Love Life with Matthew Hussey - (Matt Monday): 5 Behaviors That Push People Away (Without You Realizing)
Episode Date: January 27, 2025Why do people “fade out” in dating with no explanation? The good news is: It often has nothing to do with us. Yet there are also things we may be doing that push someone away without us even reali...zing it. In today’s episode, I share 5 behaviors that may make someone pull away . . . and ways you can leave people better than you found them (and wanting more!) Whether you want to learn how to become a better listener, not come across as too intense when you really like someone, or just be a better date, don’t miss it! These practical tips can help you instantly change your dating results. ►► Join The "Matthew Hussey Weekend Retreat" In Miami, October 18-19. Grab Your Early Bird Ticket Before Prices Go Up! → https://matthewhussey.com/weekend-retreat-25-eb/ ►►Ask Matthew AI Your Biggest Dating Question for Free Now at. . . → http://www.AskMH.com ►► Order My New Book, "Love Life" at → http://www.LoveLifeBook.com
Transcript
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Do you know one of the things that I value most in my life?
Peace.
All of the little ways that I get to construct this world of calm and equanimity that makes
me feel relaxed.
But when people are dating, it's really hard to maintain this because there are so many
things that
rob us of our peace when we are looking for love.
One of those things is when we go on a date with someone we like them, it seems as if
it might be going well and then they fade.
Maybe they stop texting us back as much, maybe they stop asking us out even if they do text us back.
Whatever is the case, it becomes clear that this person that we had hopes for has lost interest.
Now, some of the time, maybe even a lot of the time, that has everything to do with them and not with us.
But occasionally, it's worth asking the question, is there anything I might be doing
that could be pushing someone away?
I'm Matthew Hussey, and today we are gonna be talking
about the five behaviors that can push someone away
without us realizing it
and stop it from ever reaching its full potential.
Number one, we run the risk of pushing people away when we overshare. Oversharing is incredibly common.
And by definition, oversharing happens at a time when the amount of information we've
given someone is inorganic to our relationship with them at that point.
In other words, when we say things to someone who is
essentially a perfect stranger that they shouldn't be privy to yet. Now, what does this actually
look like? Well, it can look like talking about our insecurities very early in the process.
I just hate when people ask me about my height or talk about my height because I've never liked
my height. I've always felt like I'm too know, I've always felt like I'm too tall
or I've always felt like I'm too short.
That's oversharing about an insecurity we have
at a time when someone else is just beginning
to form their own opinions on us.
I always think when we dump our insecurities
onto someone else, we're telling them
what to think about us instead of allowing them
to decide what they think about us.
Oversharing can look like telling someone about deep traumas we've experienced and how we've worked through them,
which may be beautiful and courageous and amazing, but is not information that someone who just met you needs to know
or even necessarily knows what to do with. This isn't a therapy session, it's a date.
Oversharing can look like dumping on someone from our past.
No matter how awful that person was who hurt you,
who destroyed your life, who made you miserable,
this person in front of you doesn't need to know
all of that right now.
They don't need to know how badly you've been hurt
in a previous relationship. You can allude to the fact that you've had a challenging relationship,
but they don't need to know the details. And we don't come off well talking horribly about someone
they don't know when they're just getting to know us. It might even leave them wondering,
what are they going to be saying about me one day
to a perfect stranger?
Now look, why do we overshare?
We overshare because we're anxious
and when we get anxious, we just start saying things
and then afterwards we go, why did I say that?
What was I even thinking when I said that?
That was so stupid.
So when we get anxious, we overshare.
We sometimes overshare because we're avoidant.
If I can give you all of these reasons to reject me
before you find them out,
then it's almost like I'm owning the rejection.
If I say all of this about myself and you don't want me,
well, screw you, this is me.
So it's almost a kind of hedging against future rejection. Some people overshare because
they're too trusting, because they forget that information is power and that someone shouldn't
have all of that information on you right now because it can be used against you and you don't
really know if you can trust this person. Some people overshare because they've been living
in a certain world for a long time, like therapy,
and it's very normal for them to talk about their traumas
and the way they're healing,
and they don't realize that this is a different context.
