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married somebody.
Everybody was dancing by the by the by
the by the and it was so happy. We were
smiling and then I get home and there's
something about my or something about my
that's
really bothers me. I really don't like.
We tend to think communication is about
talking. Right. Everybody knows how to
talk. Nobody knows how to communicate.
And then she yells at him and he yells
at her and they're not talking for 3
days till they get to the therapist
office. Marriage is a struggle. It just
is.
>> I want to show respect really for the
people who are who are staying in
marriages that are not these ideal
marriages.
>> Looking to marriage
to help me feel a certain way about
myself.
>> Right. It almost always fails. I mean
the should be
you look at the translation. It should
be doesn't mean boss and servant. That's
not
>> Correct. We got to make that clear first
of all. I I I know couples who spend all
day together with the kids and they go
to Costco and one master feels lonely.
We're so the same. We're so wow. He's
just like me. We we finish each other's
sentences. That's a disaster.
>> In one word, in short, if you can
explain me what it is marriage.
Okay.
Our guest today
um is Moshe Ze'ev Lamb. He's a clinical
social worker.
He is the clinical director from Achieve
Marriage Center. He is known for giving
couples therapy. Today we're going to
talk about the struggles behind the
smiles.
We're going to talk about um
the dynamics of marriage
um and the expectations that we carry
that everyone carries with themselves.
We expect from other people
and how we can build uh better and
deeper relationships.
Stronger relationships with connections.
So Moshe Ze'ev, welcome to the struggle.
>> Hello. Thank you. Wow, that's a lot a
lot of stuff to discuss in one sitting.
Excellent. So I'm glad you came in.
Um so I want to talk about I want to
start with um
marriage. I want to start with couples.
When you uh hear a couple say
that um
you know, it's it's going well. You
know, there there's no personality
disorders. There is no mental illness.
It's just somehow they fell out of each
other and they're tired and you can
sometimes hear that um
became like a business.
We're staying together because of the
kids.
What do you what's your opinion is is is
is this an an approach or is is there
light by the end of the tunnel and a
person shouldn't live like that as far
as you know, like uh a must or this is a
punishment?
Wow. Okay. So so you're describing
unfortunately you're describing
a lot of marriages. Yeah.
Um
when when a couple is in that place
there's really the the question is so
broad cuz really there's
they came there. They they they arrived
at some kind of journey. There's a
journey
>> There's a journey that got them there.
When they start usually happens by by
couples who are already
in the
middle
middle marriage. Not young couples. So
usually usually it's 10, 15, 20 years.
I've actually seen it in couples much
younger.
But what what a lot of it there's a
journey here. This couple this couple
the couple that you're describing went
on a journey.
And
it's it's so hard to know when you say
is this an approach? Of course not.
It's it's it's it's
it's it's very sad. It's something that
that happens a lot.
But what you need to look at when a
couple comes in with such with such a
situation
what you really need to look at is what
was the journey that brought them here.
There was there was a journey that
brought them here. And the journey
there's no there's no one answer to that
question because the answer is
there's a journey here
that took place and at some point they
both gave up. Usually because the pain
was too great.
They tried. They couldn't get it to
work.
There's there's a lot in a in every
marriage there's a tremendous amount
of pain that's lying underneath the
marriage. It might be pain
of expectations. What I thought was
going to happen in this marriage and
what's not happening. It might be might
be and when I say expectation might be
what is marriage supposed to be what is
marriage not supposed to be.
It might be sometimes there are couples
that come in with very simple issues
that just were never addressed that were
never never touched on
and it grows and it grows and
it's just you know, we thought it was
supposed to be like this and it
there's there's a point
where the couple just
a distance started to to be created
and we really have to look back
at the couple. See there's things
playing there are things playing
themselves out on the surface. There's
on on the conscious level they're
fighting over certain things that or
that or they're not fighting or that
there's a distance there.
They gave up both people took a side and
said, you know what? We got too much to
lose. Right.
I'm staying together and they're like
this this is nothing. There's nothing
there. There's nothing there almost
always means
it's too painful to be there. It's it's
just there's some there's something that
happened in our marriage
that that didn't work
and we didn't know how to make it work.
And every time we try to make it work we
got hurt more.
And usually what happens is you know, I
try and I get hurt and I try and I get
hurt and I try again and I get hurt.
And at one point someone gives up. At
some point one or both of them are just
going to go and say I'm not getting hurt
anymore. A couple that's that's that's
using that approach is a couple that's
saying I'm not going to get hurt
anymore. I just don't want to get hurt
anymore. So that's the root of it.
That's the the root of it is usually I
don't want to get hurt anymore. I'm done
I'm done being hurt. Right. So they're
pulling back. So they're pulling back.
And
what that couple
for for a couple like that the belief
the belief that there is something else
that had the that something hasn't been
tried. The belief that that the trust
that like if a couple like that comes
into my office the first place is can we
look back
at what may have happened over here.
What was the journey?
Where was the pain?
What was the what was the pain? How did
that pain emerge and how did you each
react to that pain?
And very often the reaction to the pain
is is
sometimes the fight and then when you
fight and you fought enough then the
next reaction is to pull back
and and give up.
Could we look at so many of these
couples have not had guidance or they've
had guidance
that was taking them in in in in
in the wrong direction but so many
couples some of these couples have not
had guidance and just
it didn't work. In other words there
there was so that the approach is
like like so many issues things in life
and you
the name of this podcast is the
struggle.
There's a struggle. Marriage is a
struggle. It just is.
And what happens is people just give up
on that struggle. It's just too painful.
Going back and finding so where was the
where was the point of that pain? What
what happened? What hurt?
Finding what hurt
on one side finding what hurt on the
other side and creating a trust to come
back in and say
was there something that we missed in
each other? Was there something that
that
that happened somewhere along the way
that that that was causing us pain and
we didn't know how to deal with that
pain so we pulled away from that pain.
Maybe where we are now we can look at
that pain. As a couples therapist
how do you help a couple build trust
back?
So the the first step is to try to
understand what happened. Really trying
to understand what happened. Very often
there's some kind of cycle that took
place between them some kind of
if they can see what may have happened
from a more mature place. Now that now
they're they're they're 10 years 15
years
out out of out of what happened.
The first step in building any kind of
trust in the process is to
can I step back and see what may have
happened.
And
part of seeing what happened
is
when couples interact with each other
they interact with each other at the
level of behavior. So I behave a certain
way
and you interpret that behavior a
certain way so you react back to me from
the way you interpreted my behavior and
then I react back to you in the way
I I interpreted your behavior. We're
we're we're reacting to each other from
a place of interpreting each other's
behavior.
If I if I acted a certain way towards
you I did something that was hurtful to
you.
So now you interpret it a certain way.
What did I do? What was going on inside
of me?
Why did I act that way to you?
Right now you're hurt. You don't really
know that so you're just going to react
to me from a place of you being hurt.
What if I can have help that couple have
a conversation where they're actually
and now you're now you're hurting me and
now I'm hurting you.
All all it's just behavior interacting
with each other.
Being able to say so what what was going
on inside of you
when you
when you behaved to me that way? What
was what was your what did your internal
world look like? What was your pain?
You give him a little bit of clarity.
Help them have a conversation about
that.
Helping them see it's not just there's a
clarity. There's there's just the the
the knowledge of what happened but then
the experience of that. The experience
of
looking into your eyes and saying so
when you did that to me when you walked
out the door
that wasn't because you're just an angry
SOB and and and it was because
you were hurting so deeply.
And the reason why you were hurting so
deeply is because there was something
that I might have done to you that
caused you that pain. But guess what?
You know why I did that to you? Can you
hear me now? Cuz I was hurting so
deeply. Now could you listen to why what
was going on inside of me?
Having helping a couple have that
conversation talking to each other and
hearing what was What's on underneath.
What was the process under underneath
the behavior? Right. Right. We think we
know our spouses. Married 20 years, I
know. Don't Don't tell me who my wife
is. Don't tell me how my husband I I've
been there with them for 20. We don't.
We know We We know so little
because what we know is behavior.
Because it's a reaction only. We react.
>> Yeah, what What was I know I know my
husband if he gets this and that he just
withdraws and he walks out the door and
my wife she yells and that's the
behavior. And if I do this and this and
this and she's going to yell. If I do
this and this and this he's going to
just walk out the door.
We know that. Right.
That's the surface. That That's just
going on in the surface. Helping them
have a conversation where what was going
on inside you and really listening to
each other. What was What was happening
inside you when you did
yell? What was happening inside you when
you did walk out the door? So, what I
hear from you that communication
if if people would know how to
communicate because that's why they're
going to a third party Right.
>> help helps them communicate with each
other in a healthy level.
>> Right. So, the word communication is a
is a is a
It's a very
over-simplified word cuz Yeah, it's it's
communication. It's all about
communication, but we tend communication
means
We tend to think communication is about
talking. Right. Everybody knows how to
talk. Nobody knows how to communicate.
Okay, really means
can I sit here
It It also includes talking. Right. But
can I sit here and listen to you
share what's going on inside of you
and hold space for that? Just stay with
that. Because what you're saying right
now
No, no, no. No, no, no, no. Let me Let
me Let me Let me
There's something about what you're
saying that I really know Can I Can I
stay
and listen and really hear it through to
the end? Right. And then can you stay
and listen? Cuz what I When I hear you
talking
the husband and wife get into a fight.
They're not talking to each other. And
now you're going to explain your side of
the story.
I I My attention span is 0.03 seconds
because the second you say something
that doesn't sit with my version of
reality
I'm going to jump in and tell you why
your version of reality is wrong. And
then you're going to
Can we Can Can I listen to your version
of reality?
It's wrong. It's wrong. It's 100%
wrong. You don't know what you're
talking about. That's not what happened.
That's just not what happened. Right.
But that's the experience that you were
living in. Right.
That's That's the place that you were
That's That's your experience.
Husbands and wives they interact with
each other from the place of their
internal experience, not from a place of
Let's Let's say Let's say you have a a
husband who walks into the house.
Just Just to explain what I'm saying
over here. Let's say you have a husband
who walks into the house at 7:00.
Hi, I'm home.
And the wife is sitting in the kitchen
with the five kids and she looks at him
and she just fumes and walks away.
And he looks at her and says,
"Excuse me, I'm home."
