Love Life with Matthew Hussey - 302: “I’m nearly 40 and feel rushed to find love…help!”
Episode Date: June 25, 2025Do you feel like time is running out to find love? Whether you’re worried about starting a family, comparing yourself to friends who are coupled up, or just feeling urgent pressure to “catch up”... in your dating life, this episode is for you. Matthew, Stephen, and Audrey explore how to handle dating confidently when the stakes feel high, and how to avoid letting fear and anxiety sabotage your decisions. If you’ve ever felt behind—unsure whether to stay hopeful or make a bold change—this episode will give you the tools to find love and ease the pressure others try to put on you. In this episode we cover: Why the fear of “running out of time” is so common in dating today. How to create urgency without falling into panic mode. The illusion of progress: How “distraction relationships” can quietly steal years of your life. Real stats on women having children after 35. How to stop comparing your timeline to everyone else’s. Reframing societal pressure and internal anxiety. Dating intentionally vs. dating reactively. How to bring up having kids in early dating conversations. The importance of a backup plan—and how it can actually help your love life. Links: – Try Matthew AI for free: AskMH.com – Join the Love Life Club with exclusive courses and live events: JoinLoveLife.com – Get your ticket to the Matthew Hussey Retreat: MHretreat.com – Watch the free masterclass: Casual to Committed: GetCommitment.com – Send us your stories or questions: podcast@matthewhussey.com
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What people will do a lot of the time is have relationships that distract them from that anxiety.
But the relationship that they have to distract them from the anxiety
is a relationship that over time actually compounds the anxiety.
Welcome back to Love Life everybody.
We're excited to be here. We have a big episode today,
full of really, really important wisdom.
If you are someone right now who is dating,
but feeling the pressure of the clock,
someone who feels like they're running out of time,
maybe you really, really want a relationship
and you're afraid that you're never gonna find it.
You're afraid that you're gonna be the last one
left on the shelf as all of your friends pair off.
Maybe they already have and you feel're gonna be the last one left on the shelf as all of your friends pair off, maybe they already have and you feel
like you are the only one left, maybe you want kids and you feel like you're
running out of time to have a family, there's all sorts of pressures that get
put on us both externally and internally that can make us frightened and panicky
when it comes to our love lives and this episode is the ultimate antidote to that.
We talk about how to put these fears aside, how to date from a place of
urgency but not from a place of panic, how you can create immediate pressure
valves that can take away the anxiety in your love life when you're looking for
love and allow you to actually enjoy the process again
instead of feeling like you're behind. Stay tuned for all of that. I'm so excited for this one. I
know it's going to make so many of you feel better if right now you're struggling with the anxiety of
time running out. And of course if you are one of our Live Loves members of our Love Life Coaching
Program, I just did a live coach check-in on the 23rd.
The recording of that is inside your members app.
On July the 21st, Audrey is gonna be doing a session
on how to own yourself in early dating,
how to uphold your standards,
be the most confident version of yourself
and really be as attractive as you can possibly be when you're first in those crucial stages with someone. On August
the 5th, Stephen is going to be doing an entire masterclass on what we call the
flame method which is how you create inevitability in your love life this
year. If you want to meet someone how do you design a life
that attracts quality people to you. In addition to all of these live
experiences that you get every month you also get access to the entire library of
Love Life member only courses. We have courses on commitment, attraction,
getting over breakups, attachment styles, all sorts of different areas of your love life. And you get round the clock access to Matthew
AI, which is my alter ego, my digital mind that you can talk to, to get your questions
answered by phone or by text any time you need. And you get access to exclusive members
only live in-person events that we do every quarter
over the course of the year. We have a meetup coming up in Miami, we have another one coming
up in London, more cities to come. Check it all out at joinlovelife.com and become one
of our prized live loves. Also, by the way, if you want to go and try Matthew.ai for free, go and ask Matthew.ai
a question right now.
Questions like, could you Matthew.ai give me a three phase plan to meet someone in the
next six months?
Or a question like, what are three low pressure ways to communicate my desire for a long term
relationship on a date. Go ask any question you'd like
to ask of Matthew.ai for free just to try it out at askmh.com and with that
let's begin the episode. Welcome back to the Love Life podcast with me, Matthew Hussey, Stephen Hussey and Audrey
Hussey.
Three Husseys.
Hello friends and chums and pickles and plums.
Hey everybody.
We are talking today about the feeling of being in a rush
when it comes to our love lives.
Dating under pressure.
And what are the pressures that we feel
when it comes to our love lives?
Well, we did a poll because why not?
You love a bit of a data dump, don't you?
Coming from you, you love a data dump.
I love how you and I today,
we're bickering like brother and sister.
And about like really weird things.
I know we've been bickered all day, it's been lovely.
We've just purposely picked fights.
I know, it's fun.
It makes me feel close to you.
So the question that we asked everybody was,
do you feel rushed in modern dating?
And if so, why?
The options we had were,
I feel rushed because I need to have kids
and start a family.
I feel rushed because marriage is important
to my happiness.
I feel rushed because I'm afraid of not finding a partner
as I get older. And I feel rushed because I need afraid of not finding a partner as I get older
and I feel rushed because I need financial security.
Any ideas what people voted for the most?
Oh, I'm gonna say kids.
Interesting.
What do you think, Stephen?
I'm gonna say kids, but what was the third one?
Getting older.
The third one was fear of not finding a partner
as you get older.
It could be that one.
It could be one or three.
Well, you guys are both right in a way.
The top voted one was fear of not finding a partner
as you get older and actually had a 67% vote.
So it's a huge landslide towards that answer.
The second one was a need to have children
and start a family at 24%.
The third one was a need for financial security at 5%.
And the fourth one, feeling like marriage is important
to my happiness at 4%.
