Love Life with Matthew Hussey - (Matt Monday): Dangerous Red Flags That Are RISKY TO IGNORE
Episode Date: October 16, 2023It’s easy to ignore red flags when we’re falling for someone. But our heart pays the price.  When you’re really attracted to someone, you can talk yourself out of acting on your concerns. Yo...u may pursue someone who doesn’t want a relationship in the hope of changing them, or prioritize someone else’s needs over your own because of your feelings of admiration.  For today’s episode, I’ve gathered some of my best advice over the years on spotting and acting on red flags . . . so you can move on faster and avoid the pain of heartbreak with someone who just isn’t ready. --- Follow Matt @thematthewhussey Follow Stephen @stephenhhussey --- ►► Discover the 3 Secrets to Taking Control in Your Love Life. Go Here to Get Your Free Guide → http://www.3LoveHabits.com Â
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Anyone is capable of going on a bad date.
The difference is the successful people cut them off early.
The moment they see a red flag, they're out of there. Welcome everybody to the Love Life Podcast. I am Matthew Hussey and I believe today's episode
is really going to help you accelerate your love life today. Check it out and I'll speak to you at
the end of the episode. If someone tells you, I'm not sure I'm ready, then you have to do some
calculations. You have to say, okay, I like this person. They're saying they're not sure I'm ready.
That's an immediate giant red flag. It's not them saying, by the way, I'm not sure I know you well
enough yet. That's fine. Let's get to know each other better then. If they're saying, I'm not sure I'm
ready for a relationship, that is a giant red flag. They are telling you today, I am going to hurt you.
In case you didn't hear, I am going to hurt you. They're telling you to your face that you are
going to get your heart broken here. So you have to make
a decision with that. Do I want to continue to invest in someone who says they're not sure they're
ready for a relationship? Do you really want to do that? Now you may say if you're 25 and you're
like, well, whatever. I'm just going to have fun and we'll see where this goes. There's nothing
wrong with that. I'm not judging that. But if you find yourself at a stage in your life where you, you know, you are ready for
something real and you're excited about that. And you've got someone in front of you who isn't just
assessing whether you're right for them, but is assessing whether a relationship is even exciting to them Why get into that situation?
Why bother why spend the time when someone?
Says I'm in that's a green light
When we find that the more energy we put into someone the more we get back
That's a green light and too often what I've seen over 15 years of doing this now
in people's love lives is that they persist on a red light. These days, I really start to see it
more in terms of just flow. Like, oh, I'm like, I'm this river that's just moving, right? I'm always just moving forward. And along the way, I sometimes
hit a rock. And instead of personalizing the rock and what the rock thinks of the water,
I instead just see it as a rock. I might actually just say, well, okay, this is representing a stop
right now. I'm going to move around this. That distinction,
although it's a very, very simple one when you hear it, is one that a lot of us aren't making
emotionally. We're not making it in our behaviors. We are exhausting ourselves trying to move on a
red light. In the process, we end up resenting the person.
We end up resenting how much time we're losing,
how much energy was wasted and how much pain was created.
When someone says that they're not ready for a relationship,
that's not just a red flag about that person.
It's a green light in another direction. It's a signal that you should take your persistence,
take your energy, take the drive to find a
love that is worthy of your investment and direct that in more productive ways to people
that actually have potential.
Because the difference between different types of women who are successful and not successful
in dating is not that one group avoids dating all of the wrong men and the other one dates only bad men. Everyone dates the wrong men,
right? Anyone is capable of going on a bad date. The difference is the successful people cut them
off early. The moment they see a red flag, they're out of there. But that requires a significant
level of internal confidence because you've got to know you're worth more than that. So I once heard a phrase relationships often end the way they began
Meaning whatever ends a relationship you could have seen in week one if you were paying attention
But you chose to ignore it
I think you're a smart woman and I don't believe for one second that those men became the devil six months into the relationship
I think you saw the stuff that was wrong early on and chose to ignore it
So I don't know your problem is with finding great men
I think your problem is about with yourself the next time you meet a guy who is bad for you
You have to be strong enough to not start investing more in that guy just because it's the devil
You know and it's harder to go out and meet someone new. Does that make sense? Preach, brother. Excuse me, Hussie.
Sorry to interrupt the video, but if you're watching this and your love life is a priority
for you this year, you want to meet your person. I have a free training called dating with results
that is going to help you do that. And you can watch it right now. All you need to do to sign up is go to datingwithresults.com. I'll see you over there and now let's get back to the video. quite well-known Maya Angelou quote that struck me as being extraordinarily important when it
comes to relationships. She was once famously speaking to Oprah and she said, when people
show you who they are, believe them. They know themselves much better than you do.
And she was referring to those moments where people say, I'm a selfish person.
