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RelationShit Happens

by Olivia & KC

Welcome to the RelationSh!t Happens Podcast! I'm Olivia and my boyfriend is KC and we're here to talk about the 1% of things most couples DON'T talk about. It's too personal, too scary, too MUCH...plus, our girlfriends/guy friends could relate MUCH better and wouldn't freak out. Well, we're that couple that shares 100% of EVERYTHING with one another, regardless of how horrible & heated it might sound...AND, we're documenting it all.Tune in every Tuesday morning to hear us discuss topics like secret crushes, texting ex's, sharing our uncertainties about one another and laying it ALL out on the table.

Copyright: © 2023 RelationShit Happens

Episodes

How to have a "Rom-Com" relationship, like you see in the movies!

8m · Published 05 Jan 10:00

in this weeks episode, Olivia and KC discuss one of the things that creates a "fake" relationship, and what they believe an authentic relationship looks like from their personal experience.

How to have a "Rom-Com" relationship, like you see in the movies!

8m · Published 05 Jan 10:00

in this weeks episode, Olivia and KC discuss one of the things that creates a "fake" relationship, and what they believe an authentic relationship looks like from their personal experience.

I feel like yeeting him out the window this week - When you don't feel like hanging with your partner

9m · Published 29 Dec 08:00

Olivia and KC work through this weeks breakdown. What do you do when you don't want to see your partner or boyfriend, or girlfriend?  What does it mean that you don't want to hang out with them?  Is this going to last?  Does it mean your relationships it over?  Check out this weeks episode to get our perspective.

I feel like yeeting him out the window this week - When you don't feel like hanging with your partner

9m · Published 29 Dec 08:00

Olivia and KC work through this weeks breakdown. What do you do when you don't want to see your partner or boyfriend, or girlfriend?  What does it mean that you don't want to hang out with them?  Is this going to last?  Does it mean your relationships it over?  Check out this weeks episode to get our perspective.

I'm pissed off and I don't know why - How to get over it!

12m · Published 22 Dec 11:00

Check us out on @relationshithappenspodcast for our vlogs!
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KC and I talk about my upset/breakdown and why I got so upset. It was difficult to identify but I realized that it was due to a deeper rooted body insecurity issue!

I'm pissed off and I don't know why - How to get over it!

12m · Published 22 Dec 11:00

Check us out on @relationshithappenspodcast for our vlogs!
---
KC and I talk about my upset/breakdown and why I got so upset. It was difficult to identify but I realized that it was due to a deeper rooted body insecurity issue!

How your Daddy Issues relate to your Boyfriend Issues, part 2

14m · Published 15 Dec 12:00

**CRITICAL NOTE*** ALL people can have "daddy issues", not just women. It unfairly has become a gendered term when men DO have the same exact issues. ALSO side note, my father is the most amazing human being and FATHER to have walked the face of this earth (I'm biased, I know) so even women with "perfect" fathers can have "daddy issues". You are not broken, you are not unfixable. You are NORMAL and therapy helps :)
---
Make sure to check us out on IG for daily vlogs @relationshithappenspodcast
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Check out this article on Daddy Issues from Healthline.com
The term “daddy issues” gets tossed around a lot, but most of the people doing the tossing are getting it all wrong. It’s become a catchall term to describe almost anything a woman does when it comes to sex and relationships. If she puts out “too soon,” doesn’t want to put out, or is looking for reassurance, she’s got daddy issues. If she prefers older men, likes to get spanked and called a bad girl, or calls her partner “daddy” in bed, must be daddy issues. To set things straight and get you in the know about this almost always misused, misunderstood, and overly gendered concept, we reached out to Amy Rollo, triple licensed psychotherapist and owner of Heights Family Counseling in Houston, Texas.

