Hello everybody, well, welcome back to the show. Welcome back to the podcast, new listeners, old listeners. Wherever you are in the world, it is so great to have you here. Back for another episode, as we, of course break down some of the psychology of our twenties. I'm going to come right out and say it. The biggest questions that we have in our twenties, and the questions that I get the most of, revolve around dating, Like how exactly are we meant to do this? How do I stop
getting attached so quickly? How do I know if this person likes me, if I even like them, how do I find the one and not be completely exhausted by the process? Or the biggest question of all, is this something that I should even be prioritizing during my twenties? You know? Alternatively, could this be my decade to just be like free and uninhibited and not worry about this process. I think that I'm there with you, and so many of us are. It is occasionally, you know, is more
trouble than it's worth. But I also deeply believe that dating shouldn't be a chore. It should be something that's fun and exciting and that you don't feel any pressure towards and that there is some pretty amazing ways to go about it that bring us to this point. The question that that leaves us with it, I know I'm full of a lot of questions, is how do we
get there? How do we get to that point? And to give us the expert advice on how to date, when to date, and who to date in your twenties, we have the host of the outstanding podcast Datable, Julie and Yue. Welcome to the show.
Thanks for having for having us.
I love your voice. I'm soon by your voice right now.
Thanks so much. Guys, you know a little bit of ASMR to kick se out just on morning. Can you introduce yourself and introduce Datable? Who are you guys? Who is what is the show? O?
Yes, We're going to get right into it. We've had this podcast for almost a decade. We were in Julie and I were introduced by a mutual friend over a decade ago actually, and we were just sharing what do you call them war stories of dating, like what have you survived? And we thought it was such a great way to share what's going on in modern dating, share our own experiences and not feel like we're alone in it, so we decided to do a podcast out of it.
But since then, we've really evolved the way we see modern dating. We think we are at a point where people are very fed up with dating. It's dating is harder than ever, but also it gives us the best opportunity to date right now. And we can go into that more later, and we go into it in our book. But the two of us come from kind of like this.
We straddle the old and the new. So, you know, I'm like, I'm like the first millennial, so I'm you know, I was born in eighty one, so I'm the first millennial. And I just remember growing up with all these rules about dating, very traditional ways of looking at gender roles, and now with modern dating, we're straddling kind of a
progressive view of dating. So I was feeling lost because I only knew kind of the traditional ways of dating, like who pays for what, and who should text and who should initiate, And here I was in a world where all the rules are kind of thrown out the window, and I had to recreate a love life that worked for me, and I didn't know where to start. So that's where I was when I met Julie.
Yeah, and where I was. I don't think I ever set out to be a dating expert, so it still makes me laugh every day. But I was just as confused as probably many people that are listening are right this minute of just Where to Date. I got all the old books. We were kind of talking about that before we got on here. You know why men love bitches and you know the rules. And I thought I would approach dating like I did like schoolwork or job, and really study up and learn all the ways to
navigate it. And I think that's why those books were so appealing, because they gave you a framework. The problem was I was not myself at all in the process, and I just remember friends being like, you're so social, you have so many friends, Like why does dating not stick?
Ever?
And I was just lost. And you know, I think when I met you a, I was actually coming out of like my first real serious relationship. And at that point I was like, you know, I found someone, I did it, I made it work, and then it didn't
and it wasn't because the love wasn't there. I realized, just like not all the time things happen the way like we're told they are and like in the movies, and you know, this simplistic view of relationships, and I think it just made us both really curious on the topic and want to dive in even more.
I love that this was like an accidental career feed both.
Oh hundred, Rissa, You're gravitated to things right that you like struggle with.
Oh, you know, the psychology of your twenties. I have no idea what I'm doing. That's the whole reason I'm doing this.
But you know what you do, and then you learn all the gut along the way, right, And now.
I just get to interview really smart experts and they just give me all the tips, like yourself. But I do think that you raised a really interesting point, which is that dating in this day and age is very different, and I think that a lot of us are bringing very outdated ideas of what that looks like. Outdated ideas of like, what are the games that we have to play, what are the rules to follow? Blah blah blah blah blah. Why do you think that those rules are actually you know, no,
I don't know. I don't want to say worsening our chances, but making it so much harder for us to actually enjoy the process.
