Love Life with Matthew Hussey - 283: Q&A: Red Flags, Heartbreak, And Getting Closure
Episode Date: February 19, 2025In this episode, Matthew and Audrey tackle some of the toughest listener questions about love, rejection, and moving on. From rebuilding after heartbreak to recognizing red flags, they also break down... the emotional roadblocks that keep people stuck and show you how to move forward. You'll hear: How to ungive up on dating in 2025 Why closure isn’t always about an explanation—sometimes, it’s just seeing the truth The surprising red flag that’s often overlooked when choosing a partner How to stop wasting time on someone who isn’t invested in you What it really means when a person pulls away after intimacy Whether it’s worth revisiting a past connection—or if it’s just a distraction The importance of living a full life outside of dating to naturally attract the right person. If you've ever found yourself overanalyzing someone’s behavior, questioning your worth after rejection, or wondering if you should give love another chance, this episode is for you. And if you're struggling with heartbreak, don’t miss Matthew’s free live event on February 25th, where he’ll guide you through the process of healing and moving forward. Sign up at LoveLifeTraining.com.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
What's up guys welcome back to the Love Life podcast. We're going to be answering some
listener questions today that have been sent in to the Love Life podcast and you know we're
just we're basically in the countdown now till the launch of the new podcast which we're
very excited about. It's going to keep the love life podcast name.
So you won't have to search something new to find it.
It is going to live where the podcast has been this whole time.
And we are still going to keep the, some of the old episodes that you have
gotten used to each week, but there is going to be a new episode every week
that we're very excited about.
And, uh, in the meantime, we wanted to actually speak
to some of the people that email us all the time
and answer some questions.
Before we get into it, if you have not already signed up
for the Heartbreak event that I am doing
on the 25th of February, now is the time.
Go to lovelifetraining.com and sign up for free. We're going to be spending time together
working through your heartbreak. Whether that heartbreak is fresh and it just happened, whether it's a heartbreak that is
long-standing from someone that you still aren't able to get over,
this is your chance to be coached by me
live to be given a blueprint, a roadmap for
moving through your heartbreak so that you can heal, get closure and finally get
through this difficult period. So come join us by going to lovelifetraining.com
and I will send you the information as soon as you have signed up. Invite your
friends, invite your family, invite anyone you know who is going through
a hard time right now.
I promise you, if you are experiencing heartbreak,
this will be the most important hour you spend this year.
That is on the 25th of February,
you can access it from wherever you are in the world,
and you can join it by going to lovelifetraining.com. into some questions Audrey Hussey before we get into some questions I have a question slash comment from somebody.
They wrote, you did a recent video about not putting one's dating life on hold
and several great ones about not giving up.
Except I already did.
A few years ago I decided not to bother anymore with zero plan to ever try again.
I think there's added difficulty with zero momentum to find the courage and activation energy,
energy to start all over.
I would love your thoughts on how to un-give up in 2025.
Well, I always think what is your alternative?
You know, at a certain point you will want connection. At a certain
point you'll want romantic connection. And it's okay to say, now is not the right time
for me or I'm just not, I'm not in a space where I want to go out there and date. But
at a certain point, dating is just life. It's not this, you know, we abstract it from life
like it lives in this special category of its own.
But the truth is, you know, at any point in your life
you could go outside, walk in, bump into someone
that you found intriguing.
And that person could ask for your number
and you could end up tomorrow with a coffee with them.
What would you say to yourself?
I am not gonna do this because I have given up on dating.
You wouldn't think like that.
You would just go with the flow,
because it felt good and you're like,
well, I'll see what happens here.
This was an interesting person I bumped into.
I'm not gonna say no to coffee.
So I sometimes think that the idea of giving up on dating is a little bit of an abstraction
that is a way of saying, I don't want to get hurt.
I don't want to put myself out there or be vulnerable.
So I'm just going gonna stop doing it altogether.
But to me, it's almost, you know what it's a bit like?
The difference between writing and getting published.
If you are a creative person and you enjoy writing,
then you write regardless of whether you're going to get published.
You may say at some point, I am so sick of knocking on publishers doors trying to get
this, my articles or my book published that I am just, I can't do it anymore.
I need to take a break from going and cold calling publishers and getting rejected and
my work getting ignored.
