Love Life with Matthew Hussey - (Matt Monday): The #1 Reason You Feel Powerless in Dating (and How to Fix It)
Episode Date: September 1, 2025What if the way you view your past is quietly shaping your present in ways you don’t even realize? In this week’s video, I explore a book that has completely shifted how I think about dating and l...ife. It challenges some deeply-held beliefs and the stories we tell ourselves. This video also uncovers how hidden goals might be influencing your choices, and shares the key to unlocking a more fulfilling love life. This one will leave you questioning everything . . . in the very best way! -- ►► Grab your in-person or virtual ticket to the Weekend Retreat: MHRetreat.com ►► Join the Love Life Club: JoinLoveLife.com
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I want to tell you about a book.
I discovered recently that has nothing to do with dating, but has changed how I think about
dating in five key ways. Some of these ways are upsetting, but kind of in the best way. Others are
controversial, so they're going to have to come with a giant disclaimer, but all of them are
fascinating and I suspect will radically change the way you date moving forward. The book I am
talking about today is The Courage to be Disliked by Ichiro Kashimi and Fumitake Koga. This is a book
between a young person and a wise older philosopher who is trying to teach the young person
the methods and the theories of Alfred Adler, the psychologist, who was around during Freud's
time and Jung's time, but had wildly different opinions. In some cases, diametrically opposed opinions
to Freud. And this is where so much of the controversy comes in, because the first big thing from
this book that struck me was this idea that your trauma does not shape your life. Your goals do.
In fact, the book goes as far as to say that trauma doesn't exist. Now again, I want to repeat this
very clearly so that you understand my position on this. I believe that trauma is real, very real,
that it exists, that it absolutely has a profound effect on people's lives. But where I find
Adler's stance helpful is in my own life looking at where has my trauma become a way to avoid
something that would actually make my life better if I had the courage to approach it? And you
might ask the same question in your own life. If you've come out of an abusive or narcissistic
relationship, for example, you can look backwards at all of the ways that that has shaped your
ability to trust other people. But what you can also do is decide a goal that you believe is going
to serve you today. What Adler would have said is that when we have a different goal, we will
choose to focus on different parts of the past. That's what he meant when he said, our past doesn't
determine the present, your present determines the past. Because when you have a new goal in the
present, you might start looking for different examples in your past. In that example, the person who's
been with a narcissistic person might say, instead of focusing all of my attention on all of the
ways that I was wronged by that narcissistic person in the past, I might put my attention on the
people in my past who were there for me, the people I could trust, the people who didn't gaslight,
the people who were people of their word.
And the reason I would do that is because I now need evidence to support a different goal.
If my goal is avoiding rejection or never getting hurt again or never being in a dangerous
situation again, then I will focus on the trauma in my past that allows me to achieve the
goal of never putting myself out there again so I never face those situations again.
There is one example in the book of a young woman who can't talk to a guy that she has a crush on
because she keeps blushing every time she goes to talk to him.
And so she goes for help and she says, it's such a pain.
I really like this guy.
I'd really like to be able to approach him and speak to him.
But I just can't because of the whole blushing thing.
Now, the philosopher's approach when he talks about Alfred Adler's concepts in relation to this,
is to say that the girl wasn't not talking to the guy because she was blushing.
she was blushing as an excuse not to talk to the guy because her real goal was to not get rejected
to not talk to him because if she could avoid talking to this person then she would never have
to burst her bubble of the idea that if she just did talk to him something might happen she
wouldn't necessarily consciously be aware that there's this hidden goal of maintaining
the story that something could happen with this guy. But once you look at it through the lens of
my goals are determining my results in the present, you can't unknow that. That makes me think about
what hidden goals I'm constantly trying to achieve in my life, but am blaming on my past. I wonder if
it's the same for you too. If it is, and as you're thinking about this, you're having a mini
revelation about a hidden goal you've been achieving and using your past to achieve that
goal? Let me know in the comments. I would love to know. While we're all together in this moment,
I wanted to take the opportunity to tell you about something I have coming up in the middle of
September. It is called the Love Life Reset. I work with people year in year out who I know
in my bones can find the love that they're looking for but have kind of become stuck they've become
stuck because dating can suck really really bad they've become stuck because they keep getting the same
results over and over and over again and that creates its own kind of anguish and disillusionment
with the process it feels like we can't keep up our resilience anymore in just working through
the rejections or all the times when we're trying with someone but they're not putting in any
effort. We can get stuck because we've just lost the belief that this is going to happen for us.
