None of the voices in this series are ongoing patients of Esther Perel. 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. We can do it all. Like walk 30 blocks an under an hour, follow four of the city's sports teams at once and spend all day in the Chinatown Arcade. Drink vitamin water. It's from New York.
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I like freedom and cannot be in a traditional couple who needs an open relationship. I felt like we are building something really unique and authentic to both of us. They've been synchronized about it. They agreed on the set of rules and they looked forward to a life of polyamory, of non-monogamy, of experimentation. But as is often the case, we make rules and we break them. And the unanticipated consequences of that breach is what they are grappling with for the past year.
But then this thing happened once my partner didn't protect. The other person got pregnant. She kept the baby without any dialogue with us. Now we have to say everything to everyone. Not only that we are in an open relationship that there is a child that does not mind. We would like to create a space to receive him at our home. That is not possible if we don't accept that anyone can look at us with this child. So we have to work on this way of acceptation.
It's not easy for me. I don't want this child. I tell you honestly I don't want him in my home. I don't want him in my life. And one of my fears is to become this stepmother from all the childhood stories. I still don't want to quit this open relationship and don't want to quit Eric. But I'm still wondering which is my way. She thought that by choosing another model of relationship she was experiencing a sense of agency and now it has toppled for her.
So it's a relational crisis but it's also an existential crisis for her. And for him it is about what is fatherhood? How does one define it? How shall he define it? The session is in English and in French and we go back and forth. As an exception the couple chose to call each other by their name. They did not name anybody else. So use these names as an entry door into the universality of certain experiences rather than it is just this particular couple. Let's go.
We are in an open relationship and we have decided this from the very first moment we met. We have a child. We love being parents. We have really an idealistic idea of being parents. We are devoted. That was an exclusivity that we decided we open our couple but this is something we share. Unique experience. We are in an open relationship. Open is defined as...
It's about taking the freedom to speak if we have a desire for someone. If we want to share our intimacy with other people together or separate. It's about listening to the limits of the other. It's mostly an open dialogue about how to be in a couple. And this has been a very open mind experience for me from the very beginning. The problem is that in this open relationship so we have limits. Of course we have some rules.
And so far we consider as a nuclear couple. So we are the priority for our family. You are the primary relationship. No matter who are the other relationships, our relationship is the main. It's the priority. And what happened with our situation? I had a friend. Let's call her L maybe. It appears that in this friendship with L there was also a desire. But it was clear that this desire should never lead to sexual intercourse. But what helped very much is that she had a girlfriend too.
I didn't realize before but this girlfriend was a kind of a protection of not going too far. And then she stopped the relationship with that girlfriend. And it appears that immediately when she was not anymore with her, it gets sexual very fast. For example, I started to have a very close intimacy. Sorry, I give very precise details but it was not penetration or something like that. But it was very, very close intimacy. We were naked.
And it happened too fast because normally in this situation we should have speak together, parlor with me, before it happened. And we didn't. So there was a kind of transgression already there. But parlor and I did with this year and we spoke very, very much together. And then we decided to go forward. And then I saw her again. And then it happened that at one moment I didn't protect myself with condoms. And this is another infidelity if I think we can say.
Because we agreed with parlor that I should protect. And when this time came, I had the condom in my hands. And the stupidity from me was to say, we protect instead of we protect. You know, it's just a question mark, the difference. So you made it into a question mark with an possibility for an open-ended answer rather than a clear mandate. But I know because I thought very much about this moment. And it could seem stupid like if I was 15 years old.
But I think it was something like, this is something magic. And I'm afraid to break something. To break the moment, to break the magic instant. And I'm very hungry about that. Because when I think about that, I want to go back. But I know it's not possible. But you know, I feel hungry about this acting like a child. Angry at yourself. Angry at myself. And the other stupidity for me was that I was really trustful that because I did practice for a long time, how do you say, retray? We draw.
