Love Life with Matthew Hussey - (Matt Monday): Want MORE From Someone... DO THIS Now
Episode Date: July 24, 2023Sometimes it’s hard to tell the difference between dating anxiety and your needs not being met. If you know your insecurity can lead your thoughts down irrational pathways, how can you figure out... if something you’re stressing about is a real concern? For instance, if you had the most amazing date last weekend but they haven’t texted you for a few days, should you be worried? And most importantly of all, how do you get more investment from someone if you’re feeling this way? Instead of feeling insecure and waiting for someone to come to you and meet your unspoken needs, listen to this week’s episode and break free from the self-doubt and anxiety cycle. --- ►► Unlock the 67 Counterintuitive Text Messages That Create Real Momentum in Your Love Life. . . → http://www.MomentumTexts.com
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A confident mindset has us asking the question,
is this enough for me?
Not simply, do I need to work on myself
because this affects me?
So, Someone recently asked me a question.
She said, in the early stages of dating,
when you're exclusive with someone,
if someone doesn't text me for a couple of days,
should I be okay with that?
What she said was, I read somewhere
that if someone doesn't text you for a couple of days
and you have a problem with it, then you need to do some inner work. You need to work on your
anxiety. Have you ever been in a situation like this where maybe you're in one right now, someone's
not texting you as much as you would like, maybe there's been a period of time where you haven't
heard from them and you find yourself asking, is my anxiety the problem here?
Am I asking too much?
Am I just acting out of my own trauma, my own fears?
Do I need to do work on myself
so that this doesn't affect me?
Or is it legitimate that this is affecting me?
I wanna make a key distinction here that I made to her. There is a big difference between anxiety
and needs. Anxiety is when our thoughts go in all sorts of sometimes irrational and mutated
directions. You know, someone doesn't text us for a couple of hours and all of a sudden we think
they're cheating. We message someone and they don't text back within five minutes and we
go, they don't love me as much as I love them. We go in all of these directions that may not
necessarily be true, may have no basis in reality, but that's what anxiety does. It makes things that
are often improbable or irrational seem like they're vivid and real.
Anxiety has to be separated from our core needs.
Our needs in a relationship are, what's the base level of affection or communication or love that I need and need to feel in order to be happy. So from that point of view, instead of
asking yourself, do I need to work on myself because I want texts more frequently than every
48 hours, ask yourself, what do I actually need from my intimate relationship? Would I like someone who texts me every day?
And of course there are limits and that's where we have to explore where is
anxiety playing a part because if I'm expecting someone to text me every five
minutes then my anxiety is probably playing a massive part here. But in the
average relationship connecting each day is not abnormal. And if you speak to many people in healthy relationships, they will tell you that's not abnormal.
Now, are there some healthy relationships where people go longer periods of time without speaking?
Of course there are.
But this is where you have to ask the question when it comes to your needs.
What's right for me?
Self-awareness.
Know thyself.
What's right for me. I know that for me, my partner not texting for
48 hours wouldn't be enough. I know that I like more communication than that. So for me,
that would not be right. But I don't think of that through the lens of anxiety. I think of it
through the lens of how connected I want to be to someone. So I want us to start to
make that distinction, anxiety and needs. And when it comes to our needs in life, we all have to make
decisions about where to put our time and energy. In a relationship, we're going to put a lot of
time and energy into one person. And that one person is going to be responsible, perhaps solely, for meeting our needs
for that romantic intimacy. We're not going to get them from anywhere else because that would be a
betrayal, at least within the context of a monogamous relationship. This one relationship
needs to meet those needs. Otherwise, why are we going to put so much energy and time into it? The stakes are pretty high. A confident mindset has us asking the question, is this enough for me? Not simply,
do I need to work on myself because this affects me? Is this enough for me? See, if we're in a
place of anxiety and someone doesn't text us for two days, our thoughts go to, I'm not enough. But
if we're coming from a confident place and someone doesn't text us for two days. Our thoughts go to, I'm not enough. But if we're coming from a confident place
and someone doesn't text us for two days,
we say, oh, this person might not be my person.
This person might not be right for me
because they have such a radically different style
of communication to me.
It doesn't make them wrong,
but it might make them wrong for me.
And by the way, confidence goes one step further
than asking the question, are they enough for me?
Is their behavior what I need in my life? Confidence is creating the culture where that's possible.
Insecurity goes into every relationship following the lead of somebody else.
Confidence goes into every relationship attempting to create the culture that you actually want.
So if you're
coming from a confident place, you don't sit there for 48 hours waiting for someone to text you and
then being anxious that they didn't. Confidence is, I'm going to reach out to you because I want
to teach that culture that that's what I want in this relationship. And if I find that it's always
me who's leading, then sooner or later I'm going to get out. But right now I'm going to be
bold and create the culture that I want. And if we're confidently reaching out to someone, we of
course want to do it in a way that gives value. Anxious communication is I'm going to reach out
to you to try to get value from you. I'm going to reach out to you to get approval, to get
validation, to get reassurance, to feel whole again. Confident communication is,
I'm going to reach out to you to create value.
Now, I know when you're coming from an anxious place,
it can be very hard to create that value.
And for many of us who have never learned
what that actually looks like,
we've got no model, no examples for doing
it. I put together 67 different ways that you can reach out to someone that create
value, that don't come from an anxious place but a confident place, that creates
the culture of communication that you want to have. It's called the Momentum
Texts and it's only $7 but it gives you the 67 messages that
create value and create momentum and the culture that you want to have in your relationship it
practically shows you how to do what i'm talking about here but no matter what don't just ask the
question am i being too much or do i need to work on myself? Do I need to work on myself is a valuable question.
But there's another valuable question to be asking. Is this person right for me? Because one
way to be miserable and anxious your whole life is to stay with someone who can't actually give you
what you need and it has nothing to do with you and everything to do with them having a style
that is not compatible with yours. So go check out the Momentum Texts when you get a chance. Momentumtexts.com is the link.
I will see you over there and thank you as always. Thank you.