Divorce Lawyer: “Give her a prenup on the 3rd date” - James Sexton

English
CChris Williamson
결혼/가정생활정신 건강대출/신용

Transcript

00:00:00- It's Valentine's Day.
00:00:01- I mean, listen, this is a big day.
00:00:03People get all hopped up, make bad choices.
00:00:05It's technically, this is like the best holiday
00:00:07for my profession because--
00:00:08- The biggest influx of future clients.
00:00:10- Yeah, there's just a level of confidence out there today.
00:00:12You know what I mean?
00:00:13Like everybody out there is just like hyper confident.
00:00:15There's a lot of proposals happen on Valentine's Day.
00:00:18And the romantic in me kind of is like,
00:00:20"Oh, this is lovely."
00:00:21And then the professional in me is like,
00:00:24statistically, the likelihood you're gonna cross paths with me
00:00:27is pretty good.
00:00:29- For the people that are listening,
00:00:30if you haven't got your beloved, a Valentine's gift yet
00:00:33and you're shitting yourself and you think,
00:00:34"Oh crap, I haven't done anything."
00:00:36Or if you just want to connect more deeply with your partner
00:00:38or work out if you should leave them,
00:00:40I've put together a list of 50 of the internet's
00:00:42most viral questions to connect more deeply with your partner
00:00:45some of them are evidence-based,
00:00:46some of them are stuff that I've come up with.
00:00:47And then 25 to work out whether or not it's time to leave.
00:00:50You can get that at chriswillx.com/valentines.
00:00:53That's chriswillx.com/valentines.
00:00:56We were just talking about famous people.
00:00:59What do you see in the marriages and divorces
00:01:02of professional athletes?
00:01:03- Well, professional athletes are a very particular breed
00:01:06because professional athletes have had a monastic discipline,
00:01:09most of them, to a very specific task.
00:01:12And so they have going for them
00:01:15in the context of relationship, A,
00:01:18that they are used to putting all of their focus
00:01:21into one thing, right?
00:01:22How to catch and throw a football,
00:01:24how to shoot a three, whatever it might be.
00:01:26And so that becomes a useful skill in marriage
00:01:29because in marriage like that one pointedness
00:01:32can also be very useful and it keeps you
00:01:33from being distracted by all the little shiny objects
00:01:37that happen.
00:01:37So that's helpful.
00:01:39It depends on the type of athlete
00:01:41because I will tell you like NFL players,
00:01:44they get their contracts early.
00:01:46They usually have a girlfriend who they were with
00:01:48when they were kind of on the come up.
00:01:50And then they get giant contracts very early on
00:01:54'cause they have such short careers.
00:01:55So you're talking about getting a couple hundred million
00:01:58dollars when you're in your early twenties.
00:02:01You usually have just married the girl you were dating
00:02:03in high school, you know, and all of that money
00:02:07is now being acquired during the marriage.
00:02:09So it's all subject to division because you're one person
00:02:12in the eyes of the law on the day you get married.
00:02:13Most of these guys don't know that.
00:02:15Most of them aren't sophisticated enough
00:02:16that they would say, "Hey, you know,
00:02:18"we should make sure I have a prenup."
00:02:20They don't always have the best people around them
00:02:21giving them advice when it comes to things like that.
00:02:24So, you know, I think professional athletes,
00:02:27depending on the longevity, like MLB players, NHL players,
00:02:31they have a longer career.
00:02:32So when I, you know, yeah, any of it's sports
00:02:36that don't have that massive physical injury likelihood,
00:02:40like even MMA fighters are more like NFL players,
00:02:42I mean, except without the amount of money behind it.
00:02:45You really do see that this person is just,
00:02:50when that person leaves their sport,
00:02:54there's a, they're really kind of unmoored.
00:02:57They're lost a lot of them because they,
00:03:00especially NFL players, it's such a short career
00:03:02and there's only so many slots for people
00:03:04to become a commentator
00:03:05and it's a very specific kind of field.
00:03:07So like if somebody was like a, you know, defensive lineman,
00:03:10like he may not be the most articulate fellow in the world
00:03:12'cause it wasn't required for his profession.
00:03:14- Maybe a bit of CTE.
00:03:15- Yeah, and to have been so like focused on one thing,
00:03:18your whole career, your whole life.
00:03:20I mean, these are people who started playing
00:03:21when they were five, six, seven years old
00:03:23and they made it a monastic discipline.
00:03:26And now, you know, they made a lot of money on it.
00:03:30When they're playing, very easy to be married
00:03:33'cause it's very structured.
00:03:35You know, pre-season you're here, post-season you're here,
00:03:38during the season you're traveling,
00:03:39but they make lots of accommodations.
00:03:41All the leagues make lots of accommodations
00:03:42for family members so that people can travel with them.
00:03:45And they're busy, they're busy all the time.
00:03:47It's being an athlete is a very,
00:03:49it's like representing professional musicians,
00:03:51like a rock musician who's a touring musician,
00:03:53they got a lot of free time.
00:03:55They got a lot of partying around them.
00:03:57But athletes to perform at the level
00:04:00that most professional athletes have to perform,
00:04:02you kind of have to keep your shit together.
00:04:04So it's not as bad.
00:04:05What I will say is their divorce rate when they retire
00:04:09or get injured and have to leave
00:04:11and retire as a function of it,
00:04:13they have no idea what to do with themselves.
00:04:14- I saw national divorce statistics around about 50%.
00:04:17For professional athletes, it's close to 70%.
00:04:20So you're nearly 50% higher than the general public.
00:04:23And 50% of those divorces will come within one year
00:04:28of your retirement.
00:04:29- Because look, you said for better or for worse,
00:04:31you didn't say for lunch.
00:04:33And this person went from being as busy as busy can be,
00:04:37meaning they are from the minute they wake up
00:04:39until the minute they go to sleep,
00:04:40their day is accounted for what they eat,
00:04:42the workouts they do, everything is tracked,
00:04:45every metric, like everything is, to nothing.
00:04:49Like the silence is deafening when these people retire.
00:04:52And there's really no,
00:04:54you know, it's like when guys come back from war,
00:04:56the VA is like, okay, we got to watch this guy.
00:04:58We got to make sure we have support services for him.
00:05:01We got to help with transitions back to employment.
00:05:03We got to help make sure that the person's not dealing
00:05:05with post-traumatic stress in any way
00:05:06that could be dangerous to them or people around them.
00:05:09Athletes retire.
00:05:10There's very little support system put in place for them.
00:05:12And you assume, hey, guy's got $20 million, $50 million.
00:05:16He's going to be just fine.
00:05:17It's actually like giving them a loaded gun.
00:05:20Like they have too much money, too many people around them.
00:05:23And now they feel like the thing they devoted
00:05:26their entire young thriving life to is gone.
00:05:30And if you think that coaching a high school basketball team
00:05:35after you've played in the NBA is going to be satisfying,
00:05:40you're kidding yourself.
00:05:41What's that got to do with divorce?
00:05:43- Well, I think the dissatisfaction
00:05:44that you feel in your own...
00:05:45Look, I think most discord in relationships,
00:05:49romantic relationships is a function
00:05:50of your relationship with yourself.
00:05:52And the fact that you are feeling restless,
00:05:54you are feeling unsatisfied and it's incredibly easy
00:05:57to take that out on the people around you.
00:05:58I think we all know, you don't have to be
00:05:59a professional athlete to know
00:06:01that when you have a difficult day,
00:06:03your partner's right there.
00:06:04They're definitely doing something that could annoy you.
00:06:07It's probably something that when you were first dating,
00:06:09you thought was adorable.
00:06:10Like they snort when they laugh
00:06:11or they chew with their mouth open.
00:06:13And when you were first dating, you were like,
00:06:15"Oh my God, that's so cute, she does that."
00:06:16And now you're like, seriously,
00:06:17are you going to breathe through your nose like that all day?
00:06:19Like, because you're angry, you hate yourself at that moment.
00:06:23You hate your choices at that moment.
00:06:25So I think that's what's a function of, it's the proximity.
00:06:29- On the other side of the fence,
00:06:30what is the most difficult profession to negotiate with
00:06:34on the other side?
00:06:35Who do you not want to see on the other side of the docket?
00:06:38- I mean, it's who I see almost every day,
00:06:41which is I'm in New York city.
00:06:42So I'm finance, like everybody in finance.
00:06:45So hedge fund guys are a nightmare to have on the other side.
00:06:49They're also a nightmare to have as a client
00:06:50because they have no risk adversity.
00:06:52Like for these guys to be at the level that they're at,
00:06:55give me a quant guy any day.
00:06:58Like quant guys, they'll do the math.
00:07:00They'll look at the risk versus reward.
00:07:02They'll figure out exactly how many hours you've taken
00:07:04to do something and how much it would be.
00:07:05And they'll tell you like with the exact numbers,
00:07:07like, okay, if the offer ends up here, then offer this,
00:07:10and they give you like a whole roadmap that you go,
00:07:12this is incredible.
00:07:14But like hedge fund guys,
00:07:18guys who were traders back in the day,
00:07:20now that's sort of shifted a bit with technology.
00:07:23Those guys have no risk adversity whatsoever.
00:07:25And they also, they're risk tolerant, they're aggressive.
00:07:29I mean, I think if we did these guys' blood work,
00:07:31I think they'd have a lot of testosterone
00:07:32running through their blood
00:07:33because they have that intensity
00:07:36and like they're just not risk adverse
00:07:37and they're ready to like go to war.
00:07:39- Why is not being risk averse bad to face?
00:07:43- Well, it's not bad to face from a, you know,
00:07:46getting paid by the hour.
00:07:47Like they're gonna go to trial.
00:07:49Like they wanna roll the dice and go to trial.
00:07:51So usually what is the thing that disabuses people
00:07:54of the desire to go all the way through litigation?
00:07:56'Cause every divorce gets resolved.
00:07:58It gets resolved by, you know,
00:08:00mediation, negotiation, or litigation.
00:08:03And litigation is really what my specialty is,
00:08:06which is courtroom law.
00:08:07Like you don't, most people thankfully
00:08:09don't need someone like me.
00:08:10Like, you know, most divorces are done with a scalpel.
00:08:14I'm a chainsaw.
00:08:15Like my job is to go in and to go at your spouse, you know?
00:08:19So I'm there to cross examine this person.
00:08:21I'm there to like really do the courtroom piece of things.
00:08:24So thankfully the majority of divorce
00:08:26is you don't need someone like me.
00:08:28But when you do, it's because you have a adversary
00:08:32who is really coming at you.
00:08:35And the courtroom is an amazing place
00:08:37to sort of equalize that force.
00:08:39And it's sort of an embodiment of, you know,
00:08:41the world needs bad men.
00:08:42We keep the other bad men from the door, you know?
00:08:44- Interesting.
00:08:46What do people not understand about how prenups work?
00:08:48- I think the biggest thing people don't understand
00:08:50is that everyone has a prenup.
00:08:52Everyone, every person who's married has a prenup.
00:08:55It's either one that was written by the government
00:08:58and can be changed by the government
00:08:59at any time without your notice.
00:09:01And that once the government changes it,
00:09:04you can't opt out of this anymore.
00:09:07So it's a contract that one person can change
00:09:10and you can't do anything about.
00:09:11Or it's a contract written by the two people
00:09:14that claim to love each other
00:09:15more than the other 8 billion options in the world.
00:09:18Because what is a prenup?
00:09:19A prenup's a contract.
00:09:21What is it a contract of?
00:09:22It's a contract of, if this marriage ends,
00:09:25'cause every marriage ends,
00:09:26it either ends in death or divorce.
00:09:28So technically, like when someone gets married,
00:09:31really what you want to say is I hope this ends in death.
00:09:33It's weird like that,
00:09:35but I really hope your marriage ends in death.
00:09:37Because every marriage ends, it ends in death or divorce.
00:09:40So if your marriage ends in something other than death,
00:09:43if you don't want to talk about divorce, great.
00:09:45If our marriage ends in something other than death,
00:09:48then what will be the rule set that governs
00:09:53how we divide our assets, what we owe each other?
00:09:56What will that be?
00:09:58So every marriage has that.
00:10:00It's either done by the government
00:10:03or it's done by the two people.
00:10:04- What do you mean when you say done by the government?
00:10:06- Well, the government creates laws
00:10:08like the domestic relations law, the Family Court Act.
00:10:10Like every state, every country has its own laws
00:10:13that govern the dissolution of a marriage.
00:10:16Just like they have laws that govern in test to see
00:10:18if someone dies without a will.
00:10:19Just like they have laws that govern criminal,
00:10:21like what is criminal conduct and what isn't.
00:10:23So we don't realize or think about the fact
00:10:27that when you marry someone,
00:10:29you are doing the most legally significant thing
00:10:31you will ever do other than dying.
00:10:33It is the most legally significant.
00:10:35It has wide range effects on your property ownership,
00:10:39your participation in the title system,
00:10:41your rights and obligations when it comes to spousal support
00:10:44or child support, your inheritance rights.
00:10:46I mean, it has massive repercussions.
00:10:48By the way, you don't even get a pamphlet
00:10:50when you get married.
00:10:51Like nothing, not even a brochure that says,
00:10:53by the way, here's all of the things
00:10:55that just happened legally
00:10:56when you entered into this contract with us,
00:10:59meaning you and this person and the state.
00:11:02Because it's really the state.
00:11:03Like you're meeting someone and saying fundamentally,
00:11:07you're my favorite person.
00:11:09Out of 8 billion people, you're my favorite person.
00:11:11You're the one I like the most.
00:11:13You're the one I want to be with and spend time with
00:11:15and hold hands with.
00:11:16And when the bad things are happening,
00:11:17we'll support each other.
00:11:18And when good things are there, we'll share it together.
00:11:20And you're my favorite person.
00:11:22And this is going so well.
00:11:25Let's get the government involved.
00:11:27Which to me--
00:11:28- The threesome with the government.
00:11:29- Which if you've ever been to the DMV,
00:11:32like I've never gone into the DMV and gone like,
00:11:35oh yeah, yeah, these people should be in charge of everything.
00:11:37This is fucking great.
00:11:38- This should be the third party at the most.
00:11:39- This is the best and brightest the world has to offer
00:11:42in this building.
00:11:43Like, so let's let them make the rule set.
00:11:46- You mentioned states there.
00:11:47What's the weirdest state for divorce law?
00:11:53- I mean, every state has its own wacky proclivities.
00:11:57And each of them have their own.
00:11:58And see the things that would be weird to me
00:12:01are evidentiary rules.
00:12:03Like there's rules in New York state
00:12:04that if a person is a Department of Social Services
00:12:07or Child Protective Services worker,
00:12:10that the concept of hearsay doesn't apply to them.
00:12:14So hearsay meaning, hearsay is defined as a statement
00:12:17made by someone other than the declarant
00:12:20while testifying at trial.
00:12:21And it's offered into evidence to prove
00:12:23the truth of the matter asserted.
00:12:24That's the Black's Law Dictionary definition.
00:12:26But basically what it means is you get on the stand
00:12:28and say what someone else said to you for the truth of it.
00:12:31So like, if we're trying to prove that this can is white,
00:12:35you get on the stand and say, well, I was talking to Brian
00:12:39and he said that the can Jim was holding is white, okay?
00:12:42So I can't now confront Brian.
00:12:45And so you're testifying to what someone else told you
00:12:48for the truth of the matter asserted.
00:12:50There's a reason why we call it the right for confrontation.
00:12:53In every jurisdiction, you're allowed to confront,
00:12:56'cause otherwise trials would be like,
00:12:57I talked to this guy who talked to this girl
00:12:59who once said Brian cheated on his wife.
00:13:01And that's suddenly evidence to prove
00:13:02that Brian cheated on his wife.
00:13:04So that is a really sacred rule in the legal system.
00:13:07But in New York, we have this rule that says
00:13:09that if a Child Protective Services worker
00:13:11has done an investigation, anything they say,
00:13:15quoting people is not hearsay.
00:13:18So they can come in and say,
00:13:19well, I talked to the teacher who said
00:13:20that she heard from someone that, you know,
00:13:22the children were being beaten.
00:13:23And that's evidence as if that person got in
00:13:26and you can never cross-examine it
00:13:27because it's third party.
00:13:29So every jurisdiction has some weird ass rule like that.
00:13:33There's plenty of states that have weird rules,
00:13:36like weird laws on the books.
00:13:38Like there's plenty of jurisdictions in the United States
00:13:42where consensual sodomy remains a crime.
00:13:46So sodomy meaning like oral sex,
00:13:48like sex other than penetrative,
00:13:50penile, vaginal sex is a crime.
00:13:53- So including gay sex.
00:13:55- Including gay sex, but also heterosexual blow jobs
00:13:58are illegal in some jurisdictions.
00:13:59- Hand jobs?
00:14:01- Hand jobs would be consensual sodomy, yes.
00:14:03'Cause it would be-
00:14:04- Hand jobs.
00:14:05- A hand job.
00:14:06Well, first of all, hand jobs,
00:14:06I mean, hand jobs are outdated technology.
00:14:08It's like a beta max.
00:14:09Like who even does that anymore?
00:14:10- I disagree.
00:14:11I think that bringing back hand jobs and fingering is a-
00:14:14- Fingering, I think you could go,
00:14:16you could make a solid argument, but hand jobs, really?
00:14:18Why do you need a third party for that?
00:14:20It feels like you could do that yourself.
00:14:22What am I, can you grown up, just use your mouth?
00:14:25How does that happen? - Calorie conservation.
00:14:26I didn't, look, I think-
00:14:27- Wow.
00:14:28This is a hot debate.
00:14:29I did not expect we were gonna have this one, but okay.
00:14:31- I think a great question that everybody should ask
00:14:33is when was the last time you just got a hand job
00:14:35or just got fingered?
00:14:36Like that is, that I think tells you a lot
00:14:40about what's going on in your life.
00:14:41There is a cornucopia.
00:14:41- I gotta make plans this weekend.
00:14:43- There is a cornucopia of different things
00:14:45that you could do. - There is, yeah.
00:14:46- And look at how much you're missing in it.
00:14:47You know what, there's a lot of things that like,
00:14:50I loved them when I was younger
00:14:52and I haven't had them in a while.
00:14:53- Papa John's.
00:14:54How long has it been since you went to a Papa John's?
00:14:56- Probably same night I had a hand job.
00:14:57(laughing)
00:14:59I mean, the Papa John's hand job combo.
00:15:01When you got 20 bucks in your pocket,
00:15:03that's about as good as it gets.
00:15:05That's, wow.
00:15:06You know what, I'm gonna get a Papa John's and a hand job.
00:15:09That is well done.
00:15:10- It is Valentine's Day.
00:15:11Think about how many people this evening are thinking,
00:15:13darling, we did have this lovely steakhouse booked
00:15:16and you had the lingerie, I'm really thinking about
00:15:18a reluctant look away hand job and a slice of pizza.
00:15:21- I mean, you know what, but that's a throwback jam.
00:15:24You know what I mean?
00:15:25Like you put on Nelly Houghton here, I'm into it.
00:15:26So like go back to the '90s,
00:15:29go back earlier than that. - Sodomy.
00:15:31- Consensual sodomy.
00:15:32All right, there it is, yeah.
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00:16:45Going back to prenups, is there a correlation
