The Mel Robbins Podcast - “The Secret of a Happy Relationship…” the Best Advice That I Have Received
Episode Date: August 8, 2024This is expert relationship advice everyone needs to hear.Whether you are single, dating, in a relationship, or married, you will learn the relationship secrets you never knew you were missing.This is... not the same stale relationship advice you’ve heard over and over again. The fresh advice you hear in this episode will jumpstart your relationship or help you find real and lasting love. Learn the simple habits of all happy relationships, how to find a great partner without a dating app, and get the quick advice you need to hear to improve your love life instantly.Matthew Hussey is here to help Mel give relationship advice that will make your love life come alive, no matter what state it’s in right now. For more than 17 years, Matthew has been helping people feel more confident and in control of their relationships. His YouTube channel is number one in the world for love-life advice, with over half a billion views, and he is a New York Times bestselling author. Today, he is helping you.Listen for the best advice you will hear for finding love, falling in love, and keeping in love.For more resources, including links to Matthew’s book, website, and social media, click here for the podcast episode page. If you liked this episode, you’ll love listening to Matthew’s first episode next: The Best Relationship Advice No One Ever Told You, and for more great relationship advice, 3 Requirements of a Good RelationshipConnect with Mel: Watch the episodes on YouTubeGo deeper with Mel’s free video course, Make It HappenFollow Mel on Instagram The Mel Robbins Podcast InstagramMel's TikTok Sign up for Mel’s personal letter Disclaimer
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey, it's your friend Mel,
and welcome to the Mel Robbins Podcast.
-♪
-♪
You and I are gonna talk about the secrets
to building, creating amazing romantic relationships,
and especially if you're single, this is for you.
And I've been wanting to do this
because I've been receiving so many questions from your fellow listeners
around the world that I was like,
I got to dedicate an episode to every single aspect
of romantic relationships.
From navigating being single, to finding a great one,
to creating that intimacy,
to keeping the romantic relationship great.
And so I want you to know whether you are single or dating or married or divorced
or you're in some situationship or you're hooking up with people
and you're trying to figure it out, whether you feel good, whether you feel bad,
whatever, this is for you because you and I are going to cover every single question you can imagine and every range that happens in
the experience of finding love, falling in love, keeping in love, falling out of love.
And I'm also excited because today I have a co-pilot. And I have a co-pilot because,
you know, I'm 56 years old. No, I'm 55 years old. I'm turning 56. I'm 55. And being that I'm 55 and I've been married for 28
years, I've never done online dating. I mean, I'm at a loss for how to counsel our three kids
who are adults and navigating the modern dating world. And so I thought, I gotta call in a heavy. I gotta call in somebody who literally has been
helping people create the most amazing love lives
for 17 years.
I'm talking about the internet's favorite
and most watched relationship expert on YouTube.
And we're gonna be digging into incredible questions today.
Questions like, what do you do if you can't find love?
What is the biggest mistake
that people make in relationships?
How the heck do you meet people
in the era of toxic hookups and online dating?
How do you not sound like some sort of controlling loser
when you don't know where you stand in a relationship?
What happens if you're growing, but your partner isn't?
What do you do if you feel taken for granted? And a question that I want to know, what is
the single biggest mistake that people make in relationships? Well, it's not what
you think.
So thrilled you're here with me today. It is always such an honor to get to spend some time together.
And I also want to start by acknowledging you for choosing to listen to something that
is going to help you create a better life, make you laugh, feel a little better.
Welcome, welcome, welcome.
And if you're a new listener, I particularly want to take a moment and welcome you to the
Mel Robbins Podcast family.
I'm so glad you're here. And today's episode is for you.
Whether you're single, dating, married, divorced,
you got some situationship thing going on
that you don't even know how to describe it,
you're trying to figure things out
as you're hooking up with people,
you don't know where you stand,
you're confused, you're feeling used,
you're somewhere in between,
today you and I are gonna sort it all out.
Now I've been married to Chris for over 28 years,
and we've got three adult kids
who are all navigating the modern dating world.
And having never had to experience online dating,
when I thought, okay, I'm gonna answer relationship questions,
I thought, I better call in a heavy hitter
to be my co-pilot in answering your questions today
so that I can handle the continuum on one end,
and I got somebody that can handle the crazy world
that is modern dating.
And so let me tell you a little bit
about my co-pilot today, Matthew Hussey.
Matthew is a buddy of mine.
He's also a New York Times bestselling author,
and he's been helping people for more than 17 years
to feel more confident and in control of their relationships. More than 3 million people turned to Matthew for
relationship advice on his YouTube channel which is completely dedicated to
helping you create a better love life. And so Matthew and I are gonna tag team
your questions and my team has sourced your most asked questions from your
fellow listeners around the world. They have come to our inbox, our website, social media.
And trust me, whether you are in a loving relationship right now
or you have sworn off relationships altogether,
there is something here for you.
You will relate to all these questions.
You are going to get something from every single answer.
And you're going to want to share this with everyone that you love.
Alrighty, are you ready?
I know I am.
Without further ado, let me welcome Matthew Hussey to the Mel Robbins podcast.
Thank you.
Awesome.
Looking forward to talking with you.
I think what I want to do, because you've been advising people on how they can get into
successful long-term relationships for 17 years.
I want to focus our conversation, I think, on what you've learned about successful long-term
relationships, how to get in one, what are the attributes. And then I want to have a conversation
about how you want people to think when they're single and navigating the dating world.
So as you think about the just volume of people that you've helped, you have seen it all in relationships.
What's the biggest mistake that you think people make in relationships?
What's the biggest mistake that you think people make in relationships?
One of them is thinking that the things that your partner
is and does that are wonderful are normal
by the time you have been experiencing them
for a long time.
What do you mean?
The things that your partner does
that are actually wonderful. The things that your partner does that are actually wonderful.
The things that they do that are their special qualities.
The things that make your life better, more joyful, more magical, easier.
The things that support you.
All those little things that are magic.
You start to think those are just normal things that are to be expected or that anyone would do in a relationship
because you've had so much distance from any other relationship that your memory now has nothing to compare it to.
