When you trust someone, it means if you share your emotions with them, you believe they'll take them seriously. When you share your heart with them, you believe they'll hold it gently. When you share your dreams with them, you believe that they'll be excited for you. Trust is when you feel such a safe space that you can truly be yourself without holding back. The number one health and wellness podcast, Say said he Everyone, welcome back to On Purpose.
Thank you for tuning in for another episode. If you're in a relationship and want to know if it's the right or wrong one, this episode is for you. If you're newly dating and you're trying to figure out how to build a deeper connection, this episode is for you. And if you're exhausted of dating and it's feeling like a job ature something you have to get to, this episode is for you. Now. I want to start off by saying that dating has become extremely challenging. We know
it's hard, we know it's complicated. But here's the thing, it's not that it's ever been that easy. Sure people may have found people quicker. Sure people may have found people closer to them, easier that knew their family, But that didn't mean it led to healthy, fulfilling relationships. I'm sure you've seen aunts and uncles, maybe even parents, people around you who didn't model or have the best relationships. And therefore, finding connection is something that requires work. It
is something that requires time. And so I think sometimes we have this nostalgia effect that everyone who came before us found love, and everyone who came before us found the perfect person, and that for some reason, for us it has got more hard. Now. I'm not saying that the day to day may not feel harder. I'm not saying that the day to day isn't more challenging. And there are more aspects of ghosting and gaslighting and everything
else that's happening. But I will add this, The possibility for you to attract love into your life exists every single day, but it's important that we come at it from a place of love, not from a place of anxiety. Anxiety doesn't attract peace. Anxiety attracts more anxiety, It attracts more nervousness, it attracts more awkwardness, it attracts more discomfort. But when we're in a place of peace, we're able
to spot and attract more peace. Now, deeper connection and my fascination with it is what led me to partner up with Match. And something I've always loved about Match is that they've done their annual Singles in America study, and last year they revealed the top traits singles are
looking for in a partner. Ninety four percent said someone they can trust and confide in, ninety two percent said someone who's comfortable communicating their wants and needs, ninety two percent said someone who is emotionally mature, and ninety two percent said someone who can make them laugh. Now, I just want you to take a moment. If you've just started dating, how many of you say this thing? But then an it gets in the way when you're actually dating.
Maybe you don't like the fact that they wear jewelry, maybe you don't like their dress sense, maybe you don't like their hairstyle, maybe you don't like some weird quirk they have. But what has that got to do with someone you can trust and confide in. Sure, I'm not saying to ignore attractiveness or chemistry, but so often we get fixated on this one element, this one idiosyncrasy of theirs that it kind of cascades across the rest of
who they are. How does the fact that they wear jewelry affect whether they're comfortable communicating their wants and needs. How does the fact that they have a terrible dress sense relate to them being emotionally mature or immature. It's really interesting to me how we get caught up on these dis and these idiosyncrasies that just distract us away from what we actually set out to look for, what we actually set out to focus on. And we all
know today more than ever are times valuable. The study shows that seventy three percent of singles only want to go on in person dates with someone they already know they have good chemistry with. And this can be really really challenging because how do you quickly figure out whether you have chemistry with someone? And I think chemistry has
been the red herring or the distraction. Chemistry has been that thing, that elusive ethereal idea that almost keeps us single because we keep looking for it, We keep searching for it. We want the relationship we wanted at sixteen years old. We want the relationship we wanted at that age. We want the person we were attracted to at that age. We want the person that we dreamt of at that age, and because we didn't find them at that age, we're still looking for them today. So we're now thirty six
trying to date that sixteen year old. We're now twenty eight trying to find that teenage romance that we were looking for. There's a lot of us that are living in a younger love story than our current age. We're living in a mental reality that's younger, that isn't real right now, and it's keeping us distracted and keeping us
fully fixated on the wrong things. So one of Match's most popular features that I worked on with them is the Core Values feature, where singles can share what matters to the most and find people who prioritize the same things as they do. Just for signing up, I will send you my ten deep dive questions to get to know someone on a deeper level. We want to help people shift from a superficial mindset to a values mindset.
In addition to our bespoke Core Values feature on Match, we've added Deep Dives, a way to choose the topic and share what you want and share what you value and why it's important to you. I want to invite you all to put these lessons into practice with me, I'm partnering with Match to create something that has never been done before. To be the first to know more about our new dating reset sign up for the waitlist at datingreset dot match dot com, Datingreset dot weightlist dot com.
