The School of Greatness - 944 Matthew Hussey: Breakup, Healing, and Dating Advice During Isolation
Episode Date: April 22, 2020“Are you in love with a person's presence or absence?”QUESTIONSWhat is your energy around managing relationships during this difficult time? (2:42)What do you say to relationships going through tr...ouble during this time? (12:41)How do you create music in a relationship if there’s no in between? (15:52)What is the thing you need to do to improve when you’re single and when you’re in a relationship? (46:16)YOU WILL LEARNHow being mindful and creating space can help in relationships (5:23)How important engineering space is to a relationship (17:12)How partners can provide time for each other (22:25)How to manage heartbreak (25:15)How to handle solitude and loneliness during this time (38:57)How active attention can help in improving emotional intelligence (49:36)How to create useful hours and active leisure during the pandemic (56:31)How to use care with creativity in dating (101:23)How to help your lovelife and love life (107:12)LINKS MENTIONEDHow to Get the Guy ProgramsIf you enjoyed this episode, show notes and more at http://www.lewishowes.com/944 and follow at instagram.com/lewishowes
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This is episode number 944 with New York Times best-selling author Matthew Hussey
Welcome to the school of greatness
My name is Lewis Howes a former pro athlete turned lifestyle entrepreneur and each week
We bring you an inspiring person or message to help you discover how to unlock your inner greatness
Thanks for spending some time with me today. Now let the class begin.
Liz Gilbert said,
Someday you're going to look back on this moment of your life as such a sweet time of grieving.
You'll see that you were in mourning and your heart was broken,
but your life
was changing. Oh, what an interesting time we are in right now for relationships, for couples,
for people that are breaking up in relationships, for people in long distance relationships,
for people living in isolation together. Ooh, it's interesting. There's challenges,
there's upset, there's hurt, there's pain. There's hurt. There's pain. There's
beauty. There's magic. There's all of it. And we're going to look back on this moment
and realize that we learned a lot about ourselves. There are some things we didn't like about
ourselves. Maybe we didn't like about our partner. And we had to realize we had to elevate and learn
to communicate and learn to have passion and patience in a different type of form.
And I wanted to bring on my good friend and top expert on relationships for women in the world.
His name is Matthew Hussey.
He is a favorite here over at the School of Greatness.
We've had him on a couple times before.
And I just said I got to bring him back because so many people are reaching out to me
and talking about the challenges they're having in their relationships and I said you know what
I'm figuring it out as we go and I'm going to bring on an expert who can really give us some
guidance some tools some inspiration some some things we can think on and also just not beat
ourselves up so much because this is a time that no one has experienced before. This is an uncertain time.
And with uncertainty comes a lot of stress and anxiety. So don't beat yourself up and continue
to use this time to practice, to learn, to grieve, to love, to figure yourself out. This is all about
learning how to grow and how to become a better human being.
And relationships are the key to success in life.
And if your relationships are suffering or struggling,
then your life is probably going to be struggling as well.
My friend Matthew Hussey is a New York Times bestselling author,
one of the top speakers out there in the world,
entrepreneur, and human dynamics specialist.
He's got his own radio show called Love Life with Matthew Hussey on iHeartRadio.
And he has got one of the top YouTube channels in the world,
some of the best content I've ever seen, and one of the best out there on relationships.
MatthewHussey.com is where he's built his global brand over the last 12 years.
And his YouTube videos have been viewed almost a half a billion times.
He's got weekly videos that reach 8 million followers.
His newsletter has 2 million readers daily.
And more than 100,000 people have attended his sold-out tours.
In this interview, we talk about my personal relationship
and the struggles of growth that have come from quarantine.
Talk about the power of communication with your partner and how it will benefit your relationship,
even when you don't want to say certain things.
The benefits of living with your partner right now and how it will give you a chance to get to know them
in ways you haven't known them before.
How to create personal space when you're living and working with loved ones.
This is big, especially when you have a small space.
Advice Matthew has for people who are feeling lonely right now or just went through an emotional
breakup, the two types of recovery in relationships, the hangover and the athlete method, and so
much more.
I'm so excited about this one.
If you have a friend of yours in a relationship
who might be struggling right now,
please send them this link,
lewishouse.com slash 944.
Text this to your friends
and say you gotta listen to this episode.
And at any time you're listening during this,
please take a screenshot of this where you're listening,
post it on your Instagram story,
tag me, tag Matthew Hussey
as I'm sure he'd love to hear feedback on the advice he's giving you during this time. And you
can truly change the lives of your friends by sharing this with them. You never know who might
be struggling, who might going through a hard time. So send some love to a friend, send them
this link lewishouse.com slash 944. All about mastering relationships during this time.
Welcome, everyone, to the School of Greatness podcast.
We've got my man, New York Times bestselling author, the best love coach in the world,
Matthew Hussey in the house.
Good to see you, man.
What's going on?
Super pumped about this.
We are unfortunately not able to do this in person right What's going on? Super pumped about this. We are unfortunately
not able to do this in person right now because of what's happening in the world. But we have
been friends for what, five years now, probably. Yeah. We just went to Poland together a few months
ago and did some crazy Wim Hof breathing mindset cold therapy with a group of guys. We try to
connect in LA every month or two when we're both in town,
but I miss you, man. I can't wait to give you a hug soon. I miss you too. It's been, it's just,
everyone says it, right? It's such a bizarre time, but, and it's funny, I never imagined you and I
doing this up the street from each other in our respective isolations.
Yeah, exactly, man. But it's all good. And, you know, I've been in an interesting time in my life
because I was dating someone long distance for a year who lived in Mexico. You know, Jeanette,
and I was dating her long distance. Then she moved in at the, essentially in January, the
beginning of the year. We had six weeks, eight weeks of challenges of just how to live together,
who's responsible for what, what expectations to have. You know, learning how to communicate
with someone long distance is much different than learning how to communicate living together.
Consistence is much different than learning how to communicate living together.
So I felt like we went through a phase of, okay, this is our test to see how can we be patient?
How can we learn to communicate better?
How can I improve?
How can she improve?
All that stuff.
And it got to a good place.
Then quarantine.
And then new things came up. Okay, we have different challenges and adversities
and learning to communicate even more
and routines and spacing and all these different things.
And I feel like we just, two weeks ago,
were able to really communicate
and get to the root of so many things
that I think a lot of relationships have challenges with
where they don't actually deal with the root cause
of what's happening, why someone's actually deal with the root cause of what's
happening, why someone's truly upset in the moment, why someone's truly frustrated. And I'm sure more
is going to come up and I haven't like had this perfect relationship, but I feel like we have this
understanding now. And I feel really grateful, at least in this moment. But there are a lot of
people in the world are struggling in a big way who are in relationships,
long distance relationships, and also living together now who can't leave.
I'm curious, what's your overall just feeling and energy around this as the guy who's helping
a lot of women manage and navigate these relationships?
What's kind of your overall thoughts before we get started on all this? Well, I suppose before I answer that, I am curious, do you feel that in your relationship,
being in this situation, precipitated a conversation and a depth of communication
that wouldn't otherwise have occurred? I think we were pretty open with each other already. I think we need to be because of the
language barrier. She's pretty fluent in English, but Spanish is her first language.
So we have a lot of body language, a lot of needing to over-communicate because one word
that I might say, she could think of something completely different just based on her perception
of that word. So I've had to learn just how to have patience, how to not react if she gets worried about
something I said that isn't what I meant, all these things that normal guys don't have
to deal with.
I'm doing it like even extra.
So I feel like I've already been super mindful of moving in and needing to over-communicate.
And during this time, I've just said to myself,
this is very stressful for her.
