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How do we build emotional wellbeing and save our marriages? | With Rabbi Tzvi Sytner
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A powerful conversation with speaker, rabbi, and therapist, Rabbi Tzvi Sytner. We talk about the loneliness of mental health struggles and the truth that everyone has problems. The question is whether we are willing to show up to them. Drawing from his training as a marriage and family therapist, Rabbi Sytner shares personal stories and practical wisdom on emotional wellbeing and building lasting marriages.
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Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
He said, "You know what's going to
happen? Probably if you tell somebody
I'm depressed or I have anxiety, they'll
probably say, "Me, too." You know what's
going to happen? You tell somebody,
[laughter] "Hey, you know, I'm taking
this medication. Let's you taking those?
Oh, I'm taking I'm taking a different
one. From guy, he said, I'd love
visitors." I said, "Oh, so you don't
mind if I tell people?" He goes, "No,
I'm not ashamed of the fact that I have
severe, you know, depression. We're all
going through stuff. You don't have to
go through it alone." You know, when he
says, "You don't know how to run a shul
because you're not there for the people
and the people need," what he really
means is, "I rabbi, I would love a
little more attention. and I feel sad
that I don't have that and I need I need
a mother and a father. They had a Q&A
afterwards with with the Roberas. And
one of the guys goes,
>> you know, he's like, "So, uh, Rabbi,
like uh when was the like first time you
like, you know, you know, experienced
real love, you know,
>> and and like all the guys in the cola
were like like like burying their heads,
you know, like, oh my gosh." And he
paused, which for a minute it felt like
it felt like eternity.
>> Beyond Therapy, bringing you emotional
[music] well-being.
Thank you very much for sitting for
coming on.
>> Thank you. Thanks for having me.
>> Yes, it's really nice to have you here.
Most people know you as the rabbi of the
village, popular speaker. People don't
know so much about you that you are a
certified therapist.
>> Yes. Yes. Yes. Yes. Not licensed here in
Canada, but uh because I moved here for
a rabbitic role in Kiru. But but yes,
before I came here, I got uh my master's
degree as a marriage and family
therapist.
>> And that was more focused on the
marriage part.
>> Uh it was both. It was both. And it's
also like more of a holistic approach to
therapy is like, you know, not just
looking at the client, but also the
family, you know, how their, you know,
what their uh other relationships are
like, influences, etc. And sometimes
working with the extended family as
well. But um but it was it was
one-on-one and also couples.
>> Oh, very nice.
>> In fact, I I had an interesting before I
moved here uh when I was doing my
master's degree. So, my uh placement was
in
you can call it a community center, uh a
drop-in center. Some people would would
confuse it with a homeless shelter. Uh
like it was really like kind of a rough
>> place. uh like people are really at rock
bottom when they're there. But was
interesting was a bunch of the people
that I worked with personally were
couples.
>> Oh wow.
>> Who had both been there uh and both had
mental illness.
>> Wow.
>> So sometimes I would have where they
would, you know, both are schizophrenic
or both bipolar or one, you know, uh
manic depressive. What it really
interesting and that and and some of
them had great relationships actually.
You'd be surprised. Yeah. But anyway, it
was Yeah, it was
>> some of the marriages were great.
>> Yeah. Yeah.
>> Despite their mental illness.
>> Yeah.
>> It's fascinating.
>> Yeah.
>> Yeah. It was interesting.
>> Yeah. People like a lot of people are
concerned about marriages
in Toronto and the world. People are
concerned
how to make marriages last.
What breaks marriages apart?
What strengthens a
decent marriage?
into a better marriage.
What would what are the thoughts come to
your mind when you hear marriage and
hear divorce and you hear these type of
things? What what are the thoughts that
come to your mind?
>> So, the the first thing that I and I
work with a lot of couples getting who,
you know, they'll reach out to me to
officiate their weddings and I'll say,
you know, the wedding is 6 hours long
and the marriage is hopefully like
another 80, 90 years. So, let's focus on
the marriage and let's focus on the
marriage itself, not just the wedding.
and and and in fact often I don't even
end up doing the weddings
>> uh for one reason or another. Um but I
will end up uh spending a lot of time
with them. So one of the things I tell
all the couples is I ask them you know
they're sitting in front of me. I says
so what do you do for a living? You know
she'll say I'm a lawyer. He'll say I'm a
doctor. I say okay how many years you go
to school? Five years, seven years, nine
years, whatever. I said great.
>> Um and then I said how many how many
years you go to school for your
marriage? And they're like, "What do you
mean?" I said, "Well, you know, clearly
the fact that you put so much time into
your professions means you value you
wanted the education to be able to
master your professions." I said,
"Where's the education to master your
marriages?"
and and they looked at me and I and I
said to I said, "My my goal with you is
to kind of get you your PhD in marriage
before this wedding because and
obviously it's um you know being
exaggerating a bit there, but but the
point is that for some reason when it
comes to marriage, we're literally ready
to just get in the driver's seat with no
education and no preparation." And
nobody would do that. And I say to him
like, "Would you ever like go into court
without, you know, being prepared as a
lawyer? Did you ever go into surgery
without a preparedness? I never
>> marriage everybody just gets right into
the driver's seat. No problem. I got
this. And I think that's the first
that's the big that's the first mistake
is for some reason there's no priority
on education. And and the irony is if
you ask people what is the most
important thing in your life? They'll
tell you my marriage or my kids. And
then you say okay.
>> Yeah. Parenting people don't either.
They don't put in they don't train
themselves.
>> Same with parenting. Same with
parenting. I forget who was a certain r.
I asked him once, "What's uh you know,
when do you start educating um yourself
on uh how to raise kids?" And they the
rough answer was 20 years before they're
born.
>> Oh, wow. [laughter]
>> You know, like that's so so there's this
you ask people like, you know, what's
most important to you? My marriage, my
kids. Where do you spend most of your
time at work?
>> You know, the gap between what's
important and uh
>> Yeah.
>> So, I think the number one thing I think
first and foremost is to ask yourself
how how important is this? Because if
it's if it's not then you know uh and
and how much are we do what are we doing
to prepare
>> how many books have you read I ask
people say how many books have you read
I'm Jewish not Jewish but how many books
how many podcasts have you listened to
how many experts I remember when I when
I was uh um when I was yeshiva bakar and
I had gotten engaged and I remember I
said to my rebby and I was very close
with my rebi and I said to him uh you
know he says great you going to be a
good husband I was like of course. What
do you mean? Like he's like, "How do you
do that?" I'm like, "What do you mean
like just, you know, be nice?" And
>> and he really like his his point to me
was
>> uh to educate yourself. I think maybe
that's where I got this from, but and I
remember literally sitting with people,
people who had been married 50, 60, 70
years. I sat with them and I was like,
"Tell me what makes a great marriage."
