Love Life with Matthew Hussey - (Matt Monday): 3 Secrets to Being Unforgettable on a Date
Episode Date: May 23, 2022When you’re dating in 2022, you can almost be sure that the person in front of you on that first date is dating multiple people at the same time. This omnipresent truth can make you nervous as you s...o desperately want to stand out from the crowd. The truth is, we all want so badly to be unforgettable on a date . . . but actually making that happen can feel tricky. In the pursuit of “making someone like us,” we may give in to the knee-jerk reaction of trying to impress them, or worse . . . people please. Even though we told ourselves we’d be chill and genuine, we suddenly find ourselves working our most spectacular moments into conversation, hoping they’ll see us for the treasure we are. Or we get so nervous that our walls go up and we lose all warmth and become sarcastic and cutting instead. These performances will often have us showcasing the more insecure sides of ourselves, taking the focus away from the purpose of being on that date in the first place: connection. But luckily, truly connecting—and making yourself memorable—is much simpler than that. --- Get My Secrets to Mastering the First 5 Minutes of Any Situation. Download Your FREE Guide Now. . . → http://www.First5Guide.com
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Thank you for being brave. Thank you for volunteering something about yourself that takes courage.
I'm now going to reward that by doing the same from my side. Welcome to the Love Life Podcast with me, Matthew Hussey.
I have picked out this idea as something I think could really help you in your love life today,
and I'm excited for you to listen.
Let me know what you think at the end of the episode by going to iTunes and leaving a review.
And now, let's end of the episode by going to iTunes and leaving a review. And now let's get
into the episode. How to be unforgettable on a first date. The advice I'm about to give can work
for any date really, but on a first date, we get particularly nervous, don't we? We worry about how
we're going to come across. I want to say firstly firstly that despite what I'm about to tell you in terms of how you can
enhance your impact on a date, it's your date.
It's a date that's 50% you.
It's your thumbprint and your thumbprint is yours.
You can't get it wrong.
It's yours.
It's you we're talking about.
So while I'm going to give you
some ideas, some tips, some techniques, some thoughts, I don't want you to overthink going
on a date because you've watched this video. I sometimes think that's one of the negative impacts
of what I do is that it can lead to an overthinking. I don't want you to do that. I want you to think that even if you didn't do anything by the book on a date,
someone can still fall madly in love with you
and decide to want to be with you forever
and marry you and have a family with you.
You know, this isn't an exam.
It's you.
With that in mind, there are things that over the years of doing this I've learned
that are great enhancers for what we want to bring out on a date, for what leads to great
conversation, for what leads to amazing connection, what leads to someone thinking about you after a date. So I wanna give you today three specific techniques
for enhancing the impact you can make on a date.
Number one, start on the ground.
One of the things we do on a date,
which could be characterized
as the really difficult small talk section of the date,
is we see someone and we say,
hey, how are you? And it's a really
difficult thing to answer because where do you even start from that place? It's not that it's
a bad question. It's just a difficult question to answer. It's hard to answer honestly,
because our answer to that is always extremely complex. And it's also hard to answer. It's hard to answer honestly, because our answer to that is always extremely complex,
and it's also hard to answer specifically, because it's such a big and vague question.
It's starting from 50,000 feet in the air. I propose that you reverse that. You start on the
ground and work your way up to the 50,000 foot view.
On the ground would be talking about something that happened this morning or a movie that we've
both seen that we really like or something we're excited about in the next month. Go on a date
and ask yourself on the way to the date, what's in the news of my life right now? What's in the news of my week? What's in the news of my
last hour? What's been going on? What unexpected thing happened to me just this morning? And by
the way, I sometimes think that we get very caught up in life thinking that in order to have great
stories, something fascinating needs to have happened to us.
