Do men change? I get asked this all the time . . . and the truth is more nuanced than the internet makes it sound. When I met my wife, I wasn’t looking for commitment. A couple of years later, we were engaged. So yes, change can happen. But not in the way most people think.
In this video, I break down what actually inspires someone to grow, the mistakes that keep people stuck hoping, and the 3 things that can shift the direction of a relationship—if you’re with the right person. If you’re wondering whether to hold on or move on, this will give you clarity.
Matthew Hussey:
I am a changed man. Before we get into my personal story, though, let’s start with what this video is about. A lot of online love advice is contradictory, especially when it’s delivered in short form video. You may have heard that men don’t change. In fact, there are viral TikTok videos with millions of views in which a woman street interviews strangers in New York City asking if men changed their very funny, actually, and they always say no.
On the other hand, you may have heard that soulmates are built, not found, implying that change does need to happen in order for a relationship to work. After all, two people with histories and baggage can’t come together without some form of friction in the beginning and an evolution from either side to make it work. In these cases, change is a fundamental precursor to getting into a relationship.
But you may have also heard that you shouldn’t date men who are project. You shouldn’t be the therapist, and you shouldn’t do all of the emotional labor of a relationship because you risk becoming a mother figure to him instead of an equal partner. You’ve been told that if he wanted to, he would. And when men know, they know.
So if he hasn’t shown up as interested and pursuing and fully committed, then end it. He is not the man for you. So what is it? Do men change into becoming your soulmate? Is that something you should even hope for? Or are most of them lost causes? And you should drop them as soon as you see a red flag.
In this video, let’s do what we do best on this channel and dig in to the nuance. For those of you who don’t know me, I’m Matthew Hussey. I’ve coached hundreds of thousands of people over the last two decades now, and written two New York Times bestsellers on all of this stuff. Subscribe. And like this video. Let’s get into it.
When I first met my wife, Audrey, I was not in a place where I was ready to commit to a serious relationship. I was enjoying being single. I was focusing on my work. I wasn’t looking for a girlfriend, let alone a wife. Within two years, I was engaged. And now, just five years after we met. We’re happily married.
So if you were to use me as evidence, the answer to can men change would be a loud and resounding yes. Marriage and children were things I feared, and I was never fully vulnerable or emotionally available for prior partners, even if I didn’t know that about myself at the time. But before you click off this video and go to celebrate that the emotionally unavailable avoidant you are dating is your future husband.
There are some important nuances you should note. Change for everybody is incredibly difficult, not just for men. Change is difficult regardless of gender, and the average person doesn’t spend a lot of time in self-reflection consciously thinking about the things they want to change about themselves. Even fewer people are doing the work. And even for the people that do change, they don’t tend to get a personality transplant overnight.
They change by small degrees. So what prompts a man to change? The answer varies. For some, the answer can be regret. Maybe a bad divorce makes them never want to repeat a toxic relationship dynamic ever again. Or it’s the regret of time passing without having settled down. It could be a health scare that prompts them into taking relationship seriously.
It could be watching his friends and mentors settle down in happy marriages, and seeing for the first time that marriage isn’t a scary trap, but a free and liberating lifestyle when it’s done with the right person. But here’s the problem. Those aren’t things you can influence or bet on. You can’t influence a man’s social circle, or whether he’ll go to therapy, or if he has a profound regret that he wants to correct.
There are, however, a few things you can do to influence the direction of your relationship in the early stages. Let’s go through the three things that worked on me. That may work for you too. If you’re with the right person who just needs a nudge in the right direction. First, offer them new relationship associations. If someone you’re dating is coming off as noncommittal.
Lacks a dating history. At the age of 35, or struggles to figure out what they want. There is a high chance that they have some negative or complicated associations with relationships. Maybe they see a relationship as being trapped or the slow death of their sex life. Or maybe it’s someone nagging them at every turn. While it’s not your job to change someone’s mind about these things, it’s also true that people often change when a more powerful force shows up in their life.
And if you’re a believer in how amazing relationships can be, even more so when they’re with you. That is a powerful force. Here’s the key encourage having general conversation about the topic of relationships, but from a neutral place. Then simply listen so that you can understand what their current relationship associations are. He might say, I feel like in relationships, people just slowly become roommates, you know?
And then they stop having sex and they just end up nagging each other and getting in the way of each other’s dreams and the things that they really want to do. Now, when you hear that, you may even validate those fears they have and say, oh my God, that sounds terrible. The way you describe it, I feel like that’s the kind of relationship I would want to avoid, too.
