Love Life with Matthew Hussey - (Matt Monday): Long Distance Relationship? AVOID This Mistake
Episode Date: June 17, 2024Have you ever wondered how you can move on from someone you never dated? Perhaps you’ve been pining for them for months (or even years) . . . hoping they’ll finally notice you and see your value.�...� This great question is one of 7 I answer in today’s new episode, based on the comments you left me last week. I also dig into topics like: • What’s the best way to start a long-distance relationship? • What’s your dating advice for people over 40? • Why did they change their mind about being ready for a relationship? Don’t miss these, and once you’re done, be sure to send an email to podcast@matthewhussey.com with a question you’d like me to answer next time! ►► Sign up Now For My Free Weekly Newsletter, The 3 Relationships at . . . → http://www.The3Relationships.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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Once you realize that your pain is not actually coming from the importance of this person,
but from the importance of the story in your mind,
you can start to see that story for what it is. Hello everyone, welcome back to the channel.
I am Matthew Hussey, a coach specializing in confidence and relational intelligence,
and I am widely known for helping people find love. Last week, I answered a whole bunch of questions
that you had sent in and left in the comments,
and we thought we'd do a part two of that video
by having me do the same thing this week.
Also, I made a commitment a long time ago
to deliver free content for everybody on an ongoing basis,
and one of the places I do that,
in addition to this YouTube
channel is my ongoing newsletter where I am sending out a free newsletter full of advice,
practical wisdom, and ideas that can help you find love or heal from lost love every Friday.
And many of you have already signed up. It's completely free. So if you haven't already,
I'll leave a link on the screen and in
the description, and you can come join us in that too. Kelly Markey says, what are your top tips to
starting a long distance relationship? Firstly, be very careful about when you start calling it a
relationship. There's nothing wrong with meeting someone online, through the apps,
someone long distance, and having this kind of fun, flirtatious connection that starts to build.
But in that time period, it probably isn't the right thing to call it a relationship,
unless you've explicitly had that conversation. But it would be strange if you had it too soon.
Could even be a red flag if someone is saying that to you too soon. But after a certain period when you have that desire to start calling
it a relationship don't let the desire turn into a reality in your mind that you're now in a
relationship when the two of you have never actually had that conversation. Because I've over the years watched many, many hundreds of people give to this situation like
it's a relationship, be exclusive, give time, give energy, give effort, make trips when the other
person is not behaving like they're in a relationship at all. And they never really
had that conversation. It just became this assumption. I would start, if you feel you're
in a relationship, I would start by having the conversation so that you're both on the same terms.
Hey, do we both feel the same way? For me to continue giving to this, it would have to be
on the basis that we're really giving this a try as a relationship and that it's an exclusive one.
And once you've set the ground rules for that, okay, both of you have said yes to that. Now
you're in a long distance relationship. And at
that point, it becomes a kind of, how do we navigate the difficulty of something that feels
wholly unnatural, which is we're trying to have an intimate relationship at a geographical distance.
Well, firstly, there has to be a time on the horizon where you know you're going to see each
other. You've got to have something to look forward to. And as the relationship progresses,
I would argue that there needs to be some kind of a vision
for how you're gonna solve that issue in a sustainable way.
You know, what does this look like in a year, in two years?
Are we actually gonna be in the same place?
That doesn't have to happen on day one,
but there does gradually start to have to be a vision
for, you know, how does this problem get solved?
Otherwise,
we're in a relationship where neither of us are actually taking on the reality that we haven't
solved it. And maybe we haven't solved it because neither one of us is actually willing to do what
it takes to permanently solve this situation. In the meantime, when you're trying to navigate it, I would say mixing up the energy that we bring to the table.
It's very easy for us to say, I am long distance.
So the kind of energy I give when I'm in the same room as someone, especially romantically, is off the table.
Instead, I'm just going to do what I can do, which is have very long, in-depth conversations.
But if you think of any relationship where all it is, is one note of very long long in-depth conversations. But if you think of any relationship where all it
is, is one note of very long in-depth conversations, eventually it's going to get boring. It's going to
get stale. It's going to feel stayed. So we have to mix up our energy. Are you being flirtatious?
Are you still bringing your sexuality to the table? Obviously in ways that feel safe to you,
you know, sending nudes and things like that
represents real challenges and risks when it comes to potentially breaking up with someone or someone
you can't trust. So that's a whole different subject, but still bringing your sexual energy
to the table, still bringing your playful energy to the table. Can you have a 60 second funny voice
note or call and a three hour spending the evening together talking for that long?
