Love Life with Matthew Hussey - (Matt Monday): How I Got Over Shyness and Social Anxiety (And You Can Too!)

Episode Date: August 5, 2024

Are you someone who dreads big social gatherings? Or you want to hide under the covers at the thought of being seen in a crowd, meeting new people, or going on a first date?  In this episode, Matt ...talks about his own early experience with being a "shy kid", the psychology behind social anxiety (and what makes it worse), and some powerful mindset shifts that can put us in state of relaxed confidence. ►► Transform Your Relationship with Life in 6 Magical Days... Learn More About My Live Retreat at → http://www.MHRetreat.com   ►► Sign up Now For My Free Weekly Newsletter, The 3 Relationships at ... → http://www.The3Relationships.com ►► Striking up Conversation Can Be Intimidating. Get 9 Effortless Ways to Create Conversation That Feel Natural and Simple at. . . → https://WhatToSayNext.com

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Every single person wants to exist and operate in environments that make them feel safe. whether it's shyness or social anxiety or some combination of the two that is affecting you i know how painful it can be to find that you don't get excited about events or times when you're going to be in a room with other people, especially when there's going to be a lot of people. How it can make you unable to be present and actually enjoy whatever situation you're in because you're spending too much time in your head, feeling uneasy, not feeling present at all, having no sense of calm. I know how it can ruin dates, how it can ruin parties, how it can just make everything feel like a really big deal. So my aim with this video is to give you something practical that you can use that helped me overcome my shyness and my sense of social anxiety that once I had it, worked every single time I stepped into a situation that made me feel anxious. And when you're able to do that, we start to make a
Starting point is 00:01:36 bigger impact on the world and the results we get in the world start to change. That might mean more dates, it might mean attracting love, it might mean being more powerful at work, in a meeting, in a presentation, or it might mean that you're much more fluid and confident working the room in a social engagement. So I'm excited to share this with you. Have a pen and paper ready. If anything speaks to you in this video, make notes. So I was a shy kid and I have also for much of my life identified with having some form of social anxiety. That is surprising to a lot of people who see me as a very extroverted and confident person, at least on the surface. But anyone who knows me will tell you
Starting point is 00:02:31 that I am not a natural life of the party kind of person. I identify with Stephen Fry's notion that there is nothing he hates more than a party. Don't get me wrong, I've had some amazing parties. I've had an amazing time at some parties. But if you ask me to come to a party tonight, my initial reaction is, and there's a good chance over the course of my life
Starting point is 00:03:00 that on my way there, I will feel uneasy or even anxious. In fact, when I was a kid and I used to go to birthday parties of other kids, they used to give out like party bags to all of the kids at the end of the parties. Slime you could throw at a wall or something, which was always the thing I wanted. If there was ever a party bag, the only thing I really cared about was something I could eat and some slime that I could throw at a wall. But I was too shy at the end of the party to go and collect my bag. The kids would all like run to the, to the area where all the, there was a scrum of kids all fighting over party bags. And my cousin Casey, who is my same age, who is my best friend in the world, she would go and get her party bag and mine amidst the scrum
Starting point is 00:03:55 and bring them back because she was a lot more confident in those days than I was. I've played a little catch up since, but she was much more outgoing and confident than me. I remember growing up being at like New Year's Eve parties. That was always the memory in my head is like going to a New Year's Eve party with family, you know, seeing everyone dancing and people in my family coming over to me and telling me to go dance.
Starting point is 00:04:19 Like, come on, dance. It was like, you know when it turns into like almost an aggressive thing? Like, what are you doing? Standing, like, what are you doing standing over there? What are you doing? Line up, dance. And it took my shyness and it kicked it into overdrive because now I felt like there was a spotlight on me. I resented the, the way I was like being cajoled into doing something that I already felt apprehensive about and felt self-conscious about. And so all it did was make me retreat more into my shell. The only time I do remember dancing with utter abandon was in front of the TV screen as a kid watching Mary Poppins, the original,
Starting point is 00:04:59 when all the chimney sweeps do step in time, which was either my Cockney roots coming out and just sort of, there was something in my blood that reacted to a bunch of chimney sweeps all dancing to step in time with Dick Van Dyke. Or it was maybe my grandma who was sat with me, just who loved my moves. I mean, she really thought they were incredible. So maybe it was a willing audience that I really wanted.