She says,
"Thank you very much." she says to him.
He's fuming and "What the bleep bleep
bleep is the matter with you? Why can't
And then she yells at him and he yells
at her and they're not talking for 3
days
until they get to the therapist's
office. What happened?
So So, when I try to pull it apart,
what's what's what I'm hearing is he
said
he walked into the house at 7:00
and
she was all upset at him because he he
You told me when we spoke at 2:00 you
said you're coming home at 6:00. Right.
For the last hour I've been trying to
reach you. You're not in the house. I'm
going crazy with the kids. I had supper
waiting for you at 6:00 on the table.
Now it's Now it's cold. And you walk
into the house at 7:00 like nothing.
And he looks at her and says
6:00? I told you I'm coming home at
8:00.
I told you I'm coming home at 8:00.
What's 6:00?
I told you I'm coming home at 8:00.
And And I You know why you couldn't
reach me between 6:00 and 7:00? Because
I was rushing like crazy cuz I wanted to
surprise you and come into the house an
hour early.
And And I walk into the house an hour
early as a surprise and this is this is
the this is the What did I get?
No. What What's
At that point, if they trust each other,
if they could really listen to each
other, are they in a fight?
Of course not. There's no fight.
>> No.
There's There's
There's a miscommunication.
>> He was living in the experience of
I said 8:00. She was living in the
experience of you said 6:00.
What actually happened at 2:00? We'll
probably never know.
We'll probably never know. And even if
they texted each other, what they're
still going to have two different
interpretations of the text.
We'll never know.
And
But what's what is important What's
What's important What happens in a in a
situation like that is the couple gets
so hung up
on who's right, who's wrong. Was it
6:00? Was it 8:00? And the whole
conversation revolves around was it 6:00
or was it 8:00?
It's not the conversation.
What was your experience? And what was
your experience? What was the meaning
behind it?
>> What was it? When you walked into the
door
and and your wife was
angry at you
would could you understand that if you
said if you said 6:00 that she would be
that angry at you? Yeah, I can
understand that. That's where she was
living. That was her experience of the
universe. Now, could you understand that
if your husband said 8:00
that he would be fuming at your
reaction? Yeah, I can understand that.
That was his experience.
As As soon as we begin to understand
each other's experience
>> Right.
the fight's over.
Oh, so So And And So, I'm giving you a
little mashal of fixing up. But what if
it's
Oh, so for the last 20 years
you're living inside the experience that
I'm this and this person.
And for the last 20 years you're living
inside the experience that I'm this and
this person. That's crazy. Wow.
We were living inside Once they talked
to each other, we were living inside a
different different space. Who's right?
Who's wrong? Is it 6:00? Is it 8:00?
We'll figure that out. We'll sit down
We'll
Or we'll try to make sure it doesn't
happen next time. Right. But once I
understand your reality and I see your
experience and you understand my
experience
that's all we need. That's all we really
need to be happy. The couple that are
fighting over 6:00 or 8:00. Was it 6:00?
Was it 8:00? Which is where most couples
find themselves. Eventually they're just
going to give up. It's impossible to
live with this guy. He says he says 8:00
and he said he said 6:00. He says,
"Yeah, I can't live with her."
Hear each other's experience. Yeah.
So So, communication So,
what How did I get Communication means
Can I hear you say I I said I'm coming
home at 8:00? Right.
That's not what I heard.
>> moment
>> Can I Can I still listen to you? Can I
still hear that that was your
experience? Can I Can I make room for
that inside of me?
And then she says, "You said 6:00." I
know I know I didn't say 6:00, but can I
Can I Can I hear that that was her
experience?
Now we're communicating.
Yeah, because that that is very very
important and you have to grab yourself
while this is happening because when
it's happening when it's hot
>> Yeah, yeah, the triggers are
the body is not cooperating. It's like
>> heat is on it's like I'm not going to
give you space. Yeah. As far as couples
therapy, do you find that when young
couples come in that there's a lot of
you know, um
you know, young or even not so young,
but they were not sharing with each
other a lot of stuff, a lot of hate and
a lot of resentment and it comes out in
in in the couples therapist's office.
And sometimes it it gets worse so it
makes So, it it gets better later.
Of a sure that not yet. They're not
sharing a lot of stuff. I mean, it It
goes both ways. Sometimes they're
sharing too much. Right. Sometimes
they're not They're not sharing at all.
But yeah, for sure there are a lot of
things that remain unsaid
that happens in your office.
>> That happens in my office. What you're
trying to do in therapy is create a
safety
for both.
>> to express what the feelings are.
Um There There could be situations where
you know
There are feelings. There are emotions
that come up inside of us.
Not always are we so happy with those
emotions so we kind of push them away.
Could there be room for that in a
marriage even? Like like I'm really
upset. It really really hurt me what you
did. Right. Or I really don't like when
you do that. I really don't like when
you don't do that. I really don't like
when I'm talking and you you
totally ignoring me and looking at your
phone. Like there are parts of you that
really really bother me.
If I If there's no room to express that
it goes It goes It becomes more and more
intense. It becomes more It builds up
into deeper emotions. It builds up into
deeper emotions.
Very often we're afraid to go to
negative emotions in a marriage cuz
marriage is supposed to be beautiful.
It's supposed to be really nice. Right.
You just married somebody.
Everybody was dancing by the by by the
by the chasan and it was so happy. We
were smiling. And then I get home and
there's something about my chasan or
something about my kallah that's
really bothers me. I really don't like.
Um
I I just described 99% of marriages.
It There There are things here that that
I didn't realize. Right. Engaged I
During the engagement I never saw it. In
the dating I never saw it. Like what do
we do?
So, there's a strong tendency to just
suppress it
because we have a beautiful marriage.
Right.
And the idea that that a beautiful
marriage means I need to suppress what
is going on
is is is dangerous. Right. That doesn't
mean I need to complain about
everything. But even to my for myself to
be honest. Right.
>> With my
to say to myself
Just Just to ignore. Just to ignore.
Like there's there's there's a certain
habit that my spouse has that really
bothers me.
So
I could either
different approaches. I could just say
it doesn't bother me.
Right.
Make believe it doesn't bother me.
Suppress it. Ignore it. And And go on
with the relationship.
Problem is it does bother me. Right. I
could also say it does bother me. A more
A more healthy approach would be You it
does bother me.
And now let me see. how important is it?
Is it Is it something that I really want
to I want to bring up to my spouse? Is
it something that I could I could look
the other way and just
be okay with it?
That's okay. That's a healthy approach.
When we suppress
what we're feeling,
that's going to come up in the
therapist's office as an explosion.
Yeah, no, it's going to build up and
it's not healthy. It's not healthy
mentally, physically.
>> have to I don't have to be I don't have
to share with my spouse every single
thing about them that bothers me because
there's certain things
that I you know what? Yeah. It's
packaged. It's packaged. There's
something
But but to ignore it, to make believe
>> Yeah.
that it doesn't bother me when it does,
that that's what catches up to us.
That's what catches up to us and that's
and that's what explodes. Being able to
just be honest You say being honest with
each other is first being honest with
yourself. Be honest with yourself,
what's going on inside of me. This is
what I'm feeling and
and from that place, once we're honest
with it with ourselves, there's room to
be honest with each other and and
a relationship where we can be honest
with each other, open with each other,
we're not afraid, there's a safety to
share what we're feeling. Right. Um
that's
When do you remember a time that a
couple came in and
they you you were saying or you saw that
this is not going in a good direction
and it kind of end up in divorce?
A scenario like that.
When do I When did I think that? Think
or or actually happened? So I've thought
that many times. It's not for me to say.
Right. Um I'm not a navi.
Uh I'm a therapist. My my I'm I'm here
to help.
>> But but you see you see that the couple
sitting over there that that um
or you know, that this is not going to
work.
>> There are couples that come into therapy
and they it looks hopeless. Hopeless?
Hopeless. Hopeless? It looks hopeless.
It does. There are There are times when
I look at the couple and just like God,
why did you put these two people
together? What what's
>> the reason behind it? It could be any
number of reasons. It could be It could
be just so much pain, so much trauma, so
much
personality disorders, mental illness,
or just just 20 years of enormous pain
and and
there could be things There's so much
distance. The the the the the couple
each on their own had pain or between
them?
It could be both. It could be either
one. One of the One of the biggest
reasons, one of the biggest things that
that gets in the way of a you know,
creates a certain hopelessness in the
marriage, sometimes it's connected to
mental to to mental illness or
personality disorder, but sometimes but
one of the
one of the most important ingredients in
a good marriage,
but just just I'm going to say this, but
I want to get back to the
It's not the role of a couple's
therapist, I I I believe, to ever say
I don't think this marriage could work.
That's not That's not never my role.
You're there to help and to to coming to
me to help. I'm going to help and to
give hope. And the only the only way I'm
going to stop trying to help is if they
stop coming into my office. That's
That's my That's my role. To pass
judgment on, to say, you know, this
marriage can't be helped is is not is
not my role. Yeah, but I think
as a trained professional, they tell you
not to give advice. Yeah. No, it's not
about giving advice. It's about letting
the person come up with it themselves.
>> Right. So So taking him through
uh alleys and and valleys and
then they have to find out if this is
for them or not. They're empowered to do
that.
>> empowered, and also because I don't
know. Right. That just as a as a person,
I don't know. Right. I know that this
marriage can never work. I don't know.
I'm just going to try my best. Right.
One of the
one of the most hopeless places in in a
marriage
is
I mean, one of one of these say this of
marriage is there needs to be some sense
of of
I'm living inside a reality that's not
yours and you're living inside a reality
that's not mine.
>> It's very important. Is it just this
sense of of a subjective reality that
that's
And so for example, this couple with the
6:00, 8:00. Yeah. For some reason, you
heard 6:00. For some reason, I heard
8:00. We don't know why.
But there's there are differences
between us.
Two people look at the same thing, they
see different things.
We We are different. We're We're We're
all different. No two people look at
anything the same. Right. But there But
is there a roles that let's say the
husband has the role of being a a
noison, he's the he's you know, and and
she's the macao. Is there a leader? Is
there important to have a leader in the
house?
Is it or when you say both are
individuals and is it 100 100 50 50? Now
you're touching on a whole different
topic with that.
Um
People I mean, the times of must be a
macao. You look at the translation. Must
be a macao doesn't mean boss and
servant. That's not We got to make that
clear first of all.