So yeah, significantly most voted was the one of fear
of not finding somebody and getting older which I actually
Make does not surprise me at all. No, I mean I it surprises me a little bit what a landslide it was for that one
Because you think maybe people would feel like well, you know if I'm dating at 50 or so I could still find
Somebody but I guess people don't feel that. But I think sometimes people, like,
they're not necessarily connected to wanting children.
Some people are, but they know that that will come
with finding the right person.
And it's almost this feeling of like, you know,
my life will start once I have this goal achieved
in finding a partner.
And obviously as you get older, you know,
there is a feeling of the pool shrinking
and people pairing off and, you know, this rhetoric a feeling of the pool shrinking and people pairing off and this rhetoric we hear
of the good ones being taken.
And so I can imagine that's the reason why people
so overwhelmingly voted for that one.
It's also combining that with the fear that
a lot of people have that my stock is falling
as I get older. Whether or not it's true, there is this perception of I'm going to become increasingly invisible.
I am losing my looks. I am going to just not be as desirable.
And I think that men have this issue as well. Like it's often that pole went out to men
and women. And I think often, you know, men have the same thing where they, they think
I need my career in the perfect place if I'm going to like attract the partner I want and
provide what I want. And that might come later for them. Then they're like, I'm not 27 and
I'm not, I don't feel at my most physically attractive anymore that
I used to be. So I think everyone comes across this issue of feeling like, am I getting out of
the window where I can meet the partner I imagined? I think everyone, we all do this thing where we
keep finding an older person who's really hot to compare ourselves to. We try and find like an
older, hot role model who's killing it so that we can convince
ourselves we'll still be killing it. But at the heart of that is this fear of losing our value.
Right. Yeah. And you know, this doesn't just come in the form of looks, right? I think that this is
the reason we chose this subject. I'm so happy we're talking about this is that so many of us
live with this kind of fear that is omnipresent
in every single part of our lives,
that basically like the thing we want the most in the world,
which is to find love,
isn't necessarily going to happen for us.
So we don't have evidence to prove
that it's gonna happen for us.
Meanwhile, we witness, you know,
people that we care about, our siblings, our friends,
pairing off, having children, getting married,
doing all of the kind of life milestones
that make you feel like, oh my God, I really am behind.
I'm the only person left in my friendship group,
in my family, whatever, who hasn't found somebody.
And then that makes us feel doubly terrible
about ourselves.
And one of the things that we want to achieve today is
just kind of help people reframe a lot of the way that they think about this. Because I think that
the fact that so many people voted that they were afraid that they were not going to find their
person, I guarantee you there are just an eclectic range of ages within those people who voted for
that. And it kind of shows you that no matter how old you are,
the uncertainty of knowing that you can't guarantee
that you'll find someone is something that can plague you.
And I remember when I was 29 years old,
I look back and I think, 29 is young,
but I remember thinking, what if I never meet anybody?
This is the thing I want the most in the world,
what if I never meet anybody?
And I was 29, but it didn't matter.
I just was like, I'm getting close to 30.
This is it, like blah, blah, blah.
I'm watching other people do these things,
which is crazy, right?
Because now I think, oh my God,
what am I talking about?
Like, I don't no longer sort of like look at it like that,
but it's easy to say that from a place of going,
well, I have a relationship.
And I think that's really important for us to connect to,
which is if you're in that place
where you haven't actually found that person
and you want that more than anything in the world,
it's really, really scary.
And it sucks.
There's also a sense in which I think earlier in life,
you don't know how many different ways
life changes for people.
That's so true.
And how many things you took for granted
were always gonna stay the same,
don't stay the same anyway.
So you compare yourself to someone
who's already found love,
and you don't realize that there's a really strong chance
they won't be in that relationship 10 years from now.
Even some of the marriages you look at
as the most stable marriages,
there is no guarantee that that marriage
is still gonna be there in 20 years.
It's like that Baz Luhrmann song when he says,
sometimes you're ahead, sometimes you're behind,
the race is long and in the end it's only with yourself.
I always remember that lyric because I think it's so true.
When we're in the middle of it,
we don't realize quite how long the race is,
not that it's a race, but like, you know,
how long on an actual, on a long enough timeline,
how much everything can change and you feeling behind
might mean that in 10 years time,
you'll be the most ahead of all of your friends
because for all you know,
their relationships won't be around anymore.
But you don't see that in the moment,
especially when you're younger.
Yeah, there's something, I mean this in a positive way,
but there's something strangely freeing about the idea
that your 35 year old friend right now,
I don't know if this is gonna sound awful, but it's not meant to,
could be 55 and getting a divorce 20 years from now.
And that means if you stayed single for 20 years, in 20 years you and that person would be starting from the same place again.
And actually that kind of makes a mockery of the whole idea of a head or behind.
Because when we're in an insecure and a place of scarcity, we look at people who we perceive to be
further ahead than us. And it just feels like we have gotten it all wrong somehow. We often,
at the same time, fail to see ways that we're actually doing really well.
Things that we have figured out or things, areas in life where we've made huge progress. We're very
good at focusing on the one area where we feel really behind and using that to make ourselves feel awful. It's all, life is not as structured
and as neat and tidy as I think.
And that can in some ways be scary,
but it can also be very freeing.
And it can make you realize that actually
a new game starts every day.
And what you just said is so important,
this idea that like, I don't have it all figured out
when it comes to my fate in love.
You know, we think, oh well, it hasn't happened for me
and I'm really unfortunate in this area
and everybody else finds it easy and I find it really hard.
So therefore it will never happen for me.
That's the conclusion you draw.
What if it doesn't happen?
What if I never get this thing?
And again, we shouldn't be so, and I mean this in a,
you'll know how I mean this, hopefully.
We shouldn't be so arrogant as to think
that we can predict the future about ourselves either,
especially when it comes to what we can and can't do.
You can do anything, you can get anything.
Life can change.
And it can change so much
in the space of three to five years. I mean, it can
change so much. Your life can be pretty unrecognizable a year or two from now, from where it is today.
