Love Life with Matthew Hussey - 220: Finding Love Whatever Your Age, Trusting Your Heart, And Handling Rejection (with Marie Forleo)
Episode Date: October 4, 2023Do you still feel under pressure to find love? Are people making you fearful that it's too late and you're not young enough to attract the partner you deserve? In this conversation, Matt talks to the... incredible Marie Forleo (@MarieForleo) about her own path to finding love, how we may need to change our blueprint to find the right person for us, and what it takes to be truly fulfilled in a long-term relationship and break our old patterns. --- ►► Transform Your Relationship With Life in 6 Magical Days. Learn More About The Matthew Hussey Retreat at . . . → http://www.MHRetreat.com
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🎵 Hey everybody, welcome to the Love Life Podcast with me, Matthew Hussey.
Occasionally we have a special guest on this podcast.
It's not an interview podcast, is it, Jameson?
It's not one where every week we have a different interview with someone.
It's normally just me doing my thing, maybe Stephen, maybe Audrey, maybe you, Jameson, sometimes. But every now and again,
we have an outside guest come and join us, and we try to make them as special as possible.
Today's guest is Marie Forleo, author, entrepreneur, speaker, widely renowned coach.
And we had an amazing conversation about dating, about life,
about relationships, about how to find the right person, how to know when you've met the right
person, how to build your confidence in this area of your life. I'm excited for you to listen to
this episode. So enjoy now, Marie Forleo. Hello, hello, hello, everyone. welcome back to another conversation in the love life club
this person has been a name that i have known for many years and amazingly our paths have never crossed until now. I feel privileged to have her join us in the Love Life Club.
Named by Oprah as a thought leader for the next generation and owner of one of Inc.'s 500 fastest
growing companies, Marie Forleo has created a socially conscious digital empire that inspires millions. She's the star of the award-winning show MarieTV with over 75 million views
and host of the Marie Forleo podcast with nearly 26 million downloads.
Marie has taught entrepreneurs, artists, and multi-passionate go-getters from all walks of life
how to dream big and back it up with daily action to create results.
She runs the acclaimed business training program B-School, the writing program The Copy Cure,
and the joyful productivity program Time Genius. Her number one New York Times best-selling book. Everything is figureoutable is available now. So without further ado,
I would like to welcome to the Love Life Club, Marie Forleo.
Oh my goodness. Matt, thanks so much for having me here.
Oh, it's so lovely to have you. I feel really special to have you join us here. I know we all
do and there's a lot of excitement about you joining us today. So thank you.
I'm thrilled.
I suppose what I've been really curious about is you are married.
You've been married for how long now?
Not technically.
Not technically. So you'll see i can
try and show that to you so we're engaged that's like the technical thing but we've been together
20 years but please keep continue uh got it got it so you've been together a long time when you
are speaking to friends of yours being someone who has coached so many people over many years and they themselves are single
and are struggling in their love lives. What's your instinct on what to tell them or how to help
them or how to guide them? Or even, you know, I don't know how many of your clients come to you
kind of maybe not talking about business, but talking
about their own personal lives and their love lives. What's your kind of go-to when people
are struggling in this area? You know, for me, I actually started off, my first book was a little
sassy book called Make Every Man Want You or Make Yours Want You More, How to Be So Irresistible
You'll Barely Keep from Dating Your yourself. So this particular topic area has been
a big passion of mine for most of my life. And it started off, of course, with my own desire,
because love and relationships for me, it's a cornerstone of what it means to be human and
what it means to have a beautiful life. And so in my own world, I have a few very close friends,
one of which who, when her and I first became friends,
she was single for a long time. And so we'd often talk about relationships and her dating life. And
she is extremely beautiful inside and out. She's extremely talented, exuberant, curious,
all of those incredible human qualities, I think that all of us would like in a partner.
And I'm thinking of another dear friend of mine who I went to college with, who is actually still single. And so we've had these
conversations. And the first place that I always try and go with anyone is listening, really,
really hearing from their point of view, their desires, their frustration points, their curiosity
points, their history in terms of, wow, this is
where relationships went in the past. And here's where I feel like I've stumbled up and I'm kind of
nervous about getting out there again. And so my approach, Matthew, is always to have fun,
is to have conversations with my friends that surround her up. Well, how can we make figuring
this out, meaning going on the adventure of being open to love,
being open to dating, being open to relationships and putting yourself out there, especially
for friends of mine who, you know, they're not necessarily 22 anymore, right?
And so they're at a different stage and season of life.
They perhaps are at a stage and season of life.
And I've had friends say this to me where, Marie,'m in my fifties now, you know, and they're up against certain ideas, both in
their own minds about biases that may exist on dating apps, um, about who they're going to be
attractive to. And also, um also just external societal conditioning that I think
all of us can bump up against, whether it be around dating, whether it be around success or
entering a new chapter of our lives. Just speaking from my own personal perspective,
I am 47 right now. So I come from a generation where I understand all of the kind of media conditioning
that we've absorbed, or at least many of us have absorbed that once you hit a certain age, right,
it's like it all goes downhill from there. So we started to kind of unpack some of those
conversations. But my approach is always like, okay, well, what can we do to put some of this
insight into action? Do you feel called to get onto a new dating app? Do we want to look at your profile
together? Do we want to have some fun around this? So my approach is always to partner with,
whether it's a client or a friend, to be that guide on the side, that trusted resource that's
there to listen to them, to be supportive, and to try and hear what their soul is calling for,
and to do everything I can to create some structure, maybe some fun challenge around helping them express that soul's calling in a way that feels
true to them. Do you, when you hear people kind of reflect that societal conditioning back at you
of, I feel like I'm, you know, at an age where it's all downhill from here.
I hear a lot of people describing the feeling of having become invisible. What do you tell those
people? Well, first of all, I just want to call something out because I think I would imagine,
and I'm actually really curious to hear from you,
if you see this reflected in all the beautiful humans that you work with,
this notion of being kind of like past our prime or kind of, you know, on the downhill,
we start having those conversations, at least I did in my own mind, in my 20s.