What does it even mean?
It’s hard to say, seeing as how “daddy issues” isn’t an official medical term or recognized disorder in the recent edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5). This could explain why many experts have an issue with the term, including Rollo. “For the record, I don’t believe in the term ‘daddy issues,’” Rollo says. “Many see this phrase as a way to minimize females’ attachment needs.” Children need a dependable adult in their lives to form secure attachments, Rollo explains. “If this isn’t formed, many people can form avoidant or anxious attachment styles. If a child doesn’t have a father figure in their life consistently, this could lead to an insecure attachment style later in adulthood.” She adds that, for many people, these attachment styles ultimately present as what some refer to as “daddy issues.” Where did this concept originate? We can’t say for sure, but the consensus seems to be that it dates back to Freud and his father complex. This is a term he coined to describe a person who has unconscious impulses and associations as a result of a poor relationship with their father. From that theory came the Oedipus complex, the theory that children have a subconscious attraction to their opposite sex parent.

Oedipus complex refers specifically to boys. Electra complex is used to describe the same theory as applied to girls and their fathers.

Are there different kinds?
Yep! No two people’s experience with their parents is exactly the same. The attachment patterns formed during childhood can affect your attachment styles in your adult relationships.

Attachment styles are categorized as being either secure or insecure, with several subtypes of insecure attachment styles, including:

Anxious-preoccupied. People with this attachment type may be anxious, crave closeness, but feel insecure about their partner leaving them.
Dismissive-avoidant. People with this type may have trouble trusting others for fear that they’ll be hurt. Secure attachment styles result from having a caregiver who was responsive to your needs and emotionally available.
Then there are the insecure attachment styles.

She explains that they often appear as:
being anxious when you aren’t with your partner
needing lots of reassurance that the relationship is OK
seeing any negativity as a sign that the relationship is doomed
It isn’t just about romantic relationships, either. Your relationship with your caregivers and your attachment style also affect other close relationships, including your friendships.
Who’s got ’em?
Everyone. Daddy issues aren’t ju

How your Daddy Issues relate to your Boyfriend Issues, part 2

14m · Published 15 Dec 12:00

**CRITICAL NOTE*** ALL people can have "daddy issues", not just women. It unfairly has become a gendered term when men DO have the same exact issues. ALSO side note, my father is the most amazing human being and FATHER to have walked the face of this earth (I'm biased, I know) so even women with "perfect" fathers can have "daddy issues". You are not broken, you are not unfixable. You are NORMAL and therapy helps :)
---
Make sure to check us out on IG for daily vlogs @relationshithappenspodcast
---
Check out this article on Daddy Issues from Healthline.com
The term “daddy issues” gets tossed around a lot, but most of the people doing the tossing are getting it all wrong. It’s become a catchall term to describe almost anything a woman does when it comes to sex and relationships. If she puts out “too soon,” doesn’t want to put out, or is looking for reassurance, she’s got daddy issues. If she prefers older men, likes to get spanked and called a bad girl, or calls her partner “daddy” in bed, must be daddy issues. To set things straight and get you in the know about this almost always misused, misunderstood, and overly gendered concept, we reached out to Amy Rollo, triple licensed psychotherapist and owner of Heights Family Counseling in Houston, Texas.

What does it even mean?
It’s hard to say, seeing as how “daddy issues” isn’t an official medical term or recognized disorder in the recent edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5). This could explain why many experts have an issue with the term, including Rollo. “For the record, I don’t believe in the term ‘daddy issues,’” Rollo says. “Many see this phrase as a way to minimize females’ attachment needs.” Children need a dependable adult in their lives to form secure attachments, Rollo explains. “If this isn’t formed, many people can form avoidant or anxious attachment styles. If a child doesn’t have a father figure in their life consistently, this could lead to an insecure attachment style later in adulthood.” She adds that, for many people, these attachment styles ultimately present as what some refer to as “daddy issues.” Where did this concept originate? We can’t say for sure, but the consensus seems to be that it dates back to Freud and his father complex. This is a term he coined to describe a person who has unconscious impulses and associations as a result of a poor relationship with their father. From that theory came the Oedipus complex, the theory that children have a subconscious attraction to their opposite sex parent.