But I plan to be in a relationship where I’m having amazing sex with my partner until the day we die. The idea of, you know, turning into roommates is something I could never do. And, you know, getting in the way of each other’s dreams. I feel like your ultimate job as a partner is to know your partner’s dreams and to support those and to push them forward, to be able to to achieve those dreams or live those dreams.
If you say that what you’re saying is your version of a relationship is just one version of a relationship. You you’re describing this as if it’s all relationships. You have a very narrow minded vision for what relationships are. You don’t have to spell that out, but it’s kind of what you’re saying. That’s not what I’m getting into.
I have a much different vision for relationships. And what you’re doing in the process is you’re saying, I other relationships exist than the kind you’re talking about. They exist with me. And you’re kind of calling out this identity they have as an as a pessimistic, unimaginative, narrow minded person. And no one wants that identity for themselves. And of course, it sends the message that this kind of a relationship is one that you are going to get into with or without them.
And if they’re not careful, it’s going to be without them. It’s an offensive strategy, not a defensive strategy, but you may have your specific thing that you’re dealing with, a fear someone has said to you, or an objection that someone has said to you to moving forward and you’re wanting to know, what do I say to that? How do I deal with that one?
Well, I want you to go over to AskMH.com and try Matthew AI ask Matthew with your question whether you’ve been seeing someone for three weeks or three months or three years. It doesn’t matter. Just say your situation in as much detail as you like, and it’s going to help you know what to do and what to say to turn it around.
It’s trained on 18 years of my courses, my videos, my coaching, and it’s going to give you tailored advice for your situation. That goes beyond the general advice in this video. You’ll be astonished at how insightful it can be. We have thousands of people using this around the clock right now as the secret weapon in their love lives.
The link to try it for free is AskMH.com go ask your question. Let me know what Matthew AI says. Okay, let’s get to the second step. If you want someone to change, draw some boundaries. An early dating mistake a lot of people make is if they like someone, they go out of their way to please that person, to put them on a pedestal without ever stopping to question if this person is actually right for them.
If you’ve been on a few dates with an impressive person and you think I’ll never meet someone like this again, you might be hesitant to call out behavior like poor texting or lack of follow through or hot and cold behavior. Calling out behavior in a confident way can encourage them to step up, maybe in ways they haven’t before.
It also raises your value in their eyes because you’re not just another person letting them get away with bad behavior. Some people have gotten away with poor behavior for so long that they don’t even realize they’re doing it. They don’t even know it’s poor behavior anymore. In these situations, it doesn’t hurt to give someone the benefit of the doubt and see if the conversation, the boundary has the potential to change things and wake them up to their behavior.
But this is where key number three to change comes in, because key number two does not work. If you are not prepared to do key number three, you have to be willing to walk away if offering new relationship associations and defining boundaries hasn’t worked. Trying to change someone who doesn’t want to change or who doesn’t see the value in changing, is an impossible battle to win.
People tend to change if it’s in service of something better. They need a strong enough why. The why can be a mixture of carrot and stick the carrot is the future. They want a future that you’re painting with you. The stick is the past that hasn’t worked in making them happy so far. In the early days of seeing my now wife Audrey, it dawned on me that I was feeling something with her that was incredibly valuable.
I had never felt before. I never felt so accepted. I’d never felt so sane. And she used the things I’ve talked about in this video, like offering new relationship associations, creating boundaries, and the ability to walk away to inspire me to get to a place where I wanted to commit to her and only her. It wasn’t all smooth sailing in the beginning, but that wasn’t an indication of the kind of relationship we could build together.
Now, some of you may be thinking, Matthew, I’ve done these things before and it didn’t work, I listened. I offered amazing relationship associations. I set boundaries, and I walked away. And guess what? He didn’t chase me. He didn’t even care. Well, that’s the thing about this plan. It’s only viable if you’re dealing with a man whose values align with yours, no matter the amount of influence or impact, you cannot change the wrong person.
You walking away is not a tactic. It’s a standard you’re communicating. I think that the number of women who say men don’t change is actually a commentary on how many women stick around. For men who don’t change, you stick around for someone who’s flirting with other people and keeping his options open because you think he’s valuable and you’re going to be the one he changes for.
We would believe in people’s ability to change more if we gave less time to people who don’t change. Sticking around for people who don’t change, giving them more chances creates a self-fulfilling belief that men don’t change. I had the potential to be a great partner. I didn’t come pre-made as the perfect partner, but Audrey wasn’t hoping for that.
