Love Life with Matthew Hussey - 3 Mistakes That Quietly Kill Attraction | Rewind
Episode Date: May 29, 2026Sometimes attraction fades not because there wasn’t chemistry… but because we accidentally kill the tension too early.In this episode, Matthew shares 3 common mistakes that can quietly hurt desire... in dating and relationships—and how to avoid them before a connection fizzles out.These are subtle patterns that are easy to miss in the moment, but once you see them, you’ll start spotting them everywhere.If you’ve ever wondered why someone seemed interested at first and then slowly pulled away, this episode will help you understand what may have changed.---►► Every Friday, Matthew Hussey writes a personal letter to help you strengthen the three most important relationships in your life—with others, with yourself, and with life itself. Sign up for free at TheThreeRelationships.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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I wanted to talk about three mistakes we make in early stage dating that really hurt our chances of things going anywhere.
When we like someone, we all want to get them hooked, don't we?
We all want to make sure that it actually has the best possible chance of going somewhere.
Well, there are three things we do that jeopardize that that I wanted to highlight in this video.
And I want to start by just making a distinction.
A distinction between love and desire.
connection and attraction. Love isn't the same as desire. What gets someone to have feelings of love
for us is not the same as what makes someone want to take us home, what makes someone turned on by us.
And if we want to keep someone's attention in dating, desire is absolutely essential. The three
things that I'm going to talk about today, the mistakes we make, are not necessarily things that
will hurt love, but they will have the potential to hurt desire. And if we hurt desire, we run the risk
of losing someone's energy. And when we feel like, oh, it fizzled out with someone, oh, why did
they lose steam? It's not because of a lack of love, it's because of a lack of desire. And by the way,
What gets people to the point of love?
Enough desire in the early stages
to carry them through to a place of real deep connection and investment.
Mistake number one.
Showing that we are surprised someone is into us.
If we say or do things that communicate to someone,
I just don't know why someone like you would like someone like me.
I'm surprised that you're into me.
I'm surprised that you like me as much as you say you do.
I am surprised you approached me.
What we're saying to someone is someone with your value
shouldn't be into someone with my value.
And the danger of that is that we're gonna make someone feel
like they got the raw end of the deal.
We all wanna feel in life like we're getting the best deal possible.
So no one wants to go into a dating scenario feeling like they're the one being sure,
changed. But when we say to someone, I'm surprised that you're into me, it's another way of saying to
someone, you're the one getting shortchanged in this situation because I'm of lower value and you're of
higher value. If we do that, we run the risk of killing desire before we've even started.
Mistake number two, telling someone you're afraid that they're going to hurt you. If we continuously
show, I'm afraid that you're going to change your mind about it.
me. I'm afraid that you're going to leave me. I'm afraid that you're going to cheat on me. I'm worried
you're just stringing me along. We are playing a kind of victim in this scenario. We're not saying
that we have equal opportunity to hurt each other, that we're both in a situation. Being dating
is to be in a situation where you can be hurt. There's no getting around that. If you go on a date
with someone and they don't call you, we can feel that as a rejection. That's vulnerability.
You can't be in dating without making yourself vulnerable.
But that's also true of the other person.
So if we're acting like we're the only one who's in danger,
it's a way of communicating that you have all the power and I have none.
And you must have all the power because you're the one with all the cards.
You're the one who is more valuable in the situation.
I'm the one who has to be afraid that they're going to get hurt.
We're literally telling someone that they're more valuable than us.
We're also making them feel a level of safety that breeds a kind of boredom.
We're saying to someone, hey, the dance you thought you were in, where we're dancing together
and we're kind of feeling each other out and seeing where it goes and who knows, but let's keep going.
That dance is over.
You're in control.
I'm the one who's scared.
I'm the one who could get hurt here.
You're totally safe.
There's nothing more for you to think about.
Mistake number three.
talking about parts of yourself you don't like.
This could be as simple as talking about how you really don't like your body.
Now, when we do this, the first thing we're doing is obviously drawing someone's attention
to the very thing that we don't like.
Now, you might say, but that's just honest, I don't like it,
and that's just part of my vulnerability is saying that I don't like it.
Well, we have to ask ourselves, what's the appropriate time and place for revealing
that kind of insecurity. If you were on your way in to watch a movie that you were really excited about,
you'd been anticipating this movie, you were looking forward to it, and then right before the
movie was about to start, a video played of the director saying, hey guys, so I hope you enjoy
the movie. I just want to let you know there's a scene in the first 10 minutes, the one in the
bar, that I'm really not happy with the way that it turned out.
Enjoy the movie. I just, I'm just sorry about that scene. I just didn't go the way we wanted.