Well, if you think about it, dating is for you. You're not dating for other people. Yet we are restrained by these rules that other people have created for us, these social constructs that are not serving us for most part and not helping us in any way. So just by virtue of saying there are these rules already puts us in a box and doesn't free us from being our most authentic selves in dating.
Yeah, I think this is kind of a weird response as to dating experts, But one of the things we've realized in our decade is you actually don't need to be good at dating. Maybe it's actually hurting you because the way dating is operates today. We're not saying to not date. It's maybe to change how we date, but the way it operates today, it's all centered around disconnection when all we really crave is connection and the games. Like we hear, you know, people are like, well, I'm
over the games. I don't do that, But then we hear them say like, oh, but you know, I'm gonna wait half an hour to text that person back because they didn't text me back right away. That's a game, and it's like as baked into dating culture that we don't always even realize when we're playing games.
I really like that point. It's like, is the biggest mistake that we're making not being authentic? Like is it just seriously back to basics? Oh my god, there we go, done? Episode over And that was actually gonna be one of my questions. I was going to be that you guys are the dating experts. What's the biggest mistake that we're that we're making. What's the thing we're getting wrong about dating?
Is it you know that we're not authentic? And is it that we're trying to be someone that we're not in the first week, month, day, year of dating someone.
I mean, you did a recent episode about dating burnout, and we truly believe that you feel burnt out when you are not true to yourself because you're exerting more energy to be something you're not. That's how you get burned out. But if you're authentic to who you are and your needs, then you feel energized, like dating should feel energizing if you're doing it in a way that serves you, right, So I think you're onto something there, Gemma.
Maybe the biggest issue is we're all trying to be something we're not, and that's what's causing us to be burnt out, to feel overwhelmed, to feel completely failed by modern dating, when we just need to take the control back and say, I am in the driver's seat of my love life and I will make every choice, every action, every behavior is in line with what I authentically stand for, not with society or other people want for me.
I also feel like when with what you were saying, then when you put on this like false persona, right, you end up attracting people that you don't even lie and like you said, like it's so draining and you're
so burnt out. It's kind of like a friendship, you know, when you just know that you want a person and you really actually don't get along that well, Like there really isn't much like chemistry completely platronically of course, and you don't remain friends with those people, like you don't message them, you know, text them, you don't really want
to hang out with them. But with dating, it's like the stakes are so high that you give these people second, third, fourth chances and then you're both exhausted during the relationship and then afterwards you probably feel a sense of like, but I did all these things, I did everything right and it didn't work out. Like that's the whole Like, that's the whole cycle that I think really frustrates.
People absolutely, And we call it in our book actually the validation trap. This is something that's getting in people's way because dating is no longer a way to just meet new people and have fun and see who the right matches. It's basically measuring our self worth and that comes from all the pressure with dating. And you know, you and I really fundamentally believe We've talked to like thousands of daters. We've seen people that you know, felt
really hopeless. So I felt like I've never had a real relationship or I just don't know how to date. Are now in super healthy relationships. So we really believe that, like everyone is datable. That is a core message that we have. But it's modern dating norms that are getting in the way. So you asked earlier, like what are some of the biggest mistakes that it's coming to modern
dating culture? Like we had one of our friends come on the podcast and she was saying, how like in every other part of life, she's like, go get her she you know, makes plans proactively. If someone asks to meet up in a business context, she's on it. A friend asked to meet up, she does it. But in dating she feels like because like everyone else is putting in less and less effort, it makes her do the same. So then she ghosts because they ghost and it's a cycle.
She drops to what she called the lowest common denominator and art and her thing was, well, if someone's going to give me ten percent, I'll give them nine percent. And our take was, why not give them zero percent? Like they're showing you what they're giving you know what you want to give? Like, how do you rise above dating culture? Not just do the thing because that's how dating works.
And this validation validation cycle of validation trap trap even better, Yeah, neither. You don't want to be in either of them. Let's just avoid with the validation trap. Like, how does it keep us in those same unsustaining relationships or situationships or dating the wrong people?