I did practice this for a very long time. And I was so sure about me about that. And you know that scientifically, you can't be sure, but I thought, yeah, I didn't thought actually about that. You know, I didn't even thought about the idea to have a baby. And this flight of fantasy, this grandiosity that a rules don't apply, that science doesn't apply. You know, that your fantasy is stronger than reality and then the facts. This was an exception for you. You usually live between the rules.
Even the self-imposed rules. Or you tend to make rules and then one day you break them. It's an interesting question. Thank you. Sorry. I think I really trusted in my experience, my own experience. I hear you. Because for years, it happened to me that I used this solution. And it always did work. And then what happened? You get a call one day that says there is a child on the way and it's yours. But actually, the story is quite more complicated than that because there was another one.
Another man. Yeah, another man. And Elle told me that school, I have a child and it's his child. That's wonderful. Yeah, I mean, it just right after this happened the next week, she started an exclusive relationship. And we knew that guy and we were very happy for them. So she was pregnant like two months and she did an ecography. And she had a term of conception that was close to the weekend where they had sex with Eric. So there was a doubt.
And we started to live with the doubt. And that moment, the other guy left. So at the end, we did a prenatal test, paternity test. We did it in Belgium. But DNA test. So we knew for three months after the announcements that it's Eric's child. She was still in the limits of doing an abortion, but it was never ever a conversation. She said, okay, I'm doing this child and I will have it on my own. The nightmare started at that point. I know the family to understand what she means by nightmare.
I need to do a quick recap in my head. They have an open relationship from day one. They are the primary couple. Two of their rules are about having conversations with each other when they meet someone. And to use protection. Both of those essential rules were broken. He has a wild weekend where he has sex three times with this other woman. And she also has another boyfriend, with whom she spends the next few months.
And when she announces that she's pregnant, at first everyone is quite relieved because everything seems to be in their right place. The child was conceived with this new boyfriend and this couple almost took a massive risk, but avoided it in the end. And they can continue their life on the trajectory they're on. The child without sits in and then people start to wonder, what's the provenance of this child?
One of the most archaic questions that we have asked throughout humanity and that has been at a root of how we think about monogamy and infidelity and non-monogamy. To clear these doubts, a DNA test is made and it is established that in fact it is the child of this man who is sitting right with me for the session. And at that moment, the whole future of this couple is momentarily in question.
And not in terms of will they be a couple. What they do at night, what they do sexually with others is maybe no one's business. But to arrive suddenly on the street, at work, at a birthday party with another child, that demands explanation. So it's about bridge, of trust, it's about betrayal, it's about secrecy, it's about sexuality, it's about children in the midst of all of this, it's about parents who have no idea what your relationship is actually about.
And that's what we're going to unpack. So I heard you say it's her child. Is it her child? Is it our child? She said, this is what she said before giving birth. She said, I don't need anything from you. If you want to give me something, you give me otherwise, you don't give me anything, it's my child, I will have it alone. Eric felt the moral obligation to recognize the child, to pay attention, to think about how to integrate it in our lives, in his life, so in our life.
And this is what we're working on for more than one year. And after giving birth, she started to be invasive, she wanted more time, regularity, like she gave birth and like one week after she wanted to give us the child time. But she didn't agree with our terms. We said, okay, let's go together in this story, but it's not going to be Eric, it's going to be us and us with our child.
So it's going to be our family that will accompany this baby and she didn't want it, she wanted it, just Eric and that's all. But we said that, okay, in order to bring the child in our home with this regularity, we need to take it step by step. She didn't agree. She said, okay, it's difficult for me this way and we should do a break until the child grows bigger and then let's talk again. So now we didn't see the child since December. So we have you, the couple, you have a child that is how old?
A tree and a heart. Okay, you have a tree and a half year old boy who has met the baby but doesn't know yet who the baby is. And then who else is in the drama? That knows or doesn't know. And then there is a little baby who does not yet know cognitively but senses a ton. Well, what we are now is that we decided that when the next time one this baby will come to our house, it will be with no secrets like truly welcoming, which it was not the case before.