But that wouldn't be the same thing as taking a break from writing.
Writing is something you do because it's part of who you are.
It's part of your creative.
It's a creative vehicle for you that you can't just give up.
And I think that your love life is the same way you.
There's still an energy about you that you can have when you go out into the world
and you meet people and you say hi to people
and you flirt sometimes, you have a sexual energy sometimes,
you can still bring that energy forward in the world
and you never know where that will lead you.
Whether or not you wanna get on the dating apps right now
is, you know, that's like knocking on Whether or not you want to get on the dating apps right now is,
you know, that's like knocking on publishers' doors in a way.
But you still, that part of you still wants to be expressed.
And if you're even asking this question,
then I know it wants to be expressed.
Okay, but yes, I agree with absolutely everything you said,
but I'm just like in the listener's head
and I reckon she might be going,
fine, I will do that Matthew.
And I'm doing what you do, you're like, okay Matthew, but.
When I had a rebuttal to my own question,
Yeah, exactly.
It's my own answer.
So I'm doing that, like, yes Matthew, that's great.
And I agree with you, but there was actually a study
and I need to dig out the article.
I don't wanna give an incorrect statistic,
but the study said there's like a really high percentage
of men that have never even asked a woman out.
And so I think that's true,
but what does that actually look like in practice?
Because like, you know, I don't know about you,
but when I was single and I was out and about in the world,
walking down the street, for instance,
the guys who kind of like came up to me and tried to, you know, chat me up were not always the men I was attracted to or like,
would necessarily give my number to. And so you might have an instance where someone does that,
but you know, then you have to like the probability of you actually fancying them. And then, you know,
if you're not on the apps and you're not really actively like knocking on publishers doors
Like what does it look like to have that kind of an energy? I think
It looks like having an expansive life. So are you part of?
Like if you look at your life
Does it bring you into contact with new people?
Are you doing any activities in your week?
that expose you to a group for example? Or is everything you do in a week a solo activity?
Are you ever getting invited by friends to things that by going you would meet new people. And if the answer is no, it might be worth asking, have
I got an active enough social life? Because one sign of an active social life is that
you will get invited to places, maybe not every week, but once or twice a month, or
every other month, you might get invited to something and by getting
invited to that thing you're exposed to new people and then it's your
responsibility while you're there to be sociable even if that's something that
scares you a little. Am I talking to people in this environment? It seems to
me that those things are worth doing for their own sake. You and I are married, but we say yes to invites.
In case I meet someone better, you always have to keep your options open, guys.
I just think that's...
That wasn't what I meant.
And you know what?
If I made that joke, I would be in trouble.
Oh yeah, you'd be in much trouble.
Not with anyone out there, I'd be in trouble. Oh yeah, you'd be in much trouble.
Not with anyone out there, I'd be in trouble with you.
Yeah, yeah, very much so.
So there are certain things, apparently Audrey can say and I can't.
So those things are things that you and I still do because we see it as valuable for its own sake.
We like having friends.
We like sometimes meeting new people, not all the time,
but we like, you know, we like having a life
that feels rich in experiences
and social interactions and connection.
And so if we do that as a married couple,
why wouldn't someone do that single?
And why would someone who is single say,
I don't wanna do any of that stuff,
it's just all like, oh I have to do all of this stuff
to meet someone.
If people in relationships do it,
then what's your excuse?
A lot of the time our excuse is just,
we're just deeply afraid of expanding our life
or of getting out of our comfort zone
or of getting out of our routine.
My point with all of this is that when you,
you don't have to necessarily like put out a statement
and say, I'm ready to date again.
You just have to, in a way, you just have to say, I'm ready to date again. You just have to, in a way, you just have to say, I'm, I'm ready to have experiences.
I'm ready to open up my life to possibility.
And that can come in so many different forms.
It doesn't have to come today from going on a dating app.
It can come from all of the things that I've just mentioned.
going on a dating app. It can come from all of the things that I've just mentioned.
And when someone says I just have no interest in dating,
I do think that that's appropriate for a time
when you've been badly hurt,
when you've come out of an abusive relationship,
when you're really doing certain work on yourself
that might get interrupted by dating someone.
But at a certain point,
it feels a little bit like avoiding life itself.
