How to Get a Girlfriend with Connell Barrett - Tired of Swiping? How Matchmaking Can Set You Up with Incredible Women (Ditch the Apps for Good!)
Episode Date: March 6, 2025Are you exhausted by dating apps? Tired of first dates with people who aren’t right for you? What if someone hand-picked incredible women for you to meet—women who are just your type? Dating coach... Connell Barrett welcomes elite matchmaker Amy Andersen, founder of Linx Dating, to break down the world of high-end matchmaking. Amy shares the key advantages of working with what she calls “your own personal cheerleader” and offers expert first-date tips to help you make a great impression.Connell and Amy Discuss:04:45: Why Dating Apps Take So Much Time—and How Matchmaking Saves You Countless Hours08:22: Why a Personalized Approach to Finding Love Can Work Better than DIY Dating17:45: “They Got Married on their Second Date!” Amy’s Jaw-Dropping Success Story28:57: Essential Do’s and Don’ts of Hiring a Matchmaker33:11: How to Be Interesting and Attractive on the First Date44:01: The Power of Authenticity and Vulnerability in Sparking Real Romantic ConnectionsIf you want an easier way to meet incredible women, this episode is a must-listen.LEARN MORE ABOUT MATCHMAKING AND LINX DATING:http://www.Linxdating.comFOLLOW AMY ANDERSEN ON INSTAGRAM:@ms.linxdatingBOOK A FREE CALL WITH CONNELL TO LEARN HOW 1-1 DATING COACHING CAN HELP YOU FIND A GREAT GIRLFRIEND:http://www.DatingTransformation.com
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Wait, they got married?
Or you mean they decided to get married on day two?
Oh, they got married on day two.
They got married.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Welcome back to the How to Get a Girlfriend podcast.
I'm your host, dating coach, Connell Barrett. I'm the real-life hitch. If hitch was a skinny, nerdy
ginger. I help men gain confidence, learn to flirt, and get a great girlfriend. But
there's somebody else who helps men and women learn to flirt, gain confidence, and
make a great connection. And that's my guest today, Amy Anderson.
Amy Anderson is a matchmaker.
She is the founder and CEO of Lynx Dating,
which is an exclusive matchmaking company
and social network based in Silicon Valley.
Since 2003, Amy has been helping high caliber professionals
find love through a very personalized
and confidential approach to making connections.
In fact, she's been so successful at this that apparently they call her the Cupid of Silicon Valley.
So today Hitch meets the Cupid of Silicon Valley. Amy, welcome to the How to Get a Girlfriend podcast.
Oh, thank you so much for having me here. I'm delighted to chat with you. We're gonna have so much fun.
We are, we are. And don're going to have so much fun.
We are. We are. And don't forget to check the show notes. You can learn a lot more about
Lynx Dating and about Amy at lynxdating.com. That's L-I-N-X dating.com. And that's also
in the show notes. Okay. I'm curious. The Cupid of Silicon Valley. Where does that come
from?
I actually, I know where it comes from.
It comes from you doing this for over 20 years.
And I know that Lynx dating has been called
the Ivy league of matchmaking.
What makes the approach you take at Lynx different
from other matchmakers?
For sure.
So I think one of the major reasons Lynx is different
is just being very selective. So I'm really
cherry picking the types of gentlemen and women that I want to work with and
I'm keeping the focus truly based on the quality of the individual versus kind of
the sheer volume. So I'm only working with a handful of people at any given
time. So I think that that's a big difference compared to other firms that might really
focus on a much higher volume of clientele. That's really cool. That's how they do their thing.
But for me, I'm really selective because I really want to be able to allocate the necessary
bandwidth and time for each client's project. And my process is
also so in-depth. Like just to give you an idea, when a prospect emails me to
kind of introduce themselves to, you know, links to see if I might work with them, I
take them as part of kind of a meet and greet process, which can be sometimes in five
hours in person, just if they're a fit.
So I would say, you know, really selective with the types of people I'm working with
and also just the personalization that entails the whole process.
You know, it's certainly doing the matchmaking, but there's so much guidance and a little
bit of coaching as I can prepare them for the different dates and the journey that they
go on.
Those would be kind of the major things.
On top of, I mean, as you indicated, the Ivy League of matchmakersmakers a lot of my clients did go to
Ivy Leagues of course that's not a requirement but it's not especially in
Silicon Valley atypical that somebody went to a great university yeah have
some rockstar job they're just impressive and extremely busy and
sometimes very little time up into this
point to date. Well you anticipated my next question. One of the questions I get
a lot from men, clients and just men who are talking to me about dating, is they
say, well how does matchmaking work? Is it right for me? How does it work?
What do they do? Is it just like a cattle call of women you meet? Is it right for me? How does it work? What do they do? Is it just like a cattle call of women you meet? Is it
Is it right for me or not? Can you talk about the kind of
single person gravitating toward my listener, the professionally successful male?
What's the kind of guy who's a good fit for matchmaking and maybe a guy who's not a great fit?
Great question. So I think the right type of individual is somebody who's probably
dabbled with dating apps, you know, they've checked those out.
