When your niece revealed her father’s affair, you became the custodian of a truth that could detonate your entire family dynamic. It’s Feedback Friday!
And in case you didn’t already know it, Jordan Harbinger (@JordanHarbinger) and Gabriel Mizrahi (@GabeMizrahi) banter and take your comments and questions for Feedback Friday right here every week! If you want us to answer your question, register your feedback, or tell your story on one of our upcoming weekly Feedback Friday episodes, drop us a line at friday@jordanharbinger.com. Now let’s dive in!
On This Week’s Feedback Friday, We Discuss:
- Your niece found evidence that her father (your brother-in-law) is having an affair, putting you in an impossible position between family loyalty and moral responsibility. What do you do when every choice seems destined to hurt someone you care about, and the consequences could reshape your family forever?
- You’re teaching a college course where student feedback suggests you’re failing them with your outdated teaching methods and questionable content. As enrollment numbers plummet and department chairs circle, you face a choice between defending your academic freedom and adapting to modern educational expectations.
- You’ve always dreamed of inheriting your grandmother’s charming house, but family complications and your cousin’s competing claim have turned this potential windfall into a battlefield of resentment. As inheritance negotiations intensify, you’re discovering what truly matters might not be the property itself.
- You’ve realized you no longer love your wife after years of marriage, leaving you torn between honesty that could devastate her and a lifetime of emotional deception. As you contemplate separation, unexpected revelations force you to question everything you thought you knew about love, commitment, and what you really want.
- Recommendation of the Week: Let a stranger know how they’ve had a positive impact on you. (Witness this in action at the next point!)
- You were struggling with severe depression and contemplating ending your life when you discovered The Jordan Harbinger Show, which unexpectedly became your lifeline during your darkest moments. The insights and perspectives you gained through listening gradually pulled you back from the edge and transformed your outlook on life. After helping a few of your friends find their way through their own struggles, you’re looking to galvanize the urge for improvement in others. What can you do? [All of us here at the show are humbled and appreciate you for sharing your journey with us!]
- Have any questions, comments, or stories you’d like to share with us? Drop us a line at friday@jordanharbinger.com!
- Connect with Jordan on Twitter at @JordanHarbinger and Instagram at @jordanharbinger.
- Connect with Gabriel on Twitter at @GabeMizrahi and Instagram @gabrielmizrahi.
Like this show? Please leave us a review here — even one sentence helps! Consider leaving your Twitter handle so we can thank you personally!
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- The Moonshot Podcast: Listen here or wherever you find fine podcasts!
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Why do some people seem to thrive on the thrill of drama — even in situations that don’t warrant such an escalation? Listen to episode 836: Scott Lyons | Overcoming an Addiction to Drama here to learn more about this phenomenon and discover how to counteract its effects!
Resources from This Episode:
- Scott Payne | Infiltrating America’s Extremist Underworld | Jordan Harbinger
- Hangover Cures | Skeptical Sunday | Jordan Harbinger
- Why We Need to Stop Chasing Success and Start Enjoying Life | Tiny Buddha
- What Is a Trap Phone and What Is It Used For? | Burner
- How Keeping Secrets About Your Parent’s Infidelity Stresses Your Brain | Melissa Macomber
- Infidelity Treatment Patterns: A Practice-Based Evidence Approach | American Journal of Family Therapy
- Know Your Rights: Immigrants’ Rights | ACLU
- Stanford Course Evaluations and End-Term Student Feedback | Teaching Commons
- Collecting Student Feedback | University of Pittsburgh
- Frequent and Targeted Feedback: Evidence-Based Teaching | Indiana University Bloomington
- Is a Grandchild Entitled to Inheritance? | Burner Prudenti Law
- Tips for Discussing End-of-Life Wishes with Family | Willful
- 10 Signs You’re Falling Out of Love With Your Partner | Online Divorce
- Breakups and Suicide | Suicide.ca
- Gary Vaynerchuk | Leadership, Social Media, and Self-Awareness | Jordan Harbinger
- Separating Gracefully: How Couples Counseling Can Help | Connect Couples Therapy & Marriage Counseling
- Brad Meltzer | Website
- Access Your Hidden Network | Six-Minute Networking
- Dr. Ramani | Surviving and Recovering from Narcissistic Abuse | Jordan Harbinger
- Dr. Ramani | Identifying and Healing from Narcissistic People | Jordan Harbinger
- Dr. Ramani | How to Protect Yourself from a Narcissist Part One | Jordan Harbinger
- Dr. Ramani | How to Protect Yourself from a Narcissist Part Two | Jordan Harbinger
- Is It Possible to Assuage Narcissistic Rage? | Feedback Friday | Jordan Harbinger
- Should You Coexist with a Manchild Narcissist? | Feedback Friday | Jordan Harbinger
- Breaking Up with My Narcissistic Grandma | Feedback Friday | Jordan Harbinger
- Wendy Behary | Disarming the Narcissist | Jordan Harbinger
- Jane McGonigal | Gaming Your Way to Health and Happiness | Jordan Harbinger
- Looking Back on the Worst Chapter of My Life, Four Years On | Jordan Harbinger
1133: Should Mum Be the Word When Dad's a Cheating Turd? | Feedback Friday
This transcript is yet untouched by human hands. Please proceed with caution as we sort through what the robots have given us. We appreciate your patience!
[00:00:00] Jordan Harbinger: Welcome to Feedback Friday. I'm your host, Jordan Harbinger. As always, I'm here with my Feedback Friday producer, the guy who you knew this was coming back, the guy who's kaulu in my d Lulu, Gabriel Mizrahi. On The Jordan Harbinger Show, we decode the stories, secrets, and skills of the world's most fascinating people and turned their wisdom into practical advice that you can use to impact your own life and those around you.
Our mission is to help you become a better informed, more critical thinker. And during the week, we have long form conversations with a variety of amazing folks from neuroscientists, Russian chess, grand masters, tech moguls, tech luminaries, and astronauts. This week we had Scott Payne back on the show for a round two.
We talked about his undercover work with white power gangs. A lot of what he said actually was new for me. Turns out the KKK is still around, which kind of surprised me. Among other things. There's also gangs called Accelerationist, which just want the whole world to burn, which, you know, maybe they're winning.
I don't know. We also had a skeptical Sunday, last Sunday on hangover cures. On Fridays, though, we share stories, take listener letters, offer advice, play obnoxious sound bites, and dole out presumptuous advice to you folks like a couple of busybody, Lydia. Before we begin, something I've been thinking about lately, a lot of great opportunities get wasted chasing the idea of slightly better ones.
For example, would your career be more successful if you had taken that other job or you'd moved to a different city? Maybe. I think about this a lot actually, just from myself. But the job you have now will definitely suffer. If you don't give it a hundred percent of your focus and your effort, would you be 10% happier or more in some other relationship other than the one that you're in?
Whether it's or friendship, whatever it is, maybe who knows? But you're definitely gonna be unhappy in your relationships if you spend all of your time wondering what else is out there or lamenting something that you've lost in the past. Assuming that the relationship you're in right now is a good one.
Of course, the easiest way to end up worse off is to obsess over the paths that you didn't take instead of making the most of the one that you did every moment spent longing for a life you didn't choose is time that you're not putting into the life that you actually have. And that's not to say that you can't want other things or you can't change your life or whatever.
Of course you can. You should, in many cases. But when you want your life to be radically different from what it is, especially when you're not taking actions to create that life, you're just fantasizing or you're pining for something different, that's when you can easily miss the great people in situations and opportunities that are in front of you right now, which these usually become better when you embrace them and when you nurture them.
And it's funny 'cause I see this playing out in my own life. I have the kids jumping around me and I'm like, oh, I really need time to do this other thing. And I'm thinking, ah, I got my kids hanging out or eating together. They're throwing food at each other, jumping around on some mattress that I just unwrapped in the hallway.
This is really great. This is where I'm supposed to be right now. Not wishing I was in Lake Tahoe snowboarding. 'cause I'll be in Lake Tahoe snowboarding and then I'll be missing my kids. So that sort of on the macro scale is what I'm talking about here. And again, change is possible. Choices do definitely matter, but so does commitment.
And I really think that commitment wins in the end by a long shot. As always. We've got some fun ones. We've got some doozies. I cannot wait to dive in. Gabe, what is the first thing out of the mailbag?
[00:03:17] Gabriel Mizrahi: Hey, Jordan and Gabe. My oldest sister is married and has three kids. She and her husband have been together for over a decade.
He's been the brother we never had and an integral part of the family, but my oldest niece, his 15-year-old daughter, doesn't really get along with him. Her parents have been arguing a lot for a while and she says her dad speaks poorly of her mom. Then this morning she told me that she was using his old iPhone, which my niece calls the trap phone because she uses it without her parents' knowledge when she gets her phone taken away.
