@DrWendyWalsh (07/16) Hour 2 - podcast episode cover

@DrWendyWalsh (07/16) Hour 2

Jul 17, 202329 min
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Episode description

Dr. Wendy is answering your relationship questions with her driveby makeshift relationship advice. Also Keke Palmer had some drama with her boyfriend. Should women dress differently when they become mothers? Dr. Wendy has opinions. PLUS we are talking about breaking old patterns in love. It's all things love on the Dr. Wendy Walsh Show on KFIAM-640!

Transcript

This is doctor Wendy Walsh and you're listening to kf I AM six forty, the Doctor Wendy Walsh Show on demand on the iHeartRadio app. Welcome back to the Doctor Wendy Walls Show on KFI AM six forty. We're live everywhere on the iHeartRadio app. Just a reminder, I have a PhD in clinical psychology and I'm a psychology professor, not a therapist, but I have written three books on relationships. I am really obsessed with studying the science of love and

sharing the information as a journalist to you. I know that many of you send me lots of messages on social media with your relationship questions and I'm happy to answer them with my wisdom and also, as you know, regularly refer you to a good therapist because some of you it's time and maybe this is the way by reaching out to me. So if you'd like to send a message in a DM on social media, I'm on TikTok, YouTube, Facebook, Twitter, that other one, Instagram, and producer Kyla will go to

the dms and find some for us. The handle everywhere is at doctor Wendy Walsh at Dr Wendy Walsh Okay, without further ado, let us begin my drive by makeshift relationship advice. Okay, this from Instagram. Dear doctor Wendy, Me and my girlfriend of seven months took our first vacation together. I'm more of a chill vacation person and she's very adventurous. We have completely different vacation styles. What's a good compromise, Well, this is a great exercise

for you guys to work out in your relationship. You know, we fall in love with people because they're different from us. They're like our matching peace in some way. That's just makes us feel complete and we love all the things about them that are different. For instance, Introverts like extroverts. Extroverts like introverts. You're a chill person, she's adventurous, right. But then what happens is we get into the day today of the relationship and we try

to make the person our clone. We think there's something wrong with them if they're not like us. You know, every day in your relationship there will be opportunities to compromise, and this is one of those. So the answer is, you guys should work this out together. My personal opinion would be

that you find a kind of vacation that involves both kinds of activities. If you want to have a my tie on a beach, then she will have a day like that with you, and you will go hiking in the mountains to a waterfall with her the next day, and you will just figure out a way so that both your needs are met. I also know people that you know. Some people are traveling and one likes to be on their computer, either because they're working still on the trip or whatever, and they'll go

out and do things separately and then come back for dinner. That's all okay too. You don't have to be with each other twenty four hours a day when you're on vacation. It's nice if you're in love and want to do that, but you don't have to, Alrighty, moving on this one over on TikTok, Dear doctor Wendy, When my relationship become predictable, I lose interest and leave. It has happened in my past five relationships. What attachment

style is this? Can I ever find lasting love? Oh? Oh, I see you want me to pull out my crystal mall here and tell you your future or you want me to try to diagnose you look you're seeing the

pattern right, You're seeing that you're the one that leaves. Now, the question is are the relationships becoming predictable or are you just not accustomed to the change that happens after the exciting part of the beginning of relationship where you get assaulted with a cocktail of neuro hormones, dopamine, oxytocin, serotonin, neurope and nephron it's the best drug we have, honestly, and then after a while your brain gets accustomed to that, and then things sort of settle down

and become a lot more normal. If you call that predictable and you get bored, then you know, maybe we need to talk about what kind of stimulation you need in your life, or whether you need to learn how to put novelty in your relationship so it doesn't feel stagnant and it doesn't feel boring.

I do think, though, the fact that you've told me about a pattern past five relationships you bailed on when they got a little bit predictable tells me that before you enter number six, you go and enter a relationship with a therapist, so you guys, can figure out what is it about you that makes you do this? Because you're right, you did the most important step, which is becoming aware of your own pattern. So thanks for writing in. Okay, Heading over to YouTube, Dear doctor Wendy. I don't

like to tell partners I have children until I feel comfortable with them. My last partner said, I broke his trust. How can I start to tell people I have children and be comfortable. It's natural to want to protect my kids. Okay, let me this is You've opened up a big can of wording for me because I was a single mom for a lot of years. And you're right. It is good to protect your kids. It is good

