Love Life with Matthew Hussey - (Matt Monday): How to Choose the Right Person
Episode Date: May 12, 2025If you’ve ever found yourself stuck in a pattern of falling for the wrong people, you’re not alone—but that doesn’t mean you’re doomed to repeat the same mistakes. In this video, I’ll show... you how to rewire the way you experience attraction. In it, I share five specific shifts that will help you break free from the patterns sabotaging your love life. From microdosing on emotionally unavailable exes to losing yourself in someone who isn’t ready, we’re getting honest about the real cost of staying in cycles that erode our confidence and waste our time. --- ►► Want Your # 1 Dating Problem Solved Personally? Ask Matthew AI Your First Question Now at. . . → http://www.AskMH.com ►► Order My New Book, "Love Life" at → http://www.LoveLifeBook.com ►► Transform Your Relationship With Life in One Powerful Weekend. Learn More About my Weekend Retreat at → http://www.MHWeekendRetreat.com
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Your feelings will tell you to text the person who hurt you,
to go on one more date with the guy who isn't sure what he wants right now.
The truth is, often what feels good in the moment is exactly what we need to avoid doing. If you've ever thought, why do I keep falling for the wrong people? You are not alone. But
the better question is, why does the wrong person feel so right? That isn't just a bad
habit, it's a wiring issue. And until we change
our internal wiring, the way we experience attraction itself, we will keep gravitating
toward what we know, even if it hurts us. If you're not intentional, your patterns
will keep choosing people for you. Let's change that and get you better results starting
today. Look, we all
have patterns that sabotage our love life. Patterns rooted in fear, in ego, in
early wounds that taught us to chase what feels familiar instead of what's
actually good for us. Some of us get stuck chasing emotionally unavailable
people. Some over invest at the first sign of hope. Others hold back from love altogether,
saying dating apps just don't work for me, while secretly feeling defeated and alone.
These patterns do not define you, but they do determine the outcome you get until you
learn to interrupt them.
Okay step one to changing our wiring when it comes to attraction is we have to make
change necessary. Change doesn't begin with belief, it begins with necessity. The moment
we finally look at ourselves and say, this isn't just hurting, it's costing me everything
I want. Wasted time, missed chances, the hope of a family, the peace of mind
that we thought we were building toward.
In my book, Love Life, I talk about the example
of micro dosing in love, which can mean staying in touch
with someone who isn't really available,
hooking up with an ex or holding onto someone
who gives you just enough to keep you hooked.
If you're doing any of these
things it's time to get honest. What is the real cost of staying here? I mean at least
when we get our heart broken the pain passes eventually. But microdosing is like an old
vinyl record with a scratch where the needle keeps skipping. Heartache on loop. Every message, every hookup, every just checking in
keeps their psychological imprint alive.
It's never enough to satisfy,
but just enough to stop us from moving on.
And most dangerously of all,
it can run out the clock on our opportunity
to find someone who actually wants to be with us fully.
Making change necessary is about being radically
honest with yourself and asking, am I willing to pay for this short-term comfort with my hopes
and dreams or am I finally ready to choose differently? Step two, choose what's most
important. Once you say no more, the next step is deciding what actually matters. Not
what your ego wants, not what impresses your friends, not the checklist of traits you thought
you needed. Because a lot of what we think we want in love is just noise. Your ego says,
I want someone who proves I'm desirable, successful, good enough. But our long-term
happiness wants someone we can fully
be ourselves with.
The problem is, we often choose partners like we're casting a movie. Impressive on paper,
exciting to talk about, but completely wrong for the role of actual partner in real life.
I've seen people cling to charm, status, attraction, even when the relationship makes them feel
anxious, small or not good enough. Because deep down, they are trying to win, to prove
that they are worthy of someone who makes them feel unworthy. But love isn't something
you prove, it's something you feel safe in. So instead of asking, what do I want in a
person? Ask, what do I need to feel at peace in a relationship.
Maybe it's emotional consistency, kindness, shared values, patience, someone who follows
through, makes you laugh, makes you feel seen about how obsessive you are about the quantity
of milk that is acceptable in your tea, and someone who is ready. Because let's not forget, the right person isn't just right.
They are ready.
And if they're not ready, they cannot be right.
So look back.
What was missing the last time
you were deeply unhappy in love?
What did you need but never got?
The answer will show you exactly what should matter
to you the most this time around.
If this is speaking to you,
if you're done falling into the same patterns,
attracting the same unavailable people
or overthinking every step,
then don't miss my free live event
that I am hosting on May the 20th.
It's called Dating Made Simple,
the no-nonsense approach to finding love in 2025
without settling for less. In this event, I'm going to go through the number one mistake people make
early on that keeps them stuck in casual situationships. How to spot time wasters
before you get emotionally invested. How to keep someone's attention without playing games or
compromising on what you need,
what to text after a great first date to build momentum
without second guessing yourself,
and how to keep the right ones engaged and excited
about you.
You'll walk away with a clear, actionable plan
to take back control of your love life
and build the relationship you actually deserve.
Just go to lovelifetraining.com
or click the link in the description below
to save your spot.
It's free and I needed to tell you about this
before I kept going.
Step number three, follow your path, not your feelings.
Once you've chosen a new path, you have to walk it.