Starting point is 00:05:25 But there's something interesting in that, isn't there? Because it's not that I didn't like dancing. I did like dancing, but the idea of dancing with my nan on the sofa and just having a crazy time in front of the TV screen was a very different thing than being at a New Year's party with lots of people and being told I should go and dance in order to be normal like everybody else. By the way, if this video is resonating with you already and you have felt plagued by social
Starting point is 00:05:59 anxiety or shyness in your life, but you really do wanna get out there and meet new people, whether it's to find love or to find new friendships and expand your social circle, I have a brand new free guide that shows you some very specific things you can say to connect and spark up a conversation with a new person. When you're feeling shy or socially anxious, it can help to go on autopilot instead of having to think too hard
Starting point is 00:06:25 and question everything that comes out of your mouth. This guide helps you with that. You can use them as they are, or you can make them your own. Either way, they are free, they are super practical, and they're there at your disposal anytime you need them. It is called Spark and Connect, our new free guide, and it's available at whattosaynext.com.
Starting point is 00:06:55 Shyness is often portrayed as something kind of, it could almost be cute or endearing. And sometimes those labels, although I'm a huge proponent of giving love to the parts of ourselves that, you know, are responsible for us being shy, responsible for us being socially anxious. I think that's a very, very important approach is to find a way to love those parts of ourselves. But I think sometimes we frame it in too much of a noble way that actually can have us clinging to that identity as a shy or socially anxious person. I'm not going as far as to say that it feels like there's something
Starting point is 00:07:36 noble in it, but sometimes we can kind of almost start to wear it as part of our identity, like I'm just an incredibly shy person, like it's an endearing thing about us, or it's sort of almost some kind of affliction that we have that we struggle with. And I actually think that one of the really powerful things we can do, and bear with me as I say this, because this is, for some people, this is like almost an idea that can make them recoil at first. But like I said, this has made made a huge impact on my life, is recognizing that shyness or social anxiety is inherently inward looking. When we're shy, when we're socially anxious,
Starting point is 00:08:34 we are thinking of ourselves, right? We're thinking of how to protect ourselves, how to keep ourselves safe in some way. And like I said, we should give love to the part of ourselves that is trying to keep ourselves safe in some way. And like I said, we should give love to the part of ourselves that is trying to keep us safe and thinks the best way of doing that is to avoid social situations or not to speak too loudly, not to say anything stupid or embarrassing. We should give love to the part of us that's behind that. Oh, this is actually a part of me that's just trying to keep me safe, but it may be mis part of me that's just trying to keep me safe.
Starting point is 00:09:11 But it may be misguided in how it's trying to keep me safe. And it might be especially misguided in what it perceives as danger, right? Because the things that it thinks are danger are actually not real danger. But maybe there was a time in our life where it felt like those things were real danger. Or maybe it's just part of our personality that we've taken with us from a very young age. Either way, giving love to those parts of ourselves is important. But what if we started to see that the effect of that, which is, okay, let's call it shyness and social anxiety. But what's the effect of those two things? We stay quiet, we hold back, we censor ourselves, we're extremely cautious about talking to people or putting
Starting point is 00:09:57 ourselves out there or bringing our authentic vulnerable selves to the table and It can often be from the outside seen as a real lack of warmth because people can't read our minds alright, people only know what we tell them so people can't necessarily look at us and ascertain that oh that person's Incredibly shy that person is incredibly socially anxious people don't't necessarily register that. What they register is a standoffishness, a coldness, an unapproachability. And so what I started to realize is that there is something very inward-looking about this fear that I have and because it's inward-looking it can
Starting point is 00:10:48 ironically amount to a kind of selfishness or to put it another way a lack of generosity. Now allow me to explain this. Every single person wants to exist and operate in environments that make them feel safe. However they achieve that, people achieve that in very different ways, but everyone wants to achieve a feeling of safety. Anytime we go into a room, there are other people like us who are trying to achieve that feeling of safety, of feeling at home in an environment that feels strange, feels different, sometimes feels alien to them. Our shyness actually contributes to the opposite kind of environment for those people. Through our shyness and through our lack of willingness to go out and connect and put ourselves out there authentically and warmly, we are sending a quiet message to other people in
Starting point is 00:12:01 the room that it's not safe for them to do that either. Now, we all know that there are some people who come in very loudly and brashly no matter what, right? Because that's their nature or that's their style or it's what they've learned as a way to feel safe. But there are other people in that room who are just like you and me, who are looking for a way to feel accepted and at home in this environment. And in our shyness, in our inward looking, our fear of rejection is preventing us from making someone else feel less alone. In a sense, this should be comforting
Starting point is 00:12:40 because it also says to us that our shyness, our social anxiety is in a sense not special or unique. It's not our badge of honor to wear on our own. We are not the sole victim of these kinds of thoughts and feelings, that they are actually extremely common. And that by recognizing that they are extremely common, we stop personalizing these feelings as there's something wrong with me. And we can start looking at it as there is just something about being human that can make these kinds of situations scary or difficult or feel threatening, especially if certain things in my past have helped to create that
Starting point is 00:13:27 association for me. That's also happened for many, many, many other people. So in a sense, that's a leveler. I don't have to see myself as beneath everyone else. I can see myself as like everyone else in that these are extremely common feelings. So if there is this kind of communal feeling of it's not easy, then we have a choice to make. Do I, in my shyness or in my anxiety, make it the responsibility of everyone else to do all of the work? Or do I step into a kind of generous leadership where I go and make other people feel the things that I know I would love to feel in
Starting point is 00:14:19 this situation? Quick news update for everybody out there who wants to come and join me for six days this year in September from the 9th to the 15th. My live retreat is happening once and once only this year. So if you want to come and be with me on the beach and do six days of immersive coaching, this is where we do it together. And we will work through the deepest issues that are holding you back, whether it's holding you back from finding the love you want or whether it's holding you back from loving the life you have.
