The Arc of Love - A Small Town Affair - podcast episode cover

The Arc of Love - A Small Town Affair

Jul 22, 202450 minSeason 7Ep. 3
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Episode description

It began as a passionate affair and ended two marriages. Now, they're struggling as they try to build trust. Esther encourages them to be brutally honest--with themselves. What you are about to hear is a series Esther calls The Arc of Love. Each session centers around a couple’s story. Whether it’s issues of trust and betrayal, care and aggression, closeness and distance, repair and rupture, polyamory or monogamy. The episodes can be listened to in any order you want but were curated with a beginning, middle, and end. For the first time on the U.S. stage, Esther invites you to an evening unlike any other. Join her as she shines a light on the cultural shifts transforming relationships and helps us rethink how we connect, how we desire – and even how we love. To find a city near you, go to https://www.estherperel.com/tour2024 Want to learn more? Receive monthly insights, musings, and recommendations to improve your relational intelligence via email from Esther: https://www.estherperel.com/newsletter Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript

What you are about to hear is a series Esther calls the Arc of Love. Each session centers around a couple's story, whether it's issues of trust and betrayal, care and aggression, closeness and distance, repair and rupture, polyamory or monogamy. The episodes can be listened to in any order you want, but were curated with the beginning, middle and end. As always, none of the voices in this series are ongoing patients of Esther Perel's. Each

episode of Where Should We Begin is a one-time counseling session. For the purposes of maintaining confidentiality, names and some identifiable characteristics have been removed. But their voices and their stories are real. Support for Where Should We Begin comes from Kajabi. If you are a content creator, then you are your own brand and you deserve all the benefits. With Kajabi, you can build

your own business the way you want and keep what you earn. Kajabi is an all-in-one platform that helps creators and entrepreneurs build successful online businesses by unlocking predictable recurring revenue. Right now, Kajabi is offering a free 30-day trial to start your business if you go to kajabi.com slash Esther. That's kejabai.com slash Esther. Kajabi.com slash Esther. Kajabi.com I think in a fair, in a small town, if it gets out, it gives

people something to talk about. What this couple wrote to me in advance of the session was that they lived in a small town that they both had been married, both had a child from their first marriage, that they had had an affair. And we kissed and it was just like that was it. And for the next nine months, we were like just, you know, having sex everywhere and outside and skinny dipping and that summer was like we felt like we were in high school.

It was all kind of a blur, but there was so much fashion and so much fire and so much hope and promise of what could come of this. They then broke up. They then had different partners on whom they then cheated in an affair with each other again and in effect, they had cheated on each other and with each other. Now that was a red flag that I thought I'm different. This is so different. I mean, he left his marriage for this. This is big.

No one's ever called me out on, you know, my lies and deception. Like I could do anything and I did. And despite the brute reality of all those lies, her dominant question was, can I trust this man? And do we have a chance to start all over? This is where should we begin with Asdaq Raoul? I want to feel like we are both on the same page and equally committed to doing whatever it's going to take to rebuild art. We shall trust in her. Some sort of a foundation. Why did it go for you?

Out the window, but why? He broke it. How? He lies. How? And about what? Nothing. Disadisting. I think he hides things from me and from others. That was very painful when we were together the first go-round. I'm afraid of that. A lot of hidden things and that leading to more hidden things and more lies. Do you have any sense as to where he learned this fantastic trait? No. Do you? I have some ideas. Yeah. My grandfather. That three generations were doing.

Yeah, I spent a lot of time with my grandparents as a kid. My parents are completely honest. If they've told a lie and their life, it was a long time ago. My grandfather was a drunk, alcoholic, philanderer, had many women on the side, traumatized my mother. He was charming. He was a charming, rubber-ed-mitch and looking guy. He didn't tell the truth a lot of time. Got away with it. Got away with it. Got away with it. That's a great man. That's a good model.

