Love Life with Matthew Hussey - (Matt Monday): The Psychology of Modern Men and The Relationship Recession
Episode Date: April 7, 2025If finding love feels harder than ever in 2025, it’s not just you. In today’s episode, I explore the cultural shifts and challenges that are fueling the “relationship recession.” Drawing inspi...ration from the Netflix series Adolescence, we’ll dive into the disillusionment many men are facing, the frustrations women are experiencing, and the hidden dynamics making connection feel so elusive. From surprising stats to the subtle mindsets that sabotage us before love even begins, this video connects the dots. If you’ve ever wondered why someone amazing vanished after two dates—or why you might be pulling away yourself—this will explain what’s really going on and how to rise above it to create meaningful relationships. Let me know what you think! --- ►► Order My New Book, "Love Life" at → http://www.LoveLifeBook.com ►► Transform Your Relationship With Life in One Powerful Weekend. Learn More About my Weekend Retreat at → http://www.MHWeekendRetreat.com
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So when people say they've taken the red pill, it's possible they mean that they're waking up
to the fact that they need to improve their life, but it's also highly likely they've
started to see women and relationships through a deeply cynical lens. This video took me forever to write.
There is a big problem happening with a lot of men right now.
Most of us, including myself, did not see this problem coming.
And even when we did, we did not take it seriously enough.
In this video, I am going to talk about what that problem is, how it is creating huge numbers
of disillusioned, unhappy men and a record number of single women. And I am going to
finish by giving some practical tips for both men and women who are struggling to find love
because of this problem.
Let's start with a cultural moment many of us are sharing right now.
The TV show Adolescents, currently airing on Netflix.
I, like so many other people, took four straight hours of my life to binge watch this show
that everybody is talking about.
Don't worry, there won't be any spoilers here, but the show revolves around the story
of 13-year-old Jamie Miller, a young boy whose life takes an unexpected turn
after a tragic event involving a classmate.
Over four episodes, the series explores themes
of adolescence, societal pressures,
and the impact of online cultures.
At the time of making this video,
this show has been watched by over 70 million viewers,
more than the population of France. That's not just
because it's an incredibly made show with exceptional acting, which it is, it's
also because it's struck at the heart of something that has been bubbling under
the surface for a long time. The issue of what's happening to men in society. If
you don't know me, my name is Matthew Hussey. I am a coach, a speaker, a writer, the
author of the book Love Life and I have this YouTube channel that helps people with mental
health relationships and their confidence. If you haven't subscribed to the channel, be sure to do
that. Don't forget to like the video and hit the notification bell so that you don't miss future
videos. One of the most disconcerting themes in the show adolescence is its focus on the influence Red Pill Culture has had on
teenage boys. I recently spoke with a friend of mine back in England who said
that the show has got parents heads spinning as they rapidly try to play
catch-up with what their kids have been consuming online and how it may be
affecting their views towards women, which if you've seen the show
is actually a mirror of the experience of the parents in the show. If you're wondering what
red pill means yourself, or you've heard it floating around the internet in debates around masculinity,
dating or even politics, the term comes from the matrix, where taking the red pill means waking up
to a harsh, uncomfortable truth instead of staying in a comforting illusion. In the modern world red pill culture has become
a philosophy around men who believe society has lied to them about women,
relationships and male identity. Basically the idea is that men are often
taught to be overly agreeable, emotionally vulnerable, or self-sacrificing
in ways that actually hurt them in dating and in life.
In reality, the red pill community argues,
80% of women want to be with the top 20% of men
who are in that top 20% because of their looks,
status, confidence, and money.
The remaining 80% of men are often overlooked,
friend-zoned, or not seen as attractive partners,
especially in the age of online dating and social media,
where comparison is constant
and perceived options are endless.
Some aspects of this philosophy, at least ostensibly,
focus on helping men build confidence,
set boundaries
and stop being people pleasers, while other parts have veered into anger, resentment and
broad generalisations about women, promoting a kind of us versus them mentality that quickly
becomes excessively toxic.
So when people say they've taken the red pill, it's possible they mean that they're waking
up to the fact that they need to improve their life, but it's also highly likely they've taken the red pill, it's possible they mean that they're waking up to the fact that they need to improve their life,
but it's also highly likely they've started to see women and relationships through a deeply cynical lens.
While red pill culture raises real issues like loneliness, rejection, and the pain of feeling unseen among men,
too often it answers those issues with hostility instead of healing.
For the purposes of this video,
I'm less interested in what's happening to highly impressionable teenage boys and more interested in the adult culture that
is influencing them in the first place. The insecurity, bitterness and disillusionment
seen in the barely teen boys in the show is echoed in what's going on with an ever-growing number of adult men in the world today.