Um I'm just talking now about I'll I'll
touch on that in a second, but I'm just
talking on about just being able to see
reality, acknowledge
that we see things differently.
And we always will. Right. And And
that's all.
When there's a need for you to see
things my way,
that's where the root of the problem is.
>> And I need that that there's a no
there's this sense of of No, this is
what's real. Right. What do you mean I
said 6:00? What What do you mean I That
That can't be. That can't be. There's
either a 6:00 or an 8:00.
Most of life is built on our perception.
And And And we have different There's
actually the Gamara someone showed me in
in Yerushalmi
that uh
Yerushalmi in Sanhedrin that says that
that if if the the
two pair of the Adam
Bezen the two Adam come to Bezen, Bezen
splits up the Adam and they question
them separately to make sure that that
everything is is in sync.
And if it's not in sync, they know the
Adam is false. And Yerushalmi says if
it's in sync perfectly,
it's also it's also It makes no sense.
That's That's not That's not good. Like
there's no way two people looked at the
same event and saw the same thing.
>> say the same story what they saw.
They're going to tell the story
differently. Like So for a husband and
wife to acknowledge
that we're living inside the same
experience,
but we're really not.
Husband and wife that go through things.
I've seen this
seen so often husband and wife go
through a tragedy together.
Rachman l'tzlan, the loss of a child or
some kind of tragedy that they're going
through, a financial crisis.
So you think, oh, they went through it
together. Why they went They didn't.
They They They, you know, they go
through through an illness. I've seen
couples go through an illness together
where one of them is very sick and you
think, oh, they went through it
together.
Very rarely
do they go through it together. Each one
is living inside of a different
experience and being able to just
to just acknowledge that It's true. is
the key to good marriage. When a couple
comes in, you talk about hopelessness, a
couple when there's no ability to see
that, when there's no ability to
acknowledge
subjective reality, that's like that's
like the
That's the beginning of a marriage.
>> of an end. The beginning of a Yeah. A
marriage can't survive in inside that
because the
reality is there are two
experiences. And if we don't acknowledge
that, no marriage can survive that.
What if sometimes there is a couple one
evolves and the other one, you know, is
still staying where they were. Let's say
one grew more than the other.
And all of a sudden you hear, you know,
it was going for a few years it was
okay, but somehow one is outgrowing the
other in in a in a lot of ways. Maybe in
spirituality, maybe in other ways.
What do you say to a couple like that?
That's That's a
That's a
Like Like everything That's a What I'm
going to try to do with a couple like
that is bring that into a conversation
between the two of them. Mhm. Like
what's going What's going on? And what's
Inside of what you're asking, there's a
lot of other questions. What's called
growth? What's called movement forward?
And also what is growth mean to you and
what does growth mean to you? What does
growth mean to you? Where I see what
you're saying, where it shows up,
um where it shows up a lot is one couple
is in therapy for 10 years.
And they've explored their inner world
in such deep ways and and and the other
couple the other the other the other one
is just
like in their place and they're
What's called depth?
What's called? Does it mean I have to
have a DMC till 3:00 in the morning or
could it mean like
There's a lot of depth in having fun.
There's a lot of depth in just being
>> everything It means different to
everyone.
>> It means different to everyone. And
having the couple look at it from that
perspective,
and why are you not growing the way I
perceive growth? It's really It's a
subjective reality. It's also having
And And the other spouse may see no need
to grow in that way. You know, I'm not
the
Maybe I'm not doing all those things
that I'm not sitting there and then
exploring my inner world and growing,
but maybe I'm doing something else that
has growth. Maybe I'm busy with a chesed
organization.
What How we define growth, that's a
subjective reality conversation that
they talk about with each other. You
mentioned the the noison macao, the
mashia macao case. I would would
want to come back to that when you Yeah,
yeah, yeah. So So So the So what I hear
from you is that you're saying that one
is not supposed to
come up to the other and the other is
supposed to Who says what Who is
supposed to be up and who is supposed to
be down?
Who makes the rules? So
So rules is it So the word rules
>> Yeah. Once Once you Once you
Once you sprinkle the word rules into
marriage, That's out. It's It's You
know, dieting. Right.
>> I'm talking about being I'm I'm relating
this to food. Okay. Uh
all the research on diets, dieting,
pretty much shows clearly that diets
don't work. Okay.
>> Diets generally don't work.
And but everybody's going on diets.
>> Right. And what I mean by they don't
work is, yeah, I lost 50 lb, but come
back in 12 months. Right. Come back in 2
years. Right. You keep the 50 lb off?
So there are people who do, but
statistically, when I say it doesn't
work, statistically, You mean to say a
healthy lifestyle, change your mindset.
Really what needs to change is my
relationship with the food. You say when
you say healthy lifestyle, my
relationship with the food needs to
change. My relationship with the whole
concept of eating needs to change. If I
can't develop
a good relationship with food, if you
give me rules,
it'll work. I'll lose weight. I'll be
healthy as long as I can keep the rules
until the day comes when I can't not
stop keeping the rules.
The same thing happens in a marriage.
You give a couple rules,
so many times the questions about
marriage are what are the rules for
finances? What are the rules for who who
runs this? Who runs that? Who's What are
the What are the rules of
What are the rules of
Who who gets to choose a kind of if
If the the real the problem if a couple
comes in
asking what the rules are, Right. the
first question I want to know is why do
they need rules?
Right. What's going on in the
relationship that they need rules?
What what's what's their relationship
with other If there if there's a
relationship with each other,
then we'll talk it through. They may not
need the rules. What if a couple is not
arguing and they're not fighting? Uh
it's just one person says uh I just I
feel lonely in the marriage. I feel
alone.
I don't have any connection and
there's no coming home late, there's no
coming home early. I just feel lonely.
Is it
is it a spouse who is lonely has a
self-esteem issue?
Is it the spouse that feels like
a stickle codependent on on that I need
an outer environment to make me feel
good or two lone two people who are
comfortable to be alone can make a good
marriage?
So the word lonely, it's a big word. I
like
And
the first step in that is
just to look at what what's what's taka
happening. Like what's
Couples come in with words. Yeah.
Communication, lonely, I think.
>> What what's happening on the ground?
We're sitting and talking about concepts
and perception, but what's what's really
happening also makes a difference.
>> Right. So,
I I I know couples who spend all day
together.
Right. They they go shopping together,
they go spend all day Sunday together
with the kids and they go to Costco and
they go to and during the day they spend
all
and one spouse feels lonely.
Yeah.
That's that's one type of question,
what's happening, and the other question
would be
you know, my husband comes home at 3:00
in the morning cuz he's out with his
friends and he leaves at 6:00 and I
never see him and I have no and I feel
lonely.
Duh. Like there's no
When you say the word lonely, I want I
want to know what's happening in the
marriage.
Because
there could be
I'm lonely because there's just we don't
know
not we don't know or it's too painful
for us to connect for some reason.
Usually there's there's a pain that's
that's keeping us from connecting.
And
why is your husband coming home at 2:00
3:00 in the morning? So So in other
words, I'm lonely could mean there is no
marriage going on. Right. I'm lonely
could also mean there's a marriage going
on, there's an inability to connect,
there's something that I'm looking for
in a relationship, there's something I'm
looking for in a spouse,
and I'm not able to connect to that,
which is which is
opens up a whole 'nother door into the
topic of what what's a marriage supposed
to be.
>> Right. Generally people who come into
marriage with a deep sense of
loneliness, a deep sense of insecure
attachment, a deep sense of I'm all
alone in this world. Yeah.
There's this existential loneliness. I I
I and I
I'm lonely because
we're all born into the world alone and
then hopefully there's a mother or
father who looks at us and hugs us and
kisses us and makes us feel not alone.
Um if I went through a childhood feeling
not alone
because I had a mother who hugged me and
a father who hugged me and it was just a
there was I just felt not alone. Right.
My my existential loneliness was aided
by a family that that that that cared
for me emotionally, that I got the
warmth and I got the connection.
When I go into a marriage
not alone
and I go into a marriage looking for a
partner, looking I'm also looking not to
be alone, that marriage will help me
feel not alone.
If I go into a marriage feeling alone
because I never got connection, I never
got I never got a sense of I I
I looked into my mother's eyes, I looked
in my father's eyes, I I didn't get that
feeling. I didn't I didn't feel I felt
alone and I'm now 20 years old and I
feel completely and totally alone in the
world. And now I get married,
there's a very good chance
that I will continue to feel alone in
this marriage. Correct. You will keep on
looking for this to fill this void.
There's something I'm looking for to
fill this.
>> Yeah.
And there's this belief that a marriage
is supposed to fill this. Right.
Marriage doesn't Marriage doesn't do
that. Marriage is a partner for life.
Marriage is a lot of things.
And marriage could help me with a lot of
things. If I'm looking to marriage
to help me feel a certain way about
myself,
>> Right. it almost always fails. It'll
work in the first 6 months because we're
so uh you know,
but at some point it's going to stop
working. At some point the feeling I'm
going to go back I'm going to revert
back to my baseline feelings of being
alone and then I'm going to be upset at
my spouse
because my spouse is supposed to fill
this feeling. And it just doesn't work.
>> That's very powerful stuff. So,
in one word, in short, if you can
explain me what is marriage?
What is marriage? One one word? If you
can.
So, we'll do a little bit more than one
word. And and and I you know, marriage
is so big Right.
that I'm not going to tell you that the
answer I'm going to give you is the
definitive answer. But just for for for
a person who is listening and they say
talking about marriage, yeah. direction
in terms of how how do I how do we think
about marriage? Healthy marriage.
Um
So, we have to do work around the world.
We do work around the world alone.
And
one of the things that we don't have in
life is the ability to just be ourself.
Just I want to be me.
Being able to be myself
and having somebody hold that
is
is a very deep connection. It's as close
as we can come to feeling that. It's not
going to fill this. It's not going to
It's not going to do this.
But it's it's the most we can expect in
this world
uh in terms of of of connection. In
other words, if I want to connect to
you,
right? So, I want I want to have a deep
connection with you. So, I know that
you're a Yankee fan and I'm a Mets fan.
So, I'm going to make believe I'm also a
Yankee fan. That's why we can be
friends, right?