I'm over the hill. I'm too old for X, Y, and Z. I remember them in my early 30s, in my mid 30s,
in my late 30s. I remember them in my 40s. I have friends that are absolutely stunning human
beings. My friends in their mid 60s or 70s, it's like the conversation never ends.
So I don't know what your question was, but I just needed to call that out because I think that it's
really important for all of us to remember that we're not the problem. That conversation that we tune into is always going
to be there. And so we have to have a choice. Are we going to listen to that? Are we going to listen
to our soul and our body that says, no, I am curious about having more love at this stage in
my life. I am curious about having a partnership and what might that look like. And so rather than listening to the mind, it's about listening to our hearts and I think
the wisdom in our bodies. And if we can drop into that, usually there's a lot of curiosity.
There may be fear, of course, there may be apprehension and all those things, but there's a
lot of energetic excitement and juice. And so I try and help myself and my friends, depending on, again, the context of the coaching or the situation to come from that energetic place, not this one.
And I think that curiosity is one of the most beautiful things anyone can have. And I think
it's one of the greatest assets someone can have in dating. I think one of the biggest killers of that curiosity even if someone has done the
work internally to reach that curiosity and say you know what no i am vibrant i feel good i feel
excited about getting back out there if then they find that their lived experience is that, wow, I seem to be invisible to men. I seem to, you know, I, I am, I'm putting
myself out there, but it really feels like I'm not on anyone's radar. The guy's my age. They
are all looking for someone younger than me. Um, you know, and the ones that maybe aren't are just like, you know, they're acting 10 years,
20 years older than I am.
Right.
And they're not attractive to me.
What do you say to people when that curiosity gets suffocated by someone's lived experience
of, but it's not just that I feel invisible.
It's that it seems that I am by the
level of attention I'm getting when I'm out there dating.
Sure. No. And that's a very real thing. I always try and reflect this back to myself
in this way. Where am I perhaps doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different
results? So for instance, I'm thinking about a friend of mine who was caught in a bit of narrowness around the dating apps that she was
giving herself to be permission on because she had judgments against certain other ways of being on
different apps or even putting herself in opportunities that may be outside of her
comfort zone, i.e. going to different style parties where there
would be completely different social group, right? And maybe they're into things that this
particular person, it was like, no, that she wasn't into it. But I'm like, hey, I think we
need to get beyond this little narrow window of what you've given yourself permission to experience,
not because we're driving towards a result, but we don't want to keep basically living into that
same definition
of insanity, which is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.
And so for me, it is about if your lived experience is like, hey, I seem invisible.
It's like, okay, well, let's try a different tactic. Do we need to try a different app?
Do you as a human need to be a bit more playful? Like I just need to calm myself out on this one.
So, you know, you had mentioned I've been with my partner, Josh for like 20 years. He, I had to be the aggressor in that
relationship. Do you know what I needed to, I was the first one to kiss him. I was the one to say,
I, this is what I want. And it's like, so if you're a person that tends to be like, well,
I just want to hang back a little bit. Maybe you need to flex a little bit of a different muscle where if you see someone, it doesn't matter what their age
is, but you feel attracted to them. Why don't you make the first move or go to a party and go
make it the challenge of the night to introduce yourself to five people. Even if it's not about
dating those five people, what is the action that you can take that's going to break you out of
whatever pattern that you're in right now that's giving you the lived experience that you don't want to choose anymore.
I think one of the most powerful things for all of us to remember is that ultimately,
we are the creators of our life. And I say that from this place. It's my belief that every single
person listening to this conversation right now, you are a divine spark.
You are a divine source. Why? Because you come from divinity and it doesn't matter what your
religious upbringing is, or if you have none at all, it doesn't matter. I think we can all agree
that there is some greater intelligence at work that makes the trees go, that makes the stars
sparkle, that brings the sun up and the moon up when it does. So if we just consider that,
that you are an individuation of
that divinity, which means that you are a creator and you get to choose your experience of life.
And so if whatever combination of your unconscious and conscious thoughts has had you on this repeat
lived experience, we need to choose again and not just choose again from our thoughts,
but choose again from our actions and how we're being and showing up in the world.
So that would be my answer there, Matthew. I think it's a great answer and you know that idea
of the way that we're showing up I think is it's so it can be so subtle and we can make very subtle
changes that on the outside aren't even that big, but on the inside feel like they're huge. Even just the act of smiling or half smiling at people in a coffee shop,
if you don't normally do it, maybe a few millimeters on your face, but internally,
it feels like a mile that you've had to walk in order to make that very subtle external shift. But I really believe
that those subtle external shifts are, they are the difference between completely different lives.
Yes.
It's very hard to get out of that groove.
It is hard to get out of that groove. I remember one of the
tips that was in Make Every Man Want You, which is still a really fun book, was around giving yourself permission to just flirt your way through life. Not in an inappropriate way, but I'm building off of what you down the street, that little smile or, and when I'm saying
flirtatious, I'm saying in a very playful, the generosity of your, of your heart and your spirit
kind of way. We're not kind of putting it through the tone of anything sexual. It is about connection
of human spirit. And so there may be a toddler and a mom and you wink at them and, and, and
silently send them, wow, you look fabulous. Or, oh my goodness, look at the aliveness in that baby.
And then when you show up at the cafe, whoever's behind the counter, you give them a compliment
and smile and send that little flirtatious energy that way.
Not in a way that makes anyone uncomfortable, but in a way that is opening of your soul
and of your spirit to be open to connection.
And I think you're so right, Matthew,
like the tiniest little shift, a wink, a smile, an invitation, a letting someone know that they look
absolutely, their energy is beautiful today. And thank you for that. Those are the kind of
micro shifts that can lead to a macro transformation in your experience. And it doesn't require that
you become a whole different person. It doesn't require that you do anything that's uncomfortable, but it's a way more playful
way to go through life. And for me, whenever I find myself feeling like, again, caught in that
brown hog day kind of loop of stuck in a particular pattern, it's those type of simple
actions that can produce the biggest breakthroughs. I agree. I agree. It's those type of simple actions that can produce the biggest breakthroughs.