But what I am fascinated by and excited by and I find to be a very empowering thought is that
we can actually adopt a fresh way of being in this area of our life and a new mindset
that can radically change the results that are available to us.
And that's what I'm going to be doing with you in the middle of September on this free
live training called the Love Life Reset.
I'm going to be spending time with you, giving you a completely fresh approach to your love life.
Even if you feel like you've been banging your head against the wall, nothing's been working, you're sick and tired of it, maybe you even feel close to dating burnout, you really do want to find love.
But you feel like I just can't take more rejection or more disappointment or more people who just aren't even trying.
You know, it can feel like it's hard to get someone to go on a real date, let alone commit to an actual relationship.
But I know that when we step outside of that frustration,
that we've gotten locked into because we get very tense in this area of our life after a while,
especially when it's not been going the way we want.
If we can step out of that and into a completely fresh approach,
a calm approach, an empowered approach where we can take control again,
things change. And they can change quicker than you'd ever imagine.
So this is my formal invitation for you to come and join me on this free event
that I have put together called the Love Life Reset.
It's happening in mid-September.
It is my last big event of this kind for the entire year.
So please don't miss it.
I promise you, it's going to send you into the last quarter of this year
with a completely different level of energy and hope and excitement for your love life.
I also want to say that for people who are already in relationships who are watching this,
the love life preset is for you too.
I didn't design this one just to be for people finding love.
I also designed it for people who have,
maybe lost their sense of calm in love or who are struggling in various ways in their
relationship. Maybe you're struggling with old patterns of jealousy or anxiety or people pleasing.
Maybe you're questioning your own worth. Maybe you're finding it hard to stand up for
yourself. I am going to be working with you too. So please don't think this is just for single people.
If you're in a relationship, the love life reset is for you too. I'll leave a link below. It's
lovelife reset.com. Click the link and you can join me and get signed up right now and then I will see
you in mid-September. All right, back to the video. Here's the second crazy thing that Adlas said
that we have to have an unconditional belief and acceptance of others regardless of their actions
or whether they are trustworthy. That sounds like a recipe for getting absolutely destroyed
when it comes to our love lives.
I know this because I have talked about this
for the last 17 years of my life.
We encounter all sorts of really problematic behavior in dating.
People who gaslight us, people who love bomb us,
people who mislead us as to their intentions,
people who lead us on and hook up and then never call again.
There's all sorts of ways that having an unconditional belief in other people,
regardless of how trustworthy they are,
could bite us. However, there is a way that Adler talks about this, that the more he talks about it,
the more it starts to make sense, because he actually makes a crucial distinction between what he
calls trust and what he calls confidence. Let me explain. Trust in Adler's definition is conditional.
trust is what a bank has when you ask for a mortgage and the bank says,
I need a property or an asset in order to secure that mortgage so that I know no matter
what happens, if you default, I can take that asset and get our money back.
That's the kind of trust that Adler is talking about.
Confidence is what Adler was talking about.
when he said we have to have an unconditional belief in other people. And there he was talking about
a much more general kind of generous interpretation of the actions of human beings, a belief
in the innate goodness of people that most people who do bad things aren't trying to do bad
things. They're trying to get a sense of significance or what he called superiority. And that generally
speaking, if we want to have healthy, productive relationships in our society or community,
then we must have confidence in other people. Now, I found this distinction between trust and
confidence very helpful because trust is something that is earned. Over time, what's our version in
dating of the collateral, the bank takes when you're getting a mortgage. Our version of it is
people's dependency over time. Their reliability, they're sticking to their word, the fact that they
continue to show up for us and be who they say they are. Trust gets built through all of those
little actions that eventually lead to us having a conditional kind of trust. I trust you in this
marriage because of the history we have. I trust that you won't hurt me because of everything that we've
been through and you've shown me who you are every stage of the way. But confidence in the Adlerian sense
is what we need when we show up on a first date. Confidence is the ability to see the other person
in front of you and say, I'm going to assume the goodness in you. I'm going to assume the best.
I am going to have a generosity of spirit about who you are, which is the phrase that my wife
always used when she was talking about how we should be with people, have generosity of spirit.
But I would say that out what we call generosity of spirit is what Adler defines as confidence
in other people. Now, some of us struggle with that idea of generosity of spirit, especially if we
have been knocked one too many times or we've dealt with nasty people in the past that has
really knocked our faith in humanity. How do we get back that confidence that we can extend
universally to humankind that allows us to be that way on a date? Well, I believe that if
we fundamentally know that we are good and that that doesn't stop us from having bad days,
doesn't stop us from having selfish moments, it doesn't even sometimes stop us from doing bad
things. If we know that we're fundamentally good and yet we can be imperfect in all of those
ways, then we can assume it's the same for other people too. That most people in this world
are people who are generally good, but are imperfect. And the influences and the world they're
around affects their ability to bring out their kindest, best, most unselfish self versus
their worst self, the kind of self that could hurt us.
