Even if you've trained for it, you went to school for it, you worked hard for it, You've done all the work to be in a healthy relationship, you may feel feel like, Oh, I don't deserve this good person. It's the discomfort of being in a new situation. Welcome to the one you feed Throughout time, great thinkers have recognized the importance of the thoughts we have. Quotes like garbage in, garbage out, or you are what you think, ring true, and yet for many of us, our thoughts
don't strengthen or empower us. We tend toward negativity, self pity, jealousy, or fear. We see what we don't have instead of what we do. We think things that hold us back and dampen our spirit. But it's not just about thinking. Our actions matter. It takes conscious, consistent, and creative effort to make a life worth living. This podcast is about how the people keep themselves moving in the right direction, how they feed their good wolf. Thanks for joining us.
Our guest on this episode is Nedra Tawab, an American mental health specialist, social worker, and writer. She's the author of the book Set Boundaries, Find Peace, A Guide to Reclaiming Yourself, which was a New York Times bestseller. Today, Eric and Nedra discuss her new book, Drama Free, A Guide to managing unhealthy family relationships. If you've lost track
of what's important to you, you're not alone. We often go through phases in life where we feel dissatisfied or disconnected, and when we get off track, it's easy to get stuck in unhelpful patterns like avoidance or perfectionism. It shows up as negative self talk, breaking your own rules, procrastination, or struggling to let go of addictive or otherwise harmful
behaviors to make space for healthy ones. I want you to know that all of these are struggles I've had too, and if I can turn things around with the challenges I faced deep and heroin addiction and clinical depression, so can you. What I've learned through experience is that what we know is not as important as what we do consistently, and bridging this gap is the key to feeling fulfilled
at a deeper level. Bridging this gap is the foundation of the Spiritual Habits Program, a non religious mentorship and accountability experience to establish simple daily practices that help you to be more present, compassionate, and connected. In your relationships in life. Over eight weeks together, you'll learn how to make small changes that have a big impact. No matter what life is serving up, you'll experience it in a
more grounded, loving, strengthening, and creative way. If anything I've said is resonated with you, go to one you Feed dot net slash Spiritual Habits to learn more and sign up. If anything I've said is resonated with you, go to one you feed dot net slash Spiritual Habits to learn more and sign up. Enrollment for this year's program is open now through March thirteenth, and I love to meet you in it. That's one you Feed dot net slash Spiritual Habits to learn more and sign up. And Edrow,
welcome to the show. Thank you for having me again. I am very excited to have you on. We will be discussing your latest book called Drama Free, a Guide to Managing Unhealthy Family Relationships. But before we do that, we'll start the show like we always do with the Parable. In the Parable, there's a grandparent talking with their grandchild and they say, in life, there's two wolves inside of
us that are always at battle. One's a good wolf, which represents things like kindness and bravery and love, and the other's a bad wolf, which represents things like greed and hatred and fear. And the grandchild stops and they think about it for a second and look up at their grandparents. They say, well, which one wins? And the grandparent says, the one you feed. So I'd like to start off by asking you what that parable means to you in your life and in your work. And obviously
you've answered before, but we change. Yeah, you know, our pre conversation, we were talking about the choices that we can make. So to me, that parable represents our freedom to choose. Yeah, that is very simple and succinct, and I tend to agree with you that at its heart, that's what it's about, that our choices matter, We get
to choose, and our choices matter. Okay, let's jump into the book, and I just want to kind of start with a line that you say early in the book, which is the relationships that impact us the most are those with family. The wounds are deep and the relationships are filled with expectations. Say a little more about that. In families, our history is from birth until present, and so whatever challenges we have within our family for many of us, they have existed not just presently, but they've
been there for a long time. And because those relationships were our primary relationships, they were the first relationships we had, the ones in which we learned about ourselves and other people. It's deep and how we connect with ourselves and other people, and sometimes it's hard for us to recognize that. When we go to therapy and the therapist is like, tell me about your family, you know, most people are like, uh,
why are you asking about them? It's so important because it helps us connect who you are to who you were in your family, who you were allowed to be in your family, and what happened to you in that system. Yeah. When I hear the word dysfunctional family, I always think of well, my own family, of course, But I also think of the old Tolstoy quote that starts on a car and in it, which is happy families are all alike.
Every unhappy family is unhappy in its own way. Do you think that's true or do you think that there are real clear patterns of the ways in which we are dysfunctional in our families. I think there are levels to dysfunction. I think what we talk about typically as dysfunctioning. When I hear the word, I think of shameless. I think of that family and their chaos with substance abuse and financial issues and you know, people stealing. Like these
very big things happening. But I think it's also having a parent who won't allow you to express your feelings. I think it's also experiencing divorcing, your parents not getting along. It's also your siblings bullying you. It's also your grandparent having a very apparent favorite. You know, it's so many things. It's not just those you know, drug abuse and you know,
these really big things. It can also be these small things that impact us in ways that maybe we don't consider because we're looking at the trauma, and there's trauma and a lot of stuff. There's dysfunction and a lot of things that dysfunction just means something isn't working, something isn't healthy, it's not going well. There is a problem. Yep. Yeah,
you know. It was helpful for me to eventually start to look at it from a perspective of everybody has developmental needs, and mine didn't get met for various different reasons, and many people don't get met for various different reasons, and there doesn't even have to be fault in that. There's simply just hey, you know, some things that I
needed to get I didn't necessarily get. And I think it's very easy to get into comparative suffering with this stuff to say, oh, you know, well, chiefs, I heard about this guy who went through all this awful stuff and I didn't go through anything like that, so I must be okay, I must be fine. How do you get clients kind of over that barrier? What doesn't work
for you doesn't work for you. And I think sometimes we do look at other situations and we'd like to level them as bad or worse or better when we don't have to judge someone else's situation against our own
for our situation to not be good. You'll hear this sometimes with siblings, where siblings will say, well, my situation was worse because I needed blank and you didn't need this, or they listen to you more they did, you know, whatever these things are, and it's like you can still have a problem and that other person can have a problem. The problems don't need to be the same. It doesn't need to be you know, I was only abused if
this thing happened. It's like, there are tons of things that we might say is damaging to a child, and it doesn't have to be well my parents like me on the porch. You don't have to have these horror stories of you know, complex sort of meaning for us to have issues with our families. And I think it takes away from suffering when we put ourselves in the position of having to have a really big worry in
order to suffer. Yeah. I found the adverse childhood experience testing and score that idea of there's a whole lot of different adverse childhood experiences you can have, and that was a lens that sort of helped me as a recovering heroin addict I was twenty four years old and I was like, well, how did I get to be like this? Right? I didn't choose to end up here.