People have a rude awakening very often when they go and date someone else and they realize all the things that were wonderful about their partner were not normal.
They were wonderful things about their partner. We do that in all of life. Human beings,
in some ways, one of our greatest traits is that we're able to normalize things. Yeah.
Like, you know, we can go as an entire world during a pandemic. We can like normalize
radically new conditions in ways that are truly inspirational.
But it actually gets mutated into a very bad effect
sometimes in relationships and in other areas of life
where that normalization of what is wonderful
can make us think that it's normal.
I freaking love that you went here
because I think what we do when we seek relationship advice is we're
so focused on what's wrong with this person.
Why did it go cold?
How come we've grown distant?
And what you're saying is one of the big mistakes that we actually make is we lose sight of
the fact that there's so many things that are going right and you take it for granted.
Is that what you're saying?
Yeah, that's exactly right.
That's exactly right.
Look at anyone who like flies in a fancy seat on the plane. Yeah. If they do it for long
enough, they don't even think it's a fancy seat anymore. They just, they'll find a new
complaint with that. I keep thinking about the fact that yeah, if you've ever been upgraded
and you sit up front, it is like going to Disney World. You won't go to sleep because
you're like, I have to enjoy all of this. I have to try the little hand cream and I have to do the tea. I have to
brush my teeth with the like airplane toothbrush. You can't sleep. It's so
exciting and people do that with partners. You may have someone who has
truly extraordinary things. You just don't know they're extraordinary anymore
because it's your life. Whoa. I think we can start to
think we know everything there is to know about our partner. That there is nothing new going on
in that head of theirs. We know it all and we certainly don't know it all. We only know what
they're telling us and usually what they're telling us is a reflection of the kinds of questions we're
asking them and we might have stopped asking them questions 10 years ago, because we assume we know it all.
But we may know them from 10 years ago.
We don't necessarily know them today if we don't ask the right questions.
And so I'm constantly thinking, I don't think there's any one answer for this.
And it's certainly not a tip from Cosmopolitan about a new toy for the bedroom.
That's the thing that's going to change the whole game. How do you stand back from your partner and see them as an enigma again? That to me is one of the
most beautiful things you can do. Proust said the journey of discovery lies not in seeking new
landscapes, but in seeing with new eyes. And if you think about it, when someone has an affair,
they're seeking a new landscape, right?
But when you can start to see your partner with newness, you're seeing them with new eyes.
If you can bring newness, you're giving them a chance to see you with new eyes.
The question becomes, what are some of the ways you can do that?
And the beautiful part is there's not one answer to that.
It can be organic to you and the ways you can create newness for yourself and your relationship. How do you change it? I think you have to keep growing. I really believe that
you have to find ways to make life fresh to you so that you can stay fresh for your partner.
The more you read, the more you engage in a new activity or a new hobby or something that inspires you.
I could at this point, after I've been coaching people in their love lives for 17 years, I
could say, I know enough to just now do this for the rest of my life without learning another
thing.
And that might be true, but it would become stale for me and then I would become stale
for my audience.
The thing that keeps me fresh for other people
is that I stay fresh for myself.
I do the reading and I look at what's going on
and I have conversations with people.
So then I come back with an idea that feels new.
It may be something I've said a thousand times,
but the way I just thought about it
because of the thing that I just read,
it feels new to me. And if it feels new to me, I'm going to convey that in a way that's fresh to you.
And I think in our relationships, because we stop growing in our lives and because we stop doing
things that keep life fresh for us, we now bring a very stagnant state version of ourselves to the
relationship. We have nothing new to bring to the conversation at dinner because when was the last time we
got a brand new idea or we read something or engaged with something that made us think
differently.
One of my big takeaways already, and maybe it's age because I'm 55 years old and you're
younger than me, and you asked this question about what have you done lately to grow?
And I certainly grew up in a generation where it was all about finding somebody.
And so much of it was about the search out there.
And what do I need to do to attract that person, to find that person, the
presumption being that that person out there is somehow going to come back over
here and make my life more interesting, my life more amazing.
And I think I've already just had this aha for every one of you listening and for all of the
people that you love that you're going to send this to. That the single most important thing,
whether you're single and you're listening to this or you are in a relationship and you want
to make it better, is that it begins with
you understanding what you're bringing to the table and you looking at your own growth
and what you're bringing either to your life as a single person or to the relationship
as a person in a committed relationship.
Is that a fair takeaway?
It's everything.
It's everything.
I don't want to jump too far ahead of ourselves when I say this,
but there's, when you say that, what it brings up for me is when we feel like we're not interesting,
when we have the insecurity of someone who feels like they're not enough,
they're not cool, they haven't got a great life, they're not an interesting person. We go looking for that person who has those attributes.
And so what we do now is we, we go into our love lives driven by ego.
Not the ego of I'm so great, but the ego of I'm not great.
I'm not enough.
So I need to find someone who's going to make me feel that way.
And we often end up looking for these very superficial markers of someone else's impressiveness,
what makes them great.
When you truly feel like you're enough, you don't actually feel the need to go in search
of those kind of egoic things. You know, you're not, let's say, worried that,
is this person I'm bringing home
someone that is gonna impress my friends?
Are they gonna look good on my arm?
Are they gonna look good on Instagram?
Are they, like, you don't care about that.
You care, do they make me happy?
You start focusing on how they make you feel,
not how they make you look.
And that's a huge distinction because so many people go out into their love lives worrying
about how someone's going to make them look. And that's all driven by ego because we don't
feel like we're enough. It's no different to the playground at school. If you didn't
think you were cool, the last person you wanted to be seen with was another person who was uncool.
That's true.
You were like, if I hang around you, I'm going to get found out.
Yes, we're both screwed.
So I need to hang around with people that I can disguise myself from and other people
might by association think I'm cool too. So again, at school, we looked for all these
silly superficial markers of popularity, status, looks,
they were captain of this or whatever it may be, so that we could feel by association like we were
somebody. Now if you just carry that forward as many people do into their love lives, you keep
looking for all of those superficial markers that are going to by association make you look like
the person you've always wanted to look like. When you work on yourself, it's a very freeing thing
because you're now, I'm not looking for you to be a certain kind of good looking or a
certain kind of height or figure or this or that or money or status or lifestyle, whatever.