And so I would say if you're in 2025 saying,
you know, how do I convince myself to get back out there?
I don't think you need me to help you convince yourself.
I think you're already
thinking about the fact that you're lacking connection and you want more connection or
you wouldn't even be asking the question.
I also think, you know, the fear of not, of going back out there probably comes from a
fear of getting hurt, a fear of feeling disappointed, a fear of rejection, a fear of all of those
things.
And I suppose I don't actually have this person's name, but I just want to say to them,
you know, I think that all those things happen whenever you put yourself out there in any situation.
You don't get anywhere. Exactly. You don't get anywhere in life without fearing those things happening.
And actually, I think everything that you have in your life
that's worth having tends to be hard won
and tends to come with risk.
If nothing else, the risk of loss,
because anything worth having, you can lose.
And I do think that instead of putting so much pressure
on dating going a certain way,
which is the thing that hurts us the most,
going out there maybe with just a little bit of curiosity.
They said, how do I un-give up?
I think un-giving up looks like just dipping your toe back in,
in a way where you're not putting all this pressure,
and thinking maybe I'll meet someone
who will end up being a friend.
Maybe I'll meet someone who will end up
being an interesting person I have a conversation
with.
Maybe I'll just practice being on a date, which we all, you know, could use more practice
on because we're all really awkward in real life.
You especially.
Yeah, me especially.
Guys, this is a roast.
Actually it's not a podcast episode.
You started it to be fair.
I know, I'm saying a mutual roast.
But yeah, I think that's my advice I would give
to ungive up is just to not put so much pressure on it
and just kind of see like to your point
if you're asking that question,
you probably already do want to give up,
do you want to get back out there?
So I think that's what I would say.
But I have a question, which is outrageous.
Okay.
That's my next question.
Do you wanna hear it?
Yeah, of course.
I do now.
Emma says, I've been with someone for 11 months.
Two weeks ago, he went to the shop.
I called him and he texted to say
he was waiting for a takeaway.
40 minutes later, he texts me to say he wasn't coming home.
He was sorry, but he was done.
Since then, I've been in complete turmoil.
He has made contact,
but a lot of it revolves around his feelings.
How can I move on with what feels like no closure
and no explanation?
I have three children whom he's also walked out on,
and so how do I make sure
his abandonment doesn't affect them?
He is not their dad,
but has five of his own children
he has little slash no contact with.
Thank you so much for your amazing podcast, Emma.
Outrageous!
Who is this dude?
There's a lot going on there.
Do you wanna know something that I think is a massive
red flag that doesn't get talked about enough?
Whether his own kids won't talk to him.
Yeah, that he has kids.
I know someone-ish, like friend of a friend,
distant person though, who has had two children
from two different moms and has no contact
with either of them.
And I just think that is such a red flag.
Like why can't you take care of your own children?
What is wrong with you? It's a huge red flag. It's a huge red flag. Like why, why can't you take care of your own children? What is wrong with you?
It's a huge red flag. It's a huge red flag. How did she, she, she, he has five kids and
he's not close to any of them. Yeah. He has five kids of his own. He has, but he has little
to no contact with. That is, Oh God, where do you begin with that?
It's, there is something deeply, deeply wrong with that.
And I don't know when she knew, what's her name?
Emma.
Emma, I don't know, Emma, when you knew
that he wasn't close to his own children, all five of them,
but at a certain point point you have to ask,
on what basis am I assuming he's gonna have any loyalty
to us as a family when he doesn't even have any loyalty
to his own?
We're his volunteer family.
We're like, we're the family he volunteered for this year.
But what does it say about this person if they have no contact with their own five children? The fact that he walked
out out of nowhere, like said he was going to the shops and then didn't come back. You're wondering about closure. You got it.
You got it.
He showed himself to be completely,
I'm guessing that he put forward a very different image
than the one that showed.
But the one that showed, that's him.
Who he's been pretending to be for 11 months, that's someone else. But
you just found out who he is. That is closure. He showed himself to be someone
so callous, so cruel, so unempathetic and cold that he could just pretend to go to
the shops and then be so cowardly as to
send you a message saying I'm not coming back. A message. He's a coward. He is a
coward and that might, by the way, that might, that's almost certainly the most
polite word you could possibly find for this person. Because it says to me, personality disorder.