I can feel and sense the worry.
I can feel the fear and anxiety, her being away from her family,
just everything, the scare of it all.
And so I have just committed to saying,
I'm going to be overly patient, overly communicating,
and overly
understanding during this time and not hold anything against her, not be frustrated if she's
not calmer in certain moments or if she's overreacting for whatever reason, which she's
not overreacting, just like in sense of worry sometimes. And I'm just telling myself like,
this is hard for everybody. And the more patient I can be now in the hardest of times or seemingly very hard times, the
greater the relationship will be in the future by being more loving, understanding and patient
in adversity, not by freaking out and making her wrong or reacting.
So that's been kind of my commitment to myself and my relationship
i think that's great and i you know i think what one of the things you alluded to which is really
important is being mindful of what other people are feeling during this time and
creating space for that as well as doing it for ourselves as well.
I woke up today.
I had such a good day yesterday.
I got so much done.
Not that I value every day by how much I get done,
but I just was so productive and I did creative work that was important to me.
I got a webinar that I'm doing soon and I mapped out the content for that. And then I did a bunch of chores. It was like the perfect quarantine day.
You know, like-
Everything got done. Cleaned out the house.
Yeah, exactly. Then I did laundry. Then I cleaned out my closet and got rid of all these clothes I
don't need. And I did all these things. Then I went to bed last night and I thought, man,
what a great day. I woke up. I've been so grumpy
today. I don't like- I'm glad I'm getting the best of you, Matthew.
You are. Mate, I put on a shirt for you. I didn't like this 20 years ago.
But you know, this, yeah, my hair, this is as good as my hair was going to get today.
I, you know, I doled myself up for a minute to come and do this, but I was, I really
had like a grumpy day today. And I even said to like a couple of my team, I was like, God, I'm so
great. I'm like, sometimes I think if you're feeling something is actually important, like
just point it out and don't give it too much power. Like I'm really irritable today. I'm just
like driving me crazy. I'm grumpy today because then it's like, I'm, I'm sort of,
I'm telling people like, this is sort of where I'm at. I'm struck. I needed to make a video today.
I haven't got that video done today. Cause I said to one of my guys, I was like,
I know you need that video today, but I'm like, I'm just not in the mood.
I don't want to film this today. Let's do it tomorrow. I knew I could hold a day. There are
days when I have to rally and I have to do it anyway. But today I was like, I'm doing this
tomorrow. I'm not in the right place. And I think if we're in a house with somebody, it's super
important sometimes just to communicate to that person. This is what I'm experiencing right now,
or I'm not having my best day today. And that allows them to, to kind of maneuver and to figure out, oh,
this tack that I normally take with you, isn't the right approach for today. There's a different
approach that's important for today. It's sort of giving someone a bit of a blueprint almost to say,
and by the way, sometimes you could go even a step further because saying to someone,
I feel grumpy today, doesn't give them a lot they can do with that information, right? But if you know, I could use this person being a bit gentle with me today,
or I could use this person being a little soft with me today, or just spelling that out and not
making it about them. Because what we do is we expect someone to read our mind and know that
we need a different approach. And then when they don't, we get even more grumpy and we explode.
And they wonder what the hell's going on.
In that moment, saying to them, listen, I'm like, even playfully, not everything has to
be serious.
I'm like grumpy today.
Yeah.
Half as you say it, but like, I'm grumpy today.
I'm like, laugh at yourself.
Like, because I, today I felt like that.
I was like, the things that are making me mad today are like some
silly rational yeah so someone did nothing wrong and it's making me mad and I was like you know
what I then let's laugh at this and let's then let's engage other people in my life in this not
ask them to take it on for me but but just laugh at expressing it. Yeah.
And I think it going one step further sometimes and even saying like, I, you know, you've got to
be a bit, be a bit gentle with me today. Cause I'm having one of those days. I think that's a
great talking point. And even just yesterday, Jeanette was having one of those days. She was
like, I'm not doing my workout. I didn't do my English class, which she's doing every every day i wasn't doing the things i wanted to do i wasn't productive yeah and i felt like i
had too many things on my mind and i was stressed and worried about my mom and family and but she
communicated it to me because i remember she wasn't communicating and i was like is everything okay
and then she did and it's like the elephant was out of the room. And you can give permission to your partner,
whether it's your man or your woman
or your partner in the relationship,
to learn how to respond to it better
as opposed to being on edge or worried about it.
So communicating, I think it'd be great
of how you're feeling that day.
And it helps the other person not take it personally.
Personally, yes.
Or not feel like they did something wrong.
We think, yeah, you're making yeah you're oh like you're making
yeah you're making this my fault now yeah about something i'm doing and that's where arguments
start but actually i've found when people we love uh when they when they show vulnerability
we're actually far more likely to feel loving and to want to do something about it because we know
it's not it's not something we're doing it's something they're feeling and well now i can help uh but if it becomes a battle of good
and evil over what i'm doing wrong then then our ego gets involved and it stops us from realizing
what's actually happening and how we can uh help that person yeah and i think just being mindful
that like there's there's just we're all in a situation right now where there are things that
we wouldn't normally have to put up now where there are things that we wouldn't
normally have to put up with where, you know,
you and I wouldn't normally be doing this interview this way with me in my
house. There's a, you know, as you were talking a minute ago,
there was a plane that flew overhead.
Normally if I was shooting one of my videos, we'd pause,
wait for the plane to go, keep going.
Just cause we want as like great sound, you know, now there's a plane and you're like, going, just because we want great sound.
Of course.
Now there's a plane, and you're like,
oh, there's a plane.
We're using a webcam.
We're using this.
It's like we're trying to figure out how to turn the mics on.
We're all figuring stuff out.
Yeah, and everyone's going to have in their relationship the plane that they have to put up with right now
that they don't normally have to put up with
because they can just hit pause,
or they can just leave the house, or they can just get in their car and drive away. And right now,
we can't do that. So, the tools are different. We got to bring out different tools than we used to.
Be more flexible. You remind me of a time when I was living in Columbus, Ohio. I was living on my
sister's couch. She lived one house away from the train tracks and every 45 minutes the train would
come and literally shake the house and be so loud and have this big horn and remember it's it's kind
of like we got to live by the train tracks all day right now it's yeah where you just had to
learn how to manage it and navigate it even if you couldn't escape it that's right i really want
to cover three main i guess distinctions or experiences that I think people are in right now during this episode and this interview.
One is living with someone and being in a relationship while being quarantined.
Two is being in a relationship long distance during this time.
And three is looking for love but unable to put yourself out there physically and meet people in
person. And I want to start with people in relationships who are in a small space or feel
like they're confined or trapped and can't get out. And some people might be thriving in this
time, but I'm hearing a lot of people who are DMing me, and I'm sure you're getting a lot of
private messages from people saying, this is not the person I thought it was that I got in a relationship or
married, especially the marriages. I feel like I can't communicate with this person. This person
is grumpy every day. They're unable to open up. It was hard for them to show their emotions before.
Now they won't even show anything. What do you say to people that feel like, man, I feel
like this is a test, a big test for us, whether we're going to make it or break it. Should people
be so quick to ending something if they can't figure out this time of adversity? Or do we give
people a pass because everyone's stressed out? What's your thoughts on living with someone right
now and it's going really bad.
It's weird, isn't it?
Because on one level, we're experiencing just more of who our partner actually is.
Right.
Just seeing, you know, we don't see that side.
There's this funny tweet that went around and it was from a woman.
Sorry, I can't credit this person.
I can't remember.