to not drag your kids through your romantic life. But I feel like you're concealing and lying to partners about the makeup of you and your family by not saying that you have kids. That should go in your profile from the beginning. You know. I remember when my kids were little and I went to see this therapist and I said, well, when do you tell them you've

kids? And she goes, from the beginning, tell them you're a three pack, and you come as a three pack, and that's the deal, right, Like, relationships aren't supposed to be the separate little romantic compartment away from your family. They're a bridge between tribes. Now. I ended up not having a long term relationship until my kids were nearly grown because I had

read some of the statistics. One of the most disturbing ones I read showed that a child living in a house with a non biologically related male mommy's boyfriend, husband, stepbrother has eight times the rate of abuse either emotional, physical,

or god forbid, sexual abuse. I saw that, and I was raising little girls, and I was like, Okay, I'm just not gonna do that, right But as far as like, I almost feel like the way you say you're concealing your children feels like you feel like your children are something to be embarrassed about, something to be ashamed of, and they're not. It's who you are, and reproduction is the whole reason why we're on the planet. I say, go forth, proudly, go forth and tell

people that you're you know, you're a very fabulous mother. Tell them the exciting things you do with your kids. If they move away because they don't want to take on the burden of your kids, you should turn around and do the touchdown cheer because you got rid of them early. But stringing them along and I can see how you said that last partner said you broke his

trust. You did you know? There's research out of the Kinsey Institute that says lying on dating profiles, whether it's about your age, your weight, your height, or your family composition, is a big turn off and people will run because they think of they're lying about this, what else are they lying about? Building trust means honesty and authenticity from the beginning. If you'd

like to send me a direct message on social media, please do. The handle is at doctor Wendy Walsh. When we come back, I'll continue to answer your questions. You're listening to the Doctor Wendy Walsh Show. I'm KFI AM six forty. We're live everywhere on the iHeartRadio app. You're listening to Doctor Wendy Walsh on demand from kf I am six forty. Welcome back to the Doctor Wendy Walsh Show. I'm KFI AM six forty. We're live everywhere

on the iHeartRadio app. Right now, I am answering your social media questions. If you have relationship questions, you're welcome to put them in a DM to me on my social The handle everywhere is at doctor Wendy Walsh reminder, I do have a PhD in clinical psychology, but I am a psychology perfect certain not a therapist, although I've written three books on relationships and a dissertation on attachment theory. I like to think of myself as a journalist who provides

the science to you. But I'm also a woman, and I've had a life of experience and wisdom that I'm happy to share with you. So if you want to send me a message and get some of my drive by makeshift relationship advice, I'm happy to. Okay, here we go, Hey, doctor Wendy, I've been holding the financial weight in my marriage for two years. Whenever I suggest that my husbands start looking for work again, he gets so upset and we get into a huge fight. I want him to start

working again. Am I being financially abused? What can I do? Well? Here's a clarification on what financial abuse is. Financial abuse is a kind of a version of domestic violence, where the person who has the money, who has the income, controls the other person with it, so they don't give them an allowance, they don't give them access to the bank accounts or the credit cards, and they make them behave in certain ways if they're going

to pay for things that would be considered financial abuse. What's happening here is, for some reason that you didn't explain to me, your husband has lost his job and may have I don't know for sure, fallen into some kind of depression. If unemployment doesn't make it depressed, I don't know what else does. So I think at this point it's about you and your boundaries and how much you can tolerate. You know, it's not your job to heal

him. It's also not your job to support him while he does whatever he's doing. It is your job to set up boundaries. You didn't mention whether there are children in the house, whether this could potentially be the breakup of a family. But this is another time when finding some time and call your health insurance find out what they pay, finding some time and some money to

get into therapy to help you be clear about your boundaries. Boundaries are you know, they're rules for you so you don't get hurt, but they also always involve consequences. Boundaries aren't just talking lip service. You need to get a job or else. There's no or else boundary would be I'm giving you ninety days. If you don't get yourself healed and find some contribution to this household, I'm going to move out or we're selling the house or whatever.

I mean, those are huge, big boundaries. But I think that you need to spend some time figuring out what your boundaries are because and also you're not helping him by supporting him. That's called enabling, right, You're enabling whatever he's going through and letting it be the status quo. So my advice, see a therapist, figure out what it is. Dear doctor Wendy, my ax is trying to get back with me and I'm in a brand new relationship. I really love my ex, but our relationship got out of control.