When he was born, I think this is something that we are a bit stuck in this stage because it's very hard to open, especially from my side. I still have things to work on and especially, okay, especially my family. That's one of the main issues for me but we get even emotional to think about it. Who is in the family and what is the concern? So I live in a certain European country. I was born just after communism. I think I was lucky to have a family that is quite open. I always have had freedom.
But of course, they have their limitations that they don't know that we are in an open relationship. Our religious parents. They are orthodox, Christian orthodox. When I ask about the religion, the depth of their religious feelings, it's less about you having transgressed or you having betrayed or you having been unfaithful. But it is about what is considered a child out of wedlock or an adulterous child. That's the language that is used. Definitely.
I get the feeling that they will worry about me, that Eric is hurting me. I couldn't say to them last year because I was too hurt. And I would definitely cry. It's strange now because there are parents and you should be able to be vulnerable in front of them. But since I left and I lived in different countries, I had very difficult time to be vulnerable in front of my parents. Why? When you lived with them, you could.
Or you've always opted for, only show them that I'm sure of what I do, that I'm confident that I've got it all figured out. They don't know the other side of me. I think at some point I didn't because I didn't necessarily felt reason to end up hurt. And I think I started to a bit close myself emotionally. All the worries stopped when I had a child. So now their attention is focused on the child. I suddenly became perfect.
And of course, I suddenly became perfect because I was so suddenly checked their life principle marriage with a child. With a job. A stable job. I think also the difficulty to speak with them is that we never spoke about sex, about protection. This was very taboo. I don't know why. Well, you're supposed to have premarital sex. If you're going to have sex with the person that you marry, then there is not so much of a need to talk about. That is not my framework, but that is a consensus framework.
Because there is no sex to be had until there is sex you must have. Yes, so suddenly I have to talk to my parents about sex. Of course, I waited to not cry when I speak with them. You will cry. Because you will cry to me and you will cry with them. Because it's part of a larger story. And the larger story is that for a long time you have not done what they expected. I only show you everything that works so that I can prove to you that my choices have valid.
And I can avoid your criticism or your fears or your care and your worry. And now I'm basically coming to say, here is a choice I made that you don't even know about and here are the consequences. That not only do you not want them, I didn't want them either. And I still love this mind deeply and we are committed to each other. And we have all intentions of continuing to be a couple, a family and an open relationship. So you're going to need to select what of that they need to know.
And more importantly, you're going to have to find a way to be able to tell them, I want to be able to present myself to you with my choices and with my frustrations or mistakes or worries. That's the conversation. And if they are as loving as you say they are, then they will understand that. They'll take their time. It may not be in the first conversation, but they'll understand it. And maybe they'll even say thank you because you will appear to them more responsible than Koki.
And that's the difference rather than the narrative that you've had for the past ten years, which is always, everything's always great. And accepting this child is another point. I mean, like some of the people I want to explain. I feel that we have to go to this narrative and like you have to explain something before being accepted. This is what I feel now. I don't have it yet. I don't fully accept. I'm not fully happy when the child is in our home.
I think I project a lot of things on this child. And you don't want to become the mean stepmother. Exactly. But you find yourself with mean thoughts. Yeah. She owns every part of the story where she plays a part. And her level of insight into the complexities of this story and the relationships between the people is very moving. And I'm moved by the precision with which they understand their feelings. And as I listen to the session now, I wish I had actually told her that.
But they're also, at all times, saying, this is what I'm experiencing now. This may change. And they are continuously talking about relationships as a breathing, living organism. We have to take a brief break. Stay with us. Support for Weshadwee Begin comes from Shopify. When you run your own business like I do, you put a lot of time and energy and focus into creating a beautiful product. But then comes the challenge of how to connect with customers and how to deliver.