But she said something like, you know, she heard her husband say something on the phone, like, I can't credit this person. I can't remember, but she said something like,
you know, she heard her husband say something on the phone, like, let's circle back. And she was like, I had no idea. My husband was a let's circle back guy. Who knew? Because you've never heard him
on the phone before. He's always at work. Yeah. And that's kind of perfect because you are seeing
a dimension of your partner that you don't normally see.
And that can be quite surprising for people.
For some people, it will be sexy because it's like all of a sudden my partner's at home
and I see them on a business call and I'm like, oh, that was kind of a turn on.
Seeing my partner like in their element, powerful, doing their thing.
Other people will cringe.
Let's circle back on that, Jerry.
And then there's going to be a lot of people who just, there are sides of their partners that they
find in heavy doses are quite unmanageable. And normally they're only getting that in 30% of their day or 20%
of their day. How many relationships survive because people only get each other for 20%
of the day? How many long, think about it in terms of long distance. You know, if you look
at the extreme end of the spectrum, normally how many long distance relationships survive
because those two people aren't in the same place. And then the moment they come to,
to the same city, not even perhaps to live together, but they come to move to the same city,
it all falls apart. Um, there's a, there's a line that my boxing trainer said to me once he said,
or he said, like, I was talking to him about someone. He said, are you in love with this
person's, uh, presence or are you in love with their absence?
And I said, because some of us, we're in love.
But what we're really in love with is the absent version of them.
The version of them we can talk about, we can think about.
The version of them we can fantasy.
Yeah, we can project something onto them.
Are you in love with their absence or their presence?
And a lot of people are finding out they're not in love with the presence of their partner.
You know, the thing you're saying right here, Yo-Yo Ma, I think he said this quote,
that music happens between the notes.
And I know the power of being with your partner and separating, having space, coming back together.
That's where the music happens when you've got that separation having space coming back together that's where the music
happens when you've got that separation and you come back it's like a breath in and out
so how do you create music in your relationship if there's no in between you're yeah how do you
create intimacy and distance and date nights and missing someone when you're always around. Beautifully put, Lewis. And of course,
our friend Esther Perel, she has plenty to say on this too, in terms of she always talks about
desire existing in the space between people. And if there's no space, then how can desire exist?
Look, there are different extremes people are going through
right now. If you live in a big house with somebody and you can disappear to your side
of the house and they, theirs, that's that you're already in a luxurious position compared to many
people who are living now in a studio apartment with someone in a, you know, 600 foot studio apartment and they're, they're, you know,
the bed is the desk and you can basically fry up your eggs from the bed so close, you know,
that's, that's a tough situation to be in right now. And what we're going to have to do there is
engineer space quote, there are different forms of space. There's physical space,
there's emotional space, psychological space. There's all sorts of different versions of space. We're going to
have to engineer space even in extremely intimate, uh, and close environments. So
it might be like, I think one of the, I think one of the most valuable devices you have right now
is your headphones. Like, I, I honestly think your headphones are like those
you should like be stocked up on at least three pairs if you live with someone in a one bedroom
flat. Because in that situation, it's not rude to go into your own world and to say like, what we
have to do is communicate with our partners when we want space. But we've got to be a bit careful how we do that because it can easily
come across like, I'm sick of you, right? I want space from you. Now there may be some truth in it,
but we all have to articulate ourselves in helpful rather than hurtful ways.
So sometimes someone could say if they know they need space, but when I say I need space,
it really means I'm sick of you in this moment what's a conversation starter that's loving enough to to queue that up i'd reverse engineer it
so i'd start by talking about a piece of quality time you want to spend with them
so for example you say to them can we we have a like full on movie night tonight?
Like dinner, movie, massage, popcorn, everything.
Like let's light candles.
Let's turn our living room into a cinema and like make it like, let's have a real movie night tonight.
Let's lose ourselves in it and pretend we're at the movies.
And that could apply to anything.
Let's have like you and me time, like a real dinner tonight.
Let's do this tonight.
Whatever, whatever's your thing.
Once you've agreed that time, it almost takes pressure off because you're communicating
to someone, I want this time with you.
Then you can say to someone, okay, deal. I'm going to like
disappear into my work for the next few hours so that we can enjoy that time together. Or,
you know, I'm going to do this project for the next few hours. I'm going to do this for a little
while. And sometimes I think it's important to give a time period for it rather than saying like,
you know, just putting your headphones in and doing that. And then you have the anxiety of, are they, are they hoping that I'll take my headphones out any
minute and pay them attention again or whatever saying to them like, all right, I'm going to
focus on this for a little while. Um, and then giving them a kiss. It's almost like you are
giving them a kiss to kiss them goodbye for work. Like, you know, even if you're just turning to put
your headphones in, all right, I'm going to do this for a little while. I want to get this done
so we can enjoy tonight. All right, let's go.
It's like you're signaling something. And then by the way,
an hour later or something, if you take a quick break for a coffee or whatever,
say reinforce it, say to them,
I am so excited about our movie night tonight. Okay. Got to go.
And then, you know, like you're,
you're making sure that you communicate that time is really special that i want that to be special but then you have to
honor that you've got to then in the times where you you say you're going to show up to spend really
mindful time together you gotta then show up for. I know that I've been in situations in
my life where I felt when we had too much time apart, me and whatever relationship I was in,
I would feel bad or I would feel unloved or anxious, not necessarily because we were apart,
but because I didn't even feel close when we parted.
So we'd wake up in the morning, that person would go off for the day or I'd go off for my day.
And it's not that we were apart for the day that would really bother me because if we felt close first thing in the morning, I'd be like, I'm excited about mine too. But if you are starting
the day from a position of not feeling close and then you part ways for the day. You feel more disconnected.
Even more disconnected. Someone might feel anxiety that they're not loved, that they're
not important. So it compounds it. You earn the ability to take space or to go off and go into your own world by actually giving that
person or sharing meaningful moments with that person before you do it? It's not the amount of
time, it's the quality of the time and the presence of your quality of time that I find,
which is most powerful, at least in my relationship, where I may only have a half
hour to an hour of time a day, certain days, maybe right now, but my phone is not anywhere near me.
I'm looking in her eyes the whole time. I'm engaged, asking questions. How's your mom? How's
your family? How's this? Tell me, what can I do for you? Can we play a game right now can we do something fun can we
dance a little it's the the presence to the quality of time and i'm sure the more time you
have better but it's got to be quality time from my personal experience are you finding that that's
what uh i guess women and men want as well when you're coaching people? Oh, these issues go both ways. You know, men,
men can have the same insecurities as, as women can in these situations. And it, it comes down
to which partner might feel busier, which one has got more to do right now. It could be like,
if you're, it's a tough situation. If one person in a relationship right now, and they're living
under the same roof feels like they've got tons to do and tons of purpose and tons you know like i can lose myself in my mission and what i'm doing
right now and their partner is fine and your partner has lost the job or lost this or right
or i haven't figured out what my thing is yet i don't know what you know you have your mission
i don't know what like what i'm what i do i'm waiting for you to come home every day yeah
right yeah i'm sitting here picking random hobbies out of thin air because I feel like
everyone keeps telling me now's the time to learn a hobby.
So I'm like, should I learn guitar? Should I play guitar?
Or worse,
I'm on social media watching everyone else's perfect relationship and everyone
else thriving. And I feel less than.