But coward is the best thing you can say about him.
The most moderate thing you can say.
It's viciously selfish.
Well, and even what she said afterwards,
that even now when he reaches out,
which apparently he still does,
The audacity.
It's about him and his emotions.
But that tells you everything you need to know. It's about him. And it should now, again,
assuming you knew before that he wasn't in contact with his own kids, you just found
out why. You just discovered why the people in his life that he should be
close to. Again, if he had one difficult child who decided he didn't want to
didn't want to talk to his dad, that's one thing. When you got five kids and
you're not close to any of them, he hasn't got five psychopaths for children.
Right? If none of them are close to him, you just found out why. So this is
closure. And you know, some people are really, really talented, if you want to call it that,
at putting forward a different image for a protracted period of time, in this case 11 months. What is worth asking without
going into self blame is is there anything that I did ignore? Is there
anything that my intuition was telling me in those 11 months that I chose not
to pay attention to? And how would I do that differently next time around? What conversation would I not
avoid having and would have sooner next time around? But that's not none of that is to
say this is your fault that he, you know, that you're in this position. When someone
does that, it's often, here's what I want to say to everyone, this is a very important point. It's very common in situations for people to look at our
situation and to go, how could you get into a situation like that? How could you
you know, ignore so much that you would end up in a situation like that with a person like that.
That gets said a lot about victims of abuse, victims of narcissists, victims of all kinds of
situations. But what people don't realize when they're making those judgments from the outside
is that even when our intuition is telling us something is off,
even when we're seeing certain red flags,
what people do in their worst moments,
what people do in their most destructive moments,
what people do at the true, like, peak moments of their particular dysfunction
is still often beyond anything we could have predicted
or anything that we would have imagined.
And I say that as a note of compassion
that people should give themselves in these situations,
that it's, yes, it's true that when we look back we can often see certain
tracks that people left that we ignored that were a sign that something was off
about this situation or this person that's true and that's the part where we
have to say next time around it's not about blaming myself,
it's about saying, next time around,
I won't ignore those tracks when I see them.
I'm gonna make sure I shine a light on them
and talk about them and expose them to the light of day.
However, self-compassion should come from the fact
that we often, even when we see those tracks,
it's often still absolutely shocking where they lead.
And it's still a huge jump from what we've seen already.
Like I can guarantee that it is a jump
from anything she had seen in those 11 months,
no matter what writing she may have seen on the wall.
It was a hell of a jump from that to
someone saying they were going to go to the shops and never coming back. So don't ever, when people
try to make you feel stupid for putting yourself in a certain situation, like, oh, didn't you know,
he's not close to his own kids. You know, didn't you see that that was a red flag? Yes, that is a
red flag when you've got five kids and you're not
close to them or you don't speak to them. But it doesn't follow that you would then predict that
they would say they're going to the shops and never come back. The key thing here is to not
ignore those tracks next time if there were things that you saw that you know you ignored in your
intuition. And the second thing is to realize that the closure you're looking for you already have that you just the mask came off and
You just saw who this person really is and when they call you and they text you and they play a sympathetic tune
About their own emotions. They're showing you even more who they are because what they're saying is you the victim are
Not the headline for me. What I've done to you is not the headline to
me. The headline to me is the confusion and the struggle that I'm going through despite the fact
that I'm the one who has, you know, wreaked havoc after 11 months on you and your children.
I also believe like if you're really honest with yourself, like when someone does that to you, can you even,
would you even take them back?
Like this idea of closure and explanation,
that only really almost should qualify for someone
who could potentially, who's actually,
you've potentially lost someone valuable.
Like to me, it's like, this man is so not valuable.
We're an absolute idiot.
He's a goon.
I knew a couple when I was a lot younger.
I was a teenager, but they were a couple in their,
what, 40s, maybe 50s.
Isn't it so funny when you're like a teenager
and you see people who are like our age,
you're like, oh my God, they're so old.
And then now you're our age, we're our age and we're like, oh my God, they're so old. And then now you're our age, we're our age
and we're like, how dare you, we're so young.
But we are, to teenagers, we're old.
That's what I mean, like we're so old.
Like anyone, I feel like when I was a teenager,
anyone that was older than 21 was just basically dead
and like, irrelevant.
They weren't on your radar.