I don't care about you being any of those things. I've got me. Right.
I already feel good enough.
So I don't need you for those things.
What I want is someone I have an extraordinary time with.
Why I want someone who sees me.
Why I want someone is someone I feel at home with.
Those are the things that we start looking for.
It's a very different thing we look for when we feel like we're already taken care of.
Well, what I love that you said, and I want to take a giant highlighter and make sure that
as you're listening to this, that you got this, which is too many of us are obsessed with what
does the person make me look like? And so if I'm with this person, what does it look like
versus how does this person make me feel? And so that's another takeaway in terms of the mistakes that we're making.
And here's something I think a lot of people will relate to.
This is maybe a crude analogy, but I always think I am the house that I live in.
Okay.
When I go to a hotel, if it's a fancy, lovely hotel, I love the room, oh my god, I love the view.
I never think of it as my status or my value or my anything.
I'm like, I'm renting this room for a night.
This doesn't belong to me.
It's not my hotel.
Are we about to talk about one night stands?
Is that where we're going right now?
No.
Okay, when you said renting for a night, I'm like, what's happening, Matthew?
Well, I think of it as I'm just going to experience this and enjoy it for what it is.
Got it.
I can't take it home with me. It's not mine. My home is my home. Where I go back to every night.
Yes.
That's my home. The picture that I hang on mine and my wife's wall that is a beautiful picture,
that affects my life every single day. The hotel that I stay in is irrelevant. It's just
a nice experience. And I think we have to, to some extent, start seeing when we're with
someone that we think is really impressive or has amazing traits, is very charismatic, is sexy, is all of these things that we get drawn to.
That this is not our value, it's something we're enjoying, it's something we're experiencing,
but we are the home that we go back to every night. The work we do on ourselves, the work we
do to make ourselves a resilient person in this life, a wise person in this life, a person who's giving in this life,
who has connections and love, that's our home. It's not the value that this person brings us.
There are so many people in relationships that when they lose the person, they think they've lost
their value because they started to think, my value is this value on the outside. And I don't
think you can ever get the two confused. Well, I like that you have a visual because when you fall for somebody, obviously there's
so much chemistry and attraction and lust and sex and all of the amazing stuff that
goes down when there is a new relationship and the chase is on and it's super exciting
and it can feel like a sexy, amazing hotel room. And so we can all put ourselves there.
The sheets are fantastic and the coffee is so good.
And you can pull down the blinds
and get an amazing night's sleep.
And, oh, my God, and you can start to imagine,
what if my own bedroom felt like this?
But when the date is over,
you know how you feel when you're back at home and whether
or not you've just been with somebody that makes you feel more of yourself or whether
or not you then go back to where you are at your home when you're alone and you start
to question, did I say the right thing?
Did I not do that?
Are they going to call me?
And I also love the analogy because I've been asked a lot since Chris and I have been married
for 28 years. They're like, well, how do you know? And I'm like, I don't know, you just
feel like yourself. And so it's almost as if that right person, even though it might kind of be fun
for a minute to feel like it's like a fancy hotel room.
It actually very quickly just starts to feel like home.
And what you're saying is too many of us get swept up in the feeling
of all that shiny shit. And then when that's over, we think it means there's something wrong with us.
And you're saying, no, no, no, no, you're fine.
You were just in a hotel room. Yeah. And we think we've there's something wrong with us. And you're saying, no, no, no, no, you're fine.
You were just in a hotel room.
Yeah, and we think we've lost our value.
We think that hotel room was our value.
And by the way, you see this on Instagram,
the person whose whole Instagram profile is just them
in fancy hotel rooms in some other part of the world.
And it's like, everything is that.
You go, oh, this person has attached
to their value to these places that they stay in.
And that's a very dangerous thing to do.
It's always a dangerous thing.
Well, you can see it everywhere at Matthew.
I mean, literally I think a lot about how extravagant people have become with their
proposals and their baby announcements and all of that kind of stuff.
I don't, I don't know if you did that or not.
I don't know if you did that or not, I don't know.
Like I just-
We're a complete, I proposed to Audrey in our bedroom.
We're very like behind the scenes people
in all of those ways.
But I, you know, everybody needs to do
what makes them feel amazing.
But for me personally, I see a lot of emphasis
on the show and not the substance.
Well, the way that I have always talked about it is this, that I'm kind of
obsessed about how we tell love stories to ourselves and what we define as a
love story, like what qualifies.
I don't know that you make it.
I don't know what defines it as a love story.
That's interesting, right?
Cause if you take half the movies we see, they definitely don't make it.
It's true.
But we call them love stories and it can get quite dangerous.
But if you take Titanic, there's something a little odd about watching a woman
who's nearly a hundred years old, still dreaming about and thinking about a relationship that wasn't even
a relationship with a guy that she met on a boat and was with for about five days. It's an interesting
thing when you look at it that way. I experienced these stories in real life in my work all the time.
I was on TV in the morning, a caller called in, a woman in her seventies, and she said,
I can't get over this guy that I dated, that I was with or dated.
It wasn't even like a 10 year marriage.
I dated on and off.
And I said, well, when did it end?
She said, well, he stopped calling me 30 years ago.
Oh my gosh.
Now is that a love story? Maybe. I don't know. By the way, I think
it probably does. I mean, well, but so, so my brain, I can't wait to hear what you have
to say because I'm immediately like, well, she's been telling herself the story for 30
years and your brain doesn't know the difference between the reality and what you've been telling
it. That's right. And the amount you've told it to yourself and the way you've told it
to yourself has given that story a level of importance that it probably, in her case almost certainly,
should never have had. So then you say, okay, we need to start changing how we tell ourselves
love stories. Matthew, I want to take a quick break right now and let everything you've already
taught us and shared sink in. And while you're listening to the sponsors,
share this episode with your friends and stay with us.
Welcome back. It's your friend Mel.
