Love Life with Matthew Hussey - (Rewind): How to Cut Out a Toxic Person
Episode Date: May 30, 2025Why do we stay in relationships that erode our confidence, self-worth, and happiness? In this episode, we dive deep into the concept of trauma bonds and how empathy—one of our greatest strengths—c...an become our biggest weakness in toxic relationships. We’ll explore why we get stuck in these cycles, the danger of hoping someone will change, and how to reclaim your power by prioritizing your own well-being. If you’ve ever felt trapped in a relationship that’s draining your energy and warping your reality, this conversation is for you. Tune in for practical insights, empowering advice, and a reminder that your compassion should always extend to yourself first. 🎧 Listen now and take the first step toward breaking free. --- ►► Transform Your Relationship With Life Learn More About the Matthew Hussey Retreat at . . . → http://www.MHRetreat.com ►► Order My New Book, "Love Life" at → http://www.LoveLifeBook.com ►► Ask Matthew AI Your Biggest Dating Question for Free Now at. . . → http://www.AskMH.com
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And if it hasn't changed, then on what basis are you thinking it's going to change in the future? What we're about to talk about can relate to anybody that you're with who has consistently
treated you poorly, who has ignored your needs, who has disregarded your happiness,
who has been gaslighting you for a long time,
lying to you, breaking promises,
someone who consistently lets you down, disappoints you.
I wanna talk about how we come to trap ourselves
in these situations and what it really requires for us to break free of
them because the nature of what Dr. Ramani and other psychologists call the trauma bond is that we can become imprisoned by that bond. And it can be extraordinarily difficult
to break free from it and to finally release ourselves from a relationship like that. And
we should say that a relationship like that is tremendously detrimental to our mental health, our wellbeing, our self-esteem,
our quality of life.
It is a situation that is maddening.
It slowly erodes your confidence in yourself, especially if your needs are ignored, if you are gaslit over things that you would like to happen
and told that it's crazy for you to want those things or you're high maintenance for wanting
those things or that when someone tries to convince you that your version of reality
is completely false, it can have the effect of you not knowing which way is up anymore. You
stop trusting yourself. And of course, when you're with someone who constantly breaks
their promises to you, constantly lies to you, and then if you catch them in the lie, lie makes it your fault somehow.
It makes us unable to see what the truth is anymore.
It divorces us from ourselves.
We start becoming somebody else. We live a life of trying to manage this person.
We live a life of trying to read between the lines of what things this person is saying are true
and which things are false.
So we pay a price for staying with someone like this.
I wanna start by just talking about
how we find ourselves in these situations
and how one of the qualities that we
Like most about ourselves in other contexts can become our biggest enemy in the context of a relationship
Like this and that is our empathy
We show a level of understanding about this person that
Allows them to get away with the same thing
over and over again.
Let's talk about that for a moment.
When does empathy go too far?
Well, I was gonna say, if you're with someone who,
if you're taking care of them and making sure they're okay,
and they're taking care of themselves
and making sure they're okay, And they're taking care of themselves and making sure they're okay.
Who's taking care of you?
You know, it's quite a common thing that you hear,
but in order to be there for other people,
your own cup has to be full
and your priority in life should always be
to make sure that you're okay.
Now that doesn't mean that you have to put yourself first
in every single situation.
And in fact, you shouldn't. It's really have to put yourself first in every single situation and in fact you shouldn't.
It's really important to put other people first sometimes and to put those you love
before you when they need you more than you need them in that moment.
But ultimately your empathy towards other people cannot come at the detriment of actually
making sure you're okay.
That's when you have to suspect yourself, I think, as to whether or not
is it really empathy or are you just caught in a toxic cycle where it's serving some kind of need
for you? Well, I think that that's exactly right and we, what happens is because we're so close to this person, we've heard all of their stories.
And people who are really good at mobilizing your empathy,
get very good at telling stories that make them sympathetic.
And by the way, we all have things
that we've been through in our lives
that could have made us worse people or better
people, right? Everyone has things. But there are certain people who are really good at
taking their past and constructing a narrative that creates excuses for really bad behavior in the
present. And if you're somebody who is truly empathetic and you're prone to
feeling sad for people or seeing people as sympathetic, then it can be quite
easy for someone who's manipulative to use their past as a way to mobilize your empathy.
