, right?
Quality time.
What does that mean unless the person who is with you knows you so well and you know them
that you know exactly how you want to spend that time, where you want to spend that time,
what your acts of service.
If you're just doing the basics, what acts of service? If those categories don't reflect knowing and caring and curiosity, then all of those
things aren't mean nothing.
It's what this act of service is.
Where the quality of time is, how the physical touches and what the words of affirmation
are.
I'd love when you get fired up so much.
I agree with you from where you sit.
That is you.
And this can help out of a place of desperation.
Because first of all, there is not a truth in that we have one love language.
We have a place that we have desperation the most.
So we all give and receive love in myriad ways. There may be one way that we
are self-reporting as highest. And by the way, they have had research that shows that what we
report is not even necessarily true of us. That's so true. I totally believe that. We don't know
anything about ourselves. Right. And it's not immutable. It changes over time. But it is possible that in this,
in this situation, in this year, in this particular relationship, I am most desperate, desperate for
X. Yes. But why are we most desperate? We are most desperate because we all have an underlying,
deep fear that we are just really, really hoping that the, the showing of love
will help quell that fear. And I fearful that I will never be known. And I fearful that I will
never be safe. Am I fearful that I will always be deeply alone? It matters what you're underlying fear is. Yes, yes.
It just because then the things that people do for you have to be in reaction to that fear.
Yeah.
They can't just be random. That doesn't mean as much. And to push back a little bit on
the sex thing, I think there's a lot of people that
depending where you are in the severity of crisis in your relationship,
it isn't necessarily that like you need to know every little thing about that person.
Some people are so desperate to know that they still have a modicum of connection with their
person.
That the having of the sex will
quell that fear for as long as I need it till we get to the next time.
Yeah, I get that.
I think that it all goes back to that it isn't as simple, that it is, it depends on the
person and what they need and what they want.
And so reducing to just those five
doesn't really do justice to the complexity of people.
And kind of if you stop there,
you're not getting any further.
So this is why it was so cool to hear everybody's
very idiosyncratic love languages
because getting to know those are important.
We are multilingual.
We are multilingual.
Well, unfaceted. It's not just five Let's hear from our prize-quarters. This is Judith and my love language are concerts, specifically Brandy Carwell concert.
This is Lisa and I would call my love language transparency and feeling loved when someone's words match up with their actions and when they do it exactly what they say they're going to do it all time
or they don't ever say anything that they don't introduce.
My name is Lori and I want to tell you that my love language is to plan something for me.
Plan, don't ask me to decide anything. Just plan where we're going, what we're doing,
you don't have to pay for me. Just plan it all out and pick me up and let's go.
Hi, it's Abby. My love language is coffee. Nothing, nothing brings me more joy than coffee being brought to me or being prepared for me.
And I know that's like it all falls in the acts of circus, love language thing, but it's specific.
But it's specific.
I don't want to say that I didn't ask for.
I always want coffee. This is Melanie.
My love language is sharing and listening to music
that is very, very close to my heart
and just feeling it in silence
and feeling the same emotions at the same time
from the same song and talking and sharing about it afterwards.
My name is Katie and my love language is making travel plan and also saying yes to one more episode of Ted Lasso even though it's late and we should really be going to bed.
This is Caitlin and my love language is surprises. So whether it's breakfast in bed or a
surprise trip or even just like a slice of cheesecake or anything but the
bottom layer is anything I don't have to play on myself.
Listen Shannon, my love language? Oh, it's short and sweet. Just somebody clean
the fucking house besides me. And then I know you love me.
Hi, my name is Noah. My love language is warm cowl's right at the dryer when I've gotten out
of the shower in the winter. The breakfast and bed thing, here's what I mean. Okay, acts of service.
Yes, breakfast and bed. It's the act of service matched with the knowing of the person that makes the act of service a love language, right? Yeah. One of your things would not be surprises. You don't like
surprises. I don't really like surprises. I know this because every time somebody talks about
I'm a surprise lover. Yeah. Love surprises. I love to do surprises. I love to get surprised.
I love to do surprises. I love to get surprised. You don't. And so I have so much envy when I hear
surprise love language and just like show up and don't make plan. I like a surprise. I just want to help plan it. I like a surprise. I just want to help plan it. I really with the one more
episode of Ted Lasso
when it's ridiculously late, we should be going to sleep.