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The tools that you can use to get things done without burning out and without spending so much time on menial tasks. Different ways of thinking about what productivity means and how we might measure it. All in service of trying to get a little more done in a better way. All that on the Vergecast, wherever you get podcasts. There's nothing worse than getting home from your trip, only to find out you missed a camp missed travel experience. That's why you need Viator.
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So I've created a new course bundle on desire, where we explore together many of the other sexual impulses and blocks that we struggle with from completely stuck and sexless to simply flat, yearning for more intensity and a more erotically charged connection. We are releasing the courses September 17, but you can join the waitlist right now. Follow the link in the show notes to join the waiting list.
It will give you access to the best pricing, a chance to submit your questions about desire and eroticism, the opportunity to attend a live virtual workshop that I will be leading and be able to have a Q&A live with me when you purchase the courses and the opportunity to join a special seven day four-plate challenge. I look forward to reading your questions, exploring them with you and helping you to answer them. What's your experience of this?
I hear from Paula something like I discovered a different way of living. I was on an adventure and this adventure has capsized. But I still want to be on this adventure, but now I need to explain to people. And I need to have answers that I don't have. And I need to reassure people in ways that I can't reassure them because I can barely reassure myself. And this whole thing that was an agreement between you and I now becomes a confrontation with society. Am I hearing that accurately, Paula?
Yes. So to me, when we were speaking, Paula, I wrote this question. What is the story? Do we need to say to people? What is the story that we need to tell? I feel that I have elements that make me strong enough to face the thinking of people around us. Say more. I'm not afraid about what they will think. And it appears very clear to me that at last, okay, the priority to me, the place where I have to be, is taking care of Paula.
And this helped me very much. It was very difficult to bring El and Paula at the same table. It was difficult for Paula, but she always say, but let's go. We have to. For El, many times she said, yeah, but stop. I don't want that. And I won't come to the table with Paula and you. I can come to speak with you alone, but please not Paula. Because? My idea is that she felt that Paula looked at her on a negative way. And I think she was not ready to face that. Of course, Paula is angry about her.
On a certain point, I can understand that. But we really needed to beat the three of us in this situation. And for me, it was impossible not to come with Paula. I hated to be the translator between El and Paula. I always was afraid of betraying something, of not telling it in the good words, and not making it really understood as it should. And for me, this situation was very, very putting me into distress.
And I don't believe in God, but I went to the castle, and I burned some candles, praying that I don't know how, but to find a way that there is love, but you know, in the large meaning of the world between Paula and El, just I need them to find a way to connect together. Why? We are free of us in this story. And so I thought we need to be able to communicate the three of us, to be able to construct something that is peaceful, and that allows us to take care together of those children.
I hear you. If these two women do not find a way to connect, I will lose all. My son won't have a dad. I don't know if there was ever a plan for the two of you to have other children, more children. Not for them. But before, but before, yes. So I can also imagine that whenever Paula sits in front of El, she thinks, you changed the plan of my life. I had another child in mind, but not like that.
And there are loads of issues of acceptance. There is one in other people to accept you, but there is also how you accept this boy, how much you see yourself as parental figures to this boy, how much the boy becomes a part of the family, because you don't want him to continuously wonder what is my origin.
You feel that it's a tainted origin, and you want your older son to be able to be clear that he has a brother, and that this brother has three parents, or maybe they'll have four parents at sometimes. I don't know if I am allowed to say that he has two mothers, because I don't know how Paula considers about this second son. Is that a question? Yeah. Yeah, I definitely don't feel a mother for that child. I first have to get rid of all the things that he came with.
I see him, I feel empathic, but I definitely don't feel a mother for this child, because I have no connection with this story. If you say this is your brother to a boy, to me, it's not true. I don't feel it's part of our family yet. Maybe one day I won't care, but let's be clear.
At this moment, I understand that you have slowed down, and that you're taking some time to sit with this, and that means you don't have to go talk to anybody for that matter, or you need to say the bare minimum, just so that you can do the things you need to do. And so I do think the piece about having another child comes into the story, because a lot of things will be projected onto this child, if he gets to redefine the trajectory of this family. That's not it.