00:16:49between prenups and divorce likelihood?
00:16:52So, there's no way to track that, because--
00:16:54Select an effect.
00:16:55Well, yeah, well, and also because
00:16:58prenups aren't filed anywhere.
00:16:59So, a prenup is a contract.
00:17:01It's usually, you have a copy of it in your safe,
00:17:04your spouse has it in their safe,
00:17:05and the two lawyers have it in their safe.
00:17:07And people lie all the time about having prenups,
00:17:09particularly celebrities, because I have seen celebrities
00:17:13being interviewed about their forthcoming wedding,
00:17:15and asked explicitly, "Did you guys decide to do a prenup?"
00:17:19And they go, "No, absolutely not."
00:17:20And I'm like, "It's in my safe.
00:17:22They signed it at my conference room table.
00:17:24That's absolute bullshit."
00:17:26But attorney-client privilege protects it.
00:17:29It's only going to be filed somewhere if you divorce,
00:17:32and matrimonial files are sealed files,
00:17:34so the public can't just view them.
00:17:36So, if you've ever seen any people's divorce papers,
00:17:38it's because somebody leaked them.
00:17:39So, prenups, what I will tell you is,
00:17:42I have a theory, and it's kind of unfalsifiable,
00:17:45but the theory is,
00:17:46'cause I've been a divorce lawyer for 25 years,
00:17:48I've probably done,
00:17:50I've done hundreds, if not thousands now, of prenups.
00:17:54And usually a prenup is a very friendly transaction,
00:17:56because it's a negotiation,
00:17:58but it's not the kind of hardcore negotiation you have
00:18:00at the end of a marriage.
00:18:02It's much more, these are two people who like each other,
00:18:04they have an abundance of optimism.
00:18:05Theoretically, you're catching them in a moment
00:18:07where they like each other a whole lot,
00:18:09'cause they're about to get married.
00:18:10So, at the end of the transaction,
00:18:12they still feel really good about you.
00:18:14And it's not an expensive thing.
00:18:15You don't burn a lot of money doing a prenup.
00:18:16Like the most expensive prenup I think I've ever done
00:18:19was probably 10, $15,000,
00:18:20which the retainer to start a divorce is 25 to $50,000.
00:18:25So, it's not a big profit thing for lawyers.
00:18:29And what I will say is, very few,
00:18:33of the hundreds, if not thousands of prenups I've done,
00:18:36I think I've only done three divorces
00:18:38for someone who I did a prenup for.
00:18:40So, that would beg the question,
00:18:43are they going to a different lawyer
00:18:46for the prenup divorce, right?
00:18:48They did their prenup with me,
00:18:50but they're gonna go to someone else for the divorce.
00:18:52If that was something people did,
00:18:54I would have people coming to me getting divorces
00:18:57who had prenups done by someone else.
00:19:01That doesn't happen.
00:19:02So, this leads me to believe my theory,
00:19:05which is that people who get prenups
00:19:07usually don't get divorced.
00:19:08I think, and I actually think that makes sense to me
00:19:11because the level of open, vulnerable, brave conversation
00:19:16you have to have to negotiate
00:19:20and discuss the terms of a prenup,
00:19:23if you have that and you have that ability
00:19:25to say to your partner something
00:19:27that might upset them in the short term,
00:19:29but is important in the long term
00:19:31for both of you to feel safe,
00:19:33I think that that's a very useful skill
00:19:35and probably bodes well for the relationship.
00:19:37I see a lot of people that break up in the prenup process.
00:19:42- That was what I wanted to ask.
00:19:44So, let's say that someone wants a prenup with their partner.
00:19:47When do they broach it?
00:19:48Pre-engagement, straight after the Bachelorette party?
00:19:51How would you go about it?
00:19:52- Personally, I think third date.
00:19:54Like, I think, I'm not kidding.
00:19:56I think that there's plenty of ways
00:19:57to safely enter that discussion.
00:19:59Talk about celebrity that's getting married.
00:20:02I wonder if they have a prenup.
00:20:03Oh, Travis and Taylor, I wonder if they're having a prenup.
00:20:06Start getting the temperature of this person as to,
00:20:08well, I would never have a prenup.
00:20:09Or saying, oh, I'm sure they do.
00:20:11It's a smart, I mean, they're both smart business people.
00:20:12Why wouldn't they have a prenup?
00:20:14Like, start to get the feeling of what this person's,
00:20:17or are they just dead silent on it,
00:20:19which tells you something that's silence.
00:20:21So, that's phase one.
00:20:22Phase two is, as soon as you start talking,
00:20:24listen, what should you be talking about?
00:20:27Do you want to have kids?
00:20:28Do you not want to have kids?
00:20:29How do you feel?
00:20:30Are you a dog person, a cat person,
00:20:31or I don't like pets person?
00:20:33Where do you want to live geographically?
00:20:35How important is your family to you?
00:20:36When your family, your parents became elderly,
00:20:38would you want them to move in with us?
00:20:40These are the big life questions people should be asking
00:20:44when they're considering whether or not
00:20:46they want to marry somebody.
00:20:47So, I think a question like,
00:20:50hey, how do you feel about things like a prenup?
00:20:54How do you feel about how the state handles
00:20:58when people end their marriages?
00:20:59I think that's a useful dialogue to have.
00:21:02To me, you can't feel loved if you don't feel safe.
00:21:05I mean, genuinely loved if you don't feel safe.
00:21:08And I say that because I've represented countless victims
00:21:10of intimate partner abuse and domestic violence.
00:21:12And I say it because I've represented people
00:21:15who in their relationship felt like intimacy
00:21:17was going to get weaponized against them.
00:21:19And in fact, did get weaponized against them.
00:21:21And to really love someone well,
00:21:23I think you have to be incredibly vulnerable.
00:21:25I think you have to give yourself,
00:21:27you have to show this person your soft spots.
00:21:29Like there's no other way.
00:21:30I mean, it's part of what I think makes love so brave
00:21:33because it's only brave if you're scared
00:21:35and you do it anyway, you know?
00:21:37And I think that to love anything is insane
00:21:40because to love anything is to basically open yourself
00:21:44to the inevitability of losing it,
00:21:46whether it's a pet or whether it's another human being.
00:21:48Like you're basically saying, I'm going to let you hurt me.
00:21:51I'm going to lose you someday,
00:21:53but it's going to be worth it
00:21:54because I'm going to have this time with you.
00:21:56I'm going to have this connection with you.
00:21:58But I think that part of feeling love is feeling safe.
00:22:00And I think a prenup is about how do we both feel safe?
00:22:04If I'm wealthy and you're not,
00:22:06if I'm the Goldman Sachs partner
00:22:08and you're the beautiful yoga teacher who I've fallen for,
00:22:12there's a tremendous polarity there
00:22:13that's probably really beautiful.
00:22:15She's probably going to help him calm down
00:22:18and breathe and live life a little bit.
00:22:20And he's going to help her be a little more focused
00:22:22and help her be a little more serious.
00:22:24And maybe he has the resources to help her out.
00:22:26Like this is the tale as old as time.
00:22:28Like this is, you know,
00:22:29the nature of male and female couplings.
00:22:31So in that dynamic,
00:22:34I don't think there's anything wrong with him saying,
00:22:36hey, I want to feel like if we split up,
00:22:39you're not going to just literally come at me
00:22:41for every single thing you possibly can get.
00:22:44And she should be able to say, hey, if we split up,
00:22:48I want to feel like I'm not going to be so far behind
00:22:52in the race.
00:22:53Like, cause you know, you can't be running a marathon
00:22:55and at mile 10, take a half an hour break
00:22:57and then jump back in and never catch up
00:22:59with the people ahead of you.
00:23:00Like you've lost it.
00:23:01And we call that in the law
00:23:02diminished lifetime earning capacity.
00:23:03So there's, you know, I'm making choices
00:23:06where I can keep being a yoga teacher
00:23:08and not worry about the fact that,
00:23:09okay, I've got to like make money
00:23:10so I can buy a place someday or whatever it might be.
00:23:12So I'm going to trust you.
00:23:14So again, does that mean you're entitled
00:23:15to half of every single thing I have?
00:23:17Most people, if they're being honest would say,
00:23:20yeah, I don't know that I'm entitled to that,
00:23:22but I think I'm entitled to something.
00:23:24Or even if I'm not entitled to it,
00:23:26wouldn't you want me to feel like safe and loved, you know?
00:23:30And that's the time to have that conversation.
00:23:33Like the worst time to learn how to fight is in a fight.
00:23:37Like the worst time to learn what happened legally
00:23:41when you got married and what your rights
00:23:42and obligations are in the event of a divorce
00:23:44is in a consultation in my office
00:23:47when you're getting divorced.
00:23:48But that's when most people learn it.
00:23:50- What's the game plan for delivering
00:23:52a prenup proposal well?
00:23:54- I think what I'm pushing,
00:23:58and if there's something that I can say
00:24:00at the end of my life I did,
00:24:01I hope it's that I normalized prenups.
00:24:04And I hope that the phrase that really entered the lexicon
00:24:07is every marriage has a prenup.
00:24:10I think that is the best entry point
00:24:12is to essentially say all a prenup is is a rule set.
00:24:17And the rule set should be clear to anyone
00:24:19before they enter anything, right?
00:24:21Like I want to understand the rules
00:24:22before I get on the road I want to know
00:24:23what's the speed limit,
00:24:24what side of the road do we drive on?
00:24:26You know, before there's anything I do
00:24:28I like to have a little bit of information
00:24:30about what it is I'm about to do.
00:24:32I think the prenup conversation is a conversation
00:24:35about saying hey, I trust you, you trust me.
00:24:39We have an abundance of goodwill towards each other.
00:24:41Let's right now, while we're this crazy about each other,
00:24:45say how can we make each other feel safe?
00:24:48'Cause here's the thing, I have been in love
00:24:51and I think I have the self-awareness
00:24:56to say to a woman, you know,
00:25:00I want to protect you from people that hurt you
00:25:04even if that someone's me.
00:25:05Like there's a chance I'm going to hurt you.
00:25:09Like there's a chance I'm going to make you sad.
00:25:10There's a chance I'm going to disappoint you.
00:25:12There's a chance this isn't going to work out.
00:25:15Like I wish I knew no astronomy when stars appear,
00:25:18but like I've seen, I've lived too much life
00:25:20and seen too many people have their hearts broken
00:25:22and I've had my heart broken and I've broken someone's heart.
00:25:25So I know that's a possibility,
00:25:27but I love you enough to know
00:25:30that if I'm in a relationship with you,
00:25:31there's an assumption of risk
00:25:33and that is we might hurt each other.
00:25:35So if anyone would hurt you,
00:25:37I want to protect you including me.
00:25:39So what do you need to feel safe in this relationship?
00:25:41That to me feels like the entry point.
00:25:43- Are agreements for behaviors during the marriage
00:25:48becoming more common now?
00:25:50- They are, but the question of enforceability
00:25:52is very challenging.
00:25:53I mean, look, I love it.
00:25:55I love when people,
00:25:55I think people should have more open conversations
00:25:58about the nature of the economy of marriage.
00:26:01Like I get looked at funny when I refer to marriage
00:26:03as an economy, but--
00:26:04- Sounds a bit sort of sterile and--
00:26:06- But it doesn't have to.
00:26:08Like an economy is really any exchange of value.
00:26:11You know, it's a system that has an exchange of value
00:26:14within it.
00:26:14And so I think part of the reason why we've lost the plot
00:26:18a little bit in modern relationships
00:26:19is that we've stopped looking at them as an economy.
00:26:22Because to dare say, well, you bring warmth and comfort
00:26:26and I bring resources is like,
00:26:27well, I could bring warmth and comfort,
00:26:28well, I could bring resources.
00:26:30Okay, you're right.
00:26:31We can all be the exact same generic cog
00:26:33in the capitalist machine.
00:26:35We can all decide we want to be girl bosses or boss bosses
00:26:39or whatever we want to call it,
00:26:39or we can all stay home and change diapers.
00:26:42This is something we can all do.
00:26:43Great, is that what we want?
00:26:45Do we want a world where everyone's doing the same thing
00:26:47even if they don't like,
00:26:48I love to cook.
00:26:50And if she loves to cook, great,
00:26:53maybe we'll take turns cooking.
00:26:54But if I love to cook and she doesn't love to cook,
00:26:57why should it be, well, why should I do 100% of it?
00:27:00Because you like to fucking cook.
00:27:02So just cook, like, what is that about?
00:27:04It shouldn't have to be
00:27:05that we both have to do the exact same thing
00:27:07or else there's an inequality between us.
00:27:09I'm interested in equity in a relationship.
00:27:11Does either person feel they're being taken advantage of?
00:27:13Giving way too much consistently?
00:27:16Taking too little consistently?
00:27:18Because again, there's going to be times in any relationship
00:27:21where you're giving more or getting more.
00:27:23You know, you have family tragedies,
00:27:25you have things that happen,
00:27:26you have stress going on at work.
00:27:28You're going to be taking more in that moment.
00:27:30Is there a potential that if you litigate this in advance
00:27:34or put it down in black and white,
00:27:36that it reduces your ability to negotiate in the moment?
00:27:40I think so.
00:27:41Well, no, here's what I'll say.
00:27:42I think that it is-
00:27:43Do you understand what I'm saying?
00:27:44I do understand the question.
00:27:45I think that establishing a baseline is really important.
00:27:49And so establishing a baseline of look,
00:27:51here's what we're feeling and thinking right now.
00:27:53Throw a dart at the dartboard.
00:27:54That's kind of in the region of what we're aiming for.
00:27:57I think there are two fundamental
00:28:00and somewhat contradictory errors
00:28:02that people make when they're getting married
00:28:04or cohabitating for the first time.
00:28:06And they're going to sound like a contradiction,
00:28:07but I don't think they are.
00:28:08They think that this is going to change the person.
00:28:11You know, he drinks too much now,
00:28:12but like once we get married, he'll settle-
00:28:14You're in love with the potential.
00:28:15Right, and that somehow marriage will change
00:28:18or cohabitation will change things.
00:28:19You know, he's got a wandering eye now,
00:28:21but once we move in together, you know, she runs around,
00:28:24she's a bit of a party girl, but you know what?
00:28:25Once we get married, she'll settle down.
00:28:27So thinking that marriage will change this person
00:28:29is a mistake.
00:28:31Similarly, thinking marriage will prevent this person
00:28:33from changing is also a mistake.
00:28:35That marriage is going to build walls around this thing
00:28:39and it's going to stay this wonderful.
00:28:41Because like, think about it, there's you, there's me,
00:28:43and then there's we, right?
00:28:45And you were you and I was me.
00:28:48And then we met each other and all of a sudden we're like,
00:28:49man, we got this thing together.
00:28:51And then the we is like this warm, wonderful, lovely place.
00:28:54We've all been there.
00:28:55And it actually gets so big,
00:28:57it threatens to eat the you and the me completely,
00:28:59which is kind of a shame.
00:29:00Because now like the thing we fell in love with,
00:29:03the you and the me,
00:29:04like it's been subsumed entirely by this creature of we.
00:29:08So I think that's an unfortunate thing.
00:29:10We should probably be on the lookout to prevent happening.
00:29:13But if you think about like what brings people together
00:29:16is once they're together, now they go,
00:29:18okay, well, this is so good.
00:29:20I have to like build something around it.
00:29:22And maybe if I wear this ring, you know, that'll be,
00:29:25and it's like, okay, maybe if you like wear, you know,
00:29:27like this crystal, it'll keep you protected.
00:29:30Like it's not real.
00:29:31Like when my kids were little, I would take,
00:29:34rather than explain to them at 10 o'clock at night
00:29:36that monsters don't exist.
00:29:38I would go, okay, hold on.
00:29:40And I'd go get some powder from the thing.
00:29:42Okay, this is anti-monster powder.
00:29:44And now no monsters can enter your room.
00:29:45And they'd be like, oh, thank God.
00:29:46And they'd go to sleep.
00:29:48And so, but again, like that's a very human thing.
00:29:52Like, okay, this is all,
00:29:53what do you think a wedding ring is,
00:29:54but anti-monster powder.
00:29:55That's all it is.
00:29:56- Story myth.
00:29:58- Yeah.
00:29:59- Yeah, that's a...
00:30:00- So I think that we think that things,
00:30:03if we can bolster it the right way,
00:30:05that this thing will stay safe.
00:30:07And it won't, it'll change.
00:30:09But all I'm suggesting is,
00:30:11if you talk about baselines,
00:30:14now you know, hey, we were having sex twice a day,
00:30:19six days a week, early days.
00:30:22That's what you do.
00:30:22I get it, okay.
00:30:24You probably wouldn't get much done in life
00:30:26if that stayed the same 10 years in.
00:30:27And it might be exhausting.
00:30:28It sounds like a lot of cardio.
00:30:30So what you might say, hand job could be the answer.
00:30:33God, Papa John's in a hand job.
00:30:35All right, I'm on it.
00:30:37Happy Valentine's Day.
00:30:38So I think when you think about it that way
00:30:41and what you start to see is,
00:30:42okay, we've moved off the baseline.
00:30:44Now the question is, that's not necessarily bad.
00:30:48It's just, we've noticed it.
00:30:50Did we notice this?
00:30:51Okay, good, we've noticed it, great.
00:30:53Do we have to talk about it?
00:30:54Is there anything to talk about?
00:30:55No? Okay, great.
00:30:56Like is it, 'cause maybe it's our hormones have shifted
00:30:58or maybe, you know, we're just at a different place
00:31:00or maybe we got a baby now.
00:31:02But if one of us feels like, yeah, I kind of missed that
00:31:05or I feel things are a little different, great.
00:31:07Now we're having a conversation
00:31:09'cause we've measured our baseline.
00:31:10Again, like measure what matters.
00:31:11I think that that's a smart thing to do.
00:31:13- We'll get back to talking in just one second.
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00:32:14More and more I'm seeing people
00:32:16have open and transparent conversations
00:32:18at the beginning of a relationship about stuff like this.
00:32:20How do you feel about dogs?
00:32:22How would you raise the children at home for them?
00:32:24Would you put them in K through 12?
00:32:26How do you feel about prenups?
00:32:27How, what's your timeline for children?
00:32:29How many?
00:32:30And so on and so forth.
00:32:31And I think-
00:32:32- It's bad for my business model.
00:32:33- It sounds unromantic in some regards.
00:32:37It sounds slightly transactional, slightly sterile,
00:32:42a little bit like in a-
00:32:43- It's unromantic about that.
00:32:45I have to say when you say that,
00:32:47I think there is something incredibly romantic.
00:32:49- Well, me too, me too.
00:32:51But that's because you're showing up and you're saying,
00:32:53"Hey, look, this is what my vision of the future looks like."
00:32:57- Right.
00:32:58- I'm wondering whether or not
00:32:59you're going to be the dance partner to bring this to life.
00:33:03And if you're not, that's gonna be a shame,
00:33:05but this is the thing that I really want.
00:33:07And maybe you're gonna teach me some things about myself
00:33:09that I don't know, that I didn't know that I wanted.
00:33:11That's wonderful. - Right, right.
00:33:13- First off, and I really love what you said,
00:33:15which is if you're the sort of people
00:33:18who can talk about these things in a transparent way,
00:33:21the fact that you can have the conversation
00:33:22is maybe as valuable
00:33:25as the outcome of the conversation itself.
00:33:27- Absolutely.
00:33:28- You being able to have this sort of transparent, open,
00:33:31egoless, kind of shameful, vulnerable conversation.
00:33:35Hey, this is what my inner world looks like.
00:33:37I really like quiet mornings.
