Love Life with Matthew Hussey - (Rewind): How to Get Over Someone You STILL Can't Get Over
Episode Date: July 19, 2024What if you’ve been dating someone with whom you feel a truly unique and natural connection, but they have a fatal flaw that means a relationship is impossible? There is a real danger to the feeling... that this person is irreplaceable, when you tell yourself “I can’t find this connection with anyone else”. If we never make space for something new, never let go, and always hold onto hope of what might have been, we can get stuck on an old relationship forever. So if you’re ready to truly move on and get over “the one that got away”, this video will help you move forward with confidence and certainty. --- ►► Transform Your Relationship with Life in 6 Magical Days... Learn More About My Live Retreat at → http://www.MHRetreat.com ►► Sign up Now For My Free Weekly Newsletter, The 3 Relationships at ... → http://www.The3Relationships.com ►► Order My New Book, "Love Life" at → http:// www.LoveLifeBook.com ►► FREE Video Training: "Dating With Results" → http:// http://www.DatingWithResults.com/
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The connection and chemistry, she says, is everything she ever wanted.
But then goes on to say a few weeks later, he ghosted me.
Which, by the way,sey with the Love Life Podcast. I am excited to share this
clip with you today. Let's get into it. Two years ago, I met someone. He came into my life out of nowhere and it was easy. It wasn't obsessive.
It wasn't addictive. It was just easy and good. Our connection and chemistry was everything I
ever wanted. A few weeks later, he ghosted me. We eventually had a conversation. He wasn't ready for a relationship. We stayed friends. A few months later, we tried again after being friends for six months. It obviously didn't work again. I didn't trust him enough and it was hard. continued to see each other, often taking things very, very slow. And suddenly I discovered he
had a girlfriend. It's been a year now. I have traveled a lot and went on a solo trip to Bali.
I have dated, but nothing compares. He once told me he saw himself marrying me,
but he wasn't ready for anything like that. He wasn't ready to be the man I needed.
We see each other around, but we never speak.
And it feels as if the connection and chemistry is still there and others point it out.
How do I get over him?
How do I make myself see that he is not the person for me?
Please help. I don't want to waste another year
I think this is such a relatable email tell us why you know it wasn't the great love story of
you know a five-year-long relationship where you got a dog together and had a house. I just mean that it was, a lot of the time they're very short-lived
and a lot of the time you don't know why
it just felt so good and so right
that it just ends up getting,
being the thing that sticks under your skin.
I also think when someone says it was easy,
you know, there's that feeling of,
I never normally click like this with somebody.
It just felt so natural is another word people use.
It felt really natural.
It just felt right when we were together.
This is the kind of thing people describe,
a kind of fluidity, an organic nature
to how it feels to be with this person.
It doesn't feel forced.
It doesn't feel strange.
It doesn't feel awkward.
It feels so natural when
we have that special chemistry it's really easy to build a story and it becomes it becomes extremely
hard to let that go even like people have that years after where they go but with them the way it felt when we were together when we
were intimate when we went on trips like the way it felt with them it was just so much more than
anyone since it becomes a memory played over and over and over again it becomes a bit of a time warp you you get you get lodged in a certain moment in your life in a
certain moment in time and you know by definition it can never be that again like it was it was
that thing that moment in time and we should should qualify it, obviously, to begin with,
by saying that connection or no connection,
chemistry or no chemistry,
if someone didn't commit to us,
then they couldn't make good on the promise of being everything we ever wanted.
It wasn't.
The connection and chemistry, she says, is everything she ever wanted.
But then goes on to say a few weeks later, he ghosted me.
Which, by the way, isn't everything you ever wanted.
Nor is this person not committing,
nor is this person finding a girlfriend. I don't know how long that was going on for in the time
you were speaking, but none of these things are things that are everything you ever wanted,
nor is you going away to Bali and doing all of these things and giving
it space and giving it time and him not coming back to you and saying, I've made a giant mistake,
which he's not doing. That's not everything you ever wanted either. So I think the starting point
is realizing that this actually is a far far cry from everything you
ever wanted it stopped well short of that now that doesn't stop that what's the spanish is it no
portuguese word saudade steve knows it we did we talked about that word in another podcast
saudade yeah can you explain saudade to us steve oh you brought it up matt i think it's some kind
of feeling of wistful nostalgia isn't it for the past yeah it's described as a feeling of longing
melancholy or nostalgia that is supposedly characteristic of the portuguese or brazilian temperament
but it's a word that to my knowledge doesn't exist in quite the same way
in other languages but it's a very it's a very descriptive word in that it captures something and I don't think that I don't think that the
what I'm saying is somewhat logical right that you they didn't commit to you they didn't give
you what you wanted so they by definition aren't everything you ever wanted but the logic of that doesn't eliminate the saudade that we may feel that
wistful melancholy of what once was that didn't turn into something more and and that can linger
but the danger of course is thinking that that is an indication of how important something is.
Instead of just seeing it as one of many, many experiences in our lives that may bring up that kind of a feeling,
you may have that feeling about a time in your life where you were more physically
able than you are now. You know, you may have a moment of melancholy for a time where you were
healthier than you are now, or when you had a certain fun moment in your life with friends and life doesn't feel quite as carefree anymore or you don't get to see those friends in that way anymore.
We're capable of that kind of melancholy about many things in your life that you may have a sense of melancholy for,
that isn't really a wish for your life to go back there, but more just a moment,
a moment of nostalgia for something, rather than this nostalgia that I'm feeling means that I've really lost something important.
That to me is the non sequitur.
The idea that this relationship must be important because I still have feelings for it.
And if you lose the sense that the relationship is important, which it wasn't because he didn't
commit.
So it was only important for the experience
it gave you at the time.
It was not important in the context of your life
as your future.
It certainly wasn't that.
It wasn't that because it didn't become that.
So it was only important
in what it gave you in the present.
It was not important to your future.
Once you lose that,
so much of the sting of that melancholy is removed.
It just, you're allowed to just feel it
as a sense of melancholy
instead of a tremendous sense of loss
for a future that was supposed to happen but didn't.
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