Look, I'm getting married and you're
married 60 years. Tell me what the
secret what's the secret of a happy
marriage. And and so it was between
learning sparm and reading books and
listening to audio and speaking to
people that was that was a that was so
important to me.
>> Yeah. I heard somebody say once that
like you know people say that you don't
need to train yourself for marriage or
for having kids. I know I watched my
parents. I know this. I know that. And
somebody said like a very good point. He
says even if you don't like the wisdom
you learned from any of these courses
but at least you're conscious of what
you're doing. You know you have you're
thinking you're doing it consciously.
You're thinking about your marriage.
You're thinking about how you're raising
your kids.
>> Yeah. And I I to to your point, by the
way, about, you know, people and I think
this is part of why people don't prepare
because they feel like, look, I grew I
grew up with I I watched a marriage, you
know, I had shimos. I watched for 30
years. I watched my parents whatever,
right? I think I think that's part of
the reason why I think the reason why
that's a mistake is because first of
all, who said that your what you
witnessed with your parents was actually
a healthy relationship? People
automatically assume they are. And you
know, sometimes a couple gets divorced
after 30, 40 years. Like, what happened
there? What was going on? How long? So,
people assume, well, I know how to do it
cuz I watch my parents. Well, first of
all, who said they had a good marriage?
Just cuz they weren't yelling means
nothing.
>> Yeah.
>> But even if they did have a good
marriage, remember that you're not your
father.
>> Your wife's not your mother. And and and
she has a certain expectation of her
father. So, there's the dynamics are uh
it's not plugandplay. That's all.
>> No. Yeah. Not at all. People often
assume that marriages fall apart because
of mental illness. I mean it's an
assumption that people have sometimes.
And the interesting thing is you were
saying that these people who you in your
placement worked with had crazy mental
illness. We're talking about
schizophrenia and real issues, real
pathological issues and they were able
to make a marriage work. You think it's
about awareness of and being self-aware
of what you have and working with it?
what makes you know people's struggles
in their mental health work in a
marriage and not work in a marriage. So
I think that it's such a great question.
Um I think that
there is a line
that people cross in their minds where
they
make a decision.
Um, are they willing to put in the work?
Are they willing to really work hard to
have a great relationship?
These couples and people that I worked
with who I said they they were like rock
bottom. Like
they they were they were really like
grinding. They were doing the work. talk
about like self-awareness and
transparency and
>> being able to like you know um uh uh be
vulnerable and and and and therapy upon
therapy upon therapy and
>> there was so much work. Now, you could
say, "Okay, they have like severe mental
illness and someone else, well, they
don't have the mental illness, so
therefore, you know, they'll be much
better off." And I actually think that
part of why these couples thrive the way
they did is because is because they
realized I I don't know what I'm doing.
I need to work. I need
>> because of their issues, they they're
able to come to the realization they
need work. And people, regular people
don't think they need work.
>> Yeah, I'm fine. I got this. I got this.
What you're going to tell me about
marriage? I got this. I know what I'm
doing. Whereas they're like, "No, no,
no. I need therapist. I need help. help
you whatever and they they really are
they admit you know they're they're
maida there's like a certain like
admission you know people say like why
it's so hard to say thank you you know
to have to be mod because being mod is
also thanking is also admitting that I I
couldn't have done it without you and
>> there's a you know their their ability
to be able to
admit I need help um and I'm going to go
for the help and to have that humility
to do that and then to have the
vulnerability and and they were just
like they were doing the
Wow.
>> That was
>> that is the that that is a big key is
that awareness and that willingness to
take help.
>> Yeah. Yeah. There there's no busha.
>> Yeah.
>> There was no ba around it.
>> I just visited a guy in the health
facilities here in Toronto. And when I
went to visit him, I said to him, "Is
there anything I could do?" And he's
like, "Yeah, I'd love visitors."
>> And this is a guy from the Jewish
community, a from guy. He said, "I'd
love visitors." I said, "Oh, so you
don't mind if I tell people?" He goes,
"No, I'm not ashamed of the fact that I
have severe, you know, depression."
>> Wow. And in fact, I would I would love
people to visit me. So I went and I told
his, you know, 10 close friends and they
all did. They had no idea. And they went
to the hospital and they visited him.
>> But that that idea of like he wasn't
ashamed.
>> And that's what these couples they were
they're not ashamed to get the help that
they need and to work at the stuff they
have to work at. And I think that that
when there's when there is u hesitancy
for whatever reason whether it's because
of shame or whether it's because of
certain you know uh uh false confidence
of oh I've got this they don't do the
work
>> right well wow
>> I'll just uh tell you that I actually
this is like an epiphany for me because
I never thought I never connected the
work that I was doing with these couples
and why perhaps they were so successful
um
and and sort of taken those lessons to
apply them to regular everyday couple. I
just never even thought about that. But,
you know, the fact that you're probing
me on this, I'm like, "Yeah, you're
right." Like,
>> that's very interesting.
>> Yeah. Like, they're ready to do the
work. I You said before was very
powerful about the mental
health of this person that you went to
visit him in the hospital.
>> Yeah.
>> And he wasn't ashamed to take help. I
think that's such a big topic. There's
so many people in our community who are
suffering and like it's not like those
people are suffering. It's in every
family. It's in every It's everywhere.
>> Everywhere.
>> Right. And people are suffering with
whether it's anxiety, depression,
addictions. These things are all
happening.
>> Yeah.
>> And you see it all the time, I'm sure.
>> Yeah. We all see it.
>> Yeah.
>> Every like as you said, every family.
>> Yeah. And that loneliness, it's like
somebody has a disease and they could
talk about it. They can get support.
They can get people to help their
family. But you have this guy with
mental illness or this girl with mental
illness woman, this mother, nobody
knows. Friends don't know. People don't
know. She's too ashamed to talk about
it. And people are alone. And like there
is no visitors. I think I think part of
the
extreme mental illness is this
loneliness that is that makes it so much
harder.
>> Yeah.
Yeah. Yeah. And actually I tell people
uh regardless of what the situation is,
sometimes it's uh someone had a loss in
the family, someone passed away, and
there's nothing I can say that's going
to make that person come back.