Yeah. Yeah.
But I knew this couple who were, she was a bit older.
He was, he was about 10 years younger than her. Maybe she was in her fifties.
He was in his forties and we used to see them on a vacation. We used to go on.
They owned a business in this place that we used to go on holiday and they, we
always got on really well with them.
We thought they were really lovely.
And one day the guy just disappeared,
just up and left, like without a trace.
And it felt like this drama,
it was like this drama on vacation that, you know,
that he had done this and we were, you know,
we used to hang out with them and we were like,
what the hell?
And my mom and dad were like-
The same thing happened to me with my neighbors.
Oh, weird. Yeah, carry on. But you know what was crazy is that once we got into it with her
who and she was like beside herself that he had just disappeared or whatever
it turned out he had done this once before. Like he had done the same thing once before. So although she was shocked by it, she wasn't so shocked because he had actually done this
before.
And that's the, to the point you're making, when you take someone like that back, you
have to ask yourself, on what basis am I deciding
that they are not capable of doing
that exact same thing again?
100%.
I always think this when somebody,
look, people break up and get back together.
So like, I'm not saying every time
somebody breaks up with you,
but I think every time somebody shows themselves
to treat you in a careless way, discard you, dismiss you
or something that just... to me it's like that's the same person that
can jolt you at the altar. Well what they've shown is that that's how they
respond to problems in life. That at its essence because him feeling whatever he
was feeling, let's say he was feeling trapped, let's say he had an urge to go be with someone else.
There was some kind of internal challenge that he was facing, right?
And people face those kind of challenges in relationships a lot.
People get scared, people are, oh my God, can I do this?
Whatever. People have those thoughts.
Those thoughts aren't, they're not the end of the
world, they're human thoughts. But what he has shown is this is his reaction to an urge,
to a thought like that, to a fear, to feeling claustrophobic, to whatever he was feeling.
His response is to lie about going to the shops and then not come back and then text
her saying he's not coming back. That's his reaction to a problem and when someone reacts to a
challenge in that way you have to say this is what this person does when they
feel challenged by something. This is their reaction. So if I ever take them
back I have to ask myself why do I think that they are newly
equipped to deal with that challenging thought the next time it arises simply
because I'm taking them back. Yeah unless they have done extensive therapy. Exactly.
Which he doesn't sound like the type. He doesn't. Then don't take him back Emma
no matter what he says. Also I do do think as a, add it to the repertoire of red flags,
I do think if a man has children
and his children don't,
he doesn't have any relationship with his children
and there isn't some kind of like toxic partner in the way
that's stopping him and preventing him
from seeing his children, especially if he has access to his children
yet doesn't seem to have a relationship with them.
I think that's a massive red flag
and I think we can take that with us as a good lesson.
I agree.
Right, I have one last question.
This one's a little bit long,
but it's really, really interesting
and I wanted to read it.
I don't know this person's name,
so I will call her Sadie.
Okay.
Sadie says, hello Matthew and Audrey.
First of all, thank you for all that you do.
Your podcast saved my mental health in hard times
and to this day serves as a grounding tool.
Lovely.
Very nice, thank you Sadie.
I have a story that lingers over a year now, but really probably a few tool. Lovely. Very nice. Thank you, Sadie. I have a story that lingers over a year now,
but really probably a few years.
I am a 40-year-old widow with two young children.
My husband passed away in 2022 after a long battle
with COVID and its complications.
He had his business and I was a stay-at-home mom.
During the time of his hospitalization,
his best friend, brackets single divorced for
five years with no kids was around to help the company stay afloat after my
husband passed he has been in charge for all of our audio listeners I just did
the air quotes with my fingers we spent a lot of time together he was my shoulder
to cry on and support in any other way I needed.
After my husband passed, I started feeling attracted to him. It was such a surprise because
I didn't try to find a man right after this major event. But anyway, I felt like he likes me too.
Something was definitely in the air and it got confirmed when one evening we hung out and things
escalated. We became physically intimate.
