Tag: #dating

  • Becoming The Right Person

    We’ve all been there. That first date, filled with hopeful smiles, witty banter, and an underlying current of anxious anticipation. The quiet question hangs in the air, heavier than any silence; “Is this the right person?”

    It’s a question that follows us through life. The right person to date? The right person to marry? The right person to build a life with? We spend countless hours, energy, and emotional bandwidth searching for this elusive “perfect match.” We read books, we ask friends, we scroll through endless profiles on dating apps. But Jay Jay Douglas offers a profound and eye-opening shift in perspective: “Become the right person and the right person will recognize you.”

    Think about that for a moment. It shifts the focus from an external search to an internal transformation. And Douglas dives deeper into this concept, offering insights that are both a bit challenging and liberating.

    The Problem With Chasing Love

    We’re so focused on finding the right person that we often neglect a more fundamental question: Am I becoming the right person?

    The truth is, your ability to attract and sustain a healthy relationship is directly linked to your relationship with yourself. As Douglas rightly points out:

    *”The truth is, you can not recognize healthy love when you are not healthy yourself.” If your inner landscape is full of insecurity, self-doubt, or unresolved baggage, you’ll struggle to appreciate genuine love when it appears.

    *”When you don’t respect your own boundaries, you will keep entertaining the people who ignore them.” Without self-respect, you’re prone to tolerating behavior that is beneath you.

    *”When you don’t know your worth, you will keep negotiating it with the people who benefit from your debt.” Knowing your worth is not about arrogance; it’s about a solid understanding of your value. If you don’t have it, others with inevitably undervalue you.

    *”If you don’t have peace within, you will keep confusing intensity with connection.” This is a powerful one. We often mistake the roller-coaster of intense, dramatic situations for a deep connection, when real connection is often grounded in peace and stability.

    Be The Rooted Tree

    Douglas uses a beautiful analogy: “A good tree produces good fruit but a tree does not go looking for fruit: It focuses on being rooted well. When the roots are healthy, the fruit follows.”

    Relationships work the same way. The “fruit” – a healthy, fulfilling, lasting relationship – isn’t something you chase down. It’s something that naturally flourishes when you, the “tree,” are healthy and well-rooted.

    What does it mean to be a well-rooted person?

    ~Grounded in Who You Are: This means having a strong sense of self-identity that isn’t dependent on external validation. You know your strengths, your weaknesses, your values, and your passions.

    ~Steady Character: Your principles don’t sway with every passing trend or the opinions of others. You act with integrity and consistency.

    ~Identity Rooted in Integrity: Your self-worth comes from within, from living authentically and with honor, not from seeking approval or status.

    The Shift Inside You

    When you make this internal shift, something magical happens. You stop the desperate chase. You start BECOMING the right person.

    This isn’t about striving for some abstract ideal of perfection. It’s about a commitment to self-growth. It’s about becoming:

    <Someone who knows how to love without losing themselves. You understand that a healthy partnership involves two whole individuals, not one person trying to complete another.

    <Someone who knows how to give without abandoning their values. You are generous and compassionate, but you also have strong healthy boundaries that protect your well-being.

    <Someone who can recognize peace when it shows up instead of mistaking chaos for chemistry. You develop an emotional intelligence that allows you to value genuine, calm, and supportive connection over dramatic, emotionally turbulent situations.

    Preparation Over Pursuit

    And here’s the crucial piece: “The right person for you is not just someone you find, it is someone you are prepared for.”

    You could be standing right in front of your ideal partner, and if you haven’t done the internal work, you won’t even recognize them. You might misinterpret their kindness for weakness, their stability for boredom, or their peacefulness for a lack of excitement.

    So instead of a desperate plea to the universe for “the one,” Douglas suggests a different prayer: “Before you ask the ‘Universe/God’ to send the right person into your life, ask ‘it’ to shape you into the person who can sustain the relationship you are praying for.”

    This is the ultimate shift in power. You are no longer a passive participant waiting for happiness to be delivered to you. You are an active creator, cultivating the inner landscape that makes you a magnet for genuine, healthy love.

    When you become the right person, something fundamental changes inside you. You stop chasing love and, in that place of quiet strength and self-acceptance, you actually recognize it when it arrives.

  • Dating in Your 50’s: The Struggle is Real

    Dating in your 50’s. It’s not for the faint of heart, is it? It’s like trying to navigate a funhouse maze in the dark, with the added bonus of wondering if the person at the other end is actually a cardboard cutout with surprisingly good grammar. It’s less “meet-cute” and more “meet-cringe”, isn’t it? We’ve traded stolen glances across crowded rooms for swiping left or right on faces that may not belong to the person in the profile.

    Remember the thrill of meeting someone organically? The nervous excitement of a first encounter where you could gauge their vibe, their real vibe, not the curated, filtered version? There was a certain realness to it, a tangible connection before you even exchanged numbers. We met people at concerts, at classes, through friends… there was a tangible, human element to it. Now, we’re navigating a minefield of pixels and promises, trying to decipher if “outdoorsy” means “owns a tent” or “watches nature documentaries on Netflix.” It’s all swipes and super-likes, a digital cattle call where you’re simultaneously the buyer and the questionable merchandise.

    And let’s talk about the profiles, shall we? “Seeking my soulmate” (aren’t we all?), “Adventurous spirit” (translation: once went zip lining on vacation), “Looking for my partner in crime” (which, let’s be honest, could mean anything from one night flings to actual, you know, CRIME). Oh, and the ever-present “Good sense of humor” (which is highly subjective). You read them and think, “Wow, he sounds perfect!” You hit that little heart button, that virtual beacon of hope… and then, crickets. He’s witty, intelligent and his photos aren’t taken in the bathroom mirror. You send a message, a carefully crafted masterpiece of conventional charm. And then… silence. It’s like sending a message into the abyss, only to be met with the deafening silence of unrequited algorithms.

    Then, against all odds, you match with someone who seems promising. He’s kind, funny and seems genuinely interested. The conversation flows, the banter is witty, and you find yourself actually looking forward to checking your phone. It all flows like a well aged Merlot. But then the universe throws you a curve ball: He lives in “Upper Bumblefrack” which is approximately 300 miles and 3 time zones away!

    Ah, yes, the long-distance dilemma. We’re not in our 20’s anymore, ready to pack a bag and chase after infatuation. We’ve got our routines, roots, responsibilities, our homes, and our favorite side of the bed. The thought of packing it all up and starting over is… daunting. Is love worth a new zip code? Sometimes, maybe. The thought of uprooting our lives for a maybe, a what-if, is enough to make anyone reach for a bottle of wine and a good friend.

    It’s a lot. It’s frustrating, it’s funny, it’s occasionally heartbreaking, and it’s definitely an adventure. We’re a generation of strong, vibrant, and fabulous people who know what we want (mostly), and we’re not afraid to go out there and (try to) find it. We’re not going to settle for anything less than we deserve. So, we’ll keep swiping, keep messaging, keep laughing, and keep navigating this crazy, mixed-up world of 50-something dating.

    Keep holding out hope that somewhere out there, amidst the digital chaos, is someone who’s looking for the same thing we are: a real connection, a genuine partnership, and maybe, just maybe, someone who knows the difference between “your” and “you’re”.