00:33:40And if I've noticed that sometimes you kind of,
00:33:44you're like real up and about on a morning.
00:33:45You like to play music and sing and dance and stuff.
00:33:47I find that kind of difficult to deal with.
00:33:49And you know, it happened on the first night
00:33:50that we stayed over together.
00:33:51And I'm just, is that an every night that,
00:33:54or like, were you just so excited for me?
00:33:55And I don't want to say,
00:33:56but maybe I'll be moving in that direction.
00:33:58But look, this is my set point.
00:33:59This is where we're starting off at.
00:34:01And there's this wonderful passage.
00:34:02I want you to read you this idea from Visakhan Verasamy.
00:34:05It's called "The Divorce Mystery."
00:34:08Why do so many people divorce someone
00:34:10they thought was their favorite person?
00:34:11It's not really a mystery.
00:34:13It's mostly because good times are a poor predictor
00:34:16of how you'll handle bad times.
00:34:18And handling bad times is a much more important contributor
00:34:22to the success of a marriage.
00:34:23But as a species, as a culture,
00:34:25we have not truly internalized this.
00:34:27It's the lows, not the highs
00:34:29that make or break a relationship.
00:34:30A painful lesson over the last 20 years of relationships
00:34:33is that in the medium run,
00:34:34it's exciting to feel hyped about people
00:34:37who seem to relate strongly in specific ways.
00:34:39But in the long run,
00:34:40it's really how you handle misunderstandings,
00:34:42conflict, confusion, disagreements that go the distance.
00:34:46What do you think of that?
00:34:47- I think it's absolutely true.
00:34:48I mean, I think Wittgenstein said
00:34:50that to know a thing, know its limits.
00:34:52When you push it to its, beyond its tolerance
00:34:54as its nature emerges.
00:34:55I think that, I think we have to see,
00:34:58it's the same reason why I always thought those shows
00:35:00like "The Bachelor" were hilarious
00:35:01or "Love Island" or any of them.
00:35:02I think they're funny because, you know,
00:35:05yeah, we get along really well in paradise.
00:35:08We get along really well
00:35:09when someone has put together a beautiful date for us
00:35:12with incredible food and lovely time.
00:35:14Like of course, yeah.
00:35:15How are we going to feel when we're home
00:35:17and one of us has a head cold and is in a bad mood?
00:35:19Like how is that going to look?
00:35:22Because look, you're going to see your partner
00:35:25without makeup and without Spanx most of the time.
00:35:28And when we're dating, we have Spanx on our personality.
00:35:32Like everything is sort of a compressed,
00:35:34very, you know, stylized version of things.
00:35:37And so I think there's tremendous value
00:35:39in seeing how does the organism handle stress?
00:35:44What do, when we're both stressed, what does that look like?
00:35:49But I also think that can be very romantic
00:35:52because again, for me, and I talked about this
00:35:55on Andrew's show, you know, I think,
00:35:59I don't think our greatest fear
00:36:02is that we won't find someone to love.
00:36:04I think our greatest fear is that we are not worthy of love,
00:36:08that we believe that we're not worthy of love.
00:36:11I think that I know for me, I have in my life felt
00:36:16if you say you love me, like you say you're my friend,
00:36:24but if you saw the ugliness in me,
00:36:27if you could hear the thoughts in my head,
00:36:30the weakness in me, all the parts of myself,
00:36:33the shit I need to work on,
00:36:36because I'm presenting to the world
00:36:37the best version of myself as often as I can.
00:36:41And I really believe, like I'm not religious,
00:36:44but if there was a devil,
00:36:46I believe that the devil's principle function
00:36:48would be to convince us that we are so bestial
00:36:51that God couldn't possibly love us.
00:36:53Because I think our realest fear
00:36:55is that we're not worthy of love because we're awful,
00:36:58because we're in here and we hear all the things
00:37:00we think and feel and all the weakness in us.
00:37:03And there is something about the thought
00:37:07of someone seeing all of that and saying,
00:37:12"Oh no, I love you."
00:37:14Like, I love all of that.
00:37:15- Or maybe I even love you more because of it.
00:37:17- Right, I love you all the more because you're so human,
00:37:19you're so real.
00:37:20And by the way, I have all of this in me too.
00:37:24And so maybe we'll see each other's blind spots
00:37:28because I can't learn everything I need to know
00:37:30about myself from myself.
00:37:32So like, I need people to see my blind spots.
00:37:35So there's some things to me
00:37:38about in this increasingly performative social media culture
00:37:42that we're living in,
00:37:43we're encouraged all the time
00:37:45to present the best version of ourselves
00:37:47and sort of put our greatest hits out there
00:37:49while everyone else is living their gag reel.
00:37:52And then when we're loved, like, do you feel that love?
00:37:56Really, do you feel it?
00:37:58Or do you just go, "Oh yeah, they bought it.
00:37:59"They bought the character that I'm selling to them."
00:38:01So there's something about conversations
00:38:04where you have to say, look, this is what I'm scared of.
00:38:07Like, this is what scares the shit out of me.
00:38:10Like, this is the part of me I don't understand.
00:38:12This is, I react this way when this happens,
00:38:15I don't know why.
00:38:16This turns me on, am I gross for that?
00:38:20Like, why does that turn me on?
00:38:22Like, I don't, you know, like all the,
00:38:23and to be able to say that and have the other person go,
00:38:26oh, I get that, like, I got my stuff like that too.
00:38:29Maybe not the exact same stuff,
00:38:30but I got my stuff like that too.
00:38:32And to have that person see all of that and love you anyway,
00:38:35to me, that's love worth having.
00:38:37That's love worth signing on for.
00:38:39- How should people argue well
00:38:41if the lows, not the highs,
00:38:42determine the success of a relationship?
00:38:45What does good disagreement and argument look like?
00:38:48- I think good disagreement, I argue for a living.
00:38:51So I would say that good disagreement is substantive.
00:38:54It gets to the merit of the position.
00:38:56It gets to the substance of what we're talking about.
00:38:59You know, it's not about the pasta.
00:39:02It's not about the dirty dish in the sink.
00:39:04It's about what the dirty dish in the sink represents,
00:39:06which is you're not really paying attention to my feelings.
00:39:09You know that I like things to be orderly
00:39:12and you weren't willing to take a few minutes to do this thing.
00:39:15So I would like to get to the substance of the argument.
00:39:18I think the most important thing in romantic relationships
00:39:20and marriages is do not ever weaponize intimacy.
00:39:25Like intimacy, not meaning sexual intimacy.
00:39:29Intimacy by definition is the ability
00:39:32to be completely yourself with another person.
00:39:34So that's what we were just talking about.
00:39:35The sense of like showing this person
00:39:37all your soft targets, you know.
00:39:39And if you then use those to hurt the other person
00:39:44when they've upset you,
00:39:47or as leverage when you want them to do something,
00:39:50that's a villainous thing to do.
00:39:52Because A, you can't take that back.
00:39:55And B, that person has shown you that part of themselves.
00:39:59Like every single couple,
00:40:01any person who's listening to this, who's in a couple,
00:40:05there is a sentence that you know you could say
00:40:08to your partner that would have them shriveled up
00:40:12in a ball crying.
00:40:13- Give me some examples of this weaponizing intimacy.
00:40:16- That you know that a person is terrified of the fact
00:40:19that they're becoming like their mother or their father.
00:40:22Or that they're, I mean, you know,
00:40:24the film A Marriage Story, there's actually a great scene.
00:40:26It was Adam Driver and Scarlett Johansson.
00:40:29It should have been called a divorce story.
00:40:30But there's an amazing Academy Award level scene
00:40:34where they're having this awful fight
00:40:36and they just do that.
00:40:38They just unload in like weaponized intimacy.
00:40:43He's like, you're exactly like your mother.
00:40:46You claim you hate her,
00:40:47but you bring everyone down in all the same ways.
00:40:50And they just run and they're saying things
00:40:53that you can never unsay, you know.
00:40:55But they're the things that like you only would know
00:40:59if this person opened themselves to you
00:41:01the way that you have to,
00:41:02to have a deep connection to someone.
00:41:04Or if you just had a ringside seat to their most vulnerable,
00:41:07sad moments.
00:41:08And so that kind of thing,
00:41:12I don't think you can ever really recover.
00:41:14- So don't do that.
00:41:15- Don't engage in weaponized intimacy.
00:41:17The other thing I would say is also, again,
00:41:20the worst time to learn how to fight
00:41:21is when you're in a fight.
00:41:22So just, I think when you're in a relationship
00:41:25or starting a relationship
00:41:26or getting serious enough in a relationship
00:41:28that now you're saying your boyfriend, girlfriend,
00:41:29or wherever it might be,
00:41:31I don't think there's anything wrong with saying,
00:41:32look, we're definitely going to get in an argument someday.
00:41:35Like we're going to get in a fight someday.
00:41:36It's probably going to be my fault.
00:41:38I'm going to say something dumb.
00:41:38I say dumb shit all the time.
00:41:40So I apologize in advance,
00:41:41but I'm going to say something.
00:41:42It's going to upset you.
00:41:42We're going to get in an argument.
00:41:44How do you like to argue?
00:41:46Like, do you need a minute?
00:41:48Like, should I give you a minute so you can calm down?
00:41:50- Go on a hug.
00:41:51- Right, should I never say calm down?
00:41:53Should I change the subject and be silly
00:41:55and pick you up and hug you and spin you around?
00:41:58Should I say something?
00:41:59Should we have a code word that it's like,
00:42:01hey, let's take a break because this is going wrong.
00:42:03And then we'll meet back in 10 minutes.
00:42:06Or are you the like,
00:42:07we've got to get this worked out tonight
00:42:08because I can't go to bed angry
00:42:09and we have to figure this out
00:42:10because it's going to ruminate and get really bad.
00:42:12Like whatever it is,
00:42:13let's just talk about what that should look like
00:42:15and let's have some way to step back from it.
00:42:19- Can I give you a perspective from attachment theory
00:42:22and some evolutionary science that might be useful here?
00:42:24So there's a book called Your Brain Unloved by Stan Tadkin.
00:42:27It's in my second reading list.
00:42:28And he explains how in couples that are having arguments,
00:42:33you want to deal with the argument as quickly as possible
00:42:40and ideally within three minutes.
00:42:42So you're sat at a dinner table
00:42:43and your partner says something that's a bit dismissive
00:42:46or mocking and you feel like,
00:42:48oh, that made me feel a bit put out.
00:42:50I mean, they're my friends.
00:42:51These are my friends.
00:42:52And you just said something you want as quickly as possible
00:42:56from that to say, honey, can we just have a quick,
00:42:59and you need to agree this in advance.
00:43:02You don't need to fix the argument.
00:43:04You don't need to sort it,
00:43:05but you need to deal with it to bring the temperature down.
00:43:07And the reason that he gives for this
00:43:09is that the way that the human attachment system
00:43:12creates memories,
00:43:14if you don't deal with it sufficiently quickly,
00:43:16you risk moving it from short-term memory
00:43:18into long-term memory.
00:43:19When it moves into long-term memory,
00:43:20he describes it as you begin to see your partner
00:43:23as a predator and it's the same brain structures
00:43:26that are activated.
00:43:27And that is very perilous.
00:43:30That's where that sort of stomach twisting,
00:43:33like you've got a wet rag that's being pulsed
00:43:35inside of your chest.
00:43:37Oh, oh, that's that, that's that.
00:43:39- Very powerful.
00:43:41The danger I would say in response to that though,
00:43:44there's a chapter in my book called Hit Send Now.
00:43:46And it describes a way of approaching this kind of a thing.
00:43:50But it would not do it that quickly
00:43:52because here's the evolutionary biology basis of that,
00:43:56I think is a strong one.
00:43:57But I would also push back and say
00:44:00that even if you in advance agree,
00:44:04when that happens, we're gonna have a code word
00:44:06or something we can say that means we got to go out
00:44:08and talk about this for a minute
00:44:09so it doesn't turn into long-term memory.
00:44:12The act of verbal engagement on that
00:44:15is going to, 'cause I argue for a living,
00:44:18I like to think a lot about how will people react
00:44:20to what is being said.
00:44:21And I think you're setting it up
00:44:23for a defensive reaction in your partner.
00:44:25Now look, if in advance you sufficiently have
00:44:27enough goodwill between the two of you that you agree,
00:44:29anything I say, we're gonna really try
00:44:31not to hear it defensively because we have this,
00:44:34right, but that's an aspirational goal.
00:44:36And it's hard when--
00:44:37- In the moment, someone's just said,
00:44:39I didn't even mean it.
00:44:39What do you mean?
00:44:40I was just making a joke.
00:44:41- And we've got friends in the other room.
00:44:42Like we can't spend a minute, you know, too long doing this.
00:44:44Hit Send Now, what I talk about is send an email.
00:44:49I know that sounds impersonal,
00:44:50but the thing about sending an email is I can be thoughtful
00:44:52in the way that I put it together.
00:44:54And there will be an understanding between us
00:44:56that if the subject heading is hitting Send Now,
00:44:59that this is one of those emails that I just wanna say this.
00:45:01You don't have to respond immediately.
00:45:03I want you to just, so again, in your partner reading it,
00:45:07they don't have to immediately engage
00:45:09like they would in a verbal discussion.
00:45:11So this is a feeling of, okay, I want you to digest this.
00:45:14I'm gonna have written it, which means I'm going
00:45:15to have been careful about how I wrote it and rewrote it
00:45:18and paid attention to what I was saying.
00:45:20And now you're gonna hear it and read it and digest it.
00:45:24And because I think the value of it
00:45:25is it prevents these little things
00:45:27from turning into much, much larger things.
00:45:30- The principle is the same.
00:45:31- Yeah, the principle is the same.
00:45:32The speed is the problem because I find that what happens
00:45:37is people get so wildly defensive that, you know,
00:45:41and I see this all the time with the, well, you know,
00:45:43we're not having sex as much as we used to.
00:45:45Okay, what is that gonna go?
00:45:47Well, you're not home as much.
00:45:48Well, I'm not home 'cause I'm working.
00:45:49Well, I'm working 'cause you spend so damn much money.
00:45:51Well, I spend so much money 'cause you're never around.
00:45:53And now it's like the truth's at the bottom
00:45:54of a bottomless pit and we're all just getting no closer.
00:45:57- It's very hard to pick that needle off the record as well
00:46:00once it begins spinning.
00:46:01- Well, and there are ways to, look,
00:46:03I think a lot as a trial lawyer about how do I tell,
00:46:05it's full-contact storytelling what I do for a living.
00:46:08So when I think about what's the way to say this,
00:46:11think of the difference if your partner says,
00:46:13why aren't we having sex as much as we used to?
00:46:16Or man, it sucks we're not having sex as much as we used to.
00:46:19And your partner saying,
00:46:21God, you know what I was thinking about yesterday?
00:46:23I drove past that restaurant,
00:46:25remember we went out to that restaurant
00:46:26when we were first dating
00:46:27and then we went back to my apartment
00:46:29and we literally stayed in bed for a day and a half.
00:46:32That was so much for, what a God,
00:46:33I think about that sometimes even now.
00:46:36I love when we're that physically close.
00:46:37Okay, now I have primed the pump.
00:46:40Like now I have reminded you
00:46:42of when we were deeply physically connected.
00:46:45I have brought you back to that place.
00:46:47I've praised you for, God, remember how good that was?
00:46:50Remember how much, boy, I still love that about you.
00:46:53I love that feeling of when we're physically connected.
00:46:56Now, if I say, you know,
00:46:59I know I've been running around a lot lately and busy at work
00:47:01but we got to really make some time
00:47:02to like just spend some time rolling around in bed together
00:47:05'cause I still think you're just the hottest thing
00:47:07in the world.
00:47:08Okay, that is going to be perceived completely differently
00:47:11than why aren't we having sex like we used to.
00:47:13You know, you haven't given me a blow job in it.
00:47:14You haven't given me a hand job in ages.
00:47:16- When was the last time we went to Papa John's?
00:47:17- Yeah, for Papa John's for a hand job.
00:47:19This is, maybe a suit by Papa John's for this one.
00:47:22- What, I mean, that's so great.
00:47:23And to think as well,
00:47:25one of the best questions that you can ask any couple,
00:47:28how did you meet? - How'd you meet?
00:47:30- How'd you meet? Tell me how you met.
00:47:31Tell me what the first date was like.
00:47:33- And you can even have a couple
00:47:34that like they're at the dinner table with you guys
00:47:36and you can tell they had a fight on the way over.
00:47:38Like they got that weird tension.
00:47:40And if you do the, so how'd you guys meet?
00:47:43Within five minutes,
00:47:44there's a softness that hits both of them
00:47:46because it just puts them back to who they were,
00:47:47who they were to each other.
00:47:49When they were interested in interesting.
00:47:51- What are the important things
00:47:53that you think people should do
00:47:54at the start of a relationship to set it up for success?
00:47:57- I mean, my answer to almost everything is just talking.
00:48:00I just think, I think the more that you can talk about,
00:48:05I think when you can talk about
00:48:08how you're talking about things,
00:48:10I think that when you can like
00:48:13almost have a meta commentary happening of like,
00:48:16this is so weird, isn't it? It's scary.
00:48:18Oh, isn't this interesting what we're doing right now?
00:48:20Like really being able to talk about it
00:48:22almost in a detached fashion and narrative fashion.
00:48:25I think there's a lot of value in that.
00:48:27I think there's a lot of value in talking about
00:48:32like formative experiences that this person has had.
00:48:36And I think there are a lot of fun games
00:48:38that can be played around that.
00:48:40You know, there was an article some years ago,
00:48:42I forget who authored it,
00:48:44but it was about like 30 questions
00:48:46that can make two people fall in love.
00:48:48- Yeah, and it gets progressively more intense over time.
00:48:50Many of them are in the questions
00:48:52at chriswellx.com/valentines.
00:48:54- There you go.
00:48:55So I would say that those kinds of entry points,
00:48:57there's a lot.
00:48:58There's a card game now called Tails,
00:49:00which is very interesting.
00:49:02Steve from Diary of CEO has a great,
00:49:05you know, the Diary of CEO questions.
00:49:07Like there's a lot of really great like supplemental tools.
00:49:11That is a fun game.
00:49:13Like that game of like, you're a mystery to me.
00:49:15I'm a mystery to you in some ways.
00:49:17We've just started this relationship.
00:49:19We know we like the look of each other.
00:49:21We know we like some things about each other.
00:49:22There's an energy and electricity between us.
00:49:25So let's start playing in the world of ideas a little bit.
00:49:27Let's start playing in progressively showing,
00:49:31because look, what is dating,
00:49:34but progressively showing more of yourself to another person?
00:49:37And what have we lost in sort of hookup culture?
00:49:41We've lost that progressive revelation, that teasing,
00:49:45that sort of playing of like,
00:49:46I'm going to show you a little
00:49:47and then I'll show you a little more
00:49:48and I'm going to give you a little
00:49:49and then I'll give you a little more.
00:49:51And there's this feeling, okay,
00:49:52and I'm going to earn a little
00:49:54and then I'm going to earn a little more
00:49:55and I'll be rewarded for my efforts
