Neil Sattin.com Relationship Alive Podcast 2022-04-08T23:01:46Z https://www.neilsattin.com/feed/atom/ WordPress neil http://www.neilsattin.com <![CDATA[255: How to Be Courageous (especially when it’s hard)]]> https://www.neilsattin.com/?p=5483 2022-04-08T23:01:46Z 2021-12-29T04:47:20Z [spp-player]It's easy to talk about being courageous - but how do you actually take action when it feels like a huge risk? Whether it's the decision to enter a relationship, or to leave a relationship, or all of the moments within a relationship when you might have to make a choice that feels a little edgy or scary - today's episode is going to focus on the practical steps to taking action...courageously. Don't just "feel the fear and do it anyway" - learn how to prepare yourself so that you stand the best chance of succeeding in a moment that requires your courage.

The post 255: How to Be Courageous (especially when it’s hard) appeared first on Neil Sattin.com.

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It’s easy to talk about being courageous – but how do you actually take action when it feels like a huge risk? Whether it’s the decision to enter a relationship, or to leave a relationship, or all of the moments within a relationship when you might have to make a choice that feels a little edgy or scary – today’s episode is going to focus on the practical steps to taking action…courageously. Don’t just “feel the fear and do it anyway” – learn how to prepare yourself so that you stand the best chance of succeeding in a moment that requires your courage.

As always, I’m looking forward to your thoughts on this episode and what revelations and questions it creates for you. Please join us in the Relationship Alive Community on Facebook to chat about it!

Sponsors:

GreenChef.com is a USDA certified organic company, with a wide variety of meal plans to make having healthier food easy and convenient for you. And they’re offering you $125 off plus free shipping- just to give them a try! Just visit GreenChef.com/alive125 and use the coupon code “alive125” at checkout for $125 off, and enjoy the delicious recipes and fresh ingredients that GreenChef sends your way.

Find a quality therapist, online, to support you and work on the places where you’re stuck. For 10% off your first month, visit Betterhelp.com/ALIVE to fill out the quick questionnaire and get paired with a therapist who’s right for you.

Want something new to entertain you? Acorn TV is a commercial-free streaming service that’s rooted in British television. It’s home to sophisticated and artful storytelling with top-rated mysteries, dramas that pull you in, heart-felt comedies and so much more. So – Escape to Britain and beyond without leaving your seat. Try Acorn TV free for 30 days, by going to acorn.tv and using the promo code “alive” (all lowercase) at checkout.

Resources:

Check out my Secrets of Relationship Communication COURSE for a masterclass in how to improve the communication and connection in your relationship.

I want to know you better! Take the quick, anonymous, Relationship Alive survey

FREE Guide to Neil’s Top 3 Relationship Communication Secrets

Guide to Understanding Your Needs (and Your Partner’s Needs) in Relationship (ALSO FREE)

Support the podcast

Amazing intro and outro music provided courtesy of The Railsplitters

Transcript:

Neil Sattin: So let’s get on with this conversation about courage and how to actually be courageous. Now, the way I see it, courage is required before you get into a relationship, while you’re in a relationship, and if you decide that you’re going to leave the relationship, that requires courage too. Courage is required all the way through when you are, let’s say, meeting people going out on dates, it may require courage for you to ask someone out and it may require courage for you to follow up with a the person, it might require courage for you to ask for what you want.

Neil Sattin: There was recently a conversation happening in the Relationship Alive Facebook community, where someone was talking about how it’s challenging to them, they’ve been going out with people who are spending all their time talking about themselves instead of asking any questions. So how do you show up in a situation like that? You might need to get courageous and be vulnerable or put the other person on the spot in order to ask for what you need, or conversely, it might take courage for you, even though someone else seems really into you, if you’re not really into them, to put an end to your dating before it gets too serious, before it gets even more challenging to extricate yourself from a difficult and not entirely fulfilling situation. Now, when you’re in a relationship, there are all kinds of places where courage is required, it might be required to set a boundary with another person, or again, to ask for what you want if you’re not getting it, or to initiate a hard conversation.