I agree. I agree. It's funny. Cause when I hear, you know, those, those micro shifts create macro differences in life. You can't, the shift that has to happen behind those micro shifts is,
can be very significant in terms of our beliefs i when
you know i when you were just talking a minute ago about how you were a little more proactive
in your uh relationship with josh in the i was aggressive when i when i look at that, there's a belief system under that that was serving you there, that's allowed you to be in the relationship that you are today.
I know going back in my own life that I was in many ways too guarded sometimes to do what you did. There was an element of, I'm going to make sure 1000%
someone likes me at least as much as I like them, if not more, before I do anything that could
expose me or make me vulnerable. And I think a lot of people have that deep fear that if I'm the aggressor in this situation, if I'm the one who's going after it, even if they relent, what if it means that they don't like me as much as I like them?
And what if that haunts me later down the line in the relationship?
And that belief changes how you go about everything in
your dating life. So I'm almost curious to say, what was the belief that allowed you
to do that in a way that worked for you in a way that so many people wouldn't because they're too
guarded and too afraid of being hurt? Yeah. So I'm going to be just super transparent. I am a very body led
person, meaning that I am in touch with the wisdom in my body. And I try and pay more attention
to the messages that are coming through me somatically, viscerally from my heart.
And when Josh and I first were together physically in person, meaning we were
near each other, I felt such a magnetic attraction to him that that magnetic kind of physical
attraction overrode whatever insecurity and crappy beliefs were a hundred percent running around in
this head, because most of us have a lot of things
that we're carrying around there. And I also was so excited about the possibility of just
connecting with this human. I think one of the things that really served me was like, well,
if he doesn't like me, then at least I know. So because I'm a person who has a lot of energy and
there's a lot of things I want to do in
the world, it was almost as if Matthew, I was like, well, at least then I'll know if
he doesn't like me, then I can move on.
Like I wouldn't torture myself about it for months, like thinking whether or not was it
is, is it is, does he not like me?
And I also knew for sure.
And I think most of us, we do have this wisdom within us.
So when I made the move to kiss
him and literally what I got back, like, let me show you guys, this is how funny it was.
Like I went to kiss him and he literally, his like mouth didn't move. It was as though I was
like kissing, absolutely not there. So I had the first thought like, Ooh, maybe I shouldn't have
done that. Like, do you know, maybe he's like not into it, but I just went for it. And I was like,
Oh, is that okay? And he's like, and he was just in shock. Cause I don't have done that. Like, you know, maybe he's like not into it, but I just went for it. And I was like, Oh, is that okay? And he's like,
and he was just in shock.
Cause I don't think he had been around a woman who was as forward as I was.
But once I got past that little bit of fear and then we laughed and we giggled
and you know, 20 plus years later, here we are.
It's great to give yourself permission to take risks because you waste so much less time.
And you know, either it is or it ain't.
And if it ain't, that just gives you a lot more space to move on to what's next.
What do you say to people who feel like the reason I am so afraid of situations like that
is because of the sheer amount of rejection that I have faced
and I just can't I can't take it anymore I'm I'm you know the idea of of making another move of
putting myself out there and just getting you know for some people dating is such a
grim landscape where it's like one rejection after a next that it wears them down
to the point of going, I just can't, I can't take it anymore. I don't want to put myself out there.
What do you say to those people? Well, I think first of all, that may be a great clue that you
just need to take a break for a little bit. You know, I think giving ourselves permission to rest and recharge and to gain a new perspective.
You know, if I am going down any path in my life
and again, I keep hitting a brick wall,
it seems to be a pattern.
That's a great opportunity to step back and go,
what might I need to change here?
What might I need to do differently?
Is there a coaching program?
Is there a therapeutic program?
Are there some new books I need to read?
Why don't I just take a pause and see if I can tap back into my own wisdom and say,
what would really support me right now? And it may be an external source of support,
and it may also come from your own willingness to be still and ask yourself the questions and
see what comes up. I'm such a huge believer, Matthew, that each of us has access to so much natural knowing, so much wisdom from within. And we have become basically conditioned and I'm a fan of, you know, whatever type of external support feels good. But first ask yourself, whether it's through journaling, through meditation,
you know, what is it that I need to let go of? What might I need to do differently?
Am I placing so much emphasis on validation from another that I have stopped validating myself?
Do I need to have more fun? Do I need to really check myself and make sure that
I'm understanding I am whole and complete as I am. And I'm excited to share my wholeness and
completeness with another person who happens to be whole and complete, who could just be a shit
ton of fun. So I think that taking some of those questions and really asking yourself, especially
if you feel beaten down and you're like, I can't take one more rejection.
Take a little breather.
Take a little break.
Do something to get some new perspective for yourself.
And also don't pressure yourself.
I remember with one of my friends, I'm thinking specifically of one person.
We had this conversation over dinner in the West Village.
And she was like, Marie, gosh, every single one for the past few weeks, it has been so disappointing.
They've either not looked like what they look like on their photo, or there was absolutely
zero chemistry, or it was just like kind of laundry list of things.
And I said to this person, I said, D, you know what?
Why don't we take a little break?
Why don't we take a break?
Let's just not push it for like a week or two or three or whatever feels right for you.
And just like breathe and let's get into some stillness and let's see a new perspective. And it helped her a week or two or three or whatever feels right for you. And just like breathe and
let's get into some stillness and let's see a new perspective. And it helped her a lot. I think the
other thing to just note here, I'll speak for myself. I know, I believe you grew up in the UK.
Yeah. You're here in California. I can just speak from the American perspective. We have so much
pressure that we put on ourselves to like make it happen and get it
done and get it done and get it on and production, production, production, production. And sometimes
our relationship life and our dating life can feel like that, where there's also so much wisdom in
stillness and in taking a break and in stepping back and giving ourselves a little bit of a pause.