00:49:57by a little bit of sweetness from you.
00:49:59And that's a fun dance that people have been doing
00:50:02for a really long time.
00:50:03And we gave it up in exchange for,
00:50:06I'm not sure what we got out of that.
00:50:08- Roy Baumeister says courtship is the period
00:50:10during which a woman works out if she can do better.
00:50:13- Yeah.
00:50:14- Which I think is-
00:50:15- Yeah, but it also sparks something in men
00:50:20that I think we like.
00:50:21Something-
00:50:22- That drive, dude.
00:50:23- The challenge and drive of-
00:50:25- That drive to win, man.
00:50:26- Yeah, and I feel like we've couched that now
00:50:29as like a toxic masculinity, but I don't know.
00:50:32I feel like-
00:50:33- Go fuck yourself, dude.
00:50:34And I can tell you to go fuck yourself neurologically as well.
00:50:37The way that men bond is using something called vasopressin.
00:50:42You heard about this?
00:50:43- Yeah.
00:50:44- Okay, so here is a thing that I'm trying to achieve.
00:50:46This is why good boy points in the bedroom,
00:50:50when cleaning the kitchen, when picking the kids up,
00:50:54when dressing nicely, when telling him
00:50:56that he needs to shave on a weekend
00:50:57so he doesn't scratch your face.
00:50:59Good boy points will drive a man to do obscene things,
00:51:02especially from a beautiful, charming,
00:51:05beguiling woman that he's attached to.
00:51:08- Listen, I've trained Brazilian jiu-jitsu for 20 years.
00:51:10You think I like having sweaty balls in my face?
00:51:12No, but I get tapped 15 times, but I tap a guy once
00:51:16and it's enough for me to go, all right,
00:51:18I'm getting somewhere with this.
00:51:19- Not only that, but think about how much more it is
00:51:21when coach comes past who's got three stripes
00:51:23on his belt and goes-
00:51:23- Right, right, yeah.
00:51:25- Good.
00:51:25- Right, oh my God.
00:51:26- Oh!
00:51:27- Listen, I built a law firm and represented
00:51:30some of the wealthiest people in the world.
00:51:31When I got my brown belt, it was the most exciting,
00:51:35it was the proudest accomplishment of my life.
00:51:37The amount of hours and injuries that it took to get there,
00:51:4115 years worth of training to get there.
00:51:43So to me, there was something about that,
00:51:46that fight, that prize, that hunt.
00:51:48So that old school idea, and by the way,
00:51:51women loved, loved when there was this courtship piece
00:51:55and there was all of that.
00:51:56And again, men loved being held a little bit to a standard
00:52:00and having a sense of, and by the way,
00:52:01it solves this body count issue
00:52:03that everyone's so caught up in,
00:52:04because it turns into something that no, no,
00:52:06there has to be some gatekeeping
00:52:08and there has to be some sense of earning something.
00:52:11So I think there's tremendous value in that.
00:52:13And I think that if we were early in relationships
00:52:17to start really like progressively showing the other more,
00:52:21both physically and emotionally, right?
00:52:25And having maybe even that path coming up at the same time,
00:52:28like as I'm seeing more of you,
00:52:30like if I've seen you with your panties off
00:52:34and I don't know how many siblings you have,
00:52:37we're doing things out of order, as far as I'm concerned.
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00:53:50That's drinklmnt.com/modernwisdom.
00:53:54There's a fascinating series.
00:53:56So Roy Baumeister is now on Substack
00:54:00and is just so fascinated.
00:54:01He's writing a series on sexual novelty at the moment,
00:54:05and he's basically advocating that specifically for men,
00:54:07women need a different treatment.
00:54:08Maybe he'll give that at some point in future.
00:54:10Specifically for men, you need to titrate
00:54:12the dose of sexual novelty over as long of a duration
00:54:15as possible, and this is good for the men too.
00:54:18It's the same as not letting the kids
00:54:19have ice cream every night.
00:54:20This is from his last book,
00:54:21which came out about five years ago.
00:54:23Men will do what women demand of them in order to get laid.
00:54:25Women set the standards for sex and men meet them.
00:54:28Although this may be considered
00:54:29an unflattering characterization,
00:54:31we have found no evidence to contradict
00:54:33the basic general principle that men will do
00:54:34whatever is required in order to obtain sex,
00:54:37and perhaps not a great deal more.
00:54:39One of us characterized this in previous work as,
00:54:41if women would stop sleeping with jerks,
00:54:44men would stop being jerks.
00:54:46If, in order to obtain sex, men must become pillars
00:54:49of the community or lie or amass riches
00:54:51by fair means or foul or be romantic or funny,
00:54:54then men will do precisely that.
00:54:56Similarly, if men need to be broken, flaky,
00:54:59non-committal and inconsistent,
00:55:00then they will meet these standards appropriately.
00:55:02Women's make choices, modern romance culture
00:55:04and girl magazines are not at fault
00:55:06for emotionally unavailable behavior in men,
00:55:08but they are not totally unrelated to it either.
00:55:11- You know, I could not possibly agree with anything more.
00:55:16That approach would probably be very bad
00:55:18for my business model.
00:55:19And the truth is, I'm not a psychologist,
00:55:22I'm not a therapist, I'm not a researcher.
00:55:24I have facilitated the demise
00:55:26of thousands of unhappy marriages.
00:55:29People lie to their therapists,
00:55:30people lie on surveys, people lie in studies.
00:55:33They don't lie to their divorce lawyer.
00:55:35They don't, because there's no reason to.
00:55:37You have attorney-client privilege attached
00:55:38and I have to really know everything to do a good job.
00:55:40- On that, surely people want to put themselves across
00:55:42in the best light.
00:55:43- Well, they lie to themselves and then they lie to me
00:55:47because they're lying to themselves.
00:55:48But because I see so much data on this person,
00:55:53I see their credit card receipts, their text messages,
00:55:55like I really go in there on people.
00:55:59Like you have to, if someone's going through custody
00:56:00litigation or an ugly contested divorce,
00:56:03you get to see everything, really.
00:56:05And so having now listened to thousands of people,
00:56:10men and women, the abuser and the abused,
00:56:12the substance use disorder and the person married
00:56:14to the person with substance use disorder,
00:56:16I've argued every side of every issue in a divorce.
00:56:20I've spent time with perpetrators of domestic violence
00:56:23and victims of domestic violence.
00:56:24I've spent time with every possible permutation.
00:56:27And I will tell you,
00:56:29if only there were good and bad people in the world,
00:56:31like, you know, if only we could just find the evil people
00:56:34and segregate it through the heart of every man.
00:56:36- Right, through the Solzhenitsyn,
00:56:37through the heart of every man is the line of good and evil.
00:56:39And so I genuinely believe that if we were to say,
00:56:43look, there have to now be standards.
00:56:46There has to be a code.
00:56:47Like I was raised with the idea that men have to have a code,
00:56:51like that a man is supposed to have a code.
00:56:53And all of the men I aspired to be like,
00:56:56which were mostly from literature.
00:56:58They were always the samurai.
00:57:00They were always Lalon Karabin in "Last of the Mohicans."
00:57:04You know, it was all this idea of like the man
00:57:07who was the protector, the provider, he had a code.
00:57:09He had the things he would do and the things he would not do.
00:57:11And nothing was going to pull him from that.
00:57:14And so I genuinely believe
00:57:17that there is a hunger right now in men for that,
00:57:21the sense of what am I supposed to do?
00:57:23Tell me the mission.
00:57:24Like, tell me what is expected of me
00:57:26and what is not.
00:57:27And that women were the gatekeepers when it came to sex.
00:57:30They were gatekeeper.
00:57:31You had to earn this.
00:57:33You had to earn it, not by, you know,
00:57:35give me the money and then I'll give it to you.
00:57:37It was really more about the characteristics
00:57:40that made you someone that had resources.
00:57:42That is that you were disciplined, focused,
00:57:44that you were someone who was serious about things.
00:57:47Listen, I'm a 53-year-old man.
00:57:50And if you read the comments on my videos,
00:57:53like it's shocking to me how many women are like gaga
00:57:57over me and trust me, it's not looks.
00:58:00It's the fact that I look like a serious person.
00:58:03Like I wear a suit.
00:58:05Like, you know how many 53-year-old men
00:58:07are running around in hoodies?
00:58:09Like, but you know, listen, it's fine.
00:58:11But the truth is there is something
00:58:12about old school masculinity
00:58:15that is very appealing to women
00:58:17because this suit is a statement.
00:58:21- I'm put together.
00:58:22I take this seriously.
00:58:24That's what this says.
00:58:25I take this seriously.
00:58:26It's why you would wear this to a job interview
00:58:28or a funeral and you wouldn't wear it to the beach, right?
00:58:31You wear it 'cause you're saying I'm here.
00:58:32I'm wearing this 'cause I want you to know
00:58:34I take what I'm doing seriously.
00:58:35And if you put this on when you're getting together
00:58:37with a woman, you're saying I take this seriously.
00:58:40I take the world seriously.
00:58:42I take my place in it seriously.
00:58:44So I think the combination of, again,
00:58:47because I don't think it's a mystery or controversial
00:58:50to say that every man wants a good girl
00:58:52who's only bad for him.
00:58:54And every woman wants a bad boy who's only good for her.
00:58:57So the combination of a suit and sleeves of tattoos,
00:59:01it's not shocking that women would find that attractive.
00:59:04It's Clark Kent, Superman rolled into the one thing.
00:59:07So I don't know why we're not saying to young men,
00:59:11again, like this is what we should be focusing on
00:59:14is the mission, becoming the best version of yourself,
00:59:17cleaning yourself up, putting yourself together
00:59:19and saying to women, "Women, listen,
00:59:21"you've always been the gatekeepers of sex.
00:59:23"You always have been.
00:59:25"So you have to start taking that role seriously
00:59:28"and you have to start holding men
00:59:29"to some kind of a standard."
00:59:31And I'm sure that I'll get pilloried by people
00:59:34in the red pill space in the manosphere are going to say,
00:59:36"Oh, well, men have to accommodate themselves to women."
00:59:39Okay, yes, yes, that's how it works
00:59:41when it comes to sexual gatekeeping.
00:59:43That's how it works.
00:59:44Unless you wanna be the kind of person
00:59:46that sneaks in the back door and steals things
00:59:48and puts on a false face of what it is that you really want
00:59:51and you wanna be disingenuous, you're right.
00:59:53You can make a lot of money stealing.
00:59:55You can make a lot of money in a grift.
00:59:57Should you be proud of that?
00:59:59I don't think so.
01:00:00- Yeah.
01:00:01I've had two conversations this week talking about the show
01:00:05and how it relates to men.
01:00:06I tended to not do press, but both of these,
01:00:09the conversations were really interesting.
01:00:10There is a--
01:00:11- You got Steve in so much trouble.
01:00:13(laughs)
01:00:15- Oh, fucking hell, dude.
01:00:17I have to tell you, as someone who is friends
01:00:20with both of you and who has spent time with both of you,
01:00:23talk about two people that should not be the targets
01:00:29and being called misogynists.
01:00:30What fucking planet are we on when the two of you are,
01:00:35Steve just got engaged, by the way.
01:00:37- I'm beyond the pale.
01:00:38We've got a--
01:00:39- It's insane.
01:00:40- We've got a Mexican Hitler saluting Nazi
01:00:44as the current leader of the men's movement,
01:00:46but me and Steve are beyond the third rail.
01:00:48- Yeah, you guys are the bad guys
01:00:49'cause you dared have difficult conversations.
01:00:52- Yeah, yeah, yeah, I'm popular.
01:00:53So it just goes to show
01:00:53how much of a third rail this stuff is.
01:00:55It's weird because a lot of these topics, to me,
01:00:57are almost not what we're talking about today,
01:00:59but a lot of the other stuff, birthright decline and things.
01:01:01It's like me being a comedian doing a trans joke.
01:01:03It feels so hacky.
01:01:05And I've been talking about this for six years.
01:01:07Is it not accepted that these are some
01:01:09of the contributing factors and it's a big problem
01:01:12and nobody is laying it at the feet and blaming anyone,
01:01:15but here are some of the,
01:01:17you say that in a certain group
01:01:19and people almost roll their eyes at how trite it is.
01:01:21It's like, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, get onto the net.
01:01:22Like what's the most interesting thing that's coming out?
01:01:25Whereas if you say, you realize how big the internet is,
01:01:28oh, I'm so far outside of the territory.
01:01:30I've fucking leapfrogged the Overton window.
01:01:32I'm in a whole new universe here, motherfuckers.
01:01:35It is crazy.
01:01:36- But it's the same reason why you'll never sell a diet book
01:01:38that just says eat less processed food,
01:01:42have more lean protein and move your body
01:01:44because it's not that long of a book.
01:01:46It's like a pamphlet.
01:01:47- Scott Galloway rang me a couple of weeks ago.
01:01:50He rings me on the Saturday morning.
01:01:52- Scott's like got such a crush on you.
01:01:54He loves you.
01:01:55- Yeah, yeah.
01:01:56- He's always talking about how awesome you are.
01:01:57- I heard you say on Cody Sanchez
01:01:58that I've got sexy man stubble.
01:01:59So everyone's got a crush.
01:02:00- It's oops, I didn't know I was sexy.
01:02:01Yeah, you've grown it in a little bit more now.
01:02:04Scott's rocking the oops, I didn't know I was sexy, stubble.
01:02:06- He's also just had some-
01:02:07- Scott and I both are like, you know,
01:02:08the like dudes in their fifties who wear Panerai watches
01:02:11and are trying to-
01:02:12- I did cosmetic surgery recently.
01:02:13- So he rings me and he goes,
01:02:16the voice is the exact same
01:02:19as that of someone who's grieving.
01:02:21Someone's just died and he's like,
01:02:22"Hey, buddy, how's it going?"
01:02:26And I was like, "Well, it was fine until you arrived.
01:02:29Should there be?"
01:02:29And he's like, "Oh, well, blah, blah, blah, something."
01:02:31Anyway, conversations that I had this week
01:02:36and this fledgling term,
01:02:38this nascent little neotenous blob that's coming up,
01:02:41the gentle manosphere, the gentle manosphere
01:02:44is Richard Reeves, it's Arthur Brooks, it's yourself,
01:02:47it's me, it's Scott Galloway, it's Alex Hormozi,
01:02:49it's Chris Bumstead, Rob Henderson, Mac and Murphy.
01:02:52It's that-
01:02:53- But you know, I want it to be that we're gentlemen
01:02:55and not gentle men.
01:02:57- Yes, correct.
01:02:57- Because I tend to be of the like, you know,
01:02:59civilize the mind and make savage the body.
01:03:01- Gentle manosphere.
01:03:02- Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
01:03:03And you know, Scott, like I loved "Notes on Being a Man."
01:03:07Like, I think it's a great book,
01:03:09but I said that if you removed the throat clearing
01:03:12and land acknowledgements from every chapter,
01:03:14it would have been like half the length.
01:03:16- You've heard me talk about this, right?
01:03:17You've heard me talk about the land acknowledgement.
01:03:18- Yeah, yeah, yeah.
01:03:20I mean, when he talked about being in a fraternity,
01:03:22it was, I was in a fraternity, it was great.
01:03:25I lived with a bunch of men, we held each other accountable.
01:03:27But it was, fraternities have traditionally been
01:03:30a very misogynist thing and they've had racist undertones
01:03:32and they did this and this, and then he says the point.
01:03:35- Richard Reeves sat in that seat and I said,
01:03:38the first, one of the first things I said to him,
01:03:40I'm sick of having to do this social land acknowledgement
01:03:44throat clearing every single time
01:03:45that I want to try and make a point.
01:03:47And then the one fucking time that I don't do it,
01:03:50hundreds of times I've spoken about this topic online.
01:03:52Hundreds of times, I just chose the wrong time to not go,
01:03:55well, we must remember that women
01:03:56are going through challenges and historically,
01:03:58they've been the ones that systemically have been struggling
01:04:00and we're not saying that we need to get them
01:04:01out of the boardroom and back into the bedroom
01:04:02and it's very important to remember the other side.
01:04:04- How many times, right, do we have to say the same thing?
01:04:06- I wanna have a single fucking disclaimer on my website
01:04:09or to say it once on the show and be like,
01:04:11look, presuming that I understand all of these things,
01:04:15I'll do a full episode.
01:04:16I'll do a full episode on it,
01:04:17which is just all of the different disclaimers
01:04:19and then once I've done that,
01:04:20that means that each, but because of clipping culture,
01:04:23you need to chronologically do it with,
01:04:26even sometimes you throw little ad breaks
01:04:28in the middle of it.
01:04:29Well, don't forget what I said before about that
01:04:31and now we're back to the show.
01:04:32- Did you ever watch the show Silicon Valley?
01:04:34- No.
01:04:35- It was a brilliant show,
01:04:36there was a scene where there's a character named Ryan
01:04:38and there are two guys who really love Ryan,
01:04:41but they have to talk about something
01:04:42that he's getting wrong.
01:04:43He's like, look, Ryan is great, but...
01:04:45And the other guy goes, no, no, listen, Ryan is great,
01:04:47but then he goes, okay.
01:04:48But you know, and look, Ryan is great,
01:04:49but he goes, look, he goes, can we just say Rigby?
01:04:53He goes, Ryan is great, but great.
01:04:55Okay, he goes, Rigby, we gotta work on it today.
01:04:58He goes, Rigby.
01:05:00So we just have to agree on a common land acknowledgement.
01:05:03- The acronym, we need a safe word.
01:05:05- Women, you know, women,
01:05:06I'm not suggesting women should be back in the...
01:05:08- Women are wonderful, war.
01:05:09- War, but that's it, that's all you have to do.
01:05:13- I've got a safe word,
01:05:14I've got an anti-misogynist safe word to do it,
01:05:16but no, look, dude.
01:05:17- So I've been, I can say this
01:05:19because it's not secret knowledge.
01:05:21When I was on Danielle's show,
01:05:22I was talking to her about a concept
01:05:25and one of the concepts I was talking about
01:05:26is that the characteristics of the powerful
01:05:29are often attributed to be better
01:05:32than the characteristics of the powerless.
01:05:34And she said, oh, that's an interesting point.
01:05:36I said, well, actually it's not me, that's Gloria Steinem
01:05:38from her essay, "If Men Could Menstruate,"
01:05:40which is a phenomenal essay.
01:05:41If you've never read it, it's worth reading.
01:05:42It's a really, really good essay,
01:05:44even particularly for men to read,
01:05:45because it really talks about how when you, you know,
01:05:48when you attribute something and it talks about how, like,
01:05:51if men could menstruate, it would be, well,
01:05:54men can be the only ones in the military
01:05:55'cause we're used to the sight of blood.
01:05:57And then men could only be,
01:05:58and it's all about how the characteristics of the power,
01:06:00and again, it was written in the 1960s
01:06:02when there were a lot of systemic, you know,
01:06:04things against women.
01:06:05And so I didn't realize Danielle is close friends
01:06:08with Gloria Steinem, and I ended up getting an invitation
01:06:11to Gloria Steinem's home.
01:06:13This is a woman, she's in her 90s.
01:06:15This was my mother's idol growing up.
01:06:17And I get to spend an afternoon talking
01:06:21about modern masculinity with Gloria Steinem.
01:06:25I am beyond excited about this.
01:06:27It's this week coming up.
01:06:29And I really do think that we have to start
01:06:32having more conversation.
01:06:34And again, my work is based on my observations
01:06:38of people who signed up for a job.
01:06:40And the job was, I'm gonna love you, you're gonna love me,
01:06:44and we're gonna try to make each other's lives better, right?
01:06:48Like, I mean, the greatest goal of marriage,
01:06:51if there was a goal to marriage, should be, I think,
01:06:54that at the end of your spouse's life,
01:06:58that they would look at you and say,
