If Your Relationship Feels Like Competition, You Need To Hear This | Jay Shetty

如果你的感情如同竞赛,你需要听听这番话 | 杰伊·谢提

The Daily Motivation

2026-01-31

6 分钟
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单集简介 ...

Leave an Amazon Rating or Review for my New York Times Bestselling book, Make Money Easy! Check out the full episode: https://greatness.lnk.to/1417DM Jay Shetty cuts through the noise with a metaphor that lands hard: toxic love is when your trauma becomes the oxygen for your relationship. You're literally breathing your baggage, your insecurities, your unhealed wounds into your partner's lungs and expecting them to somehow purify it all and give you back clean air. He contrasts this with conscious love, which isn't about waiting until you're perfectly healed or being selflessly devoted. It's about independently taking care of yourself so you can bring your best self to the relationship. And here's where most people get it wrong: toxic love turns into scorekeeping. Who does more around the house? Who loves more? Who sacrifices more? That's not teamwork. Conscious love is built on healthy agreements, not competition. Jay shares a real story about a friend whose partner struggled with porn addiction. The partner was vulnerable, honest, wanted to change. The choice was simple but brutal: leave because it affects you negatively, or stay and support them through genuine healing. They chose support. Now they have a healthy relationship. But Jay warns about the flip side: using someone's vulnerability as ammunition. When your partner opens up about their struggles and you throw it back at them during an argument, you're telling them never to be honest with you again. The shift Lewis identifies is crucial: conscious love means taking emotional responsibility instead of saying "you made me feel this way." It means communicating what you're healing, making your partner aware of your journey, and finding support together. Not because you're broken, but because healing is a journey and conscious love doesn't demand perfection before partnership. Jay's book 8 Rules of Love isn't about following his rules exactly, it's about inspiring couples to create their own agreements that work for their specific relationship. The foundation isn't romance or grand gestures. It's the unglamorous work of building agreements, staying aware of what you're healing, and never weaponizing the vulnerability your partner trusts you with. Because we all say we want honesty, but the moment someone shares something uncomfortable, we often reject it. That's how you push the other person away. If they're genuinely on a healing journey and they're transparent about it, that's worth supporting. Not forcing change on them, but being there as they do the work themselves. Sign up for the Greatness newsletter: http://www.greatness.com/newsletter Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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  • Hi, my name is Lewis Howes and welcome to the Daily Motivation Show.

  • What is the difference between toxic love and conscious love?

  • Toxic love is where both people are working independently to use the relationship to serve their own needs.

  • That's toxic love.

  • And conscious love is where both people independently take care of themselves so they can bring their best self to each other.

  • And where this often goes wrong is that toxic love turns into a competition.

  • Toxic love now is who's doing more for each other?

  • Who gives more love to each other?

  • Who does more work around the house?

  • You turn the whole thing into a competition which is not teamwork.

  • And conscious love is not saying you're the selfless one, it's you're making agreements.

  • I think that's the mistake that love was constantly, conscious love was always like,

  • be selfless, love more than the other person, give more, that's not healthy either.

  • What's healthy is we're actually going to create boundaries.

  • We're actually going to create agreements.

  • We're actually going to create principles.

  • We're going to create rules.

  • The reason why I call the book Eight Rules of Love is my hope that it will inspire other couples to create their own list of rules in their own relationship.

  • A conscious relationship is one that is built on a foundation of healthy agreements.

  • Yes.