But that's not actually true. The basis of great story is we need to have feelings about something
that's happened to us, however mundane. Whatever happened to you this morning, however non-eventful,
if we have feelings about it, then we have story to tell. We have conversation
talking about something that's happened this week or today or this morning or how you feel about
a movie you saw last night. You're immediately starting on the ground, which feels like an
organic conversation. And then you can work your way up to the bigger questions about each other. Number two, connect,
don't coach. I always think that it's really aggravating when we share something with someone
that might be a little bit vulnerable. And instead of connecting with that vulnerability
that we've just shared, and maybe even offering a little bit of their own vulnerability, someone takes the opportunity to start giving us advice. Which by the way,
on a date especially, is a really unsexy move, right? Because you're immediately creating a sort
of mentor-mentee relationship, a coach-student relationship, a therapist-client relationship. None of these
are sexy relationships in the context of a date. And they also don't allow for real connection.
All they do is elevate one person above the other in a bit of an icky way. It's like if
you said to someone on a date, I really enjoy writing, but one of the things I'm working on right now is I get
two in my head and then I struggle to get down to it because I'm prejudging what I've
written before I've even started.
If someone then takes that moment and says, oh, you know, that's like, you got to do it
every day, you know, you just can't, you can't overthink it.
You know, you just have to set a time in the diary and every day,
just go for it. I feel myself getting aggravated as I'm hearing this interaction because it's so
annoying. A beautiful thing you could have done in that moment is if I said, I prejudged too much
what I'm about to write. And sometimes I I just I don't get to it for that reason
and I really want to work on that and by the way it's kind of attractive when someone says I really
want to work on that because it shows a self-awareness but also a proactiveness it's not
negative there's nothing negative about saying that and there's nothing sort of poor me about
saying that and it's not saying give me advice it's just saying I'm working on that which is
actually really attractive to meet someone who's that kind of person. That's a great opportunity for someone else to say,
I so get what you mean. I so understand that. Because I always feel like that about creative
stuff. It feels so good once you've done it, but it's the getting into it that's really difficult.
That's just a moment of humanity. It's a moment of connection.
It's also an invitation for someone who maybe doesn't write
or maybe doesn't even have that issue
in their creative world to talk about something
they struggle with.
Yeah, I totally get that.
That's how it is.
It is really tricky, isn't it?
To get into something in the first place.
I know that for me in my life,
one of the things I'm working on is this. So what I've done is I've taken your vulnerability and said, oh, I'll reward that
with my own vulnerability so that we can have a moment of connection. Thank you for being brave.
Thank you for volunteering something about yourself that takes courage. I'm now going to
reward that by doing the same from my side. We've come to the table and set down our weapons.
But instead, in so many situations, someone lays down their weapons and the other person says,
Advice!
Instead of using the moment for humanity, someone uses it for superiority.
And lastly, number three, listen and capture. Without a doubt, one of the best pieces
of advice for any date or any meeting with someone, business too, right? Because so much of this stuff
works for job interviews. It works for client meetings. It works for pitch meetings. This is
stuff that is to do with attraction and not just in the romantic sense is being present.
Being present with what someone is actually telling us.
Which starts with asking questions.
In order to be present with what you're telling me,
I need to ask questions.
I need to be curious about you in the first place.
Now, listening, active listening,
really sort of tuning in to what someone is saying.