And so it was really interesting because in the first part of my recovery I was told very clearly by just the circles I was in, don't think about that, don't worry about that, Just here the things you need to do to get sober. And that actually worked for me. It actually worked for me. That focus work for you. I'm not saying it will work for everyone because different levels of trauma are different. But the day came where I did have to reckon with what had happened in
my past. At what point would you say in your sobriety that was how many years of being sober before that reckoning occurred? That reckoning occurred about three and a half years in and my marriage fell apart, and I was in so much pain, and I realized like, well, yeah, of course you're in pain because a marriage would end. But I recognized the patterns that I had in relationships. I'd always had them. I was re enacting this same sort of drama over and over and over. I'm not
saying that that was all my fault. I think, you know, in our situation, it was both our challenges. You know, we met at a heroin dealer's house, so you can imagine, like, you know, we brought some things to that relationship. But yeah, it was about three and a half years in for me, And again, I don't think there's a right time. That was just when it sort of came to a head for me and really forced me to really look deeper.
I've worked in substance abuse treatment, and I think One part of it is being clean, but another really big part of it is figuring out why you were abusing anything in the first place. Yeah, and some people really live in that just being clean part. But if you don't figure out why you were abusing in the first place, I wonder how things show up in other ways. Yeah, you know, I don't know if you've heard the term
dry drunk of course. Yeah, Yeah, it's a person who is sober, but they have all the behaviors that they had when they were an alcoholic. Why they've done no work, They're just not drinking, yep, And so there's no change in the person. They're not treating people better, they're not less manipulative, they're not less violent in some instances. It's just like they're sober, and that doesn't necessarily improve who you are as a person or make your relationships better.
What really makes your relationships better is figuring out, you know, why that was an issue in the first place. Yeah. What was interesting for me is, you know, I got into recovery, and I really worked the twelve steps pretty diligently, and so I was doing work, you know, a lot of deep work, but the work tended to be oriented towards how I was behaving and the way it was presented to me. And this is you know, Columbus, Ohio, nineteen ninety five, right, So I'm not making a judgment
about the twelve steps or there effected anything. The way it was presented to me. It was very me focused, and that was good. I had to take responsibility for myself my behaviors. But there wasn't a lot of now let's untangle that thread of you know, why you feel the need to act that way. It was just sort
of like, well, don't act that way so much. And I'm oversimplifying, but like you're saying, I hit a point where I don't feel like I could get onto the next part of my healing without spending some time recognizing where I had come from and what had happened. And it was interesting because then I went from there into it was called inner child work back in nineteen ninety eight, you know, John Bradshaw, and I went into that situation and that was all the person I was working with
was oriented around. That was the whole game, and that was useful for a period of time. But I also hit a point where I went, wait, okay, now I need to sort of emerge from everything that happened to me and sort of integrate this my responsibility with what had happened to me. And I think that's what you do very very well in your book. You bring together Okay, there's this dysfunction, here's why you are and it is still your responsibility to work with those things differently and
more skillfully. Well, many people say that, you know, depression is anger turned inward, and so when you look at substance misuse, you look at some mental health issues, you look at our relationships. Some of us, we do have a tendency to it's me, it's me, it's me, it's my behavior, what an actuality? Perhaps there's someone else we need to be angry at. That doesn't mean we need to hit them or we need to yell at them, but maybe there is some recognition that I don't think
I was nurtured, yep. I don't think I was loved in a way that I actually felt. I think, you know, they were trying to be loving, but what I really needed was this. I find that when we talk about our families, when I have new clients, getting them to the point of even saying anything about their family is a victory, yeah, because they want to sugarcoat everything. It's like, my mom was great and wonderful. She was lovely, she
worked really hard. She picked me and my brother and sister up and da da da, and she beat us poorly, you know, but she was a great person. It's like, okay, great, she made great spaghetti. But wait, let's go to this part about her, you know, beating you. What was that part, right? I think the other version of that is they did the best they can, which is a true statement. Right, that is absolutely true, but does not mean that you don't have impact from the best they could do. Right,
doesn't mean the best they could do was okay for you. Right. Both those things can be true, and you talk about that a few different point it's in the book. Is this recognition that multiple things can be true. We can recognize the things that happened to us when we are younger,
and we can have a relationship with our family. I mean, there's a way to be angry about some of the things that happened and also be grateful for some of the things that happened, Right, that both those things are possible. But I do agree. I think the tendency is towards sugarcoating. Yeah, it's really difficult for us to reconcile that those relationships aren't black and white, like it's this, or it's that, it's all these things, And it doesn't mean that you
don't love a person. It just means that you recognize some problematic parts of that relationship, and recognizing that can really help you move away from some of your stuck points, or be healthier in your relationship, or choose a lifestyle that actually works for you instead of one that you're trying to pretend to exist in. You know, we don't realize how much we're playing into the roles that were assigned to us. I think about some of the things that were told to me as a child, like you're
so nice, You're so this. So if I was anything else, it was like, oh, you're not being yourself. I'm like, wait, I never said I was nice, Like you kept saying that because I was a baby that drewed or something. Now I'm twelve and I got stuff to say, you know, like, I'm not saying this about myself. But you know, sometimes people will try to get you to be a certain
way because it's to their advantage. It's to a parent's advantage to have a child that listens and sits steal and will eat anything you cook and doesn't have an issue. You know, that's to their advantage. It's to a teacher's
advantage to have you quiet in the classroom. So if that's what we want, of course we're going to you know, try to encourage a person to be that way, to tell them, you know, you're a good girl, oh bad girl behavior, because we are seeking a certain type of behavior from a person, but most people don't fit into that. I think some people pretend very well, yep. So what
does a parent do in that situation? Because as a parent, there is a role of Okay, I do kind of need to shape the behavior of a child to some degree, right, That's part of my job as a parent, right. And there are certain behaviors that I want to encourage and others I don't want to encourage, right Like I do want to encourage being kind of the people around you,
