Stop Killing Your Passions! Freedomain Call-In

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31 October 2023 Call-In

A father whose daughter had a conversation with Stef finds himself angry! He calls in to talk about how he can help his daughter. Is it even possible?


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Transcript
00:00:00 You've had two sessions with my daughter, and after the second one, I got quite angry.
00:00:16 But when that has settled down a bit, I was thinking, how can I help my daughter?
00:00:25 And then later, I'm more thinking, is it possible even to help my daughter?
00:00:35 The background, for those who don't know, this is all a result of a divorce.
00:00:45 It must be now, let's see, 25 years ago, maybe more.
00:00:51 We're getting near to 30 years ago.
00:01:00 My ex-wife has had the children living at her place.
00:01:09 It's hard to find the words, I'm sorry.
00:01:17 But it didn't turn out so well for my children, and so they are having difficulties, especially
00:01:23 my daughter, are having difficulties now, especially with her self-esteem, which is
00:01:31 making her make bad choices.
00:01:35 And then, of course, I would like to know, how can I help her at this stage?
00:01:47 I have been trying over the years, but I don't think it has done much.
00:01:54 Maybe it has, I don't know, you can't know.
00:01:57 But she needs more help, yes.
00:02:02 Let's leave it at that.
00:02:03 Right, right.
00:02:04 Do you want to tell me a little bit about how you met your ex-wife, and how the relationship
00:02:09 started, and all that kind of good stuff?
00:02:13 Okay.
00:02:15 We met when I was studying at university, and so was she.
00:02:23 And we had a good time.
00:02:26 Yes, we had a good time.
00:02:31 But then we moved together, and we got married.
00:02:37 I'm so sorry to interrupt, but I just asked you a big question.
00:02:40 My apologies.
00:02:42 I have a way of talking that is very, and when I hear people pause that much, and I'm
00:02:49 guessing English is not your native language, which I apologize for, it would be much easier
00:02:53 to conduct this in your native language, but I only speak English.
00:02:56 I'm just concerned that it's A, going to take a lot of time, B, it's kind of hypnotic, and
00:03:00 C, it seems that there may be a kind of self-censorship, like you're carefully weighing and measuring
00:03:06 every word, and that kind of interferes with the spontaneous communication that I think
00:03:11 makes these kinds of conversations more valuable, if that makes sense?
00:03:15 I am.
00:03:16 I am censoring myself, because I have so much anger in me, and I don't want to just have
00:03:25 it spill out, because I don't think it's constructive.
00:03:28 Hang on, hang on.
00:03:30 Just so you know, I have no problem if you get angry.
00:03:32 I have no problem with, that's totally fine.
00:03:34 And in fact, if you are angry, or angry at me, or whatever, you'd mentioned that sort
00:03:37 of earlier, that's totally fine.
00:03:40 You can tell me, but if there's this big wall of self-censorship, it's going to be kind
00:03:44 of tough to have a direct conversation, if that makes sense?
00:03:47 Yes, I understand that.
00:03:49 It's not you I'm angry at, it's my daughter I'm angry at.
00:03:52 Well, yes.
00:03:53 Give me time.
00:03:54 I have a knack of bringing this out at people, I guess.
00:03:58 But yeah, I just, if you're very careful and considerate, then it probably won't be as
00:04:02 valuable a conversation, because I just kind of want to know what's in your heart and mind,
00:04:07 and I feel if it's going through this big bureaucratic filter, that we're not going
00:04:11 to be able to connect, if that makes sense.
00:04:13 Awesome.
00:04:14 Oh, you're putting me in a spot that I'm not comfortable with.
00:04:21 Well, that spot is called philosophy, if that's any help.
00:04:25 If it's any consolation, it puts me in that spot all the time as well.
00:04:29 So we're not alone in that.
00:04:32 Okay, I'll try to do better.
00:04:35 Okay.
00:04:36 Yeah, but still, it's the language as well, of course.
00:04:41 And there's so much that I could talk about that I don't think is actually relevant.
00:04:48 So I tried to also filter out what could be relevant in this context.
00:04:55 But let's see.
00:04:57 Okay.
00:04:58 Yes, we moved together.
00:05:00 We got pregnant.
00:05:01 Hang on, sorry, just at the beginning, right?
00:05:04 So you're giving me the mechanics, right?
00:05:07 But what was it that drew you to each other?
00:05:09 What were you attracted to about her?
00:05:12 And how did you end up in the relationship, especially where you produce children, right?
00:05:18 That's the biggest and deepest relationship there is.
00:05:20 So what was it that drew you to each other and so on?
00:05:23 I think it was most other guys that were around were more or less afraid of her, but I wasn't.
00:05:35 And so I approached her and she more or less, yes, she choose me.
00:05:43 I didn't know that I could choose a woman at the time.
00:05:48 So when she choose me and I had no competition, I'd say, we started to hang out.
00:05:55 Yeah.
00:05:56 Now, sorry, you're giving me as many questions as answers, which is good.
00:06:01 Why did you think you couldn't choose a woman and why were the other men scared of her?
00:06:10 I have the same problem as my children.
00:06:14 I have low self-esteem.
00:06:16 So and the concept of choosing a woman didn't occur to me.
00:06:24 I mean, why would a woman choose?
00:06:30 Why should I be able to choose a woman?
00:06:33 I would be lucky if a woman would choose me.
00:06:36 Yeah, that's where I was.
00:06:39 And where did that come from in your mind or your heart?
00:06:43 That idea that you were worthless.
00:06:49 My parents divorced.
00:06:51 My mother left me when I was, the family when I was two or three years old.
00:06:58 I have no memories of her when she was a caretaker.
00:07:02 Well, she didn't leave you, right?
00:07:05 I mean, I get that she was gone, but she left you.
00:07:08 She left your dad.
00:07:09 Absolutely.
00:07:10 Yes.
00:07:11 My dad never left when I was a baby, but he didn't leave me.
00:07:13 I wasn't even really part of the equation.
00:07:15 He just couldn't stand my mom.
00:07:17 Yeah, absolutely.
00:07:18 I know that.
00:07:19 I get that.
00:07:22 But I was talking from my point of view, why I have low self-esteem.
00:07:32 And that is, of course, because, well, I didn't have a mother to love me the way, what's the
00:07:41 word, without, I don't get the word, whatever I would do.
00:07:54 Oh, unconditional love.
00:07:56 Yes, yes.
00:07:57 Right.
00:07:58 I just want to know what your mindset is about cause and effect in your emotions.
00:08:06 So it's your theory that you ended up at low self-esteem because your mother abandoned
00:08:13 you?
00:08:15 Yes, I think self-esteem is what you get from the mother aspect of your parents.
00:08:29 And she wasn't there and my father didn't know how.
00:08:36 So yeah, that's what I think.
00:08:38 That's my theory.
00:08:39 I strongly disagree, which doesn't mean I'm right.
00:08:42 Obviously, it doesn't mean you're wrong, but I strongly disagree.
00:08:46 And I'll tell you why.
00:08:47 And I think this is going to be important for the conversation as a whole.
00:08:51 And again, we'll get back to your story.
00:08:52 I just wanted to make sure I don't forget this.
00:08:55 To me, self-esteem comes from an accurate processing of reality.
00:09:03 Right?
00:09:04 So if you're nervous about jumping off a curb, that's too frightened.
00:09:09 If you're not nervous about jumping off a roof, that's not frightened enough.
00:09:13 Right?
00:09:14 So if you're terrified of a kitten, that's too scared.
00:09:18 If you're not terrified of a tiger, that's not scared enough.
00:09:22 Right?
00:09:23 So an accurate processing of reality is what gives us self-esteem.
00:09:27 Because the problem is if you say, "Well, I have low self-esteem because my mother abandoned
00:09:31 me," well, you never can then change that because you can never be someone whose mother
00:09:36 never abandoned him.
00:09:38 Like she did abandon you, or she abandoned you, or she left your father and therefore
00:09:42 left you.
00:09:43 So if you say, "I have low self-esteem because my mother abandoned me," then that low self-esteem
00:09:48 can never be changed.
00:09:51 Because the facts can't be changed.
00:09:53 Right?
00:09:54 If I say, "Well, I'm eternally going to be insecure because I will never be six feet
00:09:59 tall," well, then I'm always going to be eternally insecure because I'm never going to be six
00:10:04 feet tall.
00:10:05 So I think, for me, I would say that if you accurately process reality, that gives you
00:10:12 confidence, that gives you self-esteem.
00:10:13 And the accurate processing of reality is that your mother didn't abandon you, she abandoned
00:10:21 her vows.
00:10:23 She abandoned motherhood, she abandoned her love.
00:10:26 She failed, she messed up, and she hurt her children by having children with a man and
00:10:32 then leaving the marriage.
00:10:35 And that doesn't have any reflection on your value or your worth.
00:10:40 Yes.
00:10:42 I know that part.
00:10:43 Yes, sorry, go ahead.
00:10:46 But the things you described, I think, isn't that more about self-confidence rather than
00:10:54 self-esteem?
00:10:55 Well, I mean, so, esteem means to have respect for, right?
00:11:01 To esteem someone is to have respect.
00:11:03 Now we can't have respect for somebody who doesn't process reality accurately, who isn't
00:11:09 in reality, who, you know, we can't respect.
00:11:12 Respect is something that we earn by accurately processing reality.
00:11:16 So I would say that self-esteem is, well, I respect my own judgment.
00:11:21 And that means I don't put, so the value that I have can't be based upon somebody else's
00:11:29 decision, right?
00:11:30 So does that make sense?
00:11:31 Like if somebody says, "Oh, Steph, you're a bad guy," in some way, right?
00:11:38 Well, I don't have any control over what someone else says.
00:11:41 So my value, my self-respect can't be dependent upon the actions of others.
00:11:46 It has to be dependent upon me accurately processing reality.
00:11:51 So if your mother chooses to leave you when you're a baby, that can't have any effect
00:11:58 on the value you perceive yourself to have.
00:12:00 I mean, obviously when you're a kid, it'll have an effect.
00:12:03 And I'm not sort of trying to say that no kid should ever feel bad for being abandoned
00:12:06 by his mother.
00:12:08 Of course you do.
00:12:10 But in terms of the value that you have as a human being, that's dependent upon you accurately
00:12:16 processing reality, making reasonably wise decisions based upon facts, reason, and evidence.