Yeah, because you are constantly tying your self worth to other people's behaviors and your perceived perception of how they see you. That even me just saying that sentence is so exhausting right, because you're constantly like who you are, what your worth is a product of how someone else treats you. That's not how life should be. You know your worth and you know what you're putting out there. You know what you bring to the table. Why have
other people dictate that? So the danger with a validation trap is you never fully stand strong and who you are. You're not rooted. Your branches are just tied to all these other people who are moving in every which direction. Like, imagine how weak that tree is if they have no roots but branches tied to all the other trees. You would end up just being like we call this a dating chameleon, where you just, you know, pretend your other people to try to fit into other people's lives.
I think one of the biggest challenges I had personally was situationships. It was like, even before the tree existed, I was the queen of situationships, always in them all through my twenties and even to my early thirties, and
finally I was able to crack that luckily. But I think the biggest piece was with validation is that one I think I just didn't know what love actually should look like and what a healthy relationship was, but also it was this cycle of wanting the approval of someone and feeling like I could win them over, and you know, I'd already invested so much energy the sun cost fallacy.
I'm just going to keep going.
And it was so tied to my ego that like I wanted to win, but I was like winning by settling for someone that didn't even really want to be with me, Like that's not winning at all. And I think rejection also ties to that. When we're so tied to validation, we want to avoid rejection at all costs. And then like the most recent time I was dating, before I met my partner, now three years plus, I just lost all of that. Like I got to the point where I was just like I'm going to show
up as myself. If someone doesn't want to be with me, then like I'm gonna move on, and they're clearing my path to find the right person. But it took a lot of reframing to get to that point and not fall for validation trap anymore.
And I'm sure like even with all the knowledge you had, it's still very instinctive. Oh yeah, it's just you know, it's basic human psychology, like you want what you can't have, like you end up being led by construction. Yeah exactly, it's fomo. Everyone else has these relationships and you're like, if I can just make this work, like I can take that off my list as well. It's so interesting because literally this morning, I've been with my partner for
like two years now. We have the best relationship, and this morning my ex situationship messaged me out of the bloot right before I.
Come back back, and I was like, uh huh hi, and.
He sent me like this meme about how you know, as we're recording this, like the US election is going on, and he sent me this meme about like how Kamala Harris is like banning all situationships and like any like anyone who's in a like who creates a situation ship like should go straight to jail. And it was so I was like, where the fuck is this coming from? Mate, Like I haven't spoken to you in like three years, and still thinking about me like I'm with this amazing person.
Now you know that I'm with this person. But he messaged me, and I got this feeling in my stomach. It like did a flip, and I was just like oh my god, and I just felt all of these emotions all over again. And I remember, like, like, you know, three months ago, I was like why was I, you know, for a while, and like why was I ever in that situation? And I was like, because he knew how to make me really anxious and he knew how to
Like I think, I say this a lot. It comes down to like being a bit of an overachiever and a bit of a actionist. Like everything else in my life, much like your friend, right, I had to work hard for and there was this whole sense that like what's easy, Like if it was easy, everyone could have it. So the relationship that was most hard to obtain, the person's attention that was most hard to obtain, was the one
that I should focus on. And I think that made me incredibly anxious and he really knew how to leverage that.
And it was just this wild feeling of being like wow, I'm like straight back in this in this time for just that second, I feel exactly how that felt, and it gave me like a sense of forgiveness of like yeah, no, no wonder, no wonder, Like I was getting so wrapped up in this when we were in those situations you like everything is just playing on this like instinctual anxious drive, this sense of like I need to find stability here, and the only way I can find stability is to
like reach the conclusion of this relationship and make it into something more. I just think that, Like, I don't know if that's been your experience, but that was the real reason I found myself in situationships for a very long time as well.
One hundred percent. I can relate to everything you just said. In our book, we actually have a quiz of like what type of dater you are? I'm curious if you took it, but I was an achiever dreamer, and that combination was kind of a baby guessing that is what you are.
Yea, yeah, it actually was.