>> But the one thing I always tell people
always is I can't bring them back, but I
could tell you that you're not alone in
this and and that I'm here. I'm here for
you. I'm here with you and and we're
going to get through this together. It's
one of the lines that I I often share
with people before a funeral, before I
officiate a funeral, is I'll tell them
like, "Hey,
>> I am going to virtually be holding your
hand." Wow.
>> You know, metaphysically holding your
hand
>> from now until this funeral is over.
>> And and and that gives people a lot of a
lot of
>> comfort because they're in a place of
feeling uh despair and depressed and
anxious and
>> so many I mean I mean ultimately look
like you know what is anxiety? It's it's
the unknowns of life, right? If we knew,
we wouldn't be anxious. We wouldn't be
nervous, but we don't. There's so much
we don't know. And therefore, we're
anxious about and they've got this
funeral the next day. And
>> it's not something you practice very
often, you know.
>> So, I often tell people, you're not
alone.
>> Yeah. That's what's so beautiful. This
guy was able to say, I want people to
come and I want people I don't mind if
people know I don't want to be alone.
just something that sure helps his
recovery a lot instead of being alone in
a hospital room.
>> Yeah. I wish we had in uh and I think
this is sort of what you're alluding to
here is just like how taboo things are.
You know, you mentioned and whatever and
nobody wants to talk about it, but yet
and I said this one my shim recently. I
said like we're so afraid. We're so
afraid. Nobody wants to say I'm going
through something so hard. Nobody wants
to say it. I said, 'You know what's
going to happen? Probably if you tell
somebody I'm depressed or I have
anxiety, they'll probably say, "Me,
too." You know what's going to happen?
You tell somebody, "Hey, [laughter] you
know, I'm taking this medication. Let's
say, oh, you taking those?" "Oh, I'm
taking I'm take a different one." I
said, "That's probably what's going to
happen." I said, like, everybody's just
going through it like, you know, in a
silo. Everyone's going through it
independently, but but it's uh it's it's
we're we're all going through stuff. I
wish there was
like
I you know support groups or maybe
that's not even the word just like open
forums where things can be you know
people don't have to be worried about
about
things that they're going through.
>> Yeah. Look I tell you a funny story. I
was meeting with a I was meeting with a
um a couple reached out to me a while
back and uh to meet with my wife and I
to discuss a situation where their child
was dating someone and what do we do?
They're going on and on and on about
this child who comes from a broken home.
Comes from a broken home and you know we
don't know and it's pretty advanced and
they're dating and you know we didn't
realize broken home broken home broken
home. Anyway, you know what? So you know
what aids they give them. Yeah. At one
point I said to them, you know,
when my parents got divorced,
>> and they looked at me and they were
like, first of all, I think they were
looking for like a hole to crawl into,
like, wait, you come you come from, and
I hate the term, but a broken home.
>> Yeah.
>> Anyway, so I said to myself, I said, you
know, when my parents got divorced, I
said, um, you know, and they had been
married like 30 years. And when I was uh
engaged, as I said before, I took it so
seriously. I did not take it for granted
that of course what do you mean if I
grew up in a home where my parents were
married it must have been that I'll just
do what they did no the opposite now my
parents there were a lot of wonderful
things that they modeled for me
>> but it it in a very healthy way in a
very positive got me to question and
therefore I ended up putting in so much
more work and and you know and I'm far
from perfect in life in many areas but
one of the things that my wife and I are
very proud of is is our bias and and and
and it's of course It's all my credit.
No, I'm joking. [laughter]
It's it's my wife is amazing. Actually,
to me, I think it comes from the fact
that like I I I I think that, you know,
I question and therefore I'm willing to
put in that that extra work because
>> um you know, I I realize that there's
there's something wrong here. People are
so hesitant. Oh, that the guy should
know he shouldn't have any issues or she
shouldn't have any issues. It may have
mental health challenges. And it's like
to me that's like and my wife always
says this people people will contact her
she's a she's a psychiatric nurse
practitioner and they'll you know they
have someone in and then they'll contact
her and they'll say oh my goodness the
the should have just you know said that
they have xyz you know mental mental uh
mental health challenge and my wife says
wife often says um
that's great
like every
She says that everybody has something
>> right
>> most people when they get married don't
know what it is they're about to get
into
>> here you just found out
>> wow
>> now the question is is it being managed
properly and as a person you know if
they are wonderful this is great now you
know what you're getting yourself into
you know how they're managing you know
how to deal with it and the fact that
the person has the self-awareness that
they themselves know what they have they
know what they struggle with they're
willing to do the work to me that's a
wonderful thing
>> but we're so scared of it
>> I guess it builds people you know
>> yeah It does people leaders and
>> yeah I I heard someone uh said in the
name ofi they had asked him what should
a girl be looking for in a boy inim and
uh you know you're expecting the you
know masid answer you know and he said a
a balima and a balacas
yeah someone who's generally happy
>> right
>> um and someone who's follow Christ is
ready, you know, he can take
responsibility. And to me, that second
one especially, like it's not about how
perfect you are coming into this, you
know, or pretending to be, but
>> it's about like really are you are you
someone in life who's who's ready to
take responsibility for yourself, for
your life, for your everything.
>> Ready to do the work.
>> Ready to do the work. And that comes
back to that thing. Yeah.
>> Common theme that we have today. Yeah.
>> Yeah. Ready to do the work. I mean
that's what we start off with right with
that with that with those couples and
also with that the whole PhD thing like
are you ready to do the work and I I say
this is I didn't mention this at the
beginning but when you ask me what are
some of the things that people uh that I
find that you know contributing to
people's struggles in their in their
marriages and rel and I think part of it
is expectations
>> we have to come uh as realizing we're
coming as two very different people yes
we have commonalities and things that we
that we share but we're we're actually
uh we're not just one we're we are two
separate people that are coming together
and and that's going to be that's going
to mean that there's going to be a lot
of work that we have to do and I tell I
tell this I said I I ask all couples so
why are you getting married and they
laugh like what do you mean
>> and they give this you know typical
answers well we love each other
compatibility um uh companionship um
whatever they we want to build a family
trust they go through all this stuff
>> and and and I and I tell them
>> you you know, you could you could have
uh com compatibility, you can have
companionship, you could have love even
without getting married. I said, "What's
like why get married?" And then I go
into this whole thing about a Jewish
marriage. I said, "You're actually going
into this to grow."
>> Wow.
>> And I tell him, I said, "You're getting
married to grow."
>> Right?