00:12:22 It can't be that your value is determined by what your mother did when you were a year
00:12:28 or two old, because that's giving your value entirely over to someone else.
00:12:36 Which is to say you have no control over your own value.
00:12:40 Yes, I agree.
00:12:42 And that is what you do when you grow up.
00:12:46 You try to make yourself have self-esteem by, just like you said, by observing your
00:12:56 environment and how people approach you.
00:13:05 What you get from your mother when you are a child must give you a start, so to say.
00:13:14 That yes, you are worth being loved.
00:13:20 Isn't that right?
00:13:21 I mean, it's a small gift.
00:13:25 Again, I understand that how a lot of children would perceive that abandonment would be that
00:13:31 they're not worthy of being loved and so on.
00:13:33 Like if my own mother can't love me and so on.
00:13:37 But I'm asking you as an adult why you have low self-esteem.
00:13:41 You said it's because my mother left.
00:13:44 And I asked is that your causality?
00:13:46 You have low self-esteem because your mother abandoned her family.
00:13:50 And that's not true.
00:13:52 Now as a child you'll perceive that for sure, but as an adult, and as a father yourself,
00:14:00 you don't have low self-esteem because your mother left you.
00:14:05 That would be something that you would have perceived, of course, as a kid.
00:14:08 And maybe if it had never been explained to you, or maybe if you'd been blamed for it,
00:14:12 then you would have to go along with that.
00:14:15 But it's not the case.
00:14:18 It's not our self-esteem.
00:14:19 It's not a series of dominoes that get knocked over by other people and just stay that way
00:14:22 for the rest of our lives.
00:14:24 The accurate perception of reality is that your mother acted in a selfish and immature
00:14:33 manner, that she was destructive and harmful and petty and, again, immature, I'm sure.
00:14:42 And that reflects on her, not you.
00:14:45 That reflects on her, not you.
00:14:47 Like if I lock a dog in the basement and the dog gets really hungry and aggressive, we
00:14:52 don't blame the dog, right?
00:14:53 We blame me as the dog owner for harming or torturing the dog.
00:14:59 So my sort of purpose is to say that if your self-esteem is like a domino, just gets knocked
00:15:06 over, then that is not an accurate processing of reality.
00:15:12 Your mother's failure doesn't make you unlovable.
00:15:14 Your mother's inability to love doesn't make you unlovable, by definition.
00:15:18 Again, you're going to experience that as a kid, but as a kid we believe that we are
00:15:23 the cause of everything around us, but we also believe in Santa Claus.
00:15:26 I'm going to assume you don't believe in Santa Claus now, and so this idea that you are who
00:15:33 you are because your mother messed up, or you have this view of yourself because your
00:15:37 mother messed up, I think is false.
00:15:41 I think we agree.
00:15:43 I think we agree.
00:15:44 We're just expressing it in different ways.
00:15:47 No, I'm sorry, that's not the case, because I did ask you, "Do you believe that you have
00:15:52 low self-esteem because your mother abandoned you?" and you said yes, and I'm saying that's
00:15:55 not why you have low self-esteem.
00:15:56 It's part of it.
00:15:57 Yes, I think that is part of it.
00:15:59 I think that when I met my ex-wife, I was, how old was I?
00:16:06 Maybe 24, and I haven't had much success in dating.
00:16:17 My father wasn't around during my upbringing either, so he couldn't give me what I think
00:16:26 a father should give their children, I mean, caring or whatever, and I was put in a boarding
00:16:37 school.
00:16:38 Yeah, I know, I know.
00:16:42 Which was the best thing that could happen to me, which I think is kind of crazy, because
00:16:48 then I didn't have my older brother watering me.
00:16:55 So I think during my upbringing, I didn't get the feedback that would give me high self-esteem.
00:17:06 That has changed a lot, of course, when I got older, but at the time, no, I did not
00:17:14 have that.
00:17:16 Right.
00:17:17 Now, why did your father not spend much time with you when you were little?
00:17:25 I don't think he knew.
00:17:29 He was quite old when he got me.
00:17:34 He already had five children before me, and one marriage before, and so he was kind of
00:17:45 old.
00:17:46 Oh, so he was an experienced father.
00:17:48 Ah, he should be, yes, should have been.
00:17:53 No, no, he was.
00:17:54 For good or ill, if you've had five kids, I guess you were number six, if you've had
00:17:58 five kids, then you would be an experienced father, right?
00:18:03 Absolutely.
00:18:05 It was more like, oh, this is the sixth one, and so he didn't turn up when I graduated,
00:18:13 for example.
00:18:15 He was bored, I guess, of examinations.
00:18:19 So no, yeah.
00:18:22 Okay.
00:18:23 Okay.
00:18:24 So how long were you in boarding school for?
00:18:29 Seven years, yep, seven years.
00:18:32 What ages to what ages?
00:18:34 It would be from 12 to 18.
00:18:39 Right, okay.
00:18:43 And before that?
00:18:44 No, that would be, what do you call it, state school?
00:18:51 No, but with regards to your father, I mean, zero to 12 is quite a long time.
00:18:58 Okay, well, he had kind of, what do you call it, babysitters, no?
00:19:11 Oh, nannies?
00:19:13 Yes, nannies.
00:19:15 And then there was one young woman that moved in and they had relationships as well.
00:19:25 And later on produced yet another child, so he had seven children in all.
00:19:32 No, he wasn't around.
00:19:35 He did spend Christmas and some vacation together doing skiing and things like that.
00:19:53 But the day to day, I don't have any memories of that, no.
00:20:01 I'm really sorry about that.
00:20:02 It's very sad, of course, that your father would have a child and then not really want
00:20:09 to spend much time with that child.
00:20:12 I'm really sorry about that.
00:20:14 That's a very sad situation.
00:20:19 So I guess that is what made me think, I believe, that when I got chosen, I accepted.
00:20:30 And yeah.
00:20:33 But why were the other boys scared of her?
00:20:38 I wouldn't describe that.
00:20:53 I don't know how to describe that, actually.
00:20:58 She knew how to...
00:21:04 I can just only think of, she knew how to bite.
00:21:07 But of course, she didn't bite them.
00:21:09 No, I understand.
00:21:10 I understand.
00:21:11 She had a sword tongue.
00:21:13 Yeah, yes.
00:21:14 That's it.
00:21:16 Yeah.
00:21:17 Now, I assume that she was also very attractive because a lot of times those two things go
00:21:23 hand in hand, like acoustic tongue and physical attractiveness.
00:21:27 Yes, I think so.
00:21:30 At the time, yes.
00:21:33 I think that changed over the years, but yeah, at the time, yeah, absolutely.
00:21:38 Okay, so she chose you and you chose her because she was attractive and you weren't expecting
00:21:46 this could be the only time someone would choose you, right?
00:21:50 And I didn't do that knowingly.
00:21:54 I just stumbled along, really.
00:21:58 Just played my part, so to speak.
00:22:01 And why do you think...
00:22:02 Sorry to interrupt.
00:22:03 Why do you think she chose you?
00:22:07 At the time, I had some money.
00:22:17 So that could be it.
00:22:18 At 24?
00:22:19 How did you have money at 24?
00:22:21 You could say it was a free inheritance from my father, sort of.
00:22:34 Yes.
00:22:38 But we burnt that in maybe...
00:22:41 Sorry, your father was not dead, though.
00:22:44 Was it like a trust that matured when you were in school or something like that?
00:22:51 Yes, sort of.
00:22:57 I think that would be the best explanation.
00:22:59 Okay, so you had some money, but you spent it on her, right?
00:23:05 Yes.
00:23:06 So at the time when I ran out of money, she decided to get another guy.
00:23:18 Okay, and then what?
00:23:22 That's a divorce.
00:23:23 Oh, okay.
00:23:24 So in this process, sorry, the last I heard, I think.
00:23:28 So, oh, sorry.
00:23:29 So you got married, you had kids, and then when you ran out of money, she divorced you.
00:23:34 Is that right?
00:23:35 Yeah, more or less.
00:23:36 Yes.
00:23:37 And why did you run out of money?
00:23:43 She was expensive.
00:23:44 I don't know how to answer that one.
00:23:50 She was expensive.
00:23:51 Yeah.
00:23:52 Well, I mean, but wouldn't you say, "We don't have the money.
00:23:57 We need to cut back on our spending because I'm not earning that much.
00:24:02 Are we going to run out of money?"
00:24:20 There were times where we did talk about that, but we didn't know how.
00:24:27 We didn't know how.
00:24:28 So the money...
00:24:29 So what do you mean you didn't know how to spend less money?
00:24:34 Because the things we focused on was, I mean, it's idiotic to think about it today, of course.
00:24:46 I mean, yes, it is.
00:24:51 But we focused on the wrong things.
00:24:53 And the things that did cost a lot of money, those were the things that she wanted and
00:24:58 was important to her, like having a horse, for instance.
00:25:04 Oh, you got involved with the horse woman.
00:25:06 Well, yeah, that's doom.
00:25:07 Yes.
00:25:08 Yeah.
00:25:09 Thank you.
00:25:10 Thank you.
00:25:11 I didn't know.
00:25:12 I know now.
00:25:13 But yeah.
00:25:14 Yeah, no, horse women, you might as well just set fire to all the money, convert it all
00:25:18 to bills and set fire to it in the front yard.
00:25:21 Yes.
00:25:22 Yes.
00:25:23 Absolutely.
00:25:24 So it was an impossible task, I think.
00:25:29 And I didn't understand.
00:25:32 I was naive and I was hopelessly trying to hold it together so that she would be happy.
00:25:42 And yeah, no, it was not fun.
00:25:50 Well also, wasn't it the case that if you said no to her, then she would leave you?
00:25:56 Was that your concern?
00:25:57 That if you said, "No, we can't have a horse.
00:25:59 We're in our 20s.
00:26:00 We're just starting our lives and we're running out of money.
00:26:02 So we're going to have to get rid of the horse."
00:26:04 Would it be the case that if you said that, you were afraid that she was going to leave
00:26:07 you, right?
00:26:10 Not consciously.
00:26:14 I don't think I was thinking that at the time.
00:26:19 No.
00:26:20 Maybe I did unconsciously.
00:26:22 Probably I did.
00:26:24 Probably did.
00:26:25 But...
00:26:26 Well, okay, hang on.
00:26:27 Listen, you're an intelligent fellow, right?
00:26:32 You're an intelligent fellow, right?
00:26:35 I mean, no.