01:07:01"You helped me become the most authentic version of myself,
01:07:05and you're still my favorite person."
01:07:08Like, if there's a wedding toast that has value,
01:07:11that would be it.
01:07:11I hope that someday when one of you passes,
01:07:14you will look at the other one and say,
01:07:16"You helped me become the most authentic version of who I am,
01:07:19and you're still my favorite person."
01:07:22How is this a conversation
01:07:24that is in any way controversial to want to have?
01:07:27How do we get better at this job?
01:07:30Like, they spent a lot of time in my life
01:07:32trying to teach me how to divide fractions.
01:07:36It's been fucking useless.
01:07:37I've never needed it once.
01:07:40But nobody really had these conversations
01:07:43when I was a young man about, you know, how does it work?
01:07:47How do relationships work?
01:07:48How do you not paint yourself into corners
01:07:50you can't get out of?
01:07:51How do you have conversations?
01:07:53Like, you can't win a fight with your spouse
01:07:56or your girlfriend.
01:07:57Everybody loses.
01:07:58If you won, you lost.
01:08:00You made the person feel small.
01:08:02And vice versa, by the way, women and men.
01:08:04And if you lost, you lost.
01:08:05So how do we interact with it?
01:08:08'Cause this is important to all of us.
01:08:10So this is the difference, I think.
01:08:13I was asked yesterday,
01:08:14what are the defining characteristics
01:08:16of the gentlemanosphere?
01:08:18And I said, the first one is emotions.
01:08:22It's an understanding that they're important.
01:08:24It's not seeing suppression as strength,
01:08:25and it's integrating them into the relationship.
01:08:28The second one is striving,
01:08:29because there's no way that you can look around
01:08:31some of the canonical examples.
01:08:32Someone like Chris Bumstead,
01:08:34most dominant bodybuilder of his era,
01:08:35six-time world champion,
01:08:36cried on camera six weeks before he went on
01:08:38in his girlfriend's arms because he's worried about.
01:08:42The third one was a prioritization of relational patterns.
01:08:47So as opposed to, and this is what you're touching on here,
01:08:50number one and number three, right?
01:08:52It's the integration of emotions.
01:08:53It's this open transparentness.
01:08:55It's not seeing suppression as strength,
01:08:56and it's pushing on the relational part.
01:08:58But there would be a much more kind of dictatorial,
01:09:01top-down, classically patriarchal approach to this,
01:09:06which is, well, head of household, I say you do.
01:09:10There is no negotiation.
01:09:11This isn't a back and forth.
01:09:12And in some ways, the leader-follower dynamic
01:09:14is good and important and preferred by many women
01:09:18in that sort of a world, not necessarily all.
01:09:22But that is a degree of integration,
01:09:27what you're talking about here, learning how to relate well.
01:09:32How do we relate well, and how do I help my partner become?
01:09:35And I've got this line again
01:09:37from another fucking wonderful sub-stack.
01:09:40The type of person I'm assuming we're looking for here is,
01:09:43number one, someone you will find fascinating to talk to
01:09:46after you've talked for 20,000 hours.
01:09:49Number two, someone you feel comfortable
01:09:51talking through the hardest and most painful decisions
01:09:53you will face in your life.
01:09:55Number three, the conversation is wildly generative
01:09:58for both of you in that it brings you out.
01:10:00It helps you become, I love that line, it helps you become.
01:10:03That's what you were saying, more of me, more me.
01:10:06I want to be more me?
01:10:07Well, that's it.
01:10:08I don't want you to become what I want you to be.
01:10:11I want you to become the most authentic version of yourself.
01:10:14I mean, to me, as I age,
01:10:20I find that what was said by John Lennon a million years ago,
01:10:25which is that there's nowhere you can be
01:10:28that isn't where you were meant to be,
01:10:29and that becoming yourself is the hardest thing.
01:10:34Like, to become yourself,
01:10:35to really identify what that means
01:10:38and to find a way to become an authentic version
01:10:40of yourself fearlessly,
01:10:42and to embrace all of the parts of yourself.
01:10:44The messiness.
01:10:45Like, embrace the parts of yourself.
01:10:47Like, I have some extraordinarily traditionally
01:10:50masculine traits, you know?
01:10:52I am constantly challenging myself.
01:10:54I love to push myself.
01:10:55I love to push my physical tolerances.
01:10:57I competitively ran marathons.
01:10:58I trained Brazilian jiu-jitsu.
01:11:00I've tattooed my entire body.
01:11:01Like, I'm embracing pain and challenges,
01:11:04and I feel cleansed and excited
01:11:07when I'm in the presence of that
01:11:08and when I've endured something.
01:11:10These are largely masculine traits.
01:11:12Again, throat clearing.
01:11:13Yes, of course, there are many women who also enjoy that.
01:11:15But again, we have to get to a place
01:11:18where we can just say, like, it's okay
01:11:20that there are some things
01:11:21that are traditionally this and traditionally that.
01:11:24And what of that, by the way,
01:11:26precludes our ability to just embrace
01:11:28those other pieces of self and authentically present it?
01:11:32And I have to say,
01:11:33anything that has too much consistency to it worries me.
01:11:36Anytime someone is just so consistent
01:11:39that you just look at it and go,
01:11:41oh, okay, so they're, like,
01:11:43I can tell you what car they drive.
01:11:45I can tell you what hobbies they engage in,
01:11:48who they voted for,
01:11:49just by looking at even what they're wearing.
01:11:51'Cause again, my job is largely pattern recognition,
01:11:53like many people's.
01:11:54Like, my job is to, in a courtroom,
01:11:57identify all of the important,
01:11:59everyone in that courtroom's important.
01:12:01But I have to figure out a way to manipulate
01:12:03the emotional state of every single person in that room.
01:12:05Like, that's my job,
01:12:06is to manipulate people's emotional state.
01:12:08That's what you do as a trial lawyer.
01:12:09I want the judge to feel good about my client
01:12:11and dislike the other side.
01:12:12I want the other side to feel scared and vulnerable.
01:12:14I want my client to feel safe.
01:12:16I want the court reporter and the court officer
01:12:18to like me and dislike my adversary
01:12:20so that when we have a break in testimony
01:12:22and they go back in the back room with the judge,
01:12:24they go, I like Jim.
01:12:25He's a really good lawyer.
01:12:26Oh, wow, you know, yeah,
01:12:27that witness didn't seem trustworthy.
01:12:28So I want to fuck with everybody in that room,
01:12:31again, with a noble goal.
01:12:33I want to accomplish the objective for my client.
01:12:36And by the way, like, there--
01:12:38- The other side's doing it too.
01:12:39- A hundred, so well, that's why I always tell people,
01:12:41I'm like, look, my job is full-contact storytelling.
01:12:44And by that, I mean, there's lots of good storytellers,
01:12:46but you try to tell a story
01:12:48while someone's trying to stop you from telling the story
01:12:50and tell a different story at the same time.
01:12:52And then tell, it's like being a standup comic
01:12:54while someone over there is trying to be funnier than you
01:12:56and stop you and heckle you.
01:12:58Like, and you're trying to do your set while that's going on.
01:13:00That's my job, you know?
01:13:02And it's with an audience of one
01:13:04that's only vaguely paying attention.
01:13:07And it was not the most ambitious or brilliant lawyer
01:13:10in the history of lawyering
01:13:11or else they wouldn't have taken that kick.
01:13:12- You gotta be careful which judges are listening.
01:13:14They might not be happy.
01:13:15- You know, listen, I'd love to think
01:13:17that judges are out there listening to this, but.
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01:14:18Total departure.
01:14:20What does good storytelling consist of?
01:14:23- I think it starts with being able
01:14:28to have a really dynamic imagination
01:14:31and putting yourself in the head of the person
01:14:34whose story you're telling.
01:14:37If you're telling your own story,
01:14:39I think it's about telling a story
01:14:43that has the full range of human experience
01:14:46and emotion to it.
01:14:47So when I'm structuring testimony for a client,
01:14:50particularly for a custody case,
01:14:52when you kind of have to tell your life story
01:14:54and who you are as a person and a parent,
01:14:56I try to make sure that both the strengths and weaknesses
01:14:59of that person comes out.
01:15:01I do something that I jokingly call the eight mile approach,
01:15:05which is the end of the movie "Eight Mile"
01:15:07when Eminem wins the final-
01:15:09- Tell me something you don't already know about.
01:15:09- Tell me something you don't know about me, right.
01:15:11So it's really the equivalent of,
01:15:13I look at opposing counsel and I'm like,
01:15:15tell this judge something that they don't already now know
01:15:18about my client.
01:15:19Because if my client sends a text message saying,
01:15:21go fuck yourself, I hate you.
01:15:23It's coming out and he can't wait to bring it out.
01:15:26And he's gonna bring it out in the worst spot.
01:15:27So I'm gonna bring it out.
01:15:28I'm gonna put my client on and say,
01:15:30read what's been marked for identification
01:15:32as plaintiff's exhibit 26.
01:15:33Do I have to?
01:15:34I'd like it if you did.
01:15:36Go F yourself.
01:15:38Does it say go F yourself?
01:15:39No, what does it say?
01:15:40Can I curse?
01:15:41Please.
01:15:42It says go fuck yourself.
01:15:43Who did you send that to?
01:15:44I sent it to my wife.
01:15:45Why would you send that to her?
01:15:46I was just frustrated and angry.
01:15:49Do you think that helped your co-parenting relationship?
01:15:52No, probably not.
01:15:53Do you think that that improved the communication
01:15:55between the two of you?
01:15:57No, it definitely didn't.
01:15:58If you had an opportunity to do it again,
01:16:00would you do it differently?
01:16:02You know, I'd like to say I would,
01:16:04but the truth is she had sent me 50 text messages
01:16:07where she cursed at me and said all these things,
01:16:09and I lost it.
01:16:10I lost my temper and I said it.
01:16:12I shouldn't have said it the way I did, but I did.
01:16:14I'm human.
01:16:15I wish I could say to you I would never do it again,
01:16:16but you know what?
01:16:17I pushed so much that I lashed out.
01:16:19I'm watching opposing counsel cross out pages
01:16:23of his cross-examination now,
01:16:25because now my client is a sympathetic character
01:16:28because he's human.
01:16:29And so I think that anytime you tell a story,
01:16:32and in that story, you're the hero,
01:16:36but also weak, but also making mistakes,
01:16:39and there's things you get wrong.
01:16:40Like you really want to bring the whole hero's journey
01:16:43into the story.
01:16:44I think that, you know, there has to be the challenge.
01:16:46There has to be the failure.
01:16:47There has to be the prospect of you might not make it.
01:16:49And then that's where the redemption arc comes through.
01:16:51So I think the best storytelling is engaged in that way.
01:16:56I also think that how we connect with people
01:17:00and talk to people is huge.
01:17:02I mean, I think when, you know, when COVID happened
01:17:06and everything went remote,
01:17:07and we were doing remote trials via video conference,
01:17:11it was just an absolute nightmare
01:17:12because cross-examining someone via a virtual format
01:17:17is very, very difficult.
01:17:19There's something very like almost predatory about,
01:17:23'cause you have to earn the right to beat up a witness.
01:17:25Like if you just go in and are immediately hard
01:17:28for minute one, and like, isn't it a fact
01:17:30that like that's not effective cross-examining.
01:17:32Effective cross-examination is I get you to commit
01:17:35to a set of principles that you think help your case.
01:17:38And then I use those principles to snap your neck.
01:17:41- You can see why you like Brazilian jiu-jitsu.
01:17:46How do people know when it's time to quit?
01:17:49How do people know when it's time to leave a relationship?
01:17:51- I mean, it's hard to say.
01:17:54It's like, how do you know when to leave a job?
01:17:58You know, look, the humorous answer is, you know,
01:18:01winners never quit and quitters never win,
01:18:03but if you never win and you never quit,
01:18:05you're a fucking idiot.
01:18:06So I think when you have done what you could do
01:18:11and you are still in a place where I think the majority
01:18:19of the time you feel empty and unsatisfied and alone.
01:18:24I think there was a type of loneliness
01:18:27when you're with someone and you feel very lonely,
01:18:30that that is a very unique kind of hell.
01:18:33I had a friend who used to jokingly say
01:18:37that the way he knew he was in a relationship
01:18:39is when he was having sex and he found himself thinking,
01:18:42you know, one of these days I've got to get laid.
01:18:44So I think that sometimes when you are with someone
01:18:48and feeling alone, when you are having a sexual relationship
01:18:51with your partner and you feel yourself wanting to sleep
01:18:54with other people in a consistent way.
01:18:58But I also think that, and a lot of what I talk about
01:19:02in my book is the idea that sometimes that is a spiral
01:19:07that we didn't mean to create and that sometimes
01:19:10we've been created with excellent intentions
01:19:13and that there is a way to reverse that spiral.
01:19:15So like my penchant for manipulating people's emotional state
01:19:21in a courtroom, I think that power can be used for good.
01:19:25And one of the examples that I give is what I refer
01:19:28to as sexual monotony, which is that I think a lot of people
01:19:32with excellent intentions screw up their own sex lives
01:19:35in a monogamous relationship.
01:19:37Because we meet, we start dating, maybe we're not virgins,
01:19:42we've had other relationships in varying degrees.
01:19:46Okay, so what do we do?
01:19:48We throw all the different techniques we've learned
01:19:50along the way from other partners, from porn,
01:19:53from the internet, whatever.
01:19:55We just throw that at each other.
01:19:56And what do we figure out pretty quickly?
01:19:58Oh, she likes this.
01:20:00This she really likes.
01:20:01This not so good, it landed flat.
01:20:03Okay, and she figures out, oh, he likes this.
01:20:06This he loves.
01:20:07This didn't do anything for him.
01:20:08This he doesn't like at all.
01:20:09Okay, now what do you do then?
01:20:11Play the hits, man, right?
01:20:13You play the hit.
01:20:13Like I didn't go see Bruce Springsteen to hear the acoustic
01:20:15goes to Tom Joad.
01:20:16I want Born to Run, I want Thunder Road.
01:20:18Like play the hits, right?
01:20:19We're on a tight schedule.
01:20:20Like let's play the hits.
01:20:22And with great intentions, you play the hits.
01:20:24She loves this, you love this.
01:20:26We do it, we do it in a certain order.
01:20:28What have we just done?
01:20:29We created a routine.
01:20:30And what starts to happen now?
01:20:32If we're not checking in and having this open communication,
01:20:36now if one of us does something different,
01:20:39it's like, oh, that was weird.
01:20:40What did we deviate from the routine?
01:20:41Is something going on?
01:20:42What's happening there?
01:20:43And it's unspoken very often.
01:20:45So now we're in this routine, we're in this rut.
01:20:47We don't know how to get out of it.
01:20:48And then when we start to have conversation,
01:20:50well, why don't we do this anymore?
01:20:51And how come we haven't done that anymore?
01:20:52Now everyone's defensive about it.
01:20:54So what I always talk about is like behavior modification
01:20:58or like behavior manipulation with good intentions.
01:21:02And one of the examples that I give is if look,
01:21:04if you're tired, like in the bedroom,
01:21:07we're just doing the same things
01:21:08in the same order all the time.
01:21:10I don't think having a confrontational discussion
01:21:13with your partner is helpful in that.
01:21:15I have suggested to people, I think the best way to do it
01:21:18and I find me a woman who wouldn't want
01:21:21to have this conversation.
01:21:22If you went to a girlfriend and said,
01:21:24the dream I had about you last,
01:21:27I can't even look you in the eye.
01:21:28The dream I had about you last night.
01:21:29I don't even know where it came.
01:21:31Wait, what?
01:21:32What was it?
01:21:33Like, she's going to want to know what was it?
01:21:34I can't even, I don't know what I,
01:21:37it was like the dirtiest trick.
01:21:38What were we doing?
01:21:39And then you describe what it is
01:21:41you've been thinking about doing.
01:21:42And either she goes,
01:21:44oh, is that something you'd want to do?
01:21:47And then you go, I don't know, maybe?
01:21:49Like, I guess something in my subconscious,
01:21:51like it was hot in the dream.
01:21:52Maybe, you know, give it a shot kind of a thing.
01:21:55Or if she goes, oh, I would never want to do that.
01:21:57You go, yeah, I know.
01:21:58I don't know if I eat dairy before I go to bed or something.
01:22:00I don't know where that came from with subconscious,
01:22:02but at least now you've got that dialogue happening.
01:22:07And again, this isn't with a tremendous desire
01:22:10to deepen this connection.
01:22:12I think we screw up our relationships,
01:22:15not because we don't care,
01:22:17not because we don't want to be good at the job.
01:22:19I think it's just a matter of, you know,
01:22:21well, why should I do this when I could do the,
01:22:23well, you didn't do this for me.
01:22:24Why should I do this for you?
01:22:26You can reverse that flow just as easily
01:22:29by just starting to treat your partner with grace
01:22:33and giving them things that, leaving each other.
01:22:35What woman would not want to receive a text message
01:22:38in the middle of the day?
01:22:40You know, a song just came up on my Spotify.
01:22:42I had it on shuffle and it was making me think of you.
01:22:45Or, you know what I just thought of?
01:22:46A woman just walked by and she was wearing that perfume
01:22:49you were wearing when we first did it.
01:22:51Who would, that's the female,
01:22:52that's the equivalent of sending nudes to me.
01:22:55- And then, PS, you're way harder.
01:22:57- Yeah, yeah, perfect, perfect.
01:22:59And by the way, what a gift that is.
01:23:02And what man has ever received a nude
01:23:05or a suggestive photo from a girl?
01:23:07- Out of the blue, dude, an out of the blue nude.
01:23:09- Who you're dating, yeah.
01:23:11- Yeah, that's like triple nudes.
01:23:13That's worth three times the normal nude.
01:23:15That's a gold star.
01:23:16- That's three dozen roses you bought for her.
01:23:19That's what that is.
01:23:20And it's so, what does it cost?
01:23:22Nothing.
01:23:22- We did a series on the show, 20, 30 episodes
01:23:25when I first started and it was life hacks.
01:23:27It was how to make a great toasted sandwich.
01:23:29This is my favorite meditation app.
01:23:30But a lot of them were behavioral
01:23:31and many of them have stuck with me.
01:23:32Sleep with your phone outside of your bedroom,
01:23:34try and go for a walk first thing in the morning.
01:23:36The best one is basically this, but for friendships.
01:23:39And it's text your friends when you think about them.
01:23:41Because they pop into my head all the time.
01:23:44My old business partner that I used to run nightclubs with
01:23:46for 15 years.
01:23:47Sometimes I think about when we both got food poisoning
01:23:49at his son's first birthday party.
01:23:51And it'll just come and then it'll go.
01:23:54But if I don't have the rule or the impetus,
01:23:57just text Darren.
01:23:58Text Darren and say, dude, just thinking about
01:24:01when we shit ourselves, I was in Manchester,
01:24:03you were in Newcastle.
01:24:04We were both locked in nightclub toilets.
01:24:06Do you remember we were trying to run our events,
01:24:07respective events in different, it was on New Year's Eve
01:24:09and that thing happened and da, da, da.
01:24:11Well, you just send one.
01:24:12Hey man, thinking of you, hope you're really well.
01:24:14- You know what I'm actually loving
01:24:15and I never say this about tech.
01:24:18Apple Photos sends these memories reminders
01:24:21every once in a while to you.
01:24:22Like it just goes into your camera roll
01:24:23and it says like, here's a memory.
01:24:25And it just pops up.
01:24:26Now, sometimes it's upsetting 'cause all of a sudden