Here are some scary recent stats about men. Suicide rates among men under 30 have risen
by 40% since 2010 and are four times higher than among young women. A 2022 Pew Research
Center survey revealed that 63% of men under 30 identified as single, a significant rise from 51% in 2019.
The same survey found that the percentage of single men actively seeking either a committed
relationship or casual dates decreased from 61% in 2019 to 50% in 2022. So what exactly is going on here?
And what does it have to do with why so many men and women are finding it harder than ever
to get into a relationship?
The relationship recession.
Firstly, if your experience is that it's harder than ever to find love, the data supports
your experience.
In an article from the Atlantic titled Americans' Marriage Material Shortage,
Derek Thompson writes,
American adults are significantly less likely to be married
or to live with a partner than they used to be.
The national marriage rate is hovering
near its all-time low,
while the share of women under 65
who aren't living with a partner
has grown steadily since the 1980s. The past decade
seems to be the only period since at least the 1970s when women under 35 were more likely to
live with their parents than with a spouse. This is also reflected in the data on birth rates
in recent years. John Byrne Murdoch wrote in the Financial Times, In the US between 1960 and 1980,
the average number of children born to a woman
halved from almost four to two,
even as the share of women in married couples
edged only modestly lower.
There were still plenty of couples
in happy, stable relationships.
They were just electing to have smaller families.
But in recent years, most of the fall is not coming from the decisions made by couples,
but from a marked fall in the number of couples.
Had US rates of marriage and cohabitation remained constant over the past decade,
America's total fertility rate would be higher today than it was then. The central demographic
story of modern times is not just the declining rates of childbearing, but rising rates of
singledom. A much more fundamental shift in the nature of modern societies. So basically,
what all of this is saying is that it used to be the case that birth rates were falling because
less people were deciding to have kids,
but now they're falling
because there are just way less couples.
Way more people are single.
So if birth rates are declining
because there are way less couples,
why are there way less couples?
Lyman Stone, a researcher
at the Institute of Family Studies,
suggests it is because young men
are falling behind economically, and men's odds of being in a relationship today are still
highly correlated with their income. Stone said, women do not typically invest in long-term
relationships with men who have nothing to contribute economically.
So the theory goes like this. Less men are graduating from college, while record numbers
of women are graduating from college. Alongside this, the income of less educated men has
stagnated while women's earnings have increased. The result, Stone says, is a lot of young men today
just don't look like what women have come to think of
as marriage material.
In basic terms, this means as women have progressed,
as their lifestyles and their earnings have gone up,
their standards have also gone up.
They've become choosier.
Damn you, female empowerment.
An enormous amount of this, unless you are someone who believes in the subjugation of
women and having them be forced to be reliant on men, is a good thing.
Do we actually want to go back to a time when it was enough that a man having a job and
not being violent gave him bragging rights
as a good husband.
What are you talking about?
I put food on the table.
I never laid an hand on you.
I treat you like a queen.
I know if I am ever to have a daughter,
I will be teaching her how important it is
that she go out and earn her own money
so that she never makes a relationship decision
based on the need to rely on a man or a woman financially. Financial independence isn't just the freedom
to choose the life we want, it is the freedom to choose the partner who is right. Others,
however, have argued that women are hypergamous by nature, which is to say they marry up in terms of wealth, status and resources.
So when they become financially independent, they don't exercise the freedom to choose
anyone they want free from the constraints of financial practicality. Instead, they now
have an even higher bar than before. find someone with an even bigger paycheck and even
more resources than I have.
Well, let's just assume this is true for a minute, and that the data is correct, that
young women aged 16 to 24 now earn nearly 10% more than their male peers, and in 2022
single women owned 58% of the nearly 35 million homes owned by unmarried Americans while single men owned 42 percent,
then you do the maths. What that means essentially is that there are way less men than ever before
who are deemed marriage material. As Scott Galloway put it, how many of us have said
I know a ton of great single women, they just can't find a date.
That's not true, he said.
They can't find a date that they find economically
and emotionally viable.
Many men are also quick to point out
what feels like a brand new double standard,
that men still be expected to pay
even though they are dating women
who do just as well as them, if not more so.
Looking back, if I were a smarter person, I would have realized that a video of me on stage talking about these double standards,
titled Who Should Pay on a Date, going insanely viral many years ago, was a sign of things to come.
When you're on a date, who should pay?
Yeah.
I know, I mean, that's what I told him you know I'm sorry but I'm dating
with a gentleman here. Okay he's supposed to pay. Yeah. But you're
supposed to have sex with him whenever he says. No.
Whenever what? Where does this double standard come from? Whenever wall-watering.
But where does this double standard come from?
I'm sorry, it's the reality.