>> And knowing that there's differences,
knowing that you're not going to be
perfectly compatible. And with that in
mind, when you hit bumps in your
relationship, you're not going to go,
"Oh my gosh, this is not what I was
expecting. This is not what I was."
You're like, "This is what I'm in. I'm
in it for like I came in. I'm ready to
do the work."
>> Yeah. When Mar said his Rebby told him
this before he got married, you're gonna
one day in your marriage, you're just
going to be like, "Why on earth did I
marry this woman?" [laughter]
>> And don't be shocked that it happens.
>> Yeah. And that's and that's where the
work begins.
>> Yeah.
>> Yeah. And she's thinking the same thing.
>> But I think also a very important point
to say is that like we talk about the
hard work. What I think also important
to talk about is the beauty that comes
from that hard work and the beautiful
relationship you create and the
beautiful life that you create together
and how worth it that is you know yeah
there's uh there's no question about it
that a person has a good strong marriage
strong relationship it's like everything
in life I don't want to say will fall
into place but will be so much easier to
navigate. you have a life partner who
you truly trust and feel like you're on
the journey of life with,
>> right?
>> There's there's ups and there's downs,
but you're like now, you know, they say
in life you can't get you can't control
the waves, but you can learn to surf,
you know, like you have somebody that
you're like going through the waves of
life together with
>> and uh and and the opposite is true,
too. When you don't have a strong
relationship, it it just like weighs on
everything.
>> Yeah.
But yeah, the most be you know what's
interesting? There was a study done um
by the woman named Maggie Scarf I
believe her name is. And uh there was a
study or a book I think it was called
September songs was the name of this
little magazine or booklet or I can't
remember what it's been years since I
saw it. But basically what she did was
she interviewed couples who had been
married like 50 or more years and asked
them to describe their marital
satisfaction. And they all described
like obviously at the beginning was like
really high. They all described like
this really
>> that dopamine rush.
>> Yeah. It was like amazing. We were you
know we engaged and d married and like
they all described this high and then as
they start going through their course of
life you know financial struggles kids
mortgage tuition whatever illness all
kinds of stuff that you know life life
has. And as they're describing it
they're describing their mental
satisfaction sort of declining.
>> Wow. And then they continued describing
their metal satisfaction as they go
through their their life. And where it
ended up with every single one of these
couples who was married 50 years plus
was it was always higher. It was a
U-shaped curve, but it was always higher
the second time around. Higher than it
started.
>> Wow.
>> And uh and that's to your point of like,
you know, yeah, you're doing the work,
but if you can if you can really do the
work throughout the you know those
difficult times, you're actually going
to come out with one of the most
beautiful things even more beautiful
than it started with, which is so
>> profound. I guess more deeply beautiful
than just that the beginning is not as
deep of a beauty. It's more of a
excitement and a
>> Yeah. Yeah.
>> A rush.
>> Yes. Exactly.
>> That second part of the U is that like a
beautiful relationship.
>> Yeah. I once heard someone ask uh you
know Rabisak Burko it's my rebiator
also and uh I was I remember years ago
it's 15 20 years ago I'm I'm sitting in
the col there was a group of university
students from some university and they
were in Israel on a program and they
they came to the col and you know
they're they're they're clueless in
terms of like you know cover and like
that's not so like one of the guys they
had a Q&A afterwards with with
Roberquitz and one of the guys goes you
know he's like so uh rabbi like When was
the like first time you like you know
you know experienced real love you know
and and like all the guys in the col
were like like like burying their heads
you know like oh my gosh and he paused
which for a minute it felt like it felt
like eternity was like this quiet in the
>> and he said
>> true love
true love
probably about 25 years in
>> wow
>> that's what he said and you You heard it
in the pause. You heard it in his
>> Wow.
>> He wasn't saying I when I got married I
love my wife.
>> He was he what what you heard in that is
there's levels there's depth to love and
to and to relationships
>> and he said you know and he paused and
he said if he goes true love real true
love probably 25 years in.
>> Yeah.
>> So powerful. I'll never forget it.
Really? Uh
>> it is very powerful.
>> Yeah. So I'm celebrating my 20th
anniversary this year.
>> Oh wow. Not so in five years. [laughter]
>> I wanted to go more into the mental
health side of things. Do you have a
message for people like you have people
suffering right and
different levels of suffering but the
commonality that I was talking about
before is the aloneeness
and the not being able to share with
other people whether it's their kids
suffering or them suffering or they feel
they can't share with other people.
Do you have a message to people, regular
people who are just suffering
internally, fighting battles heroically,
showing up in their lives and trying to
take care of themselves mental
health-wise, but it's really hard. It's
really, really hard and especially
because they're doing it alone and the
pain and everything that goes with it.
The first thing I would say is um
you don't have to go through it alone.
I I know that's the feeling. The feeling
is I can't tell anybody. If I were to
tell if I were to tell someone, what
would they say? What would people think?
First of all, most people would would
would be impressed.
I have a I have a newfound respect for
this guy who I visited in in the you
know, I always knew him. He's been a one
of my balabatin for years. I always
thought he was a nice guy,
>> but I I have a I have a tremendous
respect for the guy when he was when he
when he said to me, I'm not ashamed to
be here. That's a G. That's a G. That's
someone who has courage. That's someone
who's got like
>> inner I was so impressed with and I and
I respect him so much more.
>> People are not going to judge you the
way you think they are. Sure, there may
be people who will and those people you
don't want them in your life anyway,
>> but I really believe um that that one
thing that everyone needs to hear is you
don't have to go through it alone.
Everyone's everyone's going through
something. Everyone. Everyone. I haven't
met anyone who isn't going through
something.
>> Wow. And you don't have to go through it
alone. Reach out for help. People are
not people people want to help. And and
and and you know I would tell people if
someone asked me you know what would you
say to a friend if they asked you if
they told you I'm suffering what should
I do? How would you respond to that?
What would you tell them?
>> You know and even these people who
themselves are suffering alone would say
well I would want to help them and I
would offer them. I would tell them not
to be embarrassed about. Right. That's
exactly what someone's going to tell
you. You know reach out for help.
There's so many resources.
>> Yeah. You're It would be a It's a big
It's a big level to do that. It's a big
level of strength.
>> Yeah. The other thing that someone told
me which I thought was was a nice
reminder is that if you feel like you
hit rock bottom, the beauty is that it's
only uphill from here,
>> right?
>> You you can't go lower than rock bottom.
>> I think something very interesting. I
had a I had a um a supervisor
when I was uh working in this this uh
drop-in facility uh in New York. And I
remember while I was doing supervision
and working with these couples and and
and individuals,
there was a terrible tragic case in
Munie of a father um who was found dead.