I mean, I think that when it's like 12, 30,
and we've been binge watching something,
and it's like one more song, one more song.
And I just look over and I'm like,
should I, can we, I want to watch another one?
That's his vulnerable.
I got it.
If he's like, actually, it's, it's 1230, we should go to sleep.
And he's 100% correct.
And I'm like, I'm basically a girl standing in front of you,
just asking to know if I can be myself and still be loved.
And you just said we need to turn off dead lashes. Yes, it's an amazing. if I can be myself and still be loved.
And you just said we need to turn off dead laughter. Yes, it's an abandoned.
And that's it.
And that's it.
And it's an abandoned.
It's an abandoned.
It's an abandoned.
I feel the same way when I, Abby and I have like a nightly T ritual
where we just, it's not, you just drink tea at night.
And it goes something like this.
Honey, do you want T? Yeah, and when every
once in a while, Abby will be like, no, I don't want tea. I receive it as an abandonment
because the tea means we're going to stay up another 20 minutes. We're going to like
drink this whole tea. I don't want tea means I'm going to bed right now, which makes me
feel very abandoned in the scary scary night.
I love the listening to music quietly, and I just wanted to shout out that love language.
I have learned that love language is with my teenagers.
So, teenagers sometimes I have heard,
don't talk to you as much, okay? And so they become very mysterious and it doesn't
work anymore to be like, I would like to sit down and have you talk to me about who
you are and your feelings and such. But our teenagers in particular, from the time
they were like, you know, preteens until now forever, they are obsessed with music.
Yeah. And they love lyrics and they love artists.
And so I have learned that if I will sit and listen to their favorite song with them,
it's a way of communicating.
So I have come up with some of my love languages that I would add if I were writing a book
about love languages for myself.
Okay, here's one.
I feel passionate about solitude.
A love language for me is someone who understands that solitude is a magical, important part of life.
So if I'm reading or I'm, you know, by myself and the kids come up and you're like,
mom's outside don't bother her. I'm like the respect of solitude is very very important to me. And
also I like a person who is not afraid to be alone also. That's so funny. And that's just my stuff.
But I always feel like good stuff happens when you're alone.
That means you're okay with being with your thoughts and your feelings and you come
back with something that's original to you and not just a regurgitation of culture.
Like I like someone who respects my solitude and someone who respects their own solitude.
I feel really proud of myself.
I never expected, when we first met,
I never thought we could have this conversation
and be like, yeah, I actually feel fine about being alone
and I feel fine about you having solitude.
Like 10 year ago Abby was like,
afraid to be alone and like needed
to be completely enmeshed with my partner.
Right, it is, We've come to our
I wonder if because I'm thinking of all of these languages and values,
I'm thinking of the counterpoint of the fear under them because I think there is
the behavior and then the motivation of the behavior. Could the fear under your
need for solitude be I am afraid of losing myself in
a relationship.
Yeah, I mean, our friend Esther Parall, she told me once that in a relationship, there's
two kinds, there's two people.
One is afraid of losing the other person and one is afraid of losing themselves.
And I'm sure that's an oversimplification
too. But there is probably that, like the fear of losing the individuality. But also, you know,
part of sobriety is being okay with who you are in your own skin. You have one that you
have identified as your own. There's been a couple of folks that have
come up with new ways of innovating around love languages. I haven't done a deep dive into
either of these folks, but Anne Hatter, Ship, talks about modern love languages and she has her new rubric. And then Molly Owens, who's founder of Trudy, she has a new analysis that has seven.
And I really like one of hotter ships ones.
She talks about shared beliefs as a love language.
She said, it's not just a love language, it's a sense of safety.
I feel like my body can actually sit and melt into whatever
Surface is under my butt at the moment because we are on the same page about some important things regarding other people's humanity for example
What matters in the world and what doesn't there is an actual visceral bodily response to being in the presence of shared values for me
Yes
and I think that that to being in the presence of shared values for me. Yes.
And I think that encapsulates what actually,
when we're doing this language correct,
when we experience a visceral bodily response
to being in the presence of something we need,
that that is what the heart of it is.
It isn't like you said you love me six times, therefore check.
It's I can feel in my body safe and I feel safe in this relationship and the safety comes
from a deeper place than the checklist of behaviors comes from.
