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How Modern Dating Culture Stops Him from Taking You Seriously

Do you feel like you have “dating burnout”? Like modern single life is a treadmill of flaky guys, false hope and meaningless hookups?

If you’re still interested in finding real, deep, meaningful commitment in modern dating (yes, it does exist), I need you to stop what you’re doing and watch this video now.

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I don’t need to be a mind reader to know that an enormous number of people watching this video right now feel this…

“Dating Sucks…”

Now why do they feel this way?

Because they want to create something real.

Chances are if you’re watching this video, you want to create something real.

You wanna find someone who values you. Find someone who invests in you. Who you can invest in. Someone who you can build something enduring with, but instead here’s what you get…

Casual dating, meaningless hookups, and mixed, confusing-ass signals.

Now this leaves people very frustrated.

It leaves them wondering if what they’re looking for is actually out there.

I recently ran an exclusive closed-door event for my closest clients.

It was invite-only, and I made them one promise:

I am gonna talk all day about how to create a real and lasting relationship, and avoid the casual dating, hookup culture we feel like we’re currently existing in.

What I’m about to show you is a clip from that private event.

A moment that highlights the frustration people are feeling right now that we’re talking about here. And watch all the way to the end, because after that clip, I’m gonna join you back here to show you a strange, counter-intuitive way that that frustration I’m talking about could actually be costing you the real relationship you’re looking for.

Check it out.

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Audience Guest: “Hi Matthew. Good to see you. Welcome back to NYC.”

Matthew: “Thank you for having me.”

Audience Guest: “The content that you have today is really amazing, and I’m really happy to be here. That’s first of all.”

Matthew: “Thank you.”

Audience Guest: “Recently, I had a conversation with a gentleman who said to me, ‘You know, Cecilia? You are intimidating to men. You are too smart. Guys can’t get over on you, and that’s gonna be a problem for you.’ And I thought, ‘I don’t wanna guy in my life that’s gonna be intimidated by my strength. I want someone that’s gonna embrace my strength, and who I am as a human being, and as a woman.’ As I get older I find that it is a little harder, and I ask, how can I allow myself to be open to love, finding a great partner who’s gonna embrace who I am?”

Matthew: “What you’re saying works on the presumption that men inherently find smart women unattractive, or intimidating. Some men are intimidated by smart women. Some men are intimidated by women who have found their purpose, who have found something that they really enjoy doing. Especially if those men haven’t found what they enjoy doing.

“Some men are intimidated by women who go to the gym a lot. [Laughter] Especially if they can’t get themselves to kinda get into a routine with that.

“I mean I just think that the…higher a frequency you’re living on, the less people are gonna be either available to you or desirable to you.”

Audience Guest: “So how do I find love if that’s the case? My pool is getting smaller and smaller. I’m not getting any younger. [Laughter] I’m sorry…”

Matthew: “I just think that it doesn’t help you to think about it in the macro like that. Like you’re thinking about it at this bird’s eye view of, you know, ‘My pool is getting smaller, and men don’t like… They’re intimidated by intelligent women, and this, and that,’ and… I just… I don’t…

“My friend is a doctor, and he told me a phrase once, he said, ‘statistics don’t matter to the individual.’

“In medicine, when someone has a rare disease, the fact that only one in a hundred thousand people get  that disease is irrelevant to the person that got the disease. Right? Statistics don’t matter to the individual. And I would say that on a relationship level, statistics don’t matter to you either, and won’t matter to you when you meet someone special.

“It won’t matter to you what the economics are right now of finding a relationship.

“It only matters to you now because those are the terms that you’re thinking in, and I just don’t think that it serves you to think in those terms. If I had thought in those terms about business, I never would have started a business. The results of businesses succeeding–new businesses–are so low that if you went by that you would never start a business.

“But I didn’t start a business to overcome the odds of business. I started a business because I had something I really wanted to say, and do, and I wanted to live a life where I wasn’t going into a job I hated. So it was a different thing driving me.