I'm here with Matthew Hussey.
He has been coaching people for 17 years on relationships
and has the
most successful number one ranked YouTube channel on the topic of love and relationships.
So we have a ton of questions about compromise and how to weigh the proper compromises in
a relationship.
So we have this great question from Carmen who wrote in,
can you talk about the difficulty of compromise
and partnerships without giving up yourself?
I've had a long time partner for 14 years.
We've been together since we were 16,
but I've been working in Europe for the last two years.
And the long distance relationship worked really well.
They supported me, we saw each other regularly.
I never felt happier during my time abroad.
I felt like I had found myself over there.
I didn't want to go back, but ultimately decided to go back
because I felt like my partner wasn't doing well without me.
And they didn't want to move to Europe.
Now I'm in a situation where I'm trying to find a compromise,
looking for remote jobs to be able to work from anywhere
and figuring out a way where we can both be happy. Any advice on how much compromise is good, bad, without forgetting
who you are as an individual.
So there you have a compatibility issue in the way that two people want to live their
lives, right? And even if you share many of the same values, even if you have an incredible
time when you're together,
if you have a different vision for your future, or a completely different vision for the present,
then that's still a compatibility issue.
I think we have to get out of this idea that someone can be the right person,
even when the way they want to live their life or the way they see their future is completely different
to the way we want to live ours or see our future.
That doesn't make them right person, wrong time, right person, wrong circumstances.
I think the right person has to be both right and ready.
I think the right person has to be someone whose values we love and also wants the same
life as us.
I don't believe in this idea that you have the right person who just, if it were only
a parallel universe where they loved Europe and wanted to be there and live there and
weren't close to their family back home and didn't, then it would be perfect.
I don't, this is science fiction.
So I think we have to look at the reality of what we have instead of what we would like to be, because anything else is science fiction.
When I hear this question, I go, it's tough because it sounds like there's a lot that's right with the relationship, but you right now, your dreams are taking you to Europe and a job that you really enjoy.
And this person doesn't want to come to Europe.
Now, firstly, that deserves ultimate compassion for the person who doesn't want to come to Europe.
Of course.
It's not their dream.
Yes.
It's not their life.
They didn't choose to have a partner who decided to move miles and miles away from home.
That requires a level of compassion and humility.
I think this about entrepreneurs all the time.
Whenever entrepreneurs complain that their partner doesn't get it.
I'm working all hours of the day and I just have this dream and my partner
doesn't get it, I'm like, yeah, no shit.
What are you, they didn't sign up for this.
They didn't choose this.
It's not their dream.
Like there's something selfish about that dream. Own it.
Like, it's okay. I've been there. I'm an entrepreneur. I get it.
But don't turn it into something noble that your partner doesn't get.
It's not their dream.
If they suddenly had a dream that meant they were never around
and they were stressed all the time and they didn't bring you good energy in the evenings
and even on weekends, they were kind of not present
and what would you be saying? We lack humility in those situations and I think
this comes back down to another hard conversation is look I've got a person I
really value. How much do I value this person? Do I value them enough to try and
find a job that I'm passionate about back
where we're from? Or when I'm honest with myself, if I'm really, really honest with
myself, maybe it brings up a tremendous amount of guilt for me. Maybe it makes me feel selfish.
Maybe it makes me feel shame, but maybe if I'm honest, if I don't get this out of my system, I'm never going to be ready
for that. And I might have to end up being ready for it with another person, but at least
I will have done this thing and pursued this thing that's really important to me right
now. Life is about choices. Like it just is. We wish it wasn't, but it just is.
That's interesting because the question is about compromise and yet you're bringing it back to
the personal responsibility to make a choice that you're not going to resent somebody else for.
Because I think that's the other thing we don't talk about, which is it's noble to compromise,
but not if you are going to die on the sword and be
silently resentful of somebody that you're with because quote, they made you do something
that they held you back when you didn't have the courage to seek the clarity about what
you valued more and the timing of your life.
That might be, by the way, he says two more years, I could do this.
Or he might say one more year I can do this, but I can't do it after that.
And she needs to be really honest with herself about whether a year is going
to be enough, there might be the compromise or the compromise is, you know,
I'm going to come home and I'm going to find something that I can do that I enjoy
back home, but if I do that, then I'm really
going to lean into that and make, you've always got to be prepared in life to make the plan
B the new plan A. Turn plan B into the new plan A. What you can't do is continue to see
it as plan B because that's where the resentment comes from.
What about some of the smaller things that trip relationships up? It's things like your
partner plays video games
all the time and it drives you crazy. Your partner just wants to watch golf or whatever on the
weekend. You are a morning person and you love to get up and get to the gym and this is a person
who's a night owl and sleeps in until 11 and how do you know, you know what I mean, when it's
compatibility versus...
Is it that you want them to be like you
or is it that your needs aren't getting met?
How do you know?
Well, ask yourself, them playing video games,
is it costing me something crucial
that I feel I'm not getting in the relationship as a result
or am I just mad that they're not like me?
That's good.
Because if it's costing you something crucial,
like one of your needs,
then you absolutely better have the conversation.
And the conversation is something akin to,
I respect and I love that you have something
that you love doing with your time,
but you're doing it so much
that I'm not getting
what I need in the relationship. And I want to support you in this thing that you really
enjoy doing. But I also want to feel supported. And I want to feel like this relationship
gives me what I need the same way I want to show up for you and give you what you need.
So by the way, after this conversation, let's talk about what you need. But right now, the
thing that I need the most is quality time. And'm not getting that because of XYZ. You can say that,
but is it about you not getting your needs met? Or is it about the fact that you don't
like that they're not like you? Which is a more interesting question because it gets
into the territory of do we need our partner to be like us in certain ways?
Where is that coming from? We can talk about that, but I think that's interesting territory.
Well, I definitely want to talk about that too, but I can give a couple examples and I think your distinction is very helpful.
Because it made me realize why these two examples matter.
So the first one is that, you know, Chris and I have been together for a long time, but he recently went away on a ski trip with our son, and I didn't go.