But life can change so much in just a handful of years. That to me is extremely empowering
if we kind of use it to go. I think of it as a form of time travel. You can kind of go forward in time
to a year from now, two years from now, three years from now and
to some extent you might be able to have a good guess at where some parts of your life might be if you just keep doing
exactly what you're doing today. And by the way, we've established that even that's not necessarily true
because things can change in ways you could never predict.
But I do think that based on our habits today,
based on how many dates you choose to go on,
based on how you're choosing to improve
your communication skills or your ability to flirt
or create attraction or make the most of what you have
or put yourself out there in the world.
You can predict to some extent where your love life is likely to be in a year.
Yeah.
Now, what I think is a legitimate form of time travel is you get to look at that picture in a year and go,
do I like this? Am I happy with this? Do I want it to be different?
do I like this? Am I happy with this? Do I want it to be different? And you get to then come back to today and make adjustments in what you're doing on a
daily basis that actually will change that picture a year from now. So it
shouldn't create panic because remember there is no ahead or behind as you said Audrey the race is
just with yourself there is no head or behind but what we can do is come back
with us to today from that little time travel exercise with a sense of urgency
about what it is we really want what steps might move us might start to change that picture a year from now if I did them today.
And what would I stop doing if I really wanted that picture to change?
Well, one thing I did want to just mention briefly is also the statistics around this,
because I think to your point, Audrey, like there's a lot of externally imposed panic. And although we can say, yes, this is a priority, this might even be the top
priority, I think the data does also show like a lot of people are doing this much
later than they ever have.
Are you talking about having kids?
Having children, getting married.
It's gone up since the nineties.
I think people having children over 35 has gone up threefold from about like 8% to 21%.
These numbers really were fascinating.
So this is from a CDC study.
Women between 20 and 24 had 44% fewer births from 1990 to 2023.
Um, while they dropped by 23% between 25 to 29 year olds, I think most
people would expect that right.
That people having kids dropped dramatically during their
twenties in the last, uh, uh, 30 years.
But this is where it gets really, uh, the numbers are amazing.
The number of births among women aged 30 to 34
increased during that time by 24%. Women between 35 and 39 experienced a steep 90% increase in
births. That is staggering. And then women 40 and older marked a new high for birth rates,
seeing a 193% surge. Yeah. And so the data I saw showed that like as of 2023, uh, of all the births
in the U S like 20.9% were over 35 year olds. And that's 20% like over 20% of all births over 35 year olds and that's 20 percent, like over 20 percent of all births over 35 and you know up to 40 and beyond.
So I just think like we yeah, it's all very real but I do think as well it is also there has been a huge cultural shift
and a huge just on the numbers basis we can sometimes have this peer group effect where you just see your immediate five to 10 peers and you assume that's the norm. But you know, you can look a bit wider and see
a lot of examples now of people doing this later, finding someone beyond the age. People
think, Oh, I must have done it by 30. That's just not the reality right now.
The danger of that. I love the comfort that that can offer people. The danger is that it doesn't just decrease panic, it decreases urgency.
Because if someone knows that it's a genuine life goal of theirs to have kids. And they use those kinds of stats to justify giving another
year or two or five to some on and off person who never
commits and doesn't show any signs of progressing the
relationship, but they're having fun with them and they've kind of fallen in love with them and they don't know how to give them up.
Using these numbers, these stats to justify giving more time and attention to that person is extremely dangerous.
Yes.
Because now I can have what I call distraction relationships.
now I can have what I call distraction relationships. Right, I think this is a big thing
for people who have a low level anxiety
that starts to increase over time
about never finding love
or not finding love in time to have kids.
What people will do a lot of the time
is have relationships that distract them from that anxiety.
But the relationship that they have to distract them from the anxiety
is a relationship that over time
actually compounds the anxiety.
Because you're now giving more and more time
and attention to someone who's not progressing,
who doesn't fully commit
or who doesn't have the same goals as you.
And all of a sudden you see another,
like while you've been distracted, five years of your life went by.
Yeah. And it's like sunk cost fallacy. Like people say, I've put two years into this.
So what's another year? But actually that another year gets, it gets more and more valuable
every year.
And it's particularly dangerous because the sunk cost fallacy of, you know, I, I, and
the, it's also in term, the sunk cost bias, the, the idea that, you know, I, I, and it's also in term, the sunk cost bias, the, the idea
that, you know, I've put this, I've played this much at the table.
I should play more to get my money back.
And we do that with relationships.
You know, I've spent this many years with this person.
It, I can't just give it up now as if it's nothing, but the sunk cost
fallacy and the distraction relationship work together in
a very dangerous way.
Because now you have something that is both a distracting drug that can make you forget
temporarily about what your real goals are.
Because it just feels good.
It's like someone to hang out with this Friday night.
It's someone that I really enjoy their company when I get it.
It's a, it feels like something's going on in my love life,
and that feels better than nothing going on in my love life.
I feel feelings of love for this person.
So that feels important somehow.
At least I'm getting all of those wonderful feelings
when I get them between hangovers of feeling like I'm abandoned by this person and not
loved by this person and not chosen by this person.
All of that distraction is happening and we'll convince ourselves that that distraction is
worth it because maybe it will actually go somewhere one day.
So they end up working together in a very dangerous way.
And this is how people end up just spending
enormous amounts of their precious time
in situations that never actually move them forward
to their goals.
It's the illusion of progress.
Yeah.
And that's what I mean by urgency, not panic.
Urgency is what tells us and and by the way urgency
plus knowing what our values are knowing what we actually value at this point in
our life that's what makes it really clear to us what we should say no to
because if we don't have urgency plus a clear sense of what we're valuing right now, we say yes to what feels good or
who feels good. You do meet someone who's a lot younger in a different place in life
and has completely different goals and think, oh, this just feels really right. It feels
really right, which isn't the same thing as this is aligned with what I really want. And our love lives are
particularly dangerous because we root them so heavily in the world of feeling
and not in the world of values and goals and what's actually important to us. And
sometimes what feels really good and what actually serves our greater goals and our values are completely different.