01:24:28you're like sitting there and you got a photo
01:24:29of your dead friend.
01:24:30But a lot of times it's just some random photo.
01:24:33And I have to tell you, like I get them.
01:24:35Half the time I text them to the person
01:24:38who's in the photo with me and I go,
01:24:40this just popped up on my thing.
01:24:41Look at these fucking kids.
01:24:43Who were we back then?
01:24:44And it starts the like, how you doing, man?
01:24:46I'm good, you?
01:24:47Yeah, how's the, and kids are good?
01:24:48Yeah, all right, man.
01:24:49Just want to tell you I love you.
01:24:50Love you too.
01:24:51What a like beautiful moment of connection.
01:24:53Costs nothing in the middle of the day.
01:24:55- It rules.
01:24:56It rules.
01:24:57- But nobody, but here's the thing, man.
01:24:58You're never gonna, and this is my like soapbox lately.
01:25:03You're never gonna hear a lot about this
01:25:07in mainstream media and the reason why
01:25:10is 'cause it's fucking free
01:25:11and you don't have to buy anything.
01:25:13- Okay, so here's a guess on that.
01:25:15There's no commercial incentive for it.
01:25:17Saying just text your friends.
01:25:18It'll improve your social network.
01:25:20Doesn't have you signing up to some new app
01:25:22or joining a running club or signing up for Equinox
01:25:24or whatever the fuck.
01:25:25I think another part of it is the same reason,
01:25:27one of the fundamental same reasons
01:25:29that the pick-up artist movement
01:25:30was so pushed back against by women
01:25:33beyond the fact that it was manipulating them
01:25:35to get them into bed,
01:25:36but that a reliable signal of your authenticity
01:25:41means that there are some things
01:25:42that are close to your sense of self
01:25:44and there are other things
01:25:45that aren't close to your sense of self.
01:25:46Your capacity for jujitsu,
01:25:48when you first started 15 years ago,
01:25:51I didn't see as some window
01:25:53into who you truly are as a person.
01:25:55Therefore, if you started learning
01:25:56to become better at jujitsu,
01:25:58I didn't feel that you were contriving yourself
01:26:01or coercing me into believing that you're a certain way.
01:26:04The same thing goes with learning to play the piano
01:26:06or speak French or something like that.
01:26:08The same thing is not so true
01:26:10with our abilities in the bedroom
01:26:12or with the primary language that we speak
01:26:16or perhaps our accent.
01:26:17We got rid of our accent.
01:26:17What are you trying to hide there?
01:26:19Immediately, you can feel like,
01:26:20"Oh, he watched some instruction about the bedroom?"
01:26:24And I think the reason is there is a degree of ick
01:26:28among the people that are not tapped in.
01:26:30The world's split into two groups,
01:26:31people who are tapped in and people that aren't tapped in.
01:26:33The world of people who aren't tapped in,
01:26:35look at, we could call it conscious relating.
01:26:38I can't think of a better word.
01:26:39It'll be a placeholder for now.
01:26:41Conscious relating.
01:26:42So I'm genuinely thinking deliberately
01:26:45about how I show up and how it affects you
01:26:47and how that recursive spiral is gonna continue to go.
01:26:50And my goal is to spin this spiral up as much as possible
01:26:54and stop it from coming down as much as possible.
01:26:56That's what I wanna do.
01:26:57And I'm gonna learn about attachment theory
01:26:59and I'm gonna realize that,
01:27:00"Oh, wow, I maybe do get a little bit anxious
01:27:03if somebody doesn't text for a while."
01:27:05And I'm gonna tell you that thing.
01:27:07I'm gonna use the emotions
01:27:08and you're gonna learn it about me.
01:27:10And if you get it wrong, I'm gonna be gentle with you,
01:27:12but firm, I'm gonna hold my boundaries.
01:27:13I'm gonna say, "Hey, babe,
01:27:14you remember when I said about that thing?
01:27:17When you do that, it makes me feel this
01:27:19and I'm sure that you didn't mean to,
01:27:20but I would love it if you."
01:27:22And you just continue to build on that
01:27:24and you're gonna cycle through partners, I think.
01:27:26And this has been my big thing
01:27:27for the last sort of two years or so,
01:27:28trying to get below the neck.
01:27:30I was emotionally decapitated and trying to work out
01:27:33how to stop praying at the altar
01:27:34of fucking cerebral horsepower.
01:27:36And you are going to cycle through partners
01:27:40and friends very quickly because it's a particularly,
01:27:44it's an acquired taste, right?
01:27:46This is not, unfortunately, Papa John's.
01:27:48This is something slightly more niche.
01:27:50But I think that the alchemy that's available,
01:27:54the friendships that I've got now,
01:27:56the way that I relate to my friends is so much deeper.
01:27:59Even the friends that I had before,
01:28:01who've grown with me and have been prepared
01:28:04to sort of come along for this ride
01:28:05or have been on parallel journeys on their own.
01:28:08- Yeah, and the depth of connection.
01:28:09- It fucking rules, dude, it fucking rules.
01:28:13- But see, this is something I think we have to,
01:28:15as a society-
01:28:16- Unspeakable misogynist.
01:28:17- But we have to, absolutely.
01:28:19We have to start normalizing that because I,
01:28:23you know, it astounded me like when my book,
01:28:27you know, "How to Stay in Love," right?
01:28:28Like there's a title for a book, "How to Stay in Love."
01:28:31Noble goal.
01:28:32You're in love, you want to stay in love, that's lovely.
01:28:35If you saw, you know, let's use Galloway as an example.
01:28:39He's a married guy.
01:28:40If you walk into Galloway's home
01:28:43and you see "Seven Habits of Highly Effective People,"
01:28:45you see "Power of Habit" by Düring, you see,
01:28:49you would go, look at this guy, look at Galloway, man.
01:28:51He's crushing it out there, he's a monster.
01:28:53And you know, he's still trying to sharpen the sword.
01:28:55Love it, love it.
01:28:56You see on his thing, "How to Stay in Love,"
01:28:58he'd be like, "Oh shit, things are right at home with Scott?"
01:29:01Nate, not you, but most people are going to look at that
01:29:04and say, because we're supposed to just be
01:29:06naturally good at this.
01:29:07- Dude, I had this line about drinking.
01:29:09I went sober about 10 years ago
01:29:11and took a break from partying and then came back to it
01:29:13and took a break and came back to it.
01:29:15Alcohol is the only drug where if you don't do it,
01:29:17people assume you have a problem.
01:29:18- 100%, see, I don't drink.
01:29:20And when I say, and it's not,
01:29:21I've never had a problem drinking.
01:29:23It's never been an issue.
01:29:24But anytime I tell someone, "Oh, I don't drink alcohol,"
01:29:27they assume I'm an alcoholic.
01:29:28And I think it's absolutely fucking hilarious.
01:29:31- Same thing's true for relationship advice.
01:29:32- 100%.
01:29:33- Relationship advice, one of the very few
01:29:35that if you take it, people assume
01:29:37that it's because of an issue.
01:29:37- That it's because of an issue.
01:29:38And what's funny to me is,
01:29:40so this is something that's fundamentally important to us.
01:29:44It has broad reaching implications.
01:29:46Like talk to a Warren Buffett, talk to one of those people,
01:29:48they'll tell you one of the single most important
01:29:49business decisions they ever made is who they married.
01:29:52And having a good romantic partner
01:29:54that doesn't cause you massive amounts of stress
01:29:56and doesn't make terrible financial decisions
01:29:58is an incredible asset.
01:30:00And having someone who helps you see your blind spots
01:30:03and helps you become the best version of yourself,
01:30:05like facilitate, like I think there is tremendous value
01:30:08in being good at relationships,
01:30:10even if relationships aren't the most important thing for you.
01:30:13If money's the most important thing for you,
01:30:14if your kids are the most important thing for you,
01:30:16if your physical state is the most important thing for you,
01:30:18having a good relationship.
01:30:20And by the way, if the relationship,
01:30:21if we learned nothing from the smashing machine,
01:30:24whether the film or the documentary, the original one,
01:30:27it was, this was an amazing person
01:30:29derailed by toxic relationships and addiction.
01:30:32So if you think about the fact
01:30:34that this is important to all of us,
01:30:37how is it that saying this is a teachable skill,
01:30:41this is something we could get better at,
01:30:43we could take a systematic approach to it?
01:30:46Like there is a value in doing that.
01:30:49My next book, which I'm working on currently,
01:30:52is really just about a systematic approach
01:30:56to being good at love.
01:30:58That's it, be good at love.
01:31:00Like we wanna be good at it, we don't wanna be bad at it.
01:31:03How can I be good at it?
01:31:05- To pick up artistry for relating, which I quite like.
01:31:09The question of how do you know
01:31:10whether it's time to end it or not?
01:31:12I'm gonna give you some samples from this list that I put out.
01:31:16Number one, if you woke up tomorrow
01:31:18and the relationship had ended with no conversation,
01:31:20fallout or drama, would you be disappointed or relieved?
01:31:23- Yeah, that's a big one, that's a big one.
01:31:26- Do you spend more time in the relationship
01:31:28or questioning the relationship?
01:31:30- Another good one.
01:31:31- What are the emotions you mostly feel
01:31:34in relation to your partner?
01:31:35What are the thoughts you have most frequently
01:31:37and is this how you would be prepared to feel
01:31:38for the rest of your life?
01:31:39So not hoping that there's going to be change in future.
01:31:43Would you want your future imagined child
01:31:46to date someone like your partner?
01:31:48- Ooh, that's a good one.
01:31:49See, and the reason that's a particularly good one
01:31:51I will tell you, because having represented people
01:31:54for several decades in custody cases,
01:31:56there's a lot we won't do for ourselves,
01:32:01but we'll do a lot for our children.
01:32:04And one of the most powerful tools I have,
01:32:06it works a lot in women, but it works in men too,
01:32:10is I've had women who have been the victims
01:32:12of domestic violence, intimate partner abuse,
01:32:14coercive control, and men.
01:32:16And I'll say to them, you know, look, you deserve to be
01:32:20in a different, that doesn't really blip on their radar.
01:32:23When I say to them, you do know that your children
01:32:25are watching this dynamic and they will choose
01:32:28their partners potentially.
01:32:31And of course, so your daughter is watching
01:32:33how your husband is treating you.
01:32:35And this is how she will believe,
01:32:36'cause whoever discovered water, it wasn't a fish.
01:32:38And believe me, your daughter is going to believe
01:32:40that this is how men should treat her.
01:32:43You have never seen someone say, okay, yeah,
01:32:45I have to make this change.
01:32:46Or this is how your son is watching and thinking
01:32:50this is how men are supposed to treat women.
01:32:52There are things we will do for our children
01:32:54and the people we, and look, we know this.
01:32:55It doesn't even have to be a parent thing.
01:32:57Like, look, we're friends, you know.
01:32:59If there was someone talking to you out loud in my presence,
01:33:05the way that I talk to myself in the morning,
01:33:10I would step in between the two of you.
01:33:12And I would be like, who are you to talk
01:33:15to him that way?
01:33:16Like, you don't know what he's going through,
01:33:18what his life is, who are you to judge him?
01:33:20Are you fucking perfect?
01:33:22But we talk to ourselves terribly, constantly, right?
01:33:26So I genuinely believe that like the sense of
01:33:30that is a fantastic metric, which is if your best friend,
01:33:35if your daughter, if your son, if your brother, your sister,
01:33:39if they were in this relationship, what would you tell them?
01:33:42- There's two other elements there.
01:33:44The first one I learned from Adam Lane Smith,
01:33:46which I thought was so interesting.
01:33:48He explained why women, breakups often occur shortly
01:33:52after a child is born.
01:33:54And I'm presuming this includes divorces as well.
01:33:57- Yeah.
01:33:58- Pressure of having kids, less time having sex,
01:34:03et cetera, et cetera, yeah, yeah, yeah.
01:34:05Like this, all of that stuff's in there.
01:34:07One of the elements, because he's attachment theorist,
01:34:09one of the elements that people don't see quite so much,
01:34:12but I think might contribute a lot is women have been able
01:34:17to put up with mistreatment of themselves,
01:34:20but they can't bear to see the potential mistreatment
01:34:25of their child.
01:34:26This guy who does not have his shit together.
01:34:29And like I was, you know, in and out and I loved him.
01:34:33I love him.
01:34:34I love him still, but he's not that competent.
01:34:37He doesn't really have it together.
01:34:38And you know, we thought that the engagement
01:34:40was going to fix it and I kind of didn't.
01:34:41And we thought that moving in together was going to fix it
01:34:42and I kind of didn't.
01:34:43Then we thought the wedding was going to fix it
01:34:44and that kind of didn't.
01:34:45And now we've had the kid and now it's not about me.
01:34:49Now it's about this little thing.
01:34:53And I, in the same way as in every movie ever,
01:34:57the hero is able to withstand as much torture
01:35:01as the bad guy can give him.
01:35:03But as soon as someone else gets brought in,
01:35:05his friend or his girlfriend or his kid,
01:35:09you fold at the first sight of it
01:35:10because watching somebody else suffer when you can interject
01:35:15is an infinity harder than enduring the suffering yourself.
01:35:20100%.
01:35:21And you feel you have the right to choose
01:35:24to have suffering inflicted upon you,
01:35:26but the choice to have another person suffer
01:35:29due to your choices is the thing that's just so painful.
01:35:32There's a kind of nobility I think that we all see
01:35:34because on the other side of hard things
01:35:36are often something valuable.
01:35:37And again, you know, winners don't quit.
01:35:39I can go through this.
01:35:41I have this, I'm the David Goggins of suffering.
01:35:43I'll just keep on going.
01:35:45- But one of the hardest things that I can say this
01:35:47as a parent of two adult men now,
01:35:50when they were growing up, one of the hardest things
01:35:55is to sit with the necessary pain of your children.
01:35:59Like there is necessary pain and to let them,
01:36:03like I remember the sort of the moment where I realized,
01:36:06oh, they're now at an age
01:36:08where I can't solve all their problems
01:36:09with a pack of M&Ms.
01:36:11- Or special, sprinkle dust on the floor.
01:36:13- Yeah, like they came home and said,
01:36:16like Chris doesn't want to be my friend anymore.
01:36:19He's hanging out with the guys on the lacrosse team
01:36:21and I'm not on the lacrosse team
01:36:22and now like I lost my best friend.
01:36:24And you just have to look at that and go like,
01:36:27there isn't a solution to that problem.
01:36:29Like the solution to that problem is like,
01:36:32yeah, you know, like that's gonna happen.
01:36:34You're gonna have people in your life who, you know,
01:36:36you have a real close connection with them
01:36:37and then your interests maybe diverge
01:36:39and you start spending time.
01:36:40And like having to sort of maybe help them process it
01:36:43is the best you can do, but like I can't fix it.
01:36:45I can't call Chris's mom and say,
01:36:47hey, can you have him play with my son
01:36:49because it's really upsetting and it's hard to do it,
01:36:52but it's also a really beautiful part of your journey
01:36:56as a parent and your journey as a human being.
01:36:59- The deeper that I've gone into this emotions work,
01:37:02the more that I've seen situations like that.
01:37:03The compulsion to fix is noble, but completely backward.
01:37:08And what you're saying by when your son or daughter
01:37:12comes to you or your best friend or whatever,
01:37:15of how to fix this thing that's happened.
01:37:17Your friend's just gone through a breakup
01:37:19or your son's just lost his best friend or whatever.
01:37:21You say, oh, what we can do?
01:37:23No, no, no, no, no, no, you do not need to,
01:37:25because what that says is you without them are not enough.
01:37:29And in order for you to be enough,
01:37:32you need to change yourself and your discomfort
01:37:35is making me upset.
01:37:37So you must make yourself okay so that I'm no longer not okay.
01:37:41- Yeah, and there's a power dynamic too.
01:37:42I mean, the old axiom that the urge to save the world
01:37:47is often a false face for the urge to rule.
01:37:50- Oh, allow me to be the savior.
01:37:52Allow me to step in and look at this,
01:37:53you're relying on me, on me.
01:37:55A much better way to do it is to say,
01:37:57and this fucking sentence wins every single time.
01:38:02I'm sorry that happened, how did that make you feel?
01:38:04- That must be hard.
01:38:05- That must be hard, how did that make you feel?
01:38:08Tell me about that, how did that make you feel?
01:38:09- Yeah, and doing what I do for a living,
01:38:12which is partly solving complex problems
01:38:16arising from an interpersonal conflict,
01:38:18but also just helping people sort of navigate,
01:38:22'cause any rational person going through an ugly divorce
01:38:27would say, I can't make any big decisions right now,
01:38:31I'm going through a really ugly divorce,
01:38:33but you have to make really big decisions about your divorce
01:38:36while you're going through a divorce, that's how it works.
01:38:39So I have to ask people at an incredibly difficult,
01:38:43emotionally intense moment in their life
01:38:44when they are everything that matters to them,
01:38:48their children, where they live, their work,
01:38:51their finite, everything feels on the line
01:38:54and is in fact on the line.
01:38:56I have to now say to that person, while that's going on,
01:38:59we have to make really gigantic long-term decisions.
01:39:03And the only way you can do it is by getting good at A,
01:39:05telling people things that they might not wanna hear,
01:39:08being able to give people difficult news
01:39:11in a very straight and honest and clear way,
01:39:14being able to sit with someone's pain
01:39:16and being able to sort of not minimize it,
01:39:19but also not amplify it.
01:39:21And I think that skillset has been a very,
01:39:26developed it over a long time of practicing,
01:39:30but it's also, you can extrapolate
01:39:33it to any number of other things,
01:39:34parenting, your own relationships, your friendships.
01:39:37And I think there's real value in knowing how to,
01:39:41and it really goes back to what we were talking about earlier
01:39:44about a really useful relationship skill
01:39:49is the ability to have conversations
01:39:51that make yourself uncomfortable, your partner uncomfortable,
01:39:55but are in service of the relationship.
01:39:57- That's alchemy.
01:39:59That's taking something that could be useless and ugly
01:40:02and turning it into a vehicle for transformation.
01:40:04How amazing.
01:40:05And then you come out on the other side
01:40:07and you're even closer together
01:40:09and you went through something
01:40:10that was difficult but related, so beautiful.
01:40:13Give me the worst and best ways
01:40:16that people get over breakups.
01:40:19- I mean, the worst way is to just immediately dive
01:40:22into another relationship without any pause.
01:40:25You're an advocate of a breathing period.
01:40:27- Yeah, or if you're going to,
01:40:29if you're gonna do the best way to get over someone
01:40:31is to get under someone.
01:40:32If you're gonna do that, see it for what it is and say it.
01:40:37Really be candid that that's what you're doing.
01:40:39Don't lead people on, don't mislead,
01:40:41and certainly don't lie to yourself.
01:40:43The most dangerous lies are the ones we tell ourselves.
01:40:45So I think just jumping into another relationship
01:40:48very quickly and a very serious relationship,
01:40:51I think is a terrible way to get over a breakup.
01:40:55- Why?
01:40:57- Because I think you, A, you're still processing
01:41:00a tremendous amount of grief and trauma and loss.
01:41:03I think that you have to move through the stages of grief.
01:41:06I actually think you could look at Elizabeth Kubler-Ross'
01:41:09stages of death and dying and grief
01:41:11and you could apply those to,
01:41:12'cause all that's happened is a marriage has ended,