Imagine watching that movie now. Are you going to be able to enjoy the movie? Or is your mind just now going to be on the bar scene? I mean, what's this bar scene?
Let me see. Let me see if it's as bad as the director says it is. Oh, I guess I see what he means. That is a kind of, that wasn't a great scene. I guess I can say.
why he didn't like it. You're literally looking for reasons not to like that thing. And by the way,
even if that wasn't the best scene in the movie, your whole attention is drawn to that scene
and not the rest of the movie that might be awesome and might make that scene completely irrelevant
in the context of the whole thing. You don't get a chance, in other words, to now leave
and just love that movie. If someone says to you that,
they don't like their nose, then they're giving you their interpretation of their nose.
I don't like my nose.
But they're giving you their interpretation of it.
You should be allowed to have your own interpretation of that thing.
Now, part of this we know comes from a kind of insecurity that if I'm worried about something,
if I'm worried you're not going to like something, let me knock it before you do.
Let me at least show you that I'm aware of this thing that isn't great.
That way, I don't seem like a fool.
I am acknowledging that this thing isn't great.
And now I'm disarming you.
I'm eight-miling myself.
You know, that scene in eight-mile where I'm an M, he bashes himself, right?
He gets up and he bashes himself.
He knocks himself in all of these ways.
And now he's like, now what do you have to say?
I'm a piece of white trash.
I say it proudly.
And fuck his battle, I don't want to win.
I'm outy.
Here, tell these people something they don't know about me.
But dating isn't a rap battle, friends.
It's not let me just knock myself down in all of the ways that you could knock me down.
Now what negative shit are you going to say about me?
The goal is not to rid them of any negative things to say because you already said them.
The goal, hopefully, is that someone comes along and is able to not only see the parts of you that you think are wonderful, but maybe, God forbid,
is able to see the parts of you that you don't think are wonderful as wonderful.
Now, by the way, am I saying that you can never say anything insecure, that you can never
point out something that makes you self-conscious? Of course not. There are always going to be
times in dating and relationships where a moment of being self-conscious is a moment of humanity,
is a moment of beautiful vulnerability that connects us to another person. But if we bombard
people with the things about ourselves that we don't like. If we continuously tell someone,
I really don't like how I look today. I don't feel good in myself today. If we keep saying that,
then we're brainwashing someone to think a certain way about us, to view us through a certain
lens. And don't think that that brainwashing will never get through. At best, they'll still
think that you look amazing, but we'll start to see that you don't.
think you're amazing and therefore that will have an impact on the way they see you.
Because ultimately long term, who wants to be with someone who doesn't see any value in themselves?
But the worst case scenario is that something they actually liked, they start to question
whether they should like it. Because some of those things you say about it being hideous
actually get through. Now, I know that we all in our dating lives,
want to be accepted for who we are. We all want someone to come along and for us to not have to
play a game to get them, not have to pretend we're more confident than we are, but instead to just
be who we are and have someone accept us. But I remind everyone again, someone accepting us
isn't the same as someone desiring us. Someone may accept you. They may think you're wonderful.
the same as desiring. People aren't so powerful that the mechanisms, the kind of economics of value
that happen to all of us reflexively are things they can just control. If we behave as someone
who has no value, who isn't desired by anybody else, hasn't been wanted by anyone in years
and who can blame them, you've got all these terribly unattractive features.
If we continue to paint that picture to someone,
then they can be forgiven for losing desire.
Because we're all going on these unconscious ways of measuring people's value
and then getting attracted or not attracted to where they end up on that scale.
Can we do some of these things I've said in this video and get away with it?
Of course we can.
Can they even be charming sometimes?
Yes, can they make us human and vulnerable in the right context?
Of course.
But the question we have to ask ourselves is, is the pattern of my behavior one that paints a picture of someone that has value or someone that does not?
And if the answer is the latter, we have to start redressing these things that we do to sabotage ourselves.
with the people we like.
Thank you so much for spending this time with me.
I do not take it for granted.
I also wanted to let you know another way
that we can connect each week
because there is a private email
that I send every Friday
to those who have signed up for it.
For me, it's a way that I can stay connected
to all of you between episodes.
The newsletter is called The Three Relationships
and basically each week I share something
to help you improve
in one of the three big relationships in your life.
your relationship with other people, your relationship with yourself, or your relationship with life
itself. These three relationships are the basis of an amazing life. People tell me that they look forward to
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go to the three relationships.com and you can sign up for free. That's the number three by the way,
not the word three. So the three relationships.com. Thank you for listening. Take care and keep showing up for
yourself in your life. I'll see you in the newsletter.