Yeah, I think that's why so many people struggled so much
during and now with the divide in politics in a single home.
I mean, it's like when you realize that your vision
of the true is most beautiful world is completely different
than your partner's views vision of the true is most beautiful world.
That is certainly one of my love languages. world is completely different than your partner's views vision of the trueest most beautiful world.
That is certainly one of my love languages. It's like the only thing that
causes what looks like a tectonic platelet shift. When I have questions about the world
that go against every because of the way I was conditioned. And I asked questions and I'm trying to process and you're like, what the ever fuck is wrong with you?
Like some freaked out.
It's like this complete misalignment.
That's really scary.
That's so true.
I think it the same way.
It's a fear.
It's a fear you're like,
and because my quantum fear
that pervades all of my behaviors and all of my needs is,
am I alone?
Yes.
Am I alone to face this thing?
Am I alone in carrying this?
And so, when that happens,
when there is a misalignment or even a threat of misalignment
of deep core beliefs,
it's, I'm on my own with this.
Yes.
We are not together in this.
We will not equally, you know, wave this flag.
I am alone.
I am responsible.
Yes.
And I think that is part of my oversimplification of like, are you for me or against me?
And so if anything is, the world seems so chaotic,
and I'm like in this house, as for me and my family,
we will be for this and against this,
for this and against this.
And so when anything questions that,
it makes me have a sleeping with the enemy moment.
We're like, I open the top cabinet and all that.
It feels like all the cans are out of in line.
And I'm like, it's happened twice in our marriage that it scares you.
And I'm like, well, no, I need to, I need to understand where I'm coming from.
And it's hard for you to actually hear.
It is hard for me to anything else that I'm saying around it because you just open
the cabinets and you're like, well, I'm doing something's very wrong here.
Yeah, it's a visceral reaction.
Yeah.
I have another one.
It's moment alignment. Okay, it's...
Oh, yeah.
So, I'm in my living room and my youngest says something that is like so ridiculous and adorable,
or I don't know, just a moment that reflects something I've been thinking about.
And I know that when I look over at Abby, she's going to be looking at me because she's paying
such close attention to our family and to all the things we're working out with each kid and she has such a connection
to each of their insides and such a connection to my insides that inside of a moment, we
are experiencing the same magic.
When something incredible happens and I look and the person's not experiencing it, I think
this gets back to like the,
why are not in the picture episode?
Exactly right.
Yeah.
But I feel left alone.
Like I feel like, oh my God, they're missing
the most important thing in the world.
And I'm alone.
I'm alone.
I'm alone.
So I wonder if that's your quantum fear.
Like sister just called it.
Yeah, I mean, am I alone is probably, you know,
attachment theory to every, everything's just about,
are you there with my real?
Am I alone?
Am I real?
Are you there with me?
Is all of these, all of our fears.
And I think one of the things to talk about too,
which I've been thinking about this whole episode
and haven't said, is these all apply to friends too?
Yeah.
It's not just romantic relationships
that a lot of this applies to.
When I think about the new friends
I'm making a lot of these apply to.
And another one for me is conflict care.
Tell me more.
Not being afraid of conflict
and having skill around conflict
because conflict for me is a way that I work out things
and grow and think and learn,
and I need people who are not afraid to say the thing,
who don't just avoid it,
who tell me the truth about how they feel
so we can work it out,
who when I say the thing,
know that that's an act of love for me
and not an act of kindness.
And I like people who don't understand conflict
for conflict sake.
Like don't just think that the goal of every conflict
is to end it in hug and kiss.
I don't know how to explain that,
but like everyone's all will be in the middle of the conflict.
That's like good stuff, we're getting at something and you'll be like, but like everyone's all will be in the middle of the conflict. That's like good stuff.
We're getting at something and you'll be like, okay, let's just remember we love each
other.
We're in this together.
And I'm like, okay, yes, for sure.
That goes without saying.
But like sometimes the goal is to like really work something out.
G, if I had to say is that your attachment to conflict has to do with proving again and
again to yourself that this relationship and connection and mutual understanding can of any interrogation of a conflict. So Abby's effort to say, okay, we're good. Let's love
each other and hug is to your eyes a retreat from continuing through the gauntlet of the conflict, which you need as a point of demonstrating the strength
and also even closer bond you'll have once you've run that gauntlet.
Yes.
An evolution.
Like evolution.