Once we have this kind of confidence in other people, it makes us more attractive.
Because now you're the person showing up on a date with a sense of optimism, with a sense
of radiating as someone who sees the goodness in other people.
And what Adler says is if we want other people to believe in us, if we want them to have confidence
in us, we have to be willing to have confidence in them. I truly believe one of the reasons
so many people are struggling in dating right now is because they have lost the confidence that
they used to have in the goodness of people. The third thing that Alfred Adler said that might
be the most difficult one of all of these to actually put into practice is that we must have
the courage to be normal. Now, this seems like a revolutionary idea in a world where everybody
has an Instagram profile that is a shrine to themselves and their attributes and their life.
We are living in a world where attention seeking is rife and is not only rife, but is constantly
rewarded with followers and dopamine and sponsorship deals. We are living in a world where
everyone, it seems, is trying to stand out and be special in their own special way. So the courage
to be normal in a world like this can be seen as a radical act, as a quiet rebellion. And as
Adler puts it, why is it necessary for us to be special? Probably because one cannot accept
one's normal self. And it is precisely for this reason, Adler points out that we try to be good
so that we can get praise for doing good things and impressive things. And when we fail at getting
praise in those ways, many people turn to being especially bad. Because being bad and standing out
for how bad we are can also be a way of achieving some form of superiority.
and attention. And of course, it's so natural to try and find ways to be special in dating,
especially in what feels like an ultra-competitive dating market. We all have our ways of trying to
stand out. I coach a lot of guys who will tell me, Matt, I keep attracting people who only want me
for my money. And I know deep down that that's often because they are trying to be special
by leading with the fact that they have money,
whether it's by what they wear, what they drive,
what they talk about on a date,
or the fact that in a first date scenario,
they have taken someone to a five-star restaurant.
When we lead with that,
we're going to attract people who want us for that.
So we have to be wary of the ways
that we try to achieve specialness
because they can actually be hurting us.
In a scenario like that,
that guy with money might have to stop leading with his,
money if he wants to attract a different kind of person. That's tough for that person. It requires
courage. It requires risking, blending in to what we see as the faceless normal masses. The desire to be
special also affects who we choose because when we're trying to be special, we don't just try to
appear special to the person we're dating. We try to date someone who is special who by being with them,
we think raises our value to everybody else.
So we go out looking for someone special,
a specialness that is usually defined
by someone's level of looks or power or charisma.
This is another way of looking for validation
through another person.
So the crucial first step in the courage to be normal
is self-acceptance.
As Eric Frum put it,
respect for another human being
is the ability to see a person
as they are and the placing of worth on that person for being that person. And this is what we can do
for ourselves too. We can have regard for the person that we are. As it's put in the courage to be
disliked, you are just fine as just you. There is no need to be special. There is value in you just being
you. Now by the way, that doesn't mean that you can't stand out in your own way. But let's talk about
that concept itself and how we get standing out wrong. Four, dating is not a competition.
Now, Adler didn't say dating is not competition, but what he did say is life isn't a competition.
That we shouldn't be competing with each other because when we compete with each other,
create enemies, not comrades. And he believed that the key to a healthy society and a community
is people having each other as comrades, seeing each other through the lens of friendship,
not seeing each other through the lens of competition, i.e. enemies. And the way he talked about
things not being a competition is that we shouldn't go through our lives feeling inferior to other
people or wanting to be superior to other people because that's what creates the element of
competition. We don't feel good enough. We feel inferior. And what Adler said was the reason we feel
inferior and we obsess over being superior is because we see relationships as vertical. We see people as
either being above us or beneath us, when in fact we should see relationships as being
horizontal, that we each have our strengths and weaknesses, the things that we're really good at,
the things that make us stand out, the things that trouble us. And the way he represented that
was through the idea of us all being on a football field together. And we're all in our own race.
And some people are ahead, some people are behind, some people are running fast,
some people are running side by side. We're all different and have different attributes on the
field, but the field is level. We're all standing at exactly the same level. We are all different,
but we are equal. And when we see life that way, we realize that we are never comparing
ourselves to somebody else. What we are doing is comparing ourselves with our identity.
deal self. And when we see someone who has more than us or is able to do or achieve or be more
than we ever will be able to, we can still see them as a comrade, we can still see them as a friend
because we're all equal on the same field. I think this has massive implications for dating.