and I want to discourage hitting them. I mean, just very simple, right, So how do parents do that without doing what you just suggested, which is, you know, sort of forcing them into a box. Labeling them, making them feel if they're not that way, you know, get in shame involved. And this is a big topic, but what are a couple things that parents could think about as ways to do that that are less harmful. I think about the difference between change and behavior and changing personality.
I think sometimes parents lean towards trying to change your personality. There are some people who will always, you know, be voicterous. Right, do we want to take that away from them or do we want to let them know the times and places where they can do that. I happen to be a parent of a child and the octave in which she speaks is typically very loud. I'm like, where are we We're in a car, girl, you know, It's like, why are you that loud? Are you? Mariah Carey Like
it's you're just screaming, you know. So there are times when, you know, if we're at a place running around, I don't care. But if we're walking into the library, I may say to you, you know we're going into a quiet space. Remember to use your quiet voice. You can be loud. I'm not saying you should never be loud. Sometimes we try to strip the person of a behavior they have to be organized, they have to, you know, be kind to everyone. Well, there are some people who
don't deserve our kindness. Should we listen to every adult because they're older, No, you know, there are some things that require further examination. I grew up at a time where you respect adults no matter what. I knew a lot of adults who didn't deserve respect. Yep. I'm like, you want me to listen to this person. I don't think that this person should be telling a kid what to do. They don't seem to have it together themselves. But it's interesting that we don't allow kids to have
the preferences that we want for ourselves. Adults have lots of preferences. I don't want to deal with this person. I don't want to go here. But with kids, it's like, no, no preference. You have to do everything I do. How do we as adults allow them to have some freedom? Not complete freedom, but just a little bit. Yeah, And I think you're talking about learning to teach kids about context.
That context matters, right, And because that's ultimately what as a grown human we need to be able to do is respond wisely and appropriately to the contexts that we are in and so if we always limit a child in a particular way and just you know, in a box, then they're not learning that context, not learning how to evaluate a situation and say, oh, well, maybe I want to respond this way or maybe I want to respond
that way. So I think that's the other limitation of just this very prescribed approach is we're not teaching one of the I think key skills of being an adult, which is that context recognition. Yes, I love that context.
Thank you. I'd like to talk now about shame. Shame is a big one, and I think it seems to be one of the things that I in working with listeners of the show and getting to know a lot of listeners of this show, and having worked with people who are in addiction and recovery for a long long time, shame is a huge issue. Talk to me about the ways that shame gets in the way of our own healing process. Shame limits our ability to be honest with our salves and with others. We fear that we will
be judged. We fear that what has happened to us will be held against us, as if we had some control over it. And Shane keeps us in unhealthy patterns. It keeps us in unhealthy relationships because we're too afraid to own up to what happened. I've heard too many adult children of alcoholics say I didn't have any kid, I didn't have any friends growing up because my parent was drunk and I was embarrassed. I didn't want to
bring anybody home. You know, the shame of that isolated them in ways that they don't even have, you know, childhood memories of friendship, like other people doing sleepovers and that that connection that is so vital for kids growing up because they're like, you know, it was just it was too embarrassing. So that Shane can really hold us
back from moments in life that we deserve to experience. Yeah, what do you say about people who have shame of even being seen and loved, Even that very positive reaction towards them causes them to almost want to hide and feel like they don't deserve it. Yeah, we have to learn to love ourselves. We have to learn to live with our stories. We have to learn to allow people to love us. When you haven't experienced authentic love, it can feel very weird. You know. Sometimes we equate love
with pain. We equate it with dysfunction, We equate it with abuse. You know. I think of parents whooping their kids and maybe saying, you know, I did that for your own good and wanting a hug afterwards. Like that's an interesting dynamic, you know, to get spaith and then hug someone like and what sort of So it's sort of teaching, like, you know, this is a part of relationships. I hurt you and then we love each other. So how do we sort of say this is loving and
this is not loving? We have to unlearn our idea of love and demand something different. You know, I don't want to be loved in a painful way. I don't want to be loved in a way where you do things to me and I have to accept everything that you do. That's not the type of love that I want. People often use a phrase that I'm curious kind of what you think about, and it's they refer to something
as self sabotage. You know, I'm self sabotaging. Does that make sense to you psychologically or is there something else you would call that? You know, I do think that self sabotaging is a thing. I think when we are uncomfortable with something we tend to move back towards chaos because that is familiar and so many of us. We can be in the most relaxing state, but because we're not used to being relaxed, it's like, where's the drama, where's the chaos? Someone's not arguing, Okay, let me pick
our argument. And that's where that you quote unquote self sabotage comes in. Do I think we know we're doing that? No? I think most self sabotage is unconscious. I don't think most people are saying, you know, I really want to harm myself right now, let me mess this situation up. Oh, let me cheat in this relationship. Oh I should steal this and get caught. You know, it's not that conscious. It is a byproduct of our discomfort. It is a
byproduct of not believing that we can exist differently. So, yes, self sabotage is a thing. Is it something we should pay attention to? Absolutely when we notice you're really in situations that aren't so bad. I was dealing with a situation with a family member who said, oh my gosh, I never get to talk to your kids. So I told them the exact data. Call my kids every week. You know these are the days where they don't have activities, they won't call on those days, and so they will say, oh,
my gosh, I never get to talk to your kids. Now, some people might say, oh, they're self sabotaging the relationship. I would say, I'm not going to enable them by forcing this. But I also think what they're trying to do is they have this thought of people should reach out to me love is you coming to me? Is not me coming to you? And people care about me when they do blank, when someone is very direct with you,
that might be off putting. And so you are able to live in your story of being unloved because you're creating this environment of not being loved even though there's a clear behavior that you could exhibit. So I think self sabotage is sometimes that where people are being clear. I've heard people say like all they want is for me to be more affectionate and I can't do it.