00:26:36 Is that fair to say?
00:26:37 I think so, yes.
00:26:38 Yeah, you're an intelligent fellow.
00:26:39 I mean, you're certainly intelligent enough to do basic math, which is we can't afford
00:26:44 this lifestyle, right?
00:26:46 Yes, I can do that.
00:26:48 Okay.
00:26:49 So you can do all of that.
00:26:50 And a lot more, I'm sure.
00:26:52 So I'm trying to sort of understand that you were living significantly beyond your means,
00:26:59 right?
00:27:00 Is that right?
00:27:02 Yes.
00:27:03 Right.
00:27:04 You could not afford the horse, the house, the cars, or whatever it is you were spending
00:27:08 your money on, right?
00:27:10 Is that right?
00:27:14 Yes, absolutely.
00:27:16 So then, of course, as an intelligent man, the logical thing, when you're spending too
00:27:21 much money, is to stop spending too much money, right?
00:27:27 But I mean, you're talking about logic here.
00:27:30 That wasn't part of it.
00:27:32 There was no logic.
00:27:33 It was...
00:27:34 No, no, no.
00:27:36 There's always logic.
00:27:39 It may not be objective, rational logic, but there's always logic.
00:27:44 There's always a reason why things occur.
00:27:48 Always.
00:27:49 Always.
00:27:51 Always a reason why things occur.
00:27:54 So why could you not say no to this woman if you can't afford...
00:28:01 I mean, you had children at this point, right?
00:28:05 Yes.
00:28:07 All right.
00:28:09 So your primary responsibility, of course, is to your children, right?
00:28:14 Is that right?
00:28:15 Absolutely.
00:28:16 Right.
00:28:17 Yeah, absolutely.
00:28:18 I mean...
00:28:19 So if your primary responsibility is towards your children, then...
00:28:23 Sorry, you would say to your wife, "We can't afford the horse because we have to feed the
00:28:28 children.
00:28:29 We can't feed the horse because we have to feed the children."
00:28:32 Right?
00:28:33 I mean, I get we can't ride the children, but nonetheless, that's how it has to be.
00:28:38 So the question is, why did you not say this, right?
00:28:43 Now, I'm not saying a big blame thing, like, "Oh my gosh, it's so terrible."
00:28:48 I mean, just genuine curiosity, like, why did you not say the blindingly obvious that
00:28:52 we have to cut our spending?
00:28:54 I think it was the same reason why other guys were afraid of her.
00:28:59 That's what I think.
00:29:00 Yeah.
00:29:01 I mean, it's...
00:29:02 Yeah, she can be...
00:29:03 I don't know if she's that way now, but she could be really nasty.
00:29:13 So yeah, it was a way of avoiding war.
00:29:17 When did you first notice that she could be really nasty?
00:29:24 Hmm.
00:29:32 I mean, I assume it was when you were dating, right?
00:29:37 No, I don't think so.
00:29:41 I don't think so.
00:29:42 I think it started to go dark when she got pregnant, and that was maybe a month or two
00:29:53 before our wedding.
00:29:56 So after maybe two years, it became obvious.
00:30:02 I'm sorry, are you trying to tell me that for two years she showed no evidence of having
00:30:11 a bad temper or being nasty or having a vicious tongue?
00:30:22 Not in a way that it affected our relationship, that I thought it was about me as a person.
00:30:32 I mean, we made jokes that could be harsh like that, right?
00:30:38 And no, we got along very good the first two years.
00:30:44 I can't remember that we had any fights the first two years.
00:30:51 It all changed when she got pregnant.
00:30:54 Right, so if she was not nasty over the first two years, then why were the other boys afraid
00:31:03 of her?
00:31:04 I mean, what could they see that you say you couldn't?
00:31:09 I saw how she could be with other guys, but maybe I was hardened from boarding school
00:31:27 and my older brothers, I don't know, but that didn't affect me in a negative way.
00:31:33 No, it was a jargon that I could handle.
00:31:38 It was a what?
00:31:40 What's it called?
00:31:41 Jargon, no.
00:31:42 What's it called?
00:31:43 Word.
00:31:44 Like a form of speech that you could handle?
00:31:48 Yeah, yeah.
00:31:51 So are you saying that she was relatively caustic or could be, but you could handle
00:31:55 it?
00:31:56 Yes.
00:31:57 Yeah, because it was just a style.
00:32:04 It was a...
00:32:09 No that's fine.
00:32:10 Okay.
00:32:11 Now, what was her family like?
00:32:12 I assume you met them before she got pregnant.
00:32:16 Yes, I did.
00:32:18 And what was her family like?
00:32:26 It's a long time now.
00:32:28 What was her parents like?
00:32:31 She has a wonderful brother.
00:32:34 Yes, I really liked him and still do.
00:32:38 Wonderful brother.
00:32:39 Oh, so hang on.
00:32:42 Did her wonderful brother warn you that she had a really bad temper?
00:32:46 No.
00:32:47 Younger brother, no.
00:32:50 Why wouldn't he warn you?
00:32:54 Don't know.
00:33:00 I mean, he would have known that she had a bad temper and wouldn't he have warned you
00:33:04 and said, "Listen, if you're going to get married to her, you should be aware that she
00:33:08 has a really bad temper."
00:33:09 No, no, no, not his style and no, no.
00:33:17 And you would think that maybe my family would warn me.
00:33:26 I mean, especially one of my brothers said afterwards that he knew that and saw that
00:33:36 and that he was skeptic, but he didn't say anything.
00:33:41 No, nobody said anything.
00:33:44 Or maybe they did and I didn't listen.
00:33:46 I'm not sure, actually.
00:33:47 I don't know.
00:33:48 I don't remember anyone saying anything.
00:33:52 Okay.
00:33:54 So for two years, I'm trying to figure out, did you know that she had a temper but you
00:34:01 were used to it or you didn't know that she had a temper at all?
00:34:15 I didn't know that she had a temper that would be directed towards me.
00:34:23 I think that would be most accurate to say.
00:34:26 And so what did you see in her temper that was not pointed towards you that you noticed?
00:34:37 She was snappy and, yeah, sharp-tongued.
00:34:44 So she was snappy and sharp-tongued but never towards you over two years, is that right?
00:34:51 Yes.
00:34:52 Don't you have the word jargon?
00:35:00 Jargon, yeah, but it's not quite the same.
00:35:05 I don't think it means quite the same thing.
00:35:08 Now did it bother you that she could be mean to other people?
00:35:15 No, I didn't reflect on that.
00:35:23 No, I didn't.
00:35:24 Okay, so she would be mean or sharp-tongued or nasty to other people and it wouldn't bother
00:35:31 you, so it didn't matter to you that the woman you maybe wanted to marry or have kids with
00:35:40 could be nasty to other people?
00:35:43 No, no.
00:35:44 No, I didn't.
00:35:46 Okay.
00:35:47 I mean, looking back, I know there were lots of warning signals, but I didn't pay attention.
00:35:54 I didn't understand what to look for when looking for a mother for my children.
00:36:02 I didn't understand.
00:36:03 So no, I had no clue.
00:36:07 Absolutely clueless.
00:36:10 And what were the signs, now that you're looking back on it, what were the signs that were
00:36:14 warning signs?
00:36:19 Like other guys didn't want to date her.
00:36:24 Just like, I mean, you're heading right towards it.
00:36:30 So you're right.
00:36:31 Yeah, I should have.
00:36:32 And I should have all those things that you have brought up, but it didn't occur to me.
00:36:37 It just didn't.
00:36:38 And she also once said something like, "Oh, I'm going to be a luxury wife."
00:36:48 Yeah.
00:36:49 "I'm going to be a luxury wife."
00:36:52 Oh, so she said that she was going to be very expensive.
00:36:55 Yeah.
00:36:57 And I didn't understand what she said.
00:36:59 But I remember it, and I'm just, "Whoa."
00:37:03 Yes.
00:37:04 No, I didn't understand.
00:37:07 I didn't think anything would apply to me.
00:37:10 No.
00:37:11 Right.
00:37:12 Absolutely clueless.
00:37:13 Yeah.
00:37:14 Okay.
00:37:15 So there were many warning signals that I could have taken into account had I been listening
00:37:25 to you.
00:37:26 Well, I can't necessarily say that's a necessity.
00:37:30 So she said, "I'm going to be a very expensive wife," and then it was surprising to you that
00:37:35 she was a very expensive wife?
00:37:38 Right.
00:37:40 I mean, I didn't make the connection until after the divorce.
00:37:50 See, I got to tell you, it's a strange situation for me.
00:37:57 Just I don't want you to necessarily focus on my feelings.
00:38:01 But you get all kinds of, in English they call that rubber bones.
00:38:06 Like I had no choice, I had no chance, I had no experience, I was naive.
00:38:11 Your wife is caustic to other people.
00:38:14 You don't think she has a temper.
00:38:15 She says, "I'm going to be a very expensive wife," and then you are surprised that she's
00:38:20 a very expensive wife.
00:38:21 She has horses, and you don't think that she might be an overspender.
00:38:25 I don't understand.
00:38:26 You're an intelligent man.
00:38:29 And the reason why I'm focusing on this is, okay, how old were you when you separated
00:38:33 from your wife?
00:38:36 I'd be 31, maybe.
00:38:42 Okay, so you were 31, right?
00:38:44 So what you communicate to your children when you say, "I had no clue about anything," is
00:38:52 you can say, "You can make it to the age of 30, be in grave danger, have people tell you
00:38:58 obviously through their behavior that you're in grave danger, and be completely clueless
00:39:04 as to the fact that you're in grave danger.
00:39:06 You can think you love someone, and it turns out that you don't.
00:39:09 You can think they love you.
00:39:10 It turns out that they only love your money, and there's no way to know ahead of time."
00:39:16 So by you saying, "I had no knowledge, I had no chance, I had no education, I had no way
00:39:22 to do any better," what happens is it communicates to your children a great deal of fear and
00:39:28 anxiety about love and pair bonding.
00:39:33 Because if you say, "There's no way to know if someone you love turns out to be a monster,"
00:39:39 okay, I guess maybe that makes you feel like you're off the hook for your 20s, but what
00:39:45 it does to your children is it says, "You can't trust anybody, least of all yourself."
00:39:52 Well, that is true, I think, until you start actively thinking, but you have to do it knowingly,
00:40:02 if you can say that, to start thinking.