They've, they've experienced that they've had been traumatized by it.
Traumatized or they're realizing, Oh my God, this is a lot of time, but
literally such an investment of time,
almost what becomes like a full-time job, that they recognize that their bar is high, they're
not going to settle, they've dabbled with that, and now they're, no, and maybe they've had a
relationship, but maybe they just don't have the time to dedicate towards that anymore.
So they're really looking for something different and they see the inherent value in working
with a human, you know, that's going to be able to apply their intuition and introduce
them also to a really different demographic and different network of individuals. Keep in mind, a lot of the women in Lynx dating are not necessarily on the dating app.
So I think for a lot of these guys that I'm working with, there is an inherent value in
that.
They're like, oh, that's cool.
So Amy, you're telling me that a lot of the women in Lynx are not necessarily going to
be on apps.
So it's a totally different social
network. So I think that that is very appealing. To answer your question in terms of the type of
client who's maybe not good for working with a matchmaker, I'd say it's somebody who is very
accustomed to high volume dating, right? And that then kind of the trend that we've seen through
the dating apps and online dating where it's the more, more, more, the grass is always
greener by somebody who almost is drinking that Kool-Aid by the gallon and they're loving
it and that's fine. Like that is their kind of mode and mentality that they're in and that can be really hard because I've learned
the hard way over the years where I try to
reprogram that mindset going from volume to
quality versus sheer volume and quantity and that's really hard. Right? That type of person is probably in a better
mindset to stay dating through the apps or online.
And maybe once they kind of burn out from that,
then they can think about working with the matchmaker.
Because generally speaking,
most of us matchmakers do one introduction at a time.
So that can be a shocking concept for somebody who's like,
great, what about 10 or 100 women?
I'm like, what?
I'm talking about one, I'm gonna find two.
And that's what we're talking about,
like finding chemistry in that spark
with one amazing person, right?
What a concept, quality over quantity in 2025. Awful idea. And you
totally nailed something a minute ago when you said, or a few minutes ago when
you said how personalized your work has to be. I feel the same way. We do
slightly different things, but at the end of the day you and I are trying to help
people come together and find love.
And I've found in the dating coach world
that everybody, every guy I work with
has his own personal combination lock.
We gotta unlock his confidence,
unlock his ability to connect,
unlock the kind of woman he's gonna have chemistry with.
And so it's not a one size fits all world
from my end of things as a dating coach.
Can you talk a little bit more about how your personalization, how that is so important in terms of finding the right partner?
Absolutely. So I think that it all inter kind of locks and
everything kind of merges together.
Now when you start working with a matchmaker, a lot of this is about kind of digging deep into kind of merges together. When you start working with a matchmaker, a
lot of this is about kind of digging deep into kind of one psyche, what
they're looking for, all the experiences they've had up until this point,
where I really encourage these men to talk about past relationships or if they
haven't even had relationships, you know, why?
You know, really kind of getting them
to kind of uncover some of, you know,
this history into their life.
I find the more that they talk about this,
then we're slowly starting to kind of
build those building blocks towards confidence, right?
That can then be parlayed into actually going out there
in real life and striking up conversations with women. My whole thing is dating is a
skill, right? Like anything in life, you know, dating is a skill and practice
makes perfect. And to remember to be patient, I think patience,
like with this whole process, really pays off. And to remember that like we're all
kind of operating in a really fast-paced dating culture where a lot of these guys,
I would imagine a lot of your clients are wanting to kind of like find the one
and sometimes they can be impatient,
but kind of the more patient you are with the journey, the more confidence you're going to build
as part of the process and the more skills you're going to kind of gain, right? So it all kind of
begins to weave together as part of the process honestly, sometimes when I find my clients are least
expecting it, that's when they find those sparks in the chemistry because they're just there,
they're there in the moment and they just are themselves. And that's when kind of those sparks
can happen and the conversation flows so much more organically,
but that is a skill and you have to start somewhere.
Can you point to one of your past clients
or maybe a gentleman you worked with
and he was impatient or he had a really bad date
or a woman you matched him with with it wasn't a fit and
he got a little bit down on himself and then it happened then he found the one
give us a give us a success story because we all need those yeah no
absolutely so one of my former clients he was fishing in a very we'll call it
very narrow pond so this is kind of like a success story and I would say like a story of
rigidity, if you will. So he was a Stanford grad and was looking for a match who was also a Stanford
grad and somebody who had former athletic experience having been on a tennis team at Stanford
because he had been part of the Stanford tennis team
way back when.
And so I told him, okay,
I think this is really interesting
if this is kind of your thing,
but I think it's a little rigid.
So I really wanted though to respect his criteria
and his kind of hopes and dreams with this.
Sure.
We did a ton of introductions
and he found that amongst
these alumni that had played tennis for Stanford, you know, he was kind of
fumbling around where he just wasn't like finding that chemistry he was
hoping for. And the women felt that I think maybe a lot of the first dates
were a little forced because he really wanted it to work. So I think through that approach he was
almost trying to manufacture something that was not meant to be. So he went
through like maybe I want to say six to eight of these very particular
introductions and then I said okay let's take a breath, take a few steps back and revisit your criteria
and see if you can kind of widen the net a little bit.