>> Right. That's that's not real
connection. I I put on a facade, I put
on a mask so that I connect to you. Wow.
In life we do that all the time.
We we put on facades, we put on masks.
Some more, some less. The closer a
friend is to me, the less of a mask I
have. The The further away, the more of
a mask I have.
I go into a supermarket, I'm not going
to show my I'm not going to walk over to
somebody and say can I share with you my
deepest pain? Like it's not like there's
a I'll smile even though I'm having a
really bad day and I really want to just
kvetch.
Hi, how are you? I smile. There's a mask
on. And we walk around the world with
masks. We we have to. That's That's what
allows us to interact with each other.
We all walk around with some level of
mask.
And that that adds to the loneliness,
that whatever the feeling over here is
makes it more lonely.
One of the things we're all looking for
is to be I want to be myself. I just
want to be me.
And the only way to really be me is in
connection because I don't want I could
be I can go to the top of a mountain by
myself and be me, but that's not me. Me
is also Me is also a social I like I
want to be me and I want to connect as
me. Wow. And the
the the more I can be me, the deeper the
connection is with you. If you accept me
with all my garbage, Yeah. and I could
really I I could show up as me and still
connect to you,
now I feel deeply connected and deeply
me.
The less of the facade that I have to
put up
to connect,
the more First of all, the more I can be
myself. Right. And
and the more I can connect. Marriage is
a place we can be ourselves. Wow. It's
it's it's really
People think of marriage as connection.
It's all about connection. So, no, it's
a I mean it is.
>> It is, but
>> a place that I can show up safely as me.
Where Where else in the world can I show
up safely as me? That's amazing what
you're saying. What what I hear that
you're describing is that
marriage is the most beautiful thing in
the world. Could be. Yeah. It it should
be.
>> Could be. Yeah.
Being alone like on a mountain, living
for yourself
is not an option. Right. You're not
You're not being fulfilled.
But if you can have a partner, you can
be in a marriage, and you can be 100%
authentic,
you can express yourself, you can be
comfortable, and you can be seen, Right.
it is the most powerful thing in the
world. Most powerful thing in Because
it's fulfilling. It's it's it's it's
it's it's it's an unbelievable place
that you can express yourself or you can
you you hold each other
like what you said before,
understanding that I see things from my
perspective, you see things from your
perspective, and having an open mind. I
don't have that. I don't have that. If I
can show up just as me and and you look
at me and say I don't understand you,
but hi, welcome. Yeah. I don't have to
understand everything that's going on
inside of you. You can You can
Marriage is a place we can be me We can
undress, literally, figuratively and
literally. It's the only place in the
world where we get to undress and just
be ourselves. Yeah. It full
self-expression. You know, that's that's
It's a It's It's It's very well
explained what marriage is supposed to
be because
it is beautiful. If you can get to that
place
>> place,
>> with the communication.
>> place to be. to. It's an
>> place because you walk through a
not an easy world and not an easy life
and challenges. And when you walk
through this life with a partner like
that, you can really be yourself.
You don't want to look anywhere else.
You Nothing is is
>> And if you you'll put this together with
what we said before,
in order to attain that,
>> Yeah.
I need to be able to starting point. It
sounds like
marriage people have this illusion of
marriage as two people who are just
We're so the same. We're so wow. He's
just like me. We we finish each other's
sentences. That's a disaster.
That's not what this is all about.
>> the real cuz if I if I if I need you to
show up as me Yeah. in order to for us
to connect, we're not really I'm not
really connecting to you.
>> Yeah.
Once we have this sense of we're
different and we always will be
different and there are parts of you I
may never understand and parts of me
that you may never understand.
And it's okay.
>> And it's okay. And and show up. Show up
as you are. Show up.
>> Yeah. That's that's the doorway into a
happy marriage.
>> That is uh that is uh
the the bomb. That is where that's the
goal where you're supposed to go. But
let me ask you a funny question.
And this happens a lot. Um
can a marriage survive
without intimacy?
Because there's a lot of times that um
on both sides of the aisle, people are
using this as a as sometimes a
punishment or sometimes they're like
done. Right. They're like for whatever
the reason is. But is
So, define the word survive. Yeah.
Are we are we staying together cuz we
have eight kids and we we have to make
sure they we just got to get them out of
the house. Yeah, a marriage can survive
without intimacy if that's what you mean
by survive.
And very sadly there are marriages like
that. There are marriages like that, but
survival is not what we're looking for.
>> It it it's
it's
Intimacy is especially you take it to to
the place The way we discuss this place
of of I I could show up as me. Intimacy
is the place where we show up in almost
the in in the deepest way as me. Right.
And I said literally and figuratively.
So, literally we take our clothes off.
That that's Right. If that's not
happening, there's a part of me that's
that's just not showing up in this
marriage.
>> There there's a distance over there
because that's the that that's what
brings very you
you're more comfortable
and and and you're open. It's it's it's
Now, I want to be careful over here cuz
I don't want to push aside. There are
very sadly marriages
that are surviving. Mhm. And there are
people who are staying in marriages
as a survival. Like when I said we're
going to stay together, we survive
because we have eight kids.
I don't want to hurt people. When I say
that I have to be careful cuz there are
people
who are saying, you know what?
This marriage can't work.
But I have a bunch of kids and they
didn't do anything wrong. Right.
And or maybe I have a spouse who didn't
do anything wrong.
So, I'm going to I'm going to push
through. I'm going to survive. I'm
sacrificing. Maybe even without
intimacy. I'm going to survive
for the sake of my children. Sake of
holding this house together. Sometimes
for the sake of a spouse who
through no fault of their own is not
somebody that I
feel I could live with or have a really
good relationship with who I you know I
married the wrong person and
but now here we are
with with a bunch of kids and a marriage
and I could leave Right.
and destroy a whole bunch of people's
lives. Right. So, I'm going to I'm going
to push through.
We're sitting here talking about the
ideal beautiful wonderful marriage.
>> Right.
I would also have a tremendously deep
respect for somebody who does that
because at some level they are
expressing their deepest self in the
marriage.
If
What about by staying by surviving?
>> by staying and surviving, I'm expressing
a value.
If I'm staying in a marriage for my
kids,
>> Right. Right.
I might be expressing a much deeper part
of who I am Right. than if I
leave. than if I leave and
try to find a marriage where I could
find this ultimate I'm I'm staying in a
marriage where I don't have this
relationship. Why am I staying there?
It could be I'm staying there because
myself, the me that I'm really
expressing over here, is a love for my
children. The me that is a value
to not hurt other people's lives. So,
what you're My own selfish reason. That
like it's not So,
we're saying all this, but I want to
have I want to show respect really for
the people who are who are staying in
marriages that are not these ideal
marriages.
>> So, what I'm hearing you saying is that
this is a heroic act a lot of times.
>> Very Sometimes I've seen people engage
in heroic acts like this and and and and
it's
And for those people, what I would tell
those people is very often like if
somebody's sitting there saying,
wow, I'm listening to this ideal of
marriage as this place where I can
just be me be me be me. But how do you
define being me? Maybe being me
is going to the core of my deepest self
and saying, I'm going to do this for my
kids. I I just I just want to make room
for that. It's it's it's a I like the
way you look at it always from both
sides of the aisle. Right. And and and
for somebody who says, I can't Yeah.
even for my kids,
have the same respect. The same respect.
It it it that's that's
Only they know what pain they could
hold, what pain they can't hold, what
pain So,
we're sitting here describing the
beautiful beautiful beautiful marriage,
>> Right. but
the same amount of respect needs to be
shown sometimes to people who are not in
good marriages or just surviving. Wow.
Wow. It's amazing stuff. What about
sometimes you probably heard you see a
lot of people that you can see between
couples there is some sort of
competitiveness.
Like
a wife would be jealous of their
husband. So, let's say if her husband is
whatever going places and he's
you know he's in the community and he's
doing people to do Whatever. He's doing
He's getting honored at certain places
or the other way around and
the spouse is not there to share months.
The spouse is not really not happy. They
feel that somehow it affects them. It's
not
you know it's not oneness.
So, that
I'm going to I'm going to approach that
from two different angles because there
could be one of two different things. I
mean it could be one of a hundred
different things, but generally two
different things that might be going on.
The jealous spouse
Yeah. might be
might need to look inside themselves
and
explore that there's something happening
in this relationship
which is really coming from outside the
relationship. There's some insecurity.
There's something
>> Right. You're looking In other words,
you're looking for something from this
relationship
which is probably not coming from a
healthy place inside of you. All right.
There's There's There's your spouse is
bringing up something in you or you're
looking for something in your spouse
that's being sabotaged by your spouse's
success. Right. If my spouse's success
bothers me, hurts me,
then
I really need to look inside myself
and
what are my own insecurities?
What am I looking for from my spouse to
give me that my spouse is taking away
from me? Like there's something my
spouse is taking something away from me
right now.
And what's going on inside of me that I
need to look at this about my spouse
from that place. What am I missing? What
am I missing over here? That that's one
way to approach it. It would be it would
be really the individual work of that
spouse to look at themselves. That
spouse must have introspect. That spouse
must be aware that that is happening.
>> And and very often that's the challenge
to help somebody get to that place of
introspection. That's uh yeah. That's
that's uh
be the job of a therapist or a rabbi or
a friend or somebody to to sit them down
and go this like Yeah. There's a
competitiveness over here. What's what's
underneath it? There's always something
underneath that. It's not
When we look at oh this competitiveness,
that's not where it's interacting.
There's there's a level below where
there's some kind of need where there's
some kind of emotional insecurity that's
creating the competitiveness. But that
that's one way to look at it. Another
another Sometimes
you need to keep a broad view of what's
happening. We look at the one who's
jealous. We look at the one who's like
what's wrong with them?
But sometimes the spouse who's
successful
may be pulling away from the
relationship because of that success.
And sometimes that's what causes
In other words,
they might be a looking down on that
person or I don't need you so much right
now because I'm very popular. I got I
got all this.
And if some of that is going on,
that it sometimes needs to be looked at
from the other from the other angle.
Like what's the It really needs to be
explored what's happening. Don't It
can't It's not the one one paintbrush.
You can't jump to conclusions and
sometimes it's a little bit of both.
Sometimes it might it might be a it
might be a little bit of each one, but
those are the two general
places where to look in terms of
competitiveness. Competitiveness by
itself
is is something underlying that is
either one spouse's insecurity or the
other spouse pulling away.