Yeah, exactly. And that, by the way, that's really,
we've got to be really careful of that right now. We're used to, we're used to comparing ourselves
to others on social media through the lens of, you know, we're seeing their highlight reel of their,
um, of their life, you know, oh, they're traveling now. Look at them sipping,
sipping a beach on the cocktail. Look at them doing this skydive. Look at, we're seeing the
highlight reel of their life. I think now we're seeing the highlight reel of people's
emotions. So in quarantine, people don't have that life, right? We've not got all of these
activities that we could be doing, but we're all of a sudden seeing that moment where someone's
just finished their yoga workout and they post and they're like, you know, I'm,
you know, I got this quarantine just did my yoga, blah, blah, blah. And you're like, exactly. But exactly. But you're not seeing like Matthew Hussey in the moment where he's like super grumpy
and like irritable. And just like today is not, this is not my day and I'm not feeling it today
and I don't want to make a video today. And I've made a point of saying things like that out loud
because I think it's important that people get the full spectrum of what other people are going
through because guess what? Other people are going to dark places. Other people are having
their freak outs. Other people are
having those moments of depression or deep melancholy. People are having those, but it's
not necessarily the things that they're posting about, especially in the worlds that we operate
in Lewis, where there's a hell of a lot of people wanting to show how well they're doing
under circumstances, how positive they're being and so on.
Yeah.
What would,
what advice would you give to people that are feeling really lonely? Cause they just went through a breakup,
whether it be the end of the year or months ago,
or maybe,
you know,
they just went through a breakup this week in the middle of quarantine and
they're lonely.
They're alone.
They're emotionally hurt and they're needing that kind of quick connection again
they're needing they might go back to the person because they're feeling weak and they miss that
feeling of connection or love or intimacy but they know it's not the right fit for them long term
they know but this is in a heightened state of vulnerability for them that they go back quicker. What advice do you have to someone like that? Very hard, very hard.
I have so much. We could do an hour on this alone. Firstly, a breakup, even under normal
circumstances is a tremendously difficult thing. True, true. I shouldn't say a breakup because there are many joyous breakups
we go through, but I truly, when you experience true heartbreak, it is one of the most devastating
feelings in the world. Devastating. You're a zombie. You're dead inside.
And it's worse than you're dead inside you act dead to everybody else inside you feel like
you're dying on loop all day you can't get out of it yeah yeah um
in a breakup and this is as true now now's no different people need to people need to
recognize that now is just a difficult breakup on steroids,
right? If you're going through heartbreak right now, you're just doing it on steroids,
but it's just the same emotions. So don't fret that, oh my God, why did it have to happen now
when this was going on? You're giving it a big story. It's still just the same emotions of
heartbreak. You're just experiencing them in a heightened way.
And you don't have the ability to rebound physically
with that person or a new person.
Which we could see as a gift.
Right. Why is that a gift?
Because there are plenty of things,
as my brother Stephen Hussey,
a wonderful writer for our website,
as he says, in a breakup, there are two methods of recovery.
There's the athlete recovery method, and there's the hangover recovery method. You're going to
like this, Lewis. I love it. You haven't heard it before, but you're going to love it because
the analogy is perfect for you. I love it. The hangover recovery method, you think about how
do people deal with a hangover? They wake up, they eat greasy foods because they're like, oh, I just need something to
make me feel better.
They watch crap TV.
They lay on the sofa.
They wake up at 2 p.m.
Yeah.
Got all the blinds.
Don't let any light in.
Eat ice cream.
Essentially, they do all of these things that are temporary kind of pleasure and comfort,
but ultimately are not nutritional and are not the things that are needed to get, you know,
what's needed? Massive amounts of hydration. Water. Go take a walk. Sunshine. Right. Exercise.
Yeah. Get the metabolism moving again. Get that like crap out of your system. Like that's all the stuff that's needed in that moment.
But it can feel harder to do the things that are actually going to get you out of it.
Now look at the way an athlete recovers in an injury, right?
You know better than anybody.
You don't, firstly, you still train whatever you can train.
You don't ignore everything simply because
your shoulder's injured. You do what you can. Yeah. You do some abs, you do some legs,
you do something else. Right. Let me keep a hand. Swimming. Yeah. Exactly. You eat well,
you get tons of rest, as much rest as you possibly can. You do rehab where necessary,
but you don't do so much that it injures what you're doing.
Yeah. You reset your vision. You visualize what you want and start mentally rehearsing
the reps, the repetition, the action steps, you mental rehearse, you know, all those things,
right? So now if you apply that to a breakup, the hangover recovery method is let's go and sleep with other people quickly
just to get my fix, just to feel connected, just to feel like I'm worth something, just to feel
like I'm still sexy. Let me go out and drink, party. Let me eat ice cream, bad food, keep going
to the fridge. Get on Tinder and all the apps. the apps right or not or just hide away under the
covers don't engage life don't it could be either or but they're all hangover recovery methods
because they don't make you feel better long term they're just short-term pleasure the athlete
recovery method in a breakup is you do the same as an athlete you say okay my heart might be
injured right now right my heart's offline so speak, but I still have everything else.
So let me make sure the rest of my life is firing on all cylinders right now. Let me do everything.
Let me be kind to myself. Let's maybe like put dating aside for the moment or put that,
but let me go and make platonic connections. Let me go and build my relationships with my
friends and family. Let me eat well. Let me sleep well. Let me train. Let me go and do all of these things that train
every other muscle in my life so that when my heart comes back online, every other part of me
is ready to go. So you've got one problem right now. You're in pain, right? But if that pain
causes you to let every other part of your life go down, spiral,
now you've got six problems. So that's the part we want to avoid.
And only have one problem, not six.
And, you know, look, it's all of this is easy to say. And when you're heartbroken, you just feel
like you feel so bad and so sick in
your stomach and so nauseated all the time that you even hearing this sounds like a lot of work.
And what I would say to people is a really manageable step is I, you know, there's that
quote, emotions are weather, let them, let them come and go. Right. And that's true. Emotions are
weather. I used to think that emotions were really important. A friend of mine, Jamison Jordan, who you know, who shoots my videos, he would always
tell me whenever I would be in a real funk, a bad place, whatever he, I would talk to him about it.
He was one of the closest people to me. And I always remember he used to say to me, like,
I just think you like, think your emotions are more important than I feel like mine are.
You put more emphasis on it.
Yeah. You, you like think they're really important.
You think your emotions are you?
Yeah. It would be like, you,
you just seem to like give more weight to your feelings than I do.
And I, at the time I didn't quite hear that.
And over time I've come to understand what that
means. And of course, a lot of this is taught in mindfulness training, meditation, and so on. But
that idea that just because you have a thought, just because you have an emotion,
it doesn't make it important. And in a heartbreak, just because you miss your partner,
that doesn't actually make that feeling that important. Just because you feel hurt and you feel like,
oh my God, I'll never find anyone like that again. That's just a thought and an emotion
that's attached to that thought. And it doesn't make it that important. And so when I was going
through terrible times, when I've gone through heartbreak, one of the key lessons I learned was,
okay, there's really cloudy skies right now. That's the weather, right? And it feels like
that weather will never pass. But what I would begin to pay attention to is I would realize
that I would realize, oh, for the last 20 minutes, I didn't think about my breakup.
Hmm. Huh. Small wins. I'd be like, yeah. And often you only notice it after the fact,
because when you're in it
you're just it could be that you're in a flow state with your work and that's taking you out
of it it could be that you're having a funny moment with a friend it could be that you lost
yourself in a movie uh it could be you just had a conversation with your brother your mother whoever
a workout yeah for a few minutes. Even if it's just five.
For five minutes, you noticed, I felt better.
I felt, maybe I didn't feel amazing. I just, for five minutes, I didn't feel like I was dying.
I didn't feel suffering.
And when that happens, here's what I would say to myself.
I'd be like, well, that's interesting.
Notice those things as interesting. And this applies not just to heartbreak, but to myself, I'd be like, well, that's interesting. Notice those things as interesting.