You ask a question and then you
really listen instead of thinking about what you're going to say next instead of thinking
about how impressive your response is going to be instead of listening to someone who says that
they went to a part of the world and going i've also been to a part of the world which we do all
the time we call it story trumping finding a way to take their story and one-up them because you
want to show that you've done that
thing too, or you've done something cool too. I'm impressive too. That's a problem. But really
connecting is asking a question and then just listening to what they're saying, being impressed
by something they're saying, being even more curious about what they're saying, or if you
don't understand what they're saying, asking another question. But listening isn't the only part of this. The reason this particular part of this
piece of content, this video, is listen and capture is because the capture part is really
important. I remember being in an interview, or not an interview, a meeting, an initial kind of
pitch meeting, I suppose, with a company called Influuex and there's this wonderful gentleman
over there called Dima. Dima and his team were pitching to design my new website
howtogettheguy.com. Go check it out it looks shiny and brand new because of
everything that Influex has done and it's beautiful. In the first meeting I
had with them one of the things that stuck out to me was that Dima got me to
talk a lot. He got me to talk about my vision, he got me to talk about what I'm excited about, he
got me to talk about where I wanted my personal brand to go and what I wanted
to do and he really looked to understand my current frustrations, my goals, what
I'm trying to do, where I'm trying to transition to, all of it. And he really
listened along with his team,
wonderful team, kind of three quarters of the way through the call. Dima repeated back to me
what I had said in sort of his own words, but also mine in a way that captured the essence of what I
was getting at. He said, so let me understand, you know,
let me make sure I understand you, what you really want to do is, and then he said this and this and
this and this, and you're frustrated because right now, blah, blah, blah. And what you're
really excited about is this, and this is where you want things to go. And I sat back and I went,
oh, he gets it. He gets it. And it was that feeling that he got it that made me decide
to go with them and not a different company. Because I went, this person gets me. They
understand the essence of where I am right now. The reason we've used this language capture,
Jameson made this wonderful point about photographers, that when we think of a
great photographer, we think of someone who's captured the essence of a moment, of a street
corner, of someone outside busking in New Orleans, of a moment between a mother and child. We feel
like we compliment them on their eye,
don't we? Because there's a sort of, for a photographer, there's a listening period,
of course, literally a watching period. There's a period of just what's going on here? What am
I trying to capture? And then there's the moment of capture. And when we look at a great photographer's photo, what we say is, wow, what a great eye.
That photographer has been able to see something and capture it in a way that other people couldn't.
It's their ability to capture the essence of the moment or of what they have expressed to us that makes us truly stand out and
be unforgettable to that person because they feel understood by us. They feel we have perceived
something about them that is not commonly perceived or that demonstrates an awareness
of who they are in a short space of time because we really listened and that builds intimacy.
And intimacy makes you really hard to forget.
It makes you very hard to not call after the date because someone feels that you've really captured them.
Now, if you're thinking to yourself, but I, you know, if you get to a part of the date and you're like, I want to, I want to recapitulate what they've said to me in a way that shows I understand them, but I don't feel
I understand them. Well, that's a good litmus test. Cause at that point you can ask more questions.
Well, what is it? I don't understand. What is it? I don't know. What is it that's making it hard for
me to sort of capture what they've said to me? Well, I don't really know what they quite meant
by that. Well, I don't really know what they quite meant by that.
Well, I don't really know how they feel about that.
Great, you now know the next most pertinent questions
to ask someone on a date
that are gonna build that connection.
I have something that I'm really, really excited
to give you right now because it's so, it's, it's very raw.
It's very vulnerable from my side, but it's something I know is really going to help you.
If there is someone you want to make an impression on in your life, what I'm about to give you was
born out of a radio appearance that I did. Now, this show that I did got an amazing response from
people. And we had thousands of tweets coming in and messages and the show got amazing feedback.
And my brother, Steven, called me afterwards and he said, that was incredible. He said,
you made such an impression, but I know that there were specific things you did to prepare
for that, that people don't know about.
You know, people often think that you are sort of spontaneously impactful, but they don't realize
that there are certain things that you've learned that they can learn too about how to have a
massive impact in the first five minutes. He said, do you mind if I create a guide that expresses
these, that actually shows people what they are so that they can learn them?
And I okayed it and he went away and created this guide.
It's called the first five minutes.
And what's so cool about this guide is that it plays you the interview that I did.
And then it has Steven breaking down the things that I did in that interview that you can learn too,
whether you want to apply it to making a huge impression on the first five minutes of a date,
a job interview, a sales meeting, a pitch meeting, a client meeting, wherever you know,
I want to maximize my impact on someone when I meet with them, this is going to be a really valuable set of techniques.
So go check it out. It's at firstfiveguide.com. That's the word first, the number five,
guide.com. And it's a little vulnerable because it's Steven psychoanalyzing me and my behavior, but it's
also really helpful. I still, to this day, get DMs about that show and Stephen's guide that broke
it down from people who said, I learned so much from Stephen's breakdown. So I look forward to
hearing your feedback on this. It's at firstfiveguide.com. I'll see you over there.