“And I understand your point. I’m not minimizing that it’s difficult to find someone special.

“It is.

“It one hundred percent is.

“The good news is that everyone’s feeling the same way.

“Right? Everyone’s feeling that.

“No one is… It’s…

“It’s really hard no matter who you are.

“You could be a person that like a hundred men are throwing themselves at you a day… It still doesn’t mean you’re gonna find anyone you wanna spend your life with.

“It’s just hard for everyone, but again I don’t think that it’s because you’re smart. I just think that the more you achieve in life, and the more you drive yourself, the less people you feel… You could still connect to everybody, ’cause I think there’s something to learn from everyone… but there are less people that will just resonate on that frequency that you’re on, and you know, that’s okay. That just means you have high standards, and you have to keep doing it.

“And if your view is, ‘I can’t keep doing it.’ Then I say, what is the thing that you keep doing that you’re deciding you’re not gonna do anymore? I would like to know Cecilia, if you said to me, ‘Matt, the whole point of me saying this, is because I’m about to give up.’ What are you giving up? That’s what I wanna know. What’s the behavior, what’s the thing that you’re gonna stop doing because you’re sick and tired of not meeting the right man? Tell me that.”

Audience Guest: “I don’t know, because I think I’m doing a lot of different things to try and meet the right guy.”

Matthew: “So what’s the thing that is disrupting your life right now that you don’t wanna do anymore?”

Audience Guest: “I don’t wanna worry about it. I want it to happen organically.”

Matthew: “Okay, but like what does that mean? You want it to happen when you’re laying in bed?”

Audience Guest: “I’m standing at a cafe… I’m gonna use one of your lines. I’m standing at a cafe, and I actually start chatting with someone.”

Matthew: “Okay great, but that’s not organic. That’s you trying.”

Audience Guest: “Well…” [Laughter]

Matthew: “So again, what’s the thing, like…I’m challenging you right now, and I know you can take it, but I… I don’t know what your question is. Is your question, ‘Is it hard to meet someone that you spend the rest of your life with?’ Yes. Is your question, ‘Do I really want this?’ I think, probably the answer is ‘yes.’”

Audience Guest: “Yes.”

Matthew: “Right? ‘Cause it’s an experience of life you wanna have.”

Audience Guest: “Yes.”

Matthew: “Is your question, ‘Should I give up?’ Well, to that I respond, what are you giving up? Leaving the house? What are you giving up? Not doing new things? What are you giving up? Going on dates sometimes? What’s the thing that you would give up?

“I challenge all of you: What’s the thing you would give up?

“Because to me, none of the things that you do to meet someone, apart from spending hours and hours online, which I don’t support anyway. [Laughter] But none of the things that you do to meet someone are things that wouldn’t be good for your life anyway.

“If I took off the table the idea of ever meeting your dream guy. Let’s just remove that. I take it off the table. Never gonna happen. I’ve literally made sure that can’t happen for you. I’ve eliminated every man on earth that could be your perfect man. [Laughter]

“Okay.

“I’m curious as to how many of you would stop having conversations with people in general.

“How many people would say, ‘Well, since I can’t find the one, I’m just gonna stop socializing. I’m just gonna stop going on dates at all. You know? I’m gonna give up the whole sex thing. Like I’m gonna just… I’m not gonna do any of this.’

“I don’t buy it for a second.

“What you would do is you’d say, ‘Okay… Well, I guess I’ll go on some fun dates that won’t turn out to be the one, but you know, I’ll just have some fun times. You know, go out and enjoy meeting new people. Stay curious, get to know people’s stories, and I’ll make the best of it, but I can’t give up this part of me. Cause it’s in me. It is me. It’s part of me being a woman who wants to go out there and explore, and meet people, and connect, and be intimate, and be warm, and be affectionate. I’m not gonna give up all of that.’

“Cecilia, what you have to ask yourself is…

“I get the frustration. I get it. And I’m not minimizing that, and I understand the frustration of searching for someone really special, and right now it’s not happening, that person isn’t there.