Like the idea of a relationship, not being just to be smushy, lovey-gubby-gubby, like evolution, like the idea of a relationship not being just to be smushy
lovey guvy guvy like lovey dovy. That's not it. That's not it for me. Like it's not just that.
It's also to have a partner in life that's helping you evolve to bigger and better and
truer ideas and identities and ways of being. It's definitely one of my love languages to know
that like, yes, a relationship, it's a port
and a storm. But it's also the partner you walk through the storm with. Everything's not just
to retreat into a comfort. It's a comfort and a challenge. The like enthusiasm for evolving.
I could never ever be with somebody who didn't want that, who didn't love that, who didn't like
have a commitment to learning and challenging
and having spiritual adventures which are internal.
It's like inner scuba diving,
you know, to doing the treasure hunt that's internal
and being okay with the discomfort of that.
And I think the comfort and the challenge
is a great way to pull together all of this
on the love languages because truly we're not here to
bash the love languages. We're here to say the blessing and the curse of as
you know commonly understood of Chapman's five love languages is its simplicity. So it is a great way to begin to have shared language into
a highly complex situation, but the catch 22 of his formulation is that it's
too simple. And so the good thing it gives you access through simplicity, but the bad
thing is if it's followed too far, it is so reductive of human potential and complexity and the vast mystery of love, that it reduces the beauty and complexity
of the possibilities of your love.
And so it's take that idea and know that
love language is going to be as intricate and interesting
and ever changing.
And ever changing. as any partner is.
Mm-hmm.
Not one size fits all.
Like dive in and figure it out and also dive into yourself and figure it out for yourself
of how you receive and then have that conversation with your partner because it does not, we repeat,
does not have to be these five.
No, and you don't need the book.
Just dive into a conversation about how you receive love
and how you need love and what fear is beneath.
Yeah, and this is why everybody loves the Indigo Girl song
closer to fine.
It's like whenever anybody should think,
I went to the doctor, I went to the preacher,
I went to college, every time we go somewhere
to try to get all the answers.
It feels good for a second because of that tempting. Oh my god. I'm about to nail it. I'm about to simplify it and it's always wrong.
And love is too big and too wild to stuff into any
dogma or five anything.
Mm-hmm. Love it. Love it. Should we end my hearing from our last crew of Love Language?
Yeah, let's do it.
This is Courtney.
My love language is memes and reels.
So, it means more a real.
My name is Heather.
My love language is to bring me back.
I should leave an act in that.
My name is Jan.
My love language is sending cards to people in the mail.
I send thinking of you cards.
I love you cards.
How are you doing cards?
Birthday cards.
I just send a lot of mail to people.
This also is someone named Abby.
Calling in re-love languages.
My love language is, please leave me alone, but also do everything
for me, even without me asking. And most importantly, read by nine. My name is Sam. I have a love language
thing to share that I think might be unusual, but it is very much a love
language between my husband and I. We are both flying glurs and I guide and he does
some guiding, but we're very active in the fly fishing world and he tied a lot of flies. He ties the most beautiful, perfect fly and he hands it to me and
for this one is for you to you, for your box and he hands it to me and it is the most
perfect thing. It feels like a lot better. And I just melt. My name is Chloe.
Interestingly enough, my love language is directly linked to bedtime and sleep time.
My need for a partner and they want for a partner to be like close in proximity to me, either gay to me, but specifically as I prepare to sleep. And I wonder if that's something
that other people share as well. Maybe it's because sleep is like a vulnerable state, but
that has always been the case for me.
I love that. That's a good one to end on. Sleep is a vulnerable state and so is life. And so is love. And we just need somebody to be
tucking us in. We got through a lot in this conversation. We got into an argument at the beginning.
Maybe poke a little bear at the end there. Yeah. Got some things to talk about. Yeah.
Don't we always? Are you still just absolutely furious with each other?
Totally.
Were you?
OK.
All right.
No, what I mean, I hope we'll be back next week, folks.
But who knows?
I think that we're getting to the place in our marriage,
where if something reaches a level of needing
to discuss what we do, I don't know about you.
We're letting go of a lot of stuff.
Yeah, I feel totally let go.
Do you know? Mm-hmm.
Okay.
Oh, you don't.
I love you, Pod Squad.
Shit.
Carry on.
We love you.
See you next time.
Bye.
Bye.
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