And think about like maybe opening up your criteria
to maybe different alumni from Stanford
who didn't play a sport, right?
Maybe they're like really good at something else,
which clearly if you got into Stanford, you were or are, but maybe you can just be a little bit
more open-minded. I think at that point, so it took some trial and error for him,
right? He was kind of willing to go through this process and then realize,
okay, something ain't working, you know, so let's revisit the criteria. He listened to my advice, opened
kind of his mindset and started meeting other women who graduated from Stanford. And that
is when he finally had the chemistry with somebody who was definitely outside of her
criteria or his criteria. You know, she had been a chess player at Stanford and was a swimmer. So you know, certainly still athletic, but just somebody who is actually out of his original
thinking.
And so that is when the chemistry was there.
It was easy.
It was a really special situation for him because he was like, oh my gosh, like, I think
I've met the love of my life. It definitely took some coaching from my angle for both of them.
Because I think for this woman,
interestingly, we had recruited her. So she got like a cold email from me just saying,
you know, I'm representing this gentleman. Are you single? If you are, I would love to talk to you
and introduce you to the idea
of potentially meeting this amazing client.
And so she agreed.
She ended up meeting him, but after a couple of dates,
she actually had a pretty big freak out
because it was almost too good to be true for her.
Oh wow. This can't be real. This is too good.
Let's target it. Yeah. Yeah. It's like this guy came into her life
from literally out of nowhere and was so like intentional and so
just expressive and a good communicator and all these things that she had dreamed
of but it was almost like unreal.
It just wasn't like a, it was like a fairy tale.
And so I remember this is a couple years ago, I had a call with her and I said, no, this
is, this is actually real.
This is really happening.
Like if you think he's maybe operating at a little bit of a quicker pace
then you know you're comfortable with like
Put it out there with your needs and your wants because I can tell you from my perspective
This is really special and I think that like you guys could be like the real deal
But like really put it out there
like if if you're a little scared right now or if he's going at a faster pace
put that on the table and importantly that's what she did and he respected
that so he kind of dialed back some of his intensity it's like his his desire
for that relationship and I just told, pump the brakes a little bit.
We don't want to scare her off.
Like try to match her pace, which is going to be slower than yours.
That's what he did.
And it worked.
Yeah.
Don't force her to take tennis lessons with you.
If she doesn't want to exactly, exactly jumping a pool.
He's never been a swimmer.
I said, I've open a pool, like
do some of the hobbies and things that are important to her. And actually I'm glad you
brought that up because like he totally did. He, number one, he didn't really force her
to learn to play tennis. He took an active interest in some of her hobbies and he never
thought he would be a swimmer, but
he actually had gone through like, I think it was a shoulder surgery. And so he's like,
this is actually really cool. She's teaching me how to swim. I never thought I'd enjoy
that. So it's kind of leaning in to the person that you're liking, lean into the things that
make them interested in the things that they are passionate about in their life.
You mentioned this man with very specific tastes.
Yeah.
I worked with a matchmaker.
I've worked with a couple of matchmakers in my single days
and one matchmaker, she told me some funny stories
about very surprising, odd, unusual requests, either from clients or maybe from a client
of somebody who wanted to be a client.
And then she said, you know what, I'm not a good fit for you.
It's going to be hard for me to find a woman who is 5'2.317 centimeters high who has this
accent that.
Do you have any funny stories about odd, unusual requests from your clients, male or female?
Oh my goodness, how much time do you have?
Molly, how much time do you have doing the technical work? No, as much time as you need.
Well, so it's not unusual to get funny and quirky requests here in Silicon Valley. It kind of goes with the territory, I think,
but I was representing a prince in the Middle East
a few years ago, and he flew into America,
specifically to my office here in Silicon Valley
with one of his assistants and laid on my couch,
very Freudian style, kind of kicked off his shoes and was very relaxed.
So I said, okay, I must be doing something right.
And his request was meeting a Stanford grad
and a Stanford grad of like a very kind of particular,
beautiful yet very, I would say kind of voluptuous,
curvy body type of a very specific age. So
I started kind of adding all these different things up and on top of that somebody who wanted
multiple kids who had, you know, a very good job but was pretty ready to probably give that up to start, you know, planning a family and like bearing children.
So that's a very particular isolated type of woman. I think for me the challenge was,
you know, a lot of these highly educated, accomplished women in Silicon Valley,
you know, sure are going to be looking for kids, but to give up a career and kind of give up all these
things to start like producing offspring, you know, what would be decidedly much more traditional
in fashion, like from the get go at such a young age in today's modern society,
that's going to be tough. That's going to be a very tall order. So I tried to see if he could
be flexible and he's like, no, like this is why I'm coming
to you.
I know you can do this for me.
I was like kind of biting my tongue, like, okay, cool.
Like we're, we're off to the races.
I'm excited.
So, I mean, I did everything to try to find this match.
I went on campus.
I literally chased after women to try to find the right.
It's like running after them.