And it's like sounds like that would change the relationship if you threw out a few I love you, But for some of us it's so hard to do that that I don't think it's like a ancious think of I'm not going to do that for them. I think it's more I feel so uncomfortable doing this that I just I can't do it. I can't train myself to say it, I can't practice it. It is so uncomfortable for me. So I think of self sabotage as a discomfort. Yeah.
I think that's a great way to think about it, and actually a more empowering and useful way to think about it. Because self sabotage, I start saying, well, I just am doing this because I don't think I deserve it. And that may be true, but you got closer, I think to the real thing, which is when I'm doing whatever that behavior we're labeling is self sabotage, is what's going on inside me around that specific behavior. And I think that, you know, that's a layer deeper and a
layer more helpful. I think of the same thing with the phrase imposter syndrome. I think imposter syndrome is a manifestation of your discomfort. You receive something in you question, oh my gosh, do I deserve this? Am I going to do a good job? That they picked the right person? Am I supposed to be graduating from this thing? Do you know? It's discomfort? It's really just discomfort. Yeah, I
don't know how to exist in new schoo space. Even if you've trained for it, you went to school for it, you worked hard for it, you've done all the work to be in a healthy relationship, you may still feel like, oh, I don't deserve this good person. It's the discomfort of being in a new situation. So I think that most change involves some degree of discomfort. Right. If it didn't, everybody would change everything, right, But it does tend to
bring us to a point of being uncomfortable. I don't think it's the only reason people don't change, but it is a big one. So what are ways of meeting that discomfort? Okay, I have decided I'm going to set a boundary with my mother about X. And every time I go see my mom, I just I'm too unk. I can't do it. I said that several times, people
say I just can't do it. You know. I remember with my dad he's in a memory care unit and it's too late, But I remember I would get these ideas of like, all right, I'm going to try and talk with my dad in a deeper way. I'm going to bridge this gap between us. You know, and when I was younger, I would just for a long time, the pattern was so strong. I would just literally when I got there, I think, I don't want to. That
was a dumb idea, I don't want to. And then later I got to okay, all right, a little bit past that, which was so subconscious, but it's still this is incredibly uncomfortable. So how do people lean into that feeling of uncomfortableness and actually get through? To do it, you have to want to change your life enough. You have to want to change the relationship enough. And sometimes our ambivalence as a sign we're not ready. We don't want to accept that I should be ready now, and
it's like you're not ready now, you know. Sometimes I've had difficult conversations like I was forced into them. The other situations made me ready. It's like, dang, I didn't want to say this now, but I feel like my hand is forced and I have to say it. So to me, you know, that was like a beautiful unfolding of other things to put me in a situation to
have to say this very clear thing. But there are times where we may not be ready, and you know, I think we don't have to you know, I think we trick ourselves to think, like I have to say this, and you know, sometimes I'll have clients and for years they talk about the same issue over and over and it's like, you're not ready to change it, And that's okay, you know. I think talking about it is helping you
get ready. I hope you get ready. But sometimes we never get to the point of having that hard conversation. We just stay in that processing phase. But I think that it can be quite challenging to force ourselves to do something with a level of discomfort that we're not ready to receive from that other person, right because sometimes we're not ready because we in the relationship. Sometimes we're not ready because we know that the other person will give us a silent treatment the rest of the trip
if we say this thing. Sometimes the discomfort makes sense. It's like, you know, I wouldn't want to put you in a position where you'll have to deal with this sort of outcome. So I don't have a lot of judgment around people not having those conversation. I think conversations. I think things work themselves out in the way that they're supposed to. We had John Norcross on recently who was one of the people who was one of the
early researchers of the stages of change model. And you write about the stages of change model in your book, and you say that some of the stuff in psychology is similar to the stages of change and breaking a habit. And I think what you're talking about is people often are in the contemplation phase. I know I should have a conversation with my mother, or I know it would be helpful to have a conversation with my mother, but
I'm not ready. And one of the things that the stages of change model does it I think it's interesting, is it points to things that you can do that are stage appropriate. So instead of lamenting that I'm not in the action phase, there are things we can do, Questions we can ask ourselves, ways of approaching that might move us out of contemplation into action. What are some of the things that you try and do with a client when the time seems right, or if they're frustrated, right,
I can't seem to get to action on this. What are some of the things in the contemplation stage that are helpful to do? You know, in the contemplation stage, I think my job is to move people towards deeper thought. Is not necessarily to move people towards action. It's to move them towards thinking about their situation, the pattern of the situation, and perhaps their acceptance is it will always be this way, and I want a relationship. So these
are things I have to deal with. So in the contemplation stage we talk a lot about dealing with things better, you know, not necessarily trying to change anything. But you know, if you go over there, they're going to do this thing. How will you manage it this time? Yeah, you write in the book if you feel stuck in the contemplation stage, you know, here's some questions you might consider, Right, how might change be beneficial to my mental and emotional health?
