Love Life with Matthew Hussey - (Matt Monday): How to Attract People Who WANT Commitment
Episode Date: October 21, 2024Why is it that we seem to be attracted to certain people who only give us scraps of attention? It often happens when we tell ourselves that someone is so rare and desirable that they’re worth holdin...g on to even if they don’t want the same things as us. In today’s episode, I’ll show you the trap that many people end up falling into, plus one key quality that results in more commitment. Whether you’re sick of superficial situationships or want to learn how to grow closer in your relationship, this is for you! ►► Discover the Biggest Reason Why People Struggle to Get Commitment, and How You Can Avoid “Relationship Limbo” Once and for All. Register Now for my FREE Masterclass, From Casual to Committed at → http://www.LoveLifeTraining.com ►► Order My New Book, "Love Life" at → http://www.LoveLifeBook.com ►► FREE Video Training: “Dating With Results” → http://www.DatingWithResults.com
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to be truly connected to what it is we want in this life and then be disciplined about saying
no to what clearly does not represent that. There is a quality that if we adopt it can change our lives when it comes to the willingness of
other people to commit to us for a real relationship. There's also a trap that so many of us are falling into that is consistently leading
us towards casual relationships or flings or being used in situations that never go anywhere.
In this video, I'm going to start with the trap and then I'm going to talk to you about the quality
that you can adopt today that will begin to change everything. If you want a long-term relationship,
this video might be one of the most important videos of mine that you have ever watched.
Now, before we get into it, I just want to say hello to anyone who's new to the channel. I'm
Matthew Hussey. For the last 17 years of my life, I've been helping people find love
through relational intelligence and confidence. I just wrote a brand new book called Love Life.
And if you want to do a live training with me,
I have one coming up in two days on October the 22nd,
all about getting into a real relationship.
So if one of your big goals right now is finding a committed long-term relationship,
this should be essential watching for you. And it is only
happening live this once. You can join this event for free by signing up at lovelifetraining.com.
It will take you seconds to do that and then come back here and watch the rest of this video.
Lovelifetraining.com is the link. Go there now and I'll see you in a second.
Why is it so many of us are struggling to find commitment? Well, let's start with where many of us are beginning. Wanting a relationship, maybe wanting it more than anything else in the world
right now, but also feeling like a relationship is really hard to find. Maybe even more than that, that attraction
is really hard to find. So now what happens is when we find some attraction or when we find even
the slightest hope of something that could lead to a relationship, we cling onto it. Why? Because
when a deep desire for a relationship meets a scarcity mindset around the possibility of getting one, that leads to a sense of panic those people, when they see someone who's willing to lower their
standards, realize that this is a match because they can continue to give little with all the
things they want to get, sex, intimacy, in many cases, true emotional connection, emotional support,
companionship, but they never need to give real commitment.
They never need to make the sacrifices or the compromises or the true investment necessary
to have a real relationship.
So this ends up creating this worldview for people who want commitment, that no one wants
commitment because their fear makes them lower their standards and lowering their standards makes them attract the very people who only want to give scraps.
And then by investing in people who only want to give scraps, they start being convinced
that the only people around are people who give scraps.
Now, people who give little have a vested interest in convincing you that you should
accept little or that you should accept little
or that you're not worth more than that.
And that starts to feed into our own insecurities
that maybe we're not worth more than that.
Maybe I've never quite felt enough.
Maybe I've started to convince myself
I'm not attractive anymore now that I'm older.
Maybe I've been told my whole life that I'm odd
or not the hot one or someone
who's always going to have a hard time in love. But I have an internal story of insecurity that
starts to meet an external force that is validating that story. But that external force doesn't just
come from the people we date. It can come from society and it does.
We live in a world now where to a scary degree, arguments are being put forward about the reality
of the dating marketplace and how all men just want a woman who is young and hot. All women just
want a guy who is tall and muscular and has made a lot of money.
And everything you need to know about how attractive you are in the world, you can break
down to these kinds of metrics.