Now that's so important to me because if we're saying the number one thing we want is someone we can trust and confide in, well, that starts on day one, right, that starts on day one. And among the Match community, honesty, love, and loyalty are currently the top values chosen across all demographics, and that says a lot about what people really want in a relationship. And hey, if you connect on that at the beginning, you have the chance to build the
rest of it. I think this is the part that's really interesting for me, that you're with the right person if you start in the right place. I'll give you an example. If I plant a seed and I plant it in terrible soil, it's not fertile. I plant it in a way where it's not going to get sunlight or water. Sure it might grow, and sure I can try and save it later, but I'm not giving it the best chance of success. And a lot of our relationships are like that. They start with the mind games.
They may start with the manipulation, they start with the playing hard to get. That's like having no sun, no water, and no fertile soil and hoping that we're going to grow love from it, and then we try and rescue it. Right when we see a little glimmer of hope, we start watering it, we start giving it the right sunlight, we start giving it everything else in needs. And we're almost always hanging on. But what if you're with the
right person because you made it right. What if that's what it meant to be with the right person, Not that you found the right person, but you found a person and decided to do it right, and you both decided to do it right. That's actually what a healthy relationship is. I think we're perplexed. Seventy two percent of us believe in tosaulme. And when we say that, we mean that there's someone who's perfectly formed, perfectly created, perfectly
crafted just for us, destined for us. What we're saying is we're going to potentially go through eight billion people to find that one person. The reality is that most healthy relationships are not perfect relationships. Most healthy relationships will agree that they weren't made for each other. They may feel they were meant for each other, but they'll recognize that there's the ability that they both choose to make
it right. Stop looking for the right person. Find your person who wants to make it right with you, and you want to make it right with them. You both want to make the right choices together, and that's why you're right for each other. Not because you're perfect, not because you were designed, made or crafted perfectly for each other, but because you chose together to make good decisions. And you know, I get it. Sometimes you're thinking, well, how
do I do this on a first date? Or if I just started seeing someone, how do I suddenly ask these questions? Don't they seem a bit too aggressive? And chances are you're probably right. At the same time, you want to ask curious questions that actually give the person the opportunity to say where they're at. So if you say to someone, hey, what's been you know, what's been exciting for you lately and they talk about their job, you're getting a sense that that's their top priority. Now,
if you say to someone what's your top priority in life? Sure, that's a heavy question to just ask off the bat, right, you may ask that, and by the way, that's a great question to ask someone that you've been seeing for a few months and getting to know quite deeply. And you may say, what is your top priority in life? Now? My answer would be you should actually already know that, And a lot of us don't actually know what our
partner's top priority in life is. Or we believe what they say in answer to that question and not what they do. We believe what people say and not how they behave when their actions tell us so much more about their priorities than their words. What someone does with their time, money, and energy shows you what they care about, not what they say they care about. What someone does and how someone treats you says so much more than
how they say they think about treating you. And so I want you to ask yourself, why aren't you ready to ask that question? Hey, what's exciting you the most now? When you say that, it could be their career, it could be their family, it could be a personal endeavor, it could be anything. But you're actually learning so much more. And here's the basic thing that we do when we hear someone say, oh, I'm really really excited about, you know, the holidays right now, We go, yeah, I love the holidays.
Right We make it about the holidays, whereas we're not recognizing that they're showing you what they prioritize. If someone says, oh, yeah, I'm absolutely loving this project at work right now, you then reflect on what you're doing at work right now, rather than recognizing they're showing you it's a priority. And so I think questions start, hey, what's most exciting for you right now and evolve into hey, what's your priority
in life right now? And then, by the way, if you've been with someone for quite some time, it's what's your priority this year? That same curious question, never stop. It simply evolves, right, it simply evolves. Now. So, the study found that a top turn on with the new partner conversation thirty eight percent, and that included deep conversations, self disclosure, compliments, and debates. Right, that's what was considered
good conversation. And fifty two percent of singles feel a potential partner is serious about dating them when they're willing to talk about their feelings. Now, I find that a lot of us struggle to talk to certain people. If we're comfortable talking about our feelings. There's a lot of people who aren't comfortable about talking about their feelings, and that can often feel like they don't care about the relationship.
And I just want to say something in defense of all of those people, because I think a lot of people are in that bucket where they just don't feel comfortable. They've never been made to feel comfortable. And that doesn't mean they don't care. It means that you may need to be more patient with them. And this is something I've realized over time. When we talk about the right and wrong people at the time, the wrong person is just someone that we're impatient with. I want to dissect
this for a second. When you're attracted to someone, you'll be much more patient than when you're not attracted to them. But the challenge is your patience isn't real. It's just the halo effect. Because you're attracted to them, you assume they have better qualities, and you really want it to work. And we've got to be really careful about this bias because it actually can mislead us away from the person who's good for us and towards the person who's not
good for us. And so when you're talking about the right and wrong person, again, recognize that patience is something you need with anyone. Just make sure it's for the right person. And often we apply patients to the wrong person because there's other qualities we have that we're enamored by. I'll give you an example. Someone was telling me recently that they can't see how their partner doesn't recognize that
their friends don't give them good advice. And what I was saying to them is that, well, that person's been friends with those people for like ten to fifteen years, and even if they are getting bad advice from their friends, it may take them another ten to fifteen years to realize that. Now you may say, well, I don't have that time, and that's totally fine, but you're going to find that the next person you meet may need ten years of unwiring and unlearning their relationship with their parents.