And this, this applies not just to heartbreak, but to depression, to anxiety, to all sorts of
different emotions that are undesirable. When you notice that for five minutes of your day,
you didn't feel that thing. Here's what happens. We have our, like whatever is our home, whether it's depression, heartbreak, anxiety,
sadness, we have our home that we're, we go to 90% of our day. And when we feel that we focus on it
so intensely that it becomes very difficult to get out of it because we are focused on that 90%
the whole time. And what we don't acknowledge is this interesting window in the day where we didn't
feel that. And that window has some clues, there's some truth often in that window, that 5% of the
day where you felt all right. There's some truth there that's waiting to be discovered, enlarged,
held under a microscope. And what I would do is when I would feel better
for five minutes, I'd go, well, okay, so what did that, if nothing else, what did that prove?
It proved that it's possible for me to feel better. I had a reference point for the fact
that I could feel better. And then you go, well, if I felt better for five minutes,
better. And then you go, well, if I felt better for five minutes, if I even felt better for a minute, let's make more of those. What, how did, what was happening? How did I do it? I might not
be able to get my day to the point where I even feel good for a quarter of the day right now,
right? That might be an unrealistic goal, but if I had one good minute or one good hour,
goal. But if I had one good minute or one good hour, let me make the new goal not to be great or to be happy or to get over this. Just make more of those. Yeah. And multiply those moments,
multiply those minutes into five and 10 and 20 minutes. Which is a manageable task. Suddenly
getting over your heartbreak, you need to get over it, dude. You know, blah, blah, blah. It's not,
this isn't, that's not practical advice for someone who's going through hell.
But for someone who realizes that just for five minutes, the clouds parted,
and they go, oh, my God.
It's like one of my favorite movies, Swingers,
where Mikey is always thinking about his ex and who, who he left.
And then now she won't come back to him six months ago or whatever.
And he's constantly talking about obsessing about it,
suffering in pain.
And then he finally learned to just put his attention somewhere else for a
few minutes and then put it for an hour.
And then he goes on a date with someone and then he forgot,
he thought about her for a day and he was like, wow with someone and then he forgot he thought about her
for a day and he was like wow can you i didn't talk about her all today you know and it was so
important about that because there's a what's really interesting about that movie is he begins
to do these things that slowly start to create more moments of good weather in his day he goes
salsa dancing he does this he. He does activities. Yeah.
Right. But what we have to be aware of, you have to respect whatever is the drug,
whether it's your ex, whether it's genuinely a drug or booze, or whether it's a situation that
makes you feel bad or whatever. Often when we start to create more good weather we start to take for granted that
the bad weather can't appear now it's like oh i'm i'm past it yeah it could come back a storm could
come raging through again someone your your ex could text you and if you text back and start
engaging knowing knowing what happens that you, when you start in a conversation with
that person, again, you're going to spiral. You're not respecting the drug. You got,
you might've been clean for months or years, but you got to respect the drug because
don't is when you, when you get cocky and you don't remember that there are rituals and routines
and practices daily that got you to this good state, you are liable to fall back into that
trap because you're, because you're blind. Don't be blind. Don't be afraid. It's not about fit.
You're not fearful. You're not worried. Cause you know, if I got, if I didn't die at the height of my
breakups pain, if I didn't die on day two, I'm not going to die on day 22 or day 52 or day 1002.
If I could deal with this at the height of its pain, I'm not going to die now. So I'm not going
to be afraid of this, but I'm also going to respect it and know that there are certain things
that make me feel better in my day
and I have to consciously put them into my day because the moment I take for granted that I just
feel better that's when that thing starts creeping. Exactly I'm laughing so hard because
we have a mutual friend that we've been helping I won't say his name but we've been helping
navigate certain things in their you know their relationship and uh you know it just reminded me of that of
replying to people when they text you when you think you're good hey don't go back into that
make sure you stay true to what you want what you're committed to by in the athlete mindset
of envisioning something that you want for your future and envisioning the right relationship or
the better match or you know how you want to be feeling and all those things.
And by the way, and just remember, and this is true, not just for people going through heartbreak
right now, but people going through solitude right now, because there's a lot of people who right now
are just in solitude. They're not necessarily heartbroken, but they are experiencing a deep
kind of existential loneliness. And when we're on our own for long periods of
time, many people, not everyone, but many people, and perhaps even most have more of a tendency to
go to dark places with their thoughts. And there's a lot of people that are there that are listening
to us right now that certainly can't, that, you know, the, I, you know, some people might be in a
hell with someone in the house, but these people in solitude are looking at that guy and I'll take that right now over the hell I'm in of being constantly on my own and going out of my mind.
I would say to people that, you know, the same weather rule applies that, you know, you might feel really kind of dark and lonely at points in your day, but there are other points in your day where you don't
notice the good weather and pay attention to the good weather and what made you feel good.
Did you just have a conversation with one of your siblings? Did you have a little group chat with a bunch of friends? Did you watch a life affirming movie? Did you read a book that made you feel
connected to an author from some period in time? Maybe who was also alone and writing about it.
And by reading that author,
you go, Oh my God, I feel, you know, someone else is having the same experience as me.
I think that's really important is if you're in solitude right now on your own,
you connect to other people who have experienced that because some of the greatest figures of all
time have spent inordinate amounts of time alone, have experienced the
darkness that you're experiencing, and you're in good company. You may feel you're alone and,
oh man, we have this solipsistic attitude that we're the only one who's alone. We know it's not
rationally true. We know it's not logically true, but we feel it on an emotional level.
Those are moments where you have to remind yourself, I'm in good company, not just today, but throughout time.
Key figures, brilliant people,
people that are far more brilliant than we will ever be,
have experienced the deepest, darkest existential loneliness.
And in a way, there is something slightly romantic about that.
I always love when I read an author and I hear that author who's brilliant and who I
love.
And I was just reading Bertrand Russell and then you hear about something that someone
suffers with or something that they've gone through and you go, oh, thank God.
This person that I love also, you know, also, you know, there's, there's that element of it.
That's really, really powerful. And so I, I think that you, you can adopt. Yes. Except that it's
difficult. It is difficult. Don't look at, don't look at other people and think they're handling
it so well. It is difficult. I I'd call my dad at times when business is hard and business was messy and like chaotic and I'd screwed up or I'd lost money or I'd done something. I'd call my dad at times when business is hard and business was messy and
like chaotic and I'd screwed up or I'd lost money or I'd done something. I'd call my dad and I'd be
like, you know, my dad's one of my big mentors and I'd call him and say, dad, like, I'm just so
stressed. I'm so overwhelmed. This is happening. This is going wrong. I got 10 people asking me
for this. And he'd say, Matt, part of the problem is you don't think that other people's businesses are just as messy.
It's almost like you think that you're struggling with all these things and other people aren't.
He said, Matt, I've been in business for, you know, 40 years.
Business is messy.
That is the nature of it.
It is messy.
It is chaotic.
There are always things going wrong as well as things going
right it right that's the nature that's how it is supposed to be and when i when he would say that
to me i would it it didn't take my problems away but what it made me realize is oh it's all right
it's not this is normal i'm on top of my problems i'm beating myself up and taking it personally
that i'm doing a horrible job yeah it's it's kind of like your dad and jameson are saying the same
thing your your feelings are more important your mess is more important it's yeah i don't give it
so much power and b and don't give your feelings and emotions so much power. Not every emotion is a cue to do something at the same time, except that this is
your, your view that, you know, in the road, less traveled. M Scott Peck talked about,
I think one of the first line of his book is life is hard. And one of the things that makes life
more difficult for us is that we expect it to be easy. Um, well, that's true of relationships.