00:40:05 At least that's what I have done.
00:40:10 But when the communication to my children that you were speaking of, I really tried
00:40:17 to communicate with my children about what I have done, from what I understand, and especially
00:40:28 what I didn't do, and how I'd made wrong decisions.
00:40:32 And yeah, I've been talking to my children so much, you wouldn't believe.
00:40:37 Well, you must have been telling them something completely opposite to what you're telling
00:40:41 me, though.
00:40:43 Because what you're telling me is I had no chance, no clue, nobody warned me, I didn't
00:40:48 even notice that she was mean to other people, or it didn't matter, and there was no signs
00:40:53 that she was ever going to turn on me until she was a month or two from giving birth.
00:40:58 So if you're saying something to your children, then that's very different from what you're
00:41:02 saying to me, and maybe that's a little confusing for me.
00:41:06 What I've been trying to communicate is that I was looking for the wrong things.
00:41:16 I was looking for someone to have fun with, to party with, and that's not the same person
00:41:22 you want to have as your co-parent for your children.
00:41:29 I think that's the main thing I try to communicate, that when you marry, you have to make sure
00:41:38 that this person is someone that can be a father or a mother to your children.
00:41:45 I've been talking about that so much, and just used my own failure as an example of
00:41:55 what not to do.
00:41:56 Yes, that's what I've been trying to say.
00:41:59 Was this a planned pregnancy?
00:42:02 Yes.
00:42:04 Okay, so who brought up wanting to have kids?
00:42:08 She did.
00:42:10 Sorry, she did?
00:42:12 Yes.
00:42:13 Okay.
00:42:14 Is it the low-volume?
00:42:15 No, no, I've got it.
00:42:18 If we both talk at the same time, that's just my issue.
00:42:20 Yes.
00:42:21 Okay, so she said she wanted to have kids, and you agreed, is that right?
00:42:25 I thought it was a little bit early, but she said that, "Well, it can take time, so why
00:42:33 don't I get off the pills?"
00:42:35 And she did, and she got pregnant the next day, more or less.
00:42:40 So why did you decide to become a father when you said that she was really only good for
00:42:46 partying?
00:42:47 Yes.
00:42:48 Okay.
00:42:49 I think there is a script that we follow, or that we think we should follow, with getting
00:43:13 educated, meet a girl, move together, get children, and so on, get a job and all that,
00:43:24 and you just sort of do it, but without really thinking if it's good or if it's a good timing,
00:43:36 you just go along without thinking.
00:43:41 That's what I think.
00:43:45 I think that's what I was doing.
00:43:47 I wasn't thinking.
00:43:50 I didn't know how to think at the time.
00:43:52 I knew how to repeat.
00:43:55 But that's another statement of inability.
00:43:57 Yeah, but it's true.
00:44:01 I didn't know.
00:44:04 If there's one thing that should be taught in schools, it's how to think, and they don't
00:44:08 teach you that.
00:44:09 They teach you how to repeat, and so you repeat.
00:44:15 The thinking part is something that I've developed maybe 20 years.
00:44:25 This is 40 years ago.
00:44:28 I didn't think.
00:44:32 It's annoying because if I had been thinking, I would have made other choices.
00:44:40 Absolutely.
00:44:41 Now, can you appreciate that?
00:44:45 Now, when you think back upon your, I guess, late 20s, early 30s, around the time that
00:44:51 you became a father and got married, were there situations where you disagreed with
00:44:59 the woman and voiced it, and if so, what happened?
00:45:03 Like you said you wanted to do something different, or maybe you wanted to limit spending or something
00:45:07 like that.
00:45:10 I don't think we had more than just a few fights, and that was at the end.
00:45:24 Only when we had a disagreement, I would be able to, to a certain degree, to have a discussion
00:45:37 and make kind of arguments for it.
00:45:44 So obviously, there were things that were off-topic, like get rid of the horse.
00:45:57 I mean, that was a big no-no.
00:46:02 Now, what was the no about that?
00:46:05 I mean, if you'd said, "Look, we can't afford the horse.
00:46:07 We're just not making enough money," what do you think would have happened?
00:46:13 I think we would probably have gotten that.
00:46:23 Yeah, she would probably get nasty, I think.
00:46:30 Maybe that was what I was afraid of, and by tiptoeing, I avoided that.
00:46:38 Maybe.
00:46:39 I don't know.
00:46:40 I think that's what you're saying, John.
00:46:41 Because this is the funny thing, and I'm not saying you're being false in anything.
00:46:45 I'm just trying to sort of understand.
00:46:47 Because you say, "Well, I didn't mind that she was nasty, and she certainly was never
00:46:50 nasty to me."
00:46:51 Okay, so if you don't think she's ever going to be nasty to you, then when you can't afford
00:46:54 the horse, you say, "Well, sorry, like, not even sorry, but it's just a fact.
00:46:59 The math is that we can't."
00:47:00 Now, if she wants to keep the horse, maybe she could have got a part-time job or something.
00:47:04 So if you're saying, "Well, I had no reason to be nervous of her, but I couldn't tell
00:47:09 her that we couldn't afford the horse."
00:47:11 Yeah, but there's no conflict there.
00:47:15 I don't think there's conflict, because she wasn't nasty to me, because I could handle
00:47:26 the situations.
00:47:30 And I'm trying to figure out myself right now, because I haven't thought about it in
00:47:34 this way, and it's a long time since.
00:47:38 But if there's some guy who's buried a body in his backyard, and you say, "Listen, I need
00:47:44 to get some earth," and he says, "Yeah, dig wherever you want, that's totally fine," right?
00:47:48 But if he says, "Well, don't dig there, whatever you do," then he can't later claim that he
00:47:53 had no idea that there was a body in his backyard, if he absolutely says, "You can't dig there,
00:47:58 no matter what, don't dig there, no matter what you do," right?
00:48:02 And so if you say, "Well, I had no reason to believe that she would be nasty to me,
00:48:06 but you can't tell her we can't afford the horse," I mean, the reason you would tell
00:48:10 her—the reason you wouldn't tell her we can't afford the horse is because you're scared
00:48:16 of her aggression.
00:48:17 Does that make sense?
00:48:19 Yes, it does.
00:48:22 So you knew that she was going to be aggressive towards you, which is why there were topics
00:48:26 that you couldn't bring up.
00:48:27 You said, "A no-no," right?
00:48:33 I think you're right.
00:48:34 Okay, so my question is, when did you first begin to change your behavior based upon her
00:48:41 potential aggression towards you?
00:48:47 I don't know.
00:48:48 I don't know.
00:48:49 I have to think about that one.
00:48:50 I don't know.
00:48:52 But certainly—so how long—when did you first realize that you couldn't afford the
00:48:57 lifestyle you had?
00:49:01 It was just—oh, that's a hard one.
00:49:19 When did I realize that I couldn't?
00:49:21 I mean, just roughly.
00:49:22 I mean, obviously it wasn't the first day of dating, but it was before the last day
00:49:26 of being married, right?
00:49:28 I was very close to it when I really—maybe, I don't know, a year before?
00:49:42 No, maybe not.
00:49:44 Yeah.
00:49:45 Perhaps, maybe.
00:49:46 I don't know.
00:49:47 I'm making it up.
00:49:49 Sorry, but when your bills are bigger than your income, you know that right away, right?
00:49:57 I mean, when you have to borrow money or you have to get credit, I mean, when your bills
00:50:03 are bigger than your income, you know that right away, right?
00:50:07 I don't think it was that obvious, because we did have incomes, but we did extra stuff
00:50:22 that costed extra money, and we had to—and those things we couldn't continue with when
00:50:30 I ran out of money, but that didn't mean that we wouldn't have food on the table, you know?
00:50:35 So it wasn't life-threatening to run out of money, because we could manage.
00:50:42 Okay, so when you stopped doing the extra stuff, that's when she left you?
00:50:48 Yeah.
00:50:49 And how old were your children when she left you?
00:50:53 Could it be three and five?
00:51:08 Four and five, maybe.
00:51:09 Okay, so they were young, obviously.
00:51:12 Now, what happened that led up to her leaving you?
00:51:16 She met another guy.
00:51:19 Oh, she met another guy, right?
00:51:22 Yeah, yes.
00:51:23 Is that similar to what happened with your mother?
00:51:26 I'm sorry, was that yes?
00:51:30 Yes.
00:51:31 Okay, got it, got it.
00:51:34 And was the other guy wealthier?
00:51:35 Is that sort of what happened?
00:51:38 No, but he was younger and he was more fit.
00:51:48 She was a teacher for, could it be, ten-year-olds in—what do you call the subject when they're
00:52:01 playing football and stuff?
00:52:02 Yeah, sports or physical education.
00:52:04 Yes, yeah, right, exactly.
00:52:06 Gym teacher.
00:52:07 Yes, a gym teacher.
00:52:08 She was a gym teacher and this guy, there was some kind of program so he would help
00:52:16 out where she had, at her school.
00:52:22 And yeah, he was young and fit and I guess she was like a goddess to him.
00:52:31 So yeah.
00:52:35 And did she leave to pursue a relationship with him?
00:52:41 No.
00:52:43 I was working an hour away in another town so I got small apartments that I could, that
00:52:57 I didn't have to commute all the time.
00:52:59 Oh, sorry, you were living in another town for five days of the week?
00:53:06 No, no, no, no.
00:53:07 We didn't get that far.
00:53:09 But just at the end of our marriage, I got this apartment because we thought that would
00:53:17 be a good idea.
00:53:19 In hindsight, I understand that what she was trying to do was to get me out of town so
00:53:25 that she could focus on this other guy.
00:53:31 Okay, I understand.
00:53:38 And how long had you been married at this point?
00:53:40 I guess five years, six years?
00:53:45 Five years.
00:53:46 I think we, the relationship in total was seven years.
00:53:50 Okay, so then did you end up moving to this other town?
00:54:00 Because we started, I started to stay at this apartment and then it became obvious what
00:54:15 was actually going on.
00:54:17 So yeah, that was, I ended up living in that apartment for maybe half a year, could it
00:54:26 be more, before I got myself a bigger place that I could, that could better fit my children
00:54:32 when they were visiting me.
00:54:34 And it also could be, she also could move into when, as I hoped, she would realize that
00:54:42 she had made a bad mistake.
00:54:45 Yeah, it took maybe, was it one or two years for me to actually let go after the divorce.
00:54:58 It took time, yeah.