That's a little kid, yeah. As some of his big strong, he was in World War II and he was rugged and ran a sawmill and handsome and charming. I never saw these other sides of him being as philanderer alcoholic. So when you watched your grandfather, you registered it as... I saw a charming liar who can seduce anybody and gets away with it. The real man is not a good guy, the sweet guy. You can either be a good man or a real man and you pick the

real man. I guess so. Yeah. That's my dad's a good man. But you don't admire your dad nearly as much as your grandfather. I didn't. I do now. You do now. I imagine him living with that tension inside of him. On the one hand, a deep desire to be known and to be seen and to have somebody really enter all the way to the basement. And at the same time, a deep fear that anybody that will ever really go look there will never

want to live in that house. And it's really both and and I track both experiences of him. I track his defense, which is the liar and I track his fear, which is the little boy that thinks that if he doesn't invent a big story, he will remain so small and he will be completely ignored and overlooked. It comes automatically to life. Absolutely. On anything, even when you don't really have to. Absolutely. I'll be like, you know, an example

will be like, someone will be like, Oh, do you know this band? I'm like, Oh, yeah, I've heard them many times and I've no idea how it is. I think in a way it's to being people happy, to please people. I don't like letting people down. Or to make yourselves more important. Yeah. Which one? To impress. Yeah, to impress. To make myself seem more educated and worldly and interesting. Whereas I have an issue with self-esteem. I have my

entire life and low level depression. I think that's trying in some ways I'm trying to mass that or was. I feel like as I got older, now after these things happened, I've consciously really, really trying to halt that, trying to stop lying. Now I'm putting more thought into my words and how those words affect other people. My family, my daughter, person sitting next to me, I try to be conscious of it. Can I ask you something? Yeah.

If you spend your life trying to be more or other than what you are, because you don't think that what you are is enough. And so you constantly inflate yourself and impress yourself as much as others and and and fabulate and inventings. What would happen the day you actually see yourself within a more realistic framework? Have you ever had a chance to

look at yourself in reality or it's always in idealization? There's moments, whether via therapy or in conversations or arguments or fights where she will bring up frankly, really horrible things I've done and said and I'm like, damn, I would not want to be with me. Yeah. Or I wouldn't want to be that person. I don't want to be that person. Do you

look down on her for being so kind? It's a strange question you have. You think if she was really more confident, powerful, she would already long have sent you to the world. Yeah. Absolutely. I did send him to the walls for about five minutes. Thank you

for being so honest. Absolutely. That was her. That's her. You like the fact that she's kind, but in fact you look down upon the fact that she's kind because you think if she was really strong, powerful and confident, she would already have said, get the fuck out

of here. Yeah. If you live with a sense of self-loading and that you don't feel worthy, the people who like you must be fools or dumb or blind because if they really were smart and insightful and strong and confident, they would see what you see and what you see is not particularly likeable. That is the distortion that comes with the self-loading. And so when I say, would you respect her more if she had said enough is enough and she put a limit to this? I

know that it's a mixed statement for him. Part of him probably appreciates deeply her kindness and part of him looks down upon her kindness. We have to take a brief break. Stay with us. What for why should we begin comes from Shopify? In every business there are key decisions,

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month. That's 25% of your first month of seeds DSO1 daily sync biotic at seed.com slash Esther code 25 Esther. And you have your answer to your question. I do. I mean you want at the end of today, live here in a state of faith and trust it would be delusional. I know. I know. I didn't have hopes that that would all be in place. I would rather he tell you I lie compulsively because it gives me access to the person that I want to be and that I never felt I could be.

But of course as a result I've never been able to become. That is probably the best you can have him tell you is that he knows what he does and that he would like not to do it but this is not going to disappear just overnight or with the promise. I know that. I know that. I care about you so much though. I want to believe that if you want to believe then you become like him because he also goes around continuously wanting to believe. That's part of why he

fabulates the whole time. No other woman's ever held me accountable. X-wife relationships in the past. My mother. Same. No one's ever called me out on my lies and deception. My marriage like I could do anything. And I did. And past relationships. Yeah just using silver tongue to kind of get out of stuff or telling a lie so intricately woven that I would begin to believe it. Even with her I've made elaborate tales that most people