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Starting point is 00:15:22 Now, I know none of these ideas of I'm being selfish, I'm not being generous, I'm letting everyone else do all of the work consciously go through our mind when we're being shy, when we're being socially anxious. But that's actually my point, is that if we do consciously bring those ideas to the forefront of our mind, instead of saying, I feel really shy right now, we might say to ourselves, wow, I'm really lacking in generosity right now. Wow, there's something almost selfish about what I'm doing right now. There are other people who feel this too, and I'm making it all about me. And in doing that, I'm actually depriving someone of the kind of warmth and love and authenticity of the feeling of being at home in a room
Starting point is 00:16:11 with other people that I myself am craving. This requires a transition away from this idea that my kindness, my warmth, my authenticity is something that someone has to come along and unlock within me, which is kind of a transactional relationship in a sense. You have to come and unlock these things, and when you do, I will give them to you. But if we take ourselves away from
Starting point is 00:16:46 the transaction of that and simply say, no, I am warm. I am kind. I am authentic. Notice I'm not saying I am confident. I am bold. I am outgoing. You don't need to be any of those things. You don't need to be anything you're not. But if you are kind, if you are warm, if you are authentic, if you are caring, then these are things that we should offer out more freely without this constant regard for ourselves that says, I have to get mine first. So remember, number one, other people want to feel just as at home as you do. And number two, you actually have the power to make them feel at home by the way that you approach or treat or engage with them. What I'm trying to say in all of this is when you go into a room and you're anxious and you're afraid and you feel shy and you go into self-protection mode, if you feel like, oh my God, I need saving,
Starting point is 00:18:03 allow that to become a new trigger to go and save somebody else. Anytime you go into a situation, this takes seconds. Remember, this isn't years of therapy or psychoanalysis. This is seconds. Where you go into a room and you say, I feel like I need saving right now. Great. Then let me go save somebody else. And it puts us in such a generous state. It puts us in such a state of, of leadership where we say, oh, I'm, I'm the one that can make other people feel better. And I am perfectly placed to do that because I, in my own shyness and in my own social anxiety, understand exactly how this feels. I have this main line to empathy of how people feel in this situation because of what I have experienced my whole life.
Starting point is 00:19:00 Let me use that. Let me make it my superpower. Let me make it this artery of generosity. Anytime I am in a situation where other people are present, turn shyness into generosity and let your generosity be this strange backdoor to confidence. Now, I don't say that as some kind of, you know, one size fits all truth about shyness or about social anxiety. Of course, I know that there are many times where we're crippled and certain people on an ongoing basis are crippled by social anxiety and the idea that, you know, I'm constantly hoarding my generosity or I'm being a selfish person anytime I'm being socially anxious, for some people would be an offensive one. So I understand that. What I'm offering is a frame of reference that can actually be incredibly helpful as a way to take us from a very disempowered state to an empowered one. One of the greatest ways to get ourselves out of inward thinking where we're constantly thinking about how to protect ourselves and keep ourselves safe is to think
Starting point is 00:20:18 about what someone else needs or how we can show up for someone, somebody else who is in need, somebody else who might be having a hard time or how we can take all for someone, somebody else who is in need, somebody else who might be having a hard time, or how we can take all of the pain we felt and help someone else not feel it. And the great irony, the thing I'm talking about here in this video is that by doing that, we actually take our anxiety and our shyness
Starting point is 00:20:38 and we convert it into its opposite, which is a very, very powerful thing. While we're at it, how can we make other people feel comfortable from this state of empowered leadership and generosity that I'm talking about here? I want to tell you a quick story in contrast to that idea of me being a kid on New Year's Eve, being dragged to the dance floor and feeling like I would do anything to get out of it
Starting point is 00:21:07 because I felt dragged and shamed for being shy and being the way I was. I remember a school disco. It's a funny word, isn't it? Disco. I must've been around 13 at the time, 12, 13. There was a friend of mine who I looked up to and I thought he was quite cool. And I remember him saying to me,
Starting point is 00:21:32 "'Should we go dance?' It wasn't a like, I'm dragging you to go dance. He just said, should we go dance? And without even really thinking about it, I went, yeah, okay. I remember us like laughing and kind of being a bit silly. I remember I did like a little spin and he looked at me and he went, that was really good.