00:55:01 And do you know why she divorced you?
00:55:13 That's never told me, so I don't know, but I guess it was the money and that he was more
00:55:21 fit.
00:55:22 No, that's not it.
00:55:23 What do you mean?
00:55:25 But that's not it.
00:55:31 Because you weren't there in the marriage.
00:55:34 You said this yourself, you were acting automatically, you didn't think for yourself, you didn't
00:55:39 resist, you weren't assertive, you were a ghost, you weren't there.
00:55:43 No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, I don't think that's right.
00:55:48 That's a bad interpretation.
00:55:49 All right, tell me then how to interpret it better.
00:56:06 I mean, you wouldn't even tell her that you couldn't afford the horse, or horses, right?
00:56:13 You were appeasing her, you were frightened of her, you were afraid to assert yourself,
00:56:18 you said yourself you didn't know how to think, you didn't know how to judge, you didn't know
00:56:21 how to evaluate.
00:56:24 And I have sympathy for that, I really have sympathy for that.
00:56:29 But that's what I've heard you say.
00:56:39 I understand the conclusion, I do.
00:56:42 But I don't think it's totally accurate.
00:56:49 When I judge myself, not that I wasn't thinking, I was just going along, I think it's in...
00:57:02 I compare with who I am today, how I do, how I think and do things today, which I at least
00:57:11 perceive, maybe it's the same, but I perceive as I'm more active now, trying to think.
00:57:25 Well I mean, is it fair to say that no matter...
00:57:30 I mean, certainly when you're in your 20s and 30s, is it fair to say that there's always
00:57:34 someone younger and fitter around, right?
00:57:37 I mean, my wife and I are in our 50s, right?
00:57:40 Is there always someone younger and fitter who's around?
00:57:50 Is there?
00:57:51 There always is.
00:57:52 Yeah, there always is.
00:57:53 Okay, right.
00:57:54 Of course there is, right?
00:57:55 I mean, it's not like nobody had children after me, or after my mom, right?
00:58:00 So, you know, there are younger and fitter people around, right?
00:58:05 And yet we've had no affairs, right?
00:58:08 So it's not the younger fitter thing, because that's a constant in life, that there are
00:58:11 always going to be younger and fitter people around.
00:58:14 So that's not causal as to why there's an affair.
00:58:23 Now in terms of running out of money, every marriage has its financial ups and downs.
00:58:30 Do we agree on that?
00:58:36 I'm comparing with my…
00:58:38 No, no, hang on, just a moment, hang on.
00:58:40 But every marriage has times where there's more money and times where there's less money,
00:58:44 right?
00:58:45 Yes, yes.
00:58:46 I mean, I got de-platformed, right?
00:58:48 It happens, right?
00:58:49 So when you say that she left you because there was less money and she left you because
00:58:56 there were younger and fitter men around, neither of those things is true, because neither
00:59:01 of those things is causal.
00:59:04 In other words, if you say X because of Y, then it needs to be pretty much 100% of the
00:59:10 time.
00:59:12 Now if you're going to say she left me because there were younger and fitter people, that's
00:59:17 not a correct answer, because every marriage has younger and fitter people around it.
00:59:21 And if you're going to say she left me because there was less money, well in every marriage
00:59:25 there's times where there's more money and there's less money, but most wives don't
00:59:30 leave their husband because there's less money and most wives don't leave their husband
00:59:33 because there's younger and fitter people around.
00:59:42 However wives do tend to have affairs if the man is emotionally unavailable, if he's too
00:59:48 compliant, if he's too appeasing, if he's scared of her, because women, of course, as
00:59:57 you know, they like to look up to their men, they like to feel that the man is a strong
01:00:01 protector and if the man is scared of her, she loses respect for him.
01:00:11 And if he won't voice his disagreements and if he just throws money at her because he's
01:00:14 scared of her, and if he's not thinking and he's just doing whatever she wants, "Oh, I
01:00:21 want to date you.
01:00:22 You said you started dating because she picked you."
01:00:25 So you're like, "Okay."
01:00:26 So she says, and I say this with sympathy, I really do, I say this with great sympathy,
01:00:30 there's nothing critical in anything I'm saying, I'm just sort of pointing it out.
01:00:34 But she says, "I'm going to date you."
01:00:36 And you're like, "Okay."
01:00:38 And then she says, "I want to have a kid."
01:00:40 And you're like, "Okay."
01:00:41 And then she says, "I want to get married."
01:00:43 "Okay."
01:00:44 Right?
01:00:45 "Oh, I want to have a horse."
01:00:46 "Okay."
01:00:47 "I want to go on a trip."
01:00:48 "Okay."
01:00:52 So I think it's fairly true to say that if a man is overly compliant in a marriage, if
01:00:58 he erases himself in order to appease his fear of his wife, that the marriage is not
01:01:06 going to do well at all, if that makes sense.
01:01:09 Yes, I think you're right.
01:01:14 I actually think you're right.
01:01:16 Hey, you told me about the anger.
01:01:20 We got there.
01:01:22 That's good.
01:01:23 So tell me what you're thinking.
01:01:25 I'm surprised.
01:01:28 I'm actually surprised.
01:01:29 I haven't thought about it before.
01:01:30 I can hear how surprised you are.
01:01:31 Go on.
01:01:32 I'm just surprised.
01:01:33 Yeah.
01:01:34 I haven't thought about it like this.
01:01:35 And you're probably right.
01:01:36 And it pisses me off.
01:01:37 Do you know one of the sexiest things a husband can do is say no?
01:01:38 No.
01:01:39 I mean, I think it's a good thing.
01:01:40 I think it's a good thing.
01:01:41 I think it's a good thing.
01:01:42 I think it's a good thing.
01:01:43 I think it's a good thing.
01:01:44 I think it's a good thing.
01:01:45 I think it's a good thing.
01:01:46 I think it's a good thing.
01:01:47 I think it's a good thing.
01:01:48 I think it's a good thing.
01:01:49 I think it's a good thing.
01:01:50 Do you know one of the sexiest things a husband can do is say no?
01:01:55 Yeah, I know.
01:01:57 I know.
01:01:59 Anyway, but tell me what you're thinking.
01:02:01 Because I know this is old stuff for you, but I mean, if there's a new perspective that's
01:02:05 helpful and you said it's pissing you off, go on, tell me more.
01:02:11 The first thing that comes to mind is that I'm so happy with my marriage that I have
01:02:19 now.
01:02:20 I'm so grateful that we have chosen each other and that we work so well together that I don't
01:02:28 have to be assertive in the way that I probably had to have been with my ex-wife.
01:02:41 Well, I doubt you could have been that way with her because she chose you because there
01:02:50 was a spineless aspect to you back then.
01:02:52 And again, I don't mean this in any critical way.
01:02:54 I sympathize.
01:02:56 But she chose you because you wouldn't say no, because you went along, because you appeased,
01:03:06 because you were scared of her.
01:03:07 She chose you because of that.
01:03:08 And when people choose you because of that, it's impossible to be assertive in that relationship
01:03:13 because the moment you're assertive, I mean, you might as well turn into an orangutan.
01:03:17 "I don't want to get married to an orangutan.
01:03:20 I chose a human being."
01:03:22 And if she chose you for your submissive side, then it would have been impossible for you
01:03:28 to be assertive because if you had been assertive, she wouldn't have chosen you in the first
01:03:32 place.
01:03:38 I'm trying to give you some peace of mind.
01:03:40 My view, right, obviously just somebody's been talking to you for this amount of time,
01:03:46 there was no winning in that marriage.
01:03:47 You couldn't win.
01:03:48 Absolutely.
01:03:49 I mean, if you'd have said no horse, she would have said, "No horse means no husband.
01:03:57 What are you going to do?"
01:03:59 And then if you had divorced her because she wouldn't let go of the horse, then she would
01:04:04 have said to the children, "I loved your father.
01:04:07 He divorced me for no reason.
01:04:09 He's a terrible man.
01:04:10 They would have poisoned, she would have poisoned your kids against you."
01:04:12 Like there was probably no winning, I'm guessing.
01:04:14 I'm thinking that maybe the last year or so that I was being more affirmed.
01:04:32 No, what's the word?
01:04:34 I was saying no to stuff more than I previously did.
01:04:43 I actually think so, yes.
01:04:47 So then when you start being assertive and she chose you for not being assertive, you
01:04:51 start being assertive, she's just going to leave you, right?
01:04:56 Yes.
01:04:58 I haven't connected the dots that way before.
01:05:01 Yeah, because if she's narcissistic, and I don't know, that's not a technical term, I'm
01:05:06 just using it sort of the colloquial way.
01:05:09 But if she's narcissistic, then if you show up in the relationship, she's going to have
01:05:15 to leave because only one of you can be there.
01:05:17 That's the narcissistic universe.
01:05:18 It's either you win or I win.
01:05:20 We can't both win because there's only one person in the universe.
01:05:22 It's either you or it's me.
01:05:25 Yes, yes.
01:05:28 Right, okay.
01:05:31 Okay, yeah.
01:05:34 Thank you.
01:05:36 No, no, it's my pleasure.
01:05:39 So how did the divorce go?
01:05:42 No, it didn't.
01:05:45 Well, what happened was that she was trying to have us both for a while, and I was hoping
01:05:58 that she would choose me, and after a while I said, "You have to choose.
01:06:03 It's me or him."
01:06:04 Oh, she was kind of like it was an open marriage for a while?
01:06:07 Yes, sort of.
01:06:08 Okay.
01:06:09 Because we filed for divorce, and when you do that, you have to have this thinking period
01:06:16 for half a year because you have small children.
01:06:21 And it was at that time it got apparent for me that she was dating this other guy.
01:06:29 So after that, half a year was done and a few months, I told her that she has to pick
01:06:38 one and that I won't go along.
01:06:42 And so she filed for divorce.
01:06:46 Right.
01:06:48 And do you think that was the right approach looking back?
01:06:54 It's always easy to say after the fact, but do you think that was the right approach looking
01:06:57 back?
01:07:03 Looking back, I should have chosen another wife.
01:07:06 No, no, but given the situation that you were in.
01:07:08 Yes.
01:07:09 Because you gave her the choice, right?
01:07:16 Yes, I did.
01:07:18 Yeah, I pushed her because it wasn't maintainable.
01:07:21 It didn't work out.
01:07:22 No, no, but why wasn't it your choice?
01:07:27 I didn't want to.