And I'm like, are you single? And I was on body type and I was like, Oh my God, what am I doing?
Um, but anything for our Prince and royalty in the middle East, right?
Was, I mean, it was me and he had quite a few matches actually.
So everything was going right.
But I think the big thing for what was occurring with representing him as a client and these
highly accomplished women that I was doing introductions to him for was that it was really
the geography.
I mean, the expectation was that they were going to move overseas.
So that's a big ask.
So he'd had many different introductions, but nothing was really clicking.
So a lot of first dates, some second dates, and then we kind of like, I just let him date
on his own for a while.
And then one day a former woman that had been passive in my database emailed me randomly and
she said, do you have any matches for me? And I was like, Oh my goodness, I think she could be
great for him. And made the introduction. They ended up getting married on date two. Crazy,
crazy. They got married or you mean they decided to get married on day two
Oh, they got married on day got
Yeah, yeah, literally boarding the plane going out. Wow. Yeah, it's a crazy story. Now they have three kids
Oh my gosh, that's incredible. Very cool. That is wild. That's a great great story
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There's a question that my clients hate to hear from women on a date.
Yeah.
And I would love to get a woman's perspective on what a good answer to this is.
Or what women are looking to hear,
how to answer it in an honest but smart way as a single man.
So many of my clients hear the question,
so what are you looking for?
What are you looking for?
And it drives them crazy.
And I have my coaching on how I have them answer that,
but I'd love to talk to ask the advice
of a very successful matchmaker, what do women, what are they,
what are women asking when they ask that question and how should men answer that?
So in terms of kind of what a woman is looking for in a man,
when a woman asks on a first date or before a first date, so what are you looking for?
Yeah. A lot of men struggle with an answer to that any thoughts on the right way to think about that
Question and answer it in an honest way, but also a way that is a good answer
Absolutely. So I think it really depends on kind of where he is at
Right if he's looking to just date and enjoy
Kind of you know meeting different women and he's kind of unsure of what the next
six to 12 months look like, I would say, you know, I'm really enjoying kind of the here and the now
and meeting people, putting myself out there and meeting accomplished, you know, attractive women
like yourself, right? I mean, that's, that's, I think, a really honest answer. If he's
looking for a relationship, right, then I would say something like, you know, I'm, I'm here with
the intent of finding the right person. Granted, I think it's a struggle and it's challenging.
and it's challenging, but I'm feeling a connection with you. My goal is monogamy. My goal is having a family one day and finding that right person who
shares those same values and then I would volley back. What about you? You
know, where's your head at with all this? Like dating can be so tough, right? So
just being very present, very honest, but then
falling back. And I think like if any of your guys struggle with that, be in the power seat for them
to bring that up before they are asked, right? Oh, be proactive. Absolutely. I always tell people if there's ever kind of that hot
button question or that topic that people are just like, oh god they they're
getting kind of nervous, the butterflies are there, or it's just addressing that
elephant in the room, be in the power position and in the power seat to bring it up before it's asked.
In that way, it's like, take that deep breath.
You just got that off your chest.
No big deal.
You're in the clear and you're cruising on to the next topic.
Right.
And why not do that earlier on, on the date or in that conversation, right?
Versus again, kind of dreading when it's gonna come up, right?
So these guys are far better served
to bring that up on their own and offer that up
and then get her talking.
What's her deal?
Good advice, very good advice.
So I had a couple of great experiences
with matchmakers in the past.
And there was something so great about the feeling of having somebody out there looking out for me.
I literally once had my former matchmaker, she once called me on a Friday night.
She's at a loud bar.
And she's like, hey, Con, hold on. I have somebody you want to talk to here.
And gives the phone to a random woman and says, hello.
And I'm like hey hello she's like yeah Bonnie said you should talk to me I
guess you're like some kind of a dating code before I knew it I was on a date
with her that this woman and and it just felt so good to feel like oh there's
this champion out there for me and I remember thinking at the time I was I
was on the apps doing a lot of dating
myself because that's partially my job but also I enjoy it. But for a busy person, yeah,
I can see the value in let me have my army, my you, Y-O-U army out there for you, for
me, finding somebody for me. So I don't really have a question.
I just loved how it felt having somebody like,
yeah, she's on my side.
It felt great.
Well, no, I so appreciate that.
And that is very cool that that matchmaker did that.
And just as thinking about you, and it
sounds like that matchmaker really
wanted the best for you, right?
Like really thinking about how to best serve your needs.
And it's clearly like, you know, in the matchmaker's life, like proactive, she's putting herself
out there.
She's socializing and meeting people.
And I think that is, you know, for your listeners, one of the definitely one of the unique value
ads, like there's a lot of matchmakers like myself where we are out there. Like I'm out there basically 24 seven, three 65.
I'm thinking about my clients and the crazy thing is
like, I just never know where the perfect match is going to be for my clients.
And so like, I'm thinking right now about an example I can share of one of my
recently married couples, they got married over Thanksgiving and I was representing the gentleman as my client and
he had had one serious relationship from my introduction, but that did not pan out in
terms of a long-term relationship or marriage.
