Love Life with Matthew Hussey - (Matt Monday): How To Respond To "Bare Minimum" Texting
Episode Date: September 9, 2024Ever found yourself sitting with your friends trying to "decode" what someone's texts mean, especially when they seem to be giving the bare minimum? And should you respond with the same aloof behavior...?  Today’s video will give you some simple techniques for clear communication, show you how to model the behavior you want to see, and give you the confidence to set your standards so you're not waiting around for someone to put in more effort. ►► Ask Matthew AI Your Biggest Dating Question for Free Now at. . . → http://www.AskMH.com Â
Transcript
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Have you ever sat around with your friends and decoded text messages?
You get a text message, you wonder what it means, what you should say back.
You have a tribunal with your friends to try and figure it out. Have you experienced someone who gives you so little effort in text messages that you
wonder why on earth you are continuing to engage with them, and yet you can't help
but feel this irresistible urge to keep going with them.
This is the bare minimum texting.
And I wanna talk about how you can get out of it today.
What does it look like to show up in a way
that is actually going to make someone put in more effort?
Now, I went for a little scroll through tiktok and i found this video of a woman breaking down
with her friends a text exchange that she had with a guy who's driving her crazy all right
we'll watch it together. He responds 138. It was a long combo. I didn't want to respond.
Still doesn't call you back.
Still doesn't call me back.
So then I say, call me.
You don't call me.
And then you never call me back.
It's so annoying.
244 responds at 820.
I legit still hasn't called me.
You left.
Nice.
What are you doing?
What am I doing right now?
Nothing, you're not responding.
No. It's done.
No, let's respond to that.
I love the moment at the end
where she's just so forlorn
that her friend thinks she shouldn't
send a message back at all.
I really feel like this video
just epitomizes this internal schism we feel
where one part of us wants to rage about someone and complain about
them and talk about how awful they are. And the other part of us desperately wants to text them
and talk about our feelings with them. This is a very, very common scenario of, I mean,
firstly, have you ever done this? Have you ever sat around with your friends and decoded text messages? I think that's a very common thing as well, isn't it? You
get a text message, you wonder what it means, what you should say back. You have a tribunal
with your friends to try and figure it out. This person wouldn't even be having this conversation
with her friends if he was putting in an amount of effort that was enjoyable to her. It would be a very different conversation at least,
but he's giving so little.
You may remember this kind of guy
from one of my previous videos.
This is the man who comes in strong,
shows lots of interest, and then disappears.
Except he doesn't quite disappear.
He still pops up now and again
with an intermittent text at random
intervals to make sure that you cannot forget him. The MPI guy is the person who puts in the minimum
possible investment to keep your attention while giving as little as they can get away with. So
let's talk about this. I want to break this down step by step because I always
find practical examples to be the thing that's most educational. I want to take this woman's
text exchange and look at where she might have done something different than she did.
She's really likable, this woman, isn't she?
Morning, good morning.
I didn't reply with an emoji,
cause like, why would I?
Yeah. Why?
All right, I want to stop there for a moment.
The idea of, I didn't want to reply with an emoji,
cause why would I?
He has sent, I can't tell what emoji
he has put in his message,
but he sent a good morning with an emoji.
She, in a sense, is falling into a common trap of, even in response to his dry text,
what she sends is a one word response. So again, in that response, there's like a degree of
protectionism. Like I don't want to show too much. I don't want to show that I really care.
And the challenge of that is when we're protecting ourselves by being aloof, we aren't demanding the
things we really want from someone.
We're not communicating our needs.
We're not communicating a standard.
In a way, we're actually dropping to the level of their standard, right?
We're giving them permission to keep talking to us like this
because that's how we're talking to them
while never voicing our needs about how we want them to talk to us.
And we're not modeling the kind of communication or behavior that we would like to see from them.
And that word is really important, modeling, because somewhere along the way, we have to model the kind of energy we want to see from somebody else to see if they can rise to meet us there.
There's a great line that Shakespeare said of Falstaff, his character in Henry V.