And that will make it harder to accept him. Can I say something? To be really honest, I don't really love this second song. Actually, I don't even know him. And I don't have this kind of real, further relationship with him. The relationship I have with him is conducted by responsibility. I feel responsible about this child. I am connected to him, but I can't say for no that I love him. That would be great if one day we can love him together.
Paula and I. History is filled with stories of fathers who did not assume the responsibility for the children that they brought into this world. At this moment, he hasn't had many opportunities to bond with his own child, with this second son. And therefore, he acts from a place of duty and paternal obligation, more than from a simple open-hearted place. We today may find that there's something called about the lack of feelings.
Whereas throughout history, we haven't necessarily asked fathers to show feelings. We have asked fathers to show responsibility. But what's interesting is that even though there is a lack of feeling here, he's holding on to the archaic role of responsibility and duty that one has as a father. And from that place, he hopes that he will find a way to connect with this child. It is completely something he longs for and hopes and knows because that is what he has felt for his other child.
It is the combination of those two sources of connection, love and responsibility. Do you feel allowed to love him even if Paula? I wouldn't say it doesn't love him. I would say, you say, parenthood can be driven by responsibility. With or without love. I feel parental duty. I don't feel parental love. And that's not very popular in the West these days. But you're being not popular and that's not your priority to begin with.
And my question to you is, do you feel that you could love this child even if Paula continues to relate to him out of duty? I think both of you have that distinction. It's actually a place where you meet. You both feel he should be loved but you don't yet love him because he has been such a terrible disruptor. But it's not him. It happens to be the decision of his mother and you can't hold this child responsible for a decision he didn't make. And that's something that you also both agree on.
But the difference is I think I don't love him not because of the history but just because I don't have the opportunity to love him. Okay, there was one moment when I did love him for a few seconds. I felt suddenly human. When the first time I hold it in my arms, we looked each other into our eyes. And at this very moment I thought, oh, yes, I think he could be my son. I think there is something here. Because you look at the other side.
But it was only a few seconds. I just think it is a person and I will build a relationship with this person. And this never started for real. But in order to build a relationship, you need the building materials. The ingredients that you have for your newborn son are not allowing you to build much because it's in the midst of doubt and anger and recrimination and guilt and pain. And so those are not such good building materials. I mean, they will build something but it will be a wobbly tower.
And so the first thing that needs to happen is to clear some of the debris, if possible. And that takes a lot of caring conversations and a lot of acceptance of unknowable feelings. Because the thought that you could be rejecting of a child is inconceivable to either of you. You are loving parents. How can you be with this kid and not love him? Not one him there. And that's when I hear Polesie. I understood for the first time what the wicked stepmother may be experiencing.
She is not just wicked. She is deeply hurt. She has been asked to do something that nobody is asking her. How hard is this? She is just expected to deliver. And she sits there with these negative emotions towards this innocent creature. And I don't want to be that person, but I don't know how to clear myself of those feelings and those thoughts.
And then I understand the mother of the child who says, if you look down on me, then I don't want to be in your presence because you destroy me with your looks. And therefore I'm going to go and I'm going to retreat and I'm going to isolate. I'm just going to put it out as a question because far from me to think here, do this and do that. But the decision that you would not be talking with El without Polar, I am not sure if that is in the long term the only avenue.
But if I do that, I really, really need to be sure that is accepted fully by Paola because I can't help Paola anymore with that. I can't. Have you deeply apologized to her? I think yes. Yes, he did. But you just felt the need to do it again. I mean, I mean, I don't just talk to her. I have to say that he is a language teacher. I think I was already in a situation where I never thought I would be able to build with someone. And I was super sick. I need you to say Paola, I respect you.