Yeah, Okay, that's the exact notion that I had too, of like, you know, I imagine this fantasy with this person and like for you know, everyone can take the quiz even if you don't have the book, and go to our website and take the quiz.
But like it's so fascinating because it's all about like what are your strengths that you bring to dating, but then also what holds you back? And I think in that situation, it was like this getting ahead of yourself,
making something, romanticizing it. This is also natural. That's why, like with all of this that we talk about, it's like these are just traps that everyone's falling for because it's instinctual to how dating and modern dating work, and this deed to like win comes from this achiever's mindset of like I still want to like get this person.
One hundred percent. And like you said, what is bedding? I'm the wedding is being with someone who doesn't even want to be with me. Like that doesn't seem like a great price. I'm sorry, Like that seems pretty crap.
How do you think how do you think we can stop ourselves from really getting carried away in the early days, Because sometimes I find sometimes, you know, I've now been with my partner for a while, so not recently, but when I was dating, and what a lot of people do ask me, is I meet this person and suddenly I'm fantasizing about the wedding that we're going to have in three years we've been on one day. Is that like just infatuation or is that a sign of like something?
How do you stop that from getting in the way of actually getting to know each other.
Yeah, it's just such a great question because so many of us fall into that. And I would argue that it's very healthy to fantasize about a future with someone. If you don't do that, then maybe you don't have a heart right, Like it's good to feel like the warm and fuzzies about someone and be like, oh my gosh,
maybe we could have a family together. But this sounds like typical dreamer where you get so ahead of yourself that you get wrapped and wrapped up in the story and then you forget about the reality of what's happening. So you know, even in the book, we always tell everybody to just like fact check, write down all the things that are real, all the things you are feeling, and then just know that you can't observe all of
this and all of this can exist at once. Don't feel bad for feeling this way, but also it's good to to do a reality check every once in a while. Okay, it's only been three days. Okay, I don't even know their middle name, Like okay, like we have we haven't had a conversation for longer than two hours, Like it's good to just bring you back to reality. But it's okay if you fantasize every once in a while, like it's natural to do that.
And in today's dating culture too, we call it the expectation of love on demand. Another trap that gets in our yay because in today's world, everything happens at lightning speed, right, Like you can get an uber and you can order a meal and all the things like at the touch of your fingertips, and of course you expect that in dating too. So with this, like as soon as we meet someone that we like, we often get ahead of
ourselves and we start imagining this future. And also couple in that people are really frustrated by dating and just want to get out. So it's all this like perfect storm of you know, maybe not giving other people that could be potentially better partners for the long haul enough time, and then focusing on people that we don't really know. Like Ua said, I really had to get realistic because
this was a huge problem of mine. I remember even like when I met my partner now though, like I remember my best friend being like, so, do you think you'll go out with him?
Again?
And I'm like, you know, if I do that, would be awesome, And if I don't, that's also okay, because I have no idea what's going on in his life after going out with him one time, and I think it really took conscious unlearning of those patterns.
I guess the other thing that really factors into this and listening to you too, you both talk about it, is this idea that like you should have this passionate or consuming spot your everybody's love stories, and there's this huge idea of like you should know within the first like five minutes, like real love won't hide and if you have to like take time and be patient with it, like obviously it's not the one for you. It is.
Also it comes down to like if you wanted to, if she wanted to, they would yeah, which I am like, yeah, okay, Like I get I do get it. I think it's like a nice philosophy, but sometimes, like you said, there's other things happening in their life. Maybe they do really want to but they can't. But also it gives us expectation of like grand gestures and huge commitment very very quickly. Sometimes like the best love comes from slowing down and
comes from taking your time. How do we do that that's like the million dollar question, how do you like slow down, actually enjoy dating, actually enjoy the process and getting to know someone in this like love on demand environment, in this like very urgent society that we live in.