[00:03:48] Jordan Harbinger: That's funny.
[00:03:48] Gabriel Mizrahi: It has no sim card but is linked to her dad's Apple ID on the phone. My niece noticed that her dad downloaded Tinder and similar apps in March, 2024 and then again recently I. She sent me screenshots of everything and it checks out.
[00:04:04] Jordan Harbinger: Hang on one second. You know what's funny about this is I was thinking, oh man, it's signed into her dad's iCloud account.
She better be really careful that her dad doesn't notice what apps and things that she has downloaded on this other phone. And meanwhile she's like, well, I went into the purchase history that my dad probably doesn't even know existed. That's right. And I see that he's been installing dating apps and then failing.
[00:04:22] Gabriel Mizrahi: Not a liability for her. Definitely a liability for him.
[00:04:26] Jordan Harbinger: That's so funny. Somehow
[00:04:27] Gabriel Mizrahi: she knows how to use the trap phone. He does not.
[00:04:29] Jordan Harbinger: Yeah. She's like, it's a trap phone. Who's trapped now?
[00:04:33] Gabriel Mizrahi: She also saw that her dad has been watching a lot of porn. Oh, he had things favorited and even searched how to delete it.
Well, there's your answer. Oh boy. Finding out your dad watches porn on his phone and knowing which things he favorited is something no child should ever know about.
[00:04:50] Jordan Harbinger: Look, we can assume a lot of men watch porn on their phone, but when it's favorited, the names are right there in the favorites list. And she's like, what does this mean?
And it's, oh gosh. Oh wow. And you know, she clicked on one and was like, oh, that's what that is. Oh my God.
[00:05:05] Gabriel Mizrahi: Right. Oof. You don't want to have access to that part of your parents' lives. The porn thing isn't uncommon, but it is telling. My parents traumatized us when we were young by not keeping things in the bedroom when they were together.
My sister has been the most affected by that, as she remembers the most. As a result, she struggles to be affectionate. I. She doesn't wanna make people uncomfortable like my parents did. So he's probably looking for affection elsewhere.
[00:05:31] Jordan Harbinger: Interesting theory. Who knows though? I guess
[00:05:34] Gabriel Mizrahi: my niece and I agree that my sister should know about the cheating.
I hate that she's involved, but that ship has sailed. But she's afraid that her dad will hit her or her mom. I've never known him to be physical and I'd like to think he wouldn't dare. But if he does, it's not as simple as calling the cops. He would be deported, and I'm sure my sister wouldn't want that.
[00:05:56] Jordan Harbinger: So that is a dark Jordan idea, like where your head's at in terms of, of I feel seen, but I'd never pitch that for somebody who hasn't done something truly horrible. And before you tell me that abuse is horrible. I know so far though, this guy is just secretly watching porn and possibly slash probably cheating.
Not okay by any means, but not in my opinion, bad enough to ruin his life over in my view. Not bad enough to deprive your niece of a father and you don't know him to be physically abusive, so let's maybe not play the ice card just yet.
[00:06:31] Gabriel Mizrahi: Should my niece tell her mom the news? Do I tell my sister with my niece?
If I do, I fear my sister would be even more uncomfortable. What should we do? Signed charting this map alone after my brother-in-law's rep was blown by this incriminating trap phone.
[00:06:47] Jordan Harbinger: Oh man, what a mess. I'm very sorry that you and your niece are in this position knowing more about your brother-in-law than your sister does.
That's super uncomfortable. It puts you in a tough spot, but I'm especially sorry for your niece. She should not know this much about her parents' private lives. I feel terrible. She's sitting on this information that she's caught in the middle at her age. It's gotta be very weird and confusing for her, and I'm sure that's doing a number on her.
In addition to watching her parents argue, hearing her dad speak poorly about her mom's is all very sad. Even if he isn't physically abusive, the fact that she's afraid he might go there, just that fear is pretty upsetting. It does make me wonder if she's seen him get physical before or maybe behave in a way that suggests he's capable of that, or who knows, maybe she's just scared and imagining the worst and he's relatively harmless.
Either way, your sister's gonna find out about all of this one way or another, and it shouldn't fall to her daughter to break the news to her. You're the adult here. You're her sibling, you're her friend. So I'm afraid that it makes it your responsibility to break the news to her. And if you could use some help in delivering the news, having another close family member there, a mutual friend, that's also an option.
But I would not tell her with your niece. She just should not play any part in this conversation. She's still a child. The greatest gift you could give her is to let her stay one as much as is possible at this point, although I understand she's the one who found out, so she's gonna be involved to some degree there.
Obviously gonna talk about it, but it doesn't mean she should be the one to tell her mom that dad is cheating on her and watching porn, and this is the kind of porn he's into, and all that stuff that's just totally inappropriate.
[00:08:24] Gabriel Mizrahi: I have a close friend who, when she was a teenager, she found out that her father was having an affair and she and her brother had to break the news to their mother, and the parents ended up divorcing and it was a very painful time for all of them.
It's still very painful actually, for the whole family. He left them for another woman, a younger woman, and they got together and then that relationship was kind of messy and then that fell apart and it was just really bad. I think this is gonna be traumatic for your niece no matter what, but I'm with Jordan.
There are ways to make it less traumatic for her, and the main one is telling your sister yourself and sparing your niece that conversation.
[00:08:59] Jordan Harbinger: Agreed. So that's what I would do. And then you have to let your sister decide how she wants to handle this. She might leave him, she might decide to stay with him and work on things.
That's up to them. I think you have to give her space to handle this. However, she wants to support her in whatever way she feels she needs. But look, if this escalates, if your brother-in-law does turn out to be physically abusive, for example. Then I would consider calling the police or calling CPS, of course.
And if that means he might get deported, well maybe that's a risk people take when they break the law, but that's a very different calculation from calling ice on him before he's done something truly dangerous. That just seems unnecessary and unfair. I'm very sorry that things have played out this way.
It is super awkward and sad, but this is what's happening and your niece is gonna have to find her own way of healing from this childhood, her own stance on her parents. The best thing you can do besides protecting her from this tough conversation is staying close with her being a safe person for her to talk to, supporting her, helping her make sense of all this and enjoy her last few years of childhood.
I'm sure her relationship with you is gonna be one of those things that allows her to survive this tough chapter and hopefully grow into a happy, healthy, well adjusted adult. Sending you all a big hug and wishing you all the best, man. Now I want you to use your trap phone to creep on the pornographic good deals, on the fine products and services that support this show.
We'll be right back. This episode is sponsored in part by the Moonshot Podcast. If you're into big ideas, wild innovations, and the kind of tech that sounds impossible until it's not, you need to check out The Moonshot Podcast. In this 10 episode limited series, they'll give you a behind the scenes look into Alphabet's Moonshot Factory, AKA, Google X, where some of the most game changing tech of the past 15 years is born.
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Find it wherever you get your podcasts. This episode is also sponsored by Bear Mattress. It's easy to assume a mattress is just a mattress. Until we got a bear mattress, I did not realize how much of a difference quality mattress makes until this one showed up. Not to sound dramatic, but this is hands down the nicest mattress that I've ever laid on.
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[00:12:10] Jen Harbinger: Go to bear mattress.com and use promo code harbinger at checkout to get 40 person off site wide. This offer is not available anywhere else.
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[00:12:30] Jordan Harbinger: Thank you for listening and supporting the show. All the deals, discount codes, and ways to support the podcast are searchable and clickable on the deals page.
Jordan harbinger.com/deals. Now back to feedback Friday.
[00:12:43] Gabriel Mizrahi: Okay, what's next? Dear Jordan and Gabe, two years ago in my early sixties, I quit my teaching job at a private high school and became an adjunct professor at a large community college teaching English and English as a second language. I absolutely love this work despite the huge pay cut, and I've been trying to learn and do as much as I possibly can to make up for lost time.
I've taken tons of online training and professional development classes, including course design. I've made an effort to meet people in person and create connections within my department. I co-facilitated a recent training on inclusion, and I've joined several committees and even designed a newsletter for one of them.
My goal is to get hired as a full-time professor before I'm too old to think straight.
[00:13:28] Jordan Harbinger: Okay. I love this way to hustle and look for ways to be of value. This is exactly the spirit that makes people indispensable and gets them hired. You sound like an amazing employee. Also, congrats on being able to think straight in your early sixties.
I'm 45 and it some days I'm like, how does this microwave thing work? I don't get it.
[00:13:46] Gabriel Mizrahi: What do you mean the microwave? Do you just open it and put the food inside of it?
[00:13:49] Jordan Harbinger: Yeah. In my defense, this thing has 20 buttons and it has to come outta the wall first. It's really nuts. I wanna be able to talk to it and tell it what to do instead of fricking programming it in Python or whatever.
Okay.