He said, he wasn't just a wit, but a cause of wit in others. Very, very interesting line. Not just
a wit, but a cause of wit in others. Now think about that. That's leadership. That we can be something, but by being
it, be a cause of it in someone else. By being flirtatious, we can elicit a more flirtatious
energy from someone else. By being human, we might be able to cause more humanity in another person.
By being authentic, we can cause more authenticity in another person, but that requires leadership.
It means not waiting around for someone to be something first, but to model it and to see if
they can meet us there. So I said I liked when she called him, right? I thought that was proactive.
It was bold. It was confident. But when he didn't pick up, she then sent a message saying, call me. And that then
to me almost veers into the kind of communication that she doesn't want from him. Sort of terse,
lacking in any warmth. So what could she have said instead? She could have said, hey, I just
tried you and couldn't get through. Give me a call when you have a moment. This is modeling
the kind of mature communication that she wants to receive from him. And by the way, everything I'm
doing right now is just warm up because the main message that is going to make the difference
is the one that's going to come at the end. Let's keep going with this video for now.
Yeah, her response, 138. It was a long combo.
I totally get her annoyance because he's annoying me as I'm listening to it.
Maybe he's annoying you too.
I didn't want to respond.
Still doesn't call you back.
Still doesn't call me back.
Okay.
So then I say, call me.
Call me.
And then you never call me back.
It's so annoying.
Now again, when she says call me, it's kind of like, you know, barking something at someone.
But without actually really expressing your standard or that you're not interested in continuing to text.
Obviously, there's a right way to do that and a wrong way to do that.
But simply barking at someone, call me again, isn't necessarily the best way to go about it.
She then says, you never called me back, it's so annoying.
Now, we know why she's saying that,
she's being, in a way, she's being authentic.
Like, this is really annoying.
It is really annoying.
We're all annoyed for her watching this.
But when she says that,
it actually has the opposite effect of what she wants. She
wants him to call her. But by saying, you never called me back, it's so annoying. She's actually
just giving him more attention for the thing that she doesn't want. In a way, she's rewarding the
behavior. By saying to a person, it's so annoying, you're really saying, I like you so much.
I really want you to call me and you're not calling me.
And that's annoying because I like you and I want you to call me.
It's just another form of attention for someone who doesn't deserve the attention.
And the other thing about this sentence is that it has no power to it, right?
It's not a standard because in a way,
this sentence is saying,
it's annoying that you haven't called me back,
but I'm not gonna do anything about it, right?
It's a disempowered statement.
Now let's imagine that none of what I've suggested happened
and that the communication had kept going
exactly the way it did.
Let's find another moment
where she could have intercepted this pattern. And by the way, that's the way it did. Let's find another moment where she could have intercepted this
pattern. And by the way, that's the beauty of communication. There's so many different moments
that even if we've been stuck in a certain way of being with someone for a long time,
we can take the off-ramp and do something different. By the way, before we continue,
if you enjoy this style of advice from me, if you're thinking, God, I would
love to be in the hot seat getting very specific advice for my scenario, getting a play-by-play for
what I'm going through right now, go and try Matthew AI. We just released this last week.
People's minds have already been blown by it. People have given it thousands and thousands of specific scenarios and got their question answered.
So go over to askmh.com.
You can literally call it and speak your question.
You don't even have to type it and you will hear my voice giving you an answer.
You can give as much detail as you want.
You can be as specific as you want.
It will take all of your situation
into account before giving you an answer. And it's been trained on 17 years of my content so
that what you hear is not some generic internet answer. It's my answer exclusively from me and my
content. So go check it out. Askmh.com is the link.
Ask your question for free right now.
I can't wait to hear your feedback
because like I said,
this has been blowing people's minds
and I can't wait to hear the same from you.
All right, back to this text exchange.
Nice.
What are you doing?
What am I doing right now?
Nothing.
You're not responding.
No.
It's done.
You even see there the encouragement from her friends to say, do nothing.