Someone else may need to unwire their relationship with food. Someone else may need to unwire their relationship with something else. So what I find is, whoever you end up with, they're going to have to rewire their relationship with something, and by the way, you do too. And often what we're saying, is I just want to be with someone who's not working on anything at all? And that doesn't exist right. Everyone's healing. I remember in the monastery we
were told you're in a hospital. Everyone's healing, everyone's diseased, everyone around you is on their own journey. And so it's almost like the right partner is figuring it out. Who are you okay healing with? Right? Who are you okay sharing an area with? Who are you okay sharing a space with? And when I say okay, I don't mean that it can't be beautiful and wonderful and amazing. I mean that's a healthier question to ask. Is is this someone that I trust that I can heal with?
If I share my feelings with this person, are they going to take them seriously? If I share my heart with this person, are they going to hold it? Let me really dig into this. When you trust someone, it means if you share your emotions with them, you believe they'll take them seriously. When you share your heart with them, you believe they'll hold it gently. When you share your dreams with them, you believe that they'll be excited for you.
Trust is when you feel such a safe space that you can truly be yourself without holding back and create that space for that person as well. So one of the ways in which you know that the place you're in maybe challenging for you with a person is your partner's opinions bother you.
Right.
It could be anything, for example, the way they talk about other people. It could be their political affiliations, it could be about men and women's roles in society. It could be how they treat someone at the restaurant. Right. And these are all important things, but there are also things that you can learn to address and have more thoughtful conversations about. And I think this is a challenge. I think we're now living at a red flag's green
flags time. And what I mean by this is we're saying, hey, if you take any of these red flags, you're out, and if you take any of these green flags, you're in. And the crazy part about that is we're basically saying that there are amazing traits and terrible traits. What we're not recognizing is that everyone is complex and everyone's going to have some red flags. Like the fact that your partner has different opinions from you isn't a sign that they're the wrong person. It's a sign that maybe you
need to engage deeper to actually understand them. And if they're willing to, that's great, And if they're not willing to, that's more of a sign. Right. Someone having different opinions is not an issue. It's about whether that person's willing to engage and you're willing to engage in a respectful way. So much of a relationship is about how you choose to engage and respect as opposed to having the same
ideas and the same thoughts and the same beliefs. Now, one thing that you should never ignore is if your friends have reservations, you should take them seriously. The reason I say this is because a lot of friends and you have to know your friends. A lot of your friends will struggle to tell you the truth about your relationship because they don't want to lose their relationship with you.
A lot of your friends may struggle to be honest with you about your relationship because they're scared that you may be hurt. A lot of your friends may not be real with you about your relationship because they're wondering if you choose to be in it forever. Then they will also have to have a relationship with that person, which is why if your friend opens up to you,
it's worth taking seriously. Which is why if they have the courage to share something with you, it's worth listening because it was so hard for them to do that in the first place. Now you have to know your friends. You may also have friends you just love to have opinions about anything, everyone, and everything, and that may not be valued at the same level as what I was just talking about. But most of the time we call people our friends for a reason. They know us. They've
seen us at our best and our worst. They know everything about us. They might even know things about us we're not even aware of ourselves. The point is our friends look out for our best interests and want us to succeed most of the time. And that's why there are friends. So why are they acting so strange around your partner? Why do you find yourselves by mutual agreement
seeing your friend solo most of the time. Now, it's really important to use that data to ask them because what most of us do, and this is another challenge. This is how you know you're getting something wrong is you isolate yourself. And by the way, it's natural when you like someone you isolate yourself from your friends and you only hang out with that partner. Right, And by the way, we all do this, And if we're sitting here going well, that person should be reminding me to
spend time with my friends. I'm here to tell you you should be reminding yourself and them to spend time with their friends. If someone is too clingy, or if you're getting too clingy or attached, it's important you remind each other, and most of all, you remind yourself that it's important to keep deepening your other relationships. Right, it's easy to get lost in a relationship with your partner. It's more important to make sure that you have other
friendships that are healthy as well. Now, an important part of whether you're with the right person or not is whether you're community pation needs match or don't match. Maybe you're someone who enjoys chronicling your day with another person, or maybe you're someone who likes checking in via text with your partner throughout the day. Are you and your partner of the same mind about this or does your
partner get annoyed when you text them? Or are something important to say or worse, don't respond, or perhaps you're a person who's upfront and honest about your feelings, and you find yourself involved with someone who has a lot of buried, unexcavated stuff going on, or who seems defended or uses humor to distract from their emotions. Maybe you like to go deep, whereas there's someone who likes keeping
things light and superficial. Now, this isn't an issue in the sense that you can't be in a relationship with this person. But the question mark is are you patient enough for them to change? And are you okay if they don't? That's really the question we have to ask ourselves in a hard relationship. Are you patient enough to wait for them to change? And are you okay if they never change? That's the real truth, right, that's the hard truth, And if you think about it carefully, this
is quite common. It's very normal for one person in the relationships to not be able to open up, and a lot of the times the other person wants to open up too much. Right, We're both at either end of the spectrum. One person wants to talk about everything all of the time and the other person doesn't want to talk about anything. And so those are the areas in our life where we have to strike a healthy balance.