How do you know the difference between when you're kind of
you're taking a pause because you're just afraid and it you know you're kind of copping out and giving yourself too much of an out and really needing to take a pause because you know the you
do need that stillness and that calm that allows you to bring a different version of yourself to
the table because there is that person who's just simply not putting themselves in enough situations they're not
being proactive enough they're not taking enough risks and a lot of people dismiss dating altogether
and i'm done with men i'm done with dating i don't i can't be bothered with this whole thing
it's a whole it's a joke and it becomes this armor that they wear to protect themselves from any kind of rejection. What would you say to people who are trying to
decide whether they're being too gracious to themselves or not gracious enough?
Yeah, that's a really, it's a great question. And it's a very nuanced answer. This is where I feel you can be so well served by a friend, a buddy, a coach, someone who knows you and
has your best interest at heart and has the trust established with you that they can lovingly
call you out.
And you can have that dialogue, like what you said.
And obviously, we want to be able to do that for ourselves.
But I'll tell you, I think that for most of us in life, none of us are an Island. We can't succeed
on our own. And it's so helpful. You know, I look at this through the lens of business too,
where I say, gosh, you know, am I giving myself too much of a break here? Do I need to pick it
up again? And I can tap into either Josh or my best friend and ping off of them and say, Hey,
here's what's going on in this mind of mine.
You know, I'm, I'm dancing on that, like, Oh, too much of a break. Or should I put the foot
on the pedal? And oftentimes really dear friends of ours or a great coach can have
an objective perspective on us. That's sometimes hard to have in ourselves. So I would say that.
And, and when you put your head on the pillow at night and you close your eyes, there's a little party that knows the truth. There's a little party that knows the truth. So I would say pay you know that it would be good for people to be more curious to
whether it's a new app or a new social gathering where there's a different kind of person than the
person they are used to yeah i'm i'm fascinated by this because i i do feel like we over the course
of our lives concretize this blueprint of what we think a person we're supposed to end up
with should be like and it ends up becoming incredibly stifling but we don't know what to
let go of as we start to evolve and mature and listen to advice that says hey you know perhaps
you should be a little broader or a little less quick to judge and a little more open to the different forms that a right partner could come in for you.
But that in itself can be very confusing because you go, well, what part of what I'm looking for
exactly should I give up on? Because this person over here, this stereotype that I keep going for,
that's the kind of person I'm attracted to. So am
I supposed to go for someone I'm not attracted to? And will that serve me long-term if I feel
bored in this relationship or if I don't feel physically attracted to this person, even though
they're perfectly lovely to me? What do you say to people about what parts of that blueprint to shed, but also how to find attraction in new sources
than the ones that either keep hurting them or keep rejecting them or don't seem to exist
in the form of a real relationship?
Yes.
Okay.
So let's tackle the blueprint first, because I think that this is really interesting.
I remember in my own history from Jersey was
dating basically the same guy in different bodies again and again and again and again.
And like as an Italian American, we have this term, it's called a guido if you've ever heard
of it. It's like somebody who's like got a lot of muscles, definitely went to a tanning salon,
definitely has some gold chains. So I had that same type of boyfriend like over and over and over and over.
And it never quite worked out.
And I remember when I first saw Josh, he was not that.
He was very different than that.
Different like from, you know, he's Jewish.
I'm Italian.
He's like a filmmaker or an actor.
Like all these different things were
17 years apart. Like there were all the things that none of who he was on paper was quote unquote
my blueprint at all. It was almost like the opposite. And yet, and yet Matthew, I felt more myself around him than anyone I had ever dated.
I felt more me.
So the qualities in me that were seeming to get amplified were the best qualities in me,
my sense of humor, my heart, my desire to be expressive. And I noticed in myself that blueprint just melting away
because of who I started showing up as. And then I started thinking back and I was like, wow,
when I was dating all those guidos over and over again, the most insecure parts of me were showing
up where I felt needy or grabby, or just like I wasn't enough.
And everything about me wasn't, it was just, I was so floored by how diametrically different
I felt and how I was showing up that that's what made the blueprint melt away.
So what I would just encourage is to not come from here, but if you have that incredible bravery to
put yourself in some new situations and say yes to whether it's going to a party, being out at a
social event, maybe having a coffee date or some type of exposure to other people that again,
don't fit your blueprint to just do it from a place of playfulness and non-expectation and do
it as a way to start seeing how you show up differently with different humans, regardless
of what their external form is. And then this is something that I think most of us know, but I can
never hear it enough. You know, I think when we're kind of in our late teens and twenties and maybe
even thirties, you know, there's still so much around the physical attraction.
The physical attraction, of course, is incredibly important.
We know that.
But we all also know that that stuff doesn't last.
It just doesn't.
We all change and evolve as we get older.
And one of the things that's really come to me is how grateful I am that I
chose and continue to love someone because of who they are on the inside. I mean, I've watched
myself change all of us, right? It's not a bad thing. It's a beautiful thing. This is like part
of our human journey is that we're not going to look the same and the external shell is going to
change and it's going to be different. But what are the qualities of that person that you want to be with? How big is their heart? Are they loyal when you're with them?
Do they make you feel like what you have to say and what you have to think is important? And I
think that's so individual for all of us. So for me as a person, freedom is my number one value in
life. And to be with a man who really respects and gets how important my freedom is to me,
you know, and this is just little stuff. But the other thing that was really important to me was
I was very clear that I didn't want to have biological kids. And so many of the guys that
I dated beforehand who fit that blueprint, they were like, okay, so we're going to get married.
And we're going to, I'm like, do you, are you looking at this thing? Like, have you heard what
I said to you? Like, I have no interest in any of that.
You know, I don't want kids.
I don't want to get married.
And so for me, it was a lot about the experience of being with people outside of my quote unquote
blueprint that taught me it's about those inner qualities and how I show up with that
person that made all the difference.
So pay less attention to your head.
Don't get twisted about the complicatedness of it and just get your butt out there and start feeling your way
into new truths. When people find themselves in that situation. And I suppose a lot of people
don't ever get into the situation where they can have enough proximity to feel at home with someone or to notice that
my best qualities are coming out because they've kind of especially if they're dating mostly
online they're those people don't even get through the door because they don't look the way that
the normal people they go for look and so I think real life still has the advantage of we surprise ourselves in real life.
