Love Life with Matthew Hussey - (Rewind): Why Have We Made Dating So Complicated?
Episode Date: July 1, 2022If you’ve got someone in your life who’s either treated you carelessly or simply not investing, check this episode out because I’ll tell you what to do. May my voice of reason forever haunt you ...in your dreams. I don’t want to spend more time giving energy to these terms and phenomena that aren’t what you want in the first place, I’d rather give time to finding people who are serious in your life. If you want to stop over analysing things that don’t matter, and start actually pursuing things that could matter, I have 3 habits for you that you can take on in your love life to start creating real results. Go to 3LoveHabits.com to get your free guide. Let’s start making progress and stop wasting time. --- Join our next Virtual Retreat! - Claim Your Limited Time Early Bird Discount ($200 OFF the usual price!) for The Virtual Retreat at MHVirtualRetreat.com - Offer ends July 6th. --- Email us! You can get in touch with the show and give your feedback at podcast@matthewhussey.com --- Follow Matt on Insta @thematthewhussey --- ►► FREE guide to download: “3 Secrets To Love” → 3SecretsToLove.com
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Invest in someone based on how much they invest in you, not based on how much you like them.
Why is it that dating seems to have become so complicated? I was recently on a show where I was asked about ghosting, haunting, zombying, and as
much as I had a wonderful time, I couldn't help but think to myself, my God, why do we
keep coming up with new names for things?
I'm going to talk to you about those three words right now, but I'm going to simplify this once and for all.
Let's take ghosting to begin with. Ghosting is when someone just, you know, maybe we went
on a couple of dates and they disappeared. They just never texted us again. Maybe we
were seeing someone for a long time and then they disappeared. Much worse. We are
left in this abyss of unknowing. What the hell happened? Are they okay? Is there something so
wrong with me that not only are they not interested, but they didn't even bother to tell me
that they're not interested? I think that a big problem with ghosting is that we look for closure.
We shouldn't look for closure. We should give ourselves closure. Closure can be the gift that you give to yourself.
And the closure is this.
They either don't care about me at all, or they do care about me, but are willing to
do this to someone they care about.
Either way, this is enough information to move on with your life.
Remember this when you're looking for more information.
Someone not contacting you is information.
Disinterest is closure.
Number two, haunting.
This was a word that got brought up to me
and I'll be honest with you, I had to look it up
because I didn't know what haunting meant
in the dating context.
When I did look it up, I realized,
oh, we've dealt with this before.
In any case, I happen to know he likes me.
Because he treats you right.
Because even if he doesn't text back,
he still likes my Instagram pictures.
Right then.
When we talked about haunting, we called it a platform downgrade.
Someone going from a more intimate form of communication with you, either seeing you in person, having phone calls, texting,
to a much lesser form of communication that perhaps doesn't even qualify as communication. It's just someone being an abstract
presence in your life through the form of viewing your stories, liking your
posts, but never having a direct interaction with you. Now look, a simple
response to this is just to block the person. If you really don't want to hear
from them, just block them. If you don't want to see their name coming
up on everything you do, block them. But if you like the person and you don't want to block them,
the least I ask of you is that you not see them viewing your stories as a sign that something is
going to happen. See it for what it is. Nothing. Number three, zombying. Zombying is
another new term given to the idea that someone who has gone off the radar completely was,
they were a ghost, now has come back from the dead. And it might be in the form of a text saying
thinking of you, or I miss you, or hey, what you up to?
Complete lack of acknowledgement for the fact
that I ghosted you, for the fact that I've not been around
for a long time.
It's someone coming back into your life.
And in that moment, you have to decide
what you want to do with that.
The danger is that this person's now coming back to you
on their terms.
They're not, you know, we have this selfish streak in us as human beings that we tend to
reach out to people when we need something, not when they need something. And zombying is exactly
that, right? Someone feels lonely. Someone needs some validation. They want to check that you're
still there. They want to check that the door is still open. So they come back to you after having
disappeared for a long time.
You have to see that for what it is.
This is not a sign of true investment.
This is just a sign that someone is thinking of me
right now in the moment.
There is a difference between attention and intention.
And there's a difference between intention
and true investment.
You don't have true investment.
You may not even have intention,
the intention for them to actually go
somewhere with you now, for it to become something more. You may just have attention. So you have to
recognize attention for what it is. And in the form of zombying, it's not even good quality
attention. It's poor quality attention on somebody else's terms. Now, look, these terms are fun,
I suppose. But where I get frustrated at them is I feel like we've begun to, as a culture, fetishize all these different versions of someone just being a bit shit.
And by talking about them, by labeling every different variation of someone not trying, we are investing more time and energy in these different phenomenons, which really aren't
that new in the first place. I mean, haunting may be new because someone didn't get the chance to
haunt our Instagram stories back in the 50s, but ghosting wasn't, ghosting's not new. You know,
that movie idea of like, you know, you see in a movie, a woman comes up to a guy in the street and she's like, you never called. That's ghosting. She didn't have any way to reach him other than when she
saw him in the street. And all he did was not see her anymore, right? It's the same thing.
And I've said it before, trying is trying is trying is trying. Invest in someone based on how much they invest in you, not based on how much
you like them. And people will say to me, Matt, but I'm not, don't worry, I'm not investing.
I'm not texting him back. That doesn't matter. Okay, so you're not showing your investment to
him, but you're still investing when you're thinking about it and analyzing it and dissecting it. It's like dissecting smaller and smaller pieces of something that's not important to begin with.
And when we do that, that represents uneven investment.
This person is clearly not thinking about you, but you're spending time thinking about and analyzing them.
Lots of investment, no investment.
So even when you're not actually having an exchange, you can still have an imbalance in terms of the amount of investment, no investment. So even when you're not actually having an exchange,
you can still have an imbalance in terms of the amount of investment you're giving.
I hope you enjoyed that episode, everybody. Don't forget we have an early bird special on
the virtual retreat right now that's coming up in November. Last chance to come to one of our
retreats this year. Go to mhvirtualretreat.com
to get that early bird ticket while they're still available I'll see you next time Bye.