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Most people assume that whoever cares less in a relationship holds the power. In this episode, Dr. Doug Lisle explains why that framing gets it completely backwards. What people call the "care gap" isn't a power move at all. It's a signal about what's actually happening in the competitive marketplace both partners are operating in. Whether you're feeling the gap or causing it, the real question isn't who cares more. It's why.
As Dr. Lisle explains, what's actually driving that dynamic, and what to do about it, depends on a highly individual matrix of mate value, aging, personality, and life circumstances.
In this episode:
· 0:00 — Announcement: Beat Your Genes is returning to YouTube. Subscribe at @BeatYourGenes
· 1:52 — The care gap question: why does he seem to stop trying after the relationship stabilizes?
· 12:30 — How mate value shifts differently for men and women after 40, and why evolution designed it that way
· 24:15 — The love instinct, the magic 10%, and why Match.com didn't solve loneliness
· 35:40 — What "caring less" actually signals, and what to do if you're on the losing end of the trade
· 46:00 — The chiseling chip: the one vicious cycle Dr. Lisle says can sometimes be broken
Key question covered: Is the care gap in long-term relationships inevitable, or is there something you can actually do about it?
Beat Your Genes is co-hosted by evolutionary psychologist Dr. Doug Lisle, PhD and Dr. Nathan Gershfeld, DC. New episodes every other week.
🎥 YouTube: youtube.com/@BeatYourGenes
🔗 beatyourgenes.org
📩 Doug Lisle: esteemdynamics.com
📩 Nathan Gershfeld: fastingescape.com
𝕏 @BeatYourGenes
Intro & outro: City of Happy Ones. Ferenc Hegedus. Licensed for use. © Beat Your Genes Podcast
By BeatYourGenes4.5
431431 ratings
Most people assume that whoever cares less in a relationship holds the power. In this episode, Dr. Doug Lisle explains why that framing gets it completely backwards. What people call the "care gap" isn't a power move at all. It's a signal about what's actually happening in the competitive marketplace both partners are operating in. Whether you're feeling the gap or causing it, the real question isn't who cares more. It's why.
As Dr. Lisle explains, what's actually driving that dynamic, and what to do about it, depends on a highly individual matrix of mate value, aging, personality, and life circumstances.
In this episode:
· 0:00 — Announcement: Beat Your Genes is returning to YouTube. Subscribe at @BeatYourGenes
· 1:52 — The care gap question: why does he seem to stop trying after the relationship stabilizes?
· 12:30 — How mate value shifts differently for men and women after 40, and why evolution designed it that way
· 24:15 — The love instinct, the magic 10%, and why Match.com didn't solve loneliness
· 35:40 — What "caring less" actually signals, and what to do if you're on the losing end of the trade
· 46:00 — The chiseling chip: the one vicious cycle Dr. Lisle says can sometimes be broken
Key question covered: Is the care gap in long-term relationships inevitable, or is there something you can actually do about it?
Beat Your Genes is co-hosted by evolutionary psychologist Dr. Doug Lisle, PhD and Dr. Nathan Gershfeld, DC. New episodes every other week.
🎥 YouTube: youtube.com/@BeatYourGenes
🔗 beatyourgenes.org
📩 Doug Lisle: esteemdynamics.com
📩 Nathan Gershfeld: fastingescape.com
𝕏 @BeatYourGenes
Intro & outro: City of Happy Ones. Ferenc Hegedus. Licensed for use. © Beat Your Genes Podcast

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