And it could also happen in reverse, by the way.
If they know that you pride yourself on being generous, being kind, being empathetic,
and then you start calling them out on their behavior and having more boundaries,
they can then attack you for that and say, oh, and you're supposed to be, you
see yourself as this empathetic person. Well, right now you've got absolutely no care for
what I've been through and what I, the ways that I'm struggling and you're always playing
this empathetic character. And yet right now you're just abandoning me. You know that now
they can weaponize it in the other direction and get you feeling guilty
that you haven't been empathetic enough.
And it's so interesting, right, because you,
it has no, it knows no limit in terms of if you want
to extend a sympathetic or a compassionate
or kind of understanding lens towards a person,
you can do that with a serial killer. You can say it's not their fault, they're born this way,
they went through these different things in their childhood, that's why they ended up being
aggressive and killing people and or even just they're a psychopath, they don't feel empathy,
they're not, it's not their fault, they're not born with that. You can actually have compassion towards anyone for anything. And the kind of...
What's really interesting is the duality between this over-compassion
you might extend towards somebody who treats you badly,
but this total lack of compassion you extend towards yourself
as you put yourself repeatedly in harm's way of that person.
And for some reason, your wellbeing and the way that you feel isn't being prioritised by you
in the same way that you're prioritising
being understanding towards them.
Yeah, I think Jack Kornfeld said something
along the lines of your compassion for people is incomplete
if it doesn't extend to yourself.
Yeah, I think that's right.
I do think there's a big difference
between giving love to someone and having love for them and sacrificing yourself, sacrificing your needs.
And I think a lot of people just conflate them together.
Like, if I love this person, I will sacrifice my happiness to just fulfill whatever their thing is or help them because they're whatever, a narcissist,
an addict, a different whatever. But I do, I think there's a real difference between loving them and
sacrifice, completely sacrificing yourself, your happiness, your wellbeing. And I think some people
get addicted to that, that role a bit. The thing that scares me about empathy
in the context of a relationship like this is it can really,
if that empathy becomes a proactive kind of forgiveness
for that person and a forgiveness that leads to you
constantly letting them back into your life,
not a distant forgiveness where you say,
I forgive you, but I can't have you near me.
There really is no limit to how far you can fall in that relationship as you say
Audrey if you excuse them on every level they're like well it's their past well
even if it's not their past it's their genes it's they can't help it it's just
the way they're built you can always find a justification. And by the way, those things are true. They're
actually true. But the danger of saying that's true, therefore, I should forgive this person
and be involved with them romantically, that's the non sequitur. And the danger of that is
that if you continue to use your empathy as an excuse for forgiving someone and letting them back in, there is no limit to the level
of destruction that someone can impose on your life.
You're letting them into the house where they can wreak havoc and you have to at a certain
point say, I cannot trust you.
I cannot trust you with my heart.
I cannot trust you with my time.
I cannot trust you with my energy.
I cannot trust you with my future.
And therefore I can't let you in the house.
for, I can't let you in the house.
Cause if I let you in my house, so to speak, you will predictably wreak havoc.
So I can have a distant compassion for you, but I cannot have a, a kind of proactive, close degree empathy,
where I constantly let you back in,
because you will destroy my life.
And I think part of what people struggle with is this,
this hope that this person will change,
that yes, they've been terrible.
Yes, they are still wreaking havoc in my life.
Yes, they are still making me unhappy.
But if this one thing could change,
then we could actually be so happy.
I also think it's a duality between the good
and the bad times.
Because I think if you've ever been with someone
who is either a narcissist or narcissistically inclined
or selfish or toxic or whatever you wanna call it,
they're not like that all the time at all.
But even in that, I think there is embedded in that idea
is a kind of hope.
The hope for the good times to be more,
the hope that the bad times will start to be less.
Of course, I suppose what I mean is that
people who are like that are very good
at being really, really charming.
So the good times feel better,
both because of the bad times being so bad
that in contrast they feel better,
but also because they are so good at making life even better than a healthy person can because they're not
playing a role. So people get addicted to the highs. For sure. Because of that and
that's then in turn very difficult because you're almost turning your back
on, when you think about it rationally, you end up feeling like you're turning
your back on the happiest moments of your life it's just that they
happen to come in conjunction with the most terrible moments of your life.