I wonder what's behind those words out of control. I wouldn't say it was toxic, but we stopped hearing each other. I feel like she only wants me back because I'm in a new relationship. Yes, of course, that's why we want people get all interested in us, you know when we get somebody else, because all of a sudden, our value goes up in their eyes. So you know, my advice is, if you're in a

new relationship and if you're happy in that new relationship. Don't muddy the waters with all this back and forth thinking and looking back with rose colored glasses. There's actually research to show that when we look back in history we see things more positively. When we look forward to the future, as a natural survival

instinct, we see things as more terrifying, more scary. So I think that this is a time for you to go complete really no contact so you can focus on your new relationship, because this is not fair to your new partner. I will say that, dear doctor Wendy, Oh, I get this kind of stuff alone a lot. I found some weird porn history in my boyfriend's phone. It wasn't anything like what we do. How can I talk to him about this? Should I say something? Okay? So,

if you're a woman, I just want to tell you this. When guys watch porn, it's no different than a woman getting a pedicure. Okay. It doesn't mean their relationship shopping. It does like they're getting a little massage for their brain. I do. I am unhappy with increasingly violent porn, misogynistic porn, etc. Because it starts to wire men's brains into thinking women are that, etc. But everybody has a right to their own autonomy when

it comes to their sexuality. So what someone does with the privacy of their telephone, if it's not bleeding into your relationship, like, come on, baby, I want to do this. They do it in the Bourne movies and you don't feel comfortable. Who cares, Let's do it anyway. Okay, it's not bleeding into your relationship. Then the next question is what are you doing in his phone? Huh? Really? I mean I've had a boyfriend for three years. We know each other's pass codes to our phone.

I don't go digging around for fun. I might he's driving, he might say, answer this text for me. But the fact that you're snooping tells me that you feel insecure for some reason, either about the relationship or about your value in a relationship. So my advice woman to woman is stops snooping and then you won't hurt yourself. And if it's not bleeding into your relationship, then he has a right to whatever sexual fantasies, even if they include

visual assistance that everyone does. It'd be like, okay, here's the flip side. What if a guy wrote in and said, my girlfriend will not tell me her fantasies. I don't think we can have a healthy sex life unless she tells me what's going on in her head at the same Sorry, dude, you don't get to know what we do to make our bodies respond. Is our business? All right? If you would like to send me

a DM, I answer questions every week here on the show. The handle everywhere is at Doctor Wendy Walsh. All right, when we come back. There's a famous couple. I'll tell you who they are if you don't know them. As she's a new mom. She wore a provocative costume on stage, and her boyfriend who she's been with a few years, the father of her children, tweets out to the world or put somewhere on DM. It's the outfit though you're a mom oh moralizing her clothing because she has a baby.

We need to talk about this when we come back. You are listening to The Doctor Wendy Wealsh Show on kf I AM six forty. We're live everywhere on the iHeartRadio app. You're listening to Doctor Wendy Walsh on demand from kf I AM six forty. Welcome back to the Doctor Wendy Walsh Show on kf I am six forty. We are live everywhere on the iHeartRadio app. I always have to say that because so many people follow me on social media from all over the country and indeed the world. And I want to remind

everybody that you can download the iHeartRadio app. If you've missed any part of this show, you can go back and listen to it all. It gets put up like an hour after the show. But also if you've missed any in the past, you can always listen to Doctor Wendy on demand. All right, So there's some gossip, celebrity gossip. Do you remember who the actress Keiki Palmer is. Remember she's young and hip and cool, and she

announced her pregnancy on Saturday Night Live last year. I think it was She's from that beautiful actress from Aquila and the b And let's see a lot of media's family reunion jump in long shots, True Jackson, She goes on and on. So she's a successful AMOS actor. Now she has a boyfriend, a living boyfriend of a few years named Darius Jackson. I had to go look him up because I had to figure out, like, where is the status? Who has the power here? They have a baby. Baby was

born in February. She announced her pregnancy on Saturday Night Live. He's a personal trainer. Okay, that's fine, you can be a good personal trainer. And he played football in college. He's gorgeous and all that stuff. So she's a new mom with a baby, and she goes out to an Usher concert. It's not clear whether she was with him or not in Las Vegas. Gets up on stage, Usher pays homage to her, sings a little bit, etc. And she's wearing a beautiful see through, sheer black

dress with some lacy leggands underneath, and she looks gorgeous. All fine until after on social media when people were going crazy on how beautiful she looks. He writes, it's the outfit though, you a mom. I'm just reading it directly. I'm not mocking, just reading what he wrote, put it on Twitter, and then he doubled down, basically saying in his family, they have morals and this isn't right for a new mother to dress like this.