01:07:28 I wanted us to try to fix the marriage.
01:07:32 Why?
01:07:33 Because of the children.
01:07:35 I wanted to be a father.
01:07:37 I had an obligation.
01:07:39 I didn't want to.
01:07:40 I didn't want to have a divorce.
01:07:43 No way.
01:07:44 No way.
01:07:45 Absolutely not.
01:07:46 Oh, no.
01:07:47 No, I didn't want a divorce.
01:07:54 I wanted to be with my children and have a family.
01:07:59 Yes.
01:08:01 We've been going for therapy for some time and it didn't work out, of course.
01:08:17 During our sessions in this family therapy, I sort of found my voice and could talk about
01:08:27 things that I hadn't been able to do before and she didn't.
01:08:34 She couldn't handle that.
01:08:35 So that ended the sessions.
01:08:39 So if after she had endless sex with this young stud muffin, you would have taken her
01:08:49 back?
01:08:50 Yes, I would have.
01:08:53 For the sake of the kids, right?
01:09:05 Absolutely.
01:09:06 But not for your sake.
01:09:16 At the time, I still wanted to be married to her.
01:09:20 Yes.
01:09:21 I'm so sorry.
01:09:22 You wanted to be married to her outside of what was for the kids.
01:09:25 And I'm not saying that's unrelated, but you wanted to remain married to her for her rather
01:09:33 than just for the kids, right?
01:09:35 Oh, both.
01:09:36 Okay.
01:09:37 So what was it about her, given that she had betrayed you and tried to shuffle you off
01:09:42 to this other apartment in the other town so she could have more sex with the young
01:09:47 man?
01:09:48 What was it about her that you wanted to maintain a relationship for?
01:09:52 Like what was appealing about that for you?
01:09:55 Like, let's say you didn't have kids, right?
01:09:58 Let's say you hadn't had kids and you had wanted to stay married.
01:10:04 What would have been appealing about that for you?
01:10:08 No, I wouldn't have.
01:10:10 I wouldn't.
01:10:11 No, I wouldn't.
01:10:12 You're right.
01:10:13 It was about the kids.
01:10:14 No, I wouldn't have.
01:10:15 I wouldn't.
01:10:16 It was about the kids.
01:10:18 No, I wouldn't have.
01:10:19 Had there been just the two of us, I wouldn't have continued.
01:10:25 No, I wouldn't have.
01:10:27 Okay, I'm kind of glad to hear that.
01:10:29 Just by the by, man to man, I'm kind of glad to hear that.
01:10:33 I mean, they call it in American slang, sloppy seconds.
01:10:36 You don't want any of that stuff.
01:10:38 Okay.
01:10:39 Yeah.
01:10:40 All right.
01:10:41 So your idea was that you would...
01:10:43 I actually thought.
01:10:44 I actually thought that I, at the time, I thought that I wanted to be with her, but
01:10:52 thinking about it now, I didn't.
01:11:00 In a way, it was kind of relief.
01:11:05 The divorce in a way.
01:11:07 But also, it was absolutely crushing to have the family dissolved.
01:11:17 It was an absolute disaster for me.
01:11:20 Go on.
01:11:22 Yes.
01:11:23 And yeah, that's it.
01:11:29 So yeah.
01:11:35 What was so disastrous about it for you?
01:11:46 I think the most painful thing was how my children, how they suffered.
01:11:59 I mean, I hated this new guy.
01:12:03 I hated him.
01:12:05 But when my daughter told me that she had been crying, longing for me, and her mother
01:12:15 didn't want to soothe her.
01:12:18 Is that the word?
01:12:19 Soothe?
01:12:20 Yeah.
01:12:21 Soothe or comfort.
01:12:22 Comfort.
01:12:23 He did.
01:12:24 He comforted her.
01:12:28 And so that's when I just, "Okay, I can't be angry at this guy."
01:12:35 You can't be angry at him?
01:12:36 What do you mean?
01:12:38 Because he stepped in and comforted my children when they were longing for me.
01:12:44 What do you mean, you can't be angry at the guy who seduced your wife, the mother of your
01:12:49 children?
01:12:52 Well, I was trying to be practical.
01:12:56 No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
01:13:00 we don't do practical here.
01:13:01 We don't do practical, be honest.
01:13:04 I am honest.
01:13:05 This guy, hang on, this guy, of course your wife has agency, I'm getting all of that,
01:13:11 but this guy knew that your wife was the mother of two small children.
01:13:21 He knew that there were challenges in the marriage, and he stepped in and helped smash
01:13:26 up your family?
01:13:27 And you're like, "I can't get mad at him?
01:13:30 What?"
01:13:31 I love my children.
01:13:34 I'm sorry?
01:13:36 Of course I love my children, and it hurt me that their mother would—
01:13:42 How does it help your children to not get angry at the man who smashed up your marriage?
01:13:49 How would it help my children to get angry?
01:13:51 I don't know.
01:13:53 It's honest, and you're saying I care that the family got smashed up.
01:14:00 It matters to me that the family got smashed up, that this sociopathic asshole came in
01:14:07 and threw a bowling ball down the marriage and smashed it up.
01:14:15 It matters to me.
01:14:16 I care about it.
01:14:17 I hate that guy.
01:14:24 Because emotions matter, and emotions help you.
01:14:28 Well, I do hate him for that.
01:14:36 Or, now in hindsight, I don't even hate him for that, because I like who I am today, and
01:14:46 I wouldn't have been what I am today had I been married to my ex-wife.
01:14:50 Oh my gosh, okay, okay, okay.
01:14:53 Now listen, listen, listen.
01:14:54 Because like you said, she's a narcissist.
01:14:55 Hang on, hang on, hang on.
01:14:58 You're here because your children are suffering a little, right?
01:15:05 Isn't that why we're talking?
01:15:09 Absolutely.
01:15:11 All right.
01:15:13 If this guy had not seduced your wife, your family would have been more likely to stay
01:15:23 together.
01:15:24 Yes.
01:15:26 Now maybe she pursued him like crazy, I don't know, right?
01:15:30 But it doesn't matter.
01:15:31 If he'd have said, "No, I'm not sleeping with a married woman who's the mother of children,
01:15:38 are you kidding me?
01:15:39 I'm not sleeping.
01:15:40 No, that's repulsive to me.
01:15:42 I'm not breaking up a family.
01:15:43 Why?
01:15:44 Because I'm not a fucking monster, that's why.
01:15:47 I'm not a total asshole, that's why."
01:15:53 But the guy who stole your wife is seducing your children, and you're like, "Well, I can't
01:15:57 hate him."
01:15:58 Isn't it being pragmatic?
01:16:04 No, it's not being pragmatic.
01:16:06 If it was being pragmatic, you and I wouldn't be having this conversation, because your
01:16:10 kids would be fine.
01:16:12 You say it's pragmatic, and I'll tell you what it is, in my humble opinion.
01:16:18 What it is, is you decided, because your parents didn't bond with you, that you couldn't be
01:16:24 inconvenient to anyone.
01:16:26 That nobody was going to like you if you were inconvenient to them.
01:16:30 And if your feelings went against their preferences, you stifled your feelings, you strangled your
01:16:35 feelings in the crib, so that you're not inconvenient to people.
01:16:40 So that you don't bother them, you don't upset them.
01:16:42 And I say this with great sympathy.
01:16:44 I know I'm passionate, but I'm not mad at you or anything.
01:16:46 I say this with great sympathy.
01:16:49 Because a pair bond is when people can annoy the living hell out of us, and we love them.
01:16:56 That's what a pair bond is.
01:16:57 You don't need a pair bond when everything's going great.
01:17:01 You don't need loyalty when everything's going wonderfully.
01:17:04 You need a pair bond, you need a loyalty, when the other person is really bothering
01:17:09 you.
01:17:14 So you have it in your mind, and in your heart, "I can't be a bother to people.
01:17:18 I can't get mad at this person.
01:17:19 I can't say she can't have a horse.
01:17:21 I can't say no to this.
01:17:22 I can't say no to that.
01:17:23 I can't assert myself here."
01:17:25 Because being assertive is to be abandoned.
01:17:31 That if you're not convenient to people, they'll just throw you off the bus and drive on without
01:17:36 even glancing back.
01:17:42 And I sympathize with that.
01:17:43 I really do.
01:17:48 I really do.
01:17:51 But it's not, don't say it's practical.
01:17:54 It's trained, it's learned, it's understood behavior.
01:17:57 It's not practical.
01:17:59 Or if you want to say it's practical, you can say, "Well, your brother tortured you.
01:18:04 Your father abandoned you.
01:18:06 Your mother abandoned you.
01:18:07 I'm sure bad stuff went on in boarding school."
01:18:11 And then your wife, back in the day, in your 20s, you were 24 or something like that, she
01:18:16 comes along and is like, "Oh, this guy will never say no.
01:18:18 This guy doesn't really have any capacity to stand up for himself.
01:18:22 He's been broken down by circumstances and beliefs.
01:18:25 I can push him around."
01:18:27 And then she gets bored and annoyed at you being a push around and then she goes somewhere
01:18:33 else.
01:18:34 And you're like, "Well, the guy who fucked my wife and broke up my family is now comforting
01:18:41 my children.
01:18:42 I'm not going to get mad at him."
01:18:44 And I'm like, "I don't know that that's necessarily the healthiest response."
01:18:48 I think that you say, and again, with deep understanding and sympathy, sympathy, sympathy,
01:18:56 can I bother people?
01:18:58 If I really disagree with someone, can I—I mean, obviously I'm willing to bother you
01:19:03 a little bit in this conversation.
01:19:04 I hope for a good end.
01:19:05 Certainly that's what I'm aiming for.
01:19:10 But if you take your fear of disagreeing with people and turn it into a virtue, I think
01:19:17 you're denying the source of it.
01:19:18 The source of it is fear, that if you displease people—and I'm sure this was communicated
01:19:23 to you a million different ways by a million different people.
01:19:26 It's not just parents.
01:19:27 It's teachers and priests and aunts and uncles.
01:19:30 They're like, "Are you allowed to be inconvenient?
01:19:31 Are you allowed to really annoy people?
01:19:33 Are you allowed to confront them?
01:19:35 Are you allowed to strenuously and strongly disagree with them and still really care about
01:19:40 them?"
01:19:41 And in fact, the disagreement is because of the caring.