[00:14:00] Gabriel Mizrahi: You need a voice activated AI kitchen appliance. That's what you need.
[00:14:03] Jordan Harbinger: Yeah, exactly. Plus, I wouldn't be so lonely all the time.
[00:14:06] Gabriel Mizrahi: Yeah. That you would be significantly less sad as a human being. Here's my dilemma. I'm currently teaching a class that is prepackaged, which means somebody in the department designed the curriculum and lessons.
While the content itself is fine, I've had to do major overhauls of the course materials. So that the students can make sense of the class. I can't tell you how many times I've opened an attachment for one of these courses and found badly formatted, confusing, or even unreadable documents. There are almost never examples given of what to do, so I often provide them myself.
The directions are vague, wordy, and have no links to the materials needed to complete them. I often see students coming in frustrated out of their minds because they don't understand what they're supposed to do. This is unacceptable to me. My students deserve better. Students at community colleges are already at a much higher risk of dropping out than students at four year institutions.
If they saw how much care has been put into course design, they would be much more inclined to engage with the material and learn something. I. I like and respect my bosses, all of whom either helped design or approved these courses. I'm torn between my ambition and my genuine love and concern for the quality of the education we're giving this vulnerable population.
How can I tell my bosses that we aren't serving our students well By giving them material like this and that I have folders full of edited materials that would make things so much better. How can I bring this up without jeopardizing my chances of going full time signed listening to my idealistic notions without messing up my promotion?
PS also, if you can work the phrase hundo P into a sentence on the podcast sometime soon, I would be eternally grateful. I almost peed myself laughing the last time you said it. And then I tried it out on my adult kids and the death glares they gave me
made me laugh even harder. Oh, so you, uh, you hundo peed your pants? Is that what happened? Yeah. Nice.
[00:16:03] Jordan Harbinger: Yeah. Oh, I can see the kids are just like, no, we're not doing this. Great question. This is something, by the way, that every professional has to worry about at some point, how to balance honesty with politics.
Basically, those two are always gonna be in intentioned. This is always a tricky dance, but I do have some thoughts on this. First of all, just to build on what I said a moment ago, you are an absolute rockstar, my friend, what you've brought to your new job, how you've invested in yourself in other people built relationships.
It's remarkable. And to do that in your early sixties when a lot of people are just checking out, you're checking in, I, I love it. You're literally a case study for reinventing yourself later in life and all of that six minute networking.com stuff. So kudos to you. The other benefit of doing all that is you're building up capital at this place.
A colleague who shows up the way you are is in a much better position to give feedback and for that feedback to be taken well. So there's a world where offering some thoughts on these course materials might not jeopardize you as much as you think. So let's talk about a few ways that you can say some hard things without it backfiring.
The first thing I want you to know is the fact that you're approaching all of this in a spirit of genuine love for your students, a genuine concern for the quality of education you're providing them. That is fantastic. It's very pure. It's extremely moving. It's impossible to argue with. That's gonna make a huge difference in how people hear this feedback.
They're gonna be infected by that spirit. So part of your job is staying emotionally connected to that purpose and communicating that purpose to other people if slash when you have these chats. The other benefit of framing things in this way is it shifts the conversation from one of criticism to one of solutions.
If you approach these conversations from that place, not from a place of, ah, these course materials, they suck. I know better, or you're failing our students. But from a place of look, I wanna serve our students as well as possible. I take great pride in the education we offer. Here are a few ways we can do that better.
You have a good shot of getting these colleagues on board. This is where you do have to be a little political. You gotta be thoughtful about how you frame things. I would not say, guys, these course materials you created, they are terrible. Our students hate 'em. They're totally lost or need to fix them, or people are gonna hate us.
I don't even know what your hell you're trying to say in these attachments. I'd say something like, Hey, listen guys, I love what you've done with the course materials. You allowed me to walk into this job with a great foundation. I am grateful for that. I have noticed a few sticking points and gaps in the materials that are making the course hard for my students.
I. I've been playing with some solutions that seem to be working, I'd love to share them with you. Maybe we can talk about building them into the materials so the curriculum can just get better and better. Because I'm sure we all agree that our goal is to make English as accessible as possible for our students.
We all want them to succeed, something like that. Just a little grace sensitivity acknowledgement. They really do go a long way in making the medicine go down smoother. And Gabe, I think when you design a course and it kind of sucks, you know that it sucks and you're like, okay, this needs work. But I'm done with it for now.
So if somebody comes in and goes, I'd like to fill in the gaps, usually, unless you're an egomaniac, you probably would be like, oh, thank you. Because we threw this together. We didn't have that much time, we didn't have that many resources. We always meant to come back to it. And here we are.
[00:19:12] Gabriel Mizrahi: Yeah, most people are grateful for the help and they're like, man, help me take this across the finish line for sure.
And by the way, everything you just said, I don't think that's just politicking. This person said that she likes and respects her bosses, which is awesome. So this is really actually just communicating that appreciation, that respect before she delivers the harder news so that they feel that she sees all of them.
You guys have done a great job and there's something to work on. It's not just, here are your mistakes. We need to fix them.
[00:19:39] Jordan Harbinger: Exactly. It's not just performative, it's meaningful. But look, I can't tell you for sure when exactly you should have this conversation. There's so many variables at play here. The personalities of the people involved, the rules and customs of your college.
It's hiring practices, your relationships, your reputation. There's a world where maybe you don't speak up about the course materials until they give you a full-time offer, okay? Or you don't go all the way until you get the offer. You give your feedback in smaller chunks and see how it goes. Keep making these informal adjustments on your own.
And then when you get hired full-time and you have a little bit more security and deeper relationships, then you give your big pitch. You're gonna have to read the tea leaves and listen to your gut there. You know better than we do. But here's what I know for sure. When you deliver tough feedback to people, when you give them total honesty, but you do it in a spirit of genuine love and excitement, which you clearly are.
These conversations are rarely as risky as they seem. They can still be daunting, but the chances that they're gonna blow up in your face are much lower. And if they do blow up in your face, it's usually because the people you're giving the feedback to are not willing to take it in. They can't meet you in that same spirit, which is always a possibility.
But then kindness, respectfulness, graciousness, how well you communicate your why. All of that can even transform poor reactions over time. So I hope that gives you some new approaches here. Ultimately, I have a feeling your new colleagues will be grateful for the feedback because who wouldn't want a coworker like you?
You're giving them a massive gift with these changes to the materials. As long as you position them in the right way, they're lucky to have you. Your students are lucky to have you. You're exactly the kind of person who should be in education, and I thank you for it. And again, just a brilliant case study of how effective and productive and courageous a person can be a little bit later in life.
You're an inspiration, my friend. Good luck. You can reach us friday@jordanharbinger.com. Please keep your emails concise. Try to use a descriptive subject line that makes our job a lot easier. If there's an unstable, violent person targeting you and your family, you're trying to track down an ancient family member who's been hidden away, or you're wondering how to support a grandiose spouse's dreams, whatever's got you staying up at night lately, hit us up friday@jordanharbinger.com.
We're here to help and we keep every email anonymous. Speaking of help, our newsletter wee bit wiser is something that's bite-sized and practical every week, most Wednesdays. If you wanna keep up with the wisdom from our thousand plus episodes and apply it to your life, I invite you to come check it out.
You can sign up at Jordan harbinger.com/news. Alright, what's next?
[00:22:09] Gabriel Mizrahi: Dear Jordan and Gabe, this is a long one, so I'll just cut to the chase. I'm 24. I live in Michigan and I want my grandma's house during the holidays, she very subtly expressed that she thinks she may not have another Christmas. We've all been quietly anticipating this for years.
Her 80th birthday was just a couple weeks ago. This is the first time she's recognized her own mortality, at least to her family. We joke that she acts like she's 20 and still in college. Her house needs some updates, but it's been in the family for decades and there's a family cemetery on the land. The house is old enough that it can be entered into a register of historical buildings, which would prevent changes to the exterior.
My grandma hasn't entered it yet, but she might. We don't know. She doesn't talk about it. I would prefer she doesn't. As renovations might become more difficult, clearly the house should stay in the family. I truly think that I would be a good fit to inherit it as I have the time, energy, and resources. To restore it and be a good steward of the family legacy.
I'm the only grandchild who's still in the area and hasn't bought a house of their own yet. Some grandmas lose their filter as they age and will happily have a chat about any topic in the world. That's not my grandma. She's very old fashioned and generally likes to keep her personal affairs private.
She doesn't like to have big conversations, at least not with her grandchildren. Nobody in my family knows what she plans to do with a house in her will. She might leave it to my aunt or one of my uncles. They would probably support me in taking ownership as their well established in their own homes and don't want the responsibility of repairing the old house, but I'd probably have to buy it from them.
