Love Life with Matthew Hussey - (Rewind): How to Make Them CHASE YOU Without “Playing It Cool”

Episode Date: March 28, 2025

We’ve all been told that we should never come on too strong, and that playing it cool is the best way to get someone interested. But how much interest is the right amount to show in the early days o...f dating? If we show too much interest, we worry we’ll lose all our “power,” but if we show too little, they may not even realize we’re interested.  In today’s Rewind episode, I share 5 tips on how to approach this in the early stages of dating so you can not only show the right amount of interest, but also encourage the same in the other person. --- ►► Ask Matthew AI Your Biggest Dating Question for Free Now at. . . → http://www.AskMH.com ►► Order My New Book, "Love Life" at → http://www.LoveLifeBook.com ►► FREE Video Training: “Dating With Results” → http://www.DatingWithResults.com

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Starting point is 00:00:00 We should be more afraid of getting someone who isn't a match for us than in scaring away someone with our interest. Hey everyone, this episode is a rewind episode, one from the archives. I think you're going to enjoy it. Let me know what you think. Send me an email afterwards, podcast at matthewhussy.com. And don't forget, by the way, to go and download my free guide that I just released. This one is new in the last couple of months. It's called Bold Standards and you can find it at boldstandards.com.
Starting point is 00:00:52 It teaches you how to articulate the difficult things that you want to say to someone in your love life. It can also be used in other parts of life too. So check it out boldstandards.com and now onto the episode. How cool should you play it in early dating? There is a period of the dating process isn't there where we're so worried that we're gonna come on too strong and scare someone away,
Starting point is 00:01:19 that we reserve the parts of ourselves that really wanna come out, parts of ourselves that feel like to come out, parts of ourselves that feel like they're authentically us. Maybe we're someone who loves affection, but we're afraid to show too much affection because we don't want that person to think it's too much or we're worried if we get seen to be liking them too much that we're going to lose all of our power. We may love being the kind of person who's expressive with our words, but we hold back our words and censor ourselves for fear that we're going to say too much.
Starting point is 00:01:49 We may love quality time but we act like someone who doesn't really care that much about seeing someone else because we don't know whether they like us as much as we like them and we're worried they'll like us less if they think we're too available. I had a question in recently from someone who said I am affectionate, I love quality time, I have so much I want to give but I find myself holding back for fear that it's going to be too much for somebody else, that it's going to drive them away and so when I show up to parties with that person I'm afraid to be too all over them at the party, I'm afraid to ask for too much or express myself. And my anxiety is what's making me hold back. Now I think it has to be said that there is this conditioning that so many of us have that
Starting point is 00:02:36 if a woman is trying too hard, that's desperate. If a guy is trying really hard, then it's romantic. That, you know know the stereotype of the love bomber is one that often we see rightly or wrongly because women can love bomb too but we see it as more of a male thing. A guy love bombing a woman showing he's really really interested and then not backing it up. We don't as commonly associate the love bomber as being the woman. We associate the woman as being the one who has to hold back in order to be attractive. So the question
Starting point is 00:03:11 is how much is playing it called necessary? And I'll give you a little bit of what I said to this woman who asked this question because I know that I have in my own past been on dates with people who were holding back and I didn't know that on the date. On the date all I knew was I didn't think the person was into me. I didn't think the person was attracted to me at all and then I was really surprised to learn 24 hours or 48 hours later that that person wanted to see me again. You know they would send me a text and say I had such a great time I'd love to see you again and I know, they would send me a text and say, I had such a great time, I'd love to see you again.
Starting point is 00:03:46 And I would think I was going crazy. I'd be like, but you, I didn't get anything for, I didn't feel you flirted with me, I didn't feel you showed any attraction towards me, I certainly didn't feel you desired me. And so I was really surprised to know that they wanted to see me again. We have to ask ourselves,
Starting point is 00:04:01 if I expressed a desire to see someone again, would it surprise them based on my experience or my interactions with them so far? A lot of the time the answer is yes. So one of the things I say to people, I'm going to give you five points today, but the first point is we have to encourage people to keep trying with us by the small things we do that communicate interest or desire. Those could be very small things.