You know, what am I giving up to stay the same? Who benefits if I don't make any changes? I think those are really useful questions. And as you said, it's to get people to think deeper, you know, more deeply
about what is this. You've got a chapter which I think you could have just titled the book and it would have been a best seller, right, which is basically how to manage relationships with people who won't change, Because nearly everybody has something there, like if my partner would just do this one little thing, So talk to me about managing relationships when people won't change, and how to sort of sort out what is like, Yeah, I can
live with that, and no I can't. I'll give you just a couple of examples maybe that you can refer to. One would be someone who would say, my spouse won't quit smoking. I love them, everything is great, but they won't quit smoking, and we've got kids and it just pisces me off. That's on one hand, versus somebody who's saying, my partner feels like they're really sort of emotionally abusive to me. Maybe those aren't the words they would label it, but they would come in with signs of that. Those
are very different things, but both really significant. Yeah, in those situations, I think what we need to focus on is changing ourselves. We can certainly make requests, but we can't force a person to stop smoking. As the daughter of two cigarette smokers, and I do not smoke. You know, in my home, it's no smoking. That is what I can do here. I can't make you stop smoking. I can't say, you know when I come visit, I don't want to stay with you because I don't want to
live in a smoke field environment. Or I can say you to my partner, can you smoke outside instead of smoking in the house. Or I can say to my partner, can you wash your hands after you smoke your cigarettes before holding me? Those are some possible changes you can make, But to get them to quit that is a bigger issue for them to manage. And sometimes we're trying to get people to be like us because we're so great and wonderful and we want them to be exactly like us,
and they don't want that. You know, I think they are doing what they want to do, and we have to figure out how to be in relationships with people. When they are doing what they want to do, they're resistant to change. Sometimes they don't see any harm in their behavior, or they are not ready to do any work. You know, when we get to the phase of being ready to do the work, we think everybody should be at the same face. Why is this person being so rude?
Don't they know about the work just like you are doing the work. If you're doing the work, you don't be rude to them. You do what you can in this dynamic it's not about them having to have all these tools. You have the tools. So often with my clients, I talk about the person that you're speaking about. They're not in this room. The only person we can work with today is you, not your partner, not your kids. So let's talk about what you can do in the relationship.
You can organize the date nights. I can't tell your partner that because they're not here. I can't tell your mother to start calling before she stops by because she's not here. I can say to you, you know, maybe you want to say this, or what do you do when she just comes over and she hasn't caught like Those are things that we can work on. We can't work on a person who isn't ready to change because
they just want to be themselves. So the real changes you showing up as this force and saying hey, this is not Hey, this is not something that I want in this relationship. I cannot tolerate this, or hey, can you please do this thing? Or can you shift it a little bit? You know, for this reason, those are the things that we can do to manage our relationships with people who do not want to change. Because everybody is not interested in change. Yeah, there's a quote I love.
I don't know who said it, but it says something to the effect of, you know, when you realize how hard it is to change yourself, you recognize how nearly impossible it is to change someone else. Right ourselves is a tall order. So let's say your client presents with what I just suggested, which is, it just makes me mad that my partner is doing X, Y or z.
It could be smoking. It could be like they just won't change their diet and their doctor has told them they need to, or let's not even go into problem drinking. You know, but it's of a similar thing. What does a person do within themselves to become more accepting of that? Is that the basic things become more accepting of it. You know what I think I could have titled this book, You're uncomfortable, and you're trying to make people change to
deal with your discomfort. When people won't change, it's hard to watch them be as they are. If we know smoking is better, if we know that this better diet will save your life, it's hard to watch them do these things. And so what we try to do is make them fix our discomfort, stop eating like that so I can stop feeling uncomfortable watching you eat. Stop smoking, so I can stop feeling uncomfortable about you know, you're
getting lung cancer. You know, I want to be able to live my life, however I want to live it. If I want to eat five hundred pieces of candy a day, please let me, please, please let me live this life that I want to live. This is my choice. But we feel like, you know, if it's not good for them, we have to stop them from doing it. We're not stopping them from doing it. Sometimes we're making them want to do it more because they know they're
already doing something that they shouldn't be doing. Sometimes we're getting in the way of their quality of life. You know, despite health issues, people may still want to eat poorly because they enjoy it. So you're pressuring them to change their diet isn't necessarily changing them as much as it's adding problems to the relationship the partners. You can change is what you cook for the household. You know, so they could go out and stop at you know, KFC
or wherever and eat whatever they want to eat. But what are you cooking at home? What are you purchasing for them? To buy, what are you eating in front of them? Those are the sort of things that you can manage. You can't manage what they choose to put into their body. Yea, that is an easy thing to sort of hear and a very difficult thing to apply,
to apply and live out for sure. Another thing in this managing relationships with people who won't change is you know, you say, if you want to maintain relationships with people won't change, it's up to you to make change, is right. You have to do the work to accept the situations. Another thing I think this is really helpful, which is like if you're in a difficult relationship and you're not ready to go, and I was this way for a
long time in a marriage that was really bad. I just was in this place, but saying to myself, I'm choosing to stay in this relationship despite what the relationship is. I am not stuck, I'm not powerless, and I am making a choice. We have to acknowledge the role we play in our own discomfort. We have to acknowledge the role we play in our own healthy relationships. We often feel like the relationship is put on us to deal
with when dealing with anything is really a choice. Yeah, it's not this thing that happens to us, even in family relationships, even in marriages. It's like you're making a choice daily to be married, You're making a choice daily to answer that person's call, You're making a choice to go to this event, You're making a choice. You have to on your power in these situations. I think those
choices often feel very constrained though. They feel like, yeah, I'm making a choice, but I'm choosing between several really terrible alternatives here. And it's not like there's a good choice on the board. If there was, I would pick that one. But I'm choosing between things that seem almost equally bad, which I think is why it's so hard to get out of a relationship, particularly if you've got children.
