Love Life with Matthew Hussey - (Rewind): How To Go From Dating App To REAL Conversation
Episode Date: July 7, 2023Find yourself stuck with endless texting on dating apps? How much contact should you make before an in-person date? It's always tricky knowing when to upgrade your conversation in modern dating. In t...his clip, Matthew, Stephen, Jameson and Audrey look at how to go from texting to phone call, and elegant ways you can do it. --- ►► Discover the 4 Secrets for Escaping Casual Dating Traps. Claim Your FREE PASS for my Dating With Results Training. . . → http://www.DatingWithResults.com --- Follow Matt @thematthewhussey Follow Stephen @stephenhhussey --- ►► FREE download: “9 Texts No Man Can Resist” → http://www.9texts.com ►► FREE download: “5 Compliments to Get Him Addicted to You” → SayThisToHim.com
Transcript
Discussion (0)
If you've been texting with someone back and forth, send them a voice note back as an answer
to one of their questions. It's a pattern break. They're hearing your voice. You stand out to them.
You're three-dimensional. Now we did have a voice note from Emily Peel posing a challenging question.
So here is Emily Peel.
Hi, Jams.
It's Emily from Melbourne.
I'm doing a voice memo because it's relevant to my question, which is for Matt.
So a little while ago, Matt suggested that we ladies have a phone call with someone we've been
chatting to on a dating site to get to know them a bit better. And so I've suggested this to some
guys, about 10 of them, and two of them have had a chat with me and the rest of them have either
ignored me or completely deleted me. I've now asked the guys I'm currently chatting with, you know,
what's the problem with a phone call or a video chat?
And they said, oh, well, that's very intense.
And so now I'm wondering what Matt's thoughts are about that feedback
and whether he would stick to his original advice or reconsider.
Thank you.
Appreciate you.
All the best. Is there a point here that we might have to go back and revise some of that advice?
As a single man, what's your opinion on someone trying to get on a call before a date?
I think it says a lot about where we are as a society that we would rather actually get
ourselves out the door, go to a date, have drinks with someone we don't know, a total stranger, than hear their voice on the phone. There's something very odd about that.
And yet you're someone who probably, if I were to create categories of people,
I would probably put you in the category of people that aren't big talkers on the phone.
Well, not if, yeah, but if I'm, that's true in general,
but if I'm getting to know someone and dating,
I prefer talking on the phone to texting, quite honestly.
Well, let me ask you this.
If you met someone in London and you knew that it's,
you could actually go out on a date with them this weekend,
would you, and they said,
hey, why don't we jump on the phone and say hi? Would you then
find that intense knowing that you might be able to see them as soon as this weekend?
No, I feel that would give me some comfort and reassurance hearing their voice, how they are
on the phone, speech patterns. Do we get on? Is it awkward? That would give me some, because when
you're first going on the date with someone you've just been texting, that is, the fear is, oh no, are we going to get there and realize there's no real
chemistry? Now, if it's first conversation and someone is pushing to the phone call, you are a
bit like, oh, it's a bit like if someone's pushing you quickly to that before there's any rapport
or desire or connection
you're like oh that's a bit much and i don't want to suddenly have this person with my phone number
and they can call me and god knows what so i get i get if it's early but if you think i might go on
a date with this person this week and we're getting to that point i don don't know, like, if they sell it as like, let's have a five,
10 minute chat. I'm totally down for that. Thoughts, Audrey?
Well, my thoughts are that if, you know, she specifically said, guys that she'd met on a
dating app. And I think the reason why 80% of men haven't responded well is because
to go from talking to someone on a dating app to jumping on the phone,
I think can feel a little intense.
I feel like it's all about the way that you graduate in communication.
So if you go from a dating app, the next organic step feels like adding each other on WhatsApp or getting each other's numbers and switching to text messages.
The next sort of organic step after that would be a voice note or or a phone call. If you are talking a lot and there's a lot of back and forth and you know that they're sat there texting you not doing anything because for the next over the last 20 minutes, that's what they've been doing.
Then it makes sense to sort of say, are you free if I call you for five minutes or something like that I think the intensity comes from um not actually having earned the
level of intimacy where you would just jump on the phone because and I'm not someone who gets
scared off but I think just in general people I don't know even you know I'm not talking in dating
but just in general trying to jump on the phone with me I find quite overwhelming sometimes I'm
like oh there's people who I'm friends with
who I would need to psych myself up
in order to jump on the phone with them.
So I can only imagine how it would feel
if someone I didn't know at all
and didn't even have their number was suggesting it.
I think I can understand how it would feel intrusive.
So I think it's not about the phone call being a bad idea,
but rather there being an organic progression
towards the phone call. I agree with, but rather there being an organic progression towards the phone
call. I agree with that. That's my thoughts. I think the progression matters. And many apps are
encouraging more voice notes now, like Hinge has a thing where you can leave a voice note on your
profile. And a lot of people do that now. So I think like warming someone up to, we got each
other's number and I left you a voice note that was 10 seconds
on whatsapp then it's like i've heard their voice they're a human like me they're not a weirdo
that these things do you're having little comfort tests as you go and then picking up the phone
isn't such a a weird idea yeah or even i i always think calling someone when you're on there on the
way somewhere and you're just like,
hey, I'm about to join up with friends in a couple of minutes. I just thought I'd say hi while I'm walking. You know, that, I always think that kind of call is much easier, even for someone else to
receive than for you to be like, just at home, what's up? You know, then, then there's no time limit on the
call. But if you say to someone, Hey, what's up? I have to go in a couple of minutes because I'm
meeting up with friends, but I thought I'd just say hi while I'm walking from the station.
That, that then gives someone the relief of, Oh, okay. It's just a couple of minutes and,
Oh, look, they're busy and they're doing something. And so you can have that kind of a phone call. I do think there's a difference between if you know you can meet up for a
quick coffee date with someone this week, then there may be no need for the call.
And in the past, I have said that I would rather get on a call with someone just to be able to
find out, as you said, Stephen, if there is a little bit of something, if we get on, if there's a bit of banter or a bit of,
you know, just good conversation. But I also acknowledge that coffee isn't that time consuming.
You don't have to give up a whole evening for a date. You can just meet someone for a quick coffee
somewhere. And if you do that, then you don't necessarily need
the phone call. I do think what gets weird is when you're speaking to someone that you have
no hope of seeing anytime soon, either because they're in a different city or a different country
and, or they're traveling right now and you're talking to them, but weeks later, you still only texted.
I totally agree.
That seems weird to me.
I think it's weak and odd.
As Audrey said, a good graduation, a good interim step is if someone is sending you messages,
if you've been texting with someone back and forth, as a pattern break,
send them a voice note back as an answer to one of their questions. Be like, hey, what's up? I'm just walking to meet my friends. Basically,
I guess I prefer this because blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. And then you answer their question
by voice note. It's a pattern break. They're hearing your
voice. You stand out to them. You're three dimensional, uh, and you're appealing to another
one of their senses, right? You're hearing, you're appealing to sound, not just, or to hearing,
not just visually through a text. So that's a nice way of putting yourself on someone's radar
and getting them a bit more
comfortable with you. If they hear your voice now, you feel more intimate, it feels closer.
And then having the call feels less of a big deal as a graduation from that point. You're also,
by the way, saying to them, it's also okay if you leave me a voice note. That's the whole point of
the word reciprocity in communication when you do something you're
also giving someone a green light to do that thing with you so don't be afraid of the voice
note it doesn't have to be the first thing you leave but a few messages in if you feel like
texting has become a little bit um if there's been a lot of texting it's a nice way to break the pattern. That's it for today, everyone. Before you go, big news.
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