Oh, such a beautiful observation. I will tell you I spent my twenties being addicted to love and my thirties chasing that high. And now being in my four I realized that was all a ruths like that was not that That's not what relationships are about. So I think it's it's good to know that, you know, Oh, I really chase the butterflies, or I'm chasing that grand passionate feeling, because as long as you are observing that, you know
that's happening to you. But the second step to that is to say, am I feeling this passion for this person because they haven't called me back in two days and I've now written this novel about them and I'm now addicted to the story of this person Or are they actually showing signs of being a good partner That's
why I'm feeling love and passion for them. And in my twenties, I will tell you I was chasing after people who were the first How I described in the first way is they were not available, but I was so connected to the story of who they were that I began chasing, not them, with these fantasy characters. So now I can look back on that and say, Okay, I'm glad I went through that experience, but this is I think this is the biggest shift for me in
how I turn that around. My friend Amy told me this because I asked her, like, why do you want to get married, why do you want to have kids, why do you want any of this stuff in life? And she said, it's not the achievements or the milestones, it's I want to learn how I can expand my heart to the fullest. And I thought that was such a beautiful way of putting relationships and dating is it's not about the end result or getting someone or chasing
this milestone. It's what can you do to love the fullest at each opportunity, and even if that person doesn't stay forever, you are using that opportunity to expand your heart. And I really hope that everybody can take that expansion in mind when they're dating, because it's it makes us so much more of a beautiful enjoyable and like self focus experience.
Absolutely, it's also this sense of like what are you rushing towards? You know, what's the rush? And I know people are always like, well, I just want to do all these things with them, and I'm like, if you're going to be with them forever, they will happen, and you don't want to squeeze a whole relationship into like four years and then be like, wait, we actually never really like got to know each other. I always say, it's like you've got to enjoy enjoy the waiting rooms, right.
There are periods in your life when you're in a waiting room and it's kind of like ooh, like you know, I'm not I'm not like coming to the destination. I'm not at my destination. I'm just kind of in the middle. And I do think that relationships have those rooms as well, where it's like, Okay, this is the time when we can like sit and slow down and have a chat and like pick up a magazine and like just really you fill out some forms, really get to know each other.
Like I really value that in my own relationship is you know, early days, like it's only been two years as it is it really does mean that there is a trust built there and I and I know that the bedrock of my relationship is not excitement. There is excitement in there, but the bedrock is like true liking and knowledge, and like you said, like my heart has room to expand. It's like when you blow up a balloon slily rather than just like giving one big push and like it explodes everywhere.
So I like that advice a lot. I think this is easier sound than dumb. But we need to like remember the long game here, like I don't. We've had these conversations with people that you know, got married super early and are now divorced, and they were saying how they felt like they lacked the communication skills, the relational skills, they just didn't do it because you know, they're just
every just fell into place and it worked out. And of course it was like, I'm not saying that every couple that gets married early this is going to happen to And I think if you are in the situation where you're like I've been dating for a while, it's hard remember that it's all going to something like you're learning at every step of the way here. And I really think that like, dating is the perfect opportunity to test out and train yourself and practice saying what you need.
And we're always so afraid to in dating because we're like, we don't know this person well enough. I don't want to scare them away. But if we turn it like why not scare away the wrong people? Like that's filtering people out for you. And then also like I mean, I know, for me, a huge pivotal point was when I was like, Okay, I'm going to date with my
own needs at the forefront. So that involved getting clear about what those deeds even were what I wanted, because in the past, I was like the hitchhiker along for everyone else's ride. That's why I was in all the situationships. But then when you are able to turn it on yourself, then you're in control and you're making those decisions, and you can also look at it like this person isn't the right one for me, not just I need to be saved and get done with this.
Oh my goodness, words I had wished I heard a long time ago, three or four years ago. Those would have been incredibly helpful, but I had to learn it the hardway. We're going to take a short break, but when we return, I'm going to talk more about how to date seriously and how to know if someone is
the right one. I've got a more serious question. I feel like the first half of this episode we talked about getting to know someone, doing some of the work in yourself around what kind of data you are, how you canel about going slow. Say you are with someone, it's getting serious, you are having fun, you're vibing, neither
of you are seeing other people. It's exclusive. If you have doubts, what if you still have questions lingering in the back of your mind, like three four, five months in, is that something that you should call it quits over or is it worth kind of giving them the grace and gift of time to see if it works.