“But you have to get back to that question:

“What would I do differently if I decided to give up the search?

“What thing would I give up in my life?

“Because I put to you that it would be very hard for you to name something that you would give up that wouldn’t cost you in other ways.

“That wouldn’t actually hurt your sense of joy, and fun, and fulfillment in other ways by deciding, ‘This isn’t for me.’ I can’t see it. What would you stop? Dating? Dating is fun. Like even if it’s not the love of your life, like going on a date, and sometimes there’s chemistry, or sometimes you get a new friend out of it, or sometimes… Who knows? Like would you really give up any connection to the opposite sex?

“Like, I don’t know… I can’t see it. I can’t see it.

“So I think that there’s so many things we do in pursuit of that person, that are worth doing for their own sake, that it’s almost not even worth worrying about in the way that you’re worrying about it. It’s just like… Just keep taking chances.

“Keep being proactive.

“Keep being the kind of person that steps out of her comfort zone.

“Keep being the kind of person that puts herself around other people.

“Keep being the type of person that is open to experiences in life.

“In that is being open to love, but we don’t even need to call it that. Just be someone who is open to experiences, and should you find yourself in a situation where it seems to be getting intimate or whatever and you like the person, do everything we’ve talked about today to make sure that you give yourself the best possible chance of being taken seriously by that person.

“Let’s keep going. Thank you so much by the way.”

************************************************************************

Look, I wanna make one thing clear. While I believe that there are many things that we do that will bring us a relationship that are good for their own sake, and worth doing even if they don’t bring us the love of our life, I understand and respect how hard it is out there.

You are dealing with so much crap.

People who have just the worst behavior. People who will do anything to use you. People who will string you along even though they have no intention of taking things anywhere meaningful or serious.

The frustration you have with that is one thousand percent understandable, but that frustration has a bad side effect for your love life. That frustration leads to the feeling that there really isn’t anyone out there, or at least the suspicion that that thing you’ve always been looking for might never come.

That leads to a scarcity mindset.

When you have a scarcity mindset it puts you in a dangerous position, because when someone comes along who has even a mild connection with you, someone who shows you a glimpse of what you’re looking for, you latch on.

You get so excited about it.

So grateful for it that you’ll do anything to keep it.

Now that’s very dangerous, because when you’ll do anything to keep something, when you see the potential of it, and you’ll do whatever you can to make sure that goes somewhere you start being more forgiving of bad behavior, and maybe not even bad behavior, but someone not giving you what you want.

Someone treating you worse than you deserve.

Someone not truly investing in you.

We start making excuses for them.

We start justifying it, because god forbid it goes away altogether.

When would you find someone again?

You have a connection. You wanna hold on to it, right?

Now here’s the really dangerous part.

When you start accepting worse behavior this person begins to value you less.

So it looks like this:

Having a scarcity mindset about what’s out there makes us accept worse behavior from the person we’re with. When they see us accepting bad behavior from them, or low investment from them, they stop taking us seriously, because they look at us, and consciously or unconsciously, they think, “What kind of person would allow me to treat them like this? Not someone that I should take seriously. Not someone that I would have a relationship with.” So now, even if that person had the potential to have a relationship with you, they’re starting to see you as lower value.

They’re starting to see you as someone who may not be worthy of a real relationship, because you’re treating yourself like you’re not worthy of a real relationship.

So the irony of all of this is the thing you value the most, which you’re letting get away with murder, because you value it the most now values you less precisely because that’s what you’re doing.

So I’m talking to you right now if you are looking for something real, because let me tell you this, if you wanna attract the real you have to be prepared to sacrifice the bullshit, and when I say the bullshit, I mean the bullshit version of a relationship that you’re currently being offered.

The pseudo relationship.

The halfway house.

The breadcrumbing that you’re sick of.

The people disappearing or ghosting you that you’re sick of.