However, right before that he mentioned that he is not ready for a relationship, but I
went along with it anyway. I did not like it at all. He proposed at first to quote,
call whenever I need a man and he will be
there. I was perplexed by that statement, but again I went along with it. We functioned
like that for four weeks and then he decided it is not fair to keep doing it. He mentioned
that I am a fresh widow and I deserve proper respect. I was shocked but I took it with
grace and didn't put up a fight or discussion. I said okay if that's what you want no problem. Inside though I was
devastated. Later on I wrote him an email explaining that I did hope for a
relationship and I had formed feelings for him earlier even before the
intimacy happened. I received no response.
Things were a bit awkward at the beginning after this breakup,
in air quotes, but we moved past it.
Fast forward, we have been working together and every now and then we spend personal time.
I'm assuming she means they get together.
I'm assuming.
He occasionally spends times with my kids and I guess the friendship remains and I can
count on him whenever I need.
However, after a year I have not moved on and I still want more.
I guess my question to you is, is this worth revisiting?
I mean, maybe a face to face conversation this time, not email, where I can express
what I really feel.
I know.
Hang on, they only were like getting together
for like four weeks, right?
Yeah, and she's basically saying.
And she's saying after a year, I'm still not over this person.
Yes, and she's wondering whether it's worth
revisiting the conversation face-to-face.
I know that.
Did Biggin have it face-to-face when he was saying
that I'm like.
No, it was an email. Oh, no, no, no, that was so.
So that conversation, I'm like when he was saying like, I'm not, you know,
this isn't right and now I've had sex with you for four weeks.
I don't want to hurt you.
Yeah, I assume that part was face to face.
I think that was face to face.
I think then she sent an email and he didn't respond to it because he's, you know, really caring and cares a lot about her mental
health. I know there is a saying, do not let a man reject you twice. And I do not want
to lose respect for myself by coming back to him and asking when he was very clear where
he stands. However, I feel like there was never a clear direct communication between
us about what we want. No. Yes, there was
At least I didn't say it. Yes, you did Sadie. I'm sorry. I think I'm gonna unleash a very angry Matthew on you
I'm sorry about this. I
Feel like there is something there for him, too
Can he know the right person at the wrong time?
I'm stuck between letting it go completely and giving it a try.
What do you think?
There's nothing to let go.
What is there to let go?
It's gone.
It wasn't there.
What is there to let go?
We have to stop this thing of like,
I'm struggling to let go.
You're not like to let go of what?
Air?
Like what is it you're holding on to? The thing doesn't exist. Like listen, I was willing to offer a lot of compassion
for the scenario where her husband passed, his friend was there in those times.
I don't know how good of a friend.
Best friend.
Right.
My God.
But I was willing to look at this as a scenario
of this was genuinely his best friend.
And this guy is a good guy.
And the two of them actually found each other
in this difficult period,
and both were able to reconcile within themselves
that you know what, he would have wanted us to be happy
if there was a shot at happiness,
and we found it with each other.
Like, we can make our peace with that.
Like that, I could have understood.
It's really easy for him to say,
I'm not thinking about this
while we're having sex for four weeks.
And now I'm all of a sudden,
my moral compass has visited me.
And you know, this just isn't fair to you.
And blah, blah, blah.
It's like, I'm sure your best friend
wouldn't have been the happiest with you
not taking his wife seriously and messing her around. And how about, how
about you? How about not, it's not fair to you. How about I've not been the kind of friend to my best, to my past deceased best friend by just seeing this as a bit of fun and then telling you, oh, because it's because you're the victim here and you're the widow.
I can't do this and it's all very confusing and so on.
Can I also just say-
I really don't like that.
I can just say as well, like I really hate it.
It's like a real pet peeve of mine.
When people like sleep with you
and like, you know, we'll see you for X amount of time
and then go, I don't wanna hurt you.
I don't want you to get attached.
Oh, don't you?
Well, that would have been interesting
and useful information five weeks ago
before we had sex a hundred times.
You know what I mean?
Like, I just think that's such a,
it's such the audacity of people doing that.
Anyway.
This whole situation has shown itself to you
as exactly what it is.
Like, he said, he literally said to you, like, I'll be the guy you need whenever
you need a man. Call me whenever you need a man. Like, can you get any more detached than that?
Not call me when you need a friend. Not call me when you need someone who you know cares about you.
me when you need someone who you know cares about you. Call me when you need a man. I'm not even a person in your life that matters. I am just a man. I mean that
is his level of emotional involvement in this situation. He basically said to you, I will be the absolute, we talk about it in those videos, the minimum
possible investment videos.