Yeah, And this goes back to our expectation of love on demand too. People feel like they need to know right away and also have no doubts in early dating, and it's so you're gonna hopeway's gonna have doubts. That's the reality of relationships too. Relationships evolve and you're gonna have moments where you're like, am I with the right person? So in our book, we actually make it very clear.
We have a.
Perfect partner equation, so you can just follow that formula and really it's a plug and chug, but also it grounds you into what matters in choosing a partner, and like we really bully down to like there are only seven things that matter, and like one of them is consistency, like as this person consistently showing up for you. But here's the thing though, like with we can do all the overthinking thinking because their thinker is one of the
dating archetypes as well. This person's going to be like every moment, is this the right person? This is the right person? At some point you just got to say this is the right person until they're not the right person. We see this with so many relationships that span years and years. They're right until they're not, and that's okay. Like they do not need to be the right person forever. There they are right for you based on your core needs, your values, et cetera. And that's all you really need
to hold on to. You don't have to think of like one hundred years down the line.
I think it's understanding why you're having the hesitation too, Like Ua was saying, is it something that's core to your values or the way you feel or your futures aren't a lunch. I just gave away some of the
perfect partner equation. And or is it that like stuff from your past is coming up that's causing you to feel that anxiety, Because I think there's a big different difference if you're with the wrong person because you're fundamentally not aligned versus the normal anxieties that happen in relationships. And like I know, for me, I thought like once I met that person, it'd be all easy because the
anxiety and the difficult part was in the dating. Because I met someone and I'm like, oh, this is like the type of person I was looking for. You know, everything on the outside is healthy, But what I've learned is like even in the healthiest relationships, we get triggered. Stuff comes up from our past, and there's a big differentiator if this person is wrong for you or it's coming from the back.
I love the way that you put that, because I do think that there were so many amazing people out there for us. We will never choose just one if we constantly think that the grass is greener. And of course, there is an important distinction between like you said, you know, you have this beautiful relationship equation. There is an important distinction between, you know, not feeling certain because of big questions and not feeling certain because you're like, ooh, could
I have something more exciting? You know, could I have the butterflies again? I honestly see this a lot with people in their twenties, where they're like, oh my god, my relationship just feels so stable, almost so used to chasing the high of early love that you know. I had a friend who was in this gorgeous, beautiful relationship. She left it for for similar reasons, and they are now back together because she was like, I just realized
that actually this person was amazing. They were everything that I wanted. I was just looking for something that actually a past version of me wanted more, which was something exhilarating and intoxicating and addictive. Is that the relationship that's gonna take me till my thirties, to my forties to my fifties. Is that the relationship I want to raise children within? Probably not, probably not, But there are sometimes
those situations. And you guys have this amazing episode which I'm just gonna plug here because it's so good about whether you should leave a good relation, whether you should leave a good not great relationship. And if that is the case, this relationship is like it's fine, it's okay, it's no amazing, and you do decide to leave, how do you get over the fear of never finding someone better?
If this is in your stars, if this is in your path, this relationship isn't right, how do you stop yourself from staying for longer than you should?
Yeah. So I was forty two years old when I found out my partner of five years had been cheating on me. We were making plans to start a family. I was we were in the middle of trying to conceive when I found all the text messages that nobody should ever read from their partner. So here's the thing. After this breakup, and it was hard, it was devastating. I realized, if I can get through this on my own,
then I am perfectly great. Like this is If this is the default of my life is to be strong and independent and be like this warrior on my own, then anybody who comes in my life is just additive. So having that kind of reset going back into dating, it was so refreshing because I didn't feel like I needed to hold on to people. I knew that whoever was meant for me will be in my life, and whoever was not meant for me will naturally filter themselves out. I did not need to force people to be in
my life. I did not need to force people to be in relationship with me, and that allowed me to attract the right people because these were people like, oh, her life is great. I want to add to it. I want to be a better part of this life, like rate come along. But I don't need a relationship.
I don't need a partner. When we see when we have the scarcity mindset, we feel like we need someone to save us, like a relationship is going to bring us to this island where everybody's safe and fed and roofed, And that's like, that's not how it works, right, Like it just relationships won't save you if you can't save yourself.