Starting point is 00:04:30 It could be touching someone lightly on the arm. It could be telling someone that they look really good in that jacket. It could be texting someone after a date and telling them that you had a great time or that you're really funny or you looked really good tonight. It could be someone that you've met on a dating app and it's not escalating to a date
Starting point is 00:04:49 and you're having a great time with them and there's lots of rapport and you send them a message saying by the way in case you were wondering if you asked me out on a date I'd say yes. Little things that show people hey I'm giving you a green light to try more because I am attracted to you. Sometimes we're so afraid of scaring someone off that we don't even give them the encouragement to actually try with us. Now, when we're showing someone a little encouragement, that can help to decrease our anxiety
Starting point is 00:05:20 if we think about it like small baby steps of encouragement instead of I'm immediately gonna say and do do everything I want to say and do. Which isn't always advisable at the very beginning of dating. What we want to do is invest then test. Give a little, see if they respond to that. And if they respond to our affection with some affection, then that's great. We have confirmation that we're both in the same place. Point two is something that can really help
Starting point is 00:05:46 with your anxiety. See, our anxiety about showing too much in early dating is often about this feeling of once you know how into you I am, I will have lost all of my power. I think that a big part of that is because we see our attraction as this constant, like it's sort of just a universal truth. You're going to find out how into you I am. But the truth is attraction is an evolving thing. It can go up, it can go down. Interest in someone is an evolving
Starting point is 00:06:22 thing. It can go up, it can go down. So I like to think of our interest in someone like a photograph. If you take a photograph of how interested I am in you today, that is only a photograph that represents that today. It's a snapshot in time of how I feel. But next week, I might feel something different. If you take a new photograph a week from now,
Starting point is 00:06:47 it might show a very different level of attraction. And if we get that way of thinking into our own minds, then when we're showing someone interest, we're not thinking, I'm giving up all of this power. We're just thinking, by giving you a little interest today, I'm showing you how interested I am today. If you don't reciprocate, if you don't meet me there, if I try to give you some affection or some nice words or show that I want to see you and you don't give me the same back, I reserve the right to change
Starting point is 00:07:15 how interested I am at any point. It can change overnight if I, oh, you're not here with me. You're not consistent. Oh, I don't feel safe with you. I don't feel your attraction back. I'm gonna take that energy and direct it elsewhere. And you'll find that out the next time you try to see me or the next time you wanna hang out, the next time you wanna give me affection, you'll find out that you actually lost some of my interest
Starting point is 00:07:44 and intrigue between the last time I showed it to you and right now when you suddenly want it again. So if someone sees through your actions that your interest is not a constant, your interest is something that has to be fed and watered and reciprocated, you know that you've never lost your power by showing interest. All you've done is taken a photograph about how you feel today and given it to them. If they're under any illusion that that photograph is just a constant truth, they will realize how wrong they are the next time
Starting point is 00:08:20 they try to get your attention if your attention has moved on. Number three, one great way to still maintain your personal power or play it cool, which is not a term I like, but a great way to not feel like you've given up all of your power is to show that you don't need an emotional babysitter. I think of the example that this woman gave me where she said, when I go to a party with someone, I don't give them any attention or affection because I'm afraid that it's gonna be too much but what tends to be too much for someone is when we never leave them alone or we show we can't be alone. Now that's not me saying that a party you have to just leave that person and go and talk to other people all the
Starting point is 00:09:01 time but showing you can is very powerful. Showing you have the ability to walk into a room with someone and truly enjoy being next to them, being in their company, but also be incredibly comfortable having another conversation, feeling like you're an independent presence in the room, that you can hold court on your own. That's a really powerful thing. It's a way of creating space for someone to miss
Starting point is 00:09:32 us, for someone to observe us at a distance which can be incredibly attractive, for connection, for proximity aren't the same as neediness. Neediness is I have to be around you, don't leave me alone, don't leave me here, I can't handle myself on my own. Needs are something very different. Needs are just this is a requirement for me to give my time to someone, to give my energy to someone is that there's an appropriate level of affection, of interest, of stability. Right those are needs. Neediness is I can't be without you. I can't be happy
Starting point is 00:10:21 without you. I can't be secure without you. I can't feel I can't make myself feel good. I'm making you Responsible for that and that's one of the things we should explore That's a good place to get some self-awareness in early dating is are we coming from a place of having needs? Which is valid or neediness which is making someone else responsible for how we feel about ourselves. Number four, we should be more afraid of getting someone who isn't a match for us than in scaring away someone with our interest. Some of the things that were put to me by this woman is she said I'm an affectionate person, I really enjoy quality time, I really enjoy touch. Well those are things
Starting point is 00:11:05 that are important for her to know someone else can give. Right? She has an awareness that that's what she's like. She needs to at some point learn whether that person can reciprocate those things. So yes, she doesn't want to give all of her time to this person at once. Yes, she doesn't want to suddenly give all of the physical affection to someone in date two that she would give to someone in month six of a relationship. But unless we start to bravely give some of the things that we ultimately want to get back, we'll never see if that person's able to reciprocate. Now, if we're never being touchy feely with someone or holding their hand or giving them a kiss on the street because we're scared that by doing those things they're going to think we're too much.