>> Because naturally it's not
There's
a spouse and a
a couple should you know I want to say
I'm so proud. Look at my wife. I'm so
proud of her. Look at my husband. I'm so
proud It shouldn't be a competition
naturally. There's there's There's an
There's an insecurity there.
Or there's either an insecurity or
There's some truth to Or there's
somebody who's pulling away and finding
their their
stuff in the world instead of at home.
What about a spouse who feels that they
they just have to ask for basic respect?
It's just I'm not asking for anything
crazy. I'm not asking for anything. They
feel like they have to explain
themselves of what respect means.
The the is not even aware of what is
going on. The behavior or the way
they're talking.
Basic respect.
So,
when a spouse is in a situation where
one spouse is just not respectful. One
spouse is putting down the other spouse.
One spouse is not
So,
number one, I'll tell you I'm
envisioning a couple like this coming
into my office.
The first step is to see
to make sure that that's exactly that
that that's really what's going on.
Um
Is there really a lack of respect going
on? And usually that's that's that will
show up. Anybody who tries to help a
couple with Shalom Bayit
and only talks to them separately
is is missing
not half the picture, 90% of the
picture.
If one spouse says the other spouse
doesn't talk to me respectfully
and the other spouse says
and then I speak to the other spouse,
"No, I don't know what
I don't know what I don't know what I
don't know what he's talking about. I
don't know what she's talking about."
And then
and then you have to try to figure out
put them in front of you. You can read
this in 2 minutes.
>> Within within
not 2 minutes, but within like 2 hours,
it all comes up. It all shows up. And
that's why you know it's
couples therapists will only see couples
together. Like like almost the time see
them together as as as a
But I've seen people work on Shalom
Bayit where they work on each spouse
individually. If anybody
is working on the Shalom Bayit problem
in that way, it it's
it's can create more problems than it
does cuz the person who's trying to help
is trying to figure out based on what I
hear from you, what I hear from you.
Let's see together. So, if there's a
lack of respect, the first place I would
go if one spouse tells me, let's say I'm
talking to the wife and she says, "My
husband just he talks with such a lack
of respect."
I I I want to hear the husband's what
what's going on the other side.
And I want to see them together.
So, that's the first step. Is there
If I if you see that there really is a
lack of respect happening
and I'm I'm taking it it's almost like
you can draw a flow chart over here.
Like like taking different directions.
The
what's happening inside of him
could be so many different things.
There could be he could be
on one end he could be just a narcissist
or a jerk even though that's not an
official diagnosis, but
there are people that fit that that that
description.
And either needs so and and and
you know, needs needs therapy for that.
In other words, what's happening inside
of you? He could be clueless and just
needs some education. He could need
maybe he needs some hand-holding. Maybe
he needs just some some
some guidance.
Or maybe there's something happening in
the relationship. Maybe he has a he has
a certain perception. Sometimes people
have a certain perception of what's
happening on the other side.
And and needs guidance over there. So,
it's
I'm not answering your question because
there's so many different pieces of lack
of respect. If it's taka
just my husband is a jerk and a
narcissist, then it then he then then he
needs help or you need help
addressing that. But can someone learn
how to be more respectful? Like this I
feel like this is something coming from
So, if it if it's just the cluelessness,
then the answer is yes.
There are people I just not aware of how
many people just go into marriage
not saying that's why I think it's so
important sometimes just to catch the
stuff in Shalom Bayit just to catch it
at the beginning and it's a shame that
we don't.
But just to catch it at the beginning
because there are people who
literally don't know. I've seen this.
They don't don't know what respect is.
They don't know. Literally they they
they either they didn't learn
and you or
back in a in a dorm room with a bunch of
guys is different than showing respect
to your wife or you grow up in a family
that would
And very often especially in Shalom
Bayit it could be just some guidance.
Just some paradigm shifting. Just some
you know, when you say this
this becomes very hurtful.
You know, if somebody would say that to
you is that would you be hurt? Yeah,
maybe. Okay. Like like just as simple as
that.
And then then so that that could be it's
it's surprising how much could be
taught. There's a lot of teaching that
that that could solve this.
If you catch it early. If you catch it
20 years later it's it's already it's
built on
And but if it's coming from a place of
narcissism, if it's coming from a place
of
then there's there's probably a lot of
therapy that's necessary. I I have seen
people change. I wouldn't give up on it,
but it but it's it probably needs a lot
of work. It probably needs a lot of
therapy and the other spouse
it's the spouse who's being disrespected
could be helped to be more empowered.
That's what I was going to ask you next.
I'm sorry if you talk to me like that,
then the answer is no. I'm going to
When you want to come back and talk to
me more respectfully, then I'll listen
to you, but right now I can't listen to
you when you talk to me like that. Or if
you know, if you're if you're yelling at
your above a certain decibel
I I don't have the ability to hear so
I'm going to walk away. Right. The
ability of the other spouse to stand up
when you have a when you have a somebody
who
who's narcissistic, sometimes the most
powerful intervention is not with that
with with with with the problematic
spouse, but with the healthy spouse.
It's the victim to build themselves up.
That's what I was going to ask you. What
happens if one of the if the spouse
is afraid to rock the boat. This guy is
so disrespectful. It's quiet and I know
if I'm not going to stand up for myself
and
then I have a better day. And and and
what what's your advice? That's stand
up. So, that's something you're asking
me what's my advice? I don't have
advice.
I don't give advice.
Um and the but the reason why that I
have no advice is because they have to
figure it out. I will help them figure
it out. That that question I don't want
to rock the boat is a legitimate
question.
Um
especially if I have kids
and I'm going to create you know
had this I'm sitting by the Shabbos
table and my husband or my wife is is
creating a
you know, doing something that's totally
totally inappropriate or being
being disrespectful to me
I can stand up for myself and destroy
the whole Shabbos table, create a whole
pandemonium, create a whole scene
impact the kids or I could just keep
quiet.
That's that's a decision that people
really really have to walk through and
and weigh both sides and it's
it's not just a decision that you make
once. It might be a decision you make
every single day.
Um
What about projection? Like you
mentioned before, projection is is we
see things the way we see it.
Right? Yeah. So, here's a couple who's
getting married or two people are living
together. Right. And
he is wired a certain way. Okay, he sees
things a certain way. He he says that
does business a certain way. Let's say
one is more aggressive than the other.
So,
or he's not trusting. He is a type of
guy who you know, he went through the
wringer and he doesn't trust anybody
now.
So, now he looks at everybody as you
know, as you can't trust.
Now, he'll look at the spouse also. He's
not going to trust the spouse because in
his mind he thinks that she thinks the
way he thinks.
And how is another spouse in the I'm
sure the other spouse does the same way.
Let's say if she's a softy
and she is forgiving and she is
everybody's beautiful and everybody's
fine. He she thinks that he is like
that. You follow what I'm saying? I sure
do. So,
how does a couple like that
understand that he has a different
wiring which we understand also we
cannot change another person. Right. A
person could change himself if they want
to. Sometimes you have to hit rock
bottom for it. But normally a person
doesn't change.
So, there are two people over here and
projecting each other's
ideas onto onto each other. So, you're
describing
a process that comes into couples
therapy literally every single day.
>> Every day. This this is
and
the basic answer is
can they begin to talk to each other and
really hear each other?
The the the problem very often when
couples I mean you talk about
projecting.
It it goes even deeper than that because
the way I see you right?
Has so much to do with what's going on
inside of me right? So, I'm seeing
I'm seeing an interpretation of you. I'm
seeing my interpretation of you. I'm not
seeing you right? Correct. I'm seeing my
interpretation of you and you're seeing
your interpretation of me. And
our interpretations of each other are
what's communicating. You and me are not
communicating. Right.
Um
Can I help them
go into a conversation
where you and me actually begin to talk
to each other? Right.
And that goes back to
you said communication to the listening.
Like I know
that this is
how I how I see you. But now I'm going
to listen to what you have to say.
This
to hear what somebody is saying
is very hard if I have a projection on
them cuz what you're saying doesn't stem
with what I see.
Another another layer of that is even if
I'm I'm projecting on you. I I see you.
And the truth is all I see is your
behavior. I don't see you. You see my
behavior. I see your behavior. We don't
we don't see each other.
And then when I and then I have to I
have to interpret your behavior
using my projection and you're going to
interpret my my behavior using
projection.
At that point we're not listening to
each other.
The words
are almost meaningless at that point. I
know you're saying this and this and
this, but the proof is in the pudding.
Look how you behaved. You're saying
this, but you behave like that.
Did you behave like that? Or was that a
projection? Did you
Another layer Keep on saying another
layer of that is who I am.
And when a couple gets to realize this,
it could be very powerful to further
relationship.
Who Who am I in terms of I don't mean
who am I in a existential place. I
haven't got a clue. But who am I in
terms of how I am in the world, how I
show up, how I behave, what
So,
I'm here with you. You see me a certain
way.
In my office with clients, I'll show up
maybe a different way. In my kitchen in
my house, I'll show up a different way.
With my kids in my church, I'll show up
a different way. In school, I'll show up
a different way.
Who I am has so much to do with who I'm
with. There's There's no
We're not We don't live by ourselves. We
interact with people. So, how I show up
is so tied in
to the to the person on the other side
of what's showing up.
Am I Am I
Am I Do I feel there's something I need
to defend from you? Does it feel like
something I or Which part of me do you
bring out? Right. And very often in
marriage, people bring out who I marry
will will
The person I marry will bring out
certain elements of me
that that If I married somebody else,
different things would have been brought
out.
Um if I if a
If I have a very strong spouse
who takes charge, Right.
the part of me that takes charge may
diminish. diminish. Even though there
was Before I got married, there was a
There was a take charge part of me. Mhm.
But in this marriage, you know, I I I'll
I'll give you the room to take charge.
That's So So a different part of me
comes up. Right.
When I look at my spouse,
am I seeing my spouse?
Am I even seeing a projection of my
spouse? Not I'm not even Not even that.
I'm seeing a projection of my spouse the
way they are with me. That's all I'm
seeing.
And who's the me that's showing up the
way I am with them?
There's a feedback loop that's going on
between us. There's a cycle that's
happening between us.