We rarely surprise ourselves on dating apps.
You know, we don't go through dating apps scrolling and suddenly get surprised that
we're attracted to someone that looks nothing like the kind of people we're attracted to.
But in real life, someone can look nothing like the people we're attracted to.
And because of something that's going on in person, we are surprised and we do give them
that extra chance.
So it does make me, I do think it's another reason why, even if dating apps are part of
the portfolio of action that you take in your dating life, real life, and putting yourself
in situations where you can bump into people and have surprising
interactions is really important. But for people that find themselves in that situation, how do you,
how did you listen to that and not go back to your programming? Because outwiring can be so strong.
Yes.
And we have been attracted to a certain kind of person
or even a certain dynamic.
We think we hate being the one chasing
or the one that feels like we're being needy
or someone who's hard to get.
But something about that dynamic we're addicted to and there's a kind of a rush
to getting a person like that whereas a person that's just standing in front of us facing us
meeting us where we are may seem almost vanilla by comparison to that person that normally makes
us work for it but the person that wakes makes us work for it inevitably breaks our heart so but we're used to that wiring so when you you've spoken a lot about listening to your body listening
to your to to how you feel about things being in touch with yourself perhaps that's part of the
answer but a lot of us just when we come across something that's alien we so quickly even if maybe it feels good or we don't
even maybe we're not even in touch with ourselves enough to be able to consciously know that it
feels good but we very quickly go that's interesting now i'm gonna go straight for that
guy who won't text me back right how did, how did you switch your programming so that you actually
listened to that feeling of, wow, I feel more at home here. And that might be not suggesting for
one moment that you don't have physical attraction to your partner, Josh, but that might be the more
important thing here than trying to find the most physically attractive person in the room or the
person that excites me the most instantly because they replicate some blueprint I attractive person in the room or the person that excites me the most
instantly because they replicate some blueprint I've had in the past?
Yeah, no, the bad boy thing, a hundred percent. I think for me, it was so painful and so
torturesome, the relationships that I had had before, because I'm someone who's very creative and very bold and very ambitious, it almost to
me, Matthew, felt like my dating life and my relationship life was this big black hole of
like a pain in the ass where my not best self was coming up. It was taking me off track. I was
insecure. What am I doing? Who is this? Like it was taking up so much emotional, mental, psychological space in my life that wasn't good.
It wasn't like it was exciting.
And then all of a sudden when I had this contrast where I was like, wow, this guy's fun.
He's funny.
He's different.
I'm showing up different.
And it's as though I felt like I expanded, not expanded because he was so
great. It was like, oh my gosh, this is what a healthy relationship could be like. That's what
helped me break that pattern because there was so much of the negativity that I was used to in my
patterning that all of a sudden went away. It's almost like, you know, if you're used to an air
conditioner being on the room and you're just living with that hum all the time and you're like, oh, this is much, I must just have to live with this.
This is like what the sound is and it's just grating on me.
And then all of a sudden you turn off the air conditioner and you're like, wait a minute, it could be different.
I didn't even know it would be different.
And so there's like this rush or surge of newness.
For me, that's what it was like.
And I have to say this.
I think for each
of us as human beings, we have to decide how do we want the quality of our lives to be?
How do we want the quality of our lives to be? How do we want the quality of our relationships to be?
What are we truly interested in? And for me, I was clear that I wanted a partner that was fun
and trustworthy and someone who intrinsically felt like loyalty,
like where we had a lineup of inner values.
And I'm very clear in my inner values.
I mean, even for me, it was important to me.
I wanted to be able to talk about money.
I wanted to be able to talk about and be excited about my career.
I wanted to be able to be with someone who really got the intensity of who I am and didn't
try and kind
of dial me down.
That's aside from the marriage and the kids thing.
So I think another piece of breaking that habitual pattern is getting clear about what
are the values that are important to you and how do you want this love life to go?
And if you're kind of meeting with people who instantly it's like, no, that ain't
possible.
It's like, trust yourself, move on, go ahead, swipe, go next, next.
Business and love, I think is a numbers game.
Until you find your person, if you believe in such a thing as like, I want a long-term
relationship and I'd like to have a beautiful, healthy, long-term relationship, let it be
a numbers game.
It's the same thing in business.
If you just go at bat, you know, and go for like a client or try and make a sale once a month or
once a week, you're going to be a lot slower to build that business than the person who's like
next. Okay. You don't want what I have to offer. Okay. Next. And you do it with a smile and you
do it with enthusiasm. Does that take practice? Yeah. Is it easier said than done? Yeah, but it
works. What do you say to people who maybe feel that feeling of being at home, but they're worried
they don't have the chemistry?
How long do you think people should give it before deciding there isn't enough chemistry
to, you know, I'm a big believer that you don't need to maximize chemistry, but it's
a box that needs to be checked, right?
It's not, you don't need the most chemistry you've ever felt in your life. You need chemistry. And it, at what point do you think
people should say, okay, I don't, I don't have quite enough here to carry me into a romantic
relationship as opposed to a friendship. Correct. I think that's between you
and you. And most of us, we know the truth. Like it's, it's like when you are really still with
yourself, you know, whether or not it's like, okay, this ain't it. Like, I do not feel it for
this guy. I am not excited at all about having any kind of intimacy or sexual, like you just got to
be real straight with yourself. And to your point, I think if it's, if it's not there at the top, like for Josh and I,
it was like, you know, chemistry was on, it was electric. Like our bodies just wanted to be near
each other and next to each other. And like, I needed my elbows to touch him if we were sitting
near each other. So like that was real. And I think for most of us, it is a significant thing.
But, you know, after 20 years, do we have that same level of that?
We don't, but we have intimacy on a different level.
We've evolved it.
And that's something that you can work on.
So I think it's about being super duper, duper honest with yourself.
You got to be real.