And they also can point to why you're having such trouble because you're missing these
key ingredients that make you attractive. This to me is yet another form of messaging that argues for
you to lower your standards. And I'm not talking about unsuperficial things like looks and status
and how successful someone is or anything like that. I've long argued and do so in this book
that those are the wrong things to chase. By all means, make sure
that when you go for a relationship, there's some chemistry, but chasing those metrics, I've been
arguing for quite some time now, is the wrong approach to finding happiness in love. But
lowering our standards for how someone treats us or how much they invest in us is a losing game.
And when we keep hearing these messages from society
that we're not attractive enough, we're not young enough,
we're not successful enough, we're not something enough,
we start to feel like lowering our standards
is the only way we're ever gonna find
some form of companionship.
And that maybe a relationship isn't possible anymore,
so I'll just take what I can get.
I don't believe in this world that is being put forward by people who talk in this way. Is it true
that there is a reality where those things are the laws that govern people's behavior and dating?
Of course. In the same way that for a gangster their reality is crime and not being able to trust people and always looking over their shoulder.
In the same way that reality for a Silicon Valley startup is one of an obsessive focus on unlimited growth that never ends.
Saying everyone cares about these things.
And if you don't live up to this idea of what is
attractive, you're in trouble and you're going to have to start really lowering your standards.
To me, that's like making a universal statement like all anyone cares about is money. Now,
there of course are realities where that's true. There are an enormous number of people
who are driven predominantly, in some cases solely, by
money. But clearly we don't live in a world where everyone only cares about
money. We don't even live in a world where everyone is driven by money. There
are plenty of people who live lives who have no care for having more money than
they actually need to get by. There are plenty of people who choose jobs that
are eminently capable
of doing other jobs that would make more money, but do this job because it feeds their creativity
or it feeds their passion or their soul. So we don't live in a world where everyone cares about
money, but it is true that many people are motivated by money. And it's also true that
there are people who only care about money. My
argument is not that those worlds don't exist, it's that those aren't the only world. There are
multiple realities all going on at the same time and we get to choose which one we want to live in
and which one we are going to engage with. I submit to you, are there people you know who have made choices
in love, not based on all of these factors, but based on how incredible the person is that they're
with? What an incredible human being they are. What an amazing teammate they are. The fact that
they're buds, you know, this idea of this is what you have to have to have a relationship or to be
worthy in the marketplace
is an insult to the things that transcend all of that, that are actually the things that make a
great relationship, that you're buds, that you're in it together, that you're a team, that you have
something that's bigger than all of that. And by the way, it better be because since we're talking
about commitment, commitment doesn't exist if it's
purely predicated on these transactional factors of you staying as hot as you are today, you looking
as young as you look today, you having as much money as you had on the day I met you. What kind
of relationship is that? What that means is what the day I lose money, you're not going to be with
me anymore. I have to start losing sleep at night lose money, you're not going to be with me
anymore. I have to start losing sleep at night, not knowing if you're going to stick around. Then
what we had wasn't love. What we had wasn't a real commitment. It's ironic that the very thing
that people talk about are the things that will get you a relationship. These metrics that if you
don't live up to them, you're going to have a really hard time and you're going to have to settle for less, are the same things that make a relationship so wildly insecure.
Because now, based on that idea, you have a bunch of people who are in relationships thinking that
what they have is love, when in actual fact, what they have is complete and utter superficiality
masking as love that only exists as long as those superficial metrics
are maintained. And the subtext is always that you should accept what you can get and be grateful
for it. Now, my argument is that that is a reality and why on earth would you want to date someone in that reality, but that there are also other
realities.
Realities that are far more beautiful, that look at human beings with a far greater respect,
that are far less ugly and crude in their analysis of how we make decisions and that there are people in that world that are
absolutely worth meeting and dating and falling in love with. So now we arrive at that quality
I was talking about that can lead to more commitment in our lives. That quality is discipline.
You see, in order to not fall prey to a reality that doesn't serve us and to
only align ourselves with a reality full of people that do serve us, we have to be disciplined
about being able to say no to short-term reward. Because often the people who are giving us scraps
are still feeding some kind of dopamine cycle for us.
They're still feeding some kind of hope
that one day the situation will change
and we'll finally get what we want.
They're still giving us a sense of progress,
at least in the very beginning,
when we feel like at least we've met someone
and it's not the case that I have no one.
At least they give us a story.