It's true of business. It's true of everything. And when we have someone close to us who says, you're all right, you're, Oh, you're at home on your own
right now. And it, and you feel like it's dark and lonely and you're having these kind of
existential thoughts and you're welcome. That's normal. That's of course you do. You're living
at home on your own in isolation right now. Of course, you're feeling these things. You're not a screw up. You're not weak. You're not handling it
terribly because you're having these thoughts. That is absolutely normal. And that's what makes
it heroic is that you're having all these thoughts and you're having all these feelings,
but you're in the company of wonderful people throughout history who have experienced this,
who have had just as bad a time, who were dealing with it no better than you.
But in that company, you can kind of then assume your hero's journey and go,
well, this is my personal hell right now. I'm going to keep going anyway.
We need these adversities to teach us things too. We don't learn about how to be the best
version of ourselves and grow through everything being easy and all the success coming to us.
We learn through challenge, through adversity. And I'm not saying you need to suffer in the
adversity and challenge. It's already going to be hard. A breakup is already hard, but you don't
need to add to the suffering like you said and multiply the amount of pain. I want to ask you a personal question that you
probably only talk about at your retreats. So I want to give people a taste of Matthew Hussey
that you probably share to only a select few women who invest and show up to your retreats
where they really get to dive in and ask you the juicy questions.
I'm curious. I'm curious as to what this is going to be.
And I'm not, you can't, no one can come to your retreats right now, but if later in the year,
I think you'll have more retreats and they can go to matthewhussey.com and learn about your
retreats because I hear they're mind blowing for women. So if you want to learn how to master
relationships as a woman, go to these retreats, go to MatthewHussey.com and sign up for them.
Oh, howtogettheguy.com.
Actually, if people go to MatthewHusseyRetreat.com,
that's the best place for people to go.
Howtogettheguy.com for everything else.
And I'll also let people know something they can do right now as well,
because I know people are stuck at home and they'll want something that they can do.
Perfect, perfect.
Okay, here's the personal question.
What is the biggest challenge that Matthew Hussey faces single and the biggest
challenge you face being in a relationship that you still,
that you still need to, you know,
you need to overcome and improve or maybe you're not as,
I wish I wasn't that way.
I'm not proud of myself in these times
when i do this what is the personal thing that matt hussey has to do or needs to do to improve
when single and when in relationship wow that's personal in the sense that i even have to think
about i really think about what the answer is.
I, the biggest challenge. Okay. Being single Lewis,
give it to me real because I know the real truth.
Whether he answers it, I know the real, I think, look, I'm,
I'm someone who has always, I've always craved real connection for as long as, you know, I've liked girls, you know, 12 years old. Yeah, I've, I've always, I've always liked it. And it's not that I don't go through the same things other people do where you wonder when you're with someone, am I with the right person? Is this the right thing? Do I need, you know, all of that. But, um, but I've always really liked connection. And sometimes
that connection, you know, I know in my past that desire for connection has led me to relationships
that weren't right for me, you know, weren't relationships I should have been in, but
they were wonderful people. They were, they were lovely and they were,
they were great moments and great connection.
Yeah. And we, and, and, and they treated me wonderfully and, you know, and that led me to
kind of go, well, maybe this is the thing, you know, but without necessarily seeing if it was
what I needed,
whether it was really the relationship that I was going to continue to grow in, um, and develop
myself and whether it was truly kind of, I guess, meeting all my needs and whether I was meeting all
of their needs. Um, so I think that over time I, I settled for some relationships that I shouldn't have where I was just
valuing the connection over what my longterm needs were going to be.
And I,
and I knew that it worked today or this year,
but if I really thought about it in 10 years or 20 years,
it wasn't going to be the relationship that was right for me long term.
So there was that.
And that has – so within a relationship,
some of the struggles I've had in the past have been too much time questioning
whether it's the right thing.
Worst feeling, man. Exhausting. The worst. too much question too much time questioning whether it's the worst feeling man so exhausting
the worst when you think i've had this in my past relationships where every day i would think and
question myself for 30 minutes am i supposed to be in this is this the right thing should i end it
how am i going to end it uh but this is good but this is that just debate. Internal debate is exhausting, like you said.
That's right. And so that sapped a lot of energy for me a lot of times when I
would have liked to have actually had more energy to pour into, you know, either the right
relationship or my business or friends or whatever, but it was being
sapped by me constantly waking up every day and going, is this the right thing? Should I be here?
Should I not? And that's, you're just fighting yourself constantly. So I think there were things
that I allowed to go on too long that I should have seen things sooner or rather perhaps more accurately paid attention
to what I had seen. Because you saw them. Yeah, I saw them. They were there. You were aware. You
just weren't actively paying attention and taking action on the attention. That's right. And so much
of what I've been able to teach people and share with people has not been coming from a righteous place, but I've been experiencing things intensely. I'm a very sensitive person and I'm someone who
emotionally feels a lot. So the reason I can relate to a lot of people is because I feel
things very intensely for better or worse. Sometimes I wish I didn't.
Sometimes I see it as a gift. It depends on the day you ask me, but that I think has been a big
thing for me in the past. And actually, I think I'm much better now at saying I won't allow myself
to slip into something that's the wrong thing.
I am much more conscious about the decisions that I make.
You won't make a long-term commitment on short-term feelings
if you know it's not at least setting you up for the best chance.
Yeah, I try to be more careful with what i say i try to be more
careful to to be to have integrity in in the promises that i make or to not make a promise
simply because it's what someone wants to hear you know but to but to say what's true even if
that's difficult and that's hard that's not i'm not so hard to say something painful yeah i don't
want anyone to think that i'm on my high horse about that because I fail that
test a lot.
And I, and I'm doing my best always to try to be more of that man that I want to be in
that respect in terms of being single.
I think the challenge for me is ironically, ironically, it's meeting people.
Yeah. It's probably not hard for you to meet people, but you just mean what quality people, you mean the right people or perhaps not even
quality people, but just are introverted. People don't know that you're extremely introverted.
I am introverted. Although a huge part of my career has been showing people how to build
the skills of the extrovert. And you've had to overcome that in order to get what you want.
Yeah. I've done that my whole life. So when someone sees me on TV, people, people who don't
know me like you, Lewis, think that that's a joke when I say it, or that I'm pandering to some image
to make people feel better. Oh, it's real.
No, it's real. But he doesn't leave the house unless he gets to.
Well, but that's changed. That's changed in recent years. I made a conscious effort to change that. But when I go on stage, I'm an extrovert. When I step out on TV, I'm an extrovert. Right now, when I was talking, I'm an extrovert. I know how to turn that on when I want to. And I've learned that over time. And I think that no introvert should use being an introvert as an excuse to not learn those skill sets.
no introvert should use being an introvert as an excuse to not learn those skillsets.
Which is why I have the whole suite of programs I have is about showing people how to do that.
But it's not so much that my introversion is the tricky part about being single, because I know how to overcome that to go and meet people. It's more that I have to go back to,
meet people. It's more that I, I have to go back to, you know, it's funny that a huge amount of what I do is I show people how to meet people in real life because that's actually my reality
is that I, I don't have the tools available to me that a lot of people have available to them.
It's not, I haven't, I've chosen not to, I never say never, but I don't think it's
advisable for me to get on Bumble or Tinder or whatever. I don't think that that's advisable
because I don't know. I think it would be, that would be a tricky experience for me.
So then, you know, the way other people are sitting at home in their pajamas meeting people,
I don't really have that.
The only way I'm going to meet someone is actually by going out is either if I get approached
online somehow through whatever social media, or if I go out and create activities.
Now, activities require time and they require energy.