>> Wow. uh father of like six or seven kids
and he had taken his life and it like
really weighed heavy on me. It weighed
heavy on me and I was just and my I just
was in shock in the beginning and then I
went into my supervisor because I had a
thought.
I said to her I said this is going to
sound terrible. Please forgive me but
and she's not she wasn't Jewish. I said
to her,
"If this guy was in that much pain that
he was um willing to leave a wife on her
own and kids on their own, which like
this is the last thing any father would
want to do, but if he was in that much
pain, maybe we shouldn't be so sad that
he took his life because he was truly he
had to have been suffering to a point
that none of us could imagine if that's
how far he went."
>> Wow. I said, "So maybe we shouldn't
maybe we shouldn't see it as such
tragedy." This what this is like a weird
thought that I had. I don't actually
believe that. I don't actually think
that. But that was a thought that
crossed my mind.
>> The point of that thought is not that
it's of course life is important, but
that to realize the extent of the pain
he's going through.
>> Yeah. And and that's when she said to me
something that I thought was amazing.
And I never looked up the study myself,
but she she said to me, you know, there
were studies that were done of people
who had attempted suicides and um and
they were they fa failed attempts.
So they swallowed the bottle of pills or
jumped off the building or whatever
>> and they survived.
And she said, "One of the things that
they found with these studies in these
interviews is that the moment they
swallowed the pills or jumped or cut or
whatever, the moment they did it, they
right away regretted what did I do?"
>> Wow.
>> And she said, "One of the things that we
we saw from here is that people who kill
themselves don't want to die."
>> Yeah.
>> People who attempt suicide don't want to
die. They just don't want to be in pain.
>> Yeah.
>> Yeah. They don't want to be in pain.
>> They don't want to be in pain and they
don't know how to get out of pain. The
reality is today more than ever
throughout history, we have so many
ways. There's so many wonderful
medications and people have all this
taboo around it, but like there's so
many wonderful
>> therapy and good good
>> therapy. Exactly. And there's nothing
wrong with it. It's wonderful.
>> Yeah.
>> Yeah. Yeah, like you said about support
groups earlier and I I really like I
deeply believe that sharing that pain
with other people and being able to
experience it as a community and not be
in your in your house stuck alone with
it and that you said like sharing with
other people. I think that's a huge help
to people. Connection is a big part of
the healing. Yeah,
>> absolutely. Part of why like AA groups
and 12step programs are successful. part
of why I mean there's many reasons but
um
going not going through it alone going
going to you know being able to connect
with other people and uh
>> and these groups oh my gosh I just I
just remembered a story when I when I
was uh
>> years ago so part of my training was
attend attending a uh a 12step program
an AA meeting
>> right
>> and I remember
>> I think I'm gonna have to do that soon.
Yeah, it's it's I'll tell you about my
experience, but I uh I I went I remember
I went to an AA meeting. It was in the
basement of a church in in White Plains,
New York. And you know, I was a yeshiva
guy and I you know put on a a beanie and
I was wearing a coat and it was the
winter and you don't go to an AA meeting
and observe any any AA meeting you go to
there's confidentiality there and
there's mutual respect and there's
understanding and therefore you go in as
a participant. Everyone goes a
participant. So, I go in and I sit there
and uh um you know, everyone's going
around the room. Hi, my name is John.
You know, I'm an alcoholic. And I go,
you know, etc., etc. I struggle with
this, that, and one by one, they're all
going around the table uh going around
the room. And then eventually comes my
turn. And um you know, I said, "My name
is uh I'm I'm going to pass." I'm like,
"It's my first time here, and I'm going
to pass." That's what I said. After the
meeting, two people came up to me
and gave me their phone number.
>> Wow.
>> Complete strangers.
>> Wow.
>> And they said, uh, you know, TV, I
remember my first meeting. I I know what
you're going through and, uh, you call
me if you need anything.
>> Wow.
>> And I remember thinking to myself like
like is the world is backwards.
We look out there. There we go. Like all
the successful, healthy, quote unquote
people, everyone, you know, that's the
real world. In here, these are all the
broken people. When I'm like, it's the
opposite. In here, there's no there's
there's there's wealthy and there's
poor. There's doctors and lawyers, and
there's janitors, and they're all in the
room together.
>> And what brings them together is their
struggle. And I remember thinking to
myself, there's no judgment.
>> There's just acceptance. And there's
humility. And and people just want to
help each other.
>> Yeah. and and and and when you come
forth and say, "Hey, I'm I'm I'm having
trouble." They they're willing to just
give their phone number, say, "Hey, I
want to help you through this. This is
the way." I remember walking away going,
"This is the way the world is supposed
to be."
>> Supposed to be. Yeah.
>> Out there is actually the world of
Sheare where everybody's putting on a
front pretending like whatever. You know
what I mean? No one can be honest with
each other. No one can be open. No one
can say everyone's afraid to be judged.
Everyone, you know, people are afraid.
And here is the way the world should be.
>> Yeah. Like imagine everybody could come
to shul and feel comfortable fully that
they don't have to hide something. Often
people feel like they can't fully show
up, you know, and if people could
do that, that would be an amazing thing.
>> Yeah. Yeah. And and I think the point
that you're you're getting at here is
not that, you know, we're all going to
just uh wear everything on our sleeve
and, you know, that everybody comes a
world where everyone's just sharing
everything. You know, it's like, hey,
you know, you know, TMI, what do I say?
Too much information,
>> right? But it's that, you know, the idea
is not that we all have to share
everything. Certain things are okay to
stay private. But there but when you're
feeling like you need help and you're
feeling like you need to share
something, you shouldn't you shouldn't
have to be concerned, right? But, you
know, but it'll be incredible to be able
to be able to reach out for that support
and not feel ashamed.
>> Yeah.
>> Yeah. Yeah, I wanted to ask you about
how you go about, if that's okay, asking
you about how you go about your like
promoting your own mental um health,
your own emotional wellness. [snorts]
[sighs]
I'm not good at it.
Um, in full transparency,
uh, yeah. So,
I think type A personalities, including
my own, uh, where, you know, we just, we
continue to go in fifth in fifth gear
for a long time. Uh, and unfortunately,
um, not pausing enough to take care of
ourselves. You know, as the old saying
goes, put on your own mask and then put
on your child's, right?
>> Uh, so I'm not good at it. So, I'm
probably not the example to the world of
uh um of self-care, but there are things
uh that there are many things that I've
done. Um and when I say I'm not good at
it, what I mean to say is I'm a hard
worker. Uh and I'm not consistent.