She was testing for that. If she had given up on me too quickly and labeled me a red flag, which she very easily could trust me on how I was behaving in the early stages. We wouldn’t have had the beautiful life we have today, but if she had kept trying persistently to set up dates or to reach out when I’d clearly been showing hesitation and uncertainty and not meeting her halfway, it wouldn’t have worked in her favor either.
She was clear about her wants and needs. She was vulnerable. She offered powerful associations with relationships. Audrey was a believer, is a believer in relationships. She was a believer in how amazing relationships were with her. She communicated her boundaries clearly and was prepared to walk away if I didn’t eventually meet her where she needed things to be. And that’s how you can inspire change in someone who doesn’t come pre-made perfectly for you.
That’s what they mean by soulmates are built, not found. Now, if you are a man watching this, let me know the ways you feel you’ve changed over the years and what inspired those changes, or who inspired those changes. What did they do? And if you’re someone watching this who’s dating someone hoping they will change, man or woman, is there something you need to do from this video, whether it’s taking action to create that change or leaving that situation all together?
I’m really enjoying reading your comments. Recently I’ve been going deep in the comments section this year. I don’t know if you’ve noticed, so leave one now and I will be reading and responding to as many as I can. I’ll see you in the comments section.
*This transcript was whipped up with the help of AI. While it does a pretty impressive job, it may have the occasional typo, mix-up, or moment of creative interpretation. If you spot anything that looks a little . . . adventurous . . . thanks for your patience (and your sense of humor).*
Omg Matthew! This resonates with my current situation and I’ve been getting direction from Matthew AI.. I have been bolder with what I want than I’ve ever been before and so far it’s working. I’m a true believer in having an excellent relationship and that’s what I want. I like this guy but I’m ready to leave it where it is if he’s not on the same page as I am.
This really encouraged me as someone who is currently interested in a friend I’ve known for a while. We are both single now and I’m trying to be patient with him as he got out of a relationship a few months ago. I’m not banking on him to change but letting him take his time to see if our relationship could be more.
Thank you for explaining this in a way that resonates with me. In my one year long relationship, I feel that I’ve made an effort in setting boundaries but not enough in creating associations. It is almost as if I assumed that he and I had the same vision of how our relationship can be different from all the rest and that I didn’t need to paint any more pictures for him. But now I’m thinking that that’s what I should’ve done, as reassurance that I truly believe that this could be something very special. But I ended all contact because I was exhausted from trying, and reading the signs, and his lack of communication and initiative. I felt that after a year of trying there was a small improvement but things were moving so slowly in the right direction that I felt like he could never meet me at the right time and pace for me… I just didn’t like that I kept feeling that I could’ve done something more, “if only I did this or said this at the right time”. I ended everything because I felt that I had to finally put a stop to this exhausting situation… it is a shame and I am so sorry and heartbroken.
SM, wow, I think you are so brave for cancelling all contact. You obviously are connected to your worth and intuition for taking that move and sticking with it. Yes it is incredibely hard to walk away, but it sounds like in thoes 12 months, you gave plently of opportunity for him to step up and he didn’t take it. You have done the right thing. Take some time to heal your heart and move on so the right man who is ready to love you can meet you. Take care xx
Love the playful energy of this video
And never saw a man talking about his wife so passionately !! We all know that your wife is perfect, for you- I am being honest.
Sorry but I have a different opinion, while your Love can influence in the right direction or show the mirror of their partner ( I had an awesome coach who have done it for me) but until we aren’t fed up of the old ways of being then nothing happens.
We should give ourselves more credit of the work we had to put in, rather than giving it to the other person. The power of change, grow and be a better person stays with us ♥️
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Love the playful energy of this video
And never saw a man talking about his wife so passionately !! We all know that your wife is perfect- for you- I am being honest.
Sorry but I have a different opinion: while your Love can influence in the right direction or show the mirror of their partner however nothing happens until we aren’t fed up of the old ways of being
I have an AWESOME Coach who have done it for me too called on my bad patterns but I am taking time to understand them, that the action of change would be mine and desired.
We should give ourselves more credit. The power of change, grow and be a better person stays with us ♥️
Thank you , this was lovely to read. I gave someone 2.5 years n projected a beautiful image of how a relationship could be. We both had our pasts but I was positive n he was bitter. After 2.5 years I thought I showed what a relationship could look like..but the person was still not progressing,was wishy washy n ultimatums worked to get “a little bit more” each time but with me chasing and coming back. Finally put my foot down n initiated no contact with the other person stil not ready to commit, still not apologising n not accepting their lack of meeting me half way or opening themselves up. Nobody should b there to bring your walls down for you.
Hey, I asked your AI a question about a situation I have. Very clear advice, albeit hard to follow!