The Learning Love Podcast

Dr. Mark A. Hicks

Peace of mind, health, and happiness all come from healthy relationships. Connections with family, friends, co-workers, and spouse or partner lead to personal and professional success. Dr. Mark A. Hicks, author of the book 'Learning Love,' provides tangible, real-life insights on how to build healthy, happy, thriving relationships, even if you come from a dysfunctional family background, have been through a divorce, or struggled with relationships in the past. Love isn't about fate. Love is a skill set, and this is the place to learn that skill set as we spend some time learning love. Brought to you by The Learning Love Foundation: https://www.learninglovefoundation.com/ Order "Learning Love: Building a Life that Matters and Healthy Relationships that Last": https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/learning-love-mark-a-hicks/1146412363?ean=9781636985954 Visit Dr. Mark A. Hicks online: https://www.markahicks.com/

  1. 6d ago

    How To Bring Up Difficult Topics Without Causing a Fight

    How do you bring up something that is bothering you without turning it into a fight? In this episode of The Learning Love Podcast, Dr. Mark A. Hicks talks about how to have hard conversations in relationships without shutting down, blowing up, becoming sarcastic, or pretending everything is fine when it is not. Most relationship conflicts do not begin because someone raises a concern. They begin because frustration has been building for too long and finally comes out sideways. A sharp comment. Silence. “Whatever.” “It’s fine.” A list of every past mistake. This episode offers real, down-to-earth ways to talk about what is bothering you before resentment takes over. Whether you are trying to communicate better with your spouse, partner, family member, friend, or coworker, this conversation will help you speak honestly without making the other person your enemy. Healthy relationships are not built by avoiding hard conversations. They are built by learning how to say, “This bothered me,” before it becomes, “This is who you always are.” In this episode: • How resentment builds when people keep saying “it’s fine” • Why sarcasm, withdrawal, and passive comments make conflict worse • How to bring up an issue without sounding accusatory • What to say when you feel hurt, ignored, overwhelmed, or disconnected • How to talk about problems before they become a much bigger fight • Why timing matters when starting difficult conversations • Practical communication skills for healthier relationships Subscribe to The Learning Love Podcast for practical wisdom on love, relationships, communication, emotional intelligence, conflict, happiness, grief, and building a life that matters.

    17 min
  2. Jun 22

    Why We Repeat The Same Bad Patterns

    Why do we keep repeating the same relationship patterns, even when they leave us hurt, exhausted, or wondering why love keeps ending the same way? In this episode of The Learning Love Podcast, Dr. Mark A. Hicks explores why people are often drawn to familiar relationship dynamics—even when those dynamics are unhealthy. From emotionally unavailable partners and constant conflict to people-pleasing, rescuing, over-functioning, and chasing affection, many of our adult relationship patterns begin long before we recognize them. We often call it chemistry when it is really familiarity. This conversation looks at how childhood modeling, attachment patterns, family roles, emotional wounds, and learned expectations can shape the kind of love we pursue. You may not consciously want chaos, inconsistency, criticism, or emotional distance, but familiar pain can sometimes feel safer than unfamiliar peace. Dr. Hicks discusses the difference between intensity and compatibility, why anxiety can be mistaken for passion, and how people can confuse being needed with being loved. He also offers practical reflection questions to help listeners recognize repeating patterns, build self-awareness, establish healthier boundaries, and choose relationships that offer consistency, emotional safety, mutual effort, and room to be fully themselves. If you have ever wondered why the same kind of heartbreak keeps showing up in different relationships, why healthy love can feel unfamiliar, or how to stop repeating painful emotional patterns, this episode is for you. Healthy love may not always feel like the love you have known. It may feel calmer, clearer, safer, and more honest. And sometimes, that is exactly how you know you are beginning to choose differently. For more, subscribe or go to www.learninglovefoundation.com

    13 min
  3. Jun 8

    Why Good Relationships Still Leave Some People Empty

    What happens when you have a good marriage, supportive friends, a loving family… and still feel lonely, empty, restless, or emotionally unfulfilled? In this deeply honest episode of The Learning Love Podcast, Dr. Mark A. Hicks explores one of the most misunderstood struggles in modern life: the painful realization that even healthy relationships cannot fully give us the sense of worth, identity, peace, and fulfillment we are searching for inside ourselves. From our teenage years forward, many of us quietly develop a belief that if we can just find the right group of people — the right friends, partner, social circle, or community — we will finally feel validated, accepted, lovable, and complete. And for a while, especially in adolescence, that strategy may seem to work. But adulthood eventually teaches a difficult truth: No relationship can permanently carry the weight of validating our entire existence. This episode explores: Why people can still feel lonely in good relationshipsEmotional emptiness and the search for validationThe hidden pressure we place on spouses, family, and friendsWhy external approval never fully satisfies usThe difference between connection and self-worthSelf-love, self-care, and emotional responsibilityWhy healthy relationships cannot “complete” usHow insecurity quietly damages relationshipsLearning to thrive from within rather than constantly seeking validationHow self-fulfillment allows us to love others more freely and authenticallyDr. Hicks explains that when we finally learn to care for ourselves emotionally, develop a meaningful inner life, and stop demanding that relationships constantly prove our worth, something powerful happens: We become free. Free to love people as they truly are instead of needing them to emotionally rescue us. Free to enjoy connection without making others responsible for our identity. Free to experience relationships as gifts rather than emotional survival. This episode is for anyone who has ever thought: “Why do I still feel empty even though I have people who love me?” You are not alone. And the answer may not be found in finding better relationships — but in building a healthier relationship with yourself. Subscribe to The Learning Love Podcast for thoughtful conversations about emotional intelligence, healing, communication, self-awareness, relationships, personal growth, and building a life that matters.

