The Diary Of A CEO with Steven Bartlett XX
[0] Did you know that the DariVosio now has its own channel exclusively on Samsung TV Plus?
[1] And I'm excited to say that we've partnered with Samsung TV to bring this to life, and the channel is available in the UK, the Netherlands, Germany and Austria.
[2] Samsung TV Plus is a free streaming service available to all owners of Samsung Smart TVs and Galaxy mobiles and tablets.
[3] And along with the Dyeravisio channel, you'll find hundreds of more channels with entertainment for everyone all for free on Samsung TV plus.
[4] So if you own a Samsung TV, tune in now and watch the Dyer of a Cio channel, right now.
[5] Some of the things that I used to go for when I was younger, when I was looking for a perfect partner, I would be able to reel off things like, I want this color hair, and I want them to look like this, this, this, this.
[6] It was like a shopping list, like apples, plums, it was like everything was on there.
[7] As I got a little bit older and I did a little bit of hindsight research on what I was actually looking for, the list reduced and it became more about fundamental things.
[8] And I got down to these three things.
[9] I thought, you need inner partner to be happy.
[10] I'm going to run these things past you and get your thoughts.
[11] I believe you need a sexual connection.
[12] So I'll say sexual attraction.
[13] I believe you need an intellectual connection.
[14] And the last one is I felt that you need to mutually make, you need to mutually make each other better at what you do.
[15] And for me, that's like my mission doing this or running businesses.
[16] And for her, it could be she's a breathwork practitioner and whatever else.
[17] We make each other better.
[18] We're sexually attracted and we're intellectually stimulating of each other.
[19] I think those things are great.
[20] I don't think everyone should write them down as their three things, but I think it works for you.
[21] And I can tell you why.
[22] They are more about who the two of you are together than her qualities.
[23] So maybe your early list had this body type, this hair color, this eye color, this ethnicity, whatever it was.
[24] It was about the superficial qualities.
[25] And so there's actually a term for this in relation.
[26] relationship science, and we call it relation shopping.
[27] Shopping for a partner, like you'd shop for a pair of Bluetooth headphones.
[28] You log onto Amazon and you say, okay, I want ones that are this color, this weight, this battery life, and then you start to think, oh, I can shop for a partner the same way.
[29] And it just doesn't work.
[30] What works is relationshiping, which is looking for a long -term partner and putting in the work to make that happen.
[31] So you want to move from relationship shopping to relationship.
[32] But this is very common.
[33] People come to me, often these maximizers, and they say, I know exactly what I want, Logan, I just need your help finding that person.
[34] So rarely does that ever work out.
[35] The person that ends up making them happy in the long term is very rarely who they thought they should be with.
[36] And so the truth is, you think you know what you want, but you're wrong.
[37] And the older you get, and the more you think you've figured it out, the more you're actually excluding really great partners because you think, oh, I want to find someone like myself.
[38] Or you think, well, if her parents are divorced and she probably doesn't know how to be in a great relationship.
[39] So I only will date people whose parents are together.
[40] You're making all of these assumptions that are wrong.
[41] The better attitude is to date like a scientist.
[42] I think I need to be with somebody who's this tall.
[43] I think I need to be with somebody whose parents are together.
[44] Well, date someone who's different from that and see if you could fall for them.
[45] And so when I'm working with someone in a coaching capacity and they say to me, Logan, I met this guy, but he's not my type.
[46] In my head, I hear ding, ding, ding, because that's often them making a different choice that's going to lead to a different result.
[47] And those are way more often the relationships that work out.
[48] And so when people come to me with that checklist, I'm not saying, great, let's run a LinkedIn search to find that person.
[49] I'm like, let's do the work to help you actually figure out who will bring out the best side of you.
[50] And I can tell you all the research about what's correlated with long -term relationship success and what's not.
[51] But my favorite way of viewing it is who are you around that person?
[52] What side of you do they bring out?
[53] And so I have this list of questions called the post -date eight.
[54] And there are eight questions to ask yourself after a date.
[55] The point of the post -date eight is that when you go in a date with a checklist, in your head, you're evaluating the person as if you're on a job interview.
[56] Are they good looking enough for me?
[57] Are they ambitious enough for me?
[58] Are they funny enough for me?
[59] You're evaluating.
[60] Instead, with the post -date 8, it's actually training you to tune into your experience, the experiential mindset.
[61] Are we laughing together?
[62] Do I feel desired in their presence?
[63] Do they make me feel more energized or less energized?
[64] And finally, what side of me do they bring out?
[65] Because whoever that person brings out in you is who you will be for the rest of your life in that relationship.
[66] And don't you want to be the happy, secure, desired, hilarious version of yourself?
[67] Where do I find this post -date -8 picture in your book?
[68] Yeah, this is something from my book that I liked it, but it's really blown up because I feel like people really use it.
[69] They take a picture of it on their phone.
[70] They take a screenshot from my Instagram and they ask themselves after the date.
[71] And it really changes the way they show up on the date.
[72] And it's also a great way to say, should I date this person again?
[73] Because my slogan, my motto has become, fuck the spark.
[74] And the spark is this idea that we go after the all -encompassing initial chemistry.
[75] the fireworks, but the spark often leads to relationships that burn out.
[76] And instead, you should go after the slow burn, the person who's not initially as exciting, the secure person, who would make a great long -term partner.
[77] But to train yourself from looking for the spark to looking for the slow burn, how do you do that?
[78] You need a new barometer.