Sometimes we have to actually do the most unnatural thing in the world,
which is go back to being alone or being, you know, choosing being single.
At a time when this person who we know is misaligned with our goals
is saying yes to us and would actually feel like activity in our love lives.
It requires incredible, I want to say it requires incredible bravery but actually
on a deeper level it doesn't always require bravery. It requires incredible connection to what is really important to us.
And discipline.
And discipline to say no to this right now, even though there's nothing else in its place right now.
That feels like an incredible leap of faith.
But if you know that that's not ultimately
going to move you forward, that it's just the illusion of progress, it's not real progress,
it gets a lot easier to say no to those things.
Yeah. There was someone who said about, I think it was Neil Young or something. It said
like, like when you're young and have no opportunity, say yes to everything. And he said, when
you have lots of opportunities, say no to everything,
but your art. Talking about being an artist. But there is some parallel there of like,
when you know what you really want, and what is your North Star really matters. It's like,
yeah, if you're at zero right now and can't, you're like, how do I get out there? It's
like, yeah, you should start saying yes more being out there, but eventually it's actually like say no to everything,
but the thing that is what's gonna give you
the fulfillment.
Yeah, well, I for one really like those figures.
I find them very encouraging.
And I think, you know, if I wanted to share a message
with everybody or anybody listening who is in that place
where they're freaking out, they're afraid,
especially if they feel like they're on some kind of timeline when it comes to their biological
clock or you know being able to find the right person at the right time. You know, anecdotally,
I even think of my life, anecdotally, I look at all of my friends and all of the people around me and so few people have ended up where the trajectory
had placed them in the beginning, if that makes sense.
A lot of my friends who are in the longest relationships
are struggling to have children
and get pregnant with their partners.
Other friends who have been with their partners
for really short periods of time are pregnant
and got pregnant literally by looking at each other,
some of them in their 40s.
And it's just not linear, it's just not one size fits all. And I just, I agree with everything
that's been said and what we don't want is for that to create a sort of like, you know, well,
I don't need to be serious and I don't need to date intentionally because I think all of that's
true. But I hope that it does alleviate some of that pressure for people, because to date from that place of fear
and like musical chairs and time is running out,
is a horrible, horrible place to be coming from.
And actually it's also the bedrock
of making terrible decisions.
So I'm really, really encouraged by that data
and I hope that everybody truly takes a second to connect
to how much time they actually have
and not give into the societal pressure
and this idea that once you hit a certain age,
it's all downhill from there.
It's not true.
There's other factors other than age,
as your health, the way you take care of yourself.
There's lots and lots of things
and finding a partner isn't a guarantee
that you're gonna be able to have children either.
So it's just, I think all of that to me is very encouraging.
I hope everybody agrees when who's listening.
I couldn't agree more and not giving into the urge
to constantly compare ourselves because as you said,
you just don't know, you know,
it's so easy to compare our lives to somebody else's,
but you don't know what's gonna go wrong in their life.
You don't know how their plan isn't gonna go to plan.
You just have no idea.
And the same is true of yours.
Theirs will be a very unique path that's unique to them.
And yours will be a very unique path that's unique to you.
My boxing trainer, Martin Snow,
once said something that I never forgot.
He was saying it in the context of boxing
when I was trying to like throw a certain punch
that he was teaching me.
And you know, he caught onto the fact
that I was overthinking exactly the way I threw the punch.
And he said to me, you can't do it, it's like life.
You can't do it wrong.
It's yours.
It's yours.
And I remember applying that to life
and taking that message with me that it's,
you can't do it wrong.
It's your life.
Don't compare your life to somebody else's
and say, well, but they've got this
and they've got this by now and that,
you can't do it.
What happens if, you know,
this couple that you thought were the perfect couple
who had it all figured out,
nothing ever went wrong for them,
all of a sudden can't have a child,
and that was their dream.
Like they, now they're gonna have to take
their situation in life and make it theirs.
Your situation is something you have to make yours,
because you have no idea what's gonna happen,
but you can't do it wrong, because it's yours.
I love that.
Let us know please what you guys think about all of this.
I'm sure it drags up a lot of emotions, a lot of feelings for people. We could talk about this for
hours and hours, but we have to move on. So please drop us an email if you have any additional
thoughts at podcast at matthewhussy.com. podcast at matthewhussy.com. Please do email us because
we actually love reading your emails and we love them not just when they're questions but when you just email in a thought what something meant to you in an
episode or how it spoke to you or even just a story because we love hearing your stories as well
and you know depending on the length we will read some of them on the show so email in podcast at
matthewhussy.com. Coming up on the show, we have Love Life Line,
which is our section of the podcast
where we either read an email or play a voicemail
that has come to podcast at matthewhussy.com
from one of our Love Life members,
affectionately now known as our Live Loves.
This one is from Rachel.
So we're gonna come on to Rachel in a moment.
We also have Steve Sleeves.
What's up his sleeves this week?
What's up Steve Sleeves today? We'll find out.
Before we do that, I just wanted to read some thoughts that were sent in on recent episodes.
This one was from episode 294.
Why they act interested then disappear. The real reason.
This is from someone in Portugal
who says hi I've been listening to you for some time now and I want to thank
you for your work I love that there are three of you now hello it's possible
that this person's talking about David and Harrison and me not you two very
possible but some would say likely very possible thank you and a big thank you from David and Harrison on that one.
Stephen, should we just start our own podcast?
Mammal Portugal.
Excuse me, I'm in the middle of reading this comment.
I've been listening to you some time now.
I love the three of you now on the podcast,
and I love to listen to your points of view.
If I may just ask for one thing,
because everything else is perfect,
could you possibly try to be a little less heteronormative?
It's important to people like myself
who are not heterosexual,
but like to follow your good advice.
Smile, greetings from Portugal.
I love that comment.
I'll be honest, it's not always easy.
It's challenging.