Remember the MPI, when I was dressed up as a cop, putting in the minimum possible investment,
that was what MPI stood for, minimum possible investment.
Some people give you the minimum possible investment
and they look for people they can give
the minimum possible investment to.
And he's sussed you out as someone
he could give the minimum possible investment.
He didn't even need to try from his side.
He just said, call me when you need something.
So now it's even you calling him, it's not
even him calling you. I'm saying all of this not for you to have any regrets
about this situation or to turn it into some kind of self-loathing that you do.
I'm saying it because this is the person that you a year later are
still thinking about. I promise you he's not thinking about you. I promise you he
is not in his mind debating what to do about you. I promise you he is not
lacking for closure. This is a common mind trick we do with ourselves is we
go, oh maybe you know they just didn't
hear enough from me how much I cared. That's not how men operate, especially after you've
had sex with them. They, at that point, I promise you, after four weeks of having sex
with you, he knows that you're interested. He's not going away going,
oh, I just, I just, if she'd have just shown me a little more, if she'd have just shown
me that she wanted more, I would have been up for it.
This is really interesting. And because I just want to say, Sadie, like, we've all done this. We've all done this whole like,
maybe if I just did this extra thing,
then we would end up together,
or they would, maybe they need a signal from me
to know that I'm open to this and I like them
in order to then themselves kind of take a risk
on this relationship.
So I just wanna like say that
because I think it's really not,
there's nothing to be ashamed of for feeling that way.
Like you say, it's a very common thing that people do,
but I'm just really curious,
like why do you think we do that?
And it was really interesting to me
is the fact that you're saying as a guy,
like that is just not how it works.
So yeah, I just wanna kind of highlight this point
because I think it's so important.
Well, I don't think it works that way for either sex.
I don't think, you know,
if you like someone weeks into sleeping with them,
you aren't thinking I just need them
to show me that they really like me for me to continue wanting to see them.
And the reason that we do that with ourselves where we go, oh, maybe I just didn't say it loud enough. By the way, he knows you wanted more. That's why you wanted more. That's why he gave you a bunch of excuses.
Because he was like, I'm not gonna risk you thinking
you're gonna get more out of this.
So I'm gonna make sure that I ward you off at the gate.
So he gave you a bunch of excuses precisely because he knew
that he was gonna get himself into trouble if you
thought more was possible. That's why he gave you the excuses. But it's easier to
tell ourselves maybe I just didn't profess my feelings loudly enough
and you know so maybe they just don't know. It's easier to do that than to just
admit to ourselves there's nothing there. It's easier to do that than to just admit to ourselves there's
nothing there. It's more desirable to think maybe there's still something on the table
if I went and actually, you know, said how I felt or that I saw something there between us.
The reason I get agitated about situations like this, I don't like I don't get agitated about you know her
sleeping with him in this scenario because it's she was in a vulnerable
position she was looking for connection and she found it and she pro and it
seems quite clear that she found it in the wrong place, but that's human.
What like gets under my skin is a year of wasted time.
I, I'm very, very protective over people's time, especially when that time is all
dedicated to thinking about someone and ruminating about someone who is
Absolutely not using their time to think and ruminate about you
Can you think of anything more futile? Can you think of anything more?
disrespectful to your own time and your own life
Than to sit there for a year and ponder the possibilities with
someone who is not thinking about you at all. And also Sadie you know potentially
this is all a big distraction from the fact that you've also lost your husband.
That's a very astute point. Speak on that more. That's a big point. Well, just maybe this guy isn't actually that important after all and we're obsessing over
whether he, you know, feels the same way, whether this might happen, whether this, whether
that.
And all of this is one big way of protecting yourself from actually facing the grief and
loss that you really feel in the loss of your husband because it
happened so quickly after and I hope that takes a little bit of power away
from this person because who is he? He's irrelevant.