I mean when someone makes your life so miserable the good times don't even have
to be that good to feel like they're incredible.
If you're in the middle of the desert starving
and someone puts like a Wendy's cheeseburger in front of you.
Oh, that's, that's ruining our chances of sponsorship for Wendy's.
Oh, I thought Jameson was going to say, now you're talking, because I feel like that's
a kind of Jameson meal.
This is, okay, well this is hurtful.
You love Taco Bell.
But I think Matt's point is it could be Del Taco in the desert.
It could be something, it could be something atrocious out there
and it still feels like it's better than the ultimate.
Let's at least criticize a lesser brand
like White Castle or something, something smaller.
Oh, there goes White Castle.
No, wait, I think there is something really important
in what you're saying, Matt, which is actually like,
you can have just a normal day finally
after just a week long fight with this person who's been
making our life miserable. And you have one nice day where it's like, oh yeah, we went
and we had dinner together and no one fought and the waiter wasn't rude and suddenly I'm
in love again.
You're grateful for civility.
Grateful for civility, what a nice way to put it.
What keeps people there, whether it's a hope for the next good time,
or whether it's a hope for things to just fundamentally change,
that hope is the most misguided thing we have. What I want you to think in terms of is empiricism.
Empiricism is basing what I do or what I believe on what my actual experience of
this person is. Have they ever truly changed in this area? You may have experienced spikes
of change after you had an argument or after you threatened to leave, but if ultimately
it just always returned to the same baseline, then you know that those changes weren't real.
They were just a tactic, more of a manipulation. Empirically you have to ask yourself, has this person ever changed
or has this been a repeatable pattern throughout my relationship with this person? And if I'm still
talking about it now with my friends, with a therapist, if I'm still ruminating about it
constantly, then it's still happening. And the answer is no, it has not changed.
And if it hasn't changed, then on what basis are you thinking it's going to change in the
future?
And the truth is, if you really relate to this episode right now, you've probably been
through every kind of emotion with this person there is. You've cried, you've been angry, you've been depressed, you've been guilty,
you've been frantic, you've despaired, you've been through everything you can go through with this person. You've begged for change.
What emotion have you kept up your sleeve that you're going to bring out next year
that's suddenly going to change this person? I have to know if you're telling yourself that they're going to change, what's the reaction that all this time you've been storing to suddenly get a different result?
Because the chances are you've already cycled through all of them many times.
You have to assume that this person is never going to change.
Because the stakes are way too high.
What are the stakes?
You don't get your time back again.
So staking your life and your happiness on the idea that this person who has never changed
will one day change is just about the worst bet that you can make.
It makes me really emotional just hearing you talk about it because I just think of the
amount of people who are currently stuck, and I think the word really is just stuck in the quicksand of that kind of relationship
and how much it just destroys people because it destroys their confidence,
it destroys their self-worth, it warps reality as you said in a way where they just feel
like they don't even know which way is up anymore. And you end up having no kind of bearing
on what a proper relationship should feel like
and a proper connection and being treated with respect
and having your needs met.
You forget, you lose sight of what that even feels like.
Just look how much empathy Audrey has.
See how dangerous it is?
It's interesting you say that, Jay,
because do you remember there was that book?
I think it was Paul Bloom who wrote that book against empathy or the case.
I was just about to reference that.
Yeah.
I was just about to reference Paul Bloom.
He literally wrote a book called against empathy because it is.
He's trying to call out the fact that it is actually a baser emotion.
The same way, like anger is just a baser emotional reaction.
He argues for a rational compassion,
which is very similar to what you're saying
with this distant compassion,
which is you realize, you understand intellectually
what happened in that person's past to explain it,
but you don't take that extra step of like,
well, just because it explains it doesn't excuse it.
And doesn't mean that I have to emotionally invest
in this situation or there of their past.
You can take a step back and understand
without needing to go that extra emotional journey,
just intellectually understand it,
rationally have compassion for their situation. You don't have to make it your situation.
Yeah, as you were saying that I was thinking just because it explains it,
it doesn't mean you have to choose it.
Yeah, or justify it.
Thank you so much for listening to the episode. I hope you enjoyed it. Before you go, make sure that you do this today.
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