And I mean, there isn't a great choice there. You know, the great choice would because I'd roll back the clock and you know not have gotten here. But we do have the choice, and it often feels like those choices are constrained by a series of not good options. For sure, think that we stay because we are fixated on other possible outcomes and family relationships just because you end a relationship with one person doesn't mean that you'll never see
that person again or you won't hear about them. It's like, no, they may still come to the holiday gathering because other people have a relationship with them. They might steal come up in conversation because other people have a relationship. Other people may ask you about this person and where your relationship with them is. So there are so many different things that you can do that, you know, I think,
further damage your ability to leave the relationship. Yeah. I like the idea that you talked about earlier, which is recognizing that we are in a contemplation stage and maybe allowing ourselves to be there for myself. When I was in that difficult marriage, one of the things that was the most painful, and it took me a while to realize it, one of them painful things was how bad I felt about myself because I couldn't figure this out.
You know, I felt like I should know what to do and I should do it, and it was complicated, right, It felt complicated to me. And one of the ways that I existed better in there, and maybe I shouldn't have existed. I don't even know the answer now what I should have done. But one of the things was to have some compassion for where I was in the process and recognized like that this was an easy choice.
Made it by now, you know, And I see lots of people who are in difficult situations who are very hard on themselves because they feel like they should have solved it. Yeah, some of these are not easy problems to solve. Like you said, there's lots of consequence to action. Yeah. With families, I mean, the relationships are so long standing. To terminate a relationship you've been in for thirty years, or to terminate a relationship with a parent, I think it it's such a big deal and it shouldn't be
taken lightly. You should take your time to figure out if this is really what you want to do now. There are some instances that will speed up their process, like if there's a safety issue, but you know, for many other issues, this is sole process. I used to work with kids in foster care and they were removed from their homes, you know, sometimes for some very severe reasons, and most of those kids wanted to go back home. They weren't like, you know what, I'm done with my mom.
She burned me in the bathtub. I never want to talk to her again, it's like, when can I see my mom? So even them in those you know, horrific situations, sometimes there was no idea that I could be without this person who has given me life, even if they harmed me in a very severe way. So it takes many of us some time to get to the point of acknowledging that this relationship is more damaging than I
am able to live with what you just told. That story points to how thorny these things are and how difficult to sort out for so many of us in so many ways. I want to continue down the thread a little bit about managing relationships with people who won't change. Chapter and you talk about a couple things that might be problematic for us, and one is you say our beliefs about others' abilities. Say more about what you mean by that. Yeah, we expect people to be like us.
So if we've changed something, we think they should be able to change it. And we don't all have the same ability to change. We don't all have the same desire to change, we don't all have the same capacity and support to change, and we have to recognize that in others, that their disempowerment is really where they are. They are disempowered. Everybody's not empowered enough to make these changes. I think about, you know, in families where people are like,
I'm a cycle breaker. I'm the only person in my family who acknowledges you know, the abuse, or only person in my family who you know, stands up against this issue, and it's like, yeah, it must be herd being really different. I'm not shocked that there are tons of people who are like, Nope, don't want those problems. You know, most people are like, now I'll I'll just stay down here and do the thing and we'll be all happy. No
one wants to deal with the blowback of that. So you know, it's not necessarily about like they have the information as much as they need to also have the ability, the support, and many other things to actually implement some changes. A really clear example of that in my life was
watching my partner Jenny's mom develop Alzheimer's. We were the primary caregivers for her, and you know, there was a period of time where I felt like, in my mind it was like, well, she should be able to do that, and then it became clear at a certain point I just really realized like, well, hey, how do I know she's well, she's capable of right, and the fact that she can't do it is probably a pretty good sign
she can't do it right now. And in that case, it was really easy to let go of because it was very clear, like, oh, there are tangles forming in her brain that are shutting down parts of her brain and that no longer works at all. Easy to let go and go, well, that's her ability, right. It's a lot harder to see that with other people. But when we realize that there are so many countless causes and conditions that make anybody who they are, and we don't
know even a fraction of those. Usually we don't know the story of everyone in our lives, even if we spent every day with them. You know, we often think, oh, I know everything about my mom. I don't. I wasn't with her during her childhood. I have no clue what happened. Yep, you know, so I can only guess some of the things that I know. I don't know every experience that my partner has had. I only know the ones that
they've mentioned to me. And now there may be others that shapes who they are and makes them think a certain way about their abilities. We have to be very careful to not project who we are and what we're
capable of onto other people. Yeah, because even in that case of like, okay, I know about my partner's past, they've told me everything, there are things that affect us that we don't even know about, right, I mean, I'm sure there are countless things that have happened to me that shaped me or moved me or in some direction that I couldn't tell you they did. I don't know.