Oedipus complex refers specifically to boys. Electra complex is used to describe the same theory as applied to girls and their fathers.

Are there different kinds?
Yep! No two people’s experience with their parents is exactly the same. The attachment patterns formed during childhood can affect your attachment styles in your adult relationships.

Attachment styles are categorized as being either secure or insecure, with several subtypes of insecure attachment styles, including:

Anxious-preoccupied. People with this attachment type may be anxious, crave closeness, but feel insecure about their partner leaving them.
Dismissive-avoidant. People with this type may have trouble trusting others for fear that they’ll be hurt. Secure attachment styles result from having a caregiver who was responsive to your needs and emotionally available.
Then there are the insecure attachment styles.

She explains that they often appear as:
being anxious when you aren’t with your partner
needing lots of reassurance that the relationship is OK
seeing any negativity as a sign that the relationship is doomed
It isn’t just about romantic relationships, either. Your relationship with your caregivers and your attachment style also affect other close relationships, including your friendships.
Who’s got ’em?
Everyone. Daddy issues aren’t ju

How Your Daddy Issues may transfer over into Boyfriend Issues (part 1)

11m · Published 08 Dec 09:00

Are daddy issues and boyfriend issues related? Sure seems that way. Here KC and I talk about some criticisms I've had against him recently and then how it has related to my recent relationship to my dad. This is part 1. Part 2 is coming next week :)
--
Here's more info from TalkSpace.com  
Sure, mommy or daddy issues can absolutely get in the way of having a healthy relationship, but nobody should be ridiculed for something that’s out of their control, since these issues are based off of things that happened during somebody’s childhood.

But what are mommy or daddy issues really?

The Psychological Explanation of Mommy or Daddy Issues

As you may know, these issues are a result of the relationships you had with your mother or father when you were growing up, and maybe even how the relationship remains today. So let’s just get this out of the way — Daddy issues are about more than wanting to call someone “daddy” during sex (and spoiler alert, it’s a misconception that the phenomenon is always related to daddy issues).

“‘Mommy issues’ is a term originating from the psychoanalytic Oedipal complex, coined by Sigmund Freud. Carl Yung followed up with the Electra complex, modernly spoken of as ‘Daddy Issues,’” explains Talkspace Provider Amy Cirbus Ph.D, LMHC, LPC. “These terms were developed and understood through a psychoanalytic lens, where it was believed that young boys were thought to be in sexual competition with their fathers and young girls to be in competition with their mothers.”

However, today, we know it’s about much more than this. Basically, mommy or daddy issues (which, by the way, are terms that are thrown around way too loosely) are the psychological effects lasting into adulthood that are caused by childhood relationships with a mother or father. Some possible causes of mommy or daddy issues in an adult could be:

  • A parent who left the family or was mostly absent
  • A parent who was emotionally or physically abusive
  • A parent who wasn’t loving or nurturing
  • A parent who is extremely overbearing
  • A parent who treated the other parent badly

How Mommy Issues or Daddy Issues Usually Manifest

When we think about mommy and daddy issues, it’s often the case that a man in a heterosexual relationship is experiencing the mommy issues and taking it out on the female partner, or that a woman in a heterosexual relationship is taking the daddy issues out on the male partner. Of course, though, there are always exceptions and obviously situations can play out differently in same-sex relationships.

Mommy issues

When it comes to mommy issues, Cirbus explains, “Generally, this is a man who seems to be seeking a substitute mom as opposed to an equal partner, or behaving as if in reaction to unresolved issues with his mother, rather than the partner.” This can lead to relationships having an unequal balance of power between a couple — whether the man goes to the extreme of being very controlling or in the other direction and becomes very submissive.

Mommy issues can also cause a man to have different expectations of a partner or spouse. If a man’s mother did absolutely everything for him and babied him up until…well…last year, it’s likely that he will expect a female partner to provide the same, waiting on him hand and foot like his mom has done.