So it was kind of back to the drawing board and I was cycling through different women
in my database then fast forward I went to my friend's Persian New Year party at her
home she happens to be my neighbor so I'm there at this fun festive New Year's
party it was like a dinner party people are having cocktails and just mixing and
mingling and I lock eyes on this woman who is in her 60s.
Side note, my male client was in his 60s.
I'm looking at this woman.
I kind of scan her up and down. She was probably thinking, Oh, what's going on here?
Why is this woman checking out?
And I approached her and I just said, excuse me, are you single?
And she kind of was like a deer in headlights, like, yeah,
that's where's this going?
And I just said, I'm Amy, I'm a professional matchmaker based on like your energy and
just observing you speak because it's true.
She was very articulate and eloquent in the way she was speaking.
I said, I think actually it could be really an interesting fit for my client.
And I literally have never done this before, Connell, but I said, I'm I think actually you could be really an interesting fit for my client and I
literally have never done this before Connell but I said I'm gonna make a quick
video of you right now I want you to just introduce yourself and so all of a
sudden I'm holding an iPhone app and recording her and I immediately sent
that to my client I said I think I've just met your future person. I matched them and they ended up getting married.
Like it was just, it was such a crazy situation.
And that goes to show like for your guys, like if you're hiring a matchmaker, make
sure matchmakers are not limiting candidates to just their database numbers.
Like you went out who's out there,
who's networking, who's social,
and as your story indicated,
like who's always looking out for the client, right?
Because one never knows.
And that's the exciting thing in working with a matchmaker
is just like somebody who is your greatest champion
and who's on the sidelines like cheering for you like,
woo hoo! What do you do when you get this kind of male client because here is the
kind of guy who might be listening right now yeah he goes on dates he's a good
conversationalist there's no awkward pauses he can talk about himself he's
articulate he's together he's got a good job but he struggles with, he's articulate, he's together, he's got a good job, but he
struggles with flirting. He's not sure either topics to talk about on a date,
or he's not sure how to help himself and the woman he's on a date with open up
and he gets stuck in that dreaded quote-unquote friend zone. Where a woman
or multiple, maybe you've seen a pattern where a male client of yours
has had multiple women say, hey, I seem like a nice guy, but I just wasn't feeling what
I want to feel. Even if on paper, he's a great catch. How do you help men like that? Do you
have any tips for men like that who might be listening right now saying, oh my God,
I'm so tired of the friend zone. What do I do? Help me.
Absolutely. So this is very common territory for so many people that I work with on both
sides, right? For women, for men, for everybody in between. So this is tough, right? I think
the key is remember the context. What are you doing? As you're entering that restaurant
or bar or park, wherever you're're meeting her the context is a
date so lean into that energetically remembering the context and the
environment in this situation this is not a work meeting this is not a board
room meeting you're not having a job interview you know for that dream job
right because people are gonna read that energy immediately.
So lean into the situation and remember that these women are there to meet you
and genuinely have agreed to meet you for the purposes of a date.
So when you remember that, I think that is step one, that's really going to help.
Number two is being interesting and an interested person. So again, kind of that theory of leaning
into the date, you are asking her questions about herself, trying to peel those kind of
emotional layers back. And remember that like
emotions don't always follow logic. I think a lot of very
analytical and logical guys really want, you know, to figure
things out and find that chemistry and sometimes force
something right. But it's really important to kind of peel those
layers back and remember that there's a lot of, you know, importance of like
nuances and feelings and trying to kind of tap into the emotion of things by
being a little bit vulnerable and sharing about yourself. I have one client I'm
representing right now and he goes out on a fair amount of dates and these are
all really good dates on paper on both sides but the feedback from these women
is that you know Amy he didn't ask me a lot of questions like he seems like such
a nice guy and I should feel the chemistry and I
should like him, but he's almost too robotic, right?
So I really encourage him to number one, work on himself.
Like I've encouraged him to, you know, maybe do a little, a little bit of therapy.
So that can kind of help him tap into some of his emotions or hiring a date
coach like yourself that can really kind of help him, guide him through this.
But I think remembering that the logical side and the emotional side are two totally separate
things, right?
Absolutely. two totally separate things, right? Be that interesting person in who you're going out with
and interested in her and also showcasing some of your vulnerabilities and emotional side and maybe
that's how you will start to feel that connection and peeling back those layers. Yeah, you need to be
and peeling back those layers. Yeah, you need to be a little bit more Captain Kirk,
a little less Mr. Spock.
Yes.
It's way too much logic and analysis.
Two or three things I have my clients do
to help them do that is literally start off sentences
on a date with, I feel, oh, I feel this.
Here's how I feel about my New Year's resolutions.
Here's how I feel about the holidays that just happened. Starting sentences with I feel. Oh, I feel this. Here's how I feel about my New Year's resolutions. Here's how I feel about
the holidays that just happened. Starting sentences with I feel because that primes your logical,
robotic, analytical mind to start thinking through the lens of emotions. And that's what humans
and women really respond to is, you know, we're emotional people. So feel and asking her other
feel questions, not just purely informational questions.
So it's not just, oh, when did you graduate?