It wasn't supposed to be a boys trip, but I literally was like, you know what?
I don't want to go skiing for a week.
I don't really like skiing.
I think I'd rather be home alone and do a staycation without anybody home.
Thank you very much.
And the reason why that was actually super cool
is because Chris's needs and my needs are getting met
in other ways.
So I didn't need to take a trip with him
to get the connection that you know, that you often will get
when you take time and go away together.
And so it didn't feel like it was taking anything away.
In fact, it was kind of additive versus,
and here's the example where I did change.
I have very bad ADHD and I have this habit
when cardboard boxes come of stacking them up by the door,
because we live in the state where you gotta flatten them,
and I hate flattening them.
I get like all kinds of paper cuts, and I just,
I don't know why I don't like to do it,
but I don't like to do it.
So Chris hates that I stack these things up,
and he would yell at me all the time,
can't you just stack them up, can't you?
And then I, of course, when he would yell at me
about doing that, well, not really yell,
but just like, for crying out loud,
can't you just do it?
I would then defend myself.
I'm so busy, you know, I'm traveling,
I was, can't you just do this?
I mean, for crying out, what else?
And so we'd get into this standoff.
And it wasn't until he sat me down and had the conversation, listen, I get that you have ADHD,
I get that you're tired, I get that you work long hours, I get that you do a ton of things.
But let me tell you something, every time I see that stack like a little kind of pyramid for me,
waiting like a gift from you, it makes me feel like you think I'm your maid. What I
realized at a very profound level is that when he explained how my behavior made him feel,
it made me realize that his need to be seen and taken care of and acts of service were not being
met over and over and over again, even though he asked.
And that's what motivated me to change my behavior.
I am the best cardboard box flattener on the planet, Matt, but that's a really important
thing because I think in these small moments where we're either forcing someone to be like
us, which I don't think you should be doing. Or you have an opportunity to express that there's a deeper need behind why you
want somebody to actually load the dishwasher or move the stuff from the
washer to the dryer.
That if you can express the deeper need, now you're strengthening the connection
versus fighting with somebody over something.
Yeah, that's exactly right
And you're giving someone in a relationship a real gift and an opportunity to give you something that that may not be
Rational and by the way, that's okay
How many things do we need in life that are not rational?
It's true. It's a beautiful thing sometimes to just understand that this is important to my partner and
It's worth showing up for them in this way, even if it doesn't make sense to me.
But that only works in two people who are a genuine team, where it feels like that kind
of generosity of spirit goes both ways.
Matthew, my head is spinning.
And you know what I want to talk about after a short break?
I really want to dig deeper into hard conversations. And by the way, as you listen to our sponsors, be very generous and share this link with everybody that you know so that they can
benefit from what you're learning today. Alrighty, I'll be waiting for you with Matthew
Hussey after a short break. Stay with us.
Stay with us. And stay with us.
Stay with us.
Stay with us.
Stay with us.
Stay with us.
Stay with us.
Stay with us.
Stay with us.
Stay with us.
Stay with us.
Stay with us.
Stay with us.
Stay with us.
Stay with us.
Stay with us.
Stay with us.
Stay with us.
Stay with us.
Stay with us.
Stay with us.
Stay with us.
Stay with us.
Stay with us.
Stay with us.
Stay with us.
Stay with us.
Stay with us.
Stay with us.
Stay with us. Stay with us. Stay with us. Stay with their relationships and also improve their relationship with themselves.
Do you have a strategy for how you know
if something's a deal breaker?
Because I do think a lot of people don't truly understand
what is a deal breaker and what's just something
you need to be more flexible about.
So in the case of the partner who's let themselves go, or the partner who is struggling
with drinking, or the partner who has anger issues, or the partner who, you know what I'm saying?
Like to your point, we could take them one by one, but let's say the partner who's let themselves go.
I think that the default with someone you love is always compassion, not judgment, because
that must be hard for them.
I know when I've let myself go in life, it didn't feel good to me.
My mind was in a certain state when I was letting myself go.
That has to be met with love and compassion.
Now, one of the things I want to make sure we at some point touch on is the compassion
we have to show ourselves and what that looks like. But outward compassion there is really, really
important. You have to ask yourself, if this was taken to its extreme, which either means
it keeps getting worse or this person stays this way for the rest of their life, is that Is that compatible with me loving myself?
Is it compatible with me taking care of myself?
And part of taking care of myself is being in a relationship
that supports my needs.
And you have to go into,
in what ways does that affect your needs?
Well, we may say in the short term,
it affects my needs sexually, let's say.
It's a hard place for us to go.
But if most people are honest and they say, my partner has let themselves go to the point
where they take no pride in their appearance.
They take no pride in their body.
They're not in that place.
And I'm also not in that place.
And this is something that's really, really important to me.
It's no judgment on them.
That's why I say we have to start with compassion.
Well, it's interesting because if you start with compassion, even when you're breaking up,
or you start with compassion and you're having a hard conversation about how somebody is mentally or physically,
and you start knowing that this is hard for them and you still love them,
but you also have to kind of have the conversation for yourself because it's not fair to
somebody to silently be mad at them or silently judge them and if you find
yourself talking more to your friends about it?
No and and and it breaks my heart as I say this because I genuinely think it's
as hard for them to change that thing as it is for you to change your hardest
thing right now. We have to start looking at these things that way. That this thing
that affects you is as hard for them to change that as it is for you to change something
you're finding nearly impossible to change. And when you look at it through that lens,
there is no judgment. It's just, it's just compassion. And the most tragic and heartbreaking thing would be
if that thing that they couldn't change over time spelled the end of this beautiful relationship.
That's the part that you have to A, connect with yourself, that that's truly heartbreaking. And that
with yourself that that's truly heartbreaking and that at a certain point you have to connect them to that as well because it's the last thing you want.
And then your needs are not just that, your needs might be your need for this person who
you love to still be around for as many years as possible.
And that there is a delayed heartbreak that is coming for me because of the way that you're not taking care of yourself right now
and you are going to be responsible for the greatest heartbreak of my entire life
and I come to you in that spirit that I want to be there for you, I want to support you. I want to put, you know,
whatever support I can around you to help.