I don't know why I'm the way I am. There are some big things I can point to, but I think we're always shaped by so many factors, and we're shaped in different ways. Yeah. Yeah. The next line that you say in this chapter about you know, managing relationships with people who won't change, is that expectations are healthy, but they should be based on the individual, not their role in your life. Say more about their abilities versus
their role. All people are not all things. There are times, particularly with parents, where our expectation is that they're nurturing, their loving, their supportive, their kind, They're this, They're that your mother is not nurturing. You could want that to be an idea of a mother, perhaps on TV, perhaps in other people's lives, but you have to look at the person you're talking about. Does this person as your mother their role of mother, do they exhibit those qualities?
And often it's a no. So you can want someone to be something and that's you know, that's fine, but to try to make them that way, particularly after you're an adult and they've done all of this parenting and they're continuing to be themselves, is quite challenging to you
request or require that from a person. It's not necessarily the healthiest for your relationship to say, you know, my siblings should be like this, or my grandparents should be you know, this particular way because this is what grandparents do. It's like, what in particular are your grandparents doing, because that's what they're capable of. What in particular are your parents doing, that's what they're capable of. We're not talking about people on TV. We're not talking about things you
read in books. We're talking about the reality of your particular situation. Yeah, that line, you should do this because of like you said, your role. You know, that's what a sister should do, that's what a partner should do. That can cause a lot of suffering in a hurry. Yeah, for sure. I think it's a way that we continue to harm ourselves by holding people to their role and
not to you know, who they actually are. And it's hard, you know, it's hard to accept that a person isn't what you need, and many of us will try to keep, you know, looking for signs of that, was that the thing I needed? It's like, nope, that's not it again, because some people just don't have certain qualities in them. Yeah. I had a good laugh reading your part about going card shopping and how like we go card shopping and
the cards are just so positive. That most of our relationships are not that clear cut, and you know, there's maybe some good things, there's some bad things, and then that cards don't show any of that nuance. And I think it's kind of funny to imagine writing cards that would be, you know, a dysfunctional family card line. I think I think I may have just found the job for my partner in this show, Chris, who's the editor. He may be uniquely suited to do that. Given a
sense of humor. It does bring up feelings of Okay, it's Mother's Day, you know, these sort of holidays I think, and Mother's Day and things like that can really be difficult for people because we do have to acknowledge on some level when it's happening that our relationships aren't what we wish they were. Yeah, and I've seen people pretend
on social media. You know, I'll know their personal situation, but on social media on Mother's Day or Father's Day, they have this heartfelt for the father who gave me everything I ever needed. Who was you know, they write the card on social media and I'm like, you just reconnected with this guy two years ago? What are you doing?
You know? So there is this internal pressure, you know, for us to fit inside of the card, and sometimes what we really need is to, you know, maybe go to the card section where the card is super basic that just says Happy Father's Day, Happy Birthday. You know, we don't we don't like those cards. We like the ones with the beautiful messaging, but you know, we just need to congratulate them on the day. We may not need to speak to the quality of the relationship because
what we're saying in the card is not necessarily true. Yeah, we were just discussing our upcoming spiritual Habits program. Although by the time listeners here this. It may not be upcoming anymore. I don't know. Anyway. It happens every Sunday, and we were looking at one of the Sundays was Mother's Day and we're like, should we have the pro grandma Mother's Day or not? Easter felt like, well, Easter's
a pretty major holiday, will skip Easter Mother's Day. The debate was interesting because on one hand, we were like, well, there's a lot of people who are gonna want to spend time with their family. Mothers are gonna want to be with their children. You know, people might want to be with their mother. And then we went, well, there's a lot of people too who Mother's Day is a difficult day for you know, my partner, you know Mother's Day,
her mom has just passed. Other people, I know Mother's Day is difficult because they don't have a good relationship with their mother or with their children. And so it was just interesting to have this debate about how this day is not the same for everyone. Yeah, it's really not, and we need to be sensitive to that. You know, maybe there's another card line to people who lost their mothers,
who are grieving that loss. You know, maybe they need a card, because that is a real thing that this day doesn't have the same meaning to all of us like many holidays, you know, Thanksgiving, Christmas, you know, all of those holidays. Some people, you know, they're men, memories of holidays are terrible. It's like, you know, this is the time of year when you know, this horrible thing happened to us, or this is a time of year
when my grandmother died, or this is you know. So it's not like this day or this experience is happy for everyone, and so we do have to be sensitive to people who maybe have some family issues. This is the day I have to spend with a bunch of people that I barely know and pretend that we are really close, I mean, on a more benign way. I think that's a lot of people's experience. You know. It's like, why am I with these people that I only see
on Thanksgiving? And I don't even particularly necessarily want to, but I feel like I should. So here we all are, and and everybody feels uncomfortable. I wouldn't know anybody like that, by the way, I'm throwing out there, throwing out yeah, things I've heard about, things I've heard about. Yeah, let's talk about an Instagram post that you had recently that I thought was really interesting, which was ways to end a circular conversation. So first, what is a circular conversation.
