How Smart Women End Up in Bad Relationships
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This week on The Weight and the Wonder, therapists Jason Herndon and Philicia Ross unpack a viral video that asks why women with multiple degrees can still find themselves heartbroken over partners who don't treat them well.
Using attachment theory, family systems, relationship psychology, and their experiences as therapists, they explore why intelligence, education, beauty, and success don't protect anyone from relational pain. They discuss the difference between your "boardroom brain" and your attachment system, how familiarity can be mistaken for compatibility, and why being chosen is not the same thing as being loved well.
Together, they examine the myths surrounding "equally yoked" relationships, the scarcity narratives often directed at educated women—particularly Black women—and how unmet emotional needs can shape our relationship choices.
In This Episode:
-Why education and intelligence don't prevent heartbreak
-The viral "three degrees and a birth certificate" relationship debate
-Attachment systems vs. logical decision-making
-Why familiarity can feel like compatibility
-The role of schema chemistry in attraction
-How nervous systems influence relationship choices
-EMDR, attachment wounds, and relationship patterns
-The Just World Hypothesis and victim-blaming
-Being "equally yoked" beyond degrees and credentials
-The pressure of scarcity narratives for educated women
-IFS exiles and the hunger to be chosen
-Bowen's concept of low differentiation
-Why being desired is not the same as feeling whole
Connect With Us
Instagram: @weightandwonderpodcast
Spotify: The Weight and the Wonder Podcast
Follow Philicia:
Instagram: @byphilicia | @villageofsoundmind
Substack: byphilicia.substack.com
Follow Jason:
LinkedIn: Jason L. Herndon
Substack: somemen.substack.com