I'm not a kind person. I don't think of other people a lot. You know, when people, I'm a mean
person. When people say those things and we shrug them off. I've had that on first dates. I've had people go like,
I'm just really mean. I can just be so nasty. When someone tells us, I'm a mean person,
I'm selfish, I'm unkind, I don't think of peril because they're telling us something about themselves. And we have to assume they have no reason to lie to me right now.
Yeah.
Right?
If someone says they're jealous, they don't surprise you by never being jealous.
You know, Oh, you said you were jealous, but you're never, you're never jealous.
They know themselves much better than you do. So when people say things like that, what,
what's going on that we don't heed their warning? Why don't we take that at face value. It's this idea that our job, when we feel something intensely for somebody
is to just keep loving them. But you don't just have one job in life. Loving someone or showing
love, giving love in life is only one of our jobs. The other job is to protect ourselves. In a boxing ring, what does the ref say at the
beginning of every fight? There's the same line that gets said from every boxing referee in every
fight that ever happens. Looks at both boxers and says, protect yourself for all times.
When at a certain point in a fight, a referee determines that one of the fighters is no longer
capable of protecting themselves because they're punch drunk. they're not putting their arms up anymore, they're not guarding punches, they are just taking a beating that's putting them in genuine peril, genuine danger,
and could be causing serious long-term harm, that referee stops the fight. Protect yourself
at all times. And when the fighter can no longer protect themselves, they stop the fight.
The problem in love is that there is no referee that comes along and stops the fight
if you're no longer protecting yourself. Your job is to be that referee.
Your job is to be both the fighter and the referee in that fight.
And if you get to a point where you can no longer protect yourself,
if you get to a point where you realize I'm just taking a beating emotionally, spiritually,
my soul is taking a beating in this relationship.
Your job is to stop the fight and remove yourself from the ring.
If you want to know someone's intentions, watch their actions, not their words,
unless what they're telling you is difficult for them to say.
When we're trying to make any kind of a sale in life, we want to say
all of the things that are going to help us make that sale. If in the course of that sales
presentation, someone tells you something undesirable, unwelcome, something that could
cost them the sale, what they're saying in that moment should be given particular attention.
In that case we shouldn't be blindly looking at their actions and what they invest in us,
we should be paying attention to the small print. I think of it like a pharmaceutical ad when
someone is trying to sell you on a pill that's going to take away some pain or ailment that you
have and it shows you this bright meadow and happy people. And after all of that powerful, emotional, good feeling,
it reads you as quickly as possible the small print of how this drug is going to make you
want to kill yourself.
Ask your doctor today about Cavorica. Side effects may include making you want to kill
yourself.
I think of what someone's selling you when they tell you they don't want a relationship as being like that.
It's like a commercial for a relationship where someone is walking you through the scenes.
Here's us going to a movie. Here's us in a park having a picnic.
Here's a moment where I confide in you with something vulnerable and aren't we connected in this moment?
Then after all of these relationship-esque scenes that make you feel so
invested comes a small print where someone says, warning, this romance comes without a title. We'll
never call you girlfriend, just not ready for a relationship and not looking for anything serious
right now. That's the small print because when somebody is telling you, I don't want anything
serious amidst doing all of the right things, or they're telling you, I don't want anything serious, amidst doing all of the right things,
or they're telling you, I don't want a relationship, even though they're behaving as if you're already in a relationship,
what they're saying requires effort to say.
It may sabotage the very attention they are trying to get.
That means it was inconvenient for them to say.
And if it was inconvenient for them to say, And if it was inconvenient for them to say,
if it was something that could cost them the sale,
then it's something that should be given extra attention
over and above their actions.
Last week, Jameson and I had a little dalliance
with the Fifty Shades darker trailer.
Tell me what he has that we like.
Sides money. Mus like. Excites money.
Muscles.
Ooh, drama.
We spoofed it.
Here's what you thought of it.
Alicia says, oh, here goes Mr. Hussy, AKA Mr. Vanilla,
making fun of the Fifty Shades again.
Shake my head.
Wait, so is she saying vanilla's a bad thing?
Yeah, like simple, vanilla is boring in bed.
Well, just because it's simple doesn't make it boring.
I'll be honest, Matt, I've never seen you
this defensive about a comment.
Defensive how?
You haven't seen me in bed.
No one has.
Just because it's simple doesn't make it boring.
Oh.
Oh, is it cold in here or is it just my penis?
And Christina says,
"'I absolutely adore everything you do, Matthew Hussey,
"'but let us women have our fantasies.
"'What's so wrong with that?'
Well, Christina, nothing actually.
But I think it's worth addressing
that there are two fantasies going on in this movie. One is the transgressive BDSM,
out of the ordinary sexual acts that many of us don't vocalize in our everyday life,
or maybe even fantasies sexually that we don't talk about with our partner, which is equally sad, I think.
