People Who Do Prenuptial Contracts Stay Together Longer

Andrew Huberman May 8, 2025
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Andrew Huberman

@hubermanlab

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The Huberman Lab podcast is hosted by Andrew Huberman, Ph.D., a neuroscientist and tenured professor in the department of neurobiology of ophthalmology, and by courtesy, psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Stanford School of Medicine. The podcast discusses neuroscience and science-based tools, including how our brain and its connections with the organs of our body control our perceptions, our behaviors, and our health, as well as existing and emerging tools for measuring and changing how our nervous system works.

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The Huberman Lab episode out this week is about contracts for love and money—which might sound like a downer, but as attorney James Sexton explains, these contracts are more about defining the specific things people need in order to feel respected and safe, as opposed to protecting “the ending.” In fact, much of what goes into these agreements is about the marriage, not divorce conditions. Also, somewhat counterintuitively, people who create prenuptial agreements get divorced far less than the average population. The current divorce rate in the United States is 56% (!). Note: The episode is not really about divorce. It’s about love, and it also addresses the forces outside a relationship that can erode it, as well as the things to pay attention to in order to avoid those increasingly common pitfalls. Through both his profession and his life, James has adopted a unique and important perspective on all of this. It’s an episode that ought to benefit anyone—married, single, divorced, etc.—because it addresses the emotional and legal contracts around romantic relationships that most everyone encounters at some point. James is also an amazing storyteller and a genuinely good human being. It was a pleasure to host him.

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