I think, though it's natural what you were saying, like, especially like we tie in like a present bias, right we look at what's in front of us currently as like having more weight than what could be in the future, and it's really hard to see that something better could be around the quarter, Like looking at uas situation. I feel like you're in a much better or a relationship now at place now, but in the thick of that breakup, you could not see that. You could not know that.
So it's a really hard situation that makes us often overstay things that aren't working. I think the hardest one too, is like when it's a good relationship, like nothing's wrong, but you're just like, is there something more fulfilling for me? And of course we recommend you know, having all the conversations, doing the work, going to couple's therapy, not just throwing
in the towel at one feeling of that. But if you keep feeling that and you're like, fundamentally I know this person isn't right for me, you also have to honor that too, and honor that and trust that something will be out there that is better serve for you, because if you're fundamentally feeling that way, then like you do deserve something more, and so does the person you're with.
I was gonna say, yeah, so does the person you're a Wait, I imagine if you were with a pot and who was looking you right, I just don't like, I'm not going to leave them because you know they're good not great? Right? That would that would break my heart if my boyfriend or my partner was like, yeah she's she's okay, but I'm too scared to leave her. Yeah, and that's going to be the rest of my life.
Like absolutely not saw it to that person took and to.
Yourself, like, yes, you owe it to yourself as well, because that's still your reality. And I love what you said of like, Okay, you might not find a better relationship, but you'll find yourself. And isn't that just as valuable because there are people who go through their entire lives
who do not find that. And I say that with the most serious level of gravity having seen it and in family members of mine actually who I'm like, you know, you married like the first person you met and now you're like seventy eighty, and like, I can just see that, only now you're figuring yourself out, as you know, as a someone who's older. And it's beautiful that they're getting that opportunity, but it is something that you need to
take seriously. You can't like there's never going to be a good time to end a relationship ever, and there's never gonna be like the final, you know, especially if you're with someone who's like really great and like kind and happy, like if you're waiting for them to like screw up as an excuse to like break up with them, I honestly think that's a little bit manipulative as well, because you're going to push them into those situations where they're gonna have to take, like take the reins like
I love the I think the overarching theme of everything you guys say is like being the driver's seat of your love life, and that also means having Like, if you're gonna be in the driver's seat, you've also got to make some hard calls that might include, you know, leaving someone who is good not great.
But we are saying actually inspired. Something that we talk Julie and I talk about all the time is sometimes we evaluate our relationships on the wrong things, like, oh, this person's so nice and faithful and kind, like I should stay with them because they are a good person. Well, you like, just being with someone because they're a good person doesn't actually do anything for anybody. You want to be with a partner who is committed to growing with you,
who's committed to expanding the relationship with you. The minute your partner shuts down or you shut down from that growth, that relationship is over because you can no longer evolve that relationship no matter how kind or nice or great
this person is. So instead of like us being like, oh, I can't leave a person who's so nice and great, I would have just challenged people to say, have you set up your partner for success in terms of how we've had discussions about growing together and where can we expand more into where can we be better at in our relationship and see if partners receptive to that. Just like hanging your hat on someone being a good person or nice, it's just not enough, simply not enough for a relationship.
So this is an interesting tidbit. But like when we did that episode, there was a specific couple that had come to us that was in mind, and they actually stayed together and years later they are super happy and the doubts are gone, which is fascinating because your instinct
is to be like leave, go find someone else. But I think that actually goes back to like some of the challenges with modern dating, that's always the instinct, and that's why we're kind of in or headed towards what we're calling the love crisis where dating is so hard that people don't want to do it anymore, or the mental health aspect is getting so out of control that you wonder like is it even worth it? And if we're always onto the decks, we can never develop the relationship.
So I like that example because it's like what you were saying, you a of like when you look at what's missing, how are you looking at it? And can you have that like come to conversation of like how do we move that barrier? And then if you've done all the work and you're still not there, at least you know you did it instead of just moving on.
