Love Life with Matthew Hussey - (Matt Monday): How to Make Someone Choose YOU (Even if They Have Lots of Options)
Episode Date: October 14, 2024Have you struggled to find people who actually want commitment? Do you feel like you’re always trying to persuade someone why a relationship is a good thing? Dating can feel harder than ever in 2...024. In today’s episode, I explain why so many people are anxious about commitment, give 3 different mindsets on commitment that can totally change someone’s perspective on it, and show what makes someone want commitment with YOU. (Spoiler alert: persuading has nothing to do with it!) >>> 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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This isn't about convincing anyone to want commitment.
This is about representing an energy that makes other people want commitment with you. If you feel like dating today is the hardest time in history to get someone to commit,
you are not alone. For so many people out there who feel like they only find casual relationships,
people who say they're not ready, people who are not emotionally available, people who don't believe in monogamy, people who don't want to get married again because
they've been married before and they don't want to do it all over again. People coming across all
of these scenarios get tired, they get exhausted, they get burnt out and perhaps most tragically
they start believing that finding a relationship is no longer possible. At the very least, it can feel like we have to go
through life convincing other people to want a relationship with us, to want commitment. So in
today's video, I want to talk about a piece of human psychology that I find really fascinating.
I'm going to do it with a very unexpected example. But when you understand this, you're no longer going through life and dating,
trying to convince people to commit.
You're the person who makes people want to commit.
By the way, while we're on the subject and before we get into this video,
there is an event I am holding live as a once only experience on the 22nd of October
called Casual to Committed. The three core principles for getting
to commitment without games or ultimatums. If you're single right now and struggling to meet
people who are ready for a relationship or emotionally available, if you're in a relationship
sort of with someone who's not really committing and you want more, this is me sharing my best insights on how to get
the committed, lasting relationship you want. To sign up, go to lovelifetraining.com. It's
completely free. It'll take seconds to sign up and I will email you all the information you need
to join us on the day. Don't forget to do it now. Before you forget, go to a browser, type in
lovelifetraining.com
and register now. And I will see you on the day.
All right, let's talk about this. I want you to imagine a scenario. You have just walked into a
restaurant. You're hungry. You've been waiting all day for this moment. You've been
excited to go to this restaurant. You sit down, a waiter approaches and hands you a menu. Now,
you've been waiting all day, so you're starving. You open the menu and immediately you're overwhelmed. There are so many options.
This menu is big, like Cheesecake Factory big.
And so in this overwhelmed state,
with all of your food anxiety about choosing the right thing,
choosing the perfect meal,
you look at the waiter and say,
I need your help.
What's good here? Imagine that there are
three different scenarios that play out. Scenario one, the waiter looks at you almost with a hopeless
expression, with a pained look as if this is going to be really hard for you and says, oh boy, I mean everything is good here. Great, you think. How nice to have
so many great options, but that doesn't help me at all. I am still just as overwhelmed. I do not
know what to choose and you haven't helped me. Scenario two, you ask what's good and the waiter shrugs and in a lackluster, monotone voice,
barely looks at you and says,
um, I mean, it's whatever you like.
The wings are pretty good, I guess.
So many problems with this one.
You were excited, you are hungry,
and yet now you're completely unexcited. You're uninspired. It has deflated you.
More so, you even start to wonder if there's something wrong with the food. You actually
love wings. It's not hard to sell you on wings. And yet right now you start to wonder if there's
something wrong with the wings. So this waiter isn't just unhelpful when it comes to making a decision,
they actually undermine what could have been a good option that you would have enjoyed, the wings.
Scenario three.
A waiter comes over, water in hand, sets it down, looks you in the eye and says,
how can I help? And you say,
what's good? And the waiter says, well, you know what? There's a lot of good options,
but the thing that you have to get here is this. And then they point to a specific dish on the
menu. This is undoubtedly the best thing on the menu and by the way is
something you can't get anywhere else. Now I don't need to tell you what
happens next in this scenario. Unless you are fiercely allergic to the thing they
just pointed to, you're in. Now why is that? Why is it that every single person
watching this video right now knows that there is one
scenario among those three that feels so good and makes it so easy?
It's because of the psychological effect of certainty.
And its impact on our decision making cannot be overstated.
This kind of certainty reassures us.
It tells us we're in good hands. It mutes our anxieties about choosing the wrong thing on the menu
or missing out on the right thing,
quietens that part of our mind that makes us not enjoy things,
and instead gives us permission to just lean into the choice we've made.
A choice that we have been reassured is the best one.
So we don't need to worry about it.
Now, how does all of this relate to your love life?
Think about it.
Dating today is not unlike the food anxiety we have
when we've been starving all day and we're about to eat.
The difference is we're now not choosing
what to have for dinner,
we're choosing who to have 10,000 dinners with for the rest of our lives.
The stakes of that decision feel impossibly high.
And of course, it's not just who to have dinner with.
It's who we might raise children with.
It's who we're going to trust with our financial situation.