Reducing my resources for renovations. There might also be disagreement among the aunts and uncles as to what should be done with it if it isn't explicitly in the will. The last thing I want to do is cause a rift in my family because of this property. If I can talk to my grandma, bring up how I wanna stay in the area and how I can care for the house, I do think she'll agree to leave it.
To me. Getting that conversation started is my hurdle. How do I bring this up with my grandma? If I can confirm with her that she will leave the house to me, what's the best way for me to go about and inheriting it? Should I ask her to put it in a trust? Should I consult with a financial advisor, lawyer or another professional signed angling for this gift so I can give our family house a facelift?
[00:24:34] Jordan Harbinger: Okay. Interesting. So first of all, I hear you that you would be a good steward of your grandma's house. You'd continue the family legacy. You could really use the help. All fair? I hear that. I'm also just wrapping my head around the fact that you're basically talking about circumventing your whole family, including presumably your own parents and apparently your cousins, and trying to become the beneficiary of this inheritance, which is delicate.
To put it lightly. Play this out. Say you managed to talk to your grandma, she engages with you. She decides that yes, you should get the house, and then at some point she dies. Then you inherit the house and the rest of the family finds out that she listed you as the beneficiary in her will without telling anyone else, even if she tells them in advance.
Although it doesn't sound like that's her style, then that drama plays out while she is still alive. Either way, that's gonna raise eyebrows, probably ruffle feathers, all the things because her kids who again, include your own parents, they would be the obvious beneficiaries of any assets. And knowing what I know about how contentious these inheritances can be when they're not done properly, I just don't see this going well whatsoever.
Look, this was a little bit different in my family, right? Gabe, my parents, they grew up in Detroit. My grandma had eight kids and by the time my grandma was a little bit senile going to nursing homes and stuff like that, it was my dad and her sisters who lived in Michigan. And everybody who lived far away or was a little bit too old, they were just kinda like, you handle it.
And my dad and my aunt handled it. And when she passed away. My dad was like, okay, I'm gonna sell the house and split it among everyone, and they were like, cool. But it was worth like two grand. It was really, it's in Detroit for God's sake. I don't even know if they have electricity and water in that neighborhood now.
So this was like a hot potato. This sounds like the opposite kind of situation where unless everybody gets along really well, it's gonna be hard enough even for the kids to deal with it, let alone like why did she give this to one grandkid? There's no scenario in which this turns out without pissing everyone off.
[00:26:35] Gabriel Mizrahi: It's very messy and I think he's underestimating how much people are gonna have an interest in how the assets get divided.
[00:26:41] Jordan Harbinger: Also, did they not grow up in that house? So they're just not gonna have any say over their childhood home?
[00:26:46] Gabriel Mizrahi: His stance on this is that they're not gonna care. They're already established, which might be true, but also I could see that not being true.
I think everybody probably wants a piece of the assets, right?
[00:26:55] Jordan Harbinger: Yeah. Look, for me personally, if I had a couple of brothers and my parents were like, we're leaving you the house, I would be like, you guys handle this? Yeah, I'm established. Maybe one of 'em needs the money more. Maybe they still live in Michigan and I live in California.
That doesn't seem to be the case here, right? She's not saying everybody lives in Oklahoma and this is still in Michigan and I'm the only one here. That's not what's going on here. Anyway, the responsible way to do this, the respectful way to do this, is to make this a family conversation. You've gotta get your parents and their siblings together.
Don't try and get your parents to fight for this, to advocate for you here. You gotta get the other grandkids, you gotta put everyone on one email, thread something, and then you talk about the house. You say that you love it, you want it to stay in the family. You'd be honored to restore it and be the steward of the family legacy.
And you're curious to know if her children know whether grandma has a will, has her affairs in order, and if so, who is set to inherit the house, what their plans for it are, whether they'd be open to a conversation about you being involved in some way, whether that means helping with the renovations or becoming a co-owner down the road or buying it outright.
And if they don't know what the will situation is, why and what are they doing about that? Or if everyone's open to it, talking to grandma about potentially leaving it to you. Although I would not lead with that idea because I think it would be way too self-serving and obvious. What you want is to start a conversation about making sure that grandma's affairs are all in order, because that's the right thing to do regardless, which look, even that's a delicate conversation because your aunts and uncles might be like, why are you so interested?
What's with you in the house? Really? This is primarily between your grandma and her kids. I know you said they'd probably support you in taking ownership of the house, but you don't know that for sure. I'm afraid that's probably a little naive. I don't know anybody who doesn't want to inherit an asset that is rightfully theirs.
Even if it's a bit of a headache and they're just gonna sell it. So actually there's a precursor to this conversation where you just ask your parents or a few of your aunts and uncles, Hey, I know grandma doesn't really like to talk about this stuff, but she mentioned that she's not sure how long she's gonna be around and I just wanted to make sure.
Are you guys on top of the estate stuff? Do you guys have a lawyer? Is there a plan for the house? And just find out first, and look. Gabriel, tell me what you think here. I'm a fan of the parable where you say something like, I'm only asking because a friend of a friend, their grandmother died and she didn't have a will and it was this big mess and it was in court and it was really expensive.
I just thought, does grandma have a will? I've never heard anything about it. It's not really any of my business, but I'm just curious. You don't have to have a real friend of a friend. I like to illustrate the consequences for me. I can say, Hey, as an attorney here, I'm thinking with my lawyer brain, does your mom have an estate that's all set?
Because a lot of people wait till the last minute and you don't wanna do that if you're not a lawyer. It's harder to do that. She might not have a will, and she's not telling anybody, or she's not handling her estate properly, and she's like, ah, it's not my problem. I'm gonna be dead. I know a lot of people like that too, and it's just creating a mess of headache and a potential battle for her kids when she goes, which is not cool and is a terrible situation and can do serious damage inside families.
So I would casually ask your parents what the deal is. If they're like, yeah, she has that all squared away, we just don't know the details, then at least you can rest easy, that the house won't fall into probate or whatever. And you might also know that getting the house is just not an option. And if they're like, no, we have no idea if she has a will.
It's funny you mention that. We just all talked about that. We're all concerned. Mom's making it really hard. She's probably putting it off. Then you have much more license to say, okay, yeah, I'm really concerned about that, because this could turn into a huge mess. You guys need to sort this out. It's time to talk to grandma, hire a lawyer, make sure the house is in the will and all that.
And I'm happy to help if you'd like. What I'm getting at is there's a much more important conversation to be had here and getting your grandma to give you the house, not a kosher move to make. Not right now. I'm actually a little surprised that you're thinking of doing this given that you said that the last thing you wanna do is cause a rift in your family.
I'm not accusing you of being a bad person or an a-hole here. I think it's naivete maybe. But I promise you that secretly scheming to get her to leave you the house that is almost definitely gonna cause a rift. It's gonna cause problems for you. It's gonna cause problems for your parents most likely.
And, and now look, if you guys have a conversation as a family about this and your parents and your aunts and your uncles are all like, yeah, I don't want the house. Oh my God, we'll sell it and we'll each get $20,000 'cause it is Michigan. Although, again, this seems unlikely, but if they're somehow all cool with you inheriting it, that's a different story.
Then it's all on the up and up. Although it doesn't really solve the problem of your cousins, the other grandkids, they might want a piece of the house too. So I appreciate that you'd be a great steward of the family legacy. I get that you have the time and the resources to restore it. I know it's tempting because you're the only grandchild who's in the area.
You don't have a house of your own yet. But unfortunately, that is not enough to justify this strategy. And my advice really is to focus on empowering your parents and their siblings to plan ahead as much as possible. That's responsible. That's appropriate. It does benefit you too, indirectly, and if there's a conversation to be had about playing a bigger role in the house, you can have it then, but you're gonna have to be much more thoughtful about the rules and the optics here, Gabe, I know he said, oh, I could probably buy it, but then I would've less money to restore it.
If it's your family, ask him for a really cush payment plan. Hey, I, I don't have enough money to buy it and restore it. I'd love to restore it and then pay you guys. Each a thousand dollars a year, they might not care, but you can't do it in some sort of shady, backroom way.
[00:32:14] Gabriel Mizrahi: Speaking of shady, backroom ways of dealing with things, I'm just marveling at how much this family struggles to talk about.
Really important stuff.
[00:32:21] Jordan Harbinger: Yeah, it's fascinating and some of it might come from grandma who never talks about anything. She raised all these kids who might also not talk about anything important.
[00:32:29] Gabriel Mizrahi: Good point. She doesn't talk about her mortality, she doesn't talk about her plans. She doesn't like to have big conversations.
She hasn't even told anyone if she's entered the house in the historical registry, which is like not a controversial thing to share. So there are some very important things happening here, some important practical matters that impact the entire family that are just not really being properly addressed.