When When a couple can really begin to
talk to each other
and get underneath that, peel away all
the layers to the original
>> me are going to talk to each other and
suddenly there's a realization. So you
So you were like that
because
you experienced me a certain way.
But the way you experienced me had to do
with the way I experienced you, which
had to do with the way I experienced me,
which had to do with the way I
experienced you. And that's And that's
that's That's our relationship for the
last 25 years. Right. So, how do you
peel that away?
>> So, that's That's The The process is Can
I get them to begin to hear each other?
So, it's a very
to slow everything down,
get to a place of
where the emotions begin to come up in
the conversation. Can Can you really Can
you hear what your spouse just said?
And if the answer is no, I can't, so
what's going on inside of you that
that's preventing you from hearing it?
Then let's see if we can work on that.
We just We want to peel away layers in
ourselves that might be getting in the
way of
allowing us to hear what our spouse is
saying. Right. You and me talking to
each other Right. is is the goal. It's
It's It's It's a Can Can I get there?
Because most of the time you and me are
not talking to each other.
Wow, but it's an art. It's It's a work.
It's a lot of work. It's a lot of work.
Marriage is a lot of
>> Marriage is a lot of Marriage is an
enormous amount of work.
>> Enormous amount of work. Also, it's mind
work. It's It's uh
It's not so simple. It's not simple.
Relationships is work. Relationships The
truth is we we're not
People are coming into marriage without
the appropriate education of what a
marriage is. I mean, we we
It's the most complicated thing in life
and there's no lessons. Yeah, there's or
very few.
Or there's lessons before marriage.
Right. There's a lot of stuff out there.
There's lessons before marriage. But
once they get married, nobody's
I I really believe the first first year
for sure of marriage just needs ongoing
ongoing guidance. That That That really
should be Otherwise, it's it's it's
really complicated. How would you know?
And And especially also today,
it's more We We We expect more from
marriage. That's also something that's
just historically
Our Our great-grandparents probably
didn't expect as much from their
marriages as we
>> Why you fluent? It's because of
you know, the social media and people
know more and there's more knowledge and
everyone needs a Everybody knows
everything and it's the The expectations
are huge.
>> The expectations of marriage today are
huge. Yeah. But there there's uh
If you've heard of Esther Perel, Esther
Perel is a is a is a is a is a is a
couple's therapist who wrote a
brilliant writer.
Um She One of her lines is that what
what we used to what we used to seek
from a village, we now look for in our
spouse. Wow. Our spouse is everything to
us.
We look for
We We look to our spouses for
All right, they're going to take away
this pain. They're going to be We have a
whole list of things that our spouse is
going to fill.
>> Whatever we're missing, what we need to
work on ourselves, we are looking for it
from our spouse. And if we don't get it,
there's a price to pay. Right. So,
there's an illusion
out there out there. That Historically,
how that illusion developed, I I don't
know.
Um but that illusion is out there. I
think our great-grandparents didn't
didn't live with that illusion.
We have an illusion of what marriage is
supposed to be.
And when it's not, it's it's painful.
And it it it's
Marriage is is is a partnership. It's a
place where we can show up as myself,
you can show up as yourself.
>> What is that What is that illusion? Is
it a Hollywood like glitz and glamour
>> is there is a concept of romantic love,
which which historically, it's it's
fascinating. Like you tell this to
somebody in the Western world today that
they They'll look at you like you're
crazy. But historically, romantic love
was not a prerequisite for marriage.
It wasn't. I'm not talking I'm not
talking Yiddishkeit. I'm not talking in
the Jewish world. I'm not talking
religious. I'm talking about in the
secular world.
Historically, there there are books
written on this
where that that um
Historically,
if you go back 100 years, 200 years ago,
this this concept of romantic love We We
We fall deeply in love with each other
and that's the core of a marriage.
That's the core of a relationship. Was
Was not It was not the main the main
source.
>> That was not what That was not the glue
that held the marriage together. If we
stay together and I can show up as me
and you can show up as you, and we have
We're going to We're going to fall in
love. We're going to have this loving
relationship.
>> the idea going in? Was it more of a
business idea?
>> A business. A
A
A We're going to build something.
>> We're going to build something.
Children, a relationship. We're going to
We're going to work together.
We're going to commit our lives to each
other
to build something together.
>> Right. We're going to make it work. So,
what you're saying is love was
secondary. Love Love was an outcome.
Correct. Love Love was
was a result.
of of what we're of what we're doing.
To say to Yeah, there there was There
was definitely this romantic love. It
existed, but it wasn't looked at as a
prerequisite for marriage. It was
something that flowed from the
relationship.
That's That's crazy. That's crazy. But
let me ask you, while we're on the topic
of technology, social media and stuff
like that, there's a lot of access to
it.
If someone is stuck on it,
and someone spiraled down that that
road,
and doesn't matter who, one of the
spouses, Right. and it gets out of
control a little bit,
and they're going to sites they're not
supposed to go, or porn sites, or
whatever the case is. Right.
How should the other spouse look at
this? Is Could Could this be called
cheating?
So, the question is is is pornography
cheating? Yes, that that that
And And uh
The only reason why I'm hesitating is
cuz I know there are other There are
different opinions on this. But if I
didn't hesitate,
>> I would tell you my opinion, yeah, it is
cheating.
The reason why it's cheating is cuz I'm
I'm going
outside the relationship
It's not the same as sleeping with
another person, obviously.
But I'm going outside the relationship
for a pleasure
that
you and I understand only the
relationship is supposed to give you.
Our relationship
is supposed to be is is sacred.
And part of that sacredness is
I'm going to be the source of your
sexual pleasure.
That's That's just this basic
understanding of what marriage is. I'm
going to be the source of your sexual
pleasure. You're going to be the source
of my sexual pleasure. And that's
That's part of the glue of our
relationship. What are you saying? When
you need something, you come to me. When
I need something, I come to you. That's
That's That's That's a trust that we
have with each other. That's something
that that we're we're That's part of
what we're building together.
You're going outside the relationship,
even if it's not with a real person, but
you're going outside the relationship
to fill that pleasure in you.
That means you're not going to come to
me exclusively for that pleasure. That's
very painful. That That is experienced
as a betrayal.
If you want to look at it as
Technically, is it a betrayal? I I I
I don't know if I would even ask that
question. It's The experience of the of
the spouse who's being hurt is
he doesn't need me or she doesn't need
me for this part of the for for this
most sacred part of the relationship.
That's going to be experienced as a
betrayal. Right. So, even though the
spouse would say that nothing against
you know, they're
pretty much pretty decent marriage.
They're living a good life. He's just
addicted to it. Addicted to it. And And
in that sense,
there's a lot
There's a lot more work to do. It's a
lot easier to overcome that than if
there was a real betrayal where he you
know, he was sleeping with another woman
or she was sleeping with another man.
That's obviously a much more difficult
situation. So, there is There is
something to be said for Yeah, it's not
There was no There was not another
person.
At the same time,
it's not you know, it's not like you
have a tie before candy and you're
eating candy behind my back. This is
something core to the relationship. This
is something that's sacred to the
relationship. And you're you're you're
it's going to hurt our relationship.
You're you're not going to come to me
for the most sacred part of our
relationship.
>> Right.
That's That hurts. Right. Because
there's something being severed here.
There's something being severed. This is
a core relationship piece. That's a very
core relationship. I I've I've actually
had a husband say to me, "And if I if I
if I
uh eat pastrami sandwiches behind your
back and and the Right. then you know,
and I gained weight and or I it it it
it's This is
The line I've heard is this is between
me and God. It's not between me and you.
It's between me and God. That I don't I
don't buy that. Yeah, you don't buy
that. Now in in that way you want to
build a solid It It's
>> Right. Right. Now, as far as um
um financials, let's talk about
financials.
>> Okay. Um and this is where I'm going to
come bring you into a mashpia and a
mekabel. Okay. Because um
if you want to go down that route, you
know, the spiritualism,
that a husband is supposed to come in,
is supposed to is supposed to know his
role. And his role is to be a giver.
And the wife is not a taker, she's a
receiver.
And all you need to know is that you're
the giver. Right.
>> You're the man in the house.
So,
is it his responsibility fully? Is my
question. Um
is he supposed to share
everything about the finances? Which
means sometimes he has bad days, good
days. Sometimes he got involved with
some debt.
That she's not You know, I mean, if he's
not seeing that she's benefiting from
knowing
uh how bad the situation is, we'll get
out of it and this and that. He's a man
now. Right. Um how should someone handle
that? And sometimes I've heard from
women
from who are very upset that he's
doesn't share. I want to know. I want to
know what's going on.
So, you're touching
>> on rules now also. Like what what's What
is the right way Right. to do this? What
are the rules in terms of finances?
And
again, I'll just say that the the the
first part of the answer would be
let's step let's step away from what's
what's supposed to happen. Right. What's
going on between the two of you? Right.
Is there
if if you know,
how are you interpreting being a giver?
How are you interpreting being a
receiver? What what's what's You're
defining every word of of You're saying
when when someone says, "I am the
mashpia." Yeah. What is a mashpia? What
your role is a mashpia? So, let let me
let me just spend a second defining
mashpia and defining mashpia and
mekabel.
Mashpia is the one who's giving. There's
a shefa. There's a shefa from me coming
to you. Right?
>> The lashon, the word shefa, the word
mashpia
is If you look at the words that were
chosen
by the by Torah is is is is it's it's a
beautiful word.
Shefa. It It's It's a flow. There's
There's a flow from me to you. It's a
very soft word. It's not It's not a hard
word. It's not a harsh word. Right.
>> It's even softer than nice and it's it's
something very soft about the
There's There's a flow from me to you.
And the word mekabel, like
I'm going to hold it. I'm going to I'm
going to I'm going to I'm going to
receive it. It's not like you're
grabbing it or uh There's a shefa in
this in this receiving. When you when
you soften it, when you soften the tone
in that
>> Right. it takes on a whole different a
whole different meaning. So,
for a husband,
let's say a husband says, "I'm I'm
I'm the I'm the masculine one. I'm
masculine. Masculine means strength.
Masculine means, right? And she's
feminine. Feminine means softness.
Mekabel, right?
So, what's masculine? I'm the strong
one. Right?
If I say to you,
"I'm the strong one.
I'm the masculine.
I'm the giver.
So,
this is what we're going to do. And this
is how we're going to run the finances.