I love that, and I like, I really like this realistic approach of like look at the right things and the order I've gotten that saying of like relationships or work. I used to be so scared of that saying. We used to be like no, no, no, no, it should be easy. Yes, but like you go to the gym when you want to, like you look after your body, that's hard work, but you still enjoy it and everything is worked exactly. Anything that's good is work and is
a choice. I actually think that like the easiest things in life aren't always worth having. You know, it's easy to like be passive in your life. It's easy to sit on the couch and it's easy to like eat the food that's like on your way home, and it's easy to do X y Z. Is that going to put you in the best place? Probably not. Same goes for a relationship at times, especially like I don't know, especially when there is just so much about them that
you do really like and that is important. I know we're giving like conflicting advice here, guys, but I think the basis of what we're saying is if you have an instinct that maybe this relationship isn't right for you, investigate it further. Is it for a reason that is something that you can work on, or is it something fundamental about your character and your plans and your visions.
The first step is definitely to really test that out with your partner and really do the work and the interrogation. If they are someone who is genuinely a great person for you, and then it's kind of up to you. Like, maybe the reason our advice is like this way and that way is because there is no one answer. But I love the analogy that that couple, it's hot warming.
I think the question too, is like what's hard, because like, if you're like constantly trying to get attention from a situationship that is telling you outright that they don't want to commit to you, that's not the right relationship for you. But if it's hard because it's actually making you confront parts of yourself and you know, feelings that are coming up or emotions that you've stuffed away, that's like the right type of heart that's challenging you to be a
better person. So again, I think it is conflicting, but we have to come back to like what the root is of like what is actually the hard mm hmm.
I love that. Now we have to wrap up because I've just gone completely.
I've got a complete It's.
Like I was going to ask you every single dating question I've ever had. I think to finish the episode, and I ask a lot of my guests this, what would each of you pick one thing the best piece of advice that you would give you a twenty something your old self around dating. What do you wish that you had known back then that the listeners can know now?
I think for me, it's trust in your timing, especially in your twenties, there's so much pressure to you know, meet these artificial milestones, and it's so much better to take your time and be with the right person. Again, it goes back to the long game, and you know, getting into this mindset to of I'm the one in control, I'm figuring this out. It's not the apps, it's not my city, it's not all other people, like I'm the
one leading is so empowering too. So if you can combine those two mindsets of like, you know, things will work out for me, Especially if I make this a priority with I'm in the driver's seat, then I think that really sets you up for a lot more success.
I think been asking the question you just asked, it's a really good way to think about dating. The question is, if you're, let's say, in your thirties or forties, what did you learn in your twenties about dating? Ask yourself that question in your twenties, you know, ask yourself, like, in this situation I'm in right now, ten years down the line, what would I tell that person that I
learned from it. I think in the twenties, you don't need to be like I have to figure it all out, and I have to get it all right because you'll never get it all right or figure it all out. But it's such a great place with so much freedom to play and to experiment and discover. Just know that you are intentional about the discovery process. You're not repeating the same patterns of behavior that every moment is teaching you something so that when you do reach thirty, you
go yep. In my twenties, I learned all of this, Like I have a whole list of things I learned.
And also, like your dating life and life doesn't end at thirty, there is such a pressure to hy make sure that you've like picked up a partner along the way. Oh my god, absolutely not good. No, you have so much time. You have so much time. So I want to thank you both for coming on to the show. I also really want to plug your book How to Be Datable by the time it comes out on January twenty eighth, correct.
Yeah, yeah, And it's incredible.
It's a really good book and it's practical and it's helpful, and it's modern and there's just so many nuggets of wisdom in it. So I'll leave a link to pre order the book in the description of this episode. Where can the listeners find your podcast? Where can they find you? Both?
So many pleasers, We're all over the internet, but really, wherever podcasts are? Apple Podcasts, Spotify and yeah, datablepodcast dot com or how toobe datable dot com.
Brilliant Again, thank you so much for coming on and for your beautiful advice for us twenty somethings. I hope that you, guys the listeners enjoyed this episode. Everything else that you need will be in the link your own the description of this episode. Make sure that you leave a five star review on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, wherever you are listening. Give us a follow so you know when new episodes are coming up, especially with twelve months of
guests happening. At the moment, we have some more amazing guests on their way. And until next time, stay safe, be kind, to be gentle to yourself. We will talk soon.