It's who we're going to be okay sharing a bed with every night for the rest of our lives.
It's no wonder we feel anxious in this area, men and women alike. This isn't just, oh, people don't
commit these days. This is people are nervous about making the wrong choice. And by the way,
the menu seems really big. Dating apps make it look like there is this endless buffet of people
and every different kind you can imagine.
Now, whether someone can get all of those people or not is kind of irrelevant.
It feels like there's a lot of choice.
And the feeling of there being a lot of choice
only compounds the anxiety we feel about making the wrong choice.
So when we're in that situation, we look for certainty.
We look to have our hand held in making the right decision
so that we can feel safe in knowing
we're doing the right thing.
The big human psychological insight of this video
is recognizing that you can actually represent the certainty that other
people need. This isn't about convincing anyone to want commitment. This is about representing
an energy that makes other people want commitment with you. This means recognizing that you can be your representative.
You can be the waiter that makes it easy for someone to decide what to get on the menu.
And by the way, we have to start by not giving people so much credit all the time.
People don't necessarily know what they want or what they think they want is some idea of the person they thought they'd end up with from 15 years ago that's never been updated.
There is a great Steve Jobs quote that goes,
some people say, give the customers what they want,
but that's not my approach.
Our job is to figure out what they're going to want
before they do.
I think Henry Ford once said,
if I'd asked customers what they wanted,
they would have told me a faster horse.
People don't know what they want until you show it to them.
What we can do in dating and relationships
is make people realize
through our infectious sense of certainty
that the thing that they want
that maybe they didn't even know they wanted
is the person standing right in front of them.
That means opting to be waiter number three,
the one who actually guides people
with a sense of certainty to the right option.
In this case, the right option is you for a relationship.
The first waiter didn't give any solid recommendation.
They weren't making you feel weird about items on the menu
or feeling like they weren't good.
It still wasn't helpful
and it wasn't recommending anything.
And that's the important part about dating
is that if you want someone to choose you,
you have to be willing to recommend yourself.
You can't get away with saying,
"'Everyone's great, I'm great too,
do your thing. How many YouTube channels are there? How many channels are there like my YouTube
channel? A bunch. When I'm talking about my YouTube channel, especially when I want people to actually
engage with it and watch it, I don't say there's plenty of great YouTube channels. I'm one of them. I say, here's why you should watch
mine. Here's what's awesome about my YouTube channel. And perhaps most importantly,
here's why it's awesome for you, specifically you. That ability to recommend myself makes all the
difference. So you don't want to be waiter number one when you're going
out there to find love. You also don't want to be waiter number two who is making someone question
whether they want that thing in the first place. That's the equivalent in dating of us talking
ourselves down, talking with a high degree of uncertainty, not having any passion about
recommending ourselves and leaving someone thinking, well, even if I was
excited about this person to begin with, I'm now actually starting to question my choices by the
energy they're giving off. We want to be waiter number three, the one that with confidence and
certainty recommends something. Now, a lot of people will be watching this and feeling like
this sounds amazing, but
this feels like an unattainable level of certainty.
This feels like I have to be a kind of confident that I can't even relate to because I can't
go out there and talk about myself like I'm the greatest person in the world and that,
you know, someone should be with me above all others.
I understand that.
But we don't have to base our certainty
on a kind of confidence
that I'm never gonna get rejected because I'm so great.
We can base our certainty on far more concrete ground,
like certainty about what we're looking for
and what we value,
certainty about what we don't value and what we don't want,
certainty about what we bring. Certainty about what we don't value and what we don't want. Certainty about what we bring to the table. Certainty about what isn't interesting enough for us to keep giving our time
and energy to. And when we start developing certainty around these things, it actually has
the same effect because it's all certainty. So this isn't the certainty that comes from arrogance.
This is a very different, much more mature kind of certainty
that anyone can have, by the way.
So quick recap, what have we talked about today?
That whether we're choosing our dinner at a nice restaurant
or whether we are choosing a partner for life,
we come to the
table with an internal anxiety about making the right choice. When that internal anxiety meets
the external big menu problem in food or in dating, that creates decision paralysis. And that
is what's happening in modern dating today for so many people. But if
we come along as the outside certainty that someone needs to develop the internal peace of
mind about their choices, we will get a completely different level of commitment to other people.
I want to show you how to apply this psychological insight in practical ways in your dating life moving forward. Whether
you're completely single right now and not seeing anyone or whether you're seeing someone but it's
not progressing in the way that you want. I want to show you how to apply this so that you can
develop that sense of certainty that changes the way people operate around you and has them really
step up for you and choose you. On October the 22nd, I'm going to be going through all of
this in detail for free in a very rare once only live event. I want you to join me. You can go to
lovelifetraining.com right now and register and I will see you on the day. Lovelifetraining.com is the link.
Look for me in your inbox today. Once you've signed up, I'll send you all of the information
and I will see you on the 22nd of October. Thank you for watching. Be well and love life. Outro Music