wouldn't do to cover up a lie and then telling another lie to cover that up. It just becomes a sysophysian ball of lies coming back and we have to keep pushing it up and I don't want to do that anymore. It's exhausting. But no one's ever held me accountable. You know I used to flirt with other women and do things like that. In front of everyone, in front of all my friends and just you know no one ever held me accountable for it. I mean only a few people in my life have

ever called me a cheater. Her being one therapist being another and that's it. So I've never been held accountable. I've always been able to get away with it. Do you know it's interesting because I'm listening to you and I'm thinking of it from a different angle. I can hear very well when you say nobody has held me accountable. But another way of looking at it is that maybe nobody even bothers telling you because they don't even expect anything. Yeah I can see that.

Why is this different? Well an initial reaction is it pisses me off that someone has caught on. I mean she can see like deep inside my psyche. And she knows me better than I know. Well she grew up with one like you. Yeah that is true. That is true. Takes one to no one. Yeah. There's so many things happening in a very short amount of time here. You know part of me says to him you know when people don't hold you accountable you may think that it's because you

got away with it. But sometimes it's because they don't even respect you enough to even expect more from you. He has asked why do people let me cheat in front of them while I'm married and why does nobody say anything. And it's not because you're so amazing. It's sometimes because you're so low anyway that why should we even bother asking from you. And then she says why is this different? And the question is also a way sometimes of asking what is so special about me? How am I different

than all these other people? And he begins by saying it's because you call me out on this because you recognize me and I say yes she does recognize a cheater she grew up with one. She actually has known you before she ever met you. You are a part of her history too. You're not just a part of your own history. No one has ever seen me for who I am per se. No one's been able to dig through those

onion skins to get down to my core being of shitty guy. And I realize that more and more and more these days that I have not been a good person the other day I was thinking there are more people on this earth who dislike me than like me because of things I've done. And that made me feel horrible. I mean stop being my tracks. I didn't feel guilt about what I did in the past but I'm that's creeping in more and more and more in my life these days. Guilt or shame? Both.

Both. I'm ashamed of what I've done. I wouldn't wish that upon anyone what I've done to her and others. And what would exist instead? If you don't lie you have to deal with reality. Yeah. What would exist? I don't know. A reality that I feel that I have to accept who I am and accept my limitation except my flaws. What? Why would you need to accept? That I've been a liar, a cheater, I have incredibly low self esteem. I- What does that mean? It means I don't really like myself.

Because what? What does that mean? When I was younger it was more for physical reasons like I'm not tall you know it was never the best athlete and I would you know get hooked to fun at for things like that and- We have bullied. I'm sorry? Were you bullied? Yeah. A little or a lot. A little. Even through college I was bullied. You know. And how? How did you square it? I'll show you. I'll be back. You think you have won up on me? How do you know? I didn't bully. I didn't fight back. I just

wanted to say it and let it seep in and keep me up at night. It's easy to see the bad guy. It's more difficult to see the wounded boy. And when he says he was bullied a little but then he tells me in the next sentence that it went all the way through college I know that what that little is not nearly as little as he would like it to think. And I can just see how he condensed years and years of suffering into this little sentence that is meant to just go unnoticed but that holds within it.

Decades of pain and humiliation. So I guess in the sense that I was like all right if I can't be a big guy physically I'm going to try to be a big guy otherwise. And then inflate. Yes. Yes. Yes. If I can't be big in size I'll be big in lies and stories and I'll inflate myself. It makes a lot of sense. Yeah and I never put this together until just now honestly. I hurt with words. But is my this is an interesting

competition between us and what you call this in English. Jackhammer. Yeah. Jackhammer. So. But what happens when you hear things like that from people who don't care about hurting you is that sometimes you stop caring about hurting others. And that's what allows you to say the kind of stuff that you said. I'm being tough and I'm able to hurt people with words in the ways that I would never do physically. Yeah. I mean I use those words as weapons for sure.