Daddy issues

Daddy issues can manifest as trust issues or fear of abandonment for some women. “Women who have an absent father, inconsistent presence, or malfunctioning relationship are at risk for seeking to resolve this through an partnership with a man,” says Cirbus. This can cause women to constantly seek validation or approval from men, or seek out people who are emotionally unavailable. They might also have a fear of abandonment if their father left their family when they were young, afraid that a partner will leave in the same way that their dad did.

How Your Daddy Issues may transfer over into Boyfriend Issues (part 1)

11m · Published 08 Dec 09:00

Are daddy issues and boyfriend issues related? Sure seems that way. Here KC and I talk about some criticisms I've had against him recently and then how it has related to my recent relationship to my dad. This is part 1. Part 2 is coming next week :)
--
Here's more info from TalkSpace.com  
Sure, mommy or daddy issues can absolutely get in the way of having a healthy relationship, but nobody should be ridiculed for something that’s out of their control, since these issues are based off of things that happened during somebody’s childhood.

But what are mommy or daddy issues really?

The Psychological Explanation of Mommy or Daddy Issues

As you may know, these issues are a result of the relationships you had with your mother or father when you were growing up, and maybe even how the relationship remains today. So let’s just get this out of the way — Daddy issues are about more than wanting to call someone “daddy” during sex (and spoiler alert, it’s a misconception that the phenomenon is always related to daddy issues).

“‘Mommy issues’ is a term originating from the psychoanalytic Oedipal complex, coined by Sigmund Freud. Carl Yung followed up with the Electra complex, modernly spoken of as ‘Daddy Issues,’” explains Talkspace Provider Amy Cirbus Ph.D, LMHC, LPC. “These terms were developed and understood through a psychoanalytic lens, where it was believed that young boys were thought to be in sexual competition with their fathers and young girls to be in competition with their mothers.”

However, today, we know it’s about much more than this. Basically, mommy or daddy issues (which, by the way, are terms that are thrown around way too loosely) are the psychological effects lasting into adulthood that are caused by childhood relationships with a mother or father. Some possible causes of mommy or daddy issues in an adult could be:

  • A parent who left the family or was mostly absent
  • A parent who was emotionally or physically abusive
  • A parent who wasn’t loving or nurturing
  • A parent who is extremely overbearing
  • A parent who treated the other parent badly

How Mommy Issues or Daddy Issues Usually Manifest

When we think about mommy and daddy issues, it’s often the case that a man in a heterosexual relationship is experiencing the mommy issues and taking it out on the female partner, or that a woman in a heterosexual relationship is taking the daddy issues out on the male partner. Of course, though, there are always exceptions and obviously situations can play out differently in same-sex relationships.

Mommy issues

When it comes to mommy issues, Cirbus explains, “Generally, this is a man who seems to be seeking a substitute mom as opposed to an equal partner, or behaving as if in reaction to unresolved issues with his mother, rather than the partner.” This can lead to relationships having an unequal balance of power between a couple — whether the man goes to the extreme of being very controlling or in the other direction and becomes very submissive.

Mommy issues can also cause a man to have different expectations of a partner or spouse. If a man’s mother did absolutely everything for him and babied him up until…well…last year, it’s likely that he will expect a female partner to provide the same, waiting on him hand and foot like his mom has done.

Daddy issues

Daddy issues can manifest as trust issues or fear of abandonment for some women. “Women who have an absent father, inconsistent presence, or malfunctioning relationship are at risk for seeking to resolve this through an partnership with a man,” says Cirbus. This can cause women to constantly seek validation or approval from men, or seek out people who are emotionally unavailable. They might also have a fear of abandonment if their father left their family when they were young, afraid that a partner will leave in the same way that their dad did.

RelationShit Happens has 122 episodes in total of non- explicit content. Total playtime is 27:39:50. The language of the podcast is English. This podcast has been added on December 18th 2022. It might contain more episodes than the ones shown here. It was last updated on February 22nd, 2024 17:40.

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