This is a date, not a therapy session,
or their best friend who they're talking
about their therapy session with.
So we overshare for all sorts of different reasons but the effects of
oversharing can be universally damaging. They give people information that makes
them uncomfortable, that they don't know what to do with, it brings them into a
world of intimacy they haven't earned so they start asking themselves why do I
have this level of intimacy with this person right now? This doesn't feel
normal, this doesn't feel organic. It not only gives too much information to
someone we don't trust, sometimes it breaks the bond of trust from their side
because they see that we have no boundaries around the information that's
stored in our minds. So oversharing can become one of these invisible ways
that we push someone away without ever realizing it.
I mean, whoever, when they fade out of our lives,
puts in a call to us at the end of it all and says,
just so you know, I'm fading because you overshared.
No one ever.
So it's not like this is feedback
we're ever going to get from anyone,
but it is having an effect nonetheless.
And unfortunately, when it comes to oversharing,
it's often worn as a virtue by the people that do it.
I'm just being me.
I'm just being honest.
I'm just being authentic.
But oversharing is not the same as authenticity.
The second way we push people away without realizing it
is through negativity.
Now, I wanna make something very clear.
I'm not, when I talk about negativity being a bad thing,
advocating for endless, relentless positivity
that finds its way into every conversation
no matter what someone says.
We have been going through the wildfires
here in Los Angeles,
and a very helpful video my friend Dr. Ramani put up
during these wildfires was advice on how to support people
who are going through the wildfires.
And she said, if you're speaking to someone who has lost their home,
talking to them about how lucky they are to still be alive and to have their family,
and that's what's important, might not be the best place to go
for someone who's just lost in their mind everything.
That, as she describes it, is a form of toxic positivity.
So positivity all the time is not necessarily what is called for, especially when we're trying to
connect with people in the things that they're going through. But I think of negativity more broadly as the way that we leave people feeling
after we've left them.
When they leave us, do they feel like life
is a little better?
Do they feel a little happier?
Do they feel a little lighter?
Or do they feel like their lens of the world is dimmer?
You know, sometimes negativity takes the form
of saying deeply negative things.
Other times, negativity can look really innocuous
on the surface.
It's being the person that every time someone meets up
with us and asks us how we are, we say,
oh my God, I'm just so busy.
There's just so much going on.
It's just like,
I don't know, I can't catch my breath right now.
If that's the energy we bring to someone every time we meet them, at some point that's going
to have an effect.
It's also true that positivity doesn't mean always finding the bright side.
Positivity can just mean bringing a
certain kind of energy to a situation. I was reminded of this during the
wildfires here in LA when a friend of mine, John Turtletub, a movie director
whose movies many of you will have seen and love, was being interviewed outside
his house which was literally one of the only houses
still standing in the neighborhood
by the grace of a neighbor
who had fought the fires all night to protect it.
And amidst this chaos and tragedy
and him and his family worrying
that they had lost everything
or were going to lose everything.
There was still a chance that their house
was going to catch fire.
They were not out of it and in the clear.
He gave an interview because there was a cameraman nearby
and an anchor who ran up to him and was like,
can we get your thoughts?
And amidst all of this sadness,
he not only expressed how hard it all was and how terrible
it all was, he also managed to make the people behind the camera and in front of the camera
laugh.
And he did this because he saw that there was something behind the camera that the cameraman
should be shooting and wasn't. And as a movie director,
he was quick to point out what the cameraman
should be doing.
Check this out.
Can you believe that houses are still going up right now?
It's crazy.
I think it's amazing there's anything left.
What happens is they're gone.
And then if you look over there,
that just started that new flame coming over there.
I know he doesn't want to pan over it, does he?
I'm a movie director, I'm telling you, pan over it.
It's pretty great.
It is, it is pretty great there.
We are seeing some flames right there.
Jon, you cannot speak it
as we're looking at those flames right now.
Now that clip was shot by Jon's family,
watching the TV, going through one of the worst times
of their life and laughing at the energy
that John was expressing in that moment.