You know, with three straight people who are,
you know, have been steeped in heteronormative
relationship advice for a very long time.
You know, probably me the longest out of anyone here.
And I, you know, it's, it's challenging to change
the vernacular in real time to make it more inclusive.
And that does not in any way reflect a desire
to keep the advice narrow.
I will tell you, one of my favorite things in the world
is walking down the street and being approached
by someone from the LGBTQ plus community who says, I love what you do. Like,
you have massively helped me or you helped me through the worst breakup of my life.
And it's, for me, the idea that more and more people from all different communities are just
getting huge value from this work is so validating and so rewarding. And we don't pretend to
is so validating and so rewarding. And we don't pretend to know every experience
of every different person from every different group.
But what I believe at my core
is that the vast majority of everything we say is universal
and has universal application.
So you have my word that we will,
and we do try, I promise you, we do try.
And over time, one of the reasons you've seen certain, you know, pronouns sort of
disappear a little bit for us is because we don't want, not least of which we
don't want guys either to feel like they're excluded, straight men.
We don't want them to listen to a podcast or a video that says, Hey ladies.
And they're like, Oh, this isn't for me.
When in fact, what we're about to say will be incredibly useful to you.
So we we've tried to, uh, lose some of that, but it's, it's not always easy.
Habit is, you know, it's hard to change.
So I will be conscious of it.
We will do the best we can with that.
And please bear with us as we do.
And please realize that it's never a reflection of how much we will do the best we can with that and please bear with us as we do and please
realize that it's never a reflection of how much we love you being here and how much we
think that this will be helpful to you out there, whoever you are. These are a couple
of thoughts sent in to episode 300, letting go of the life you thought you'd have, grief,
truth and rebuilding. This one is from The Rainbow Bitch 30.
I feel incredibly lucky to be in a time
where I have access to this with no effort.
Man, what a time to be alive.
Now again, it's possible that this person
is saying access to David.
Yes.
And or Harrison.
Which is why I put that in there.
Got it, okay.
So this one is from Euroneenite815. Yes. And or Harrison. Which is why I put that in there. Got it. Okay.
So, this one is from uraninite8151 who says, damn, this is so true.
But my fear, and I think it's quite a common one, is that I won't find anyone else.
So this is where we were talking about breakups.
My fear is that I won't find anyone else.
Even if my ex wasn't perfect for me,
it now feels like they were my only chance.
Strange that I felt the opposite before the breakup though.
Yeah.
That's a classic kind of psychological trap we fall into
when we lose something, isn't it?
Distorting that person or that thing's value
simply because we no longer have it.
Loss aversion.
Have you ever...
Or prospect theory, if you want to get formal about it.
Go on.
Well, when you have something, it feels inherently more valuable letting go of it.
It's like having something in your attic you haven't seen for ages, but then when someone's
like, do you want to get rid of it?
You're like, oh no, what if maybe I really need that?
This is what...
And I'm not saying a relationship's like that, but just the idea of losing something can make you overvalue
it.
I find it helpful when, when I felt that way in my life about different things, I find
it helpful to remind myself that there was life before this person and this thing, and
there will be life after. And like you lived how many years of your life before completely fine and
just like not even before you even knew this person or this thing existed like
you can get back there yeah and I find that to be a useful thought I love that
well thank you to everyone who messaged us about those episodes again you can
message us about this episode
and any other thoughts you have at podcast at matthewhussy.com.
All right, it is that time.
Love Life Line.
David, have you got the voice note?
Beep, beep, boop, boop, beep, boop, boop.
Boop, boop.
There you go.
I love that.
Boop, boop.
You love that.
Yeah.
Yeah, he asked me to do it.
All of the things you criticize Audrey for
and this is what you love.
He doesn't criticize me.
Thank you Audrey.
You two have been bickering like a couple
of handsome kittens all day.
Yeah, because we're bro and sister.
That's what we do.
But when she does something great, I give props.
Yeah.
And also we got each other's backs.
Right, so it's sort of, she's mine to mess with, not anyone else's.
Yeah. Do it again. Beep beep boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop bo do I bring up to someone I'm dating that I want to have children? Pretty soon. I'm 37 and just broke up with the person I thought I was going to marry
after one year of dating.
Well, I haven't lost hope.
I fear he was my last chance to have children.
I constantly hear people say, you have plenty of time.
You know, I know someone who had a baby at 42,
but being able to have a baby at 42 is not a guarantee.
I saw a fertility specialist and it's quite obvious that my window
to have a baby is closing and I can't afford egg freezing. How and when do I address my shortened timeline
with new prospects without it seeming like I'm putting pressure on them? And how do I politely
tell them that my time is valuable in that regard and ask them to be honest with me about their
long-term intentions? I feel I did a pretty good job of this with my last boyfriend, but here I am a year later back at square one.
Man, thanks for sending that in, Rachel.
I have a first initial thought to kick us off.
Please.
Which is the importance of dating an adult.
And what I mean by that is if you're 37
and one of your big goals in life is to have a child,
make sure to only date people
who are also in that phase of life,
not people that you're having to convince
or kind of drag over,
drag across the finish line, I should say,
because they're not quite ready.
Maybe they're like 35 going on 29.
Date adults and be very selective
and picky about dating adults.
And that comes right back to that point about urgency,
knowing what to say no to and who to say yes to.
And that point about, you know, dating a quote adult
is about dating someone who's capable of
handling the conversation that doesn't run a mile simply because you're someone
who's expressing that this is a really important goal for you.
And that doesn't have to come up on date one or date three or date five.
But if we're looking at a timeline where we're talking about a handful of years,
not a decade, you don't want to get months into dating someone only to find that
you can't even have that conversation with them.
Well, that's the thing I really reject is this idea of people go, yeah, but we're
not going to get into that stuff until we've been dating a while.
And I just think you don't want to spend four months dating someone and then have
those conversations like you can on date three, date four, five, at least be like
exploring and talking about your vision for your life, what's important to you right now.