We can tell our friends of something that's going on
in our love lives.
And that can feel like a form of progress.
We have to have the discipline to be truly connected
to what it is we want in this life,
to what feels good to us,
to the kind of relationship that is gonna make us happy.
And then be disciplined about saying no
to what clearly does not represent that,
even if there's not someone else to say yes to right now.
Because even when it feels like
there's nothing but blank space in our love lives,
if we are saying no to the wrong reality,
we are still saying yes to the right one. We are saying yes to the wrong reality, we are still saying yes to the right one.
We are saying yes to the kind of culture
that we want to create in our love lives.
We are saying yes to the kinds of relationships
that are beautiful to us, that are deep,
that are magical, that are predicated on the right things.
And when we're able to be disciplined in this way,
what we get is more respect. We're respected for being someone who is aligned with our intentions, for someone who has
the internal sense of integrity that says, I'm not going to be waylaid from the thing that really
matters to me, the kind of relationship that I really want. And that respect ends up
being one of the primary reasons that we get attraction and that we get other people's
discipline in continuing to invest in us. This is one of the great ironies is that I believe
on our part, we need more discipline in sticking to what we actually want.
But what we also need is someone who has the kind of discipline that makes it possible for
them to have a real relationship. Because one of the things that a long-term relationship requires
is discipline. It requires someone to show up day after day, many days where they don't feel like it,
or when the honeymoon
period has worn off. That's when commitment actually matters. Commitment doesn't matter
when there's just this kind of velocity to the attraction because everyone's really excited
and it feels good and our dopamine is just firing constantly. Then you don't need commitment. There
is just this force pulling you forward towards something.
But when that force subsides, in the same way that at a certain point when you have a great
business idea, at some point the reality will set in of running a business is no longer an idea that
you're excited to talk about, that's when commitment steps in. And commitment at that
level requires discipline. The most powerful quality will
wind up being the respect that you engender in other people through your discipline about staying
true to what you want. And by the way, the respect that people have for us when we're like this,
when we have that discipline, is evergreen. That is something that can last a lifetime,
which cannot be said for many of these other qualities
we've been talking about.
Our looks will fade.
We may very well go through ups and downs financially.
Men, we will not look as strong and as manly
as we do today when we are 80.
We are not gonna maintain these things,
but respect is something that can be maintained.
I'm not saying that you shouldn't work on the things that you can work on. Work hard if you
feel inclined to. Put yourself in a nice position financially. Become as hot as you can be without
doing anything that compromises your values or obsessing over it. You know, do what you can do to become attractive superficially
to a wide range of people. There's nothing wrong with that, but never be under the assumption that
if you don't match up to other people in those areas, there is going to be no one in the world
that sees your value, a value that transcends all of those things. I would argue that for me,
what is absolutely a truth is that the person worthy of your commitment is by definition,
the person who sees your value beyond those things. So you have to one, give yourself
more credit for being attractive beyond those things that the world is telling you, or certain
people at least are telling you, you have to have or you're worthless. We also have to give a lot
more credit to the world. That just because some people in the world tell us that this is all that
matters, it doesn't make it true. That there are many people in the world who don't think like that.
And there are many people in the world that can't wait to give you credit
for how amazing you are as a human being.
And that the ones that do are the ones that you will have the greatest relationships with.
And the ones that don't are people that you should be thankful you missed out on along the way.
Now, if you want to come and work on this with me in a practical way, because this video,
you know, I've been putting forward a point of view, but my work in my actual coaching is showing people how to make this practical in their lives. I want to show you how to do that. And in two days,
I am running a big live event on exactly
how you can apply the things that I'm talking about in this video. It is called Casual to
Committed. The three core principles for getting to commitment without games and without ultimatums.
And we have many thousands of people already signed up for this. It's a free event, but it's
an event that is only happening this once. So come
and join us. If you've never done a live coaching session with me, then you have to come. And if you
have come before, well, you have to come again because we worked really hard on this one and
it's my final one of the year. So come join us. Go to lovelifetraining.com to sign up for free.
I will see you there on Tuesday and I can't wait.
Thank you so much for watching as always.
Be well, love life, and I'll see you on Tuesday. Bye.