What I love about this example is that John left people
better than he found them by the end of that interview.
By all rights, that should have just been
an incredibly sad interview.
But John being John is experiencing
one of the worst moments of his life with his family
and has a moment of lightness.
And that moment of lightness does not come
from him talking about the bright side of what they're all
going through.
It comes from John injecting his playfulness and his wit into a situation where no one
expected it.
It came from him leading.
And by leading with that energy, he made the guy holding the microphone laugh,
he made the cameraman laugh,
he made his family who were going through
the worst time of their lives laugh,
watching him on TV,
and it made the rest of us who were watching that interview
laugh in a moment where so many people were crying.
So he led with his energy.
And that's the part that it's worth all of us looking
at ourselves and saying, am I default negative energy or default positive energy? Am I leaving
people better than I found them? And I find that, by the way, much more descriptive in
some ways than am I a positive person
because when we think positive we think we have to say positive things all the
time or always show people how to look on the bright side but when I think of
leaving people better than I found them I simply think of the energy that I bring
sometimes without words at all that leaves someone better off. By the way
before we get on to point number three you'll notice that so much of this is about how we choose
to connect with another person
that we hope to build a relationship with.
And there are lots of wrong ways to connect
and some really amazing ways to connect
that maybe aren't our default right now.
So before I get onto point number three, four and five,
I wanna tell you that if you want better ways to connect
and you're wondering what did those look like for me,
I have a tool for you that you can use right now
is called Matthew AI and you can go and ask it
any question you want about dating, about love,
about how you come across, you can role play things,
you can literally ask Matthew AI any question you want
for free right now at askmh.com
and get some immediate answers.
It's not easy to work this stuff out on our own,
but when we have the help of that mentor,
which really Matthew AI is me
because it has all of my information,
everything I've said up until today downloaded into it,
you're getting the best advice and personal tailored advice for your situation.
In fact, I literally had someone send me this email just a couple of days ago.
I wanted to drop you a message about Matthew.ai.
I had a truly awful experience with a man I'd been chatting to intensely for several weeks before we met. I sought comfort in
lots of friends but also reached out to Matthew AI. The response was brilliant.
It's a very clever tool and it actually did make me think more positively after.
I was blown away at how clever it is and how it actually really did make me feel
less rubbish about myself.
So thank you.
You've clearly put a lot of effort and Minecraft into it
and it has paid off.
Well done.
So if you haven't tried Matthew.ai yet,
go check it out at askmh.com.
You can text it or call it whatever suits you.
All right, let's move on to number three.
The third way that we can unknowingly push people away
is by drinking too much.
This one is gonna be a pretty short point,
but it is so common to have one too many drinks on a date
because we're trying to calm our nerves
or just because we're in the habit of doing that
or because it feels like the thing to do or because we're trying to calm our nerves or just because we're in the habit of doing that or because it feels like the thing to do
or because we're trying to keep up with someone else
who we shouldn't be trying to keep up with.
And somewhere between drink one and four,
we become a different version of ourselves.
And that version of ourselves isn't necessarily
the most attractive version of ourselves. Now, I'm not suggesting that version of ourselves isn't necessarily the most attractive version of ourselves.
Now, I'm not suggesting that we judge ourselves
for the way that we are once we've had a couple of drinks,
but I am saying that even though sometimes
it feels like our best self when we're drinking,
it rarely is.
And I don't say this as someone who has any kind
of righteousness about
drinking. Audrey and I consumed more than our fair share of beers in Japan when we
went there a few months ago, so I have no dog in this fight of whether you should
or shouldn't drink. But what I will say is that when it comes to dating, it really
can take us off our game in unhelpful ways.
It can make us less composed, it can make us say things we otherwise wouldn't.
We lose a sense of control over our ability to articulate and connect.
And for somebody else watching us, it can quickly become something that turns them off when they see it.
So be aware of how much alcohol you consume when you're on a date.