I'm not worried about you now. It's not for you that I do it. You understand? I don't do it for you. I do it for myself. I need to say that I respect you. I feel more than sorry that I hurt you because I feel hurt about that. I feel hurt about myself by the idea that I hurt you because I really love so much of our relationship. Our relationship is to me a real treasure. I never, never was so far in a relationship, in the ability to build through the storms.
And for this, I am so grateful to you. And that's why I am so sorry and so hurted that I can hurt you. And so afraid to hurt you again. I am a little bit afraid that while hearing you, I feel a lot of pressure. I don't know why, but I'm afraid that what you are saying to me is that you're afraid to be vulnerable again in front of me because you're afraid to hurt me. I won't stop. That I hope I can control myself to build the decision with you. To build something that I would like.
For example, about polyamorous things. Before I thought, we see what happened in a relationship. Oh, I kissed someone. And then we speak about that. And I really feel that now I need to be strong about that. And I feel strong. And that's a good thing. I can feel we could be about to kiss. And I hope I can not kiss. And first say, okay, we are going to speak together. I think that what's just happened is something different. You made a beautiful declaration of love.
I can't bear to see how much I hurt you. I royally fucked up. And I cannot take any decision that would hurt you more. And I was curious how you would receive this. And if you would receive it as a gift, there's nothing for you to do. Just to hear it. Because he probably feels bad often. But you heard this as if he was not giving you something, but as if he was demanding, as if he was putting pressure on you. And in my psychological head, I thought, so interesting.
Because you said that you have learned with your parents never to show yourself vulnerable. But my question to you is, and then what happens when someone actually sees it? Can you receive it? Can I receive what? The others look, the others regard. His regard, his reflection. Sometimes when we learn not to show our vulnerability to the people that are close to us, it becomes hard for us when other people see it. To receive it without pressure. You don't have to reassure him.
You can just say, thank you. It means a lot. I needed to hear that. And I may have to hear it many more times. The problem with this is that I've heard many times. I would never do that. I mean, I trust Eric. But like he said at the beginning, I would never sleep with that woman. And then he says, this is like he's very sure about something. And then there is the surprise. Yes, yes, yes. I see that. So he's building something. Yes. He takes time to build it. And then he destroys his leg.
And this is the summit. It was a real explosion. When we had the news that this is Eric's baby, I felt like my life is melting. I was really like my body would enter into the earth. I have a lot of anxieties nowadays about there is something. And in a second, I lose everything. So now Eric is speaking to me like this. I think I know this system. Maybe you have to prove it to me. Like, okay, these are words. And words I know they can be just destroyed melted. I feel we build it a little bit.
So my trust for Eric is rebuilding. So I don't know if I take the words so powerful as they are. I think they have a charge. Yep, I hear you. Her answer was really powerful because while I was emphasizing his ability to envelop her with the breath of his emotions, she highlighted a piece that I had not yet seen, which is that he starts from that place of engaging her with his feelings. And then gives her a sense that she can rely on it, that the frame is solid.
And then he actually over-throws it, which brought me back to the question that I asked him in the beginning, when he transgressed and infringed on all the rules that he had himself created, if this was unusual for him, or if this was actually something that he had been known to do, and she answered it for him. We have to take a brief break. Stay with us. Artificial intelligence, smart houses, electric vehicles, we are living in the future.
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See Apple.com for product availability updates. Apple Intelligence coming this fall. I hear you and I connected to something you said before. I arrived. I had very little knowledge about any of this. And I allowed him to take me by the hand and enter with me into a whole world. And I was fascinated. And we decided to create what we thought was a more elevated relationship. And my co-creator stepped out of the creative process. And I learned something very important about him.
He has a capacity to convince himself and others that is very persuasive in the moment that disconnects him from reality. Now, on occasion, that's an amazing thing to do. That is part of the creative process is to disconnect from reality so you can enter rich, imaginative, generative worlds. But in this case, it came with a big price. So if you want to apologize to me, you can apologize to me. But if you become convincing, I become suspicious.