If you actually want to be taken seriously you have to prepared to sacrifice the bullshit. And by the way, sacrificing the bullshit can mean giving up the guy so that you can go out there and find someone who’s serious, or it could mean sacrificing the current dynamic and taking the risk to graduate it into something more. The death of the bullshit you have with him right now and the birth of a better, new dynamic that you have with this person because they now take you more seriously.

So I’m on a campaign right now for those people who want something real to show you exactly how to create it.

I wanna walk you down the path that you actually want to go down, because this isn’t about an unrealistic level of optimism.

I know how hard it is to meet someone you really like.

How hard it is to meet someone that you actually wanna make it work with.

So when you do meet that person, you wanna do the right things.

Join me next week, ’cause we’re gonna be continuing this conversation, and we’re gonna make some serious progress together.

For now, leave me a comment.

Letting me know, A: If you’ve fallen into this trap before, and you can relate to it. A time when you cared so much that that caring actually lead you to doing some of the wrong things.

And B: If you’re ready to finally create something real.

I can’t wait to read those, and I will see you next week.

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273 Replies to “How Modern Dating Culture Stops Him from Taking You Seriously”

  • I can relate very well to what yku are talking about…been there the guy disappears then appear asking for a daughter from me out of the blue iam like what…he is back again to mock me then disapper it was tiring me up like crazy ..he is lazy in typing only calls when he wanna see me i cant wait for your next video thank you

  • Yes Matt. I’m doing this right now…in contact with my ex-boyfriend via email and accepting crumbs of communication (that aren’t even consistent in frequency or in caring). I just had a 6-date run with a super handsome, amazing guy who’s divorce isn’t final and he decided he needed to take a pause on dating until things are settled. I completely respect that decision, and I wish that great guy well and hope that one day, we might date again. But I then started emailing my Previous ex-boyfriend, out of loneliness and desire to re-connect. He is clearly not willing to invest in me, and is basically treating me like I don’t matter, AND he’s currently in a relationship, so I know I’m operating at a place where I need to cut out the B.S., and let go of him completely, but I don’t know how. Do I simply stop emailing him without a word (which is actually what I think my ex-boyfriend wants me to do, since I haven’t heard a word from him in almost a week)? Or do I make some boundary statement, like “obviously you don’t care about me and I won’t accept your crumbs anymore. Goodbye for good.” (Which I’ve said before and didn’t stick to in weak moments). I want to let go of my ex-boyfriend (whom I’m still in love with but who left me for another woman). I don’t want to sabotage my own chances of meeting the right, available man. When a dating situation is discouraging and falls through, like my recent 6-date run that I was hoping would turn into a relationship, sex, etc….) I fall back towards my ex-boyfriend, but that only makes me look more pitiful because he’s not going to leave the person he’s with and come back to me. The question is HOW to end the b.s. and HOW to not wish we were back together. Any advice Matt?

  • This is actually me. I just see all my friends and family in relationships that it is easy to think that I may never find someone. Like you said maybe there just isn’t someone out there for me. And I do get very invested in guys I feel I have a small connection with. I want to feel what other people feel. I understand though the accepting people’s bad behavior. I think I wouldn’t let someone treat me bad but a lot of the times when I feel someone might be I usually just chalk it up to me being the problem. I think maybe I’m over dramatic for feeling a certain way. I just think I haven’t ever experienced a relationship (I’m 20 years old) and that I don’t know what it’s suppose to be like. And I always feel like problems with guys are probably because of me.

  • Matthew,

    I’m dating a guy who says he wants a serious monogamous relationship (it’s been about 3-4 months). I believe he’s sincere but here’s the catcher. His father died when he was 11, he’s an only child and he works minimum 80 hours a week. Understandable he’s fairly attached to his mother – usually spending every Saturday/Sunday with her (I believe she also hasn’t moved on from his fathers passing – plus she’s extremely dependent on him, can’t drive, can’t take bus etc.). We spend enough at least 1 night a week together and often go on coffee and lunch breaks together. If I’m in a tough stop, he’s always ready to step up and be my rock. What I’m needing is a weekend evening at least every couple of weeks (for now) to build our intimacy. I have e pressed this too him. He agrees, but then weeks go by and I’m left frustrated – feeling like a chore or a nag. I have spoken to his mother on the phone, he has invited me to their house – but there is still a disconnect for him. I’m looking for the right tools to help push him through this self developed block and protection method he’s built. I understand from your videos that intergrating me into his life is now the next step, but how do I do it so he’s a) comfortable and b) feeling like it’s his choice.