And it's a great advertisement for having daytime dates
where you don't have that pressure to drink,
unless you live somewhere like London,
where people are just pirates who drink all day in pubs,
especially if the sun is shining.
But even then, you know, you could do something else.
The fourth way we push people away without realizing it is by having too much...
intensity.
Now, there's different types of being too intense in dating. Let's explore a couple of them.
The first one is with excessive neediness. You know, following up with someone, do you
miss me? Why haven't you texted me back? I haven't heard from you. What's going on?
Demanding a level of attention and investment from someone that we barely know based on this idea of where
we want it to go. In a way it's kind of like we're not really reading the
situation or measuring the true nature of the situation, instead we're chasing
after something that we want to happen, and in the process, we become the intense one
who is doing the chasing.
Another kind of intensity is over-familiarity.
This is when someone that we don't know,
we place a level of proximity and comfort and intimacy
that they haven't really earned.
Audrey was telling me about a time
when she experienced this kind of over-familiar intensity
where after a single date that she had with someone,
he started calling her baby.
And that for her felt really weird and unearned
and it just made her feel uncomfortable
and like there was almost something
to back away from. So you know, pet names for someone that hasn't earned a pet name,
good way to be too intense through over familiarity. There's the kind of intensity
where we over invest emotionally or supportively to someone. For example, you may say, how are you?
And someone may say,
oh, I've had a bit of a crummy day at work.
My boss has just been a nightmare.
And you know what?
Honestly, it doesn't matter.
It just, my boss is being really difficult.
Now, a nice response might be,
oh, that sucks.
I'm so sorry.
How about I take you for some tacos
to make you feel better?
Compare that with the intense response,
which might look like,
well, that's because they have no idea
how valuable you are.
Do they?
The last kind of intensity
is what I call self-help intensity,
which usually involves some mix of reading a lot
into a situation using one's intuition and giving unsolicited advice. And it looks a
little something like this.
You know, I can't help but notice when you talk about this, it seems like there's more
there.
Have you explored this at all?
Have you tried trauma-informed therapy?
I know that made a big difference for me.
When I learned to love myself, all of those old childhood beliefs that I know you're struggling
with, they just evaporated.
Oh, no I definitely I was just saying I didn't
enjoy Wicked as much as everybody else seemed to but no I should try that.
Intensity is scary huh? Here's the thing A lot of intensity in the early stages comes from a story
that we've been telling ourselves in our head
that doesn't correspond with reality.
A story about who another person is or what they need.
A story about how important the relationship is
at a time when you can't possibly know how important it is,
a story about how perfect you are for a person or how perfect they are for you at a time
when you don't really know each other. The answer to intensity is presence. Because when
we actually get present with the person in front of us and the stage that we're at, our
words and our actions will be a direct mirror of what's actually
going on, not the story we've told ourselves. The fifth and final, yes we've
made it to the final one in this video, thing that pushes people away without
our noticing is when we don't listen. This is such an obvious point that it
feels like it doesn't even need to be said.
And yet the true art of listening is lost on so many of us,
including me, when we're in conversation with people
and it's lost for a number of reasons.
It can be lost because of anxiety,
because we're waiting for our turn to speak,
not out of any sense of not caring but out of a sense
of oh my god am I gonna say the right thing am I keeping this person
interested am I engaging right now am I doing a good job and when we're in our
head thinking of those things we live on the outside of the conversation looking
in instead of being in the conversation with somebody else of course we can also
be a bad listener through ignorance through having no empathy for the experience of the other person in the conversation we can also be a bad listener through ignorance, through having no empathy for the experience
of the other person in the conversation.
We can also be poor listeners due to arrogance,
that I can't learn anything from anyone else,
what everyone else has to say isn't interesting,
I'm not truly interested in their story,
I've already drawn all of my conclusions
about this person, this situation,
so I'm just gonna talk.
And of course, not listening can also be a sign
in some cases of narcissism.
The only words that need to be heard here are mine.
And the only thing that's really important to me
is impressing you with how great I am.
And I can't do that when you're speaking.
In any case, not listening becomes this ultimate barrier
to connection.