Now, our friend here is thinking of doing something similar by trying to talk to his grandma directly instead of starting a conversation with the whole family. I just find that. I don't know. It's interesting.
[00:32:57] Jordan Harbinger: Yeah. You know, you're right. This sort of, let's not face this head on, seems to run in the family somehow, which is normal.
I'm getting the sense this really is the family way and the problem with that is when nobody's talking openly, there's all this secrecy that a tactic like this, it might feel like fair game or the easiest way to handle it, but he might just be dealing with the same avoidances as grandma and it's gonna blow up later.
That's the problem always. So go talk to your family, encourage them to get on top of this estate stuff, gently push them to have the important conversations they need to have with your grandma. That's the right thing to do. That's your role here for now. Good luck and hey, I hope you get the house, but I hope you do it in the right way.
If open, genuine communication doesn't work, you can always bribe your family. With the fine products and services that support this show, we'll be right back. This episode is sponsored in part by NPRs up first podcast. Trying to keep up with the news these days is exhausting and can often result in doom scrolling through social media.
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[00:36:48] Gabriel Mizrahi: Hi, Jordan and Gabe. I've been married to my wife for 10 years.
We've been together for 15, and we have one kid together. We also have one child each from previous relationships, but there have been a number of incidents that make me question if I married the right person. Five years ago, we had a business that was losing money. I asked her for an exit strategy or some criteria that would trigger us to close the business.
But she was easily irritated when I brought this up. She explained that we should have a never say die attitude and shouldn't entertain the idea of closing, which led to us losing money. Luckily, the pandemic happened and that forced us to close it down. Second, we're living with my stepdaughter, who I consider my own in 2020.
My son from my previous relationship tried to live with us and he said that he felt that my wife doesn't like him. He's constantly being criticized, and after a couple of weeks he decided to move back in with his mom. Third, my wife has some depression and is dealing with it with medication and therapy.
She's gotten better, but she gets easily irritated or frustrated. That's led me to not tell her things and just keep my feelings to myself. The resentment then builds to the point that I feel like I don't love her anymore. Oh, wow. Over the past few years, I've become attracted to a few other people, but I feel depressed that I can't pursue them because I'm married.
My wife constantly complains that she doesn't feel special anymore. She always reminds me of my shortcomings, like not posting her on social media as much as she wants, even though I do post here and there and not taking her on dates. I find it hard to do all of those things because I don't feel anything for her anymore, but I don't know how to start a conversation with her because of her emotional instability.
She's told me multiple times that if I ever leave her, she'll kill herself. Wow. I've also come to love my stepdaughter and I'm not prepared to see my son 50% of the time. I've been trying to work on this for five years with no progress. I feel like I'm trapped. How long should I try before the feelings come back, or how do I know how to stop trying?
What if she does indeed kill herself? Signed debating whether to leave here when my wife might no longer wanna be here.
[00:39:06] Jordan Harbinger: Oh boy. Okay. There's a lot going on here.
[00:39:09] Gabriel Mizrahi: So much in this
[00:39:10] Jordan Harbinger: letter. So look, I'm very sorry that you and your wife have ended up here. I'm even sorry that your wife is struggling in all these ways and that it's affected your son as well, that you find it hard to be fully honest with her.
This is a challenging partner to have. It sounds like she's in a lot of pain and it really just breaks my heart for all of you. Honestly. I'm also very sorry that leaving would come at a cost, quite a big cost. Let's come back to that in just a moment. So I understand why you feel trapped and feeling trapped in a relationship is an awful feeling.
That's obviously not how a marriage should feel. So look, you said you've been trying to work on this for five years with no progress. I guess my question is, how have you been trying? Are you having open and productive talks with your wife? It doesn't sound like it. Are you going to couples therapy? You didn't mention that, so I'm assuming you guys are not there.
You said that her tendency to get irritated and frustrated, that's made you not tell her things and you just keep your feelings to yourself, which I can understand why, but I can't imagine that creates many opportunities for you guys to really work on things. And to be fair, it sounds like that's a function of her mood, her patterns, but it also sounds like it's a result of you maybe cramping around them to keep things on an even keel.
You're probably both playing a role in all of this, but another part of me wants to say, damn, it's been five years of this and there doesn't seem to be much willingness on either of your parts to work on anything you say. You don't feel anything for her anymore. So is that just the end of the story?
'cause look, can people come back from that feeling? Sure it's possible. I think it's probably pretty unlikely. And if you guys are gonna work on this in a meaningful way by really digging in and doing the work together, there has to be some minimal level of investment, some baseline love there. And I tend to think you kind of have a window in a relationship where you can save things.
And based on what you've shared, it sounds like that window has closed, at least for you. That's what I'm hearing, but only you can know that for sure. But honestly, even if you were still in that window, even if there were still some love there, even if you were largely to blame for the state of your marriage, there's still one huge issue here, which is she's threatening to kill herself if he leaves, she's threatening to kill herself if he leaves.
I don't know how a person is supposed to stay in a relationship and be happy if that's the case. This is a very disturbing form of manipulation. It's very sad that your wife feels that way. That's gotta speak to just how much she's struggling right now. Possibly. How desperate to keep you close. We can't know her true intentions in saying that, but I'm guessing it's a little bit of all the above.
But I do think you know that it is not fair to you whatsoever. Not only is she putting her mental health, her desire to live on you, she's also preloading you with a ton of guilt about leaving, which again, I have to just imagine is a way to keep you in the marriage. So this is complicated. It's complicated for her.
She has a lot to work through in therapy. I sincerely hope she and her therapist are getting into all of this stuff. Although whether she's actually able to make progress is a whole other question. And it's complicated for you because if you choose to leave, you have to be willing to accept a timeline where she does, in fact follow through on this threat, which is very sad.
It's very dark, it's very scary. So I really feel for you on the upside, you won't have to share custody. Sorry. No, I'm, I'm trying to keep it light. Crawl back in
[00:42:27] Gabriel Mizrahi: your hole Dark Jordan. Geez, what a dark turn that took at the last moment. Yeah, dude, this is intense. I share that view. Here's what you need to understand my friend.
Oh boy. This is a hard one. You are not. Ultimately responsible for anyone else's experience. Certainly not their basic desire to stay alive, even if they are your spouse. And if your wife ever did take her own life, which I genuinely hope she never does, but apparently it's a possibility you need to remember.
That would be her choice. That would be her response to this whole situation. And as hard as it is to really take this in and live with this, my feeling is that you can't live your life in such a way to keep your partner in tact in these fundamental ways that are ultimately her responsibility. She needs to take care of herself with her therapist's help.
You can, and you should support her in doing that. And you obviously play a big role in her experience because you're her husband. I'm not saying you should go out of your way to hurt her or just straight up abandon her. I'm not saying that at all. But you cannot live your life in service of protecting another person all the time, because ultimately I don't think you are protecting her.
You're not protecting her by biting your tongue when she gets irritated and frustrated. I don't know if you're protecting her by staying in a marriage that you don't wanna be in because you are afraid she might not wanna stay alive. As tragic as that is, and I know that's a very intense thing to say and to wrap your head around, I imagine that it might feel selfish and cruel and maybe dangerous because it's such a different stance from the one that you've been taking with her for the last five plus years, 10 years, 15 years, maybe your whole life with other people.
But that's where that healthy separation has to come into play. You gotta recognize that you are your person and she is her person. And there's also a lot of grief to that, you know, grief that you can't on your own, make her better. And there's the grief also of potentially going your separate ways and seeing your children may be a little bit less, and possibly, I really hope this never comes to pass, but possibly the grief of losing her if she ever did decide to go through with this, which again, I sincerely hope she does not do, but that is really hard.
If you're not willing to at least risk experiencing that grief, which is always part of change, then I'm afraid you're gonna stay stuck in this situation.
[00:44:53] Jordan Harbinger: I am too. And honestly, Gabe, we are being very delicate here as we should be, but dark Jordan, or at least less delicate Jordan, he wants to go, dude. The second your partner threatens to kill themselves, if you leave, get out because that person is unhealthy and unstable and manipulating you, and this cannot be good.
[00:45:10] Gabriel Mizrahi: I get that. I also know that he is in the process of coming to terms with what that exactly means. He's learning to become the kind of person who can stay firm in the face of a threat like that. And by the way, this might just be a threat. She might be speaking abstractly, it might be a tactic, or it might just be an expression of how she feels these days.
And it's not something that's actually gonna come to pass that doesn't make it not meaningful. But let's just remember that it doesn't necessarily mean that she would go through with this, but the cost is high. It's not just the end of his marriage and the end of a chapter in his life. It's also what it means for their kids.
He didn't say this, Jordan, but I wonder if he's also afraid of what his kids, especially his stepdaughter, what they would think if he left and then she did spiral. And what if she did ever follow through on this plan? He said he loves his stepdaughter like she's his own. I imagine that would be devastating.
