Dr. John K. Miller: Family is the Place that, When You Go There, They Have to Take You In
In this episode of "Key Figures," Dr. John Miller shares his decades of experience as a family therapist, exploring the intricacies of mental health, marriage, and family life in China. He discusses how culture shapes relationships, the importance of healthy conflict, sustaining passion over time, and the true essence of love.
Key insights from Dr. John K. Miller:
WHAT DO YOU THINK IS THE NO.1 REASON PEOPLE HAVE MENTAL HEALTH PROBLEMS IN CHINA?
If you ask that question anywhere else in the Western world, they’ll say depression. If you ask that question in China, they won’t say depression. They’ll say pressure.
MARRIAGE IS NOT JUST ABOUT LOVE AND ROMANCE, as we see in novels.
YOU CAN’T MAINTAIN PASSION AS IT WAS AT THE BEGINNING OF THE RELATIONSHIP. And that’s normal.
FAMILY IS THE PLACE THAT WHEN YOU GO THERE, THEY HAVE TO TAKE YOU IN.
IT’S A PROBLEM TO FIGHT. It’s a worse problem not to fight enough.
YOUNG COUPLES FIGHT, but important psychological work is being done in that fight.
YOU THINK COUPLES FIGHT ABOUT HOUSEHOLD CHORES. But it’s really about how my family taught me to do things versus how yours did.
COUPLES WHO STAY MARRIED FOR SEVENTY YEARS NEVER TAKE EACH OTHER FOR GRANTED.
When you’re in trouble, the person you go to should be your partner. I CALL IT A SAFE HARBOR.
THE BIRTH OF THE FIRST CHILD is statistically the lowest point of marital satisfaction.
THE OPPOSITE OF PATHOLOGY IS PLAY. A sick marriage doesn’t have much playfulness in it.
THERE IS NO AFFAIR THAT DOESN’T HAPPEN IN THE SHADOW OF DEATH. When I ask why they had the affair, most people say: “I FELT ALIVE.”
LOVE IS THE CONDITION IN WHICH THE CARE, SATISFACTION, AND SECURITY OF ANOTHER PERSON IS AS IMPORTANT TO YOU AS YOUR OWN.
Timecodes:
01:13 – Cultural differences in mental health in the West and China
01:58 – “Pressure comes from the outside in, not from the inside out.”
02:26 – Parental influence on partner choice in China
03:03 – What does family mean in the modern world?
03:55 – How to choose a partner
04:40 – Fighting as a way to reconcile differences between families
06:20 – Good fights vs bad fights
Four harmful behaviors: criticism, defensiveness, stonewalling, contempt
08:0 – Long-term marriage insights
Passion evolves; appreciation and mutual support are key.
11:51 – Why do people cheat?
15:31 – Insights on soft power
16:20 – Psychotherapy in China: evolution of therapy
18:59 – Pop psychology and public discourse
Evidence-based practice vs stereotypes; controlled self-disclosure.
21:35 – Definition of love
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