It is what has someone leaving a date feeling like they never really connected with us, they don't
really feel seen by us, they don't feel understood by us. The question is how can
we become better listeners and there's so much advice on listening out there
but I want to draw your attention to something I read literally this week. I've been reading this book by Haruki Murakami, the famous fiction writer out of
Japan called Novelist as a Vocation.
And it's essentially a book of advice and musings for people who are aspiring
novelists, of which I am not, but I enjoyed reading the book very much.
And there was something he said that really stuck with me,
which is that in a somewhat self-deprecating way,
he talks about how he's not bright enough or quick enough
to draw fast conclusions about things
and that he just sort of has a way of observing the world
without coming to conclusions.
And that that behavior, that way of going through life
actually serves him as a novelist
because if you were to come to conclusions too quickly,
that would make a bad novel, right?
But a great novel is one where conclusions are arrived
at somewhat slowly at a different pace.
And he says this, I wanna read this to you.
Next, before you start writing your own stuff,
make a habit of looking at things and events in more detail.
Observe what is going on around you
and the people you encounter as closely
and as deeply as you can.
Reflect on what you see.
Remember though, that to reflect is not to rush
to determine the rights and wrongs and merits and demerits of what and whom you are observing.
Try to consciously refrain from valued judgements.
Conclusions can come later.
What's important is not arriving at clear conclusions but retaining the specifics of a certain situation.
In other words, your material as fully as you can.
It strikes me that that is really great advice for a date too.
Of course there are certain conclusions we come to privately in our own mind
during or after the date that make us say,
yes I'd like another date with this person,
or no I don't want to go anywhere near this person again.
But when it comes to the art of conversation, drawing conclusions quickly becomes
a barrier to getting to know someone. For example, if someone tells you about a time they went through
last year because of something that happened in their life and immediately your thought is,
oh, I know that pattern, they did that because they're this kind of person who has lived this
life and that's drawn them to the place they are today.
And now you start assuming all these things about this person that may be right or wrong,
but certainly, even if you're right, aren't going to make that person feel heard.
Curiosity and continuing to listen and actively ask questions is what makes another person
feel heard, is what makes them feel
like you are discovering them, perhaps in a more intricate way than anyone else has
recently because no one else has been this great at doing this excavation instead of
just rushing to conclusions.
There's a great moment, I just want to read you this real quick.
He says, let's say you know someone who for no apparent reason starts sneezing
when they get really angry.
Once the sneezing fit begins, it goes on and on.
Now, I don't know anyone like that,
but for the sake of argument, let's say you do.
What you wonder explains this pattern.
One approach would be to try to come up
with a tentative theory, physiological perhaps,
or psychological,
to analyze their behavior.
My brain, however, doesn't work that way.
I think, wow, people like that exist,
and leave it at that.
Now, I'm suggesting you go one step further
in the little novel that you're writing on a date
and suggest that the character in front of you
is gonna give you some information.
Great listening is not assuming everything
about what that information means,
but continuing to encourage the arc of that story,
of that character, to a point where A,
you get to know them much better as a result,
which allows you to decide whether to go on another date
with that person, and B, makes them feel truly listened to which is one of the most miraculous things in helping
you stand out.
So what about you? Having heard these five things is there something that you've either
done yourself or seen in your friends and family
that unconsciously pushes people away in dating
and ends things before they need to end?
Leave a comment, let me know.
I'd be curious to know what you would add to this list.
And do not forget to check out Matthew AI.
You can ask it questions like,
what should I do on a first date?
What are the kinds of conversations
that make for really attractive conversations?
You can even ask it for specific scripts
or ask what can I do to recover the attraction
after a date if it seems like it's been lost?
You can ask it literally any question you could conceive of.
Go there now and check it out.
And by the way, if you're wondering what prompts you could ask Matthew AI,
in the description below, I've got a little list of prompts
to get your mind working on the ways that you could make it valuable to you.
So check those out in the description below and go to AskMH.com
to ask your question now.
Thank you so much for watching, as always.
It's been a pleasure. I will see you next time.