I want to understand how hard it is for you.
And let's talk about that.
Let's go to therapy for that.
Let's, whatever we have to do, let's do that.
I'm not minimizing how hard it is,
but I also don't want to minimize the impact
that this is going to have on our life,
is already having on our
life and will one day have in the most tremendous way if we're not careful, if we're not careful.
And that kind of language I think gets out of the mode of judging someone for what they're
not able to do that maybe comes more naturally to you, which is your gift and their curse.
I think if the shoe's on the other foot
and you're the one struggling,
that's how you want your partner to show up for you.
I get a lot of questions about what to do
when you're changing and someone else isn't.
And so this one comes from Heather.
What do you do when the person holding you back
is the partner that you love?
I struggle to not be angry with my partner
for not matching my desire for personal growth.
And I resent the fact that I feel like
I have to pull them along.
My frustration to them is perceived as believing
that they are a piece of shit
or that they will never be good enough for me.
I feel like I'm holding myself back to keep the peace.
The more I grow, the more they become insecure.
I don't want my kids to watch me sacrifice who I am because of my partner.
What's your counsel to somebody that's in that position where they're growing and their
partner's not?
Well, so I want to set up that framework again that is my problem that they're not like me
or that my needs aren't getting met.
Now if someone doesn't read the same books as you or doesn't fancy going to that weekend
seminar that has no bearing on the relationship on its own.
It's like skiing.
That's true.
It's just a program. It's just a book. Someone
could have grown up on a farm having never even connected with the idea that there was
a self-development world in existence. You might be the same age and meet each other
and have learned just as much about life through completely different paths. And the fact that
they don't know about this that they don't know about
this or they don't know this language that you've learned and they don't
understand these therapies or this growth work or whatever is utterly
irrelevant but where the rubber meets the road is is them not doing that work
denying you something fundamental in a relationship. For example, are they unable
to apologize because they have no self-awareness of the traits that they have that are truly
destructive and they're not conscious of the things they're doing that are really destructive
and they're not even interested in becoming more aware
of those things.
They don't have to become aware of it through therapy.
They don't have to become aware of it
by reading the same books,
but they can just become aware of it
through conversation with you.
What do you do if you're like in the relationship though,
because most people are not as transformed as you guys?
If you find that when you bring something up
that affects you, it's met with disinterest, it's met with judgment, it's met with contempt, then you don't have
the kind of teammate that you're looking for. You don't have someone who values
teamwork and that becomes a deep compatibility issue. So it's you're
sensing to what extent do I genuinely have a teammate and you only know the
extent to which you genuinely have a teammate when And you only know the extent to which you genuinely have a teammate
when you're able to have these kinds of conversations. I don't want to have these
conversations, Matt. I just want it to be perfect. I mean, what do you mean we have to talk about it?
I have a bunch of speed round kind of questions around dating. Okay. What advice do you have for
people who have been single for a long time and are struggling to find love?
people who have been single for a long time and are struggling to find love?
First, the story is almost certainly now gonna become,
if you're not careful, your biggest enemy.
Now it's not just the pain of loneliness,
that pang of, oh, I wish I had someone and I don't.
It's the story I've told myself about why that is,
that I'm not enough, that I'm
undesirable, that I'm always the person before the person they marry, that all the good ones
are taken.
There's a story now that's no longer serving you.
The greatest gift you can give yourself is don't try to fix your loneliness or the fact
that you would really like to meet someone.
That's a part of being human. There human there gonna be times where you feel lonely.
There gonna be times when you ache because you really like to have someone in this life but the thing that turns that pain into unbearable pain is the relationship you have with your loneliness the relationship you have with being single and so much of that relationship is defined by this story that gets created.
Loneliness, the ache of wanting someone and not having found them is like a
chronic pain.
It is a chronic pain.
It's just a chronic emotional pain.
How do you change it?
Cause it sounds terrible.
Firstly, the deeper work is changing your relationship with it.
The more surface level work is you do everything you can to make it inevitable that you can
meet someone.
And what are those things?
Well, firstly, get comfortable with where you are.
Because if you can't get comfortable where you are, then anytime someone comes along,
you will join whatever cult comes your way because
you just want to get out of pain. So you have to get yourself to a place where you're happy
enough without someone. You don't have to be blissfully happy, but happy enough that
you can always say no to the wrong thing because you will find the right person faster if you
can say no to the wrong people quicker. So you have to be happy enough that you can say
no to the wrong people when they come along and not grip onto them.
Give yourself a kind of portfolio of investments in your love life.
So there's nothing wrong with online dating.
It's one investment, but it shouldn't be your only investment.
How are you investing in your social circle?
Are you still hanging out with the same three friends that you've been
hanging out with for the last 10 years, two of which are married and one of whom you love,
but she never stopped talking shit about men and she feels so disillusioned that she's like
screw dating altogether. Well, that's okay and be that person's friend, but that can't be your peer group for trying to improve your love life
So start saying have I got the right people around me who are
Opportunity generating are they the kinds of people that say to me?
Hey, let's go do something today and let's not just go do something where the two of us do something on our own
But let's go be in a place where there's other people
Are you joining communities if you run? Why aren't be in a place where there's other people. Are you joining communities? If you run,
why aren't you in a running club? If you really want to meet someone and you're running anyway,
why are you not part of a running club where there's 50 people there that can become an entire
new community for you, some of which may be right for you, one of them may be, or even if no one there is right for you,
there are now a community of people that are more likely to invite you to their individual birthday parties where their brother is single or
their sister is single or there's someone there that could be the right person all because you put yourself in a new community.
Now if you say to me, my time's all spoken for,
start looking for the things that you already do in your week. You keep going to the class
at your gym. This is the thing people always say, oh, Matt, you think there's anyone at
my class in my gym? There's no one there. Are you going to the only gym in your city?