But at times when I feel like I need, I
have a lot of resources.
>> Uh things like I I find breathing
exercises to be incredible.
>> Um
especially I think noteworthy is when a
person is in a a place where they had a
really hard day things are you know
really they're going through a very
stressful time to say you know to sit
there and do some you know breath work
is it's actually much harder it's easy
to do breath work when things are great
but like when you're having a hard day
and your mind is racing and you're
you're in like a you know a place of you
know really stressful place I actually
find that it's more helpful to have a
guided meditation or guided breath work
then and there's like thousands of them
out there, right? You just Google five
minute breath work and just listen to
someone walk you through a five minute,
you know, guide meditation or something
like that and
>> it calms you down
>> completely. It will slow your heart rate
and it'll slow your breathing and it'll
slow your mind and and just it literally
just gets you with your feet back on the
ground. And I've had this where people
call me and again I say like I'm I'm
good at it with other people but
unfortunately when it comes to myself I
only do it when I'm like uh oh wait I'm
in crisis mode. Okay here's what we're
going to do you know so I can get I can
ground myself but I'm not one of these
like I regularly uh you know meditate
and I regularly that's what I mean by
I'm not good at it,
>> right?
>> I find that that that type of thing is
very helpful. Um, something else that
I've really really come to appreciate
um through my own work over the last uh
I would say seven years
um has been IFS.
>> IFS internal family systems um guy named
Schwarz actually.
>> I find IFS to be incredible.
>> Yeah,
>> I went uh last summer. Every year I go
by myself for like two or three days. I
go on either a canoe trip or uh or
hiking by myself for a couple couple
days.
>> By yourself?
>> By myself? Yeah.
>> Oh wow.
>> And it's just in the wilderness. There's
no phone cell phone reception and it's
just a few days by myself.
>> Maybe I'm better at this than I than I
than I thought because I don't think a
lot of people do this.
>> But um
>> and one of my and it was probably if you
asked me like what was my best day of
the year last year, it was probably that
day.
>> Wow.
Not because I was alone by myself,
although I love being alone by myself. I
can I can be with myself for a very long
time. Uh scarily. Um but I it was that I
had done a couple of IFS sessions on my
own. Just sat there for about an hour
each day,
>> right?
>> And it is so profound. Wow.
>> And so in it was so uplifting. So much
so that I had gone for 3 days and after
two days I had like two really great
sessions just by myself and
>> that's
>> I went home early.
>> Some people go crazy in their own brain.
>> Yeah.
>> But but uh [laughter]
>> I went home early I felt so I felt like
in such a high
>> Yeah.
>> Um
>> Yeah. IFS if if people don't know what
that is, they should look into it. I
think it's amazing. I actually think
it's it's it's it's like what's going on
inside of you all the time and we're
just like not aware of it.
>> Yeah.
>> Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. And also that the the
initial part of IFS I thought was was
helpful uh for me was even if I don't
get to the point of dialoguing with you
know what what's going on inside myself
at a particular time but being able to
just access
I find that to be uh to be like
profoundly helpful. So, you know,
whereas a person goes through through
their day and they're like feeling super
anxious about something, they don't even
they don't even know what what to do
with that. They they don't know what to
do with the fact I'm feeling so anxious.
I'm feeling anxious. So, so what Okay,
maybe I'll go for a run.
>> Um maybe I'm going to eat. Maybe I'll
drink. Maybe I'm going to watch
something, you know, mind numbum in some
way, right? They're feeling anxious. And
what I found amazing about IFS was the
idea of first obviously breathing and
slowing your mind and then being able to
um sort of scan your body top to top to
bottom and and get in touch with
yourself physically but then also become
aware of your emotionally what's going
on and then leaning into you know
completely focusing and breathing into
whatever is that's happening.
>> Just the embodiment of your body and
>> the awareness. Yeah. the awareness and
the and the acknowledgement and the uh
noticing and accepting and leaning into
whatever you're feeling
>> experience.
>> Yeah.
>> Wow.
>> To me that's incredible,
>> right? That is something that's much
easier to access than the inner
dialogues and that's something is much
harder to get to.
>> Yeah. And but and you know what but even
if a person just did that
>> Yeah. You knowing I think it's amazing.
Yeah. And then support, you know, it's
good to have like uh, you know, there
were times when I felt like, you know,
it' be really good to work this through
with a therapist and get a good
therapist and like work something
through. Then there's times you just
like have a good friend, you know, like
somebody can speak out. And empathy is
so powerful because it goes back to what
we were talking before about not being
alone.
>> Yeah.
>> If you have somebody who uh people don't
like to be empathetic because it
requires them to sit in a place of an
emotion they may not be comfortable
with. Uh Bnee BR Brown has a great clip
about empathy. Uh it's not it's part of
a longer talk that she did, but someone
turned it someone sort of cartoonized
it. You know, it's it it demonstrates
what empathy requires. It requires
someone to actually go into the
emotional space that the other person's
in. And part of why we don't want to do
that is because that's uncomfortable.
You're, you know, you're feeling really,
really, I don't know, scared about
something. For me to to be like, you
know, to sort of step far away and go,
"Oh, wow. That really stinks. Well, good
luck. You know, it's easy to me to do
that.
>> For me to really like tap into what does
that mean? That must that must like what
does that I'm trying to imagine what
that really means to feel what you're
feeling. I can imagine that's actually
very scary if you feel like you're going
to go broke or going to go bankrupt or
going to be attacked or going to get
divorced or what like and you actually
start getting into that place yourself.
That's empathy. That's why people don't
like to do it because it it requires you
to go somewhere you don't want to go.
>> Go inside of yourself deeply.
>> Yeah. Yeah. I think that's what we're
most afraid of doing as people.
>> Yeah.
>> Is really experiencing ourselves in a
deeper way.
>> Yeah. And that is what empathy requires.
But the nice thing is you ask about when
you're going through a hard time, the
nice thing is if you can reach out to
someone who's good at being empathetic.
>> Yeah.
>> It's incredible. That's the that's the
uh that's what we were talking about not
being alone.
>> Yeah. I think this point that's come up
throughout our conversation is that
there is a point of when you're alone
and and it's not your fault and that is
true. At the same time, you can help
yourself to not be alone. You can reach
out to people. You can create
friendships. You can create find
supports. There's people who want to
help. There's people there's a bunch of
more just good people who just want to
help you. And if you would reach out,
you would have more support and you'd be
less alone.
>> Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
>> And and I and and I think your point
about reaching out to the right people
is important. If you're going to reach
out to the person who be like,
>> you know, you're going to reach out and
say, "Oh my gosh, I'm really I feel like
I'm going to get divorced. I'm having
such a hard time." And the person's
going to be like, "Hey, well, at least
you're married."
>> Yeah.
>> You know,
>> well, that that doesn't help me, you
know. But you call that person who's
going to be like, "Wow, I can't imagine
what that's like. I'm so sorry you're
going through that. I you know, I'm here
for you. I'm with you. I don't know what
to say. Like, I you know, but I I can
imagine how scared you must be right
now." Like, that's empathy.
Yeah.
>> Yeah. That makes a person not feel alone
which is so powerful.
>> Yeah. We're speaking about people
showing up to themselves and then
self-numbing like we all do self-noming.
I think every single human being in the
world whether they're aware of it or not
whether it's eating
whatever food they like or their phones
or
it could be anything.
>> Yeah.
anything that that calms down what's
going on inside and not instead of doing
some actual self soothing and actual
like listening to what's going on inside
of you and what is the problem you know
our body's telling us something what's
happening what's going wrong
um
yeah that self-awareness
to do that it's such a challenge
do you have any advice for people how
they could at such moments connect more
them to themselves instead of going to
that numbing whatever sort even though
it's not talking about somebody's doing
something terrible we're talking about
regular people you know just not
destroying their lives just numbing but
it be so much more healthy if they
turned inwards
and they were self-aware the the first
thing is you know I think when people
are at a point where they're they're
ready to turn to something to uh as you
call it uh self-numb That's usually like
a a crisis mode already. I don't know or
maybe crisis is not the word, but it's
like they're already in like panic mode.
They're in stress mode.
>> Right.
>> Right. So, you know, they had a long
they had a long day and you know, this
happened and that happened and then
something at work and there's a major
issue in the community and so and so
then called them and then you know one
thing after the next at that point like
okay I just I need to drink or I need to
eat or I need to watch this or I need to
whatever I
>> whatever self soothing you know thing
that they might look towards which may
be an unhealthy habit to to talk about
to do or not to do is like almost an
irrelevant question. What perhaps is
attainable is
before we get to what am I going to do
next
like five minutes of breathing,
>> right?
>> Because your mind's not thinking clear,
your heart's racing, your palms are
sweating, your breathing is quick,
you're
>> you're just not grounded enough to make
any kind of direction change. Right now
you're hitting on the direction of I
need to I need to do something to like
just not feel what I'm feeling right now
>> and it's probably going to be an
unhealthy habit.
>> Yeah.
>> Right. So like like for so I need to
like slow the train a little bit because
right now I'm heading like full speed
ahead to wherever
>> we're not even conscious of it. Most of
the time we go to these numbing things.
We're just like yeah I'm just in the
mood of that. I'm just in the mood of
doing we don't think about it.
>> Right.
>> Doesn't even come up consciously.
>> Yeah. And so I I think I think and you
used the term before about listening to
your body. You know, it's it sounds so
like uh I don't know, new age. Yeah, new
age. But it's like it's like it's just
godless. Like made it like there are
people who have real real uh uh diseases
where they don't have uh uh feeling in
their fingers. You know what I mean?
That's a dangerous disease where they
have no feeling in their palms or
whatever. Why? Because they could be
leaning on the on a stove top and not
even realize, right? So they have no you
know the fact that we the fact that we
have uh senses in in our whole body we
know this is a from made it that like we
we're aware when something's hurting or
something otherwise we would you know
die from it. Oh I didn't realize I was
bleeding out all this time you know
>> and it's the same thing emotionally.
>> Yeah the same thing emotionally makes it
that I'm feeling anxiety in my chest or
I'm feeling or I'm feeling my heart
racing or I'm feeling choked up in my
throat or I'm feeling super tense in my
shoulders. All of these things are just
like, you know, Hashem's way of when
there's something wrong where either I'm
feeling scared or I'm feeling sad or I'm
feeling angry. Hashem makes it that all
those that it manifests somewhere in my
body and I like to look at it like a
like an alarm clock.
>> It tells you you need something.
>> Yeah. And and
>> you need to turn inwards. You need to
take care of yourself,
>> right? And what we're supposed to do is
be like, "Okay, well, hey, let me look
at that clock. What's going on? What's
that alarm about?" Instead, what we do
is we're like, "Okay, um, let me turn
the volume on higher on my, you know,
and yeah, exactly. [laughter] Let me
like watch something, listen to, you
know, if I can chew louder than I can
feel this, you know, then that that'll
be good. I won't you won't be bothered
as much."
>> We ignore the alarms that are telling us
turn inwards, see what's bothering you.
>> Right.
>> Maybe reach out to a friend, a family
member, maybe a therapist.
>> Right. Right. Right. And again, before
they even what to do, there's just like
can can you just at least figure out,
you know, what why why is this alarm
going on? What's what's what's this
about? What's your what's your body
trying to keep you what's your mind
trying to keep you uh uh safe from or
protected from or do you know what I
mean? Like what do you what are you
concerned about? And like
>> that's like the place to go, you know?
That's
>> Yeah. Yeah. The one part of what you
said actually the the breathing part
it's interesting because today it
actually calms me down. For a while it
made me more anxious. It's interesting.
Yeah. It's interesting how like
different people react to different
things. Today it actually helps me but
for a while made me like if I was
anxious and I started breathing for some
reason it made me more anxious. I don't
know why. Just interesting.
>> That is interesting.
>> Yeah. I was working with my
brother-in-law's a coach in in Israel uh
therapist and anyway but he so you know
he was he was walking me through this
sort of um
s I don't know if it was sematic
experiencing or whatever it was but
getting in touch with what I was feeling
and I was feeling anxious and he's like
okay so just sit with that
>> right
>> and I remember feeling like I am going
to die
>> what what just sit with it sit with it
yeah sit with it oh my gosh sit with it
if I sit with it like I'm going explode
or something terrible happen and you
realize after a while like oh it goes
away so interesting.
>> Yeah that's very powerful
>> you build me afterwards. [laughter]
>> Yeah.
>> Do you feel this is a controversial
question but do you feel everybody would
benefit from going to therapy? You know
people say therapy is for people who
struggle then some people say no
everybody would benefit from going to
therapy at some point. What are your
feelings about that? I'm subjective, but
I think the answer is yes. Everybody
would benefit from therapist. If it's a
good therapist,
a bad therapist is that's bad. But a if
it's a good therapist, I think so.