You know, how do you feel if you cause your step child's parent to hurt themselves or something like that? So. I understand the predicament he's in. This is really tough,
[00:46:08] Jordan Harbinger: eh? Look, I get it. I really do. I'm not minimizing any of that. I understand he needs some time, although let's also remember it's been five years of this.
Five years doesn't sound like that long of a time. But then I realize I have a 5-year-old kid, I'm like, man, he can do math for God's sake. But to me, threatening to take your own life if somebody leaves you, it's just so extreme. It's so revealing of a problem that is ultimately hers. I just can't imagine sticking around.
Maybe I'm an a-hole.
[00:46:36] Gabriel Mizrahi: No. Uh, you're right. And if you say that to a partner and you don't go, huh, I wonder why I would want to take my own life if we ever broke up. I need to go work on that. I need to figure that out. Maybe that's part of the problem in our marriage and the fact that she's kind of laying that at his feet and then not doing anything.
She might be talking about this in therapy and that's a big question mark for me, what kind of work they're doing there. To your point. Just to lay that at your partner's feet without making it part of yourself work is dicey.
[00:47:01] Jordan Harbinger: Dicey. By the way, we didn't even touch on the other detail about the business they ran together.
Oh yeah. How it was losing money and she's like, no, you never say die. Terrible idea, by the way, the whole never give up in business is some of the worst advice you can give or give. That led to them losing money. Of course, I hear that and I'm like, okay, here's a woman who's very defiant, very headstrong, very committed to sticking with something that isn't working.
Probably possibly watches too many YouTube videos from Gary Vaynerchuk, but this compromised them in the process, and it's kind of ironic because she was so committed to the business, but she doesn't seem to be committed to her life. You'd think somebody who's suicidal would've been different to the business, but she's very invested there and seemingly not nearly as invested in, I dunno, taking care of herself to the point where she could survive a divorce literally.
[00:47:46] Gabriel Mizrahi: Interesting observation. It is curious. I think we would need to know a lot more about her, but what I'm hearing in that detail is someone who might struggle to acknowledge failure or even weakness who might experience that as like a near fatal blow.
[00:48:01] Jordan Harbinger: Yeah. Which explains why she'd rather lose money than admit that something they created is not working
[00:48:05] Gabriel Mizrahi: right.
Might be a metaphor for their entire
[00:48:07] Jordan Harbinger: marriage.
[00:48:08] Gabriel Mizrahi: I don't know. Look, her personality might be more headstrong than resilient. Good distinction. Those are two different things, right? Doubling down and insisting that something will work. Or not being willing to admit that something's not quite working. That's not always strong, right.
That's inflexible and that's often actually a form of weakness. But being willing to admit, okay, something isn't working here. We either need to make some changes or we need to close the business and try something new. That actually requires greater strength. It requires a willingness to bear the wound of struggling, of potentially failing.
You gotta be durable. You have to have a capacity for that discomfort. And also the ability to separate your professional accomplishments from your basic sense of worthiness, which I also wonder if she struggles with, which maybe that was also in the mix. So I'm connecting a few dots here. We don't know her again, but if any of that is true, then I could see those qualities playing out in other areas of her life and her marriage, in her mental health.
Again, in her basic willingness to stay alive if she ever goes through a big loss,
[00:49:11] Jordan Harbinger: I could totally see that. 'cause in a way, that business thing is a footnote compared to all the suicidality, but it's all connected. And you're right. How she relates to the business, how she feels the business is a reflection of her that's gotta mirror how she feels about.
A lot of the other parts of her life, including our friend here. I hope that gives you some new angles here. Obviously, I don't think this marriage is healthy or sustainable, but that doesn't necessarily mean it's game over. But if there's a way forward, you're both gonna have to have some very real conversations.
Your wife is gonna have to confront these parts of herself. You are gonna have to stop cramping around her to avoid them. The one big upside to giving it a go. You'll know for sure whether you guys are willing to do that, and if you're not, then maybe you'll feel more secure in your decision to leave.
But I'm afraid that's where this is heading regardless, and that's where you really need to be willing to live with the consequences and remember which ones you are responsible for and which ones you're not sending you, your wife and your kids. A big hug and wishing you all the best. Alright, now for the recommendation of the week,
[00:50:09] JHS Clip: I am addicted to lit fella.
[00:50:13] Gabriel Mizrahi: My recommendation of the week is a little different this week. It's not a product, it's not a service. It's just a thing you can do. It's an experience. And that experience is telling people you don't know personally how they have impacted you. So I'm always really touched when people write me on Instagram or in the feedback Friday inbox and they're like, Hey, I listened to the show.
I've listened for this long. It means so much to me. I learned this thing, even two sentences, like really touches me. And I think a lot of people assume that the people they appreciate or follow or admire or whatever, whether it's an author or a speaker or somebody important in their industry, whatever it is, that those people are just too important or too fancy or too busy to read an email from a stranger.
But I can tell you, and I'm sure Jordan would agree, when you put something out into the world, it means so much more than most people Imagine to hear how it lands with people. You know what it means to them, what they do with it. And you'd be surprised by how often these folks do read these messages and they do respond.
Doesn't happen every time. You won't have a a hundred percent response rate, but it is absolutely worth it. So if there's a stranger who has impacted your life, my recommendation is take a couple minutes, hunt down their email address, find their Instagram, handle their LinkedIn, whatever it is, get in touch and send them a brief note, just telling them what they mean to you.
You can keep it brief. It does not need to take you more than five or 10 minutes at the most. Just send it. And I kind of do this fairly regularly with people just because I know how much it means. Especially anyone who creates something and puts it out into the world. It's always a rewarding experience.
It requires so little effort. And yes, it can lead to cool outcomes. You might strike up a relationship that grows into an interesting opportunity down the line or whatever, but that's not the point. The point is sharing your love and appreciation without any specific expectation. And I'm just a really big fan of doing this.
It's made me feel more connected, more grateful, even when I don't hear back from the person. A few months ago, I went to a play here in LA that was so good and the lead actor was insane. Like so stunning. I followed his work for years. I'm a big fan, not even super famous, but just like a master at what he did, and I had one of the best nights at theater I've ever had.
And when I got home, I wrote his agent an email, and I was like, if you could pass this along, it would mean a lot to me. And she said she would, and I never heard back, but I hope he read that email. And it just made me feel good to tell him how much the play meant to me. It really does make the world feel smaller, more intimate, and it makes me appreciate it even more when people do it for me.
So I say give it a go and see what happens. I think it's a nice little practice to build into your life. I just wanna share that with you guys and I think maybe give it a go and see what happens and see how it makes you feel and see what happens to how you consume things and what your relationships are like.
'cause I find it to be very impactful.
[00:53:01] Jordan Harbinger: You know, I've got a, on my Todoist app that I use for all my to-dos, once a week I send genuine appreciation to someone because it's easier to forget to do this, but Oh nice. I'll just write a random friend and I'll be like, Hey man, three years ago you gave me this idea to count calories and weigh my food and it has changed my entire life and here's how.
And it's just wanted you to know, like that random text changed the entire direction of my body and mind forever. And people are like, whoa dude. Thank you for sharing. I was just feeling sorry for myself or I was just driving to the gym. This made my day. It's really cool to do that. And it's not just to get the reaction outta people, it's actually just, I think it strengthens the relationship period.
And I second everything you said, it's kind of straight out of six minute networking.com. And I agree this works best when you're not explicitly trying to cultivate a relationship in the first place. But I find that doing this kind of thing, of course it often does cultivate or strengthen the relationship because it's such a nice way to kick things off or remind somebody of the impact they've had on you.
I think I said this on the show recently, a lot of people, especially young people. They write to me and they're like, I'm 18, or I'm 20, 25, whatever. I'm just starting out. I wanna meet this amazing author. I wanna meet this senior person at my company who gave this great talk. Whatever it is, I have nothing to offer them.
So I don't know where to start. I'm just gonna not say anything. And I'm always like, Hey dude, that is enough. Your gratitude is enough. A five sentence email telling them why you responded to what they said or did, that is enough. And if you can tell them what you did with what they put out, specifically, how you put it into action, what results it led to, even better.
'cause that's really what makes these notes pop. But I'm with you, Gabe. It's not about pushing for any specific outcome. You have to hit pause on the part of your brain that's hoping for something more. But the cool thing is when you keep your intentions pure, people tend to respond to that the best, whereas a request for career advice wrapped in a compliment.
That kind of dilutes the message and it can be self-serving. There's an author named Brad Meltzer, he's a friend of mine and the reason he's a friend of mine, I read something that he put out and I was like, oh, this is really good. And I told my agent and she's like, oh yeah, I, I love his stuff too. And she told another agent who told Brad Meltzer and Brad Meltzer reached out to me and was like, Hey, we should chat.