And one of the things that this is something that I I'm super interested in right now is I just read
this book. Um, I just read this book by, uh, Bertrand Russell or this essay by Bertrand Russell on, it was called In Praise of Idleness.
And Bertrand Russell essentially makes this case. He was a very controversial
and lucid thinker in his time and amazing individual, very learned.
He made this argument for the fact that we should all work four hours a day,
he made this argument for the fact that we should all work four hours a day,
four hours of intense focused work a day. And then the rest of the day he said should be used for active leisure,
what he called active leisure.
He describes passive leisure as sitting in front of a movie.
Yeah.
Right.
I call that strategic messing around active leisure. It's like you're strategically messing around. Right. He movie. Yeah. Right. I call that strategic messing around active leisure. It's
like you're strategically messing around. Right. He would. Yeah. I imagine he would like that term
because, because he, because he was very much into the idea of play. He was very much into the idea
of going and involving yourself in things, whether they're sports, whether they're activities,
whether it's cooking, whether it's practicing something,
learning something, going places, just being in nature and noticing things, writing, reading.
These are active leisure. And this is a thought that I'm glad you asked me about this, Lewis,
because I'm progressing this thought right now. And it's something that I invite people to think about with me.
I don't have a solid answer yet because I literally, I'm literally go, I've read this book this week and it really made me attach, attach to my own content in a way that I thought
was really interesting.
I have for a long time been calling people out on them saying I have work and I do this
and I do that.
So I never meet anyone because I have
no time. And I look at it and I'm like, okay, it's true that those things are excuses and that we
have to create time, but time is only as good as your energy. And if what, what a lot of us are
experiencing myself included, because I don't, like I said, I don't
have those, that way of just meeting people online from my bed at night because I like finish work at
nine o'clock and now I'm going to lay in bed and meet some people. I don't really have, it's hard
for me to do that. So I'm back to kind of where we were 30 years ago where it's like, oh, I've got to live a life that brings me into contact
with other people. And that could be classed as a form of active leisure, but that active leisure
requires energy. And if we're so exhausted by our day that the only thing we have the energy to do
is watch a series on Netflix, is to sit and watch Tiger King, you
know, or Ozark. I love it, but that's the thing. At the end of the day, that's like the, like the
only thing I want to do is sit. I don't even want to read. Why is it when I go on vacation, I used
to like go on vacation. I'd be like, I've read three books this week. What the hell?
Like, I love reading.
I get so much out of it.
It does so much for my life, so much for my mind.
We're only having this conversation about this right now because I read a book this
week.
Why do I read three books on vacation and not at home?
It's easy to say because you had more time.
It's not because I had more time. It's not because I had more time. It's because I had more energy because my useful hours were not on vacation being used for work. Because even if I would
finish at 7 PM, like you could say, well, you've got four hours to read before bed.
It doesn't really, energy doesn't- You need time to unwind.
So I read on vacation because I have energy to read.
Now it becomes active, not passive leisure time.
And what I'm fascinated by about this quarantine is that not all people are finding themselves with this.
There are plenty of parents with kids who are finding themselves with even less time and energy than before because now they're homeschooling.
Yes.
In addition to doing their jobs and looking after
their old, worrying about their elderly parents and so on. So it's false to say that everyone has
more time right now, but there are a segment of people that have found themselves with more time
and what they're enjoying is not necessarily having more time. What they're enjoying is having
more energy for active leisure. And now they're like, wow, I'm doing all these things that they're enjoying is having more energy for active leisure.
And now they're like, wow, I'm doing all these things.
They're almost dreading the time when they have to go back to work because they're worried.
I'm enjoying these things I get to do right now.
But what they're really saying is I'm enjoying the energy available to do these things.
Because often, even when it gets to the weekend, I'm too exhausted to do anything.
So apply that through the lens of dating. And what you see is a lot of people are not meeting people.
This is what I'm, I know I'm talking so much, Lewis, but I've got so much, my brain is so
creative right now. I've got so many things bouncing around. I just turned a bad mood day
into a good mood day. Well, of course, what makes a good mood day is flow states,
losing yourself in moments, in thoughts, in ideas,
and that's why we need more time, more energy to do those things.
But what was I going to say?
Where was I right before that thought?
People are saying they have no more time,
but now they're no more time,
but now they're having more active leisure time.
Okay.
So through the dating lens.
Yes.
People looking to date right now.
Yeah. I'm really curious about how people can start to see that,
okay, it might not be your fault that you're not meeting a lot of people
because it's not just
tied into your dating life. It's tied into everything, how hard you're working or how much
exhaustion you experience working. You would never imagine actually has a tremendous impact on your
ability and your dating life and your ability to flirt and your ability to go and take on new
activities. Cause you don't have the energy. No, you don't. Now you have the your ability to go and take on new activities. Because you don't have the energy.
No, you don't.
Now you have the creative energy to go out and say, okay, I'm going to approach this person online and do a special FaceTime chat and do something creative.
The irony is right now people have more energy to date, but it's harder to date because they're
at home.
John Kay wrote this book called Obligity about how results are achieved indirectly.
So if you want to get rich, don't focus on making money.
Focus on all the things that provide a valuable service, that add something to the world,
that give you time to think.
And that's what makes you, quote, rich financially.
It's not focusing on getting rich.
And the same is true of our dating lives.
It's all of those things that we don't
even associate with our dating lives that have a tremendous impact on our dating lives. Whether it's
reading books and now you have something to talk about on a date. Who would know that reading
Bertrand Russell's essay on In Praise of Idleness would have an impact on how interesting you are
on a date? Well, it does because now you can, this is a date, right? We're on a date. We're having a conversation. We've got plenty to talk about because I read a book this
week. Because I'm making myself more interesting by learning, by practicing something. And who
would think that reducing your workload or that saying no to more is going to have an impact on
whether you meet the love of your life? Not through any direct reason, but indirectly because saying no to more means you
have more energy, which means you have more time for active leisure, which means you're putting
yourself in more situations where you might meet someone. You do join that running club. You do go
to that evening lecture. You do join that cooking course where you just happen to meet someone.
Yeah. I think Tony Robbins was the one who said this, that the key to a successful relationship is creativity and caring.
And it's the amount of your creativity and the amount of your caring towards someone else and focusing on them, their needs, being creative towards it.
And hopefully that will be reciprocated so that they're caring and creative with your needs and your attention and your time.
It's the ability to do both.
And if you're caring but you're not creative,
you're eventually going to lose that spark, energy, intimacy, desire.
It takes both.
And you're the expert, so I don't know if it takes more than that as well.
But obviously, I think you've got to be creative. When you're trying to find someone to date. If you're not creative, why would they date you? Just on how you look? me to, to be part of that little tribe. And it was one of the most valuable things, not for the
obvious reasons that people would think that, look, you're overcoming something tremendously
difficult by doing this immersion work in the cold, in the ice and snow. It was one of the
most valuable things I did because at the beginning of the year, instead of racing into my work,
of the year, instead of racing into my work, instead of racing into all of these, the treadmill of another year, I, we took a week, put the phones away and we just had time to think, to talk,
to listen to other people with other businesses, with other points of view. Um, and, uh, to do
something that was different to anything I would normally do.
That sparks creativity like nothing else.
And one of the reasons that we get stuck in business
is because all we do is our business.
One of the reasons we get stuck in our relationship
is because we're not doing anything new.
We're not actually, we're not, it's not like you need to
shake things up. No, it's not about shaking things up. It's just about giving yourself like something,
something new to engage a part of your brain that you don't normally engage. It's why a couple that
decides to like go dancing for the night, who normally would think that's embarrassing and awkward and
wouldn't normally do it, find that it changes something. It changes something in the relationship
for a couple of days. We don't give ourselves new things to think about enough. And I,
this is which we're traversing between business and love and everything here,
but I think your audience, I, I know they love that.