A circular conversation is one that just goes back and forth. There is no end. You say something, they say something, they say something, You say something, and you keep going round and round. And sometimes we are doing that because we want to convince the person of a thing. We want to get them to agree with us or think like us, because we think that that is the true way to change their behavior. When an actuality, people can change their behavior without being convinced or agreeing to what
you say. We you know, spent eighteen years as children. I certainly did a lot of things that I didn't understand or respect. You know, it was like stand over here, Okay, fine, I wasn't like, why convince me to stand here? It's like, no, we often do things that people ask or request, So in circular conversations, we're just really just you know, it's kind of like paying tennis. We're just going back and forth, back and forth, back and forth, and not everything has
a resolution. Yeah, and often these circular conversations are not only circular. They repeat themselves over and over and over and over again. It's like the circular conversation that just keeps happening every two weeks. You know, it's a circle within a circle, I guess. So what are ways of ending circular conversations that are constructive? Agree to disagree? Now, you can get really creative with your agreeing to disagree. You know, I've heard your position. It doesn't sound like
you know, um, we agree on this. Let's just tap out for now, or you know, thank you for your perspective. Mind is different and I'd like to revisit this in the future. Or I'm right you're wrong. Interesting, I'm right you're wrong. Let's right you're wrong, and let's move on. Go on. You know, there are so many ways to get out of that conversation without continuing to be on the wheel of I have to convince them. It's like
you know or not. You know, I've heard adults argue over really interesting things, like this person it is a better singer. It's like singing as a preference, Like you don't have to have this conversation with a person like okay, great snice, you think that moving on? I disagree this is an old drunken argument. But and it's stupid, but it just came to mind when you said it, which was I was getting me and my partner at the time.
We're arguing about whether the white stripes or the strokes were better, and it was actually getting heated, and you know, I look back on them. That is just preposterous, Like there is no better in this sort of situation, right, there's just preference. But I was young and didn't apparently fully recognize that in my drunken state. But you're right, there are a lot of conversations that really are that way.
It's like, but there isn't a right answer here. There's just your preference and my preference, and preferences can be respected without being you know, agreed upon. Okay, So that's one way agreeing to disagree. What are some other ways of getting out of a circular conversation. I don't want to talk about this anymore, you know, so not even saying, hey, I agree to disagree, but I'm out of here. I
don't want to talk about this anymore. You know, this conversation is starting to get heated, or you know, this conversation is moving in a direction that I don't necessarily want to go, so I will tap out. So let
me ask a question about that. I'm going to do a little bit of gender stereotyping here, which is a dangerous thing to do, but I'm gonna wade into it for a second, okay, And I'm just going to say that that is a complaint that many women have about the men in their life, and let's do away with gender. One person is saying, I bring up this thing that matters to me, and you always say I don't want to talk about it, so we never really get the chance to talk about it. So maybe that's not a
circular conversation. That's something else. Yeah, I would say there is a continuation of back and forth in a circular conversation. If you never want to talk about anything that is problematic because you've never talked about it, so do not want to talk about it, is interesting you're just shutting down.
But if you're having the conversation with someone like I've noticed sometimes, you know, in disputes, it's like my point, your point, counterpoint, counterpoint, this point, and another example and another example. It's like we have five examples, we have two counterpoints. When will we say okay, got it, thank you for all of this information. I'll take it back to the team. That was enough. I think I know
exactly what you're needing in this moment. So it's not saying I don't want to talk about it, but it's like we've talked through it. Because sometimes we think that arguing for a long time makes a conversation more productive when there are things we could say in a shorter window of time that would be more productive than arguing
for four hours. A four hour conversation is guaranteed circular. Yeah, I sometimes think one of the worst pieces of marital advice I've ever heard was never go to bed angry, you know, because what that ends up causing is lots of circular conversations well into the night when both people are way too tired to be having a useful conversation about anything. Yeah, you know, I think it's one of these things we have to learn how to communicate with
other people. And just because you communicate well in one relationship doesn't mean that those same communication skills work in other relationships. So it's not just about you know, you leaving the interaction, it's about the other person knowing when to stand down. You know, it's like how long should we argue about something? And those are conversations you can have, particularly in a partnership. In a marriage, you would want to have that conversation, like what are healthy arguing skills?
What are the things we shouldn't do? I remember when I started dating my husband, we were like no arguing via text or when we're out with our friends, Like you can't call and be like hey, like those are just not good time. So how do you say, you know, like after thirty minutes, we need to take a break. We have to set some parameters around how we talk to each other relationships. I think that's a great point.
We had a guest recently. I can't remember who said it, but they said, when there's communication problems or something's not working, it's always good to try and talk about the way we talk about things, Like here's how we and now we're on the same team, are going to talk about these things. You can't implement that rule in the middle of an argument usually, but outside of that, to agree
to some guidelines can be really really helpful. Yeah, and it really sets the stage for future communication because sometimes we get it wrong, you know, like sometimes you know, in a conversation, I'll say something in the wrong way the intel nation is off. But when you talk about how you talk and disagreements, you can correct that in future interactions, like Wow, I didn't notice that I was yelling, but you know, in the future, I could be more
mindful of my tiel. So that's really helpful in our relationships to talk about the way in which we communicate. Well, Nedra, that is a great place for us to wrap up. I always love talking with you. I think we have great conversations. Your new book is wonderful again. It is called Drama Free, a Guide to Managing Unhealthy Family Relationships. And we'll have links in our show notes to where people can get access to the book and all this stuff that you do. So thank you so much for
coming on. You're welcome. Thank you for having me again. If what you just heard was helpful to you, please consider making a monthly donation to support the One You Feed podcast. When you join our membership community with this monthly pledge, you get lots of exclusive members only benefits. It's our way of saying thank you for your support. Now. We are so grateful for the members of our community.
We wouldn't be able to do what we do without their port, and we don't take a single dollar for granted. To learn more, make a donation at any level and become a member of the one you Feed community. Go to one you feed dot net slash Join the One You Feed podcast. Would like to sincerely thank our sponsors for supporting the show.