Oh right, what's really happening, folks? So I want to remind you there are all kinds of things that contribute to your status in a relationship. For women, it is often how beautiful they look, but in today's times, it also may be level of celebrity. This guy her partner is not famous or just as gorgeous as her, etc. They're not married, she's got the baby now. And he sees Usher with his arm around his

girlfriend up on stage and his girlfriend's looking very sexy. There is not any man on the planet who wouldn't feel a little threatened by at let alone a personal trainer who's married to a famous celebrity actress. So this was his little kind of jab to get hurt, to be in line right, He's afraid that Usher could be a mate poacher. I don't even know Usher's relationship status, so it doesn't matter. But the point is, this is why we do this, and it is very, very common with men to try to

control women psychologically. We know there are men out there who try to control women physically through threats of violence or indeed violence, but the other ones when men feel insecure or they have an anxious attachment style. I'm not saying he does, but in general, they're more likely to try to put down their mate because if a guy can make a woman feel insecure, then she's less likely to go out into the mating marketplace and try to find somebody else.

Okay, so that's what's going on. Now, let's go to the subject at hand. Is it okay for moms to dress sexy? Yes? Have you ever seen the video with is it the Kardashians and Fergie called milk Money and it's all about breastfeeding moms and how sexy they can be and the milkman chasing them. You really should see this video. It's fabulous. You know, women have every right, at any stage of their life span to use

their greatest power, which is their physical prowess. It will be like saying to a man, you know what, now that we're married and we have a child, I really don't think you should drive a flashy sports car, and I don't think you should be going to the gym and working on those muscles all the time. That's the same thing, right, we are always going to be have to make guard everybody in every relationship. I make guard in my relate. I like where you been, who you with, who's

that girl, what's happening? I need to show up there. If you value you your partner, you will mate guard them. This is a natural, normal part of human mating strategy, human evolution. So he's doing a little mate guarding by trying to put her down. Unfortunately, the Internet came to kekeep Palmer's side, and they're not happy with him, because the Internet right now is very feminist right and women have every right to use their body

however they want. I always used to say when I was talking, for instance, about sex workers who get paid to do certain fun things. You know, if a man is qualified to do some physical jobs that involve heavy lifting that a woman couldn't do because of her just her upper body strength, then she's qualified to do some other jobs that he might not be qualified for because he's missing some parts. So just saying we have a right to use our body, now, was she deliberately trying to taunt him, tempted?

We don't know. We don't know all the details of their relationship. But in my opinion, women can dress however they want, whenever they want, across the lifespan, and that also stands for older women. I cannot stand here young women on social media put down older women for dressing sexy. Who cares? She doesn't care what people think about her now because she's old, She's graduated. She's smart, she's wise, just saying, all right,

this dude loses in this case against the school of public opinion. When we come back, let's talk about love. Let's talk about why it's important, let's talk about how to create it, and let's talk about the most important things you need to do to keep your relationship alive and healthy. You are listening to the Doctor Wendy Walsh Show on kf I AM six forty. We're live everywhere on the iHeartRadio app. You're listening to Doctor Wendy Walsh on demand

from kf I AM six forty. Welcome back to the Doctor Wendy Walsh Show on kf I Am six forty. It is the home stretch of my two hours with you here on KFI every Sunday. It's always my treat to be here with you, and I wanted to spend a moment to kind of go back in history and talk about the beginning of how I got to where I am regarding teaching people about the science of love. I'm a psychology professor at California State University, Channel Islands, and when I teach developmental psychology, I

talk about, especially in the age twenties or thirties, building intimacy. That that is the ultimate challenge and conflict. You know, we are wired to bond. We are wired to reach out and connect with people, whether that connection involves a sexual relationship, or romantic relationship or a close friendship. We don't do well in isolation. In fact, as a surgeon general says, loneliness is the big epidemic right now. But I thought I came from a

leave it to Beaver family. In fact, of a friend of mine told me he was the first person to ever get me into therapy many years ago, and he said, when anybody says they came from an idyllic childhood, a perfect childhood, or leave it to beaver family, you know, there's a lot of baggage buried there, pretty deep, because the very act of going from pre verbal, completely dependent infant to you know, fully effective adult