Starting point is 00:21:53 He was like, let me try. And then he tried to do it and we were laughing and he looked at me and he went, you're fun, you. And I remember having this moment when he said that, where I went, I'm fun. I'm fun. And it felt so good. And it felt so non-judgmental. It wasn't like anyone was trying to look cool.
Starting point is 00:22:20 It was just this idea that we were both having a good time together. And someone had suddenly given me this label, this identity that I hadn't thought of myself as previously. It's a very powerful thing when someone gives you an identity like that. And all of a sudden you start questioning what you know about yourself and how you think about yourself. I tell you this story to illustrate that when you see someone else who's maybe standing on the sidelines, who's shy, who maybe would like to be more involved, or someone who just wants to feel more at home,
Starting point is 00:22:56 one of the great ways to do it is just to bring them a nonjudgmental loving energy that invites them into the room. Or ask them to teach you something. How do you do that? You have to teach me that, because that puts them in a position of leadership and empowerment.
Starting point is 00:23:12 All of a sudden, you're not saying, you should be doing this. You're saying, that was really cool what you just did. How do you do that? Teach me how to do that. Now you've made them braver by putting them in a role where they're teaching you something. And when they do do something that maybe is a little out of character for them, at least publicly, but probably isn't out of character for them.
Starting point is 00:23:34 They're just finally doing something publicly that they normally do privately in the shower or in the car. When they do that, let's not make the mistake of pointing at the thing they're doing and being like, you're doing it. Look, you're doing it. You're dancing. You're singing. You're being brave. Like that's the thing that all of a sudden makes someone focus on themselves again. And that's the root cause anyway, right? Is I'm now, now what you've done is you've made me aware of myself. And in making me aware of myself, I start going inward looking again. And when we go inward looking, we start to close down because I start to go into protection mode. when someone is coming to life, instead of pointing it out in a way that shines a light on them, just be in the energy with them.
Starting point is 00:24:32 Be the energy that they are. Be beside them with them in that energy. When in doubt, go back in a loving way to that childhood version of yourself. When you were scared, when you were shy, when you were anxious, when you were in your own head, when you were inward looking, and find out what does that you need? What did they need back then? What kind of support or love or encouragement or teammate could they have used back then that would have helped them to feel
Starting point is 00:25:17 comfortable expressing themselves more? Once you know what that is, ask yourself, who could I go out and give that to today? And as a last point, one of the most beautiful things you can ever do that can take away your own shyness, your social anxiety, or not even take them away, just make you realize that you can still go and express yourself in spite of them, is when you recognize what that child needed, you can actually give it to yourself today.
Starting point is 00:26:00 You can give yourself the very warmth and love and encouragement and the teammate, the dance partner that you're craving on the outside. Because you can actually be that friend to yourself in any room. And when you do that, you'll realize that you never went to any party alone. You never went to any event alone. You are always taking this incredible ally, this incredible teammate and cheerleader, and that is you.
Starting point is 00:26:29 Key takeaways from this video. Number one, shyness is inward looking. Focusing on our own fear of rejection prevents us from making someone else feel less alone in a room. Focusing outward is the cure. Generosity of spirit is the antidote to shyness. Two, our kindness shouldn't be a transaction that depends on someone else unlocking it within us.
Starting point is 00:26:57 And number three, we will worry less about our own image and our own self-preservation if instead we think about being an expression of the love, compassion and vulnerability that somebody else needs. And we know they need it because it's something we ourselves are wishing for. I know that so many people who watch this channel are simultaneously on a journey to find love, to build stronger relationships in their life in general, and to build a better relationship with themselves. And I have a place you can do all of that over the next few months and year. It is the Love Life Club, where we have an incredible community of people.
Starting point is 00:27:51 I answer your questions live every month, along with my wife, Audrey, my brother, Stephen Hussey. You share your experiences with other members in the community and connect with this global network of amazing people who are on the same path. And we even have some brand new live events coming up that are exclusive for members this year in different parts of the world.
Starting point is 00:28:14 So if you wanna come and join this thriving and beautiful, loving community of people who are all on this path to becoming more confident, loving life more, and finding the love of their life, then come join us in that experience and I will see you in the next video. Thank you so much, my friends. Don't forget to leave me a comment.
Starting point is 00:28:34 I look forward to reading them. Be well and love life. Outro Music

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