And this is where most people fall off
because following your feelings in the moment is easy. But following your values? That takes discipline. Your feelings
will tell you to text the person who hurt you. To go on one more date with the guy who
isn't sure what he wants right now. The truth is, often what feels good in the moment
is exactly what we need to avoid doing. Start asking yourself, will this feel good later?
In 12 step groups, there's a saying, play the tape forward.
In your love life, playing the tape forward
looks like this.
You're about to text someone you shouldn't.
Play the tape forward.
Hmm, now I'm in a conversation with them
and they're starting to make me laugh again
and they're charming and they're drawing me back in.
Play the tape forward.
Hmm, now I'm in their in. Play the tape forward. Now I'm in their bed.
Play the tape forward.
Now it's three weeks later
and I'm back in a situationship with this person
that isn't going anywhere, feeling bad about myself.
My confidence is being eroded.
And when I finally have to break it off again,
I have fresh heartbreak that I have to get over
all over again.
Play the tape forward.
When Audrey and I were first dating,
I was the one who pulled away.
She did not chase.
She didn't try to convince me.
She just quietly stepped back
and stayed aligned with her values.
That told me everything I needed to know
about the kind of woman she was.
And it changed everything about the way I showed up.
Once you know your path, you have to walk it. Which brings us on to step number four.
Communicate your path with confidence. It's not enough to just quietly walk your path.
At some point, you have to be willing to share it clearly and confidently with the people
you're dating. Not as an ultimatum, not as a performance, just as a reflection of
what matters to you. My friend Tanya spent years dating with serious
intentions but things only began to shift when she stopped trying to keep
things casual to see where it goes and started calmly owning her standards.
She actually started telling people she was dating.
I don't sleep with anyone unless we're in a committed relationship.
Not to pressure them, not to prove a point, but just as a way to be honest about where
she stood.
And guess what?
The wrong people weeded themselves out.
But she eventually found someone who respected that and she married him a few years later.
You might have a different boundary. This isn't about following her rules specifically.
It's about having the courage to share your own, whatever that is for you.
That kind of clarity is attractive. It shows you know yourself and it saves you from wasting time
on people who were never on the same path to begin with. And by the way, if you ever feel unsure about how to say these things,
how to communicate what you want without scaring someone off, use Matthew AI to help.
I created this tool to help you with exactly this, whether it's figuring out the right message to
send, how to bring something up, or how to express a boundary without sounding too defensive.
It gives you calm, clear language when it matters most. You can go and try this for free at askmh.com. Remember, when you
share your path with intention, the right people don't run. They recognise you.
Step number five. Don't comparison shop for chemistry. Let's talk about the elephant in the room, chemistry.
You meet someone new, they're kind,
present, emotionally available, boring.
It feels flat.
There's no spark.
So your mind drifts to someone
you felt enormous attraction to, who you hate.
But still, why can't you just feel that again? It's worth asking, why we felt so much attraction towards that person in the first place?
Oh well that's easy Matthew, it's because they were impossibly good looking and I felt alive
when I was with them. Okay, well that is possible I suppose. But I also know that what used to happen
for me a lot, and you can tell me if this happened for you too, is that is possible I suppose. But I also know that what used to happen for me a lot,
and you can tell me if this happened for you too,
is that someone would seem so alluring
when I wasn't sure if they liked me.
But the moment I felt safe that they did like me,
that was when my fault finding began.
Now some people will say, aha,
but I remember a relationship
where I never lost that attraction.
I felt utterly obsessed with them the entire time.
Well, maybe.
Or was it a relationship where you never really felt safe?
I had a relationship like this before,
one where the high never wore off
because I never really felt like I had the person.
When you never feel safe in a relationship,
the chase never really ends.
So the intensity that we feel in these situations
isn't love, it's instability.
It's the adrenaline of trying to earn someone
who never gave us solid ground to stand on.
We need to stop confusing tension with compatibility. And we need to stop
comparing grounded, available people to chaotic experiences that were never going to last.
But here's some good news. We can feel attraction with a lot more people than we think we can.
Attraction doesn't have to come in the form of our predefined type. And as long as there's a baseline of curiosity
and intrigue about someone in the beginning,
chemistry can grow over time.
It's surprising how much we can become attracted to someone
from the way they move, how they carry themselves,
and the things they say.
You can suddenly find yourself unable to stop talking
about someone who, when your friends ask, can we see a picture?
You're like, yeah, let me pull one up.
And then you scroll and you go, that's not a great one of them.
Hang on.
Well, that's not a great one of them either.
I'm not, I'll find, none of these look like them.
I'll find one that actually does and I'll show it to you.
What you're really saying is you had to be there.
And why is that?
Because attraction isn't a profile,
it's a presence. And attraction that lasts is built on real presence, not somebody's
absence. It grows through shared values, safety and laughter. It grows when you accept how
good it is to feel seen, not when you're busy trying to be chosen.
Look, rewiring your attraction doesn't happen overnight, but it is possible, and it's easier than you think.
If you want help making this shift and you want that help from me, come join me live on May the 20th for Dating Made Simple.
Just one hour could shift everything about the way you show up in love.
You are not too late.
You are not broken.
You are just ready for something better.
I'll see you on May 20th. you