We have to recognize that maybe some of our wanting to check in all the time is anxiety based, and maybe some of their not wanting to check in is anxiety based. Right, that's the kicker. That's what's so interesting that we want to check in with them all the time and know what's going on because we're anxious, but they don't want to talk about things because they're anxious about something else. And this is what I really want to encourage. Relationships are about healing as long as they're
not emotionally, verbally, physically abusive. Those are not including in this conversation about what I'm talking about. Those are ones that you should seek professional support, You should not stick around out of pressure. But when you really think about it, a lot of the stuff we have challenges with with our partner is because we're not letting them heal and they're not letting us heal. Most relationships have a healing problem that causes hurt as opposed to another type of problem.
It's a healing problem. We don't want to give the person space to heal. We expect them to be healed, and they're not giving us the space to heal. And the challenge is we think we're trying to heal and fix that person, not realizing we're being pulled and pushed to heal parts of ourselves. That's really what's being demanded in a relationship. What's really being demanded in most relationships
is can we heal right? Now? A relationship can be the wrong relationship if they don't respect you right, if they don't want to give you an opportunity to pursue your career, if they don't care about your professional life, if they expect you to support theirs, and these are all common things. Sadly, I've known a lot of people who, sadly where men in a patriarchal society have certain expectations
of women that are unfair. They expect that the woman should not work, they expect the women should take care of their parents. And there are all of these old fashioned views, and they cause rifts in relationships because the person doesn't feel heard. Do they treat you like a human right? That has to be what the right relationship is. And if your dreams are diminishing, you're in the wrong relationship. Maybe you've always loved to travel, Maybe the future fantasy
of yourself and the wilderness. Maybe you've always wanted to spend time in Italy, or you've had your eye on taking a teacher training course in yoga, maybe you love to dance, and maybe just maybe your partner isn't into any of these things. But that's okay. But now they're dismissing it. They dismiss it as an unrealistic fantasy. I think also, there are so many of us that just
don't feel our dreams are supported by a partner. Now I don't mean financially, because that's a conversation, but what I've realized is a lot of people don't believe in our dreams because they don't believe in their own They never had someone who believed in them, so they don't have the capacity to believe in you. And the question you have to ask yourself is am I willing to be the one to shift because this person has so much depth, this person has great qualities, great abilities, or
am I not ready to do that? And you're well within your rights to make that choice, well within your right to make that choice. This is why I think when you start dating or restart dating, or even if you've been in a relationship for a while, find out someone's values quick and that's why I created the valuesspace on match dot com where you can actually find out
your values, your partner's values, and connect on that. And I also want to say that in addition to our bespoke Core Values feature on Match, we've added deep Dives, a way to choose a topic and share what you value and why it's important to you. And I want to invite you all to put these lessons into practice with me. I'm partnering with Match to create something that has never been done before. You will have the opportunity to join other singles to date with intention based on
your values and a deeper connection. If you're not single, please share this episode with a friend to help them change their mindset. Join the waitlist at datingreset dot match dot com datingreset dot waitlist dot com. And I'll say this too, this episode's for anyone, even if you're with someone, you're not with someone, because a lot of us don't really know our partners that deeply, and it's never too late to start. Thank you for listening. Remember I'm always
rooting for you and forever in your corner. I hope this helps. If you love this episode, you're going to love my conversation with Matthew Hussey on how to get over your ex and find true love in your relationships.
People should be compassionate to themselves that extend that compassion to your future self, because truly extending your compassion to your future self is doing something that gives him or her a shot at a happy and a peaceful life.