>> Yeah. You think everybody could benefit
and build self-awareness, build
understanding of yourself, build
presence.
>> Yeah.
>> Yeah. There's nothing to lose if it's a
good therapist.
>> A little bit of money maybe.
>> Yeah. A little [laughter] bit.
>> A lot of money. But uh
The reality is everybody has like midos
challenges. Everyone has midos issues.
So if you're somebody who gets angry in
case I don't need a therapist ju but
just like just explore that why
>> right
>> you let's say a person yells they're
good person you know they I don't have
mental illness but they find themselves
like yelling at their kids a lot or
yelling at whatever.
>> Does that need a therapist? Not
necessarily.
But your to your question of like does
can everyone benefit from it? If that
person would sit and and and you know do
some CBT work, you know, or just like so
what's going on there? Why is it that
like I yell at my kids, you know,
>> most likely it probably has something to
do with their childhood, something to do
with that home they were raised with,
how they were sort of trained, you know,
to react when things happen.
>> And that could be re that could be like
revisited and reprogrammed, you know,
like, you know, for
>> anger is a really common one because
anger is like a self-numbing tool
almost. It's like we don't want to feel
our emotions. We can use anger as a way
of like self-protecting,
you know, it's a it's a secondary
emotion that we can use when we don't
want to feel what's going on. It's
easier. We feel more powerful when we're
angry. And
>> yeah, I
>> it feels protective.
>> I I think I heard this from uh my rebby.
I don't remember. Anger is the most
primitive form of sadness. Most
primitive expression of sadness.
>> Wow.
>> Anger is the most primitive expression
of sadness. And it makes so much sense.
>> Yeah.
>> When I'm angry at you, and I find this
with men, adults, uh, especially kids
too, but, um, if they're angry, I'm so
angry. I'm so angry. What they really
mean usually is, I feel so sad.
>> Wow.
>> I feel so hurt.
>> Wow.
>> But they can't say that.
>> Wow.
>> And I have this with balabatum. I have
this with people where they're they're
so angry. They're so angry. And I'm I'm
able to tolerate and to hold space for
whatever it is that they have to say,
>> right?
>> Because I recognize that
>> there's hurt there.
>> Yeah. But they're they're not, you know,
when they come and be like, "Rabbi, I'm
going to tell you, you know, how you're
running this jewel is, you know, and you
don't know what you're doing." You know,
like, thank God I don't really get a lot
of that. But, you know, if I if I have
that and I have had that, I'm able to
hold space for it because I'm like, what
you really mean is um I feel sad, Rabbi.
And
>> I wish you would just spend a little
more time with me. You know, when he
says, "You don't know how to run a shul
because you're not there for the people
and the people need." What he really
means is I Rabbi, I would love a little
more attention. I feel sad that I don't
have that and I need I need a mother and
a father. I need a you know what I mean?
That's really what he's saying, but he
can't say it. powerful to look at people
that way and to look at the people
because when people yell at us, we react
so we're so offended instead of reacting
like this person's attacking me. Wow,
what's going on? I can I can show up and
be have some compassion for this person.
This person's just sad. Person's hurt.
They're in pain.
>> Yeah.
>> Okay. Um if you could give a message to
the Toronto community or to the
community at large about mental health,
what would it be? If you could say one
thing that people should hear
about mental health, emotional
well-being, what would that be?
You could shout it from the rooftops and
make sure everybody hears it and
everybody takes this in.
We have to make it not taboo.
Yeah,
>> it can't be taboo.
>> We have to have this. We have to it has
to be regular.
>> Yeah, we have to we have to be able we
have to talk about stuff. Um
it can't be taboo.
There's physical health. We're not
afraid to say it.
>> Yeah,
>> the brain is is just another part of the
body. Like every single part of our body
that can get sick,
>> every part of our body that sometimes is
stronger, sometimes weaker, you have a
pain in your foot or you know an
infection in your eye, the the mind is
no different. And we have to we have to
stop
all the judgment
and it we we've got to talk about stuff
more.
>> Well,
>> because the reality is, as I said bunch
of times, everyone's got something.
Yeah,
>> everyone.
>> Yeah.
>> A personality disorder, a this, a that,
a trauma
>> and everybody. And if we just, you know,
>> so we could be more supportive, we could
be, we could help each other, we can
stop judging each other. We can, you
know, look at it through the perspective
like my wife said, right? Like,
>> great. So, now you know what they have.
This is great. Now, you know, now is it
being manageable? Fantastic.
You know, to me, like I'm not going to
get up on, you know, you know, I I speak
on tour anytime now for a couple years
and uh there's hundreds of thousands of
views and you know, hundreds of people
that listen listen every single week.
Oh,
>> wow.
>> And I'm not just going to,
>> you know, get up there and just, you
know, let me just tell you all my
problems and all the things that are
wrong with me. I'm not going to do that.
>> But I do allude to stuff and like I have
my my fair share of challenges. like I
have stuff uh but I'm not afraid to say
it,
>> you know, and I I feel like it's part of
why I can relate to other people who are
going through challenges.
>> Um and and I think it's
>> right. You have stuff and you're willing
to show up to it and you're willing to
be aware of it.
>> You're willing to to own it and not be
embarrassed of it.
>> Yeah. Yeah.
>> That's the powerful thing.
>> Yeah. It's it's not a bad thing.
>> Yeah. It's I think it's a part of you
know
>> I don't know I can go on and on about
this but
>> yeah no it's very powerful
>> but like I said with that story when the
guy's like well they come from a broken
home you know broken broken [laughter]
home
>> the couple ended up getting married by
the way. Yeah. And when we asked them so
what was the turning point they said you
know the guy the wife told my wife you
know when your husband said he comes
from a broken home we realized if he his
parents are divorced and he turned out
okay so maybe this should not such a bad
idea again I'm not saying you oh every
divorced person but
>> like you know fact that everyone has
stuff it's just a question of like are
we taking responsibility like said you
know abalas are we you know
>> are we showing up to it
>> are we showing up to our tough.
>> Yeah.
>> Yeah. And and and uh so I think that's
the message that I that I would shout
from the rooftops. It would be like we
got to talk about it.
>> We got to talk about it.
>> No more no more.
>> This is what we did today.
>> That's what we did today. There you go.
So we're doing it.
>> We're doing [laughter]
>> You're doing it.
>> Yeah.
>> Thank you so much for coming on. It's
really pleasure to talk to you.
>> My pleasure.