Oh, I, you know, even in your profile on Bumble or Tinder or whatever, like do just say, you don't
have to say like I'm looking for kids in next year, but be like, I am at a stage of my life where
I really want a serious relationship. And it's, you know, that's an important goal of mine right now.
And I think if you're dating people who are in your,
in your age bracket, you know, 37 and up,
I think it's perfectly reasonable to ask somebody on date one
or even like if you don't wanna do date one,
cause it doesn't come up late, you know,
you can ask that on date two,
but I think you can ask pretty early on like, you know, do you, you know, you can talk about your family and let's say you can ask that on date too. But I think you can ask pretty early on, like, you can talk about your family
and let's say you have a good relationship
with your family, you can be like,
oh, I just love my family.
That's such a beautiful part of my life.
I've always actually had really strong family values.
Family has always meant a lot to me.
You let that be a conversation and you say,
do you think, is that something you want in your life?
Do you want a family?
I think there's nothing wrong with asking that question
because what you're really trying to see
is whether somebody's vision for their life
aligns with yours.
And again, an adult who's also looking
for the same things as you isn't gonna go,
oh my God, you know, they asked me
that if I wanted a family, like that's so full on.
You don't, you're not saying,
do you want a family with me tonight?
You're just saying like, what do you want?
What are you looking for?
And I just, I think again,
it's not being so afraid of scaring people away
because I think you'll only scare away the people
who are probably not sure and not being intentional.
And if you're in a point where you've gone
to a fertility expert and you're really feeling like,
actually you do have a shorter window to find gone to a fertility expert and you're really feeling like actually you do have
a shorter window to find that person
and make that dream come true.
I don't think you have time to waste on people
who are kind of umming and ah-ing about that.
I think it's time to get very intentional
about the people you go on a date with.
To your point, Stephen, I think that's really nice what you said.
And when you do express, you know,
as you start to have deeper conversations with someone
and you do express that having kids is something
that is a big life goal for you. It's actually fine. And I would
say even a good idea to express the truth that, you know, for
you, having having kids is something that's really important.
But the challenging part is that you wouldn't do it with someone who didn't
feel right to you and you wouldn't do it with someone who wasn't the kind of
person you saw yourself with long-term or saw yourself raising children with,
or who didn't have the right values.
And, you know, that is one of just the truisms of people for
people who want to build a family, but also have standards
for the kind of family they want to build is that everyone faces
that dilemma.
Yes, I really want this to happen, but I also know that,
you know, it's really important to me that that happens with the right person.
Because when someone hears that, they don't just hear like, they don't just hear someone who's on a mission and then start to get afraid because they're dating someone who's hell bent on having kids no matter what.
What they hear is someone who has standards.
Because there's nothing, what someone doesn't want to feel like, they're just part of an agenda for you.
That's true.
And the relationship you're having with them
really has nothing to do or very little to do
with how special you think they are
or how great the connection is
or how right you are for each other.
It is just become a bit of a means to an end.
No one wants to feel that.
And when you say that, what I just said, when you're
able to express that in your own way, you're telling people that's not the
case. That's not what I'm looking for. So I would connect authentically with your
desire both to have the right partner and to have children and then not be
afraid to express that as you get into
deeper conversations with someone. A reasonable human being who's emotionally
intelligent will hear that and go, wow that's powerful that you're able to
articulate that and it actually shows confidence to be able to articulate that.
And I think one more thing Rachel is just it's important for you to know
I understand what you said about egg freezing being too
expensive and it's so sad that, especially in certain parts of the world, it's prohibitively
expensive for so many people.
But I do think it's important to search yourself and say, if I didn't meet a partner in time to be able to do this,
is that something I could make my peace with? Or will I regret not having made it a major goal
to do this by myself? Even if it didn't mean egg freezing,
even if it meant, you know, finding a sperm donor,
is this something that I need to be thinking about
as a major goal, the same way I would think about like,
I need to buy a house or I need to rent an apartment
or I need to, you know, you can make it
one of your financial goals. If you decide
this is no matter what you want this to happen, whether you meet someone or not. And the reason
I say that is because it's just so important that you get clear on how important this is to you.
Some people will say, if I don't meet someone in time then okay I will learn to
make my peace with that because I have no interest in raising a child by myself and that's a completely
fair place to arrive but if you arrive there arrive there consciously don't sleepwalk into
don't sleepwalk into that feeling because then what results is a kind of not just a grief but a regret that I didn't make a plan B for myself and for
a lot of people you know having coached a lot of people in this area now and I
write about I have a whole chapter on this in my book Love Life so you know
Rachel if you if you haven't read the chapter in my book Love Life. So, you know, Rachel, if you haven't read the chapter in
my book that's called The Question of Having a Child, please go and read that in the new
book. But a lot of people, when they have a plan B like that, and they take it seriously,
it's actually one of the things that allows them to date in a more relaxed way. Because
they know that no matter what, they are gonna proceed with a plan that allows them
to have a shot at having a child.
It's not reliant on the person in front of them.
But these are intensely personal calculations
and decisions that we all have to arrive at ourselves
and just wanna invite you
into that kind of honesty with yourself.
And Rachel, one thing I wanna just also say to you is,
we touched on this earlier in the episode,
but I think it's important to reiterate here.
I have a friend who wanted to have a baby
more than anything in the world.
She was planning on actually doing it on her own.
She then accidentally got pregnant
with some random person
that she wasn't in a relationship with.
And he didn't want anything to do with her,
but she basically found out she was pregnant
a month into dating another person who has said to her,
I'll stick by you during this pregnancy
and I just wanna be with you.
And I accept the fact that you're gonna have this baby
and I'll be there.
And the reason I talk about this story
is that you just never know what the future holds
and in what capacity things can happen in.
And so again, it's kind of not looking at things
in such a restrictive,
like it has to be this one way or no way
because I think in life in general,
if you come across a barrier, you have to find a way around it. to be this one way or no way, because I think in life in general,
if you come across a barrier,
you have to find a way around it.