And I said, okay. And I can't remember exactly what the business reason was, but it doesn't matter. He sent me a ton of his books and then recently we caught up again. He's gonna come on the show 'cause he just gave a great speech and it's got a great message that I wanted to share with everybody and now we're just buddies.
It's really funny how that worked. And it was all because I reached out to somebody to say, Hey, I really like this guy's work, and I know he is famous and doesn't care, but I'd love to just get that message over to him. Look, I'm a big fan of this one. I head to soapbox for a moment about how this connects to everything in the six minute networking.com courses, and this is useful at every age, at every stage.
I still do it myself, like I said, but it's especially useful for people who are just starting out or starting over and it, this stuff is totally free. I don't just mean the course. The idea of reaching out to somebody and telling them how they've impacted you, that is free. It only costs you a little bit of time, and the return on that investment could be huge.
Also, folks, the subreddit for our show, if you wanna jump into discussions with other listeners about specific episodes, if there's an episode you like, there's something you don't like, you're confused about a lot of cool fun conversations happening over there, you can find it@reddit.com if you are a redditer over in the Jordan Harbinger sub Reddit.
Okay, what's next?
[00:56:22] Gabriel Mizrahi: Dear Jordan and Gabe, my girlfriend listened to your show for years. We met in 2020 during Covid and throughout our relationship. She always sent me links to episodes. I never opened any of them. I thought your podcasts were boring as hell. Then again, I thought all podcasts were boring.
Fast forward to October, 2022. I was 30 pounds overweight, drank half a bottle of whiskey a night, binge smoked, ate like shit, and had stopped working out. I was also $125,000 in debt from dumb choices. Wow. Meanwhile, my girlfriend, who's an amazing person, was the opposite. She watched what she ate, worked out five times a week, and was always working to better herself and those around her.
I wasn't always like this, but somewhere along the line I lost myself. I'd also never shown her affection or talk like we used to. She deserved better. Eventually she told me that she wanted to break up because we didn't share the same values. One of the last things she said to me was that I never took an interest in the podcasts that she loved.
And she mentioned only one, the Jordan Harbinger show.
[00:57:28] Jordan Harbinger: Mm.
[00:57:29] Gabriel Mizrahi: That shocked me. I thought it was such a dumb reason to break up with someone.
[00:57:33] Jordan Harbinger: Uh, actually not liking this podcast is one of the single best reasons to end any relationship. Truly. You have three kids with somebody, total intimacy, undying romance, you never fight.
They cookie breakfast in bed every day, but they don't like this show. Just, I would say end it now. Don't even look bad. Back.
[00:57:48] Gabriel Mizrahi: Game over. Don't even do it. Just get out. Yeah. So he goes on. A few days later I was sitting in my truck thinking, damn, she's right. I've been wasting not only my life, but hers too.
Wow. I don't know what moved me to do it, but I opened our texts and found one of the links to your show. I listened and was like, eh, not bad. Love that. Ringing endorsement. Yeah. Would you mind leaving that as a review for us? Five stars, eh? Not bad. He goes on. I started going down the rabbit hole of self-development shows and learned so much about health, fitness, empathy, affection, how you need to constantly work in a relationship.
Things I never learned growing up, for example. I would always wanna argue and gaslight my ex. I didn't even know what gaslighting was. Then I started listening to your show and I was like, damn, am I a narcissist? I'm
[00:58:38] Jordan Harbinger: loving this so far, clearly because I'm a narcissist. But seriously, just to say if you heard our Dr.
Romney episodes, our feedback Friday episodes about narcissism, and you were like, oh man, that sounds like me sometimes you're probably not a Capital N pathological narcissist. Those people, 95% of the time, they literally can't even begin to confront that quality in themselves. But we all contain narcissistic traits to some degree, even if we don't have the clinical disorder.
So if you were able to see that more clearly because of the show, fantastic. I love it.
[00:59:10] Gabriel Mizrahi: In short, I kicked my vices, lost a ton of weight, and started the business. I always said I would. I'm now about $20,000 away from being debt free.
[00:59:19] Jordan Harbinger: Wow. Paid down 105,000 so far. Bravo.
[00:59:23] Gabriel Mizrahi: Damn. That takes hard work and talent, I imagine.
Yeah.
[00:59:26] Jordan Harbinger: A lot of ramen noodles in that house.
[00:59:28] Gabriel Mizrahi: Yeah. Truly, I've been working hard to confront my trauma, like the gaslighting I learned from my mom who learned it from her mom. I confronted the little boy who grew up never seeing his dad show affection to his mom. I've rediscovered my love for health, fitness, and travel.
I was fortunate enough to go to Bali and Japan for a whole month, and the entire time I practiced gratitude for what I had, what I have, and what will come, and I'm still traveling a lot. Last year I traveled across Mexico and I'm planning a China trip at the end of the year. Trauma creates change.
[01:00:00] Jordan Harbinger: Amazing. It can. Not everyone gets there though, sadly. But yeah, all trauma, even difficult trauma, it's always a window into something profound. Yeah. We've talked about the concept of post-traumatic growth before. Not everyone has the courage or the tools to explore that, but the opportunity is always there, which is remarkable.
Amazing. You were able to make this transformation. Man, this is such a great letter.
[01:00:23] Gabriel Mizrahi: Losing the person I love the most in this world destroyed me, but it opened my eyes. My best friend recently asked me if I could go back and make sure this never happened to me, would I? In the moment, I would've said, of course, now I wouldn't.
I needed to experience losing someone I loved in order to change. It wouldn't have happened any other way. Yep. Life really do be like that sometimes. I'm so thankful for her strength. If she never made the hard decision to leave me, I would still be where I was and if she never mentioned you, I wouldn't have found the information to help me change.
I wouldn't consider your show a self-development show, but you randomly gave me a second chance at life and I'm never going back. I still think about my ex all the time and I hope she's happy and thriving. I recently found out she has an amazing boyfriend now, and I couldn't be happier for her. I now have an amazing girlfriend and we have a dog.
I talked to her about the story and my ex told her how much I learned the hard way. She's remarked on how different I am from her ex-boyfriends. I've also introduced podcasts to her. Funny how that works.
[01:01:28] Jordan Harbinger: As long as it's this podcast, fine, I'm all for
[01:01:30] Gabriel Mizrahi: it. No. Gary Vaynerchuk for your girlfriend. That's right.
No shade to Gary. I was just, that came up earlier. That's why I wanted to share all this because I hope that someone listening to this can take a look at themselves and learn from my mistakes. I used to live my life like I had unlimited time, but the truth is we don't. Every day and moment is running out.
Sorry for being so corny, but being aware of that is a gift. Mahalo, Jordan and Gabe for ruining my last relationship. Just kidding. For saving my life. And a new question has come out of all of this. I've helped a few of my friends change their direction and worldview, and I feel a strong passion around that.
How can I reach out to more men, young and old to help them signed? A guy who lost it all decided to finally tune into, you know-it-alls realized he had stalled, made a major overhaul, broke through a wall, and experienced a psychospiritual windfall.
[01:02:25] Jordan Harbinger: Mm, I can tell that's a Gabe sign off. What a letter though.
This is very inspiring. As per you with stories like this, I don't have a ton to add. I'm just very grateful that you shared all this with us. With everyone listening, and I'm honored that we could play a role in ruining your life. I've giving you another shot at life, whatever. Bit of both actually. That's what stands out the most to me about your story, how you had to lose something really important to you in order to evolve.
Obviously, my mind went to my sort of trauma, what if you can call it that? It seems a little silly to use that word for it, but my big show reset in 2018, how painful that was, having to start over, but I came to the exact same conclusion that you did. It really was the best thing that ever happened to me.
But if you'd asked me back then, Hey, do you want this? I would've been like, hell no. Keep things exactly the way they are. It's gonna be impossible to recover from this. Even though things were far from perfect back then, I desperately needed to make some changes. It's funny, we're such conservative creatures as human beings.
We don't wanna expend any more energy than is absolutely necessary to get where we want or what we want. And we try to organize our lives to create as much stability as possible, even if the status quo is super dysfunctional. Like where you found yourself in 2022, which is actually not that long ago, man, a couple years ago.
Oftentimes something external has to come along to force us to wake up a partner leaving a job, falling apart, an illness, whatever it is. And yeah, that can be awful. It's very stressful. It's very unpleasant. It brings up a lot of anger and fear and grief. But what your letter captures so beautifully is it also creates space.
It shakes the etch of sketch. It creates new room for us to reconnect with ourselves, to try new things, to form new relationships. It shocks us into waking up, right? Most of the time, myself included, we're on autopilot. We have to lose something. Some big disruption has to happen for us to sit up and go, oh yeah, okay.
