Love Life with Matthew Hussey - (Matt Monday): The Only Dating Advice You'll Ever Need!
Episode Date: January 23, 2024You may not know this, but you probably have an unconscious dating mindset. We all do. It might be learned from our parents, an early relationship, or any other kind of formative childhood experience,... but it affects so much of our behavior when we meet someone we like. In today’s new video, I’m going to share 3 of the most dangerous dating mindsets to avoid, and one powerful mindset that will let you enjoy the process while naturally attracting the person you really want. ►► Pre-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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The truth is, if we can find more joy in the dating process,
we'll be able to be more productive in the process
because we'll be able to sustain see struggling in dating all the time.
The skater, the sinker, and the sideliner.
And as I go through the characteristics of these three different archetypes,
you let me know in the comments which one you most identify with. The first archetype is the skater. The skater is someone
who is out there dating a lot. This is someone who has definitely prioritized their dating life.
They are very open about the fact that they are looking for love, but they date like it is their job. There is a
palpable fear of this person being on their own, of leaving any real gaps between anyone they're
dating and constantly jumping from one person to the next. That could be in the form of lots of
short-term relationships and as soon as one ends they go straight to the
next one. It could also be in the form of dates themselves going on multiple dates every single
week, never really having the time to be present with any one person, not really allowing the time
for a true connection to form, to see the other person or to be seen by the other person. In a sense,
the skater lacks vulnerability. There's no time to really go deep. There's no time to really be seen,
to actually open up about who they are. And importantly, there isn't the space to actually
get hurt. Because even if someone hurts their feelings, even if someone
rejects them, even if someone that they've been seeing for a minute suddenly disappears,
instead of in any way feeling or indulging that pain, they are straight on to the next person.
There is something inherently avoidant in a sense about the skater because there is that dating to get a real connection actually
requires us to be present. It requires us to slow down enough to actually see things that we don't
see when we're going at pace, to see parts of someone that you don't see when you're dating
so many people that you never really see anyone. So for the person who's skating, it's hard to ever find that true, deep, organic connection
that we're all looking for when we say we want to find love.
The second person I wanna talk about is the sinker.
This is the person who is very much in the water.
They meet someone that they like,
they quickly become obsessed with that person.
They become engrossed in that person's world. They go out of their way to try and impress this person
to become what this person wants them to be or what they think this person wants them to be.
They try to make themselves available for this person whenever they can. They go out of their way to please this person. They become anxiously
attached. So the sinker is much more characterized by a kind of anxious
attachment style. The sinker makes the other person too important too quickly.
They obsess over why someone hasn't texted them, where the relationship is going,
what the other person is thinking.
They're over analyzing about the situation all the time,
chopping it up in a thousand different ways.
And it's almost impossible for the sinker to be themselves
or to really be seen because they're so busy
being whatever the other person wants them to be.
On the 23rd of this month,
which is only a couple of days from now, I have my free
event, The First Principles for Getting to Commitment. If you're sick of casual relationships,
if you feel like no one's ever ready anymore, if you want a real relationship and you want to know
how to find one in a world that seems to not value real relationships in the same way anymore,
this event is going to really help you. It's going to be practical,
full of advice. I'm excited about it. We've got over 15,000 people showing up for this. I think it's going to be a lot more by the time we get there. I didn't want you to miss it. So you can
sign up at lovelifetraining.com and it's a virtual event, so you can do it from anywhere in the world. the sinker is so busy trying to secure someone trying to get them and to be whatever they think
they need to be to get that person that there's no room left for them to truly be who they really
are there's also no room left for them to have any needs because when you spend all your time
trying to please someone else,
there is no space for the things that you want.
You're afraid to even voice what you want
for fear of scaring someone away.
So the sinker in the process of becoming obsessed
with this person that they'll do anything to get
ends up losing themselves.
Then there's the third person, the sideliner. This is the person who
takes themselves out of the game altogether. It's like they're standing on the side of the lake,
looking at all of the people in the lake saying, that's not for me. And they could say all sorts
of reasons why this is true. I have been hurt too much in the past to ever do this again. I am so
sick of men because all men are like this, or I am so sick of men because all men are like this.
Or I'm so sick of women because all women are like this.
They will refer to dating as being impossible.
They make generalizations.
They become completely disenchanted by the process.
As a defense mechanism so that they can never be rejected by a date,
they reject dating itself.
The truth is that these different archetypes
aren't always different people.
They can be the same person
at different stages of the dating game.
It could be that we get scared
that we're not gonna meet someone.
And so we start becoming very type A about dating itself.
And we go out there and we date and we date and we date,
never really getting below the
surface with anyone, almost treating dating like a game of how many dates can we go on, never giving
ourselves time to breathe, constantly on a mission to find love, but finding that we never really
meet anyone we connect with or like. Until finally, one day, someone breaks through, someone gets our
attention. Maybe there's a specific kind of charisma about
this person. There's something interesting, mysterious, gripping about them. And all of
a sudden we begin sinking with them. And of course, by the way, when you're dating that much,
at a certain point, the person who's going to stand out is not necessarily the person you have
the greatest connection with on a deeper level. It's the person who has the most charisma.
That's the person we suddenly go, oh my God, there's something special about this person.
I don't know what it is.
There's just something about them.
You don't end up rewarding the person that would become the best teammate to you in a
relationship.
You reward the person who's the best salesperson.
We over obsess.
We overanalyze.
We make them too important.
We go out of our way to
please them, we drop everybody else including our own life and we do everything we can to try and
secure them. And when we inevitably get hurt in a relationship like that with someone we are giving
way more to than they deserve, we're so hurt that we decide, you know what, I am done with dating.
