Love Life with Matthew Hussey - (Matt Monday): They’ve Pulled Away?? AVOID THIS MISTAKE
Episode Date: May 15, 2023Have you ever deeply fallen for someone only to feel them gradually fading away? It feels awful. You panic. You overthink every text message. You worry that losing this person could mean losing your... chance at a real connection, or your dream of a relationship with someone truly special. I’ve found there are 3 common mistakes people make when they get into this panic mindset, and in today’s new episode, I’ll show you the best strategy to give yourself the maximum chance of salvaging the relationship (or help you move on to find the RIGHT person for you). ►► Get The Text Messages That Lead Your Love Life in a New Direction Learn More About The Momentum Texts at. . . → http://www.MomentumTexts.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
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Why did this happen when he showed all of this initial interest and then faded away?
And what did I do wrong in trying to assert my boundary? Have you felt someone in recent memory or very recently in your life pull away? What was your
reaction to them pulling away? In fact, what do you feel was the reason that they pulled away
in the first place? I'm going to tell you a quick story about
someone who came to me about someone pulling away and what they did and I'm going to show you a very
very common three-part pattern that happens in situations like these and as I go through each
of these three parts I want you to just see where you might be able to see your own pattern aligning
with that because it might be that you see exactly this pattern show up frequently in your life. The woman who came to me
told me a story of a marriage that she had recently left. An eight-year marriage which for five of
those eight years had become devoid of passion. There was no sex.
There was no real intimacy or romance.
It was essentially a relationship of two roommates.
And she left that relationship,
went back out there into the dating scene,
and then met a guy that she felt an intense chemistry with.
Now, in feeling all of this chemistry
and the excitement of it and how important that felt,
she suddenly started to give an awful lot to this situation.
And she said herself that the text messages from her
got longer and longer and his messages
got shorter and shorter.
There was a strong initial interest from him,
but it started to fade. And as it faded,
as she felt him pulling away, she felt this urge to make it work. Then when she happened to see
that he was hanging out with another woman, she tried to reach out and assert a boundary and say
that she wasn't comfortable with that. He said that's way too much control
for me at this stage. He wasn't willing to oblige and then suggested they go their separate ways.
This is the point at which I entered the dynamic and she said Matthew what do I do here? I really
like this guy. I feel something extraordinary with him that I didn't feel in my marriage.
Why did this happen when he showed all of this initial interest and then faded away? And what
did I do wrong in trying to assert my boundary about this other woman that he was hanging out
with? Now, let me explain the three-part pattern that this aligns perfectly with that happens to so many people when they
feel an intense chemistry. The first part is that we overvalue something in the situation.
Now let's take her story. She was in a marriage for eight years where for a very long time she
was not feeling that chemistry and they weren't having sex. So now the first person that she really meets
and connects with, when she feels an intense chemistry,
it feels like the most important thing in the world,
that this is exactly what was missing in my marriage.
Now, when we feel like we've been missing something
for a long time, we can hyper
focus on that thing and not all of the things that perhaps a marriage is important for and provides.
In other words, when we find someone new, we still have to have the good parts of that marriage,
the teamwork, the mutual respect, the thinking about each other, all of the ways we show up for each other,
the consistency, the stability. We still need all of those things. It's just that we were missing a
very, very important component of a long-term relationship, which is intimacy. But when she
felt chemistry, it made her forget about all of these other things someone would need to have
and massively overvalue that chemistry. So that's
part one. And that happens to so many of us when we meet someone. There is something they have
that we overvalue. And because we overvalue it, we put them and the possible relationship that
may emerge with them on a pedestal. The second part of the pattern is this. When we overvalue something, based on that
overvaluation, we begin to give way too much. So for her, her effort that she was putting into this
was effort that corresponded with how important she thought it was because of the chemistry she
was feeling. It did not correspond to how important
he was making it or how important it really was. She had just decided that because she was feeling
something intense, this was a really important thing to hold on to. And she gave in accordance
with that. That made him feel like he was getting way too much for what he was giving. And I'm not suggesting
that this person would have been capable of a real relationship had she given the appropriate
amount. But what is guaranteed is that he got way more than he was giving. And that only lowers her
value in his eyes. That this effort is cheap. I don't need to do much to get this amount of
investment and what was the investment based on it wasn't based on real qualities it wasn't based on
character it wasn't based on how much he was investing it was based on some attention that
he'd given her that had resulted in some chemistry i see this pattern a lot where someone says but
matthew he he seemed to really like me.
You know, in the beginning, he was giving a lot.
And we have to almost stop thinking of someone liking us as meaning one thing. Someone liking us can be, they really like having sex with us because we're good in bed.
Someone liking us can mean they like not feeling alone.
They like the feeling they get when they have companionship around us.
Someone liking us can be that they like that we're a really great person, but maybe they
don't feel romantically about us, but they do like being around us because we have great
values and they feel secure around us.
Someone liking us can mean they're just having a great time right now.
The same great time they're having with five other people.
So what does liking us really mean?