Like you're telling me that's the only, that's the only fitness class going on in your city. Switch classes. There. Entire
new group of people right there. You can't go to a different church this week, one weekend,
so that you meet a whole different group of people. There's more than one place that does
the things you enjoy. But if you're addicted to your existing community, the places where
you do everything, the places, the friends you have, then you're never putting yourself in the new communities where you won't have one new
option but 10, 20, 30 new options. There's many, many pieces of advice like this, but
that's just a couple. And it gives people a sense that the limitations I'm giving myself
are really a kind of cover for the way my life has kind of calcified and hardened into this
thing that I've made immovable when actually there's so much opportunity around me. I'm
not exploring it because there's an activation energy required to explore it and it's more
than the price I want to pay.
What advice do you give for just the scene of so many people doing online dating and the fatigue and the anxiety and the frustration
that comes with just feeling like there's a lot of cycling through
and flaking out and being ghosted as you are out in the world dating.
And let's say you've taken your advice, which I think is so
important for everyone to hear, that online dating is not your only option.
And I think people have really relied on that and pulled away from communities and putting
themselves out there and joining different churches and trying new things and joining
the running club and just being more open in day-to-day life. And I think it takes even more
post pandemic to start doing that for yourself. But what are some of the other pieces of advice?
Because it is very hard.
That's what I hear from everybody that is dating.
It's very hard.
It's very frustrating that the app scene sucks.
It's just another social media app at this point.
And you just feel like a commodity and it's a numbers game.
Which is why you have to obsess over the way you use your energy both on and off those vehicles.
Because those vehicles, they're dopamine machines.
And me and my wife were talking about this literally this morning.
She was talking to me, she was like, you know, I just realized I've got back into a little dopamine cycle with Instagram,
where I now
I'm like there's a friend I haven't texted back and I'm telling myself I haven't got
time to text this friend back which is real connection and then I go straight to Instagram
and I relate to that too.
This is the same way that people use dating apps.
So we have to manage our own way that we use those things.
People are not wrong.
Dating culture today for so many people sucks.
And it is hard to find love.
I'm not one of those people that talks about how easy it is.
It's hard.
It's the one area where we feel like we're out of control.
Because if you want to lose weight or get in better shape, you can eat better and you
can train every day and your body shape will change.
You want to make more sales, you can pick up the phone, you want to save more money,
you can deposit in the bank account every day.
The money will accumulate, but you could go on a date every day of the week for the next
year and still not find the love of your life. That is infuriating. If
it were a board game it wouldn't be Monopoly with its steady accumulation of
houses and hotels, it would be shoots and ladders, where you feel like you make all
this progress climbing up the ladder and finally I'm on date five with someone, it
feels like it's going somewhere and then they ghost me and I just go all the way
back down, but even worse it feels like,
because now I've got less time and I'm heartbroken and I feel bad about myself
and I'm questioning my worth and I'm questioning the people that I'm dating
and how great they are.
One of my favorite quotes is a Mitch album quote where he says,
if you don't like the culture, you have to be brave enough to create your own.
And that is so relevant in dating and in finding love because so many of us are going into
our love lives as culture adopters, not leaders.
You know, one of the best things about like starting a business, you know this, is that
you get to decide what you get to look at all the other businesses that do things like
you and you get to decide the kind of business you want to create. You get to decide the
kind of culture you want to have with your team. And because of that, you get to put
your thumbprint on it and the strength of your leadership,
then it has this infectious impact on everyone else.
It's not just that you hire people who are like you,
you hire people and you give them a heavy dose
of that culture and the way we do things here.
And some people go, oh my God,
this is what I've been looking for.
And they rise to that culture and other people fall off
because they can't.
That can happen in love too. How? How? Because here's the thing, like literally, been looking for and they rise to that culture and other people fall off because they can't.
That can happen in love too.
How? How? Because here's the thing, like literally I just, I really want to hear the how because
I have, I have so many extraordinary people in my life who are single, who are frustrated
by the toxic dating scene that is very much driven by apps and social media and that the advice about creating
your own culture and being brave enough to create your own.
I totally get that.
How do you do that and what advice do you have
without getting resigned if it's taking so long?
You see what I'm saying?
Like, I think that it's really important that you go,
I am not gonna buy into this shit.
I am going to have very high standards for myself.
I'm gonna be brave and have the courage
to create a different culture
and just have the conversation
because my energy is worth it.
And I'm also going to invest in things
that make me come alive
because I know the more that I'm raising my standards for my own life,
the more likely I'm going to bump into somebody that
I could potentially have a long-term relationship with.
So first, you go slow to go fast in your love life.
You don't race to date someone because you really want to be able to tell
the people at Thanksgiving that you're dating someone now.
You don't
rush because you're just, you want a love story in your life, even if it's one that's
precarious and you don't know where you stand because it's better than nothing. You go slow
to go fast. Then when you're actually engaging with people, you start to lead with the kind of energy you would like to see from other
people. There's a piece of advice I've been giving for a long time which is
both deeply true and flawed. It's don't invest in someone based on how much you
like them, invest in someone based on how much they invest in you. Now if you follow
that rule you're gonna be okay because you're not gonna get into these
situations where you are over investing in someone who's not giving you the same
back because you keep telling yourself it's so important and there's attraction
when really that person is not investing or committing on the level you are so
why are you bothering? The problem with the advice don't invest in someone based on how
much you like them, invest based on how much they invest in you, is that at some
point someone has to do a little bit more than the other person. Otherwise
we're just in a stalemate. We're just at the school disco with these people on
this side and these people on that side and no one doing anything. So at some point someone's got across the room. Now if you
apply that to let's say online dating or just you're texting someone you've met
someone on online date on a dating app you're now texting them. What does it
look like to create your own culture in that situation? Well if you're only
mirroring what they're doing, then you're mirroring
all of the worst parts of dating culture as a way to protect yourself because you're,
I'm only going to invest as much as they do, but you're now actually mirroring the culture.
So instead, what we have to do is say, if I were creating my own culture what would I do?
Well you know what there is in this texting thing there's a real lack of
humanity. It's just words on a screen and we've been going back and forth and
there's just something missing in this it doesn't feel like a real connection. So
the next time they send me a text and say, what are you up to?
I'm going to leave them a voice note.