I don't want to do this anymore. I don't
want to date anymore. I am just going to be on my own. And so you do that for a while. You sideline
yourself until eventually you get to a point where you start thinking, this can't be all there is.
I need to get out there and meet someone. And you jump in with a ferociousness again to trying to find someone in a state of panic
that leads to skating.
Now this cycle of going from skater to sinker
to sideliner and all the way back again
leads to dating burnout.
And that's the thing we have to avoid
if we wanna find real love.
We have to find a way to go through the process of dating
in a way that's actually
sustainable. And dare I say, it even enriches our lives as we go. We have to, cliche as it sounds,
learn to love the process. And it doesn't have to be that we have to learn to love the process of
going on lots of dates with different people that don't pan out, but there has to be something
about the process that we love, something about it that makes sense
to us, something about it we can frame in such a way that we can tell ourselves, I'm learning as I
go. I'm getting closer to what I want. I'm refining my tastes. I'm getting better at exerting my
standards. I'm getting better at showing up as myself. I'm getting better at seeing other people
through a compassionate lens and really getting to know them. There has to be something driving us beyond just the immediate result. And when we've done that,
we've learned the antidote to skating, sinking, or sidelining ourselves. We've learned how to swim.
Swimming is the answer to not being one of these three archetypes.
And people who know how to swim in dating, they go at an organic pace with people.
They don't overdate, but they don't underdate either.
Overdating is when you go on so many dates that you become the skater and you never really connect with anyone.
Underdating is when you go on so few dates that you get obsessed with the first person that comes along. We need to find a dating cadence that works for us to build organic connections,
to actually get to know people a little better, at least having a few days between our dates
so that we can have some follow-up, so that an attraction plot line can actually begin without it being interrupted by a date the next evening. Swimming is about
learning to stay hopeful during the process. It's about knowing that with someone or without someone
you're going to keep moving forward in your life. If it's progressing with someone, great, you'll
keep moving forward in that way. If it's not progressing with someone, you'll keep moving
forward in another direction. And moving in another direction doesn't always have
to mean immediately finding somebody else so that you don't have to feel any pain of the last
situation it's about actually feeling your feelings being present enough with your feelings
that you can heal and then when you meet someone, being present enough with them to actually get to know them, to actually reveal who you are.
I almost think of it as slow dating.
The ability to take more time in the process, but to have more real results to show for it.
The truth is, if we can find more joy in the dating process, we'll be able to be more productive in the process because we'll be able to sustain our energy in dating for longer.
Swimming means not suddenly overvaluing the charismatic person that comes along,
but instead more slowly evaluating who's got the kind of qualities
that would make them great for a relationship.
In the way that they show up, in the way that they treat me,
in how at home I feel with this person,
in how much of myself this person brings out. When I'm with this person, do I feel like the me-est
me? Do I feel comfortable to do that? And do I make them feel comfortable to do the same?
When we think like that, we're no longer rewarding the person who comes along and dazzles us. Someone
may dazzle us, but we're still gonna reserve our judgment
for a time where we know that they have the right stuff
to be a great teammate.
And that inevitably involves going slower.
You can't swim as fast as you can skate,
but the results will be more real when you get them.
When we're swimming,
we focus on connecting instead of impressing.
I remember my friend Ali Abdaal
in a recent conversation I had with him
talked about his original dating profile
and how he designed it to attract
the maximum number of people
until he realized that what he really wanted to do
was find the right people for him.
He wanted to stand out to a certain kind of person.
So instead of having a generic profile
littered with things that he thought would make him attractive to women in general,
he started adding a couple of details that nodded to who he actually was. One of them was him saying
my idea of a great evening is working on my laptop with someone for three hours side by side
and then watching a Disney movie together.
Now that detail will have made some people go,
that's not for me.
Other people will have seen it and gone, that's exactly me.
And that's the kind of person that he wanted to attract,
someone who was right for him, that's swimming.
I'm gonna come on to the antidote to all of this, but
before I do, if you identify with dating burnout and you want to actually put your love life on a
path to success where you no longer feel like you're burning out, I have a free training for
you called Dating With Results. It's a one hour training with me that you can watch right now by going to datingwithresults.com.
It's completely free and it's for anyone who is making their love life a priority for the next
year. And you know, you want to find love faster than is happening for you right now.
So that's at datingwithresults.com. So what is the antidote to these three archetypes?
How can we avoid them so we don't keep ending up in dating burnout?
Look, if you're on the sidelines of dating right now,
it takes courage to put yourself in the water.
It really does.
You can get hurt there.
You can have disappointments there.
But it's also where the living is.
Because otherwise, you're denying yourself a key part of yourself.
You're not just denying yourself someone else,
you're denying yourself something that's in you,
the desire to connect, the desire to love,
the desire for romance.
So being in the water is a way of connecting with ourselves
even if we don't find the right person right now.
But when you're in the water,
having taken that courageous step,
it takes confidence
to slow down to an organic pace, even when you're faced with people who are trying to move at
lightning speed or love bomb you with their charisma and all of the things that they want
you to feel so that they can get theirs. But it also takes confidence to say no to the wrong thing
when it comes along, even if it's the only thing that's come along in a while.
Swimmers stay in the game, but they keep moving forward.
Hey guys, before you go, just a reminder that on the 23rd, I have the first Principles for Getting to Commitment event.
It is a free virtual event. It's going to be amazing. We have over 15,000 people showing up
and it really should be a must if you want a committed relationship and you're struggling
in this world where no one seems to be ready and everything seems to be casual and it seems harder
than ever. This is an actual framework for understanding how you can get that relationship
for yourself this year. The link is lovelifetraining.com. I hope you'll join us and thank you as always for watching the video.