And
and I I I I hear that you want to say
something right now, but I I'm I don't
have to listen to you. Like Oh, you want
to know about what the deal I made
yesterday? I
That's I'm not that I'm
I'm in charge of you.
Do you hear weakness in that? Or do you
hear strength? This is This is not
shefa. That's for sure not.
>> even strength. Yeah, no. It's not
masculine.
It's not Masculine means strength.
What's strength?
Strength is I'm secure.
Strength is I I
If I'm strong, if I'm masculine,
if I'm the mashpia,
Right.
what is giving to you? And And you you
have an opinion.
You You want to ask me something.
If I'm too weak, if I'm too scared, if
I'm too insecure to listen to what you
want
and consider it and talk to you about
it,
that's not masculine strength. That's
That might even be called feminine.
That's weakness. It's It's I'm not being
the giver. I'm not being I'm not
exerting my masculine strength. My
masculine strength, I'm going to show up
as a gavra. Yeah. I'm going to show up
as a masculine
Masculine means I'm so strong
that
I could hear any disagreement that you
have with me. Let me hear. Let me hear
what you have to say. I want I want to
consider your opinion. I want to know
what you have to say. I want to know
what hurts you. I want to know what what
Is there something I'm doing that you
totally disagree with? Like I could I
could listen to that. This It's not
touching my insecurities. If I have to
shut you down, that's coming from an
insecure place in me.
The mashpia
is not a mashpia if he's not listening
to his spouse. If he's not talking it
through. If he's not understanding it.
So, if a husband says, "I don't have to
do what my wife says." Sure, okay. You
don't have to do what your wife says.
Could Could you Could you Could you
listen?
Entertain the thought maybe what she's
saying is right. Maybe what she's saying
is is a correction to what you're
saying. Maybe she knows more than you.
Could you Could you hold that?
>> Right. Maybe she's hurting.
And And as as the mashpia you would you
don't want her to hurt.
That's
that's mashpia. Right.
The mekabel is Yeah, it does
Sometimes this is missed in marriage
also. The
For a woman to to to exert masculine
strength in a marriage
does throw things off. You do You know,
it's it's important to have a masculine
feminine
interaction in the marriage. Not in
terms of who's in charge. Right. Because
who's in charge is not relevant. Cuz
we're going to talk this through.
We're going to talk this through. We're
going to understand each other.
And the mekabel is taking the shefa of
my husband. My husband Assuming that
there's a mashpia on the other side.
>> Right. Right. Not a Not a boss who's
who's a tyrant. That's not a mekabel. I
want to take the shefa
which the kindness, the giving. They're
partners. It's not one has it up on the
other. That's not mashpia and mekabel.
I'm going to nurture it. I'm going to
nurture what it is that my husband the
shefa that my husband wants to give me.
I'm going to nurture that. That's the
mekabel. I'm going to take it. I'm going
to nurture it.
Inside of that, we could sit for hours
and talk things through. I want to hear
what you say. I want to hear what you
say.
That softness
takes away all the questions that you're
asking. So, what do we do with finance?
Who's in charge of finance? Talk to each
other. Like like Yeah, he he's the one
He's the one who's out there making
money. Okay.
But if he's strong enough, Yeah. he's
going to be there for her. And she And
she'll be there for him to nurture it.
Yeah.
And a lot of times in-laws get involved
because when it comes to
finances and problems and this, the
in-laws get involved. And then this is a
whole new uh a whole new dynamic. Uh You
want to bring in-laws in, you're going
to have to We're going to have a whole
'nother podcast.
>> 'nother podcast, isn't
But let me ask you something as far as
um personality disorders. In the world
of narcissism,
there's uh if they can change, if they
cannot change, it's all big to do.
Right. But let's talk about the victims
first.
Let's say
someone is living with a uh
person who has a not a mental illness.
Mental illness, you know, can be handled
with medication. You can label it. It's
fine.
This type of personality disorders that
I'm talking about, these are regular
people walking the streets, executives,
uh sometimes very successful and very
charming. Right. And they'll make you
the crazy one. Right. They'll talk to a
therapist and they'll convince the
therapist that they are right. Very very
dangerous covert narcissism.
Now, a narcissist lives
on a codependent. That's what gives them
highest. That's what gives them life.
Because otherwise,
you know, the his power, his struggle
is not happening. Now,
for a codependent who lives with a
narcissist
and cannot define if this is love or am
I a codependent?
>> Right. Because in the meantime, the
narcissist charms that person. When they
they blow hot and cold. You know, they
have their ways how to do it. So, she's
going through a roller coaster. But
doubting herself uh if this is love. I
love him.
And in the meantime, you love him or
you're afraid or you're so
you ran with your mind places that you
feel that if this if he's not going if
he's you know, that
you have to rely on this person. Right.
So, how can somebody identify if this is
love or this is codependence?
So, very often you're dealing with
personality disorders.
>> Yeah.
Uh the
So, in your question, how could somebody
identify if this is love or
codependence? or codependence?
First of all, you're assuming that
there's
that it has to be either or.
Okay. Very often it could be both. Okay.
Um
I could love somebody and also be
codependent on them. You know, there's
there's a part of them that I see that
there might be a sweetness in them.
There might be something There might be
something there that's
So the codependent can love the
narcissist. A codependent can love the
narcissist and actually because
It happens a lot.
>> It happens a lot. Wow. Um and there
might be something there to love. Yeah,
there's always there because the
narcissists usually
are very charming. Narcissists are not
not A narcissist doesn't mean a bad
person. A narcissist means a person who
doesn't see other people. Correct. Yeah.
So I could be very good. It's very
important.
You got to stop doing that. It's very
very important. Cuz a lot of people are
saying that the narcissist is crazy. And
I always say this, he's not crazy.
And a crazy person is not a narcissist.
No. No. They're smart. They are not
crazy. What you're saying even more,
they're not bad people.
Yeah. They're not bad people. They're
not They are just not in touch with
reality. They're living their own world.
We all know narcissists who are out
there doing good.
Wow. Right? They're doing They're doing
They're doing They're doing a lot of
good things.
From totally from their own perspective.
Totally doing what makes them feel good.
Totally
Just not seeing another person. So so
Right there
the spouse might see a very good part of
that person.
It's not It's It's so not black and
white.
>> Right. It's so not black and white.
>> complex.
And and
it it could show up in both ways. It
could show up as a kindness. It could
show up as a giving. But
it'll only be kindness and giving as
long as it's from their perspective. As
soon as I have to see your perspective,
it's all the kindness and giving is is
gone. It's lost.
>> Wow.
Um
so in terms of it's
the codependent
in this kind of relationship
it's it's not saying is it codependent
or is it love. It's being able to split
the two apart. What's codependence?
What's love? Right.
So define codependency. Codependency is
that I I am completely responsible
for your happiness, for your care, for
you for you.
If you're upset about something
So the codependent walks around on
eggshells.
>> 100% Totally. Totally.
Just taking on
taking on whatever his whatever his his
issues are. I had a
It's a classic codependent situation. A
husband and wife where
um
the husband would do something wrong.
Yeah. Let's say she would ask him to
take out the garbage and he
he didn't. He forgot. He would He would
forget something. He would do it.
>> Right.
And she would get upset. Beginning of
the marriage like I asked you to do this
for me and and it's you know, the
garbage truck came. We missed the
garbage already.
And
he would feel so bad. I'm I'm so sorry.
I'm so sorry what I did.
I I feel so bad.
She jumped in and said, "No, no, no,
it's okay. It's okay." She starts
apologizing for something that is not at
all related.
>> So what ended up happening is she would
apologize for everything that he did
wrong in the marriage.
Th- This is This is I didn't see this
couple until 10 years later. So there
was
the dynamic that was set up was he did
whatever he wanted. Like the dance that
they played was he He basically do
whatever he wanted because if he did
anything wrong, she apologized.
That that's A codependent is I I need I
need to make like
whatever Almost like she feels
viscerally what what's going on inside
of him and it becomes her responsibility
to make sure he's good. Right. So yeah,
a narcissist will set up that
relationship with a codependent because
a narcissist is expecting everybody to
see it from his perspective. So if I'm
if I'm upset
you need to see what's going on inside
of me. The fact that you're also upset
because I didn't take out the garbage,
that's not even part of the husband.
Right. I'm upset now because
you are upset that I didn't take out the
garbage. So now I'm feeling like a
failure of a husband. So now I'm upset.
The fact that there was somebody else
upset is not is not even part of the
picture. It's It's It's not even part of
the husband in their mind. So again,
you're not talking about a bad person.
>> Right. It's just
the whole world is viewed through my
through my lens. Right.
When you understand that, so so the
codependent, the person who could be
good but
also understanding where it comes from.
It come narcissism
basically most most of the time comes
from
very very very low self-esteem or almost
zero self-esteem. A person who doesn't
have a
Right.
And because they don't have a sense of
self, if I don't have a sense of self,
then
I I need I need to make sure that
everything revolves around me because if
I see if I see it from your perspective
I I I begin to lose myself. If If If I
start to see things from you, then where
where do I fit in? So they hold
desperately onto themselves. Right.
The codependent might see that
and and feel bad for them and love them.
Like never
They like
This I've seen also like like this
He's really I know he's doing this and
this and this, but he's really a little
teddy bear. Like he's so he's so lost
inside. Yeah.
So
codependence love, there's almost no
line that you could slice it. There's
There's almost that that it's a
Codependence first of all shrink
themselves. Yeah. So this is also no way
of living. No, so the the real the work
in this in a relationship like that
is to help the codependent.
And I'm not saying this to the exclusion
of helping the narcissist. Right? Let's
say this this is a marriage here that I
want to try to save. Right? And there's
a codependent and there's a narcissist.
To start the work in a couple's therapy
dialogue, probably not going to work
because he's not capable of having that
conversation.
>> Right.
Um
and that that will usually show up like
I said before, the first thing is to
make sure if there's a codependent
narcissist, don't take anybody's word
for it. When you see them interacting
with each other, it's like, "Oh yeah,
okay, codependent narcissist."
Once once once we've confirmed that
there was a codependent narcissist
the next step is probably not to work in
couple's therapy cuz that's not going to
work. It's also not to work with the
narcissist cuz he's he's fine. He's
happy. He's He's okay. The world is
working for him.