If you wanna get to the other side,
dude, you just have to find a way around it.
And the way around it can look like being open
to different opportunities
and different options around this subject.
So I just wanted to say that as well.
Don't feel like your whole entire happiness
and everything that you desire in this life
is in the hands of this elusive partner
that you haven't met yet.
It's actually very firmly in your hands
and you have so much more control
over making that dream happen than you realize.
Well said.
Before we get onto Steve's sleeves, tickets are on sale right now for the
Matthew Hussey retreat this October. Whether you want to join us in person in
Miami on the 18th and 19th or you want to attend the retreat virtually, you can
do both by going to mhretreat.com
and getting your tickets right now.
If you are joining us in Miami,
firstly, I can't wait.
It's gonna be so exciting to see you.
But we have different tiers of tickets
from general admission, preferred, and VIP tickets.
The VIP tickets are selling fast.
There's actually not that many left of the VIP tickets,
so grab one of those now if you know you want a VIP experience at the event and all of the
goodies and extras that come with that. The life we have right now is not just a
result of our circumstances, it is a result of our patterns and the hardest
thing about patterns is how hard they are to shift but we can change our
patterns and when we learn
how to change our patterns we change our life. I'm gonna be working with you on
changing even the most stubborn patterns in your life, helping you get out of your
own way, stop the self-sabotage and truly achieve what you're capable of
achieving. Whether it's new love, whether it's a different career,
or whether it's a different social life
or just more joy and happiness.
I'm gonna show you the best of what I know as a coach
and we're gonna do it over one immersive weekend together.
So again, both virtual tickets and in-person tickets
are available at mhretreat.com.
We truly hope to see you there.
or MHRetreat.com. We truly hope to see you there.
It's that time again. Who's doing the theme song? Have you got the theme song now?
But I'm gonna, it's gonna, it's gonna be like this. It's gonna be like,
don't be bereaved, you know, that we can't leave without another episode of Steve Sleeves because it's just like it's definitely lost some of its previous luster. I don't get what happened but
rest assured in the background hard at work. Okay art is is being made. You're in a submarine. Wait,
wait, wait. Sorry, what is it? What is the name of Steve
Sleeves? Normally, you, you say it's got a name or something.
Alright, go on. If you want to start like that, we'll see
where it goes. You're in a submarine. It's dropping
rapidly. The pressure's changing. You realize the
pressure's unsustainable
where it is right now.
Someone has to do something.
You have intimate knowledge of the valves
and you're gonna have to toy with those valves
to release the pressure.
What's going on here?
We're gonna play pressure release.
Okay.
So you're gonna twist some valves
and release the pressure in this submarine
so that we can get this baby back on track.
As a claustrophobic, I don't know why you would come up
with this terrifying analogy.
I am facing my demons.
Right, go on then.
So, okay, I'm gonna give you some scenarios
and you're gonna tell me how you'd release the pressure.
Right.
I think this will reveal itself as we play.
Yeah. I'm assuming. I've made it sound more complex than it is. But perhaps, yes. Okay,
you're above 30 and you feel you need a degree to get your career going and you feel very behind
everyone. So you're above 30, you feel you need a degree. You don't have a degree and you're like, I am just like, I'm completely under pressure
on my career here.
I haven't built anything.
I haven't got a degree.
I need it.
Change the story.
That is a change the story situation.
You've told yourself a story that in order to have a career,
you need a degree.
And that is absolutely not true. That
the quickest.
And what if it is? What if you're like, I want to be a doctor.
Wasn't it like we can go back to all of these amazing people who built amazing things like
much later in their lives, right? You know, you've got Anthony Bourdain. How old was he
when he wrote kitchen confidentials?
Kitchen confidential. He was in his 40s.
He didn't need a degree to write chicken confidential though.
But the point is, is that you are not behind
and even if you're 30, even if you're 30
and you're going, I have to start from scratch,
there are people who have started from scratch
at much later phases of life.
So if you really don't have a choice
but to go back
to let's say medical school or law school
in order to get that dream degree and that dream job,
you will not be the first person to do that
in your 30s, 40s or even 50s.
So again, this concept of ahead and behind is just kind of,
I think really counterproductive.
So what's happened here is Matt went to this
pressure release valve on the submarine and
started to try to work it and then Audrey just came in and hip checked him out of the
way and then released it herself.
Well because she kind of went for a different valve.
Yeah.
Because Stephen said what if you need the degree?
So in a world where you don't need the degree and you can go for a different career
that's gonna make you just as happy
or pursue that career without a degree,
then I agree with Matt.
But in a world where you actually need it,
then don't worry about it, you're 30.
You've got time.
You are at karaoke.
You have promised your partner that you'll sing
because you have a history of bailing mid song
and it has infuriated them forever.
They said like, you've never finished a karaoke song.
You've never finished or you've never gone up
You bail, you bail.
Your nerves get the better of you and you run off.
You bail in the middle of the song.
Yeah, and they are furious about it.
It's like a movie.
They're just like, you can't happen again.
It's so embarrassing.
So you're singing at a full house
in karaoke.
The song goes off and the crowd eggs you on
to just finish your acapella.
What?
What are you gonna do?
Firstly-
And your partner's looking at you
and the crowd are going, just finish your acapella.
You're doing great.
Who is this partner that is so mad? Firstly, why does it always take until halfway through
the song for you to be like, I can't do this? That's normally like a, the cliche is that
you get up there and no words come out and within 10 seconds of the song playing you
leave. But apparently what you get to the middle of the song and during the bridge, you're like, I can't.
It's a challenging part of the...
That's where the trauma happened.
The song.
And this partner is so, they're just like,
you've got to get back up there.
I've had enough of this.
It's like you've embarrassed me so many times.
Embarrassed me, where are they going?
You've done it so many times
and you always promise you're gonna finish it.
