Speaker 1
And the thing is, this is the same
Speaker 2
advice that I would give people who are in a long-term relationship, like a committed relationship, right? It's not any different. It's actually quite the same. Having honest conversations about your needs, your expectations, checking in with each other on, hey, is this, how is this feeling for you? Are you happy with how this is going? These are all the same tips I'd give monogamous, coupled, long-term committed relationships. Yeah.
Speaker 1
Thank you for sharing
Speaker 2
that. Yeah. Okay. So were there any other do's and don'ts you
Speaker 1
have, Pepper? Let me take a look at my notebook. My notebook, I mean. I think we've covered most of them. The only other don't that I had was, I would say it's more of a caution, is caution against people that you see all the time. Co-workers, perhaps. If you're on the same soccer team, perhaps, think about how this could potentially get a little messy, not to share too much, because I'm a very different person by then. I'm from then, but I learned at a very engaged in high school and college not to entertain business with pleasure, not that there was much business going on in high school, but close organizations, relationships, people you see all the time, was a problem for me, and I know that for myself. So that's just something I would caution against, or just to be aware of, if you are interested in someone that you're going to be spending eight hours a day with, four times a week, be cautious of what that could mean for your work life and for your relationship with them as well. You don't necessarily want things to spill over to areas of life where they shouldn't spill over