And then I think in terms of long-term, and I would love to get here,
is making sure that if this is a person you think you're going to potentially go to distance with,
is to get some tools in your tool belt for how to make a relationship healthy over the long-term.
And I can share some of my best ones because Josh and I have had our ups and downs. And one of the most powerful forms of therapy slash toolkit that I have ever come across
is the work of Harville Hendricks and Helen Lakelly Hunt, Getting the Love You Want,
learning how to have what's called a dialogue.
That's part of a body of work called imagotherapy.
I think it's honestly, it should be required work for every human on the planet,
regardless of who you
are, what you're up to, what you desire. What's been the biggest insight for you on how to make
something last that you've found most practical in application in your relationship? I think it is
the, for me, it's the practice of, of dialogue, of really being able to step into your partner's
shoes to, especially at times of conflict, to not only hear what they're saying and listen
to what they're saying, but to be able to reflect back to them exactly where they're
coming from so that they say, yeah, you got that. So that I can communicate if Josh
and I get into it and he's upset that I can represent his point of view accurately enough
to him where he feels fully seen, fully heard, fully respected. That one ability alone has allowed us to navigate over two decades of being human and living
life together.
That's not always easy.
And once you have that level of genuine heart connection reestablished, then all of a sudden,
whatever challenges you're facing are on the table and you're doing it from a place of
love.
You're connecting and seeing the other person's point of view from a place of genuine love and wanting the best for them. Honesty comes
online. Vulnerability comes online. And I found it, Matthew, to be quite magical. It's like at
moments when we literally want to like just wring each other's necks and you're like, I can't even
stand you anymore. You know, like you're in that place with your partner. It has been shocking to me how quickly that tool of having what they call a dialogue has gone from like,
I want to walk out of the house to crying in his arms and we're connected. And it feels exactly
like day one again. It's wild. That, you know, everything you just said strikes me as just as important in making sure that a
relationship gets off the ground as in keeping one, because I think the reason so many people
bail on either side in the dating phase is because they don't feel understood and they don't feel
heard and they have their first real argument and what do you know
about what you have until you have your first real argument and you see how you handle it and
how the dust settles that argument becomes the end because they the you know you see patterns
and someone shuts down someone runs away someone ghosts someone else, you know,
and those patterns end up being the thing. It's like at their core, they might have worked,
but because of these behaviors on the surface, they immediately repel each other.
When you're in that moment, because I think this applies in both cases, long-term and early
dating when you're trying to get a relationship. When you're feeling in the heat of the moment
and you feel hurt and you feel angry and, or you feel afraid, you feel, don't feel understood.
How do you get over yourself and your emotions in that moment enough to even sit with someone else's point of
view at the very time when it's the last thing you want to do? Yes. Oh my gosh. What a great
question. So this is why I think the training is so powerful because I have found myself there.
I have found my, I found myself there even after the training. So,
you know, when we're in a position of feeling hurt, which is usually what's underneath the anger, what's underneath all the things, not feeling seen, not feeling listened to,
not feeling understood, there's a deep level of hurt. And I think naming it out loud for me,
you know, you've got to name it to tame it in terms of our emotions. That is just one of the most helpful straight up personal development tools that I've ever
learned in my life. Being able to say out loud what I am feeling in this moment and to own those
feelings, to not say you. To him. So you'll say it to him.
And to myself, you know, I'm, yes, I will. And I'm a person too. And I had to learn this. So this was a growth edge for me.
I am the kind of human where if, especially in relationship, if something pisses me off,
I'm like, I'm fine. And it's like, clearly I'm not fine. Do you know what I mean? The,
the emotion and the energetic Marie is gone behind like a transformer, like metal protective unit.
Yeah. We, we have that in common.
Yes. Right. I'm still physically here, but every part of my energetic and emotional being
is basically out the door. And so I've had to learn how to basically not say I'm fine and not
pretend, not direct that anger or that emotion and say, you did this to me and just
say, I'm feeling really hurt right now.
I'm feeling really frustrated.
Yes, I am frustrated.
Yes, there is something wrong.
I might need 10 minutes to take a walk and then we'll come back and do a dialogue.
I basically try and outwardly narrate and inform what is happening in real time with as much emotional maturity
as I can muster in the moment. Am I perfect at it? A hundred percent not. But I have found
that at least for me, being able to say the truth to another person in a way that is
as not directed at them, but it's just reflective of my own experience has a way of keeping people
connected, even when it's difficult. You're right. Like if you feel your partner, they're upset,
but they're not emotionally leaving you. They're not literally out the door. They're not ghosting
you, but they've expressed something's up and we're going to take care of it. I may not have
the capacity to dive in fully at this moment. I just need a few. That has a way I've seen of having people
go, oh, this person's really in it. There's one other thing I just want to say too. One of the
things that clued me in that Josh was a potential phenomenal life partner was the fact that he was
interested also in personal development. He was interested in going to therapy. He was interested
in quote unquote doing the work. And I think that if you're someone who's in a program like this, you're clearly interested
in learning and growth.
You're clearly interested in how you can be your best self and bring your best self to
a beautiful relationship.
And if your partner who you're dating or just getting to know either thinks something like
this is weird, or they just either poo poo on therapy or poo poo on any type of seminar or workshop environment,
that may not be the best match for you. Because what that tells you is they don't necessarily
value self-reflection and self-awareness. And when y'all hit a bump in the road, which we all do
many bumps in the road for us. It's always been around,
Hey, we need to get some outside help here. And both Josh and I've always been like, yep.
Like it's either let's go to a workshop. Let's go to a seminar. We need to go to therapy.
Like we need to go grow ourselves to keep this love alive. Hmm. When you would say I'm hurt, you know, I'm struggling right now and you don't blame it on
him or you don't say it's your fault. You don't get angry. You just express what you're feeling.
Yes. What's the transition for you from that to hearing and then echoing their point of view.
Yes.
Okay.
So I am not going to do this perfect justice.
So anyone who knows Imago dialogue, you know, knows of the technique, you'll understand
it.
For those of you who don't, I encourage you.
We actually have a whole MarieTV episode we did.