And why are they going to a karaoke place
with a full house?
Go do it in a karaoke room together. I anyway, I you've okay so the music's gone off.
You're now being egged on to do it acapella. Yeah. The pressure valve is there's there's firstly
probably have a conversation with your partner and say it's not appropriate for you to be so angry
about this but that's a conversation for later. For right now, I would say, you know what?
I, this, I am putting in so much pressure on myself to get this right, that I've taken
it to some extreme that it never, I don't need to be a good singer. It's not my job. I don't need to treat
this like an area of my life that demands excellence. I can just focus on doing it and
enjoying it for its own sake. So take all the pressure off of yourself to be good at it.
You're not getting paid. Someone said this to me in jujitsu when I was like, get my ego was getting involved because I wanted to like win, you know, every, every single time I was doing it. I
was like, how frustrated that wasn't making. And the person said to me, what, you know,
you're not getting paid to do this. This, that you do this for fun.
You're paying them.
Exactly. So don't, don't go in with this feeling of like nerves like I've got to
perform. You don't have to perform. You're doing this for fun. Remind yourself I'm up here because
I chose to come to a karaoke bar and stand up and just sing a song. I'm not doing it because I'm
getting paid to do it. Or picture everyone in their underwear. That's your answer to everything.
it. Or picture everyone in their underwear. That's your answer to everything. I never really got that piece of advice. I don't know if you guys agree. I've never understood it. I'm like,
why would that make me less nervous? It would make me 10 times more freaked out and then I'd
feel a bit like a pervert and then I'd get self-conscious that people think I'm looking,
thinking about them naked. Just imagine it's a sex party.
them naked. Just imagine it's a sex party. We didn't, you didn't do the sound. Thank you. James Cameron has given a wink and a thumbs up as well. Okay. I imagine if James
Cameron listened to the podcast. He will now, it's about submarines. Your family constantly
pesters you about not being a relationship. You feel frustrated at being single, but your family's perspective makes you really nervous
when you try to date and you're going to bring someone home and they're going to be all like,
oh, who are they? Are they the one?
Well, you're not dating for your family, you're dating for yourself. And I think it's really important to communicate
if something is putting pressure on you consistently,
it's really important to communicate that directly
and compassionately toward to that person,
just saying like, you know,
I appreciate you guys want me to be happy,
but every time you kind of ask me questions about it,
it just makes me feel nervous and put under pressure
and it makes me not wanna share things.
So can you just trust that I will come to you
when I have news in that department,
I'll be really excited to share it with you.
I want this something to be that,
I want this to be something I'm excited to share
rather than something I feel the pressure to show up
with like a badge that I've somehow acquired.
And I would have that conversation
and then I would just remind myself that our families
may be the most well-intentioned people in the world,
but they don't really understand necessarily
what it's like to date, what dating is like today,
the challenges, your specific challenges
are things you're struggling with.
So don't take what they're thinking
and what they're kind of desiring so much to heart
and just focus on staying in your lane
and just staying present with your experience of dating.
And just remember that you're not dating for them,
you're dating for you.
And if you say all of that to them
and they keep addressing your dating life
in a really unhelpful way, tell them less.
Just don't share as much of your dating life with them.
And that won't be your fault, it will be theirs
that you don't share as much with them.
So don't feel you need to involve them
at every stage of your dating life
if they can't be supportive of it
or if they can't engage with it in a way
that's actually constructive for you.
You know, this, just quickly, that's a really good point.
And I just wanna actually make that point across the board,
not just with family, but with friendships as well.
Like your dating life actually should be something
that's quite personal to you.
And oftentimes we have the habit of kind of,
something happens in our life in that area
and we just like overshare with everybody who we care about
because either we're excited
or that's just a habit that we have
or it's a way of connecting with those people.
But actually I think encouraging ourselves
to try and be a little bit more private in that area
can only be a good thing
because what often happens is people feel more entitled
to comment and more entitled to give you opinions
and more entitled to ask questions and more you share.
Versus if you're actually a little bit more reserved
on the subject, people don't feel like they necessarily
are able to ask those questions.
And then it kind of stops them from putting that,
maybe unintentional pressure on you as well.
So just being a little bit more private
about your dating life, I think is actually
a piece of advice that a lot of us can benefit from.
Can I go back to the karaoke one?
Well, I'm starting to think this relationship
is not very nice.
And if someone is getting angry at you
because you're not finishing karaoke,
maybe you're only up there in the first place because you feel like you've got to do it
to make someone else happy. And I think one of the things that like, one of the good parts
about getting older is just realizing what you do and don't like. And maybe you just
don't like doing karaoke. Maybe it's just not your thing.
And so when the music goes off, maybe instead of feeling you have anything to prove, you just go, I'm just going to not, I'm just going to sit down because the music's gone off.
And also I'm maybe not going to do karaoke anymore because I don't like it.
That's a liberating thing in life. Well, the ultimate pressure valve in life is getting to say,
I don't want to do this because I don't actually enjoy it instead of having to prove it to someone.
That submarine is just gently elevated and is bobbing, bobbing on the surface of the water now.
Well, I think we've got to end it there with that.
I don't think we can top that.
That was another episode. In some ways, the strangest beginning to any Steve Sleeves that's
ever happened.
Well listen, thank you everyone for being here for this episode.
Quick note, if you haven't already, I think a great pairing, a real delicious pairing with this episode would be casual
to committed, which is a free webinar that I hosted a masterclass on how to get a relationship
from the early dating phase to actually having real commitment from someone in a relationship
that's truly progressing. It's a great Masterclass. It's
free and you can watch it right now at GetCommitment.com. Go check it out, GetCommitment.com. The reason
I say it's a great pairing is because if this episode has made you want to treat your love
life with not panic, but urgency, get very clear about what you want and be much more
intentional, this master
class is a wonderful place to start. GetCommitment.com is the link for that
and as always we look forward to seeing you again next time on Love Live. Thanks for watching!