Can you be both?
And the last thing I'll say about this is being together in conversation and there's being together in company.
And when you think about a relationship, sometimes you're having conversation and that's quality time.
Other times you're just in company with someone.
You're sitting next to each other on a sofa reading or watching a movie. And it would be hard work if quality time always meant being in conversation. to start to feel the stakes are really high anytime they want to be with you or around you
because it's going to involve trying to have a conversation and you know at a certain point you
will run out of things to talk about that's just natural so it might be time to be in company with
them that might mean hitting play on a movie at the same time from a long distance and watching
a movie together and then talking about the movie afterwards. Don't just be in conversation. Pick times to be in company
and that will lower the stakes
for the time that you spend together.
It also means that time spent together
doesn't always have to mean time away
from other obligations and responsibilities
that both of you have.
Glory Be Free says,
do you see a connection between the physical pain
you endured and the newfound level of love
and vulnerability you orient from?
Well, firstly, that's a lovely compliment.
Thank you.
For those of you that don't know,
I write in my new book, Love Life,
about my own journey with physical chronic pain
and how it lasted for many years.
Part of that I still have,
so it's not completely gone away.
It certainly did kind of crack me open. I of that I still have, so it's not completely gone away. It certainly did kind of
crack me open. I think every challenge we have, every challenge I've ever had in life has been an
invitation to a greater degree of compassion, not just for myself, but for other people. Because I
think every time we go through a challenge, we get more connected to what other people go through
in life. If we can kind of widen our lens
and not just see it as our pain,
because of course, none of our pain is original.
Other people have experienced it, are experiencing it.
I always find any challenge gives me a window
into the challenges that other people have faced
or are facing.
And that's made me a more compassionate, loving,
humble person every single time.
And my chronic pain was, I suppose in some ways,
my first encounter with something
that truly made me miserable
that I didn't know how to change.
I didn't know how to make it go away.
And I had to change my relationship with it.
And that was one of the most humbling experiences
of my entire life.
And it was also in many ways,
and I'm not someone who throws this word around lightly, it was a spiritual experience to
come to a place of acceptance with that.
So yes, I think that probably, I don't think it's the only thing that's made me loving
and vulnerable, but I do think it gave me access to a depth I hadn't had access to before
when I felt like I could always fix my problems and in this
case I couldn't fix it. I had to change the impact it was having on me by changing my relationship
with the challenge itself. Marie Cooper 35 says why am I so obsessed with looking for things
wrong in my relationships? Things that will hurt my heart like looking at their exes on social media and then overanalyzing everything.
So on one hand, it might be that there's a familiarity
for you in looking for those kinds of things
that simply sitting back and enjoying the peace
that you might feel right now is deeply uncomfortable
and it's unfamiliar, which is why it's uncomfortable and
instead going and looking for something that creates drama gives you something to feel jealous
about gives you something to feel insecure about is much more familiar and we're drawn to what's
familiar not necessarily to what makes us happy i want you to imagine that so far in life, your behavior in dating is like a vinyl,
you know, like an old record.
And that the groove in that vinyl
that plays the song a certain way has been established,
long since established.
So when you go on another date
or when you start seeing someone you like,
what happens is you put the needle on that record
and that record starts to play because it's the
groove that you established a long time ago. You don't necessarily have access to a different
record right now to play because you haven't established those grooves, but you can. It
requires conscious practice. It requires awareness of, oh, I'm going to look at this person's profile
right now and dig deep into who they've been with before
or what their exes are like
or what they have that I don't as a kind of compulsion
because that's the record that I've been used to playing.
I'm used to feeling these feelings of jealousy,
of anxiety, of tension.
I'm not used to not doing that and feeling a sense of peace.
If I become aware as I'm about to do that,
that that is a behavior that I feel drawn to,
not because they're doing anything underhanded,
not because they're behaving badly
or they're giving me reason to be suspicious,
but because that's the way the record plays for me.
That's the groove I've worn in over time.
When we get conscious of that,
we become able to take a different path.
And it may be that that path in the past has served a need, maybe the need to feel safe,
and that that hypervigilance that has you looking for problems so that you can go and meet them
instead of them surprising you is something that's made you feel safe.
It's felt like a form of control.
But maybe these days you're ready to accomplish a feeling of safety in a new and more productive way.
For example, in just having trust in yourself
that if anything were to come to light
that would reveal this person wasn't a good partner,
you would be able to walk away.