There's lots of material online so you can get the real deal, but I'm going to give you
my short, summarized, simplified version.
So when I would say like, I'm hurt, I'm angry, one of the first things that you do, and you
learn this in the tool, is you ask your partner, may I have an appointment?
It's basically a way of saying to your partner, are you open to having a discussion right
now?
Do you have the time?
Do you have the space?
And when you say, hey, can I have an appointment?
Your partner has the opportunity to either say, I am not available for an appointment right now
because I'm about to go on a meeting, but I am available for an appointment in about an hour
and a half, and I would really love to have one with you. So what that does is it starts right at
the onset to set up a container and to set up a structure where you're asking someone to be involved in a
conversation that's likely going to be a little intense. And then you get both people on the same
page from the get-go. The next step, as I learned it, you look into each other's eyes and you take
three deep breaths. It's a way to calm down your amygdala. It's a way to start to kind of relax
from the fight or flight response that many of us can feel when we're very hurt, when we're angry, when we're emotional.
And it has a way of getting you back in touch with your heart and your sense of presence and
your prefrontal cortex, your executive reasoning functionings, which are great for having a more
civilized, productive conversation. Then the next step, again, as I learned it,
is you actually tell your partner, even if you're pissed as shit with them,
between one and three things that you genuinely appreciate. So I might be like, even again,
if I'm on fire and there's like steam coming out of my ears and out of my nose and out of my
eyeballs, flamethrowers, right? I'd say, Josh, I really appreciate you because this morning I had a lot going on and you
took care of Kuma, our dog, and it really allowed it so that I didn't have to think
about the 500 things that he needs.
Thank you so much.
I appreciate that.
Or Josh, I really appreciate the fact that when our washer and dryer broke just last
week that you took care of everything and it was one less thing that I had to do on
my list.
Acts of service are my love language. We need to know those things too. So then after I've said a
few appreciations, then I would go into the kind of format of dialogue and he would start to mirror
me if I'm the one that asked for an appointment, or if he asked for an appointment, because he's
really upset, then I would start to mirror him and start to reflect back everything that he said using his
own words and doing it from a place of genuinely trying to represent his point of view, not like,
oh, so I hear you. No, no, no, no. You got to do this from a purely sincere place. And it is
magical. When you get to the end of this kind of beautiful process, what winds up happening is a deep
level of perspective shifting and understanding.
That's beautiful.
And that's a, I mean, as you say, that requires either a partner who's willing to educate
themselves on a process like that, or someone who's willing to at least entertain you bringing
it to the table and explaining the format of that.
What would be your suggestion for someone who's coming to someone that isn't conscious of that
process? So saying to them, you know, do you have an appointment would bewilder them.
But they are, you know, that there's someone that maybe you hope at least has good intentions and
you want to go through a process like that with them, albeit without in week three or four,
having to kind of immediately make them feel like they're going through a kind of therapy with you.
What would be your approach in week four of dating if you wanted to do that process
without having to outline that process with someone? Gosh, I don't know if I'd go there,
to be really honest with you. I might have to simplify it because this is just me being super
transparent. Before I learned this process, and Josh and I were together for a long time,
and we're pretty caring people who have read a lot of books. We're both really smart and
we really respect each other. My God, Matthew, we would go down into these spirals where I was like,
okay, this is going to be a really good one. We're going to have a really good conversation.
And it would wind up digging us deeper into the trenches. One of us would inadvertently say
something or both of us would, that would entrench us both in our own kind of perspective caves,
and it would just not feel very good. So I think that one, to have a conversation and say, wow,
I really felt hurt by X, Y, or Z. I'd love to clear this up with you. It's going to be tricky
territory if you don't have that structure. It just is because most of us haven't
had training. And this is why I love this structure and I'm not trying to push it, but it is, I mean,
most people can learn it for free. I love the analogy that they use, which is this. It's like,
you don't really need a license, right? Like you need a license to get married, but they basically,
you don't have to take a driver's test like you do if you're going to drive a car, right?
You just go down and you get a license, but no one gives you training and communication.
But with marriage or any kind of long-term relationship, it's like, why are we not training
people how to communicate their way out of conflict in a way that lives people closer
rather than further apart?
So I think going back to answer your question, I would be, I would be
really cautious about trying to set this up if you both don't have the tools or the training,
but I would say that just expressing yourself and owning your feelings, not saying you made me feel
this, you hurt me because of that. It's like, wow, I'm feeling either unseen. I'm feeling
misunderstood. I'm feeling unappreciated. I'd love to talk to you
about it because my desire is that we stay connected. Well, I want to get to some questions
from people, but before I do, I only have two more and they're perhaps more on the practical side of
the spectrum. The first one, because some of your work focuses on using our time effectively
and time management and managing our energy because energy is time right time's not got
any value unless we have energy to do something with it so many people struggle with their love
lives because the rest of their lives leaves them so burnt out to, at the end of the day, even think
about. And now after everything I just did today, I have to get on an app and message someone and,
or go out on a date with someone I don't even know I like. And that's an evening I could be
spending with my sister or with someone I actually give a shit about. And instead I'm on a date that, you know, is 50%
likely to be disappointing at the very least. How, what tips would you have practically speaking for
people managing their energy and dating? Yes. So I think this is such a great question. It's
so important to know your own energy patterns. Like for me, for example,
I know that at the end of the day and at the end of the week, I have the least patience,
least, right? And so I am not going to put myself in a position to make some important decisions
Thursdays at 6 PM and certainly not Fridays at 4 PM., right? So for you, dating, when can you put in a
pocket where you're either going to look at the apps or you're going to open yourself up for,
say, a coffee date or even a drink or whatever it might be, right? Whatever that looks like.
Can you place that somewhere in your week that you're excited about, and you're going to show up from a place of
feeling refreshed and rejuvenated. That might look different for everyone. You know, it might be that
you switch it around completely and say, you know what, I'm going to try Wednesday mornings,
like just as an experiment. I'm going to try Wednesdays from like, you know, 1030 to 1130.
I'm going to do some swipes after I've done a workout and I'm feeling my most optimistic.