You know when I told her when she was pregnant the second time to have a smothered guy raise the kid. Not me. I can see now how that would just stab her. But at the time no I was I was fired up. I was fueled. I was drunk and I was like angry and I. You're angry a lot. Yeah. You were scared. And I was scared of what? Losing my kid.

The reason he's scared is that he was afraid to lose his daughter from his first marriage and that there would be a change in the custody arrangement if he was to have another child with this woman. He basically demanded that she have an abortion and she got pregnant again and so as a result not one but two abortions. It becomes clear that there are two primary people in his life, this woman and his daughter from his previous marriage.

I mean I listen to you and all I'm thinking is how lonely you must be. I'm pretty lonely. You know when I have her and I have my kid. Yeah it's pretty lonely. What's it like for you to listen to all this? I feel a lot of compassion. Did you want all of it? All of it? All of it. Most of it but it's nice to hear him be really super open and vulnerable. I feel a lot of compassion for him. I'm terrified still. That

is it always going to be like this? Like is this something that can be repaired? This behavior? What does that say about me but I've allowed it to happen? But mostly I feel compassion because this can't be easy. I know you're lonely. You're a good friend to me. No. You know you're my best friend.

But you see I hear you say I've struggled my whole life to make myself bigger and since I couldn't do it physically I did it in many other ways but I have feeling that you've struggled your whole life in wanting to feel special and in wanting to feel that somebody really noticed you. And so when he speaks this way it awakens in you like he's true with me. I get to see the side of him that nobody else does. With me he will change. I'm going to be the

one that's going to give him the redemptive experience. I'm not fully convinced of that. No? No. Okay. I'd like to be the person I'd like to help in some way. I feel like I do hold a mirror. It's a delusional to think that we do have something special and that could be a catalyst for change in both of us. That's the big question, right? Yeah. Aren't I helping him to see things for what

they really are? While it made appear at first that she's weak and unsure there is also a real defiance in her that basically says I know better than all of you what I'm doing because I am on a mission that none of you know about and that mission had something deep to do with her own father, the story that she grew up in and had promised that she had made to herself a long time ago that was now being played out with this man of which he may not even know.

We are in the midst of our session. There is still so much to talk about. We need to take a brief break so stay with us. You both tell me I have a propensity for chronic lying and then you tell me I want to trust. Something doesn't click. The first thing hits to probably be I would like to know that he's not lying and then maybe over time I learn to trust but what you're wanting with what he's doing. It's a strange thing meaning it's not. It means that it's realistic that you don't trust him.

On what basis would you trust him? Right. I agree. It makes sense what you're doing. Why would you trust him? And why would you tell him the person who is basically in his more understanding ever, maybe telling you how much he's not to be trusted? Don't do it. You may have to take the risk and as you take the risk over time he may prove to you that it was a risk worth taking. But you want the end at the beginning. Yeah. You want to start with the trust. Whereas you may end up with the trust.

With him you can't start with the trust and not with anything that is happened between the two of you. That's the piece that is kind of fantasy thinking and you know it. I do know it. You are smart. You both smart people. You know that's your version of telling yourself stories. He tells himself stories but you have a version of that. You know I'm we're intimate and we travel together and we do all this stuff in secret. So that was a secret as well. I mean we're still a secret.

You know her friends and family don't know about us at all now. No one knows we're here and no one knows we hang out. Because I think you're ashamed. To they were I lost so many friends over the course of our initial relationship when we were public about it and they were I confided in a lot of my close friends over the during the painful parts of that and after a while they some of them were so tired of me sticking it out

and not leaving that they left my life. I have since been able to rebuild friendships with most of those people. Because they think you came back to your senses. Yeah but here I am. I can just hear my mom. I can see her. I think she'd be so worried. And she says what? I think it's me so many years to finally leave your filandering father. I see what you don't see. She blame herself. She blame herself. That's what that she rendered you blind.

Yeah. Yeah. Sometimes I feel like she's a little bit ashamed of me but also proud of me. Similar to my marriage, she held everything together for us. She was the one that was at every dance recital and at every concert and my dad kind of came in and out of the picture where his job was pretty demanding. He was off doing other things. Such as who knows? Well, having affairs, you know it. I do. I rule. Yes. My first memory of that was when I was in kindergarten.