The work is with her. To build her
self-esteem because To build her
self-esteem.
>> who depends is also missing self. They
both You see what the problem is over
here? Her problem
is I mean saying her him both ways, but
let's assume she's the codependent.
Um
she has a lot of work to do in terms of
There might be just as much low
self-esteem inside of her. She's She's
feeding off of him. So you have two
people here with low self-esteem. The
problem is there's no door in for him.
Correct. Because his life is working for
him.
>> Correct. The door in is for her because
he's probably the one falling apart.
She's probably the one who slept slept
him into therapy. That's that's
She's the one who's probably depressed.
She's the one who's falling apart.
That's That's where your work is.
And the work is to help her see Help her
separate. He's Is it codependence or
love? You love him. Right.
But this is destroying you. Right. And
those are not contradictions. Those are
It's okay because sometimes people come
in confused. Like he's such a good guy,
but look at this. And It's not
confusing. Both both sides are true.
Wow.
You love him. He has all these good
qualities. He's a sweet guy. He's
charming. He
So he takes you on beautiful vacations.
He He smiles at you. He has
Okay, that's true.
Check. Check. Check. He's also
destroying you completely. He's sucking
the life out of you.
>> Right. And he's making he he His
behavior is not allowing you to have a
self. He's literally sucking the life
out of you and you're going to continue
as long as you engage in this
relationship with him, you're going to
be destroyed. Right. Yeah, but I love
him. No, it's not a but. It's no but.
Put put a and in between. And you love
him. Okay, you love him.
>> That's fine. And also he's
This This is destructive.
And it's not it's destructive for her.
It's probably destructive for the whole
family. It's It's
She's shrinking away. Shrinking. But the
Just Just disappearing as a human being.
Right.
Empowering her. Helping her. And that
that's an avoid. That That could be a
very big avoid. How does a codependent
build their self-esteem?
It's It's
with a lot of therapy. Right.
And the the work I've like every therapy
therapy work starts with with
self-awareness. It starts with Can you
notice what's happening? That's the
first step.
>> First step is notice what's happening.
Notice where it might be coming from.
What I read also is that codependency
Yeah.
um is an addiction.
It It It comes to a point that that in
where I want to get though is
the solution one of the solutions for
addictions is the 12-step program. Okay.
12-step program has spirituality in it.
So my question to you is Yeah. if you
bring in spirituality
um especially where you in Right. and
where you get the bunch of little men
involved and you start knowing who you
are, what's your mission, where you
coming, where you going with awareness
and
with the therapy understanding that you
are somebody, you are entitled,
don't worry to rock the boat,
there's a right and there's wrong and
you start seeing it coupling that up
with spirituality with their bunch of
little men with with that I mean that.
100%. I'm I'm all for spirituality.
Okay, so And I'm even I'm even pro
spirituality and therapy. Like
spirituality is is amazing. It's amazing
stuff. So what would you want to say
about addiction? However
in addiction codependency, yeah. The The
You can You can You can look at
codependence as addiction. But what does
that mean that codependence is
addiction? What What's an addiction?
An addiction means
there's something going on inside of me.
Something in my nervous system.
Something that I'm not holding right
now. Something that I'm feeling.
Something that I'm experiencing that I
that that's that I need something
to help me escape this, to help me feel
better.
>> If I go to spirituality right away, I'm
all for spirituality.
If we go to spirituality too quickly,
Mhm. we run into the concept of
spiritual bypass. Like I'm I'm using
spirituality
the same way I might be using any
anything else, any other drug. I'm I was
thinking about surrendering, about
giving up the control and and um
So, what am I giving up? So, there's a
self-knowledge here.
I'm agreeing with everything No, no, I
want to hear. I'm just doing it step by
step.
>> So, you ask me what the steps are. The
first step is is self-awareness. Where's
it coming from? Self-awareness includes
what's happening to me right now, just
in my body. What what what am I
experiencing?
>> I feel? How do I feel right now? What's
showing up for me?
When So, with with codependency, let's
take another addiction. Let's take
alcoholic or drug addict.
>> Yeah.
What's There's something showing up
in their body. Their nervous system is
overwhelmed.
There's no coping skill for it. There's
no There's no coping mechanism. How do I
How do I How do I deal with this? Now,
what this is
could be a lot of different things.
Could be coming from childhood, could be
coming from There's so much stuff here
and I've I've learned how to cope with
it.
I I I can deal with this. You know how I
deal with it? I take some cocaine.
Right. I take some alcohol.
With
And that's that's what That's That's
what That's addiction. With the
codependent,
there's some deep deep deep insecurity.
Usually at an attachment level, there's
some deep attachment pain. Some Maybe a
deep sense of loneliness, a deep sense
of of I'm all alone in this world and
and nobody's
How do I deal with this? How do I deal
with this pain?
It's It's Look at it as an overwhelmed
nervous system. Right.
I can deal with this by attaching myself
to that person.
And
I'll take care of that person.
There's no self over here. With with
with this is coming from, there's no
There's There's just There's I'm not
looking at myself as a self.
There's pain here. And I need to deal
with this pain. So, I'm I'm going to I'm
I'm going to take care of that person.
That that's soothing. Very Very Very
soothing. Very very soothing. That
awareness
that your action, what you're doing, is
because of this will make you aware.
>> That That's what's going to help me.
That That awareness When I say
self-awareness, understanding that I'm
acting in a way that's
really
in some ways no different than cocaine.
It's just something that I'm using to to
soothe. Mhm.
And I'm using my attachment to that
person to soothe me right now.
That's That's why they call it an
addiction. Right.
Um
Understanding that and working with
that. Like if I'm going to not be
codependent, I have to I have to figure
out a way to deal with everything that's
going on. Well, how do I deal with all
this? Right. And there's a lot of ways
in therapy how to deal with all this.
Some of it's There's a somatic work that
could be done. There's There's There are
all different methods, understanding
where this is.
Spirituality can come in
only at the point really where I
I got all this. Okay, now I
>> the awareness of of yourself, of of what
makes you, what's what's your fabric,
then you can open up your mind and
>> Then you can open up your If we If we If
we jump away from self we go If we go to
spirituality before we have
self-awareness. And when I say
self-awareness, I don't just mean up
here, I mean down here.
>> Right. Right. Self-aware in terms of my
my life, self in terms of
my thought process, my my my nervous
system,
then I go from there to spirituality.
That's where spirituality can have a
massive impact.
>> Could there be a little trauma bonding
also since the narcissist a master mind
manipulator? So, now she's the the
spouse is a codependent and filling that
void, but a trauma bond
>> Yeah, a narcissist codependent, I think
we can just assume there's a trauma bond
going on there. That's That's That's
They're just feeding off each other's
trauma. They're both in a position of
zero self-esteem, probably from some you
know
very likely relatable back to some
trauma in their childhood.
And that's how they're feeding off each
other. That's how they're making each
other feel feel good.
>> Wow.
So, the work is really with the with the
with the with the codependent. When What
What's What happens sometimes and people
say narcissists can't be helped. What
I've seen happen sometimes, not always,
sometimes,
when the spouse who's codependent When
the when the It's called the victim
spouse, whatever it is. It might be
codependent, might be just a victim of
narcissism.
When that spouse becomes
The reason why narcissists cannot be
helped
is cuz their life is working for them.
And they have no introspect. Why should
they introspect? This is working. This
is I'm I I created a a situation where
I'm the center of the universe.
>> Right. And and that that helps me deal
with my low self-esteem and I'm just
controlling everything. What happens
when that starts to fall apart? What
happens when that that that dance
doesn't work anymore? Right. Because my
spouse is not putting up with it
anymore. Then punishment is coming and
more mind manipulation is coming.
>> So, so the the the initial reaction is
to double down on it, become more
narcissistic, more And what if that
doesn't work?
>> Right. That's the point where narcissist
might get helped.
When their whole
way of dealing in the world, the this
system of
of dealing with my low self-esteem for
last 30, 40 years
doesn't work anymore. My life is
crumbling because I can't control my
wife. I can't I can't control I don't
have the
That falling apart
is sometimes what allows a narcissist to
get help.
That That's That could be the beginning
of introspection. That's the narcissist
>> Or not. Yeah, but that's the
narcissist's rock bottom. When he starts
his facade
>> When the facade crumbles, it stops
working. And when you help the spouse
make sure that that doesn't work
anymore. Right. That that you know cuz
cuz she's standing up to him. She's
saying no. And in a nice way. If she
gets angry back at him, that's not I'm
talking about. In a nice way, no,
it's I'm sorry, In a self- in a
self-confident way. Right. I see you're
hurting right now. So, it that's you
know,
I you you can take care of that. You're
You're a big boy. Look I I
I I It's not something I'm going to be
able to help you with right now. So
sorry.
He's like, "Whoa, whoa, whoa. Who
changed the dance over here? It's not
working." Right.
>> As long as it's working for him, he's
not going to get help. Once it Once it
stops working, once it stops working, he
might get help. Wow.
Right. Right.
That is amazing stuff. Let me tell you
something.
Um this conversation was truly
eye-opening.
It was beautiful beautiful stuff.
Um You remind us how important empathy
is.
You remind us what marriage is. You
remind us what life is all about.
Um and what connection is all about. And
most of all,
you give us a sense of hope.
You see light by the end of the tunnel.
You see a lot of people and you you you
see light by the end of the tunnel. You
see the good in people. I want to give
you a brocha that the boina shel oilam
should give you koiyach
to can to to have the strength
to sit and and and hold people's hands.
Amen. And hold them hold them to get out
of their struggles and you should have
nachas and gezint Amen. Amen. and only
broches. Amen. And I want to thank you
for the opportunity to be here cuz it I
think talking about shalom bayis Right.
is the biggest chos that cuz it
Shalom bayis is what holds everything.
Like what Life is tough. Right. Life is
you know, life is a struggle. Right. And
shalom bayis is not the only struggle in
life. Life has so many struggles.
>> Yeah.
What holds What holds that? Correct.
Shalom bayis. If I have shalom bayis, I
have I have a I have a kaili to hold all
the struggles of my life. If I don't
have shalom bayis,
the struggles of my life become
overwhelming. So,
thank you for this chos to be able to
talk about this. Thank you. Thank you so
much. Thank you for coming in and thank
you for your time. Okay. Thank you.