How long have you worked at that firm?
When did you move to that place?
What did it feel like when you won your first court case?
What did it feel like when you finished your masters and threw your mortarboard up in the air?
So yeah, I forget who said it, it wasn't me,
but I love the quote,
flirting is the opposite of logic.
It's gotta be emotional or emotion-based.
Yes, exactly.
And it takes practice, right?
Oh yeah.
Again, practice makes perfect.
It's a skill.
So the more you can just put yourself out there and even practice.
Like I, my thing, what I tell everybody is walk up to strangers, just say hi in social situations and introduce yourself.
Like say hi and practice some of those skills of flirting. See how women respond to it.
Right.
Even if you fumble around a little bit or somebody, you know, is not receptive,
then move on to the next person.
Right.
You're putting all these different techniques and practices into your, what I
call kind of laboratory, you know your daily laboratory and again
this is all part of your confidence building and boosting. So when you meet
that right woman you're gonna be primed, you're gonna be ready, it's gonna feel
good and you're in cruise control like I got this. This is no big deal. Well said.
Very well said. Next question I wanted to ask you, I've been meaning to ask you this, but I thought let's save it for the podcast instead of me texting you.
So this podcast is called How to Get a Girlfriend and a great way to get a girlfriend in part is to
project and let her feel and see that I'm gonna be a pretty damn great boyfriend, right?
If you had to build a
not perfect, but a
attractive, datable great boyfriend in a Frankenstein
laboratory, you're building the perfect boyfriend, what are two
or three traits that you would say, Oh, here's what women are
looking for in a potential partner?
Absolutely. So I think communication, communication is critical, right?
Somebody who says what he does basically and vice versa.
So if he says, I'm going to call you on Tuesday at 7 p.m., he's going to be consistent with
following that communication, right?
I think women are really from that baseline perspective, looking
for a man who is consistent in general, consistent with his behavior, consistent with his communication.
That makes us women feel really safe and that he's trustworthy. Like trustworthiness and
consistency of communication is so important. So I would say in the magical
laboratory, like that's the first part that I'm gonna sprinkle into this like
perfect, perfect specimen. I think the other thing is somebody who is
responsible, right? Responsibility in terms of the actions that he takes in his life, right? The decisions he makes.
Like that signals to a woman that especially if she's in finding a future
partner mode and the you know father of her children one day mode that this guy
is somebody who is gonna be reliable, right? So kind of the reliability, the responsibility, the
consistency of communication. Oh gosh, like we're getting really close to kind of manufacturing
and creating this perfect weird science guy, right? Oh, it sounds fabulous right now. I think the third thing is integrity, right? Like having that moral compass
and it all kind of merges together in terms of the reliability, the responsibility, the consistency.
A man who is a good person, right? I think what this is signaling to your listeners
is that the notion of needs to be a certain height
or has a certain bank account,
it's nice to have, but I'm telling you,
it is really the baseline of the integrity,
the moral choices, is a good to great communicator.
That's what women are looking for.
So if we can merge all those things together and put it in a blender and a magic wand,
that's I would say for me, that would be kind of the universally amazing specimen that we
just created in our laboratory. Dear
listener, did you hear what she did not say? Amy did not say, well you need eight
pack abs and you need nine figure bank account and you have to be really
charismatic and but not too but not too available. No, you just said be a good guy
integrity, consistency, believe in yourself, say and
do what you say you're going to say and do.
That sends all the right signals.
I couldn't agree more.
Absolutely.
I mean, it is actually very rare.
In fact, I do not recall the last time a woman said needs to have chiseled abs.
I mean, maybe they were joking, but women are not looking for that.
Now there are certain universal signs of healthy, right?
Where it's a daily movement, walks, you know, goes outside to get some sunlight, things
like that, that are, I'd say more basic things, but it is back to my earlier point of the
morals, the integrity can communicate is consistent, makes her feel safe.
That's what women want. I mean, truly.
God bless women. So I've never seen my abs. My abs are on a milk carton. I don't know where they are, what happened to them. But there's, so here's what I've learned in my 20 years of working on my dating
life and coaching for 13 now is the beautiful thing about women is they're
going to focus on the one physical thing that you do offer that they like.
And they're going to hone in on that.
So I don't have any abs, but my girlfriend likes my arms.
So guess what I spend three days a week working on the gym.
And, and you can see me, I don't have giant muscles, but they're nice. They're a little bit toned.
And that's all that my girlfriend just needs to see. She's like, Ooh, your arms look good to
that. I'm like, yeah, babe. And then you like that, don't you? So if you can just pick one part of
your physical attractiveness to lean into that you already have.
You don't need to be 6'4", you don't need the abs. Maybe it's your arms, maybe
it's style, maybe it's shoulders. Just pick that one thing and women are gonna
look at the whole package and then they'll dial in on that one thing and go
okay he's good-looking enough. I love that. I love that you said that. So and I
think honestly if your guys don't know what that is ask your peers
Like ask your buddies be like
Dude, I'm not hitting on you right now, but just tell me
What's my best asset?