And that played out in front of me and my brother, my mom took us to spy on him and his lady friend running. They were running at the track together. And then I know he had in a fair with one of his students at the school where he worked and it ended up. I didn't know this until years later but we had to move very suddenly across the state right before I started high school. And it was because of that. He lost his job or was asked to leave.

And I know he had others when I was in high school and beyond. And something was the catalyst for my mom finally having enough when I was about 20 when I was in college. All of this remains a secret. I think he knows that we know but we've never had a very frank conversation about it. When I told my dad that I was, I told him in two parts. I was leaving the marriage. I left that alone for a little while. And they seemed understanding about that. They seemed understanding.

And then I told him that I had met someone else and that was a big part of it. And he didn't speak to me for months. He was so mad. He's so mad at me. He was so mad and so ashamed. He told my entire family before I got a chance to tell anyone. Most of them don't talk to me now. Which is a swironic. Wow. But what did you do with him with my dad? You just collapsed and got upset. Or did you, I just told him it was a shame that I didn't get to tell them. I don't think I got nearly mad enough.

I think I was. And I still am like riddled with shame and guilt for hurting husband and my son. So when you father shamed you, you thought he's right. I deserve it. I think I do. Okay. Now I understand. And how do you deal with the discrepancy between how you saw yourself and how you acted? Because this is not just about a type of person that has to do with circumstances of life too. So many people, the majority of people never thought this would happen to them.

Yeah. But what's the story that you tell yourself that I was kind of just wandering aimlessly through my marriage? It was really missing intimacy. We didn't have any in my marriage. Maybe it was dead in my marriage too. And then we met and it was just like What? Right away. To me, inside and in terms of attraction. We opened up though about our yeah. Similar longings. Yeah, we spoke about that. How unfulfilled we were. Insomitably. Emotionally.

I don't know if I'd ever, I think I'd been in love maybe once in my life before. And I was deeply in love. I'm in a still haven't in love with her. I was willing to leave everything behind my wife, life, time in my kid. But then I realized how important that was to me. And it really wore me down. You know, living with her and her son and not having my child. It really messed me up more than I realized at the time. You threatened to go back home. I threatened to go back home many times. To whom?

Why did you have to threaten her for that? Because I missed my child so much. And why did that have to come with a threat? Because I couldn't have my kid. Why did you need to threaten her? I don't know. It was, I don't know. I know it was misdirected. And I just think a lot of the way I treated her in the past was because of that. Because of my inner sadness and rage of not having my child. For leaving a dead marriage which would have been even more horrible for my kid. To witness.

I understand your reasons, but it's a very, you know, it's one thing to tell her. I miss my daughter. It's another thing to threaten her because of it. Why do you kick the one and only person who's actually right near with you? And really does not know how to put limits. Maybe that's why because I know I can push it. Because I know I can get away with whatever and she is there. See, to me, this is what you need to work on. Yeah, limits. This is the essence of what goes on here.

Not all the stories around. That's the decor. But this, this, this dynamics, limits. It's limits for you, yes. It's like every time he kicks you, you come back with the question, how can I trust you? And I'm like, you're missing a few steps in between. Why do I do that? Why do you do that? Let's meet. I just met you. I don't know. I don't. It's a difficult question. But you seem to be a rather introspective person who does a fair amount of thinking.

You tell me, I am experiencing the anger that you're not experiencing. Something is off. I am vicariously experiencing the feelings that you are denying. And I put the words to put limits or it's not just to be angry. It's also, there's a lot of things in this, but it does have something to do with not collapsing. It's like your father does a dirty trick on you and you collapse. And you hunch over rather than actually say, no, of all people, you certainly do not have moral authority here.

And don't confuse me with you. And put your shame on me because you think that the apple didn't fall far from the tree. What I'm trying to understand is, is it that you have an independent spirit? And you say, I don't just go with the herd and I don't just blame and shame people because that's the convention. And I can distinguish between having a Philandering father and a good father at the same time, which doesn't have to be contradictory.