01:41:14a relationship has died.
01:41:15So you have to treat it like a death.
01:41:16We have to have the bargaining, the sadness.
01:41:19We have to have the anger.
01:41:20We have to have each of those stages
01:41:22before we can reach acceptance.
01:41:23You don't just get to skip.
01:41:24So I think you have to process those emotions.
01:41:26And I think that takes a little bit of time.
01:41:28I also don't think your divorce,
01:41:30you don't start to recover from your divorce
01:41:32until your divorce is done.
01:41:33So a lot of people are like,
01:41:34"Oh, we moved out months ago,"
01:41:35or, "Oh, we've been going through this for ages."
01:41:37So now, no, when it's actually done
01:41:39and you get the piece of paper
01:41:40that says you're officially divorced,
01:41:41that's when it's done.
01:41:42- The start line begins.
01:41:43- That's when you buried the dead body.
01:41:46Like saying that, "Oh no, this person died last week
01:41:48"and the funeral's next week, but I'm over.
01:41:49"Like they're dead."
01:41:50No, okay, when you see them lowered into the ground,
01:41:53now we've started the grieving process.
01:41:56So I think that's a piece of it.
01:41:58I think the best way, I mean,
01:42:00I believe that the people that A,
01:42:04have some body practice is really important.
01:42:07I know that's gonna sound really bro-ish,
01:42:09but I really do think that there is tremendous value in--
01:42:11- Body practice can be yoga, Pilates, running.
01:42:13- I think it can be yoga.
01:42:14Listen, I trained martial arts from the time I was seven
01:42:17until I was in my 20s.
01:42:19I trained Okinawan Goju-Ryu karate and Muay Thai kickboxing,
01:42:22and I gave it up.
01:42:23I stopped, I started running marathons.
01:42:25I focused on that.
01:42:26It was more friendly to the raising kids
01:42:28and things like that.
01:42:29When I got divorced, I went back to martial arts.
01:42:32That's when I took up Brazilian jiu-jitsu.
01:42:33Because I actually took up,
01:42:36well, Craig Jones actually said in an interview recently,
01:42:39like he was sort of slagging on somebody,
01:42:41it might've been Gordon, and he said like,
01:42:43"Guys, come on, this is cardio for divorced dads."
01:42:48And I thought, you know what,
01:42:49thank you for saying that out loud.
01:42:51- It's true.
01:42:52- That's exactly what it was to me.
01:42:52- You're listening to Creed, you're drinking White Monster,
01:42:55and you're gonna go and try and do octopus.
01:42:56- And you're gonna do struggle cuddles with a bunch of men
01:42:59that is essentially the minute you've sent
01:43:01a six-minute round with somebody,
01:43:03you're now sitting next to them with your arm around them,
01:43:05and you guys are best friends for life.
01:43:07Because there's this feeling of physical,
01:43:08what physical intimacy do men have who aren't homosexual
01:43:13with other men that you break that physical boundary,
01:43:17you spent up, there's tremendous trust in Brazilian jiu-jitsu.
01:43:21I'm trusting that when I tap,
01:43:23you will stop and not snap my arm,
01:43:26or you will let go of my carotid arteries so I don't die.
01:43:30Like there is something really lovely about a stranger
01:43:33that I believe that promise,
01:43:35and you can believe my promise to that.
01:43:37- Yeah, it's a microculture that's very interesting.
01:43:39- So I think there's tremendous value in a physical practice
01:43:42or returning to some spiritual practice,
01:43:45whether it was meditation or some religious thing
01:43:47I've seen people go back to.
01:43:48I think that, again, they're really the same thing,
01:43:53which is to say reconnecting to another person
01:43:56while you are navigating a breakup, I think is ill-advised.
01:44:01Whereas connecting to aspects of self
01:44:04that you may have let go of
01:44:06in the pain of your difficult relationship
01:44:09that you're exiting, or becoming a beginner at something,
01:44:13or like if there was a sport you enjoyed,
01:44:16reconnecting to that sport.
01:44:17I think, A, there's tremendous value
01:44:19in having a physical practice.
01:44:20I think that there's tremendous value in sweating
01:44:23and going through all of that
01:44:24and overcoming physical adversity,
01:44:26maintaining a strong instrument and being physically healthy.
01:44:29A lot of my clients, they drink more than they should
01:44:32'cause they're going through something stressful.
01:44:33So finding healthy outlets for that,
01:44:34I think is really important.
01:44:36And also too, just improving that,
01:44:37that it creates a sense of community.
01:44:39I think you start to feel really alone
01:44:42when you're in a bad relationship.
01:44:43And then when you're ending that relationship,
01:44:45it's like, okay, well now I'm ending this relationship
01:44:48and I feel really alone 'cause I'm actually alone.
01:44:52And so there were times when,
01:44:54I mean, my kids were five and seven when I got divorced.
01:44:56And I remember when they were there,
01:44:59it was the most joyous, lovely feeling
01:45:01'cause now I had them there,
01:45:02but I didn't have the uncomfortable feeling of,
01:45:04oh, I'm with this person who I'm not really in love with.
01:45:07And like, I have to sort of pretend I'm happy,
01:45:10but I'm not really happy.
01:45:11Suddenly I could just be happy.
01:45:12I was with my kids and I was having,
01:45:15and then they would leave and the silence was deafening.
01:45:19I mean, it was a three-year-old and a five-year-old,
01:45:22like little kids, like little kids, they're so loud.
01:45:25They're boys, they were, and then they were just gone.
01:45:28And it was just this feeling of like,
01:45:30oh, like it's so quiet, you know?
01:45:33And they'll be back, but God, it's so quiet.
01:45:35And the greatest thing I did for myself,
01:45:40and I don't know what pushed me to do it,
01:45:44is I just started to create like routines.
01:45:46Like we live in a world of symbols.
01:45:48And what I would do is they would leave
01:45:51and I would make a point of doing all of the laundry
01:45:53of their clothes and washing their sheets.
01:45:56And then I would make their rooms.
01:45:58Like I would put their beds back just right.
01:46:01And I'd put their clothes in the drawers and it was ready.
01:46:04It was ready for when they were back.
01:46:07And something about reconnecting,
01:46:09like caregiving in that way, and then reconnecting to,
01:46:12no, no, the stage is set and they'll be back.
01:46:16And then I gave myself permission to go,
01:46:18okay, now they're not here.
01:46:20You go be you now.
01:46:21You go figure out what that is, who that man is,
01:46:23because that's someone they're going to be watching
01:46:25and going, hey, who is that man?
01:46:27What does he do, you know?
01:46:28And so that gave me a tremendous strength
01:46:31and it really helped me navigate that challenge.
01:46:34And I think that that is the kind of thing
01:46:37that people can do.
01:46:38And again, this is not exclusively male.
01:46:40I think women can do the exact same thing.
01:46:42I think that when your children go back to the co-parent
01:46:45or when, again, even if you don't have children,
01:46:47if you return, or get a pet, like having a pet,
01:46:50having something, I think my mother used to say to me,
01:46:53you need someplace to go, something to do,
01:46:55and something to love.
01:46:57And if you're missing any of those three things,
01:46:59you're going to have unhappiness, right?
01:47:01So I think that having something to love
01:47:04is really, really important.
01:47:05If it's children, great, you have your children.
01:47:07If you don't have children, you have a pet.
01:47:09If you don't have friends, like, but connection.
01:47:12I think we're social creatures
01:47:13and I think we just have to find that connection.
01:47:15'Cause what is divorce, but a deep disconnection, you know?
01:47:19And it's a disconnection that may have happened
01:47:22over a long time.
01:47:23Like we've fallen in love so fast, so fast,
01:47:27and it's so powerful and amazing.
01:47:30And then we fall out of love, like the way we go bankrupt,
01:47:33very slowly and then all at once.
01:47:35And when it goes, there is this part of us
01:47:41that sees it happening and just goes,
01:47:43"Oh no, is this really happening?"
01:47:45- There's this one time that comes to mind for me
01:47:47where I actually remember this deceleration.
01:47:50It felt like falling off the edge of a rollercoaster.
01:47:52And it was very slowly.
01:47:53And then, "Oh, fuck."
01:47:57- Yeah, and falling feels like flying for a little while.
01:48:01Then you hit the fucking ground.
01:48:02- Until you hit the ground.
01:48:03- And then it's a real wake up call.
01:48:05And, but again, like I see,
01:48:09and again, I think it's a function of age.
01:48:11I look back on the loves of my life
01:48:15and I look back on even like the great pains of my life.
01:48:21Losing my mom to cancer, all of the hard things.
01:48:25And I realized like just how much was in there,
01:48:30like emotionally, like how much material was in there.
01:48:33And I have to tell you like the journey of that
01:48:37is I've learned so much from all of those things.
01:48:41And I feel like they were all so formative of me.
01:48:44And I also just, I don't know,
01:48:47I love stories that have that full range of human emotion.
01:48:51And there's something about,
01:48:53there is a saying that only unfulfilled love
01:48:59can be truly romantic.
01:49:01Like that there's something about
01:49:03riding the whole spectrum of connection
01:49:06and then disconnection and then,
01:49:09but you know, it's very funny.
01:49:10I've been in therapy for many years
01:49:12and sometimes you know you're in therapy
01:49:15it's 'cause your life's on fire.
01:49:16You know, like your marriage is ending,
01:49:17your mom is dying, whatever it might be.
01:49:19And then there's times where you're in therapy
01:49:21where you're like, hey, this is about just like
01:49:22trying to see my blind spots,
01:49:24trying to get better at being me,
01:49:26seeing connections I might not have seen.
01:49:28And I have to say like that there is, in my view,
01:49:35like tremendous value in,
01:49:38I had to switch therapists.
01:49:41I'd been with a therapist for like 15 years and he retired.
01:49:44So I had to find a new therapist.
01:49:46And the funniest moment was in that early,
01:49:50'cause having the same therapist for 15 years,
01:49:51like they've seen you through a lot of things.
01:49:53You don't have to fill in the blanks,
01:49:54they know your whole history.
01:49:56And all of a sudden there's a stranger across from me
01:49:59and I'm about to talk to them about me.
01:50:00And I'm like, they have no context.
01:50:02So you find yourself sort of giving like the Wikipedia page
01:50:05of your life.
01:50:06And as I was doing it, I remember thinking like,
01:50:10oh, there are things that felt like epic tales
01:50:14that are now three sentences.
01:50:17Yeah, I married my college sweetheart
01:50:19and we were married for about 10 years and we had two kids
01:50:21and then we got divorced and it was relatively friendly.
01:50:24That's it, that's all that was.
01:50:26But when it was going on, the world was ending.
01:50:31Were my kids gonna be okay?
01:50:33Was I gonna be okay?
01:50:34Was she gonna be okay?
01:50:35Like what was this gonna do?
01:50:37Like who were gonna be our friends and who weren't?
01:50:40Who was gonna be team her and team me
01:50:41even though there weren't teams?
01:50:42And how would we explain that to people?
01:50:44And now you look at it and you go like,
01:50:46oh, it was just a thing.
01:50:48You know what I think people are looking for?
01:50:49I think people are looking to feel alive.
01:50:52And my housemate George has this idea of alive mode
01:50:56and dead mode.
01:50:57And what you feel even going through a heartbreak,
01:51:02tumult, aliveness.
01:51:06This is some fucking life.
01:51:10There's some life happening right here.
01:51:12And it's the same thing that you feel
01:51:14when you close the deal.
01:51:15It's the same thing you feel when you sell the business.
01:51:17It's the same thing you feel when you fall in love
01:51:19and you fall out of love.
01:51:20And yeah, sure, there is a flavor to one that is enjoyable
01:51:23and a flavor to another that is painful.
01:51:25But in some ways, it's better than that Wednesday afternoon
01:51:30where you can't remember anything that you did.
01:51:32- Yeah, I don't wanna die without any scars.
01:51:35Like I wanna earn all those scars
01:51:37and I wanna look at every one of them and go like,
01:51:39oh yeah, that was this insanity.
01:51:41That was this and I love that.
01:51:44- And to your point about I sort of got on with things
01:51:48and I gave myself a routine
01:51:49and I rediscovered the stuff that I'd lost.
01:51:51Anxiety really hates a moving target.
01:51:53The action is the antidote to anxiety with that.
01:51:56I wanted to get you to react to an image
01:51:59that had been going very viral for a while.
01:52:00I'm not sure if you've seen this.
01:52:01You may have done already.
01:52:02- Sure.
01:52:03Yeah.
01:52:05- So it's a famous image of Pierce Brosnan and his wife.
01:52:08And I think it's maybe 20 years apart, something like that.
01:52:10And it's him and her at what looks like the height
01:52:13of his 007 fame.
01:52:15And she's looking very young and then it's him and her
01:52:18and she's gained a lot in the chest
01:52:20and got a little bit older, but so is he.
01:52:22And the best response that I saw to that,
01:52:24dear man, this is your daily reminder to avoid marriage.
01:52:26The best response that I saw to that was
01:52:30that man hasn't aged a day in three decades.
01:52:34Where do you think that regulation came from?
01:52:37That is the single best advert that you could see for marriage
01:52:42because look at how he is flourishing.
01:52:46And is that really the thing that you're-
01:52:48- But see, I'm shocked that anyone looks at that.
01:52:52Like, first of all, this is a successful marriage
01:52:56in an industry where there is no such thing.
01:53:00Like I have done a lot of actor divorces and believe me,
01:53:03they suck at being married.
01:53:05And so this is a successful happy marriage
01:53:09that produced children, it is a long marriage.
01:53:14Now I will tell you, I don't know these two people.
01:53:19That is still a very beautiful woman.
01:53:21- Damn right it is. - Has she gained weight?
01:53:22Okay, she's gained weight.
01:53:24- Pierce Brosnan has gained great.
01:53:26- Right, okay, but this is a stunningly beautiful woman.
01:53:30And this is a woman who is aging appropriately, right?
01:53:33So she's not trying to do 50 million-
01:53:35- Aging better than appropriately, but yeah.
01:53:37- But I'm saying she's not trying to undo the inevitable.
01:53:41And the truth is like, if you're with a partner long-term,
01:53:46you don't always see those changes as much.
01:53:51Just like you don't notice in yourself
01:53:53that you've gained or lost weight until stuff feels tight.
01:53:56- How old do you think your mom sees you
01:53:58when she looks at you?
01:53:59You're still 12. - Right, right, right.
01:54:00And so isn't that a beautiful expression of love?
01:54:05Like I always tell people when they talk about this sort of
01:54:07like, oh, well, you're gonna age and when someone ages,
01:54:10okay, I have a dog that is 16 years old.
01:54:15I got that dog when the dog was four months old.
01:54:18What a youth, the dog is now deaf, okay?
01:54:23Gets up every morning tail wagging,
01:54:24can't wait to eat breakfast.
01:54:26He's got a great quality of life.
01:54:27When he no longer has a great quality of life,
01:54:29I will do the thing you need to do,
01:54:31which is to the brave and difficult choice.
01:54:35But he wakes up every day tail wagging,
01:54:37has to get carried up and down the stairs.
01:54:39But once he's there, can't wait to eat his meal,
01:54:41can't wait to do his thing.
01:54:42So he's a happy dog.
01:54:44Do you think I look at that dog,
01:54:47deaf, has to be carried up and down the stairs
01:54:50and go, dude, I gotta get a puppy.
01:54:53This is like this fucking dog.
01:54:54Look at this old ass dog, can't even hear anything.
01:54:57Like puppies can chase ball.
01:54:58These kid dogs chase balls.
01:55:00He was so fun.
01:55:01He used to run like a wind.
01:55:02I got videos of it on my phone.
01:55:03Now look at him, he's like a broken little thing.
01:55:06The opposite, the opposite.
01:55:08I love that dog more and more.
01:55:10I know I'm in the bonus rounds.
01:55:12I know I don't have all that much time.
01:55:14And I have to tell you, I fucking love that dog.
01:55:16If you, how do you know that those people
01:55:20don't look at each other and just go, look at us.
01:55:23And look at that photo of us when we were fucking kids.
01:55:27And we didn't know what it was going to be.
01:55:29And we were so scared, and here we are, right.
01:55:33And by the way, you won, you won.
01:55:37That's escape velocity.
01:55:39That is escape velocity.
01:55:40How do you look at that and not admire it?
01:55:43And by that, so, but again, I get it.
01:55:46If you're that unbelievably shallow,
01:55:50that you go, oh, could Pierce,
01:55:52Pierce Brosnan is a handsome, successful man.
01:55:55He could pull 20 something year olds easily.
01:55:58And have his, and have his mind turned inside out
01:56:01by the inability.
01:56:02But I'm saying, this is not a man who doesn't have options.
01:56:05And this is a person who he chooses.
01:56:08And I'm sure, and she, I'm sure has choices as well.
01:56:11So you, you look at these two people
01:56:13and I would look at that and say, wow,
01:56:15that's a success story.
01:56:16That's something to aspire to.
01:56:18Again, if they're happy, if they find joy in each other.
01:56:21But to just look at that and that's more about
01:56:23what you are seeing in your life and your emotional state
01:56:28than anything that's actually going on
01:56:29between those two people.
01:56:30- James Sexton, ladies and gentlemen.
01:56:33Dude, you absolutely rule.
01:56:35I think you're fantastic.
01:56:36I love your work.
01:56:37- I love the admiration.
01:56:38- I love the framing that you're placing around this.
01:56:40The relatedness.
01:56:43It's so good.
01:56:44- It means a lot.
01:56:46I think these are important conversations.
01:56:49I think, I didn't have a title for it until today.
01:56:52But yeah, I think that,
01:56:53I think we need to have the gentle manosphere.
01:56:56Like, I think we have to have, you know,
01:56:58we have to have a dialogue again.
01:57:00One of the things I think is most important about stuff
01:57:03like Scott is talking about is,
01:57:05look, what is non-toxic masculinity?
01:57:08'Cause if the answer is femininity,
01:57:09then that's not an answer.
01:57:10Like, I'd like to understand.
01:57:12And I think we have, there is a conversation out there.
01:57:16There is a large number of people, men and women,
01:57:20that are looking at the current state of things and going,
01:57:22yeah, this isn't working.
01:57:24And the fact that I'm so goddamn busy professionally
01:57:26and all my colleagues are too, is a testament to the fact.
01:57:29(laughing)
01:57:30Is a testament to the fact that we're doing something wrong.
01:57:33- We're tapping the well of it going wrong.
01:57:34Yeah, exactly.
01:57:35- 'Cause nobody meant to get divorced.
01:57:37And yet, the divorce rate is up.
01:57:39And my prediction is it's only gonna keep going up.
01:57:43So, I think we have to figure out
01:57:46how to fix the individual components.
01:57:48And then how to bring them back
01:57:50into some kind of serious, meaningful dialogue.
01:57:52So, but thanks for having me, man.
01:57:54This was a blast.
01:57:55- You're amazing, man.
01:57:56- Great to see you.
01:57:56- We've talked loads and it's so great to meet you.
01:57:58Buck, where should people go?
01:58:00- You can get How to Stay in Love,
01:58:01anywhere where fine books are sold.
01:58:02You can listen to it on Audible or download that.
01:58:05You can listen to me talk for eight and a half hours
01:58:06if that's your thing.
01:58:07You can find me on Instagram at @nycdivorcelawyer.
01:58:10I post a lot there.
01:58:11And you can go to sextonshow.com.
01:58:13That's got a lot of my appearances
01:58:15and it's got a lot of my point of view on stuff.
01:58:18- Heck yeah.
01:58:19Until next time, man.
01:58:20Appreciate you.
01:58:21- You got it.
01:58:22- Thank you very much for tuning in.
01:58:23Congratulations for making it
01:58:25to the end of an entire episode.
01:58:28Another one that I think you'll enjoy is right here.