Tell me because like then that way once you have that information and you know
If you have siblings ask your siblings or work peers, whatever it is, lean into your
community to get that feedback.
And then you can really play up that one physical aspect and have fun with it.
That's your thing.
Yeah.
And I'll throw one other thing back to the great point you made about those three Frankenstein
boyfriend traits.
You already said this earlier, but I want to underline something.
You talked about vulnerability.
My work for that is authenticity,
really leaning into being who you are.
So I like to encourage my clients and listener,
the listener to do the things you can do
to project things like consistency,
just be consistent, be congruent,
and to back up what you say with what you do.
At the same time, I love, so a big mistake that many men make is I'm going to try to
impress her.
I'm going to tell her a story about the time I hit the home run in high school to win the
game.
I'm not saying don't talk about that if it comes up organically, but I love my clients
to come armed to a date ready to tell a vulnerable
story.
Tell a story about the thing they screwed up and they learned from.
Tell the story about the time they, in my case, sophomore year of high school, I faked
back spasms to get out of a geometry test because I was going to fail.
And my parents, instead of taking me home, like I thought they were going to do, they
took me to the hospital and I had to have all these MRIs and x-rays for non-existent back pain.
Very creative.
And once you lie, you got to commit to the lie. So at the end of this long, crazy afternoon
of tests that I didn't need, the doctor told my parents that I had scoliosis, which I didn't.
Oh my gosh.
And then I failed the test and I went to summer school
and I got, and it was nightmare.
Bottom line is that the story doesn't make me look good.
Yeah.
But because I'm laughing about it now,
it gives a really good impression
that you can be vulnerable, you can laugh at yourself.
So I like the idea of conveying some kind of vulnerability.
Yeah, yes, I'm with you a hundred percent%. I think there's something too, in terms of
impressing a woman, like pay her a compliment. Yes. Be a gentleman, like be a good guy. If you ask
her out for the date, then treat her for the day. Like just be a good guy, but definitely be human.
Right. We all arrived at the dating equation with scars and little warts and funky
things and just like a whole history of life experiences that make us into the unique individual
that each and every one of us are. So I do think there's something really beautiful to sharing
like just something.
Like, you know, I love what you said about kind of the story
of like overcoming some obstacle, right?
And that is a really attractive thing for women
where it's like, okay, like this is a really interesting guy
who is able to kind of overcome a situation
and move on from that, right?
Versus like, let me tell you how great I am and how well I do and all these different
accolades and awards I have.
It's like those trophies and that kind of shiny object.
Yeah, that's like attractive, but things fade over time.
You know, women again are looking for a real connection
and somebody who's gonna be a little bit vulnerable.
And that is how, as we talked about earlier,
that's how that heart and emotional connection
is gonna happen, right?
Kind of when we let the facade fade away
and we're just more real, raw, authentic, and our vulnerable self.
Preach it. Preach it, Amy. Okay, a couple of final things here. Oh, by the way, so the
back, the, I faked back, I faked back spasms to get out of a geometry test. I crushed on hinge.
I got all these likes on my prompt.
So feel free if you have,
whatever your embarrassing high school grade school story is,
feel free to test drive that on a dating app profile
if you're on the dating apps.
I have something I wanted to mention on that.
Oh, please.
Many years ago when I was testing out
different like dating profiles,
I mean, actually this is when I was single way different dating profiles. I mean, actually, this is when I was single,
way back when on Match.com, I just for fun,
I was testing things out, R&D,
and I said that I had a pet rat.
And I know, and I've gotta say, I love rodents.
Oddly, a lot of men were like, Oh my God, tell me more about your
rat. Okay. And I just said, it's my thing. I've been into rodents a long time and gerbils,
hamsters. And I think because it was so freaking unusual and like, it was just weird. It was off topic. It was unexpected and
that is what people like. I think when you you can create the profile that is a
little bit quirky and random like the right person is gonna bite at that
because it's just different right? It's not like your prototypical dating
profile. So the rat thing did did very well with research. Then I started kind of using that in real life.
I'm like, I have a pet rat. They're like, do you really? I'm like, no, I don't.
The sound you hear right now is thousands of men going on their hinge
writing, I have a pet rat. If it works, it works. Okay, so I'm happily coupled. I have an incredible
girlfriend named Jessamyn who sometimes pops up on the podcast. But I thought I'd
put you to the test. If I was a single man and you had to set somebody up for me
for a matchmaking first date, what kind of woman would you match me up with? What
are you thinking? Absolutely. Well, not knowing what Justin looks like,
I would think that you are somebody who definitely values quality time with your partner.
So probably somebody who has taken the love language test
and who is a good match of that too, who really values that in-person time.
You're definitely really smart.
You're bookish, clearly from behind you.
I see a lot of books.
So probably somebody who is gonna value that as well,
who's articulate, who's a really good conversationalist,
a strong communicator, and then just fun, I would think.