That's a really powerful point you just made and it's really really really important that this is a distraction and and
look at how little you have become distracted by. Four weeks of hookups and a year later
we're talking about this person. I can guarantee you by the way if he were a stranger
person. I can guarantee you by the way if he were a stranger it would be a lot harder for us to be taking this person seriously a year later but it's easy to
make this seem more significant because it happened to be his best friend and
he's been in the middle of it all and he's been helping and you know he's been
spending time with your kids stop that shit as well
Like if this is someone you can't get over after a year
Then the whole spending time with your kids thing that has to stop
Because that is that is only gonna warp your mind further
Watching him have a good time with your kids
going to warp your mind further. Watching him have a good time with your kids, when he was
the best friend of your partner, like that's going to play tricks on your mind.
That's not an, it's an utterly unhelpful image for you to have because all it does is make you feel like he's great, what a great guy. Oh, and he's so good with my kids.
That's like really like easy points for him to score.
It's really low hanging fruit.
He looks fatherly, he's endearing.
Meanwhile, you're no better off in the situation.
So it's, you, what Audrey is saying is really,
really profound is really, really profound
is that this is a distraction is not helpful.
It's not helpful as a distraction from your grief
and it's not helpful as something that's gonna get
in the way of you one day finding something that's real
in your love life once again.
Yeah, and Sadie and anyone else out there
who is going through something similar,
maybe you're not sure whether or not
you express your feelings loud enough
and you're not sure how someone really feels about you.
I think the way he has ignored this email,
the way he has not reciprocated those feelings,
is your answer.
And that's hard to accept because once you accept that,
you have to face your grief, but it is your answer.
And anyone in a similar situation look to see,
have you already had an answer?
Have you not heard from them for two weeks?
Have they not, have they skirted the subject of a relationship over and over again?
Yeah.
Have they just evaded every single conversation around commitment, future planning, anything like that?
If so, that's your answer.
You don't need to put yourself out there
another time to just, if you need to do that, that's fine. But then at that point, you know,
do it in such a way that they cannot ignore you and they have to reject you to your face. So you
can finally move on and be ready for that rejection, because that rejection will come.
Yeah. Yeah. If they have the decency to do it, because they may not come. Yeah. Yeah.
If they have the decency to do it
because they may not even reply like this guy.
If you've sent an email and a phone
and you've made a phone call and you wrote them a letter,
you know, at that point, don't blame it on the fact
that you didn't also send a carrier pigeon.
You have said it.
He knows. Now go find someone better than this guy. Or find
no one right now. Actually just be. Just be. Be with your kids. Connect with them. Build build your social life, develop your friendships,
meditate, you know, heal,
do the things that are actually gonna make you feel whole again, do the things that are actually gonna make you feel
strong again, because I promise you, we are all, you know,
this is an oversimplification, but I think it's a useful one.
We're all either, in any moment,
we're coming from a place of anxiety and fear and,
you know, paralysis, or we're coming from a place
of strength and leadership.
And right now, I know you're not coming from a place
of strength and leadership.
Because these aren't the questions you would be asking
from a place of strength and leadership.
So ask yourself what do I need not how do I communicate my feelings to this guy. Ask yourself how do I get back to a place of strength and leadership in my life because I promise you if
you do that you won't be asking these questions. I love that it's not about him it's about you
enough of making him the center of attention and actually Sadie and anyone else out there listening to
this struggling to get over someone and you know just not really sure how to
move on from a breakup or anything like that come to our free masterclass on
Heartbreak. Is that on the 25th? It's on the 25th of February. Sadie, this is actually perfect for you.
And we're gonna be spending over an hour together,
helping you move through this heartbreak.
And when Matt says we, it's actually just him.
It's just me.
But we will be live and there'll be people joining us
from all over the world.
It's a free event.
I just wanna spend time with you all.
And I wanna show you what I've all over the world. It's a free event. I just wanna spend time with you all.
And I wanna show you what I've learned over the years
in how to move through heartbreak.
So go sign up at lovelifetraining.com.
It's completely free.
And we'll see you on the 25th.
I'll send you an email with all of the details.
Thank you so much for watching everyone or listening
to another episode of the Love Life podcast.
Launch coming up.
David, what's our launch date?
March 12th.
March 12th.
March 12th.
The new episode of Love Life is coming.
We are so excited.
Put it in your diary.
Subscribe to the podcast now, either on Apple or Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts.
Go subscribe so that when the new episode comes out,
you receive it.
All right, that's it.
We'll see you soon.
Thanks for watching everyone.
Bye everyone.
I mean, let's think, it's a podcast. Thanks for watching!