That you don't need to anticipate every problem.
You just need to show up as the best version of you
and pay attention to the present
and to what you're actually seeing from this
person, not trying to anticipate everything they could be or do in the future. Grizzle101 says,
would love to hear more tips and advice for dating in our 40s and 50s. Everything seems to be
targeted towards the younger generation. Why is it so hard to find love again? And what can we do to become our best self to attract a partner?
Look, I have always maintained that the things that I say are applicable at every age.
I don't think that even when I'm talking about things that, you know, like flirting,
often people think, oh, that's a, you're talking to younger people there.
But of course, what makes us attractive at any age is the ability to both be sincere,
but also be playful, the ability to be flirtatious, to not lose that energy.
So I would challenge you to ask yourself, what is the part of what maybe I'm saying
that you don't think applies beyond a certain age.
Because I think the fundamentals apply at any age.
If you're in your 50s
and you have come out of a long-term relationship
or a divorce,
or perhaps you've just struggled
to meet someone in your life,
the fundamentals are the same.
How active is our life?
Is it the kind of life that brings us into contact with other
people? A lot of the time, the older we get, the more our life contracts. We get into these
routines and rhythms that can become quite staid. They're very comfortable to us, but they may not
be the kinds of routines that actually engage us socially with people that we don't already know. So do our lives include communities,
environments, events that bring us into contact with new people? Are we being brave in those
areas? Because it does require some bravery. It's hard. The last thing I would ever tell you is that
it's easy because the reality is many people do experience feeling more invisible, feeling like
they don't have nearly the same amount
of attention that they had
at a different stage of their life.
I think for that reason,
we have to find ways of enjoying the process
because otherwise we'll never do the things
that bring us into contact with opportunity.
What are the activities that I might like to do
regardless of whether I meet someone,
but by doing those activities, I might actually meet someone.
What are the ways I could engineer my life to build myself into more and new communities
that I could meet new single friends?
I could meet different types of people than maybe I've encountered in the past.
Not over relying on only one thing like a dating app.
You know, it's very tempting to get into the comfort of a dating app, but then it can be very demoralizing when we find we're
not getting matches or the kinds of people that are matching with us are people that are sleazy
or they're not our type of person or scamming us, which is very common these days. It could be
extremely demoralizing, which is why I say you can do those things, but don't make it your only source of new people in your life. That's what we do again from a place of comfort
and not actually putting ourselves out there in the real world. I do empathize with what you're
feeling and what you're going through. It's hard when we're not where we want to be at a certain
stage in our life and we feel like it's gotten harder in the process. But I also want you to entertain the idea that at least a part of that is not all
of it because some of that difficulty is real, but at least a part of it may be a story that
we're telling ourself about how it's impossible, it's never going to happen, or no one is ever
going to want us. And instead consider the idea that if you just woke up
into your body right now at the age you are and you felt the desire to meet someone without any
of the baggage of the past you might take a different approach and have a different energy
towards going out there and meeting someone and that energy might be the reason that you do meet someone. Min Yunji Seven says,
"'How to move on from someone you have never dated.
"'Feelings for him are so strong
"'that it feels something is dying inside.'"
I've spoken about this at length in my book,
"'Love Life."
For anyone who hasn't got a copy,
I strongly advise you read chapter two,
"'How to Tell Love Stories',"
because in it, I talk about the value that we're placing
often on the wrong things,
that a real relationship is so much more than the story
that we invent about how important a person is.
I have a much more backwards-looking approach
for relationships than forwards looking.
In other words, a forward looking approach is,
look at all the potential for this person.
Look at all the potential for how happy they would make me.
Look at what we could be together.
And that is by definition,
a projection of a future that does not exist.
So we could be right, I guess,
but we're only right if that future that we have anticipated
actually happens. If it doesn't happen, then we were wrong about how important this person was.
Whereas a backwards looking approach is saying, look at how extraordinary this person is who is
in my life. All the ways they have shown up for me, look at what we've built together.
Wow, this is an important relationship.
Wow, this is an important person in my life.
And you don't need your imagination for that exercise.
You are saying it because it's true,
because those are the facts.
And I would argue that in order for you to feel
like something is dying inside right now,
you need a lot of imagination
because there's an imagined idea of how important this person is in your life when they're not
living up to that idea at all, or the two of you would actually be in a thoroughly fulfilling
relationship with each other. Once you realize that your pain is not actually coming from the importance of this person, but from the importance of the story in your mind, you can start to see that story for what it is, a story, and separate from it and observe it kind of in the same way that we do with our thoughts in mindfulness practices and start to realize that the story is making it painful, not the reality.