Not a lot on its own. Liking us just gets us some of a person's attention, but attention is not
intention. It's not the intention to have a relationship with us, the intention to build
something with us, the intention to be a permanent feature in our life. And even intention doesn't
mean real investment because
not everyone who has the good intentions can back it up with real investment over time. In her case,
she didn't have intention or investment. She just had attention. Attention that she was vastly
overvaluing and that overvaluation was making her give way too much. Now here's the third part in this pattern.
Her giving so much and him realizing, oh, I really don't need to do a lot to get this amount of
investment, which naturally makes someone go, well, maybe I can give a little less. Oh, I still
get the investment. Maybe I'll give a little less. Oh, I still get the investment. When he feels that
he's giving less and she's feeling more
and more out of control. So in response to feeling out of control, the third part of the pattern
is I now try to exert control in the wrong way because I don't feel in control of how much this
person is giving, but I can be in control of trying to tell them I'm not happy with them
hanging out with this person in this case.
So we try and exert control there.
The problem with exerting control in a way like that
is that A, it doesn't show control over the right things.
It doesn't show that I'm just simply controlling
whether my perception of whether you're right for me,
or I'm controlling how much I give to this situation.
Those are high value ways of controlling,
but a low frequency way of controlling is you can't do that.
I don't feel powerful right now.
I feel like I'm trying to get you and I can't get you.
So I'm gonna try and control you in this way.
Often when we do that,
and it's coming from a place of desperation and insecurity,
we are trying to make a demand at a time
where we don't have leverage. In life, when we ask
for something, we usually need some form of leverage. In dating, if I say you have to commit to me,
I have to have some form of leverage. And I know that may sound like a crude way of looking at it,
but what makes someone commit? I don't want to spend time without you. I don't want to lose you. I want this to continue. You represent so much importance in my
life that I couldn't have you not in my life. I really like you or I love you. That's a form of
leverage. We don't think about it like that because it sounds too kind of manipulative almost. But the truth is,
we ask when we have leverage. It's the same as in anything in life, in business. You know,
if you're asking someone to pay for something, the leverage is that you really want that thing.
If you ask someone to pay for something they don't want, there's no leverage there. In her case,
what I gather from this situation is this is kind of a charming guy enjoying himself, enjoying creating
chemistry, maybe doing it with multiple people, enjoying that freedom. And the fact that he had
chemistry with her wasn't enough leverage on its own, but she was treating it like it was.
In order to make an ask someone has to really want
us in that moment. They have to be asking for something. The right time to say hey something's
making me uncomfortable is when that person is actually asking to see you again. When that
person is asking for more of your energy. When that person wants to keep dating you.
That's a great time to say hey I'd love to keep dating you. That's a great time to say, hey, I'd love to keep dating you too,
but there's something that's making me a little uncomfortable.
Or I just want us to establish the rules going forward
of what we're not gonna do or what we are gonna do.
Those are the right times to ask for something.
But if we don't have leverage, there's no point asking.
In that moment, what could she have done differently?
Well, ultimately, if she feels like she's texting more there's no point asking in that moment what could she have done differently well ultimately
if she feels like she's texting more and more and more and him less and less that's a good time to
step back and the next time he reaches out to her she shouldn't ratchet up the energy she gives him
until she feels a ratcheting up from his side. So there should be a reduction
in her energy, a reduction in her investment. And if he questions that reduction, like what's going
on, that's the time to say, well, I felt like there wasn't any progression with you. And because
there was no progression, I just kind of felt like I didn't feel excited in giving much more to this he could at that point
say oh my god I'm but I want to keep seeing you well if you want to keep seeing me you need to
show me and if he does show her then she can increase her energy in accordance with that
but what was happening instead was he was decreasing his energy and right as he was
lowering his energy she came in and said and here's what i want and he's saying but but i'm not even asking for anything from you right now and you're telling
me what to do no leverage to three parts to that pattern that people fall into if we ever want a
shot at pulling them closer we have to reverse this pattern value appropriately, give appropriate to the investment that I'm getting, and then make out
asks at times when I have real leverage because this person is seeing me as someone they want
in their life more. But what I'm showing them is that there's a price to having me in your life
more. How to do this in reality, because this is, i'm giving you a conceptual model here but what we
need is okay how do i actually apply that like walk me through from the moment i meet someone
on a dating app to getting on a date to what i do after a date between date one and date two what
do i do when i don't hear from them for a week after date two? How do I communicate with them at each juncture when I do ask for more? What's a great
way of doing it in a powerful, confident way? These are all things that I've created for years
of my life now in very practical ways that are easy to follow. And I've put them in a program called the Momentum Texts. And the Momentum Texts is 67 specific ways to increase momentum in the early stages of dating
so that a situation like this doesn't happen.
So that when you apply energy to your dating life,
it actually goes somewhere instead of always petering out, instead of always fading out. And by the way,
a copy of the Momentum Texts is seven bucks. So it's a very, very accessible program. There's no
excuse for everyone not to have their hands on this. To get your copy, go to MomentumTexts.com.
Whether you're on day one of texting someone or you're on month six of seeing someone,
this program will give you something for every part of the dating process. you