The second fantasy is one that is potentially more harmful in real life.
And in the context of what we talk about every week, I think it's worth indulging.
And that fantasy is the fantasy of changing somebody. This relationship that is depicted in Fifty Shades is one between a
woman who wants something the guy is not prepared to give and is going out of her way to invest her time and
energy into changing him. Yes, she may be curious about the sexual acts that he's offering, but her
curiosity about transgressive sex is his obsession.
It's not her obsession.
And the reason she indulges it to the extent that she does,
unless you feel like I've got this wrong,
is that she wants more with him.
There is literally a moment in the first movie
where Christian has talked about all of
the things that he won't do. He won't sleep in the same bed as her, he won't go on dates with her,
he won't have a normal romantic relationship and she justifiably says to him, well what do I get
out of this? To which he replies, you get me. Perhaps one of the most narcissistic responses
someone can possibly give.
Saying on one hand, I will meet none of your needs.
And on the other hand,
I want you to meet all of my needs and demands.
I don't want to seem like on the other side,
I'm siding with all of the people that suggest
that this kind of sex is wrong.
Because if two people go into that thinking, this is horny, this is fun, whatever, I don't
care about that.
In fact, I would go as far as to say that if she didn't want to do any of that stuff
with him, she would be the wrong person for him.
See, a great relationship is one where Christian Grey meets Anastasia and says, hey, I'm into
lots of weird kinky shit. Are you up for it? And
she says, yeah, I am. By the way, I'm into romance and going to see movies and sleeping in the same
bed and having an intimate emotional relationship. Are you okay with that? And he says, yeah, that
sounds great. And then they have an amazing relationship where they meet each other's needs.
If either one of them can't meet that criteria for each other, they're probably the wrong person.
And this isn't me bashing Fifty Shades.
It's entertainment.
What I'm concerned about is the real life version of this that people play out.
Men and women alike they go into things compromising on their deepest needs
and desires and standards just because they want the person in front of them so for anastasia this
entire relationship is predicated on her fantasy that this man will change to become what she wants, which is just about the most dangerous bet anyone can make in a relationship.
I call this bet the one day wager.
The one day wager trading in your time,
energy, emotions and intimacy on the hope
that the person you're giving it to will one day become what you want them to be.
I'm not saying that the one day wager is wrong, but it is really, really, really risky.
Everybody has a story of somebody they know that held out for somebody to change, change a trait about themselves or make a bigger
commitment, marry them, suddenly want kids, whatever it might be, who are now in despair,
depression, really tumultuous places internally because they feel like they gave so much time to
somebody who never changed.
And if they'd have paid attention to the warning signs along the way,
they realized they could have seen that for themselves.
Now, this isn't to say that people never change because they do.
I know that people change because I watch them change all the time
as a result of the advice that we give,
as a result of the inspiration that people draw from our material.
I see these changes day in day out
but that's somebody who is motivated internally to change that's somebody who's made a decision
that they want to change there is a difference between having the motivation to change
and the person we're with making a decision and having the motivation to change. And I'm going to leave you with a line right now that is going to sum up that distinction.
Consider how hard it is to change yourself and you'll understand what little chance you
have in trying to change others.
That is a profoundly damning quote
when it comes to hoping that the person
we are in a relationship with will change
just because we think it's important they change.
Now, it's a different thing if someone we love
recognizes that we really want them to change
and as a result of their love for us decides fundamentally that it
is paramount to them that they change but until it becomes paramount to them and not
just paramount to you that change will only be momentary it will not last if it comes
at all now if you're with someone right now and you want to make
that bet, you want to make the one-day wager, my promise to you is that you will
never ever have any judgment from me. When it comes to my own life it is just
as hard for me to make those difficult decisions as it is for you. So please
never ever think that I'm coming from a righteous place. I'll never judge you for
it. But if you decide maybe as a result of watching this video that the risk is too high
and that you need to take the other path, then I would like to encourage you down that other path
so that you can start making progress to a world of more choice where you realize that that bet
that wager is not the only game in town it is not your only option there are
many other options wonderful options better options down this path where the
stakes will be so much lower and the payoff so much higher.
Dating is hard, isn't it? It's confusing, it can be stressful, it can be exhausting,
it can be fruitless and lead to burnout.
Well, I wanna fix those things for you
because finding love is a beautiful thing
and it's a deeply human need that we have
that is not going away regardless of how frustrated
we get with the dating process so if you want to escape the horrible dramas of modern day dating
and actually just find the love that you're looking for i have a free training i did called
dating with results where you can just give me one hour of your time is completely free
and i will show you the roadmap for finding love in your life today this year quicker than if you
didn't watch this you can find it right now for free at datingwithresults.com i'll see you over there.