01:19:44 If I have a blind uncle who's walking towards a cliff edge and for some reason he's got
01:19:48 headphones on and I end up having to tackle him, it's not because I want to hurt him.
01:19:52 It's because I want him to not walk off the cliff edge.
01:19:59 So that's my concern, that you take the fear that you have of being assertive, which again
01:20:06 I really, really sympathize with and understand, and you've made it into a virtue.
01:20:11 Like I'm just being practical.
01:20:12 I'm just being sensible.
01:20:14 I'm just being prudent.
01:20:16 It's for my children.
01:20:17 It's this, that and the other.
01:20:18 No, and look, I mean obviously you say that with your current wife you don't have those
01:20:23 restrictions.
01:20:24 You could be honest and direct and I think that's wonderful.
01:20:25 I think that's wonderful, but it's really tempting to turn trauma into a virtue, but
01:20:32 it tends to be kind of destructive, particularly for the next generation, if that makes sense.
01:20:40 How?
01:20:41 How does it affect my children?
01:20:54 Well if self-erasure is a virtue, if pushing down and rejecting your own feelings becomes
01:21:03 a virtue, then your children learn that not being direct, not being authentic, not being
01:21:11 passionate, not being powerful, not being honest is a virtue that's going to inhibit
01:21:17 them in their own relationships, and maybe even their relationships with you, right?
01:21:38 I mean, I, you know, hopefully I'm doing some good in the conversation.
01:21:43 I think I've been direct.
01:21:44 I think I've been sympathetic.
01:21:45 I think I've been a little outraged on hearing some of these things.
01:21:49 That doesn't mean we can't have a great conversation.
01:21:50 In fact, it may be the reason why we have a great conversation.
01:21:54 I can disagree with you strongly.
01:21:55 We can still have a great conversation.
01:21:56 We can still be connected.
01:21:59 In fact, I think that by disagreeing with you, I'm showing you great respect in that
01:22:05 you can be disagreed with and be fine, right?
01:22:07 I mean, you can, and I'm not right.
01:22:09 I could be wrong about everything that I'm saying.
01:22:11 That's not what's important.
01:22:12 What's important is that I'm honest about what I think and won't hide my feelings from
01:22:16 you, if that makes sense.
01:22:18 Yeah, it does.
01:22:21 Okay.
01:22:23 I'm trying to make conclusions on how to change my…
01:22:38 Well, I mean, it's a classic in Western culture, right?
01:22:45 I mean, they call it the mind-body dichotomy, that your feelings are impractical, unhelpful,
01:22:55 and need to be suppressed.
01:22:58 And you said, like, "Well, how would it help things if I got angry?"
01:23:01 Absolutely.
01:23:02 Yeah.
01:23:03 Yeah, as if your feelings are there to be helpful to everyone.
01:23:07 No, your feelings are there to be honest, to be direct, because it's who you are.
01:23:11 Who you are is what you think and how you feel, right?
01:23:14 What you think and how you feel.
01:23:16 And if you won't… if you judge your feelings, and it's what I said at the beginning, this
01:23:21 sort of censorship, if you judge your feelings and say, "Well, I'm going to let you out
01:23:27 a little bit because I can see the practicality and use of what you do, but oh, that anger,
01:23:33 no, that's impractical, that's unhelpful, I'm going to suppress that.
01:23:36 That's bad," then you're kind of a tyrant to your own instincts.
01:23:42 And the problem is, of course, that when you judge your feelings as good or bad, practical
01:23:46 or impractical, you are treating them as potentially dangerous enemies.
01:23:53 Now, your genuine and deep feelings were enemies to your parents when you were little.
01:23:59 The anger and outrage that you had at being abandoned, at your father and your mother
01:24:03 abandoning you, your mother abandoning the family, your father tossing you into boarding
01:24:06 school for seven years, and the nannies and all that kind of stuff, you were justly outraged
01:24:14 and angry.
01:24:15 But when you have people who aren't bonded with you, right, who are only there if you're
01:24:22 convenient and positive and helpful, then what happens with people who aren't bonded
01:24:29 with you if you get angry at them?
01:24:31 What do they do?
01:24:36 They abandon you, right?
01:24:39 They leave.
01:24:41 If you'd have said to your dad, "Dad, I need to sit down," when you were a kid, "Dad, I
01:24:46 need to sit down, I need you to listen to me, okay?
01:24:49 You're a father, you've done this five times before, I'm number six, you've got to start
01:24:53 being a better dad.
01:24:55 You've got to be there for me, you've got to talk to me, I'm not going to boarding school,
01:24:58 like no way.
01:24:59 You've got to spend more time with me, I don't want any of this nanny crap, like you have
01:25:04 got to parent me.
01:25:07 I demand that.
01:25:08 I didn't choose to be born, you chose to have me."
01:25:11 That gives certain obligations to you that you better start respecting.
01:25:16 What would have your father have said if you'd had that conversation with him when you were
01:25:21 five or eight or ten?
01:25:23 "Oh, forget about it."
01:25:25 He would have just abandoned you, right?
01:25:29 "Yeah, I wouldn't have had the courage, I wouldn't have had the courage, no way."
01:25:37 That would be suicidal, that wouldn't even be courage, that would be suicidal.
01:25:42 It's a funny coincidence, I'm just reading a book with my daughter, I'm sure you know
01:25:47 it, Oliver Twist, by Dickens, of course.
01:25:50 And in it, Oliver Twist, and it was very famous, I was actually in the musical when I was a
01:25:56 kid, Oliver.
01:25:58 So it's very famous, I don't know if you know the scene where Oliver goes up with his little
01:26:03 bowl of gruel and he says, "Please, sir, can I have some more?"
01:26:09 And do you know what happens to him after that?
01:26:11 "I don't remember."
01:26:12 Yeah, well, I mean, they threaten to send him out to sea in the hopes that he will get
01:26:18 thrown overboard or beaten to death.
01:26:22 They want to put him out as an apprentice to a guy who's a chimney sweep in the hopes
01:26:27 that he will get black lung and die.
01:26:30 They finally send him out to a coffin maker where he has to sleep among the coffins.
01:26:35 Why?
01:26:36 Because he dared, when he was hungry and starving, he dared ask for more.
01:26:46 And so, for you, survival meant not being honest about your needs.
01:26:58 And then, you know, you fast forward 20 or 30 years, and survival now becomes, "I can't
01:27:03 get angry at the guy who seduced my wife and destroyed my family."
01:27:15 And feelings that are inconvenient to narcissistic people must be squelched and relabeled.
01:27:25 And that squelching and murdering of your own true self must be relabeled a virtue.
01:27:30 It's prudent, it's sensible, it's practical, it's utilitarian.
01:27:34 How would it have helped?
01:27:35 Blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
01:27:37 But falsifying your own emotions and lying about your own experience to yourself and
01:27:41 to others can't be a virtue, because then that's to say that lying is practical and
01:27:47 falsifying.
01:27:48 And I'm not saying you're consciously lying or anything like that, but when you relabel
01:27:52 the effects of trauma, which is the suppression of your natural emotions for the sake of survival,
01:27:58 which I applaud you for doing, there's no way to survive otherwise, but if you relabel
01:28:03 the suppression of your natural emotion as a virtue, as practical, as sensible, then
01:28:11 you create a world where your emotions are like mad ghosts in your brain that will try
01:28:18 to possess you and drive you in desperately bad directions.
01:28:25 You're at war with yourself.
01:28:27 You could be possessed by genuine emotion at any time and it will be the end of you
01:28:32 or the end of someone else.
01:28:33 It's incredibly dangerous.
01:28:34 You have these horses that you have to spend your whole life restraining because they're
01:28:38 charging all over the place and running in opposite directions, pulling you apart like
01:28:43 being drawn and quartered in the Middle Ages.
01:28:47 That's a lot of work.
01:28:48 It's a kind of exhausting work, right?
01:28:52 Yes, it is.
01:28:55 I remember, I think it was one and a half year after the divorce that I started to recognize
01:29:07 myself again, my thinking and the way I used to be, which was interesting.
01:29:18 So even though I had been suppressing myself before we met, I must have done it so much
01:29:27 more during the marriage.
01:29:29 No, no.
01:29:32 It's before the marriage.
01:29:33 It comes out of the childhood.
01:29:34 It's why she chose you because you're already self-suppressing.
01:29:40 But it accelerated.
01:29:41 It got even worse during the marriage.
01:29:46 So when I got back to the level that I was worrying before the marriage, I recognized
01:29:52 it that I had been changed.
01:29:54 But yeah, so it was really bad.
01:29:57 No, it was.
01:29:59 It's amazing when you listen back to this, you'll see just how more fluent and fluid
01:30:03 your speech is now as opposed to the beginning.
01:30:06 Now here's the wild thing.
01:30:07 This is the thing I sort of wanted to leave you with as a thought to mull on.
01:30:11 So the wild thing is that we suppress ourselves because we're afraid of being abandoned and
01:30:16 rejected.
01:30:17 But what happens is we're actually abandoning and rejecting ourselves.
01:30:22 And so if you say, "Well, I'm going to abandon and reject my own authentic feelings for the
01:30:27 sake of my children," you're modeling to your children that to abandon and reject yourself
01:30:32 is the best way to avoid being abandoned and rejected.
01:30:37 Like to shoot your dog is the best way of making sure your dog doesn't die of old age.
01:30:41 It's kind of true in a way, it's just that it's not very sensible if that makes sense.
01:30:50 What's best for my children is if I don't have impractical feelings.
01:30:57 And I personally, my belief is I don't believe any feeling is impractical.
01:31:00 Look, we don't go around and act on our feelings like you don't act it out, like you're angry
01:31:03 at someone, you don't go and kick them in the side or something.
01:31:08 But I don't think that any feelings are impractical.
01:31:10 I think they're all very important and very essential for us to have a full existence.
01:31:14 And also they protect us very much.
01:31:17 I find anger in particular is the immune system of the soul.
01:31:20 It recognizes when we're being exploited and works to protect and create boundaries against
01:31:25 being exploited.
01:31:26 It's a fundamental self-defense mechanism.
01:31:29 I find that the people who don't allow themselves to get angry are often the most exploited
01:31:34 people around, and they will often relabel not being angry as a virtue.
01:31:40 And that's, I think, where the problem is.
01:31:42 The problem is not having to suppress your feelings.
01:31:44 We all have to do that from time to time.