You guys can moan at it or you want, but the moment you say to a guy, you have to fucking
pay for my time, you're saying this relationship isn't equal.
This relationship isn't equal.
My time is worth more than yours,
so you should pay for it.
I wonder what paradigm that sets up.
One comment I saw online reflected a growing sentiment
among men where he wrote,
"'Dating for men is like paying for a job interview.'"
Combine all of this information with the fact that
I hear all of the time from women
that when they try
to date men who have less than they do, the men themselves seem to have a giant hang up
about it and get intimidated and, well, it's a giant f***ing mess.
So basically we have an army of newly choosy women and an army of men who feel invisible,
overlooked and increasingly hostile, all put together in a pressure cooker
of economic uncertainty
and unprecedented political division.
Never fear, social media and dating apps are here.
Oh, top 10 places to get pancakes in New York.
Hi, hi, hi, hi.
What was, what was this video again?
Ah, yes, smartphones will save us,
delivering an endless stream of stimulation and options
to us from the comfort of our own couch.
The two insidious words that are ruining our lives here
are options and couch.
First, let's look at the options problem.
Options create entitlement on both sides.
Men and women alike are awash in profiles
that depict impossibly curated
lifestyles and bewilderingly filtered faces that lead to expectations that simply cannot
be met by reality.
It is now entirely possible to go on a date with someone you met online and find that
when you arrive at the restaurant or coffee shop, you literally cannot find the person
because their actual face is different from the
person in their pictures. But social media doesn't just create entitlement when it comes to who we
want to attract. It invites massive amounts of comparison with our perceived competition.
Women see other women looking perfect. Men see other men the same age as them, seemingly living
a millionaire lifestyle while they struggle to pay rent.
The effect of all of this isn't just in America or Europe, it's all over the world.
John Byrne Murdoch in the Financial Times wrote,
Gender researcher Alice Evans has shown that relationships are down just about everywhere.
Like a stock in the stock market. Relationships are down.
Some Islamic authorities blame Western values
and social media for the shift.
Damn you, Western values.
When women are exposed to more Western media,
Evans argues, their expectations expand.
We must find a way of stopping these women's life
expectations from expanding, but how?
Max, get my cloak.
Social media, a woman veterinarian in Tehran
told the Financial Times,
also glamorizes the single life
by showing how unmarried people live carefree
and successful lives.
And it makes people keep comparing their partners
to mostly fake idols on social platforms.
So we have the options problem.
Then there's the couch problem for both men and women.
Social media has constricted so many people's lives which is especially dangerous for men who
typically spend less time investing in their friendships and real life support systems than
women do anyway and whose motivation to go out and meet women even for fun is muted by the unending and immediately available rabbit hole of online porn.
I don't want to claim that this video is comprehensive in discerning all of the factors
going into what's going on with so many men right now.
For example, I haven't even touched on the fact that men are way more likely to be right
leaning politically now than women, and how the political differences between the sexes
introduce a litany of incompatibilities,
some superficial, some far more fundamental. But hopefully this video is a start.
In a sense, none of this would really matter if we were all happy with our lives the way
they are. But as Derek Thompson writes, marriage is strongly associated with happiness. According
to general social survey data, American self-described life satisfaction has been
decreasing for decades.
In a 2023 analysis of the GSS data, the University of Chicago economist Sam Peltzman concluded
that marriage was more correlated with this measure of happiness than any other variable
he considered, including income.
None of this, by the way, is designed to be leading
to some kind of grand statement of belief on my part
that we should all be in relationships
and that we can't be happy single.
I don't believe either of those two things.
And I wrote a chapter in my book,
Love Life Happy Enough for that reason,
because I believe it is entirely possible
to be happy enough to live a great life
without a relationship.
But the fact remains that many people deep down
truly want companionship and either feel
that it is not available to them, have given up,
or are letting their superficial preferences
get in the way of them experiencing
an amazing relationship.
So for the people who want a relationship,
whether they will say it out loud
or not, what is the answer to these deep and complicated challenges? This is probably the
subject of a whole other video because this one is already way too long and some of the solutions
are macro, like Scott Galloway's suggestion to invest more in the middle class to help men who
are falling behind. But I am not in government and my impact is always the most powerful, in my opinion,
when I'm helping people work with how life really is, not how we'd like it to be.
So I will just give you some initial thoughts and you can tell me what you think
in the comments. First to all of the men who are struggling or relate to any of the
things that I have said in this video.
For many of you, I know that life has not been or relate to any of the things that I have said in this video.
For many of you I know that life has not been and continues to not be the privileged walk
in the park that you keep hearing it is from the outside.
You may be struggling both financially and psychologically, feeling behind in life and
to add insult to injury feel like because you're not successful enough, tall enough, or good-looking enough,
you're fundamentally not enough for women in general.