You know, you just don't respond, which is another version of having one's guard up and wanting to look aloof instead of actually communicating. So again, all this does is enable
his behavior because when he comes back three days from now or the next day and texts her and she
texts back, what she's really communicated is, I'm just going to disappear on you at random moments,
not say why, not say that your behavior isn't enough for me, but instead just look
like I'm indifferent and I don't care that much. Even though right now I have your text
messages projected onto a screen in front of all my friends. Now let's say that she
does send that last message that she's around if he wants to give her a call and it would
be great to catch up properly. And let's say that he says in reply, I'm out with my boys tonight, how's your evening?
So he still dismisses the phone call, albeit because he's busy, we don't know,
it doesn't really matter. What does matter is that when she replies to that,
she shows that she's not interested in carrying on this text exchange. So she would then say,
no worries, have a great evening, catch up tomorrow when you can talk. So she's not
entertaining his question, not out of rudeness, but out of the fact that she's given him different
opportunities to get on the phone and have a conversation with her today. He's made it
impossible at every turn. And so now she's not being cold. She's saying,
have a great night, but let's catch up tomorrow when you can call, which is also a standard,
right? I'm basically saying, don't contact me tomorrow unless it's a phone call. Now let's put
a cap on this because I know what you're thinking. What if he sends her a text tomorrow instead of calling?
What if he reaches out to her and says, how's your day going? Right. Which starts to feel like a
form of gaslighting that I keep saying the same thing and you keep acting like I haven't said it.
Like you have amnesia for me asking for a phone call. Here's what she could say. And so far,
what we've been communicating with these amended texts is an indirect standard. Here's where you
can get more direct. And I love this message that I'm about to give you. I want you to be brave
enough to send it if you ever find yourself in a situation like this. Here's what you write.
I don't know if I'm going crazy, but it feels like way too much effort to get you on the phone
for a real conversation. I don't mind texting in general, but these short exchanges just aren't
all that rewarding. LOL. Are you only interested in texting? I like the, I don't know if I'm going crazy because it allows you to kind of
almost point out that, you know, maybe you've judged him too soon. Maybe there is a legitimate
reason why yesterday, last night, and the first half of today, he couldn't do the simple thing
that you had mentioned and kept pretending like you weren't mentioning it. So I like that start.
I love the idea of it feels like way too much effort to get you on the phone for
a real conversation because what you're really saying there is this isn't sustainable. I'm
not going to keep putting in this amount of effort. I'm not going to ignore the elephant
in the room that I'm trying harder than you are to have a real conversation. I'm pointing out that I am trying to get a phone call with you and that it's too much work.
So I'm not going to keep putting in that much effort.
And then you're saying that you don't mind texting in general.
It's not that you have a problem with texting.
It's simply that this style of communication, especially his style, which is really dry and short, is not rewarding. It might be different
if he was sending amazing text messages, which he's not, but what she's getting isn't rewarding.
And she's pointing that out. Hey, I have a higher standard for being entertained in conversation
than this. This isn't enough for me. This isn't worth my time. Are you only interested in texting?
So this is a very empowered response. It gives someone nowhere to go.
They can't exactly keep texting you and pretend that it's all okay after you've said that, can they?
Now, I want to point out that I don't know this person's situation.
I don't know the conversations that have preceded this text exchange, so while I'm
having some fun talking about what she could have said, for all I know this
lovely human being had a massive fight with this person right before this text
exchange and that's why she's being so short in her replies. But the principles of this video still stand.
And, you know, it's always fun when I get more context,
I'm often like, oh, well, if that's the case,
then I would send this instead,
which you know, if you've ever been coached by me
or worked with me in my Love Life Club,
you know that more context helps.
It's why, by the way,
Matthew AI is such a cool thing for you to be able to use,
because you can give it all the context in the world. You can tell Matthew AI everything that
you're going through, how the last exchange was, that you want it to be a bit more like this,
or to take account of that. And it will help you figure out what something means, what you can do about it, and what you can say next.
So before you leave this video, do me a favor,
go over to askmh.com and ask your question of Matthew AI.
You can even, if you wanna do a version
of what we just did in this video,
upload your text exchange or your conversation, and it will help
you understand it and know what to say and do next. So go check it out. Askmh.com is that link
again. And I can't wait to know what you think. I'll see you next week. Be well. Love life. Thank you.