I'm alive. I'm living my life. How am I living my life? Am I making the most of my life? And then the other big thing that loss does, of course, is it forces us to confront some difficult truths. Although I gotta say, that's not the case for everyone. It's far from guaranteed some personalities, especially narcissistic personalities.
They tend to respond to big losses like this by digging in harder, growing more resentful, doubling down on the story that they're right and everyone else is wrong, and they're the victim and the world's out to get them and blah, blah, blah. Which is another reason that I doubt you are a pathological or clinical narcissist.
But like I said, we all have narcissistic traits. And those traits, they're often defenses against the very feelings that you had to confront. After the breakup, especially the shame. The shame of having to admit, man, I am not healthy. I am not stable, I am not taking care of myself. I did not treat my partner well.
I have some stuff to work through. That's intense and that can be wounding. So where a narcissist would go, screw you for leaving. You're not on my team. You're too needy. All you want for me is to listen to the podcast you listen to. Nobody Gets Me. You said, essentially, I have a lot of feelings about this and one of them is that I might be wasting my life or going down the wrong path.
Let me give this thing a listen and look where that got you. Being able to tolerate the tension of those feelings. Got you. It opened up a whole new process, a whole new worldview, a whole new set of opportunities. It's really extraordinary. Just that willingness to be wrong, to bear shame, to take another person's opinion seriously.
It's, it is extraordinary. So I really commend you for that. I. You're a case study in how to surrender to loss, how to make meaning out of grief, how to use these crises to grow rather than to shrink or stay stagnant. And I'm very touched that we've been part of that process with you. So to answer your question finally, how to reach out to more men to help them, I think you're already doing the most important thing, which is sharing your story.
It's a powerful one, and the beauty of it is it shows that you're actually living these values that you talk about. You're not just talking about growth and healing and all that. You're in this process. You're embracing these ideas and putting them into action. So I would say keep sharing your story one-on-one for sure.
And maybe in larger venues, if you feel moved to do that. This show is one of them. You could post this in a few subreddits around personal growth or relationships or breakups or something like that. You can start a conversation. You could publish it as a blog or a newsletter. You could go tell it at storytelling shows in your town.
They have those all over the world. Maybe work up to a moth style event or a TEDx or whatever, if that's interesting to you. But my feeling is, look, if you really wanna help people grow the way you have, wonderful. If that's truly your calling, you'll find it reflected back to you when you talk about what you went through.
And that would be a good signal that you should be more proactive in sharing this stuff. But you also don't necessarily need to go out looking for people to save. I'm not saying it's your intention, it's just a pitfall of teaching. It has the potential to be a little crusader, maybe a little pushy. I know how to help you.
Let me work on you. I'm not sure that's what you want.
[01:07:18] Gabriel Mizrahi: Yeah, I agree. The best version of helping other people is putting yourself out there and sharing your story and just looking for ways to be helpful to them as they navigate their own journeys. So yeah, I like that Reddit idea, Jordan. And if people comment on that Reddit post and they're like, Hey, I have these questions, and you know you have thoughts about that, that would be a really great invitation for you to offer some wisdom and maybe strike up a correspondence.
Or if people read your blog post and they ask to chat with you and you're open to that, I say, go for it. Amazing. But yeah, I wouldn't necessarily go out recruiting people to help. 'cause that's when this can get a little, I don't know, a little life coachy a little like, I know I've been there and now you need to listen to some things, which, yeah.
Not the vibe you
[01:07:54] Jordan Harbinger: want. Exactly. What do you, a podcaster for God's sake. Seriously.
[01:07:58] Gabriel Mizrahi: I can't believe I'm the one saying that while we're sitting here on the Yeah,
[01:08:00] Jordan Harbinger: exactly. Room to talk over here, Gabe, Mr. Advice column. But you know what? You did say that we're a
[01:08:04] Gabriel Mizrahi: couple of Lydias today.
[01:08:06] Jordan Harbinger: You're right though. You generally wanna pull more than push.
And again, if you are being called to help people in a more formal way, like some kind of coaching and you wanna formalize that role, hey, go for it. I'm not saying you can't. But I think this stuff needs to unfold organically on its own to some degree, for it to be truly meaningful. If you find yourself working very hard to find people to help, I think that's usually a sign that you're trying to achieve something else.
And what that thing is, I'll let you figure that out. It's a pitfall that I think all people in the self-development world have to confront at some point. And it's not all bad, but it is something to keep an eye on. I can't help but notice that a lot of people who are in the mix of something and solving a bunch of problems in their life, they get three steps into a hundred steps and they're like, I wanna be a coach.
It sort of solidifies their identity as somebody who's like action taker and doing something about it. It's like you don't have to become a professional yoga instructor in order to go to a yoga class, but a ton of people wanna do that with coaching, and I don't totally understand why it happened in the dating world.
When I was working in the dating world, people would sign up for a bootcamp and like on day two, what does it take to be an instructor? Why are you even thinking about that right now we're trying to iron out the. Yellow belt stuff here, pal. I get it though. It's just something to keep an eye on, like I said, and your motivations, your ways of connecting with people, the spirit in which you meet them.
Those have to be very pure always, but especially early on. And look, I appreciate the question. I love that you wanna be of service. I'm extremely moved that your story has inspired other people to grow. All of that is incredible. Those are signs that you have something important to offer and it really is a testament to the remarkable transformation that you've been through, the man you've become, and I'm very proud of you for that.
I can tell you are too, as you should be. So thank you for clicking on that link that your ex sent you when you were definitely not going through her text so that you could respond to something that was months old. I'm gonna go through all these and find something mean that you said he was actually hunting for those podcast links.
Actually, he was here. All right, fine. I'll listen to Jordan Harbinger and maybe she'll come back to me.
[01:10:03] Gabriel Mizrahi: Jordan's just happy you do that 'cause it really helps his numbers just to be clear.
[01:10:07] Jordan Harbinger: That's right. Text. Every girl right now dating anybody. Text this to your man. Tell him that if you don't listen to this, it's over.
That's what I need right now. Actually, man or woman, do that to your partner right now. That's the mark of a healthy relationship that you can lay down an ultimatum. Outta nowhere in the middle of any Sunday, any weekend when everything else is fine. That's right. Do you love me or not? Here's the link. If you do, you listen to this podcast and you support our sponsors too, right?
As a massive thank you for changing your whole life. Uh, I kid keep up the great work. We are super pumped for you. Thank you for being a part of our show, fam and everybody go back and check out our episodes with Scott Payne and our Skeptical Sunday on Hangover Cures. If you haven't done so yet, show notes and transcripts over@jordanharbinger.com.
Advertisers discounts, ways to support the show all at Jordan harbinger.com/deals. I'm at Jordan Harbinger on Twitter and Instagram. You can also connect with us on LinkedIn. You can find Gabe on Instagram at Gabriel Mizrahi or on Twitter at Gabe Mizrahi. This show is created in association with Podcast one.
My team is Jen Harbinger, Jace Sanderson, Robert Fogerty, Ian Baird Tataki, and of course, Gabriel Mizrahi. Our advice and opinions are our own, and I am a lawyer. I'm not your lawyer. Do your own research before implementing things you hear on the show. Remember, we rise by lifting others. Share the show with those you love.
If you found the episode useful, please share it with somebody else who could use the advice we gave here today. In the meantime, I hope you apply what you hear on the show so you can live what you learn, and we'll see you next time. Are you addicted to drama? Check out this preview of the Jordan Harbinger Show with psychologist Dr.
Scott Lyons.
[01:11:36] JHS Clip: Do you vent constantly? Do you find yourself changing the stories? Do you find that wherever you go, there's always something that's wrong or happening? Do you find yourself. Believing the other shoe will always drop, that no matter how good things are, something bad is gonna happen. Do you find yourself crisis hopping?
If you're in it, you will have no idea that that's what you're doing. And it takes a lot of time for those addicted to drama to recognize, to even be aware of the pattern is happening. Our primal needs as a kid is to be seen and heard, to feel safe. And so you will go to whatever extremes, intensely shouting is needed to pierce through the chaos of a family household to be seen and heard.
Even if it's burning down the house, a wave of an emotion. It lasts 30 to 90 seconds. Anything after that is the story we're feeding to maintain it. We're trying to keep that emotion active. We're feeding off the emotion as opposed to processing or metabolizing it. We're not letting it go because there's some belief system.
If we let it go, we'll be victims. If we let it go, we won't be safe. Whatever it is, why we won't let go of the emotion. Even a small trauma can feel like death because we feel helpless, and if we don't have the resilience capacity to know that someone will help us. There are tools out there to help us if we don't inherently know that it feels like we're gonna drown in that moment, it feels like death.
[01:13:08] Jordan Harbinger: Learn to recognize and heal from drama addiction On episode 8 36 with Dr. Scott Lyons on the Jordan Harbinger Show.
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