Um,
as I do as well.
Um,
I,
for many years,
Lewis,
I was in,
you know,
I would say no to many,
many things outside of the direct scope of my company.
Uh,
because I would see that as me being laser focused on growing this thing
that I really cared about.
And I would see anything else that
wasn't to do with that as a distraction. I had a very utilitarian approach. And meanwhile,
I would see my brothers painting and cooking and doing other things like writing and they would
explore other interests. And it's not, I didn't for one second look down
on that. I just thought, Oh, I, but I need to focus myself a thousand percent on this. If I'm
going to get to where I want to be, I've come to look at that as, um, focus is a, is a strength,
but it can also be a weakness because it stops you from doing other things that would actually give you a different level of creativity in that core thing. That's really interesting to you. And if you never do
anything outside the scope of what you do, you're going to find quickly, you don't have a lot to say.
And that's a, and that's a problem. Sometimes you have to do something new,
not, it doesn't even matter what it is necessarily.
It just matters that it takes your brain to a different train of thought, a different
idea, a different moment.
I had a hamster when I was a kid.
And my dad once, I used to keep his cage all neat and tidy, right?
And it was the only pet I had.
I think I was like nine years old or something.
It was the only pet I had because my dad was allergic to everything else. And I had this hamster. I used to
keep his cage like really tidy. And like my dad, one day I come home from school and the hamster
wheel is just turned on its side and the hamster is just standing there staring at it. And, uh,
and I, I looked over at my dad and I was like why is his wheel like that i was kind of
annoyed i was like that's his wheel he's supposed to run on it why is it on its side and my dad
said oh i i i turned it up i turned it on its side why why'd you do that he goes
give him something to think about. And I thought, he goes, he's in his, he literally said he's in his, my dad doesn't like any,
I today feel the same way.
But even back then, my dad was like, why is he in a cage?
Why do we have these things in cages or whatever?
My dad said, he's in his cage all day.
He has nothing else to do.
It's the same wheel, same thing, same, everything's the same.
I gave him something to think about today. And I, at the time I didn't get it. And I look back now and I laugh, but it's,
we're not like, sometimes we're so used to getting our house exactly the way we know it all the time
and having the wheel just turning the same way. Sometimes turning the wheel on its side
and giving yourself something else to think about
is one of the most valuable things you could do for your life,
for your relationship, for your mental health,
for your creativity, for everything.
Loving this, man.
This has been powerful stuff.
And if people want more, they can go to howtogettheguy.com.
And do you have something you can give people or an opt-in for?
I'm doing something right now. Look, I have a membership that a lot of people are a part of,
and a lot of people just don't know about. And every month I'm doing webinars on that membership.
My dad is doing webinars on that membership. My brother is doing webinars. Um, and, and the whole
idea of this membership is, is, is called the love life membership. And the idea behind it is twofold.
It's going to help your love life, but it's also going to show you how to love life.
And what's that called when you do that with two words, when it's love life and love life,
what's that? I suppose a double, double entendre. Something like that. Yes. Yes. I, I, but I,
the reason this is so important is precisely because of what we've already talked
about that the results in life are often best achieved, not just directly, but indirectly.
So we're going to give you all of the things you need, whether you're single or in a relationship
to make the best of your situation, your love life, and to create the life that you want there.
But it's also much bigger in scope than that. It's about showing you
how to love your life as well. And we have webinars literally coming up in the next two
weeks that people can join as long as they're a member. And I have given people a way to do it
risk-free. We've got a 14 day free window where people can sign up today, ask me a question and
sign up. And their question will be in the running for some question that I'm going to answer on the next webinar. And that's askmh.com. So if you go to askmh.com, you'll get
the chance to A, ask a question that I'll try to answer on my next webinar. And B, you'll be able
to sign up for free for 14 days. So even if you just join for 14 days and do a couple of webinars
for free and then cancel, you can do that, but you'll see
the value in it at least. Amazing. And for the Americans listening or watching, that's askmh.com.
A-S-K-M-H.com. Askmh.com, yes. And if you want to follow one of the best YouTube channels in the
world on any subject, go to Matthew Hussey's YouTube channel.
I think you're almost at 2 million subscribers over there.
Now it's,
if I,
I'm hoping we will have hit that by the time this comes out,
this,
this is pretty crazy.
I haven't checked that number in a long time.
And then someone just mentioned to me the other day,
like you're about to hit two mil.
I was like,
Oh,
that's amazing,
man.
It's amazing.
It's honestly one of the most creative channels best content uh most thought out it's it's amazing even if you're
a dude and you're not looking to get the guy it's just great relationship advice
life advice all that stuff so make sure to subscribe there when when men say like do you
does your advice apply to us as well i'm like, what do you think I'm using all day, every day?
Yeah, exactly.
Literally, this may as well be a diary of everything I'm learning in my life
because I'm learning all of this with you guys.
So I'm loving it and I'm trying this year to just be a more vulnerable version of myself,
I suppose, because I want people want, you know, I want
people to know I'm on the path with them. This is not, you're not joining my membership to be
lectured to. You're joining my membership to become a part of a, a community of people that
all are taking growth, their own growth really, really seriously. Myself included.
Yeah. Everyone's on the journey. Thank you for opening
up and sharing your journey. We covered a lot about living with someone in isolation who's
in a relationship. If you're long distance or if you're broke up with someone recently,
how to navigate that. Also, how to look for love while in this time right now. Make sure you guys
check out AskMH.com. Subscribe to his YouTube channel. Follow him on
social media. Some of the best social media content as well. I mean, I love your videos
and content over there. So check out Matthew, guys. Matthew, you're the man. I appreciate you,
brother. Thanks for having me, man. Can't wait till we hug it out soon, man.
Yeah, I look forward to it. For those of you who haven't had a hug from Lewis Howes,
the man gives like top three hugs in the world. I love it, man. Thank you, brother.
All right, man.
I hope you enjoyed this episode with my good friend, Matthew Hussey.
I love how we just both went off on sharing our strategies and stories about how to truly
figure out this time with our relationships.
If you're single, how to manage being together in a tight space so much, how to be apart,
how to make sure you don't go back to your ex during this time just because you're lonely.
If you enjoy this and you know there's at least one or two friends that would get a
lot of value from this, then send this link, lewishouse.com slash 944.
Text a couple friends right now.
Post it on a WhatsApp group message.
Post it on your Instagram story.
Tag me, at Lewis Howes, and Matthew Hussey to your stories, to your Twitter, to your Facebook, everywhere,
to people you think need to hear this message the most.
You truly have the opportunity to change someone's life by spreading this message of love and positivity.
So send the link, lewishowes.com, slash 944.
And if this is your first time here and someone sent you this link, send them a text back thanking them, telling them what you got out of this the most, the biggest lesson, what you learned, how it helped you, and continue to pay it forward.
Please subscribe to our podcast over on Apple Podcasts, The School of Greatness.
Leave us a review.
We'd love to hear from you, how we can improve this, make it better, or how this helped you in your life.
to hear from you, how we can improve this, make it better, or how this helped you in your life.
And I love this quote from Liz Gilbert, who said, someday you're going to look back at this moment of your life as such a sweet time of grieving. You'll see that you were in mourning and your
heart was broken, but your life was changing. I hope this is changing you for the better,
this time, this opportunity, this challenge, this struggle, whatever phase you're at in your life.
I'm sending you lots of love.
You matter so much.
And you know what time it is.
It's time to go out there and do something great.