Neil Sattin: Like for instance, a conversation about something that you really want that you’re not getting, just as an example, and then so often those challenging conversations might go a little bit off the rails or might not go exactly how you would want them to go, and it takes courage to follow up on those conversations rather than just letting things go and fostering resentment. It requires courage often to make a choice when the right decision isn’t quite clear to you. It requires courage when you need to be honest with a person, even though it might hurt their feelings, and this kind of courage is really important for having relationships that are alive and authentic and where there is continually energy being generated to keep you excited and engaged in a relationship. It turns out that if you’re not able to show up in those ways to be vulnerable, to take risks, then your relationship ends up being a big story of avoiding those things, and if you avoid the things that have lots of energy or juice to them, in one area, then it’s likely that you’re going to end up avoiding the energy and the juice in the areas that are more exciting, like your romance and your desire, and your sex, and your adventure and those kinds of things.

Neil Sattin: The thing is though, it’s easy to talk about being courageous. Yes, you have to be courageous. You have to feel your fear. You have to just move forward, but the reality is that that’s super challenging. If it weren’t challenging, it would be easy to do, we’d be doing it all the time, and I wouldn’t be having this conversation with you, but there’s more to it than simply being courageous. There are things that you can expect to happen within you and in a situation that requires your courage, and that’s what we’re going to talk about today, ’cause I want you to be able to prepare for an act of courage. I want you to have an understanding of what’s going to happen. I want to set you up for the best possible outcome. And in the end, I want you to be able to take that experience and build on it, so that’s

Interested in reading the transcript for the rest of this episode? 

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neil http://www.neilsattin.com <![CDATA[254: From a “Fair” Relationship to Radical Generosity – the 80/80 Marriage with Kaley and Nate Klemp]]> https://www.neilsattin.com/?p=5479 2021-12-01T06:06:44Z 2021-11-30T06:02:44Z [spp-player]It's easy to talk about being generous in your relationship - but how do you actually put it into practice - especially when things feel unfair or out of balance? If you're stuck in fighting for fairness in your relationship, it's time to learn a new way of being together where shared success becomes the rule - not the exception. Today we're talking with Kaley and Nate Klemp, authors of "The 80/80 Marriage - A New Model for a Healthier, Stronger Relationship." You'll get practical steps to foster radical generosity in your relationship.

The post 254: From a “Fair” Relationship to Radical Generosity – the 80/80 Marriage with Kaley and Nate Klemp appeared first on Neil Sattin.com.

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It’s easy to talk about being generous in your relationship – but how do you actually put it into practice – especially when things feel unfair or out of balance? If you’re stuck in fighting for fairness in your relationship, it’s time to learn a new way of being together where shared success becomes the rule – not the exception. Today we’re talking with Kaley and Nate Klemp, authors of “The 80/80 Marriage – A New Model for a Healthier, Stronger Relationship.” You’ll get practical steps to foster radical generosity in your relationship.

As always, I’m looking forward to your thoughts on this episode and what revelations and questions it creates for you. Please join us in the Relationship Alive Community on Facebook to chat about it! Also, see below for links to our other episodes with Stan Tatkin.

Sponsors:

GreenChef.com is a USDA certified organic company, with a wide variety of meal plans to make having healthier food easy and convenient for you. And they’re offering you $125 off plus free shipping- just to give them a try! Just visit GreenChef.com/alive125 and use the coupon code “alive125” at checkout for $125 off, and enjoy the delicious recipes and fresh ingredients that GreenChef sends your way.

Want something new to entertain you? Acorn TV is a commercial-free streaming service that’s rooted in British television. It’s home to sophisticated and artful storytelling with top-rated mysteries, dramas that pull you in, heart-felt comedies and so much more. So – Escape to Britain and beyond without leaving your seat. Try Acorn TV free for 30 days, by going to acorn.tv and using the promo code “alive” (lowercase) at checkout.

Find a quality therapist, online, to support you and work on the places where you’re stuck. For 10% off your first month, visit Betterhelp.com/ALIVE to fill out the quick questionnaire and get paired with a therapist who’s right for you.