Starting point is 00:11:50 We're also never learning if they can be the kind of person that makes us happy. Have you ever been in a relationship where you really like affection and the other person doesn't? That's going to make you miserable. You know it if you've felt it, if you've been there. So during the dating process, I'd be more concerned about can this person be physically affectionate? Is that in them? If my physical affection scares someone away then I've scared away someone who's not compatible with me. I can't keep taking the lesson that oh my god I should
Starting point is 00:12:20 never have given that affection because it scared them away. That's the wrong lesson to learn. Number five, whenever you find yourself playing it too cool in early dating, remember that it is your standards that ultimately allow you to hold on to your power, not your indifference. When we communicate interest in somebody, there's always the fallback of our standards. We communicate a little interest, we see what happens, and if that person shows that they cannot meet our needs, we can always have the standard of saying, this isn't enough for me. I don't get enough of my needs met in this situation. And in early dating, we can't have so many needs
Starting point is 00:13:06 that someone says, oh my God, you're literally, we've only known each other two weeks and you're already asking for everything that you would get from a relationship from this situation. That's having needs that are out of context, needs that should be reserved for someone that we know better, that are being placed on someone we don't know very well at all.
Starting point is 00:13:25 If we find that even our most basic needs aren't being met, the need for respect, the need for a level of consistency in the way that this person is reaching out to us, or the cadence of seeing each other and talking to each other, the need for a level of affection when we are together. If our needs aren't being met in that area, our standards is what saves us and allows us to hold on to our power. People often think of standards as this very kind of aggressive thing, like I am telling you this is what you have to do and this is what I need from you.
Starting point is 00:14:05 And often standards can seem a little over the top and even entitled for someone that we don't know very well. It's like, how are you asking me for all of this? We don't even know each other very well. Standards to me in early dating are often quieter. Standards are just where we direct our energy. And if I don't get enough back from you, then I am going to take my energy and direct it somewhere else,
Starting point is 00:14:31 to other parts of my life or other people, other dates. And when you feel that, I can explain why that is if you're asking me that question, but you're quickly going to realize that if you don't give me more, you're not going to get more. That's give me more, you're not gonna get more. That's a standard. A standard doesn't always have to be spoken. And that's what I was talking about with the idea of the photograph. Just because you gave attention to someone last week, just because you showed interest last month, it doesn't mean that they still have it.
Starting point is 00:14:59 And your standards are what show someone that they don't still have it in the same way that they did before. Because when they come back asking for what they got last month, they're going to quickly realize there are consequences to not meeting you where you're at. And a standard is a much better way to hold on to our power than just indifference. That's ultimately playing it cool is a form of indifference. I'm holding on to my power by being Indifferent to you, but we all know is bullshit because we're not indifferent. We actually like the person We actually want to see where it could go And unfortunately if we're not vulnerable with a person We'll never see how far it could go because we're not actually giving what we want to get from someone else
Starting point is 00:15:42 Which is vulnerability letting our guard down, actually showing up, being affectionate. So we have to be willing to be vulnerable and let our guard down, but our standard is what ultimately saves us. If you don't meet me there, I can move on with my attention. And what we have to do is trust ourselves to move on with our attention
Starting point is 00:16:03 if we don't get it back from them. That's what really allows us to be bold and confident in showing someone we like them, is that we realize, the moment I feel like you're not there with me, I can start to move on and I trust myself to do that and not to keep chasing your approval, your attention, trying to get more of you
Starting point is 00:16:23 when you're not giving me the same as I'm giving to you. And in order to do that, in order to have that self-trust, we have to root it in something real. That always is, I know that I can be happy without you. I know that I don't need you. You could be an incredible addition to my life. Building something with you could be amazing. Seeing where this goes could be amazing, but I do not need you. See, when we don't need someone, we're free to enjoy them. When we need them, we can no longer enjoy them.
Starting point is 00:16:52 Because when we feel like someone has our happiness in the palm of their hand, we can't be ourselves because we're constantly under threat. We're constantly trying to appease you and make you happy and second guess what you want because I'm afraid that you're going to take away my happiness. If you can't take away my happiness, then I can really be myself with you
Starting point is 00:17:13 and we can really see what this could be. Thank you so much for listening to the episode. I hope you enjoyed it. Before you go, make sure that you do this today. I promise you every week you are missing out by not doing what I'm about to say. I am sending a private email to a group of people who have registered for it every single Friday. The email is called the three relationships and every email is packed with advice on how you can improve one of the three relationships that I believe determine the quality of your life your relationship with other people your
Starting point is 00:17:52 Relationship with yourself and your relationship with life itself. It's a super valuable email people really look forward to it This is not the kind of email that you don't open It's the kind of email you can't wait to see in your inbox every Friday. Go over to the3relationships.com to sign up for that email for free and I will see you in your inbox this Friday. Thanks for watching!

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