Rachel "Raquel" Leviss' latest romance did not SURvive the test of time.
The Vanderpump Rules alum shared that she and Matthew Dunn called it quits after one month of dating. In fact, she even provided insight into why she parted ways with the investment CEO, saying that he failed to adhere to her one dating rule.
“He told me one thing and his actions were different,” Leviss explained during the June 28 episode of her Rachel Goes Rogue podcast. “I asked him not to post on social media because it was too soon in the relationship. We were dating for a month."
As for the post that triggered the breakup? The 29-year-old revealed that Dunn “updated his Facebook profile picture” to a snap with her after the pair attended the Stagecoach music festival in Indio, Calif., back in April.
“The media caught wind of that, and it was just this whole thing,” Leviss continued. “I had to end it. It was hard. It was sad because we had a good connection, good conversation and he was emotionally stable and emotionally intelligent."
Acknowledging that those attributes were "standard" but "new" for her to experience, she added, "It just seemed like maybe he either had an impulse control issue because we agreed not to do that or he wanted to post to, like, show me off.”
E! News reached out to Dunn for comment on the split but has not heard back.
Leviss and Dunn's romance was first confirmed back in April, about a year after news broke that the reality star and her VPR costar Tom Scandoval were having an affair, dubbed colloquially as "Scandoval."
Since then, Leviss—who began a two-month stay in a mental health facility following the March 2023 scandal—has gotten candid about all the steps she taken to improve herself. That mission includes a sobriety journey and starting her podcast, which she hopes will be "healing" for others too.
As Leviss previously told E! News, her show's goal is "just sharing what I've learned about myself through this journey."
"And hopefully helping other people who have been through abusive relationships, toxic friend groups, that can relate to what I'm talking about," she continued. "I feel like it's given me my power back. And I just feel empowered doing it."