Yes, it's just that in which part I would like to be convincing of something. Because I don't feel I try to convince Paula about something. Because really for me, I just describe what I feel. It's about when you feel too sure about yourself. Or when you say, I would never do that. But I corrected. And I said, I hope I will never do that. You corrected yourself today. But she's been with you for a few years. And what you do in the moment is not the only thing she registers.
Our internal memory, our nervous system, we remember. And we interpret a behavior in the moment on the basis of what has proceeded. Yes, but I'm not feeling in a way that I try to convince. I think I try to, I really try honestly to describe who I feel. Maybe I'm wrong. Maybe I'm wrong. I think let's change the word. You're not trying to pull her over and to convince her. But you're making statements that resonate with assurance.
Even though it's a desire, it's a wish, but it's emphatic, it's absolute. And that is what got broken for her. Paula, do you want to say this in your own words? For me, there is a level of taking things for granted. Maybe sometimes you're too sure about yourself to see me for real. Or how I feel for real. Maybe the last year I missed a few times saying a real question of how do you feel and less about you saying your thoughts. And maybe I need more space. Yeah, I think I have the point.
You need me to open voluntarily the space for you to express yourself. Is it that? Did I understood? Yes, yes, maybe. Maybe you need me more to mark, okay, no, it's not about what I'm about to say, but please tell me you. You need me to say that and not to wait that you take the initiative to express yourself about something. Or maybe I don't even let you space, sorry. That can be a good opening and see where it takes us.
One of the dilemmas is that if I understood well, there was a desire at some point to begin to think about having a second child. And this boy in your mind has kind of eclipsed that other project. And so it's like which child cancels out which? It's a terrible way of thinking. If you start to think about another child now, it softens the reality of this boy that entered your life, but that wasn't part of the script.
But on the other end, if you integrate this boy and you put all your attention on him, then it also redirects the whole trajectory of your relationship. It's an impossible triangle. Which child will win, so to speak? I didn't give out the idea of having a second biological child. I'm fantasizing about it and it's really a real desire for me. I really want this child and I'm not really biological child or not. I even thought about adoption at some point. But the adoption is a common project.
It's a project that two people decide on one or I don't know. The fact, and maybe the other point was about this the whole last year, I had no word to say. I had only like do you want to keep and save this marriage, to fight for this? But I had no words to say in keeping the baby, in recognizing the baby, and the pension in the time, in the like nothing. Things were imposed to me. It's not my project. There is a dialogue with Eric, of course, but it's like a fake conclusion.
You don't really make decisions. You can express your feelings but you don't have power. Exactly. That's what you say. Yeah. Are you surprised? Yeah, I'm watching his face too. So here's the thing, don't say ye or nay. Just take it in. You wanted to know how she feels. She just told you. Don't argue with it. Or try to convince her that that's not it. She tells you that's exactly this. This is the dynamic. This is about power and influence, not just about feelings. Or expressing oneself.
This is about decision-making. But there is another thing that I'm a little bit sad to say this now because I think it's not very positive. I'm afraid that I will leave this discussion with a fear because of the idea of a second child, because there is no connection from me with the sound that I have and that I didn't want to have. Before this, I really was sure that I want to have a sound that we have. And I really don't feel ready to have another one.
I'm very sorry to express because I see that there is a deep desire for you which is to have another child. But I can't give you this child because I love you. If we make this child together, it's because I also feel ready to have this child. And it's not that I should convince you not to do this child. I don't want that. So I wonder where we are going.
I have a fear that's to one point you will need to... I don't know if you need to leave me, but there is a need to do something so that you have this second child because you need it. It's possible that I'm not the father of this child. There is a question mark here. I'm afraid that I can't give you what you really need. I'm afraid about that. I hear, I understand. It opens up a new conversation that I agree that you should not make a child only because you love me.
I have no solution that I hear and I agree with what you say. And it's a conversation that you will have. Even if we don't have it together, you will continue this. This is not about ending something with a nice bow. Sometimes you end in the middle because it's dot dot dot. In the middle of a thought. And here we are. This is a complicated situation and there's no easy answers and pity solutions. You're trying to live a very conscious, examined life and this will be part of the examination.