He may have been a shitty husband, but he may have been a good father. Is it that you think I'm smarter than all the other women? They all will come and go and I'll be the one to stay. I'm the one constant. And I'm the one that he can't fool. And I'm the one who sees through him. And I'm in some way I'm the special one. In that sense. That's my dad, you mean? Yeah. Same here. Same here. Same here. All right. That feels similar with you.

But... Well, just if I feel my relationship with my dad in that sense feel similar to my relationship with you. Same here. I feel like I see right through you. But I have so much compassion for you. Yeah. But... I mean, you know in a live. You're like... You're like a human polygraph to me. You're like... Your eyes too. You know exactly. Like no one has ever called me out of that. No one has ever known I was lying before. No, listen. She's here. And she... A very good training.

Yeah. She came well prepared. Yeah. So she's just a shift of my eyes or if I like... Tell my head a certain way or like get my hands a little fidgety like she'll... No. Yeah. So what's it like to live with a human polygraph? When I... When I... When I... Is it called you like that before? No, but that's what it feels like. I felt like I had to be cautious. But now I actually really appreciate it. Do you? I do. Okay, so... You say you think you have extra powers through the lying.

And you think you have extra powers through being an astute polygraph. Yeah. I do feel like... Do you meant to eat? You meant to eat. Yeah, I know. You see? Yeah. You are actually in a competition with him. But in a competition as in... We'll see who does it best. But you pretend to come and ask me if you can trust him. Rather, that's kind of almost a fake question. Because you know the answer is no. Not now, for sure. But that's not why you would him. You would him because you...

You're going to show him you dad and many men that there are polygraphs who will outdo all of them. I don't want that. I didn't say you wanted. I'm saying that that's the script you're in. I know. Is it? Yeah, that makes sense. Yeah, she... The way I see it when she had caught me in the competition, the way I see it when she had caught me in something, she like got satisfaction out of it. Yes. Like she got... Yes, you have the eyes of the pot. Puppy and she has a glee. She's like, aha.

I don't know if Glee is the right word. What? You definitely seem satisfied. I didn't enjoy. I meant you feel vindicated. But as painful. Of course it's painful. And you can ask yourself, why do I want to put myself into that kind of a situation? I would ask myself that. I would bring that question to your therapist too. But I'm watching. Because your demeanor doesn't tell the full story. And I'm looking for what is she after? What is she doing? What's the hook for her?

Besides that he's a charming smart fun to be with. All of it, I get that too. And we have so much that. But vis-à-vis your entire community, which you stand to lose so much, none of this has moved you. Because there's a part inside of you that says, I know better than all of you. And that has very little to do with him. That all pre-exist. My office is in the middle of New York City. And that means that I have to contend with sirens of the fire trucks, with jackhammers.

And today is particularly bad. But you didn't know these things about me when we got together. I told you the total truth about my past. Not the total truth. A lot of the truth. But until I experienced the lies and the limbo of our relationship, I thought that we left our marriages for each other. I thought this was so different. Yes. And it was different. In many ways. I thought that I was immune to those things that was dumb.

I mean, you told me after a handful of months being together, you had a big fight about something. And you said you've never been able to feel empathy. You've always lied. And all my red flags went up. But I did nothing about them. Here we are. Because the grand illusion of love is that when you say that to someone, then they think this is all changing because of me. That's what I meant by special.

She thinks that her goal is to change, to being this empathetic, honest, devoted, compassionate man. And those things are in me. They are. But the pressure to change on a dime, it just makes me not have resentment per se, but makes me to be like, hey, hold on. I can do this at my own speed. No, I'm going to add a piece to this. Yeah, please. You didn't, because what you're saying is that you didn't become a chronic liar, or you didn't become even sociopathic for no reason.