    I really value your advice. It has transformed my dating life. Here’s hoping you have some suggestions.

    BTW – I’m a busy girl, I don’t sit and wait for his phone calls and invitations. I’m just not sure if his work/mother/only child issue is to large of a hurdle for me to climb.

    Thanks.

  • This video was spot on for me. Thank you, thank you, thank you. I am looking forward to the next video. I can relate to Kelsea Ballerini’s song “Miss Me More” Your video and her song will be my new mantra.

  • Love this advice,would love to know if this also applies to deal breakers, I recently started dating someone who had 2 of my deal breakers, I sort advice from a male friend and decided to give it a go regardless, they were drinking and smoking, the relationship only lasted 3 weeks because it turned out his drinking was way more than he indicated. So I ended it, there were a few other things as well.

  • Thanks Matthew Hussey for putting things in perspective. Often when we feel stuck it’s because we lost perspective of other possibilities and have tunnel vision. Thank you for having my back…thank you for having our backs. Nancy x

  • Hey Matt,
    I have been in a recent situation (as recent as last week) where I was ghosted by a guy I had been dating for about two months. After watching this video it’s resonated to me on every level all the signs I saw early on within the first few dates of the ‘bullshit’ that bothered me but I made excuses for and allowed that behaviour to be ok because I was focusing on the potential. Now I realise that the frustration I have had towards dating in the last year has gotten me into this space this scarcity mindset which allowed me to accept that bad behaviour!
    This video was exactly what I needed to see at the most perfect moment!!! Can’t wait for the next video!!!
    Thankyou

  • Hi I watched your video thank you very much for that I needed to here it again !like you were talking rite to me I’m going through that so thank you very much happy Easter I’m not sure he plays games constantly for four years has not accomplished anything he’s a liar and a cheater but he keeps coming around calling in tax I blocked him so I’m trying to do different as that is the same routine over and over so thank you

  • That last situation sounds too familiar…it’s exactly the position I’m in and don’t like that I’ve been accepting of crumbs because I don’t want to lose the connection but I realise I need to cut the bullshit. This video was just the reminder I needed

  • Scarcity – yes I have accepted the unacceptable due to feeling this way. I just ended with someone when I finally realized I wasted a year hanging on.

  • This is so me.

    Like you had this brain camera all around me seeing how I am devaluing myself everyday. With Christians we say ” this is the sermon “.

    This theory is just what I needed. Almost explained it scientifically.
    Amazing. This work was just for you.

  • I have been in this rut for a while. The minute a guy has one of the qualities I like I latch on even though they are not truly making me happy. Although I keep doing it I have begun to realize sooner and end things. But I am tired of going on dates. They are no longer enjoyable.

  • Was about to start crying when you repeatedly said “I understand how frustrating it is”. Because it f*cking is.
    Being single probably never been easy but now it’s shitty.
    I’m 24, in serious search for a good relationship since 2 years, faced so much bullshit and second-best treating that I find all of this a real battlefield now.
    Keep your fingers for me, gonna do it.

    Keep posting such content, really useful.

  • This video came it the right moment. Oh my…
    I even cried at the end because you said everything that’s actually happening to me in my love life. Curious thing: I’ve been meditating about this situation and realized I was giving more than I should and that probably didn’t allow the other person to give, at least, in equal amount to mine. Anyways, I’m tired of getting the same results but not tired of being who I am now. It requires courage to be out there, trying, and being your most authentic self, and not settle for less than we know we deserve.

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