Love Life with Matthew Hussey - (Rewind): Do You Give Too Much In Relationships? Listen To This...
Episode Date: March 15, 2024Do you ignore red flags? Do you feel like you give too much in your relationships? Do you brush things under the carpet when someone violates your boundaries? If so, this week’s episode is specif...ically for you… The richness and depth of a true connection can only come from giving other people the chance to reciprocate your warmth, kindness, and giving nature… Because, while it might feel selfless or nurturing to pour into others without receiving in return – it can actually backfire, weaken your connection, and make you feel resentful. I promise that if you find the courage to be honest, you’ll find more satisfaction, fulfillment, and happiness in your relationships. ►► Pre-Order My New Book, "Love Life" at → http://www.LoveLifeBook.com ►► Ready to Get Off the Sidelines and Back into Dating? Join my Free Virtual Event, The Love Life Reset Reserve Your Spot Now at. . . → http://www.LoveLifeTraining.com
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Are you someone who often brushes things under the carpet when someone does something that you don't like or you feel violates your boundaries or fell beneath the standard you would like to have for yourself? Hey everybody, it's Matthew Hussey with the Love Life Podcast. I am excited to
share this clip with you today. Let's get into it.
Are you the type of person who feels you give too much in your relationships?
It doesn't just have to be romantic relationships.
It could be with friends, family.
You feel that you're a giver and ultimately that gets taken advantage of.
Maybe in the process, your needs don't get met.
You give so much and then you somehow forget yourself in the process
and you can end up feeling extremely resentful.
It comes out in passive aggressive ways or maybe one day you even explode.
Right. And then the person in front of you says, whoa, like who who is this?
I don't know this person because we haven't been giving them a true impression of what our needs are along the way.
So now they don't recognize us.
Now, why do we do this?
Whenever I talk to women about this,
there's often the logic that,
well, it's because I'm a giver.
It's because I'm a nurturer by nature.
So I like doing those things for people.
I like showing up for people.
It's just who I am.
I'm a very loving person.
I don't wanna cause pain to those people.
I love those people. And anyway, I can handle it. You know, I'm a giving person and yes, sometimes they do things that upset me, but I can live with it. It's okay. But of course they can't because it's like this slow drip torture where eventually you suffer so much in your resentment that that's when that extreme reaction comes about. Here's
what's interesting to me. People give that logic of, well, it's just because I'm a loving person
and I am a giving person, so I kind of forget about myself. And it's not that it's not true
that that type of person is giving. It's not that it's not true that they're extremely loving and
that they are nurturing by nature. But sometimes that becomes an excuse
for something else that's going on, which is that what's really happening underneath all that
is that the amount that they're giving to someone else, they don't truly feel worthy of.
They are worried that if they suddenly start asking for what they need, that this person will leave them.
This person won't like them as much. This person will decide that they're not worth the trouble.
And so they hold back these needs. In doing so, they deprive both them and the other person
of a deeper relationship because you can only form a depth of relationship out of honesty.
And when you're not communicating your needs, it's actually a form of detachment.
You're creating a wedge between you and somebody else because they don't really know you.
They don't know your mind.
They don't have a chance to connect with you more deeply
because you're not placing trust in them to be able to handle who you really are.
It's also depriving
somebody else of the opportunity to grow. Certain people may need to hear truths about themselves.
We don't, you know, there's been so many times in my life where I've needed someone or multiple
people to tell me, often multiple times, something about myself that I'm too close to see or that my
self-awareness is lacking on that particular thing. And when I hear it from other people, I go, wow, I better pay attention to this because
this is how I'm making other people feel.
I've needed the honest people in my life to tell me that.
And I haven't been able to rely in those moments on the people pleasers in my life who don't
tell me the truth.
I've had to rely on the people that tell me often very unwelcome things about myself,
but things that ultimately allow me to grow.
And although that may cause me pain in the short term, it does allow me to grow in the long term.
And pain isn't what deprives me from being happy. Lack of growth is.
So we could say that when we're not honest with the people in our lives about things that are bothering us,
we're trying to avoid pain with them, maybe pain for ourselves that they may like us less in
that moment, or they may not want to be around us, or they may even leave us. Pain for them in hearing
an unwelcome truth, but we're actually depriving everyone of real happiness. Because real happiness
comes from true growth, and true growth can only come from a place of hearing honest truths about
ourselves. So are you the type of person that when you see red flags in a relationship, ignores them?
Are you someone who often brushes things under the carpet when someone does something that
you don't like or you feel violates your boundaries or fell beneath the standard you
would like to have for yourself?
I always think we have to convert our wish list, the things that internally
we, I wish this person would do this, I wish this person would do that. We have to convert our
internal wish list into an external standard. Wish lists have to become standards, but that can only
come from a place of self-worth, of believing that we are worthy of that from other people. What we
are willing to give, we are also worthy of
receiving from those people. And of course, that doesn't mean that every single person that we
express our needs to will be capable of meeting those needs. We will lose people in life who
aren't capable of meeting our needs, but it's better that we lose them sooner rather than later
because you don't want to get three years into a relationship where you've been that entire time pretending to be someone you're not. I'm a giver, I'm a giver, I'm a giver,
I'm a giver, I'm a giver, but never receiving. And then three years later, finally you start
putting your foot down and putting yourself first. And then you find out they leave because they're
not up to the task of being able to meet your needs as well. It only worked as long as it was
a relationship
completely out of balance. But when you asked for things, all of a sudden it didn't work. And I know
many of you out there will have experienced this. Well, you don't want the pain of finding that out
late into the mature stages of a relationship. You want to find that out now, which is why it
is imperative that, yes, be the giver you are don't hold back give your love freely be that
person who can show up for other people be nurturing you don't have to rein in all of the
ways that you give but you better be brave enough and honest enough at the same time as giving all of that to also ask for what you need to point out where you
don't like something and to explain to people what things would mean a lot to
you if they did them if that terrifies you and you know underneath all of this
use this sounds good but you know you avoid these kinds of conversations all the time
is for two reasons. One, you need to learn to communicate with the people in your life
and communicate from a place of strength. There's a mechanics to the way to communicate in that way.
And there's an internal self-worth issue going on with you right now
where you don't feel worthy of having your needs met.
Thanks for listening. And before you go, if it is a priority for you this year to find your person,
I have a practical roadmap for you in a free training I did called Dating With Results.
It's a 60-minute training.
It is helping so many people right now who are going through it.
And you can be one of them by going to datingwithresults.com and go there now.
Datingwithresults.com is the link.
I'll see you over there and enjoy the training. framing.