Thank you. Throughout the session where they express their ambivalence about this other child, a feeling keeps growing inside of me that her attachment with this boy will ultimately be determined if she has another child of her own. And the loss is less about this other boy as about the fact that he now no longer wants to have another child with her. A child she chooses to have. Another child she chooses to accept. So he says in all honesty and honesty hurts in this moment. I don't want it.
I'm going to rob you of one of your biggest dreams. I can't impose on you not to fulfill it. So I'm inviting you in effect to go and create a similar situation to me, to have a child with someone else, which is what the other woman chose to do. It's an awkward place to end the session. But as I often say at the end of a session, when I do ongoing work to be continued. It's very important for me to hear what of this session stayed with a couple and I received two broader detailed voice notes.
And if you're interested in actually going further into this relationship, I reflect on these notes and I play them for you on my office hours this week on Apple subscriptions. Where should we begin with Esther Perel is produced by Magnificent Nois, a part of the Vox Media Podcast Network in partnership with New York Magazine and the Cut. Our production staff includes Eric Newsom, Destry Sibley, Sabrina Farhi, Kristen Muller, and Julian App.
Original music and additional production by Paul Schneider. And the executive producers of Where Should We Begin are Esther Perel and Jesse Baker. We'd also like to thank Courtney Hamilton, Mary Alice Miller and Jack Saul. YouTube Door Dash Reddit These are some of the most important tech companies in the world. But they didn't start out that way.
In the new season of Crucible Moments, a podcast by Sequoia Capital, host Rulof Bohta talks to the founders of these tech giants and others as they go beyond the creation myths and reflect on the make or break moments that shaped them. Tune into the new season of Crucible Moments and catch up on season one at CrucibleMoments.com or wherever you listen to podcasts. Listen to Crucible Moments today.
If you've been enjoying this podcast, here's a look into what else is happening at New York Magazine. I'm Corey Seagat, I'm an editor at New York Magazine. I'm talking with Madeline Lee Young Coleman. She's written for us about how we treat animals at the end of their lives, about the most difficult decisions that none of us ever want to make. And the big question we have is, who is this medical care for? Is it for them or is it sometimes for us? Hi Madeline. Hi Corey.
I'm really scared to talk about this topic on air because I don't want to start crying. That is the big hazard here for both of us. We will get very upset. As most people in America, we have had pets die and pets come and go and it's tough. It's true. And not only had them die, but had to make the decision about when they died. You said that Vets, a vet said to you like nine times out of ten, people have waited too long. Yeah, she says of the youth in Asia cases that she sees.
Nine times out of ten, it's someone who's waited too long, versus people who are bringing a pet into the youth and eyes who she doesn't think would need it. The phrase you bring up is a phrase we have all heard, which is the phrase you'll know when. But we clearly do not know when and both of us have not known when in our lives. How should people who are struggling with this know when?
There are actually some checklists that you can find online that basically help you evaluate your animal's quality of life. But ultimately, the only thing that actually prepares you to make the decision is having been through it before. You were calling vets and pet owners and asking them about animal death and end of life and all this terrible stuff. What was the one thing you heard that surprised you?
The person I talked to who used to work at a shelter found that when people would bring their dogs in to be youth and eyes, people who really love their dogs, but just couldn't afford to treat them or just need to put them down for whatever reason, they would all bring their dogs the same last meal. A McDonald's cheeseburger. You were kidding me. What? Every single person, she said basically, would bring into McDonald's cheeseburger for their dogs to eat. They can have chicken bones, finally.
That's all they want to eat is chicken bones. Let them have them. That's Madeline the Young Coleman and you can find her story on animals, ethics and death. In our print magazine in your own home, which you should subscribe to and receive there, or at nymag.com backslash lineup. That's nymag.com slash lineup.