I'm feeling my most kind of fresh. I'm feeling frisky or fun or expressive. I would play with different time blocks in the week where you feel like you can bring your best energy,
where your perspective will be the most open, where you're not going to be tired or exhausted
or pessimistic, which we can all get at different points in our week. Does that make sense? So that, that would be perfect sense. Yeah. Suggestion number one is
to play with different time blocks where you're looking forward to it and then see if that time
block doesn't work, let's try a different one next week. You know, if Friday nights are like,
no, I really want to be with my family, or I really want to be with my sister or it's girl
night. And that's perfect for me. We'll leave that perfect for you. You get to dictate the rules
in life. You get to put things where you want them to, and it doesn't have to look in the
traditional way as everyone else does it. I love that. What would you, if we, if you could set
everyone, there are, you know, some people in the love life club are in
relationships many are looking for a relationship um what would be if you were to set everyone one
challenge today what would it be i would challenge them to find at least three in real life events.
It might be a sporting event.
It could be a concert.
It could be an art class.
It could be a church gathering.
It could be a workout.
It doesn't matter.
But find three in real life events that sound super fun and interesting to you.
Things that you could go to in your neighborhood or in your community, or even if you have to get on a train and travel, it could be some kind of retreat somewhere
that has the potential to have a mix of humans, of people that you would be available to date,
right? So whatever your dating preferences are, put yourself in at least three situations that
have the potential to have folks that you might be interested in and get that done ideally over the next month. I think again, dating apps are amazing. They are
one tool. I love how you put this in your portfolio. They should be included, but I love
people getting back out there in real life for the very reasons that we talked about. So you can
start to feel body wisdom. So you can start to practice being around different people that may not fit your typical blueprint that may not be the healthiest
from your past and to have fun doing it. And I think going back to our challenge that we talked
a little bit about in the beginning, if it feels comfortable for you and like it would be a soul
opening to just use these opportunities to practice being more, I say flirtatious, I'm putting that in bunny ears,
in the most human and loving, compassionate, connected, and playful way. Not necessarily
from a sexual energy, unless, hey, that's what you feel and you're like, I'm going for it,
then bless you and have fun with your badass self. But more so in a way of these micro moments
throughout your day where you can connect with another human being, human to human,
and just start feeling that energy flowing between you i love that i love that challenge and i think
i would just encourage everyone when you do that challenge which i think everyone should do this
month i think that's a great uh month a challenge for the love life club i would encourage everyone
to not over judge the situation once you're there because when we're
in a kind of defeatist mindset and we get there and we're like there's not even any men here or
there's no one I even wouldn't be remotely attracted to here or this is not how I thought
it would be instead of being defeated by that just chalk it up to it doesn't matter I added
something to my month that wasn't routine.
That's a win. I got myself out of my comfort zone. That's a second win. I have a story to tell that on my next date, that's a third win. Like you have to start seeing those three events through
the lens of there's multiple wins I will have out of this, regardless of whether I meet someone there that in any way I'm attracted to.
And Matthew, let's not underestimate the power of trusting your heart and soul about what those
events are, because even if the human that you're supposed to date is not at the event,
you might meet their brother or their sister or their best friend. There may be some connection
there that unfolds into some magic that you cannot even
predict. So to underscore your brilliant point, don't go in with a defeatist mindset. Don't judge
too fast. Show up at that party or event or experience with the desire to meet and connect
with people. And you'll open the channel to have connections start coming to you that you could
have never predicted.
For sure.
And if you meet someone who's fun and playful and got a good sense of humor and is smart and, you know, they're the things that you like in a person, but they're not age appropriate.
They're not the gender you're looking for.
They're not whatever it may be.
Those people likely have people in their life that are part of that same culture.
So what you're looking for really in life more broadly is culture fits as far as people go.
When you find a culture fit, even if it's not in the form of the love of your life,
you're basically inviting, you're being invited into a community of people that are a culture
fit to you and the community, as you say, Marie,
that's where some of the amazing wins can be. Well, Marie, before we do some questions,
is there something you have going on right now or somewhere you'd like to invite people to
continue their journey with you? Oh, we've got beautiful things coming up. One of which,
if anyone listening has wrestled with their own ability to get things done
in their life and have enough time, not only for what matters, but to feel like it is expansive
and you're not being crushed by exhaustion and burnout and overwhelm.
I would invite folks to come check out something that we do that's called Time Genius.
And you can go to join timegenius.com.
We've got a lot of free training coming up. I went through a whole experience in my life where
I burned myself out and it was not cute. And my health took a hit and my mental health took a hit.
And there were so many patterns that I was unaware of that were just driving me into the ground
until I realized that I did not have to live that way. It was a lot of enculturated things that I was unaware that I even had in me. So if anyone is interested in being more joyfully
productive, so you have more time and space for yourself and these beautiful relationships that
you're cultivating, come check us out at join time, genius.com, take advantage of the free
training. And if you want to go deeper, you have opportunities to do that too.
Marie, thank you so, so much. It's been such a pleasure to meet you
and to get to know you better alongside my audience.
And I hope that my audience,
even those that have been fans of you for a long time,
have got to see a different version of you today as well
and heard some things they haven't heard before.
But it really is a privilege for all of us
to get access to you and your time
and your energy and your wisdom.
So thank you.
And I look forward to more of these in the future.
Thank you so much.
It was such an honor what you've built
and all these incredible humans here.
I could not be more grateful for the time.
So thank you.
Hey everyone. I hope you enjoyed this conversation with me and Marie. So thank you. they wanted. It was an amazing hour. It's so fun to watch someone who's so experienced do what they
do best in real time. And people don't normally get that kind of access to Marie. If you want to
go and listen to that full hour, you can go and check it out by going to joinlovelife.com. There
you won't only find Marie's interview, you'll find all sorts of different interviews I've done, masterclasses for
every part of your love life, and you'll be part of live regular coaching calls with me every single
month. That is at joinlovelife.com. I'll see you over there and I look forward to coaching you next. Outro Music