Because one of the things that makes us feel inferior in dating is this feeling that we don't
match up to what we see out there. So we go into a date and we feel
not good enough. We look at someone and we think they're intimidating because of the way they look
or their style or what they've achieved in their life or the speed of their wit and we think,
God, I can't match up to this person. But if we see them as being on a level playing field
with us where we're different but equal, we can simply celebrate those aspects of them. The same
is true in a relationship. Someone else's success in a relationship doesn't diminish our worth.
We can be with someone who is incredibly impressive in all sorts of ways and simply celebrate them
knowing it takes nothing away from our inherent value.
Now, I am not saying it's easy to practice not seeing life and dating through the lens of
competition.
It's not, although I do think the football field analogy really helps.
But it is made easier by the next concept, which is not only wildly counterintuitive,
but some would say goes against everything they have ever been.
taught. Number five, date as if you're dancing. Let's imagine the way that most of us go about
our love lives, which is that everything we do to find love, to go on an app, text someone,
go on dates, put ourselves out there, is all a means to an end. It's all about getting to
that destination of having found the love of my life. And
What Adler would have said is that the destination is not the most important part.
The most important part is all of the little moments along the way where you were experiencing life.
He talks about it in terms of mountain climbing.
You know, if you value climbing, then you won't think that if you set out to climb to the mountaintop and you didn't reach.
it that the whole expedition was a failure and was pointless, that regardless of whether you
reach the top, an expedition took place. Climbing had to happen, and the point was the climbing.
We have this constant focus on the future and how likely it looks that we're going to reach
the point that we want to reach in the future. How likely it looks that we want to reach in the future. How likely it looks
that it's ever going to happen for us.
And if we conclude that it's, you know, it's hard or it's never going to happen,
then we can become dissuaded from fully experiencing and living life now.
That's how it is with dancing, right?
We're not dancing to get somewhere when we dance.
We're dancing because we're enjoying the act of dancing.
Now, in the course of dancing, we will end up in a different part of the floor.
Our feet will end up on a different part of where we are because as we dance,
we move. And so it is with life. As we live life, we move. We end up in a different place.
But it wasn't that we said it was only worth dancing if we ended up in a different place.
It was worth dancing for the act itself. And I actually think that dating or let's say forget
dating. Dating is such a loaded word and it has so many negative connotations for people.
But the act of finding love or being open to love, I think, can be seen in the energic sense,
not as a kinetic journey from A to B, but a way of being, dancing.
If you see dating as simply exchanging messages on a dating app or being on a crummy first date,
then it's going to be hard to see it in that sense.
But if you see the act of living in such a way that you could involve,
fight love into your life as dancing.
I think that's possible.
The idea that my ability to leave my house not knowing what's going to happen today or to remain open armed to people in this world and the possibilities that people bring with them every time I meet a new person or choose to flirt a little or play a little or be a version of myself that creates energy in this
life or to expand my life by joining a club or a class or some new activity that I wanted to
try anyway. There is something about living in such a way that can invite love into our lives
that is like dancing and certainly will be worth it for its own sake. And a Gaia, not Kinesis
when it comes to our dating lives. Dating is dancing. And this idea,
from Kashimi might help sum a lot of this up.
He talks about this idea that when we're so focused on the past
and our story of why it's so hard for us in the present,
let's say to find love,
and we're constantly focused on a future where we're scared
our ultimate goal won't materialize, won't be realized.
It's as if we are standing on the edge of a stage in a theater
with the house lights turned down.
When the house lights are turned down,
you can see all around you.
You can see all the way to the back of the crowd.
But when we shine a bright light on the present,
when you turn up the house lights,
all of a sudden, you can't even see the first row.
When the lights are turned up in our lives,
we can't see the past or the future.
There is only now.
and there is such a power in that
that we're no longer attached to our story that limits us
we've let that go
and we're not constantly fretting
about whether or not something's going to happen in the future
the lights are up
and we are dancing and experiencing life fully in the present
if you would like me to do more videos of this kind
where I take Adlerian psychology
or other forms of psychology
and apply them to dating, let me know, or was it just too heady?
And you want me to get back to giving flirting tips?
Leave me a comment, let me know.
And don't forget to sign up to the LoveLife Reset at lovelifreset.com,
and I will see you for that big live event in mid-September.
Thank you.
Thank you.