Love Life with Matthew Hussey - (Matt Monday): How to Stop Addictive Thoughts About Someone Bad for You
Episode Date: October 23, 2023“How can I stop addictive thoughts about someone who’s wrong for me?” When we really like someone but know there are signs of problems, we’ll often overvalue them for their charisma and cha...rm . . . and set ourselves up for massive future heartbreak. If you find yourself getting fixated on someone too quickly—trying to make them fit into a relationship based on who they could be—then watch this week’s episode (taken from my Live Retreat) to figure out when someone is truly worthy of your investment. --- ►► Discover the 4 Secrets for Escaping Casual Dating Traps. Claim Your FREE PASS for my Dating With Results Training. . . → http://www.DatingWithResults.com
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You really want to get obsessed with someone because they're super charming or because you think you have a great connection with that person?
You have a great connection with that person? Let the relationship prove it out. Hey everybody, it's Matthew Hussey with the Love Life Podcast.
I am excited to share this clip with you today.
Let's get into it.
How can you stop the addictive thoughts about a man that's not right for you?
Is that a good one? Firstly,
we have to ask ourselves, where are these addictive thoughts coming from? If he's not right for you, and you've truly accepted that, then why the addictive thoughts? Now, what
this person's really saying is, logically, I know he's not right
for me, but emotionally, that's not become a truth for me. And if you want to understand on an
emotional level, it's like, I mean, it is incredible what happens to us as human beings,
where we start to like someone. We decide so quickly how wonderful
they'd be for us. And then based on a fantasy, we start having these addictive thoughts.
This has nothing to do with reality. Nothing. And the one thing,
to be self-referential about this, the one thing I know is I may have a lot of thoughts about someone that I have a crush on that I want to talk to and I want to ask out.
And there might be an addictive quality to wanting to ask them out.
But once someone says yes or no, if they are not interested, my interest stops there.
It's no longer interesting to me if that person's not interested, my interest stops there. It's no longer interesting to me if that person's not
interested. If I go on a date with someone or two dates or three dates or whatever, and then they
ghost me, but I really liked them, it may be upsetting, but I really don't like after that.
If this person isn't interested, this is not attractive to me.
And we have to assess the part of ourselves that somehow is doing this mental gymnastics
where someone who's not actually paying attention to us, we've still somehow made right for us.
Someone who's not giving us what we need is somehow still right for us.
I just, that to me is like, it's a lack of acceptance of what you actually need.
Because look, I've had crushes on people who, for whatever reason, couldn't give me what I wanted
or whatever. And I thought they may have been super sexy. They may
have had this way about them. They may have just been this way, you know, you know, sometimes it's
the way someone moves. It's the way they smile. It's their charm. It's their charisma. It's
something. But even then someone can have all those things. And if they don't have the part
that is, I want to really go for it with you. I want to have like, I want to, I want to have a
great relationship with you. I want to pursue something. And that's what I want. really go for it with you. I want to have a great relationship with you.
I want to pursue something.
And that's what I want.
I just am not under any illusion that there's anything that exciting about this person.
They might still be sexy to me.
I might not be able to kill that part immediately.
Because they might still be super sexy.
But I'm not.
I'm not holding on to these addictive thoughts about what they could be
because they've literally shown me they can't be that.
So that addictive thought comes from, firstly, a massive overvaluation
of what someone is bringing to the table
because you literally have to make shit up to fantasize about them that much. You have to concoct an idea of how great you'd be together that doesn't
exist. Like someone, what? Because you're attracted to them and you had a good night?
Because you had a good connection? That means what, and I've experienced enough people in life, not just women, men too, who
I've had a great time with.
They've been fun people.
Like I've developed quick friendships with them.
I'm like, this is a really cool guy.
I like this guy a lot.
Super charming.
There are some people who are just, they can charm the pants off you so quickly.
And you're just like, this person's so great to be around.
And then you realize this person's so great to be around. And then you
realize this person's a nightmare. Haven't you experienced that? How's it if you've experienced
that? So is the part really that compelling, the charming part? Like it's not to me anymore.
It's not. I grew out of that because I've had enough experiences of super charming people that I definitely don't want to be like in life.
Frankly, I'd rather be more, I don't know.
I'd rather be more underwhelming at first.
And allow people to know me and know what I'm all about and bring real value, then be Mr. Charming in the first minute of meeting me
and you learn very quickly that that's all I've got to offer.
We'll work on both because why not, right?
That's what my whole impact program is about.
It's like if you can work on your instant impact with people, why not?
It's another tool in your belt.
But I don't overvalue people's initial charm anymore,
or my initial connection with someone, because I have learned I can have an incredible time with
someone who is terrible for my life. And many of you have experienced the same thing. But to me,
maturing is realizing that was an incredible time. It was not and is not an incredible investment.
There's a big difference between those things. So the addictive thoughts are based on this very
narrow perception of someone and all you have to do is extrapolate that out. What's it like to stay
with someone? A friend of mine just texted me yesterday. She's, you know, a very well-known person who the person she's with
basically had an issue with her and her career and didn't, you know, didn't want to be with her
because of that and was telling her, you know, I just can't be all in. And she broke it off because
he said that. And now this week she's questioning how I feel like I need more information and I need
to talk to him more. I'm like, you can talk to him more, but when someone's literally telling you I can't be all in, where does this go?
Where does this go but more of that?
More of the thing that made you break up with this person in the first place?
We have these addictive thoughts because we allow our minds to play tricks and we don't allow
ourselves to think of the reality of someone. You really want to get obsessed with someone
because they're super charming or because you think you have a great connection with that person.
You have a great connection with that person. Let the relationship prove it out.