[79] So with the post date eight, you ask yourself these questions after a date, and then you see, am I interested in them, is my interest trending upwards after each date?
[80] And it's a way of training your brain away from the initial chemistry, maybe the anxious avoidant loop, to a new way of dating.
[81] So the post -day eight questions are all kind of, they're all kind of sensible.
[82] Yeah, I'm pretty sensible.
[83] And I guess this is ranking them more on whether they are a secure person, and whether they are that kind of super spicy cayenne pepper, maybe a little bit abandoning, anxious type?
[84] Yeah, I think it's, I think it's doing a few things.
[85] So one is, do you know the research on gratitude journals and why they work?
[86] No. So if you throughout the day have to look for three things to write in your journal that you're grateful for at the end of the day, you're training your brain to look for those things.
[87] Like, I almost missed my flight, but I made it.
[88] Maybe normally you wouldn't even think about that.
[89] But because you have to look for things to be grateful for, you make a little mental note, and then you feel more gratitude.
[90] The same thing works with the post -8.
[91] Because I have to answer at the end of the date, what side of me did they bring out?
[92] how did I feel in my body.
[93] I'm paying attention to that during the date.
[94] So it's overriding the checklist mindset.
[95] It's overriding the evaluative mindset.
[96] I'm not thinking, are you good enough for me?
[97] I'm thinking, what are we creating together?
[98] So it's really training me to be more mindful and really tuning and tune into what it feels like to be around you.
[99] Because so often what happens with daters is they think he's from a good family.
[100] He has a great resume.
[101] He makes a bunch of money.
[102] We should work out.
[103] This should be a great relationship.
[104] He's good on paper.
[105] Well, when you're in person, he makes you feel like shit, he's rude to you, and he's inconsiderate.
[106] But you're so focused on his resume qualities that you don't think about it.
[107] With the post eight, you'll be like, I felt very bad on that date.
[108] I shouldn't see him again.
[109] So it's taking what people are doing wrong and it's training them to focus on what really matters.
[110] What are some of the things that people think matter less than they actually do as it relates to finding someone falling in love and having a great relationship?
[111] So some things that people, you know, they think are really important, but are actually not important in reality.
[112] Yeah, so let's go through that.
[113] So here are some things that matter less than people think they do for long -term relationship success.
[114] So the first one is looks.
[115] Of course you should be attracted to the person, but the truth is that we have adaptation.
[116] We adapt to whatever's around us.
[117] So I like to joke that even the hottest person you know, there's somebody who's sick of sleeping with them.
[118] That's just the truth of the human brain is that we adapt to what's around us.
[119] And so obviously you should be attracted to the person, but I wouldn't optimize for the hottest person.
[120] The next one is similar, which is money.
[121] Obviously, money makes things easier.
[122] There's tons of research that when couples have enough money to outsource things like cooking and cleaning and child care, they have more time to connect.
[123] But the same thing is true with money.
[124] And there's this idea called the transition rule.
[125] So when you think about winning the lottery, what you imagine is going from your current salary to what you would have with the lottery and what that change would feel like.
[126] But over time, and we know this from the research, about a year after you win the lottery, you are about as happy as you were before because you've adapted to your new circumstances.
[127] And the same thing is true with people who become quadriplegics.
[128] If I say to you, how bad would it feel to become a quadriplegic?
[129] You think about the change and you think it would be extremely terrible.
[130] But what actually we find is that about a year after becoming a quadriplegic, somebody is the same happiness as they were before.
[131] And so the same thing is true with looks and money is that we adapt to our circumstances, so don't over -optimized for it.
[132] The next thing is having a similar personality or similar hobbies.
[133] It's fine if we have different hobbies, as long as you make me feel like I can explore mine without judging me for it.
[134] So interesting, because me and my girlfriend are completely different.
[135] She is super spiritual.
[136] She believes things that are metaphysical and can't be proven.
[137] And I'm like, science, science, science, evidence.
[138] Right.
[139] And maybe at some point in your life, you thought, oh, we have to have the same interest.
[140] No, you probably both want to be curious and be respectful and you want to understand her breathwork stuff.
[141] It doesn't mean you need to share it.
[142] And with similar personalities, it's the same idea.
[143] I remember I was coaching this guy who had a huge, larger -than -life personality, crazy nicknames, life of the party.
[144] And he wanted to find someone like that because he's like, well, she needs to party with me. I was like, dude, you are so much.
[145] Two of you in a relationship would be exhausting.
[146] Two of you at the same dinner party would be exhausting.
[147] I want you to find somebody who complements you.
[148] And so the woman he ended up with is very different from him.
[149] She's not at the party.
[150] She's at home, but she's the home base for him.
[151] And he is the energizing, wild part of their relationship.
[152] And so it's not that people have to find their opposites.
[153] It's that you shouldn't focus on just finding your identical twin, your personality twin.
[154] Did you know that the Dario of a CEO now has its own channel exclusively on Samsung TV?
[155] And I'm excited to say that we've partnered with Samsung TV to bring this to life, and the channel is available in the UK, the Netherlands, Germany, and Austria.
[156] Samsung TV Plus is a free streaming service available to all owners of Samsung Smart TVs and Galaxy mobiles and tablets.
[157] And along with the Dyeravisio channel, you'll find hundreds of more channels with entertainment for everyone all for free on Samsung TV Plus.
[158] So if you own a Samsung TV, tune in now and watch the Dyer of a CEO channel right now.