Key Takeaway

Divorce lawyer James Sexton argues that proactive, radical transparency regarding legal and emotional boundaries—such as prenups and honest communication—is the most romantic way to ensure relationship longevity and personal safety.

Highlights

Every person who is married already has a prenup, whether it is one they wrote themselves or one imposed by government laws.

Professional athletes face a 70% divorce rate, with 50% of those divorces occurring within the first year of retirement due to a loss of structure.

The best time to broach the topic of a prenup is as early as the third date to establish safety and transparency.

High-stakes litigation is often driven by individuals in finance, like hedge fund traders, who possess high risk tolerance and aggressive personalities.

Successful long-term relationships are defined by how couples handle misunderstandings and 'lows' rather than just 'highs.'

Intimacy should never be weaponized during arguments by using a partner's vulnerabilities or 'soft spots' against them.

Healthy post-breakup recovery involves reconnecting with one's self through physical practices like martial arts or personal routines rather than immediate dating.

Timeline

Athletes, Finance, and High-Conflict Professions

James Sexton opens by discussing why Valentine's Day is ironically a busy period for divorce lawyers due to overconfidence in relationships. He specifically analyzes the monastic discipline of professional athletes and how their rigid structure often leads to a 70% divorce rate upon retirement. Sexton notes that NFL players are particularly vulnerable because they often marry early and acquire massive wealth during the marriage without legal protection. He also identifies 'hedge fund guys' as the most difficult legal adversaries because their high testosterone and lack of risk aversion make them prone to aggressive litigation. The section highlights how different professional psychological profiles directly impact the success or failure of a marital union.

Demystifying Prenups and Government Intervention

Sexton explains the fundamental legal reality that every married couple is bound by a prenuptial agreement, whether it is a private contract or the default state laws. He describes marriage as the most legally significant event in a person's life, affecting property, inheritance, and support rights, yet many enter it without a brochure or understanding. The state acts as a third party in every marriage, and Sexton warns against letting the 'DMV-style' government set the rules for your life. He also shares anecdotes about weird evidentiary rules in New York and archaic laws regarding consensual sodomy in various jurisdictions. This segment emphasizes that a private prenup is simply a way for two people to write their own rules instead of letting the state decide.

Normalization of Prenups and Early Communication

The discussion shifts to why people who sign prenups may actually be less likely to divorce because the process requires brave and vulnerable conversations. Sexton controversially suggests bringing up the topic of prenups as early as the third date to gauge a partner's values and business sense. He argues that you cannot truly feel loved if you do not feel safe, and a prenup provides a 'rule set' that establishes safety for both parties. He uses the analogy of a Goldman Sachs partner and a yoga teacher to show how different resource levels can be balanced fairly through negotiation. The goal of this section is to frame legal preparation as an act of love and protection rather than a lack of trust.

The Economy of Marriage and Baseline Behaviors

Sexton describes marriage as an 'economy' or a system of value exchange involving resources, warmth, and labor. He critiques modern relationships for avoiding these 'sterile' conversations, which leads to resentment when one partner feels equity is imbalanced. A major mistake couples make is thinking marriage will change a person or, conversely, prevent them from changing as they grow. Sexton introduces the concept of 'baselines,' suggesting that couples should measure and talk about their frequency of intimacy or habits to notice when they shift. By identifying these shifts early, couples can address hormone changes or life stresses before they become irreconcilable rifts. He encourages viewing these logistical discussions as highly romantic because they involve sharing a vision for the future.

Managing Conflict and the Danger of Weaponized Intimacy

Host Chris Williamson introduces the idea that how a couple handles 'bad times' is the true predictor of relationship success. Sexton strongly warns against 'weaponized intimacy,' which occurs when a partner uses a person's deepest fears or insecurities to hurt them during a fight. He argues that once you say something that cannot be unsaid, such as comparing a spouse to a hated parent, the relationship may never recover. The conversation covers 'attachment theory' and the importance of resolving conflicts quickly to prevent them from moving into long-term memory where a partner is viewed as a predator. Sexton suggests 'hitting send' on thoughtful emails as a way to communicate grievances without the immediate, defensive volatility of a face-to-face argument. This section provides a masterclass in 'arguing well' to preserve the connection.

Masculinity, Standards, and the 'Gentle Manosphere'

The dialogue explores the evolution of courtship and the current cultural landscape for men and women. Sexton discusses the concept of a 'code' for men—being a protector and provider—and how women traditionally acted as gatekeepers of sexual standards. They introduce the term 'Gentle Manosphere' to describe a group of modern thinkers who prioritize emotional integration and relational patterns over suppression. Sexton mentions his upcoming meeting with feminist icon Gloria Steinem to discuss how powerful characteristics are often gendered. He stresses that the ultimate goal of a relationship is to help your partner become their most authentic self. This section reframes masculinity as a tool for building better relationships rather than exerting top-down control.

Survival Strategies for Breakups and Long-Term Success

In the final section, Sexton utilizes his '8 Mile approach' to legal storytelling, explaining that honesty about one's own flaws makes a person more sympathetic in court and in life. He advises those going through breakups to avoid 'rebound' relationships and instead focus on 'body practices' like Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu to reconnect with themselves. He reflects on the grieving process, noting that the end of a marriage must be treated with the same weight as a physical death. Sexton closes by reacting to a viral image of Pierce Brosnan and his wife, defending their long-term marriage as the ultimate 'success story.' He posits that even the pain of heartbreak is a sign of 'alive mode' compared to a life of unfeeling monotony. The episode concludes with a call to treat relationship-building as a teachable, systematic skill that requires constant refinement.

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