And I would imagine given that kind of
the quality time's important, geographically centric. So
somebody who's gonna be like very close in your geographic vicinity would be
really important. So that would be like dating is easy and you can meet up
spontaneously and say, hey babe let's go get you know coffee or a drink, lunch
versus having to like plan something that's much more regimented for like weeks on out if there's a
divide geographically. Yeah, no, spot on. If I was single, I would definitely be gravitating toward
somebody who I have a verbal connection with. I'm a big, I love deep, fun conversations,
playful conversations. Hopefully that comes across on the podcast here. It certainly comes across in my dating life.
And I just want a nice girl who just wants to adopt a rat
with me, raise a little rat.
And it's not so much to ask.
That's what I'm looking for.
I want a rat.
No, you nailed it.
You absolutely nailed it.
Okay, last question. If you're going to do a TED Talk,
the links dating TED Talk or the matchmaking TED Talk, and the TED Talk is going to be titled,
the secret dating hack nobody talks about, what would that hack or tip be? I think the secret kind of dating hack is remembering your social network. Your network
is everything and you have a community of peers, colleagues, and people in your vicinity that you
can lean into and really lean into for dating advice, for setting you up with people, and
also giving you feedback, right? Like asking your peers, you know, I met this woman, like
she didn't want to go out with me again, like am I doing anything wrong? You know, having
them help guide you through their experiences. Importantly, also in your network that is
right in front of you and presumably surrounding you, looking at any
examples of couples that you know that are successful couples and asking them
to dinner and having conversations with them about when they met, what attracted them
to each other, if they were their type.
So really trying to kind of lean into your community for any advice about successful
couples that you know, that met, and were they, they're tight necessarily, or was something unexpected about, you know,
the connection on how long they dated before they got serious. What makes them work? What
is the secret sauce, you know, in silicon terms, that is the glue that holds these successful
couples together. So really tapping into your community of peers
for dating advice, guidance, feedback, wisdom. That is one of the most powerful dating hacks
and tips I could give your listeners, right? Like sometimes it is the most obvious things
that we are not even thinking about. Sometimes we, you know, think we have to
spend, you know, thousands and thousands of dollars for something when it's right around us, right?
So not fearful in a lot of cases, not being fearful about asking friends or our community
for help and wisdom and guidance. Often people really like to share stories.
Oh yeah and a lot of people love doing what you do even though they're doing it in an amateur way,
being a matchmaker. One of the things I have my clients do if they want to is open up a what I
call social circle dating funnel because most guys are like okay let me go on the apps,
let me approach women, finally get the nerve up to do that. But so few people, especially men,
maybe there's a little bit of a masculine ego
that gets in the way.
And they're afraid to reach out to two or three friends
and say, hey, I'm single.
I'm looking to mingle.
Do you know anybody who's almost as awesome as me
who I might connect with?
And I found that so many of them are pleasantly surprised
to find that their friends or acquaintances
are like, oh my God, I know the perfect person for you. And I want to help you. Not you're
bothering me, but we'd love to matchmake in life, I found so many people do.
Absolutely. And expanding on that note, I think the other key is, so when your guys are now out
there, they're putting themselves out there, they're, you
know, leaning into these, you know, wonderful experiences in life and being open to the
grand possibilities.
Even if you are going on dates and you realize net net, she's not your woman, like the chemistry
is off, keep those windows and doors open for other possibilities.
You know, be friendly, be a good guy, be kind.
Remember again, the context.
Like you guys are in the same boat together.
Even if she's not like your person and the love of your life, be friendly and keep your
possibilities open because like imagine six months down the road,
if you were that nice guy who just treated her well and she was kind to you back, maybe
she's throwing a dinner party and she invites you because she's looking for a single friend.
You're still single. She's looking for a single guy to add to the dinner party and maybe you're
at her dinner party. It's a potluck,
you're sitting across from somebody and that becomes the love of your life, right? So keep
those possibilities open by just being a good person and then back to those earlier points I made,
aid, you know, just being consistent with communication, you're a good guy. Yep.
with communication, you're a good guy. Yep. The world is amazing. Like if you lean into possibilities like anything is possible. Yes. Hell yes. That's a great some words of wisdom to end on. I would
love to keep talking to you Amy, but you know those back spasms are coming back so I really need to
go to the hospital. So For somebody who's interested either in
learning more about how they might work with you or they just want to learn more
about matchmaking, where should they go? Where should he go? What should he do?
Absolutely. So thank you. So I have a really comprehensive content-based
website. It's lynxdating.com, L-I-N-X, dating.com.
Furthermore, you can follow me on social, on Instagram.
It's Ms.LinksDating, so M-S.L-I-N-X, D-A-T-I-N-G.
I'd love if you follow, and thank you so much.
Do you have pictures of you
and your non-existent rat on your Instagram?
I need to post the rat.
I need to do a little
story about the rat. Oh man, I'm going to test a rat based prompt. Let's wrap up and
see what happens. That was a great tip. It's probably terrible, but like a rat, yeah.
Amy Anderson, link stating, thank you so much for being here and thank you for listening.
I know you have 8 billion podcasts, sir, you can be
listening to and you spent an hour with Amy and me. Thank you. Don't forget, your dream girlfriend,
she is out there and she is going to love you, but she's going to have to meet the real authentic
you. So go out there, take action, Carpe Datum, seize the date. Until next time.