    13 min
  4. May 25

    Love Means Making the Effort to Understand

    Why do so many relationships slowly drift into frustration, criticism, defensiveness, and emotional distance? Often, it’s not because people stop loving each other. It’s because they stop trying to understand each other. In this deeply personal episode of The Learning Love Podcast, Dr. Mark A. Hicks explores one of the greatest gifts we can give the people we love: the sincere effort to understand them — even when their interests, habits, personality, emotions, or passions make little sense to us. Why does your partner love sports so much? Why do video games help them decompress? Why does cleaning the house bring them peace? Why does social media, hobbies, routines, music, collecting, or quiet alone time matter so deeply to them? Too often, relationships fall into patterns of teasing, mocking, nagging, dismissing, or trying to “fix” each other instead of becoming curious about one another. But beneath those conflicts is something profoundly human: every person longs to feel known, understood, accepted, and emotionally safe. You do not have to fully understand every part of someone to love them well. But making the effort tells them something powerful: “You matter to me. Your inner world matters to me. I want to know you.” And for many people, that effort becomes one of the most healing gifts they will ever receive. If you want stronger relationships, deeper emotional intimacy, and healthier communication, this episode will challenge the way you think about love, connection, and acceptance. Subscribe to The Learning Love Podcast for thoughtful conversations about emotional intelligence, communication, relationships, personal growth, mental health, and building healthy relationships that last.

    12 min
  5. May 18

    You Can't Build Great Relationships on Poor Self Esteem

    What role does self-esteem really play in love, connection, and emotional health? More than most people realize. In this episode of The Learning Love Podcast, Dr. Mark A. Hicks explores why healthy relationships are deeply connected to the way we see ourselves. Low self-esteem doesn’t just affect confidence — it can quietly shape communication, boundaries, trust, conflict, emotional dependence, jealousy, people-pleasing, and even the kinds of relationships we choose. Many people spend years trying to fix their relationships without realizing the deeper issue may be the way they relate to themselves. Whether you struggle with insecurity, overthinking, fear of abandonment, or simply want healthier and more emotionally connected relationships, this conversation offers practical insight, emotional honesty, and hope. Healthy relationships do not begin with finding perfect people. They begin with becoming emotionally healthy enough to love well. The Learning Love Podcast explores emotional intelligence, communication, relationships, healing, mindfulness, and what it means to build a life that truly matters. Dr. Mark A. Hicks is the author of Learning Love: Building a Life that Matters and Healthy Relationships that Last. #SelfEsteem #Relationships #EmotionalHealth #MentalHealth #Communication #HealthyRelationships #SelfWorth #EmotionalIntelligence #PersonalGrowth #TheLearningLovePodcast #DrMarkHicks #Mindfulness #Healing #LoveAndRelationships

    16 min
  6. May 11

    Why Mocking Your Spouse Is More Dangerous Than You Think

    In this episode of The Learning Love Podcast, we explore one of the most common relationship habits that quietly destroys trust: putting down your spouse in front of friends, coworkers, or family members. It may seem harmless. A joke. A complaint. A way to vent or get a laugh. But over time, repeatedly mocking, criticizing, or belittling your partner in social settings can slowly create contempt — and according to relationship researcher Dr. John Gottman, contempt is the #1 predictor of divorce. Why does this happen? How do small comments become emotional distance? And what can couples do instead if they genuinely need support, humor, or a safe place to process frustration? In this episode, we discuss: • Why public criticism damages emotional safety • The difference between healthy vulnerability and destructive venting • How friend groups can unintentionally reinforce negativity • Why respect matters even during conflict • The hidden connection between humor, resentment, and intimacy • Practical ways to communicate frustration without harming your relationship Healthy relationships are not built by pretending problems don’t exist — but by learning how to handle those problems with wisdom, dignity, and care. If you want deeper connection, stronger communication, and relationships that actually last, this conversation is for you. The Learning Love Podcast explores emotional intelligence, healthy relationships, communication, mindfulness, and building a life that matters. #Relationships #MarriageAdvice #Communication #EmotionalIntelligence #HealthyRelationships #Love #Marriage #RelationshipTips #Psychology #TheLearningLovePodcast #ConflictResolution #Trust #Couples #SelfAwareness #Podcast

    17 min

About

Peace of mind, health, and happiness all come from healthy relationships. Connections with family, friends, co-workers, and spouse or partner lead to personal and professional success. Dr. Mark A. Hicks, author of the book 'Learning Love,' provides tangible, real-life insights on how to build healthy, happy, thriving relationships, even if you come from a dysfunctional family background, have been through a divorce, or struggled with relationships in the past. Love isn't about fate. Love is a skill set, and this is the place to learn that skill set as we spend some time learning love. Brought to you by The Learning Love Foundation: https://www.learninglovefoundation.com/ Order "Learning Love: Building a Life that Matters and Healthy Relationships that Last": https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/learning-love-mark-a-hicks/1146412363?ean=9781636985954 Visit Dr. Mark A. Hicks online: https://www.markahicks.com/