Anna says, why a guy was telling me from the beginning he wants something serious with me
and after two and a half months, all of a sudden he said he is not ready for a relationship. Well,
there could be many reasons for that. Maybe he got overexcited in the beginning and couldn't back it up. It might be that
he himself got excited about the possibility of a relationship, but the reality of a relationship
was something that he wasn't really ready for. In which case, after two and a half months, he did
you a giant favor because it's better that you learn that two and a half months in than a year
in. That's the case for a lot of people is that they get excited in the beginning, especially it's a sign of real
immaturity. It can also be a sign of manipulation, of course, that's, you know, telling someone I
want something serious even when I don't because I just want to get something from you. But it can
also be a sign of immaturity. Oh my God, I feel so strongly. I've never felt like this. I haven't
felt like this in such a long time. You make me feel amazing. I want something serious with you. Especially if he
felt like you were kind of, you would only be into him if he wanted something serious and maybe he
felt you pull away a little bit. And he was like, no, no, no. I want something serious with you. I
can't lose you. There's an immaturity to that. If the reality is he's not available for a real relationship when it comes
down to it. He starts noticing that a real relationship means that he actually has to get
to know you, not just your projection. He has to be known. He has to actually share more about
himself instead of just being the heroic version of himself. When someone who is immature about love
and isn't ready for an actual relationship, just the feeling of a
relationship, they may initially get excited. And then when those things start presenting themselves,
when having a relationship actually requires a few calories, all of a sudden they get completely
overwhelmed by the reality of a relationship. And it sounds like two and a half months in, either he had been in
manipulation mode or he had been very immature about his version of love or his idea of love.
And he couldn't then back that up when a reality of a relationship presented itself.
The other alternative is that during those two and a half months, he discovered that it wasn't
right for him for whatever reason. That doesn't mean it's anything to do with you.
It can be many, many reasons something isn't right
for someone that aren't to do with you.
And that it was easier to tell you that it turns out
he wasn't ready for a relationship
than to tell you that he didn't want a relationship with you.
The important thing for you to realize
is that someone has made clear their intentions.
All you need to do is look at the situation and go, is there anything
I would like to do differently next time? Did I bring my best self to the table? And if the answer
is no, I didn't, I'd like to do some things differently next time, then this was a gift in
giving you that insight. And if the answer is no, I brought my best to the table, this person just
misled me about their intentions for a relationship or decided I wasn't right for that relationship, then I need to grieve the disappointment and keep moving forward because
the right person for me will last longer than two and a half months. And Anna, if you haven't already,
I would suggest that you go and check out Dating With Results. It's a free training that I put
together to help you seek out healthy, mature people who are ready for a real relationship,
avoid the people who are not, and certainly see the early warning signs that someone is not,
and have the conversations along the way that actually lead to something real. For anyone out
there dating right now, if you want to date productively, if you don't want to waste your
time, if you want to find the kind of love that you've always been looking for instead of just more casual dating or something that
presents as very exciting but then disappears as quickly as it came, this will be one of the most
valuable hours you could spend for your love life. And it's free. That's at Dating With Results. I'll
leave a link here and in the description for anyone who wants to check that out.
All right, there seems to be one more question.
This one is from The Audrey Hussey.
Who is more tidy, you or me?
It's definitely me.
She thinks that she's more,
she has this strange perception of herself
as a more tidy person.
What makes you think you're more tidy?
I tidy up more than you do.
No, you don't.
I do.
I'm way more, like, I do way more to, do I?
I don't wanna say anything that isn't true.
I'm always tidying up after you.
In our bathroom, your makeup is always like everywhere.
And I always put it back in the bag and put it there
because every time we have a nice clean bathroom
and your makeup's just, you just leave it out.
Do you think it just magically goes back in the bag?
Do you think you have a magic makeup bag?
Yes or no?
Not my magic makeup bag.
I'm your magic makeup bag.
There you have it, folks.
It's not that she's not untidy,
but I do more to tidy up after you
than you do to tidy up after me.
And that is a fact.
And you can ask anyone, literally anyone.
Yeah, but there's a difference between
who tidies this thing go versus like,
you let it all pile up and then you're good about tidying.
Like that's different.
You may do the makeup, I do everything else.
Whose side are you on Jeremy?
Why are you defending this?
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