It's a tiny thing, but I'm going to leave them a voice note and just say, Hey, I am
at Ikea with my sister right now and we are buying furniture for this room in our house.
And I'm already dreading the fact that I have to put this thing together.
It's going to be a complete disaster.
I'll send you a picture.
They're hearing your voice and it's already,
let's say they are dating three other people or talking to three other people. You're attacking
a different sense. They're hearing you, there's a different intimacy to a voice note and it
invites them to the table.
But what I like about what you're saying is it's actually more about you giving yourself permission to just show up as yourself and not worry about whether or not that is what
drives somebody to a different level. And having the standard on the back end, so having the bravery
on the front end to create the culture and instigate it by being a leader, not a follower, but having the standard on the back end that
says, if I don't feel that this pattern that I'm instigating is reciprocated, then I can
back off. If I send you a message tomorrow morning and I instigate and I say, you know,
hi, lovely. I hope you have an amazing day today. I was just thinking of you.
And I do that.
I'm brave and I instigate that.
If tomorrow you don't send me a message, then fair enough.
All right, I got it.
What I'm not gonna do is send you another message
tomorrow morning and then a week later,
so I don't get it.
I don't get it.
Or just say, no, but let's say they texted back that day.
You instigated, right?
So that was a brave thing to do.
But you don't want to be in a pattern with someone where you're always instigating.
So if the next day they don't instigate or you find that you're the one constantly instigating,
then you back off.
What you don't do is keep instigating.
They keep texting back and you say, I don't get it.
They must like me because they keep texting me back.
But you know, they never, I just wish they'd ask me on a date
Well, you are you are setting up that dynamic
By having no standards on the back end of this
So that's where you mirror if you create the culture and then
They can't reciprocate then you go. Okay, I'm gonna back off you model first
Then you mirror But what we're
doing is mirroring someone from the start. If someone hasn't texted you in two weeks and then
they say, and you've been hurt by it. And you're like, wow, this really sucks. We had such a great
date two weeks ago. I really wanted to see them. I barely heard from them. And then two weeks later
on a Saturday, they say, do you want to do something tonight? Do you want to go to a movie? It'd be so
great to see you.
The temptation is to go,
I'm going to be happy cool person here
because I don't want to make it seem like
I've been thinking about them for two weeks.
So then we mirror them.
We go, yeah, movie sounds great.
What time?
Well, what the hell would you say
without sounding like a psycho clingy bitch?
You say, hey, one of the things I really value
is consistency and I haven't really heard from you. So I'd like to see you. It'd be fun to see you, but I kind of assumed we weren't on the
same page because I haven't heard from you for two weeks. Like you just say that. You make it
sound so simple. And I think the advice is incredible. I'm reflecting because I know how emotions get the best of us, which comes back to your original point, that that's why it's dangerous.
And that's why you have to go slow to go fast. And before you just immediately text back, take a beat, assess who you are, be a little bit more honest and vulnerable. And when you lead with that and you create your own culture in dating, now
you are in a more powerful position.
That's exactly right.
And if you don't get your needs met, you have to be, you're being very warm and
kind and compassionate in the way you bring things up. But if you don't get what you
really need, you have to be ruthless in your response with your energy. And that's where the
tiger comes out. It's not in me biting your head off because you haven't texted me for two weeks.
You're going to get my sensitivity and my vulnerability about that part because I actually
was kind of sad I didn't hear from you. We had such a great time. But where you'll see the tiger is that I have absolutely no
patience for someone who's not showing up for me. So I aggressively move
forward with my life. I am a train that goes and if you step too close to the
train as it's leaving the platform you're gonna get hurt. So you're either
on or you're off,
but this train is leaving.
Right, because I'm not waiting around
for somebody to text me back.
No.
You know, Matthew, I just wanna say,
I'm so grateful you agreed to be my co-pilot today
because I needed you to handle those online dating questions.
And I'm also really grateful
that I've never had to deal with it.
And as you're listening, you're probably thinking of someone
in your life that needs to hear this episode.
I mean, maybe it's somebody who's struggling to find love.
Or maybe they just went through a really bad breakup.
Or maybe you've got a friend who went through a divorce
and now they're thinking about putting themselves
out there again, and they just need the encouragement
and the advice and the wisdom that you heard today.
So share this with them
because you know that they're an amazing human being.
Let this conversation with me and Matthew Hussey
remind them of the fact that they should never settle.
You heard Matthew say that the biggest mistake
that people make is thinking that they're not good enough.
The truth is you are good enough for love.
You just haven't met the person
who's good enough for you yet. Ooh, don't you love thinking about it like that? And in case no one else tells
you today, I want to tell you that I love you. I believe in you and I believe in your ability to
create a better life. And based on everything that you learned today, you now know what to do
everything that you learned today you now know what to do to create stronger healthier and happier relationships. Alrighty, go do it and I'll talk to you in a few days.
Matthew, share this episode with your friends and stay with us because I'll be...
Oh my god, okay hold on.
That was the best interview ever.
Really?
Well I would have been pissed if it was as worse.
Knowing your standards you would have been pissed if it was second best.
Everybody back your houses! I'm a lawyer. I'm a lawyer. I'm a lawyer. I'm a lawyer. I'm a lawyer.
I'm a lawyer.
I'm a lawyer.
I'm a lawyer.
I'm a lawyer.
I'm a lawyer.
I'm a lawyer.
I'm a lawyer.
I'm a lawyer.
I'm a lawyer.
I'm a lawyer.
I'm a lawyer.
I'm a lawyer.
I'm a lawyer.
I'm a lawyer.
I'm a lawyer.
I'm a lawyer.
I'm a lawyer.
I'm a lawyer.
I'm a lawyer.
I'm a lawyer. I'm a lawyer. I'm a lawyer. I'm a lawyer. I'm a lawyer. This podcast is presented solely for educational and entertainment purposes.
I'm just your friend, I am not a licensed therapist,
and this podcast is not intended as a substitute
for the advice of a physician, professional coach,
psychotherapist, or other qualified professional.
Got it?
Good.
I'll see you in the next episode.