The REALationship Method
The REALationship Method
Chris Lomboy
Six-month Dating Rule and Which Phase is Better - Single, Talking, or Together?, with Aulani
1 hour 13 minutes Posted Jan 6, 2026 at 1:00 pm.
Meet Awolani: Counselor And Performer
Hawaii New Year Fireworks And Local Culture
Parenting, Language, And Kids’ Behavior
Dating Standards, The Six-Month Rule, And Home Red Flags
Money, Sneakers, And Spending Priorities
Gold Chains, Hawaiian Bracelets, And Meaning
Career Pivots After 30 And Hustle
Burnout, Emotional Tools, And Communication
Texting Etiquette, Social Media Dating, And Presence
Boundaries, Saying No, And Building Independence
Charging Adult Kids Rent And Tough Love
Overprotective Parenting, Rebellion, And Honest Talks
0:00
1:13:16
Download MP3
Show notes

Send a text

Fireworks lit the sky, but what really sparked was a candid look at how culture, money, and boundaries shape love. We sit down with Aulani—a behavior-focused counselor and hula performer—to unpack the signals we miss and the standards that save us. From Hawaii’s New Year traditions to why the street is spotless on January 2, we trace how community norms carry into parenting, dating, and the choices we make when no one’s watching.

We get specific. Paper plates versus real dishes. Sneaker walls versus balanced budgets. A custom Hawaiian bracelet that doubles as a proposal and a life story etched in gold. These aren’t props; they’re patterns. They reveal whether someone invests in people or flexes for validation, whether spending is strategy or impulse. Aulani shares her six-month rule, why limited access to her space protects her peace, and how to read a home like a map of habits. Chris adds the parent’s view—passing down heirloom sneakers, setting rent for an at-home 19-year-old, and choosing tough love over comfort so independence can grow.

We also explore the emotional backbone of real partnership. Burnout happens. Crying can be a clean reset. Acceptance and commitment tools help you step back from spirals. The bigger challenge is communication: some of us want space to think, others want words to feel seen. When you know each other’s process, you stop rewarding bad patterns and start building trust. That shows up in dating, too. DMs and W Y D texts are easy. Sitting across from someone, listening, and noticing the mismatch between their confidence online and their presence in person—that’s where clarity lives.

If you’ve wondered whether it’s too late to change careers, we’ve got you. Your mid-30s can be a launchpad, not a deadline. Skills stack. Mentors matter. Multiple income streams keep your life resilient in a high-cost world. And boundaries? A text breakup won’t cut it. Respect does. Hit play for a warm, unfiltered journey through Hawaii’s culture, modern dating cues, practical money wisdom, and the kind of accountability that makes relationships—and people—stronger.

If this resonated, follow the show, share with a friend who needs new-year clarity, and leave a quick review to help others find us. What boundary are you protecting this year?

• reading Hawaii’s New Year culture and community cleanup
• how environment and media shape kids’ behavior and language
• six-month rule, access to space, and home-as-dating-red-flag
• paper plates vs plates for guests as signals of effort
• sneaker walls, image, resale, and spending priorities
• meaning of gold chains and custom Hawaiian bracelets
• career pivots in your 30s and building multiple incomes
• burnout cycles, crying as release, and ACT tools
• compatibility in communication and avoiding reactivity loops
• texting etiquette, social media dating, and showing up in person
• charging adult kids rent, chores, and financial discipline
• overprotection, rebellion, and honest talks with teens
• non-negotiables: no text breakups, trust and boundaries