Love Life with Matthew Hussey - (Matt Monday): Keep Ending Up in Toxic Relationships?? WATCH THIS
Episode Date: July 25, 2022Over the years, have you found yourself repeatedly attracting: . . . people who appear to be emotionally unavailable? . . . selfish people who don’t respect you in both friendships and romantic rela...tionships? . . . maybe even narcissists? Have you ever wondered why you seem to be a magnet for these kinds of toxic people? If any of this rings true, and you want to break this cycle, then this episode is for you. --- Join our next Virtual Retreat! - Claim Your Limited Time Summer Self-Care Discount ($100 OFF the usual price!) for The Virtual Retreat at MHVirtualRetreat.com. Offer ends August 7th! --- Email us! You can get in touch with the show and give your feedback/thoughts at podcast@matthewhussey.com --- Download my free guides and give your love life a kickstart today! ►► FREE download: “3 Secrets To Love” → 3SecretsToLove.com ►► FREE download: “9 Texts No Man Can Resist” → http://www.9texts.com ►► FREE download: “5 Compliments to Get Him Addicted to You” → http://www.SayThisToHim.com
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Complaints are passive. Standards and boundaries, that's where all the results are. That's where the action is. I've found, I don't know about you, but most people that I've ever known are a combination
of good and bad. The problem is when we encounter someone where the dynamic between us and them
is really bad, where it produces a kind of toxic result.
And I'm gonna give you four things today
that will help you break free of a dynamic like this.
And in the process, massively build your confidence
and develop a better life and better relationships.
Number one, listen to your resentment, but be impatient with your complaining.
The resentment is powerful. The resentment is telling you something feels wrong. This giving
that I'm doing, something about it doesn't feel right. It feels like there is a complete asymmetry
in what we're bringing to this relationship. You know, think
about it. When we give to a charity, we don't feel resentful afterwards, do we? Because we feel
it was just generosity. It was just giving. It was doing something good. So then why in this
situation does the giving lead to resentment? Because the giving has become a compulsion.
So that resentment is something that we need to listen to. But the complaining is something we have to be incredibly wary of. And we've all done it. I've done it. I've been
in situations before where I complain, in some cases for years, where I complain about someone
over and over and over again. But my behavior around that person never changes. And we have
to get to a point where we have an intolerance for our own complaining because
complaining can just become a kind of pressure valve that lets the air out of our resentment
until we decide to just go back to the same behavior.
We don't actually do anything.
Complaining becomes a surrogate for action.
Number two, take your complaints and convert them into standards and boundaries.
Every time you complain,
I want you to hear what you're complaining about and go, well, okay,
if I was to actually implement something
that dealt with that complaint,
what would it look like?
Either in the form of a new standard or a new boundary.
What would I say no to?
What would I start saying yes to in myself
or in the things I wanna do?
What behaviors would I change around somebody?
Where would I stop listening or having a conversation with someone about a certain
thing if that conversation is never productive? Or if it always leaves me feeling like I've been
berated for something that I don't deserve to be berated for? Where am I actually going to say
enough? Where am I going to do something that I really want to do? Even though my normal reaction to doing that thing would be to feel guilty about it. Take your complaints
and make them actionable. Complaints are passive. Standards and boundaries, that's where all the
results are. That's where the action is. Number three, don't expect having these new boundaries and standards to feel good, at least initially, because the truth is it probably won't.
You'll put your foot down on something, you'll say no to somebody, and the first thing that will happen is you'll feel this rush of shame.
Who am I to ask for this? Who am I to say no? Who am I to have needs? And then you feel
guilt. I feel guilty. I shouldn't have done that. I shouldn't be doing more. I should be showing up
for this person. And then you feel fear. I'm not doing enough, so I won't be loved. This person's
not going to want me. This person's not going to see me as important or valuable or a good human
being anymore. All of this leads us to wanting to backtrack.
And what we have to remind ourselves in that moment
is those emotions are exactly what got us
into this situation in the first place.
So they do not serve us now, not in this context.
And if we're worried we've gone too far,
oh, I've gone too far by saying no to that.
I've gone too far in asserting my needs. Well,
firstly, you will go too far sometimes when you're trying to recalibrate. That's the nature of it.
You're still practicing. So you're going to get it wrong sometimes. But your bigger fear should be
the doing it wrong by doing too much, not the doing it wrong by not doing enough, especially
if this is your pattern. Number four, realize that doing things
that are right for you finally is actually going to be the thing that allows you to give real love
to this person. In other words, when you're free of the compulsion of giving out of obligation,
you're free to give out of love. You're free to
actually give authentically. And the irony is, I think, when you come from that place, you start
actually thinking creatively about what would I like to do for this person? Not what do I have to
do for this person? What would I like to do? What would be a really beautiful, loving thing to do for this person?
And now you're into a relationship that will see if it can stand up on those terms. Because also,
let's not forget, when you take away those things that you do compulsively with someone, they will now be confronted with who you are and loving you
for who you are, not for what you do, not as a transaction, not loving you because they need you
or because they're dependent on you or because they don't want the giving to stop, but just
loving you for you. Now, that will either be enough for them or it won't. Wouldn't you rather
know, by the way? But what happens is you get to now love and give from a pure place. They get a chance, a shot at
doing the same and the relationship will now reveal itself to be what it actually is. Which is either
something worth keeping or something that was never worth as much as you thought it was in the first place.
The greatest gift you can give yourself is the gift of self-growth.
I have in November something that can help you do that.
If you want to join me and do it with me, you don't have to.
You can find your own path and that's great.
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the 13th and it's three days of immersion coaching with me on becoming the most powerful, confident
and happy version of yourself. I promise you, when you come out the other end of this, you'll never
have felt more ready to take on everything in your life.
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