Resources:

Check out “The 80/80 Marriage” on Amazon

Take a quiz, get more information about Nate and Kaley Klemp and their book, the 80/80 Marriage – by clicking here.

FREE Relationship Communication Secrets Guide – perfect help for handling conflict and shifting the codependent patterns in your relationship

Or…check out the Secrets of Relationship Communication complete course!

Guide to Understanding Your Needs (and Your Partner’s Needs) in Your Relationship (ALSO FREE)

Visit http://www.neilsattin.com/8080 to download the transcript to this episode with Nate and Kaley Klemp.

Amazing intro/outro music graciously provided courtesy of: The Railsplitters – Check them Out

Transcript of this episode:

Neil Sattin: Let’s just start maybe with you’re revealing a little bit of your personal journey, if you don’t mind, getting a little vulnerable with, how did 8080 come to be for the two of you?

Nate Klemp: Yeah, well, I guess it starts in high school actually, so Kaley and I grew up in the same town, and we met our senior year of high school, we were in chemistry class together, and we actually dated a little bit in high school, and then we both went to the same college, but broke up pragmatically and got back together seven years later, and it was almost like a fairy tale, Instagram-worthy story where we got back together in our early 20s, we got married, and we went into marriage thinking that the momentum of that perfect story, that fairy tale was just going to effortlessly continue and it didn’t… Not at all. In fact, a couple of years in the marriage, I had a serious bike accident, which left me in a position of both having very little energy to work and complete Life’s tasks, but also in a pretty serious depression, experiencing a lot of anxiety, and all of a sudden we were thrust into this conversation really more of a conflict over What is or isn’t fair, and we started to see that for us and for most couples, we saw eventually that the fundamental thing we were grappling with is how can we be equals and in love, and that seemed to be a totally vexing question that we just could not answer in our marriage. So we really spent the then 15 years, we’ve been married for almost 16 years now, trying to answer that question, both for ourselves and then with this book for other couples.

Neil Sattin: Yeah, and when you talk about how to be equals and be in love, that makes me think of what you mentioned in the initial part of your book where you talk about moving from what you call the 80/20 model of relationship into 50/50 relating, and then of course. You’re making a case for the 80/80 model of relating. So yeah, can you describe what we’re talking about, just kind of in simple terms, what’s a 80/20 relationship… What’s a 50/50 relationship? And where are we headed with 80/80?

Kaley Klemp: 80/20 is looking back at sometimes our parents, sometimes our grandparents, where one person’s “job” is to take care of the relationship and the other person gets to kind of coast, and in 80/20, based on gender norms at the time, typically it’s the woman who’s responsible for making sure that we’re close and that we have date night, and that we have friends, and really, it’s her job to make sure that the relationship is working at all, and as easy as it is to look at that with condemnation or disdain, there was an advantage at that point in time, which was, they were at least on the same team, pointed in the same direction, because they were really, really interdependent.

Kaley Klemp: What happened though is as the ’60s and ’70s occur and women were given a lot more opportunity to work outside the home and pursue their own interests, there started to be a big shift where each person could look at 80/20 and say, “Gosh, that seems wildly unfair.” And it was… And so they said, “You know what, we can do better. Let’s make things even between us, let’s make things equal, and the clunky technology was, Let’s make things fair.” And so that’s where 50/50 came from, this idea that if we each do perfectly equal amounts of things, then somehow we’ll end up in marital bliss, unfortunately, and we can talk about all the reasons why. 50/50 ended up being a recipe for even more fighting and even more conflict because finding that perfect midpoint where it was exactly fair seemed completely elusive. And so what we’re striving for and arguing for is this notion of 80/80, where rather than keeping score and keeping track like you do in 50/50, instead you intentionally strive to overshoot the mean to do more than your “fair share” from this mindset of generosity. And with that new mindset, with this intentionality around how can I show up with generosity with my partner, what are the structures that support it, how can we take that mindset and make it really practical so that in real life, we can actually live it…

Interested in reading the transcript for the rest of this episode with Nate and Kaley Klemp? 

The post 254: From a “Fair” Relationship to Radical Generosity – the 80/80 Marriage with Kaley and Nate Klemp appeared first on Neil Sattin.com.

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