is a painful one. It's a lot of losses along the way, a lot of losses, and a healthy person learns how to manage those losses and grow from them. But I compensated for them. I became anxious, I became avoidant. I chased around a bunch of bad boys for a lot of years, and I had all kinds of opportunity because I was on television. I was a local news anchor here. I hosted TV shows, you know, And so I had opportunity to date a lot of people, but always

the wrong ones, the ones who would reignite my early abandonment issues. And it's like, those bad boys made me crazy, But I wanted to make one of them love me. This was my crazy little challenge in my head. If I could somehow get one of them to turn into a good mate, then somehow I would be lovable, be a good person, be valuable to myself. I don't know, but that was my challenge. In the meantime, I met people who had a secure attachment style. I met great

guys who were ready and available to be intimate. I remember actually sitting at a lunch table on like a third date with a guy, and he said, I just want you to know I'm attracted to you. I think you're fabulous, and I would like to go forward and get to know you better and have a real relationship. And I was like, I guess, all right, I gotta go take this call. I was dashing away from restaurant

tables and out of places. I was this hard to attain woman because in some ways I was terrified or if somebody was available to me, emotionally available, then somehow there was something wrong with them in my mind. It's like I thought, well, they're too nice, why do they like me? I need to prove that I'm likable by having somebody who doesn't like me like me. It was the craziest, craziest way of thinking. So anyway, this friend of mine eventually got me into therapy. I went to a number

of different therapists. I tried all kinds of things. It was only later, you know, once I settled down to nurse my babies, that I went to graduate school in my late thirties to get a master's and PhD in psychology, And then I learned that there's a whole science to love, and that love isn't about luck. You hear people say all the time, you know, if it happens or if it works out for me, No it doesn't. You make it work out, like everything else in your life.

You plan it, you execute it, you make it happen. Love is about skills, not luck, and you can learn those skills if you don't have people around you who can shape you and help you learn to be intimate. Then go to a therapist who can teach you how to be intimate. You know, I'm a very long slow boat on the way to love. I don't think I found a true, secure attachment and a feeling of deep

love until well into my fifties. Well into my fifties, I kept learning, but all along I kept reminding myself that every relationship wasn't a failed relationship. It was a learning opportunity for me to get smarter, to understand what I didn't want to leave earlier. For many people, I say, you know what, it might be progress for you to see the red flags early and move away and just be like, Nope, that's not going to work.

One of my videos that went viral online, it is about me just telling a little story about somebody I saw for a short period of time and the sex was great and they were a nice person, and then I could feel them withdrawing a little bit, and the old Wendy would have chased him down or tried to be extra sexy and cool and tried to reel him back in with all my tips and tricks, because I was very good at that but this time I didn't. I called him and I said, hey,

you know, we've lost our rhythm or whatever. I had a little conversation about it, and I could feel him not having a clear answer for me, and so I said goodbye, Darling, goodbye Darling, and I moved along. Doesn't mean I didn't feel sad. It didn't mean that I didn't feelings of loss. It didn't mean that I didn't feel even a little bit abandoned. But I could tolerate those feelings and know that there was something else out there for me. You know, love has biological pieces, pheromones,

gene matching, Love has psychological pieces our attachment style. Love also has social pieces. And that's pretty much all we put in the dating app. The social thing like what food you eat? Are you vegan? Are you a paleo? Or you know? Or political or education or zip code. That's the social stuff because in practicality, relationships are a bridge between tribes and so it's all those things. It's psychology, biology, and it is sociology.

And I encourage you to keep trying. If you're still single, I encourage you to keep trying because the person is out there and the person by the ways in you. Once you have good relationship skills, you'll find there are many more mates around. That's the first thing. But if you're in a relationship that is un of filling to you, you have the ability to improve that relationship or find a new relationship. Don't beat yourself up because it's not

working. We just all keep trying. Stop judging, stop shaming yourself. Love will be there. We're wired to bond and I wish you love and happiness in your future. You can always find me every Sunday from seven to nine pm right here on KFI AM six forty. You can also follow me on my social media at doctor Wendy Walsh. It is always my pleasure to share the research and the science of love with you. You been listening to the Doctor Wendy Welsh Show on KFI AM six forty. We're live everywhere on

the iHeartRadio app. You've been listening to Doctor Wendy Walsh. You can always hear us live on KFI AM six forty from seven to nine pm on Sunday and anytime on demand on the iHeartRadio app.

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