01:31:46 You know, if some policeman stops you and you're really annoyed, you don't act out your
01:31:50 annoyance on the policeman, you suppress it and, you know, deal with it later.
01:31:53 It's when it becomes a permanent habit, which we then relabel as a virtue.
01:31:57 I think that's when it becomes more of a challenge, if that makes sense.
01:32:01 You're right.
01:32:06 I don't know how to handle it, handle my feelings, and how to use them in a constructive way.
01:32:18 They're not there to be handled and used.
01:32:20 They are you.
01:32:21 Like, no, listen, if I were to say, "I don't know how to handle and use my arms," that
01:32:27 would be kind of odd, right?
01:32:28 Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, thank you.
01:32:30 They're not like dangerous pets, "Oh, I gotta figure out how to feed them right without
01:32:34 losing an arm," and they're, you know, they are you.
01:32:37 Okay.
01:32:38 Yes.
01:32:39 Fuck.
01:32:40 They're not tools, they're you.
01:32:42 They're not dangerous, they're just you.
01:32:45 Your experience, your passions, your, I mean, isn't that where meaning comes from?
01:32:51 It's emotion and love and passion, and pair bonding is emotional, it's not intellectual.
01:32:58 And all of the things I think that mean the most in many ways are based upon feelings,
01:33:03 and when we distance ourselves from our feelings, we do distance ourselves from life, I think,
01:33:07 in sort of the essential ways.
01:33:13 And we also end up having to go through life, and this is why I sort of pointed out you're
01:33:16 a very intelligent guy, we also end up having to go through life trying to, like, intellectualizing
01:33:21 things, which tends to go round in circles.
01:33:24 We can talk ourselves into and out of just about anything, but when we have sort of deep
01:33:28 emotions and passions, we tend to have a much straighter and safer course.
01:33:32 Sorry, I interrupted you most rudely, I apologize if you'd like to go ahead.
01:33:37 I'm just moaning because I have lots of work to do, and I'm not sure really what to do
01:33:44 with all this right now.
01:33:45 I hate to be annoying, I hate to be annoying.
01:33:48 Yes, I love it.
01:33:49 No, you have, hang on, no, what you're doing is work.
01:33:51 You have lots of laziness to do, you have lots of not work to do.
01:33:57 Because if you're holding back a dog that needs to just run and be free, and if I say,
01:34:03 take the leash off, you say, "Oh man, I've got a lot of work to do," it's like, no you
01:34:07 don't.
01:34:08 Holding back the dog is a lot of work, letting the dog run is not work at all.
01:34:15 Stop working, stop controlling, stop managing, stop trying to find the practical utilization
01:34:20 for various emotions, stop being in charge, stop being self-restrained.
01:34:25 It's a lot of not work, if that makes sense.
01:34:29 It'll feel self-indulgent, I guess, right?
01:34:31 But it's just authenticity, I think.
01:34:37 I'm so lost.
01:34:38 I have no idea what to do.
01:34:43 Oh, I love this.
01:34:45 Well, stop making a virtue, stop judging your emotions as practical, impractical, useful
01:34:52 or not useful.
01:34:53 Take deep breaths and just feel.
01:34:55 Again, they're not possessions, they don't make you do things, right?
01:34:59 I mean, if I'm angry at someone, I don't go and set fire to their car or anything, I just
01:35:04 feel it, right?
01:35:05 I just feel it and have it as who I am.
01:35:11 Your emotions are all there to help you, and they're all there to protect you and your
01:35:14 children and they're a useful part.
01:35:17 We wouldn't have evolved them if they were, you know, we didn't evolve arsenic for blood
01:35:22 because that would kill us, right?
01:35:23 So we evolved our emotions to help and protect us.
01:35:26 Now of course, you know, some of this modern world stuff is pretty anti-emotional and so
01:35:29 on.
01:35:30 But yeah, and the last thing is good.
01:35:33 I mean, but, you know, whenever we're going in the wrong direction, the first step we
01:35:37 want to be is feel lost.
01:35:39 Because as long as we're certain if we're heading in the wrong direction, we just keep
01:35:43 going in the wrong direction.
01:35:44 I mean, I'm sure you've had it.
01:35:45 I used to do this.
01:35:46 I used to drive a lot for business in the business world and this is before GPS.
01:35:52 And I'd have some map directions written down.
01:35:55 And you know, you have that feeling when it's like, "Shouldn't I pass the street by now?"
01:35:59 You get this uneasy feeling of like, "Ooh, you know, maybe, oh, you know, maybe I've
01:36:05 gone too…"
01:36:06 And so you want that in life because if you're absolutely certain, you could end up in China
01:36:09 or something, I don't know, maybe not China, but you end up in Belarus or something.
01:36:16 So that uneasy feeling of maybe I'm going in the wrong direction, maybe that's what
01:36:20 the feeling that maybe you are lost is, you know, if you have missed an exit of authentic
01:36:24 emotion, it may be worth turning back, I guess.
01:36:27 But what I'm thinking is that what I should do with the feelings.
01:36:34 I mean, if I'm not constrained…
01:36:36 No, no, no, again.
01:36:37 How far should I let them…
01:36:39 No, just let them.
01:36:40 I mean, how far should…
01:36:41 No, just experience them.
01:36:42 No, just feel the feelings.
01:36:44 You don't have to do anything with them.
01:36:47 Right?
01:36:51 You don't have to do anything with them.
01:36:53 Just experience them.
01:36:59 They affect the way… if I let them out, if you let your feelings out, they affect your
01:37:05 appearance, what you say and all that.
01:37:09 Or am I getting it wrong?
01:37:12 Well, they don't possess you.
01:37:14 You still have reason, you still have judgment, you still have self-restraint, right?
01:37:19 Yeah, and that's, I think, what I need.
01:37:23 And if you're concerned, then just do it when you're alone, right?
01:37:26 Do it when you're in a room and, you know, if you want to scream into a pillow, you say,
01:37:30 "Whatever," right?
01:37:31 You know, you don't necessarily do it when you're driving an important client around
01:37:35 in the business world or something, but, you know, you can do it if you're concerned and
01:37:39 do it at a time when you have some privacy and so on.
01:37:47 But what that does is it communicates to your kids, you know, feelings.
01:37:51 They're your friends, you know, they're there to help you.
01:37:54 They're positive, they're useful, they're essential.
01:37:58 That means I have to show them my feelings.
01:38:01 Well, I think so, yeah.
01:38:03 But first, you've got to get comfortable with them yourself, right?
01:38:07 You don't go and necessarily dump some new emotional instability on your kids, but get
01:38:12 a little more comfortable with them yourself and I think that would be the way to go.
01:38:17 But yeah, I think feelings are essential.
01:38:39 They're as essential as thought and they can certainly give more depth and permanence to
01:38:45 our experience than thinking, right?
01:38:48 You know, that old Hamlet thing, "There's nothing good or bad, but thinking makes it
01:38:51 so."
01:38:52 We can talk ourself into or out of just about anything when it comes to our thoughts, but
01:38:58 our feelings tend to be a little bit deeper and more permanent and I think that's where
01:39:01 more of the loyalty and passion and power, I think, comes from as well.
01:39:07 You know, if you're in touch with your anger, if somebody tries to exploit you, you just
01:39:10 get angry at them.
01:39:11 Now, it doesn't mean you scream at them or it doesn't mean you'll hit them, but your
01:39:14 anger will say, "Hey, wait a minute.
01:39:17 Something's not working right here.
01:39:19 Something's going against your interest here."
01:39:20 And you know, once you get more fluid with that, you can make your decisions, but without
01:39:25 that you can just talk yourself, "Oh, I'm not being exploited.
01:39:27 No, I'm going to be reasonable.
01:39:28 Oh, it's not worth it.
01:39:29 It's impractical."
01:39:30 And your feelings just go away, but what that communicates to your kids is that feelings
01:39:37 are not great, that they're dangerous, that they're destabilizing, that they're impractical,
01:39:43 and then your kids may have trouble pair bonding, because pair bonding is a fundamentally emotional
01:39:48 experience.
01:39:50 I see.
01:39:53 When you describe it, the more you describe it, I think I'm doing a lot of that, but not
01:40:01 towards my daughter.
01:40:03 I don't.
01:40:05 Right.
01:40:06 Well, maybe that's the way.
01:40:11 Yeah.
01:40:12 I think, yeah.
01:40:14 Yeah, this is hard.
01:40:17 This is hard.
01:40:20 Yeah.
01:40:21 Oh, come on.
01:40:24 Isn't it great to have a good project for the last third of your life?
01:40:32 That's what I like about it.
01:40:33 I mean, we can't avoid it, otherwise why get out of bed tomorrow, right?
01:40:38 Yeah, I'm truly grateful for all these new thoughts.
01:40:42 I mean, I love it.
01:40:45 I'm just earing for what's coming.
01:40:49 That's what I'm doing.
01:40:50 You're trying to think your way through it, which is going to be a challenge, because
01:40:52 you're a thinking guy.
01:40:53 Yes.
01:40:54 Which I appreciate.
01:40:55 I'm a thinking guy, too.
01:40:56 I think thoughts are great.
01:40:57 I'm not trying to say one is better than the other, but the thoughts and feelings, I think,
01:40:59 need to combine.
01:41:00 I think that's where the real depth is.
01:41:03 So, listen, that's most of what I wanted to get across.
01:41:05 Is there anything that you wanted to mention at the end?
01:41:08 No, I guess I'm full.
01:41:10 I think I'm full.
01:41:11 Okay.
01:41:12 Will you post it about how things are going?
01:41:14 Yeah, sure.
01:41:15 Why not?
01:41:16 Yes, I would love to.
01:41:17 I appreciate the conversation, and please pass along my best to your kids.
01:41:20 I have great admiration for you as a father and as a family man for having this kind of
01:41:25 conversation.
01:41:26 I mean, for what it's worth, I'm just some guy on the Internet or whatever, but I really
01:41:30 do admire your strength and resolution in these matters.
01:41:33 It's to your great credit, and I think your kids are lucky for that.
01:41:37 Thank you.
01:41:38 I appreciate that.
01:41:40 I appreciate our conversation very much.
01:41:43 I do.
01:41:44 All right.
01:41:45 Well, take care.
01:41:46 I'd love to hear from you.
01:41:47 Take care, man.
01:41:48 Thank you.
01:41:49 Bye-bye.
01:41:50 Well, thank you so much for enjoying this latest Free Domain Show on philosophy, and
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