When she pushes you to change like that, there is a part of you that feels that she doesn't really have a compassion or an empathy for you. Yeah. It makes me think that she's doing it for her own reasons. And that you didn't become like that out of no reason. That there was plenty of your own pain and your own suffering and your own boyhood led to you becoming this way. And that this was the best protection and adaptive shield you could have. You want to fuck with me, I'll fuck you.

And I won't even have any remorse about it. And when you pressure him, it makes him feel that you don't understand the pain that lies underneath. I don't think you mean that, but that's what I think he reacts to. The entire time I was with the other man here for the last almost year, he was a bug in my ear, leave him, I'm going to change, I'm going to do all the work. You're going to see it's going to be different. Leave him, be with me, I'm different, I'm going to change. I left, we broke up.

And now you're like, when I'm ready, don't pressure him. What? You know, in different circumstances when you were with the other man, he was taller. Yeah. He was a musician, a band, tons of friends. So he had a mission.

As we were winding down to the end of the session and it became clear to me that I would have to punctuate the possibility for a future together and if so, under what terms, I began to think that the noises of the city were speaking to us and conspiring to tell this couple that there was an interference that they couldn't overcome. You and people should be friends. You would be tremendous friends for each other. I'm not sure you meant for couple. Sorry, it's okay.

Not that I have the truth or any of this. But now, what you can offer each other, you have a much better chance to make good use of it as friends. And if you try to become a family, blend it family with, I'm not sure. If you want each other in your life, you feel that what you call that tattoo thing, have each other in your life.

You have a better chance to experience the beauty of all of that, that if you stay good friends with a real deep connection with each other, then if you try to become a couple. If they want to preserve the good stuff they have between them, they'd better be friends. That doesn't mean I'm right, but since they came asking me, do we have a chance? Can we be a couple? Do we have a future?

And so forth, I felt that I needed to share my impression with them at the end, which is you have some wonderful things with each other, cultivated as friends. Better chance to stay in each other's lives if you have friends than if you go for the next divorce. You just heard a classic session of where should we begin with Esther Peral? We are part of the box media podcast network and partnership with New York Magazine in the cut.

To apply with your partner for a session on the podcast for the transcripts or show notes on each episode, or to sign up for Esther's monthly newsletter, go to estherperal.com Esther Peral is the author of mating and captivity in the state of affairs. She also created a game of stories called Where Should We Begin. For details, go to her website estherperal.com If you've been enjoying this podcast, here's a look into what else is happening at New York Magazine.

I'm Corey Seeker and I'm here with Reeves Wideman, who has written about the American obsession with NDAs. Where did they come from? Why are they everywhere? And are they good for anything besides covering up for abusers? After you've poked around NDAs for a while, do you see NDAs used mostly as tools of abuse and coercion? You see positive results like where did you land on NDAs? I think in most situations, it is used as a way to sort of claim power, but not even necessarily to do a bad thing.

It's just kind of, it is this now the sort of boring standard tool in the toolbox of corporations or powerful people. But now it's being used on the people at the bottom. It's the warehouse workers at Amazon being made to sign them. Or like I was just trawling job listings while doing the story and there were NDAs for forklift drivers and people working in butcher shops. And I think on the one hand, it's just kind of like, well, I might as well. There's no downside for me to do this.

But it is also just another way that you sort of keep your employees or people you get into a relationship with that you sort of keep your thumb on them. So I do think it is at the end of the day that people who are giving them out by and large are trying to control someone. Do you think that they're going to become standard for like literally every interaction in job interview and possibly relationship as well?

Or do you think they're just finally going to die or become outlawed? Like where do we go from here? You know, it was corporations first. Then it was celebrities. Then it was just rich people who aren't famous. But they also want to protect their privacy. The next frontier is people like you and me. And are we going to start giving them to their partners?

You know, I think some people are going to start experimenting with it. It doesn't take much to go online, download a free NDA and without even consulting a lawyer and hand it over to someone. I did as a joke, send one to my girlfriend. She hasn't signed it yet. But I at least sent it. That's Reeves Widermint, who may or may not be single soon. You can read his work on NDAs in our beautiful print magazine in your own home or on nymag.com slash lineup.

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