You don't get to decide that. Do you know what I mean? You don't get to decide on your own,
we would have
something really special together. If only you could come around. What? There's two people in
that equation. But how do you know the number of people every week who come up to me and have
decided on their own that they're matchmakingmaking themselves you know like when people
obsessed with matchmaking other people like people always think I must be like
that I have got no interest whatsoever in matchmaking people it bores me to
death the idea of it I but people some people are just like that I love
matchmaking people some people so they'll go oh I think this person would
be great with this person and they're all about pairing up pairing up well
it's like saying about yourself I would go great with this person and they're all about pairing up, pairing up. Well, it's like saying about yourself, I would go great with this person and they would go great
with me. So why can't they just realize it? That's not a unilateral decision. That's for two people
to decide. So the addictive thoughts are based on fantasy, not on reality. And if you could just
root your thoughts in what's
really going on instead of an idea you've created in your mind. And I know that's not always easy.
My God, it's not always easy. Because sometimes we're in a relationship with someone where
we could be expecting to hear from them all day and excited to hear from them all day.
And when they send a text, they could have been not thinking about us the entire day. And then in a bored moment, send us a message saying, miss you. Now, that's their reality. Our reality could be,
I've been excited to hear from this person all day. When I get a message saying, miss you,
it confirms all of this story. I want to believe that this person has been thinking about me and
that we have something. So there it gets confusing, doesn't it?
Because now you're like, well, I could easily construct a story in my mind,
which is why we have to base what we do on the average of people's actions.
How does this relationship really make me feel?
Does it like, do I really feel like this relationship has the level of communication,
the level of connection I really want?
Does it have that?
Can I really get the amount of quality time with someone that I want with a person with this person?
We have to look at the average of this dynamic and see if it meets our needs.
There's a, you know, the book Attached obviously talks about three different attachment styles,
anxious, avoidant, and secure.
And the book, I disagree and agree with the book at the same time.
The book makes one case that whatever you are is what you are.
If you're an anxious, i.e. you're constantly needing to be reassured,
that's what you are, and you should find you're constantly needing to be reassured, that's what you are.
And you should find someone who's willing to constantly reassure you.
Now, I happen to be halfway on that scale.
I think that we are different and that there are certain things about us.
I know that I was brought up in a family where we're big on affection.
We're big on closeness. We're big on
depth. And I'm, in that sense, I'm a little needy. Like I want to be close to someone. I like
affection. I don't want to be in a relationship where I'm constantly away from someone. And
you know, I know at this stage in my life, the kind of relationship that I would like to be in and the kind of attention that I would like to receive and give.
That being said, I don't think that it's someone else's responsibility to make us feel okay.
That that's our job and that we shouldn't say, we shouldn't use what we believe is our default attachment style to burden someone else and say, I'm this and you have to always make me feel that.
I think that's a dangerous place to go.
But I think there's truth in both.
We have to work on ourselves at the same time as understanding that there are certain core needs that vary between us and I should look for someone who leans in the direction
of the kind of affection, attention, closeness, connection that I gravitate to.
But these addictive thoughts about someone who's not right for you,
I mean, just realize it's like you can have...
How is it any different to having addictive thoughts about a drug?
Is anyone in this room going to argue cocaine is like a positive thing for people's lives?
Like that's a good thing.
But what happens with that?
People get addictive thoughts with it.
No one's logically going, God, it would be a good thing for my
life if I took that up again. Right? But we can still have addictive thoughts about it. And so
part of it is just recognizing that when something feels good in a moment, when it gives us a hit of
dopamine, that becomes an addiction. It's no different to social media. You have addictive
thoughts about fucking Facebook. You have addictive thoughts about Instagram. That's why we go to
these things. They're crack now. We go, like, where's my phone? I haven't checked it in 20
minutes. I wonder if I've got any new likes on my photo. You think that's not addictive thoughts?
That's addictive thinking. All right? So this isn't just people. We do this with everything.
Whatever is going to give us that hit of dopamine is going to take us back there.
And of course, the only guy that you've been talking to in the last six months or year
or five years that you've had a connection with, who when you talk to is kind of fun
and sexy and exciting, gives us a rush of dopamine or oxytocin, makes us feel something.
And when we feel that drug, literally a chemical release.
So we crave it.
But we have to start seeing it the same way we see other drugs in our lives.
I don't have to convince you that those drugs are bad for you, do I?
And yeah, I spend half my time on stage convincing you that going back to a certain guy is bad for you.
We somehow put that
on a different category. But if your experience of a man is that you go there, you get your heart
broken every time, he constantly drops in and out of your life, it's never consistent, it's not
stable, this person can't even tell you, yes, I really want to be with you and stick to it,
and your feeling of this is constant, high hangover, high hangover, high hangover,
then why am I convincing you that this person is a bad drug for you?
You know.
But it always seems like a fun idea in the moment, doesn't it?
Especially when you've had a couple of drinks.
No different, is it?
It's the same thing.
It's no different.
That's the drug.
It's another drug.
I hope you enjoyed that clip.
Now, it might be that you watched these clips from me
because you're currently asking yourself
how to make your dating life easier. You're struggling
with seeing someone and it's not going anywhere. You're never meeting anyone to even get to the
point of seeing someone or you've just come out of a relationship and you're trying to heal.
Regardless, what you really want deep down is love in your life. But dating today is a minefield, which is why I want to help you
escape all of it and just get to the part where you actually find the love that you really want
in your life. Because that need is not going away for us. I have put together a one hour free
training called Dating With Results that shows you a roadmap for getting rapid progress in your love life
so that you can finally meet your person. All you have to do to watch it is go over to
datingwithresults.com. Like I said, it's free. All it costs is a little bit of your time,
but it will save you years of your life. I'll see you over there.