But this does women a disservice, and it treats them all as if they're some kind of giant hive mind
with no will of their own as individuals to decide their own nuanced preferences.
Not all women want the same thing and many of them are
far deeper than the people on TikTok simply looking for a 6'5 blue-eyed
trust fund Chad. But yes if you aren't stereotypically attractive you may find
yourself with very few matches on dating apps. But charisma, humor, being
interesting, being great company and having a great outlook
on life go a very long way. But these aren't tools you can easily flex online.
So maybe online isn't your place. Maybe it's out there in the real world being
in communities, having face-to-face interactions and letting people
organically come to the realization that you are way more awesome and attractive
than any of the superficial people they have dated to the realization that you are way more awesome and attractive
than any of the superficial people they have dated before.
For that to happen,
it's important that you aren't constantly anticipating
the punch, imagining that women won't want you
once they get to know you, or feeling emasculated
the moment you find out there's an area of life
she's excelling in.
Her success takes nothing from your intrinsic value
and your ability to admire her success
without feeling threatened by it
or feeling the need to compete with it
will set you apart from other more insecure men.
Also, be careful on hating on people
who are drawn towards people who are successful.
It doesn't automatically make them superficial.
And it's a double standard that some of us have
to be mad at someone else for having a preference
when we ourselves disqualify people
based on our preferences all the time.
In any case, you don't need to be outwardly
and superficially successful to be a hardworking man,
to have a vision for a
better life for yourself, and to have a resilience that is noticeable and
admirable when it comes to getting through hard things. These are all
insanely attractive qualities that don't require superficial success for them to
be expressed on a date. Dating is storytelling. You are telling the
story of where you came from, who you are, and where you are going. If you learn to tell
a better story, you will attract more women. And in regards to the women who don't give
a shit what your story is until they know what car you drive, don't give them a minute
of your time. You don't want the woman who wants you because you have it all. You want the woman who would be by your side if you lost
it all.
Now to women. Whenever I hear this toxic stereotyping BS about you coming from certain male communities
online, I champion you everywhere I go. You know that. You've watched me on interviews, on YouTube,
and constantly fighting that fight for not allowing you to be stereotyped in unfair ways.
Because I've spent 18 years of my life working with you and I know you deserve better than
that. But man, does some of you give the rest of you a bad name and make it hard to defend
you against those stereotypes?
If you want an authentic relationship
based on mutual respect and admiration,
date someone who respects and admires you.
Not someone who gets the message loud and clear
that the reason you are into them
is because of what they've achieved and what they have.
If you achieved a great paycheck in your life,
an enviable lifestyle and a fancy job title,
good for you, that's amazing.
Wasn't the whole point of that
so that you could choose whoever you wanted
without relying on anybody?
If you're in a position to choose a relationship
for love and not security, you already want.
So take advantage of that position.
Realize that you being more successful
should make the dating pole bigger, not smaller.
You can't go around calling men superficial
when you yourself cannot see past the fact
that a man doesn't have the exact style
you'd like him to have,
the height you said you wanted when you were 25, or the kind of job or status that you think would impress your
friends when you tell them about him.
And to everybody of any gender, we have to realise that physical attraction is way more
interesting than simply finding someone who fits our preconceived type online. Life is
way more interesting than that.
We get attracted to people we never would have expected to get attracted to when we
actually spend time with them and find out what's beautiful about them, what's unique
about their energy or what we respect about their standards in life.
And no matter what, remember, statistics don't matter to the individual.
No matter what the trends are in dating and relationships,
the reality of your life is that you are one conversation
away from meeting someone who makes
this entire video irrelevant.
Before you go, there is a program
that I would love you to try of mine
that for those of you that are struggling in dating
because you reach out to people and you
don't hear back or maybe you start texting them and you feel like they're just not trying very
hard they're sending you one word responses or maybe you feel like you get talking to people or
you even go on a date or two but then it just fizzles nothing comes of it and what you want
is real momentum in your dating life. This
program is that program is called the Momentum Texts. In it I give you 67
pre-written text messages that are all designed to give you momentum in the
early stages of dating for all different situations right from the minute you
start talking to someone in that first message, to after a first date,
to when you're well on your way to having a relationship
and looking for commitment.
And of course, you can make them your own.
It's not that you have to send them word for word,
but they're things that I have created
that you can play with as ideas,
and they're really valuable.
Program is $7, which is basically
the price of a coffee these days.
Go check it out.
I know that you're going to love it.
It's at MomentumTexts.com.
So I'll leave a link below as well.
MomentumTexts.com.
Let me know what you think and I can't wait to read your comments on this video.
Thank you so much for watching!