Abused/Battered women, Obsessed with a competitor, Overpopulation & Mental health

In today’s episode, Dr. Lisle and Dr. Howk discuss the following listener questions:

  1. How do you square the notion that there is “no 1 mate” (or job, friend etc) with the jealousy/abuse/ stalking (and worse) that happens in relationships. What type of general education on this concept could be offered to attempt to mitigate such costly stone age behavior.  Related, can u talk about the treatment of battered women in your practice, how they do or don’t escape?  Buss claims one contributing cause of such behavior is patriarchal culture and institutionalized male dominance.  Any truth to that or is this just genetic like everything else?
  2. I have a frenemy (that is, a friend who was really an enemy) who I’ve long lost touch with, but whom I still irresistibly stalk on social media. She was very competitive with me in college, although I drastically outperformed her at the time (I was the dux and she was upper-middling). Nevertheless, she went on to similar feats as me, getting her PhD from Yale (again, the same as me). I see her subtweeting things about me occasionally and I wonder why, after not being friends for so long, we both harbour a malevolent obsession about each other? What is the evolutionary good of this? Neither of us stands to gain anything from this and we’ve both achieved what we wanted, showing that it wasn’t the zero-sum game we might’ve thought during our early college years. She has become a tenure-track professor while I started a very successful company and am now a millionaire. Why do we ruminate so much about enemies/frenemies, and how can be finally move on from them?
  3. I was wondering what over population does to a society. I understand nothing is changing genetically but was curious how lived experiences differ between populated densely packed cities and villages/ towns. Is one better than the other for mental health?

Episode 300

In our 300th episode (actually episode 301, but we wanted to save it for Dr. Howk),  Dr. Lisle and Dr. Howk take a break from solving listener problems and answering listener questions and instead turn towards answering some fun, personal questions.  

 

 

300: Genetics,BPD, Getting Your Health on Track,Group performance,Nosy Neighbors

Upcoming seminar Sun, Feb 19:  True to Life Seminar – visit http://www.TrueToLife.us to register. 

In this show, Dr. Lisle discusses:

1. I am still trying to figure out genetics and evolution (I wasn’t taught it), so I might be way oversimplifying this. If you get a set of genes from your parents and they get a set of genes from each of their parents, wouldn’t you be able to track a certain genetic trait as being from either one of your parents or one of their parents?

2. You have previously explained borderline personality.  Can we have a refresher on this, and do you have a better moniker it?

3. If you had to map out the very best way to get on the right track or stay on the right track for my health, What would be the best things for me to do?

4. My organization is constantly trying to access and improve ‘group performance’ and there are a variety of corporate tools marketed to optimize the effectiveness of work Teams. Is this bunk or does this have any relevance. More broadly, what do you think of “Organizational Psychology?” and does this relate?

5. My wife and I recently moved to a very exclusive neighbourhood. It’s a small, rich neighbourhood and we thought before we moved here that we would enjoy a lot of privacy and that people would keep to themselves. However, we have discovered to our horror hat we have extremely nosy, over-friendly, and slightly interfering neighbours. What can I do to enforce boundaries without falling out with them and potentially creating even bigger issues?