Don’t Get Into A Relationship Before You Read This…(Or: How To Be Single)

Stephen Hussey

Single. Dating. “Friends-with-benefits”. Coupled.

People like to tell us that one state is desirable over another. And yet, 10 years of working with people in their relationships has taught me that it’s possible to feel wildly fulfilled or totally miserable in just about ANY state between flying solo and a committed relationship.

But that’s not what we’re told.

The cultural story tells us: “Your life will finally make total sense when you meet the right person.”

Actually, it’s even worse than that. It says:

“Get a relationship, or else your life won’t have meaning.” 

Yikes.

This is why being single can be extra tricky, especially for women, who face far greater pressure to prove their worth by “locking down” a steady relationship by age 30ish. 

The cultural narrative tells us that all roads must eventually lead to a relationship, rendering singledom as a kind of purgatory abound with lonely humanoid atoms, hovering past one another until they finally get paired up and can live the rest of their lives in blissful duality.

Well, fuck that. 

I don’t have a dog in this fight. Being in a relationship can be incredible. But being single is also AMAZING and gets taken for granted way more often.

But to do single right, you need to avoid the traps that lead to dating burnout, bitterness, or a feeling like you’re waiting for connection to come and finally give your life purpose.

Here’s how:

1. Stop Forcing Dating

The greatest tyrannical mantra of singles is this: I must find someone else to merge with as soon as possible.

Says who? 

Unfortunately, a LOT of people say so. 

Even as a 30-year-old man, despite not being subject to the same pressures as women, every year I get older I find people have a bemused expression when I say I’ve recently been happy single and pretty much out of the dating game. It’s weird. But it seems to render people genuinely incredulous when you tell them you’re enjoying not having a relationship and don’t plan to have one for a while.

Their loss.

Let them assume you’re hiding. Or you need to grow up. Or pay someone to give you extensive therapy and delve into all the reasons you may be burying a terrifying fear of intimacy.

I’m not saying that getting into a relationship is an unworthy goal. 

I’m saying that once you learn how to love being single and squeeze the juice out of it, you won’t care about finding a relationship UNLESS it already adds to your bountiful, exuberant, jolly, freedom-filled single-fun-fest (think Homer Simpson skipping through the land of chocolate, and you’ll get a picture of where I’m at on this).

And the epiphany comes when you realise: Just because I’m single, I don’t have to date.

Suddenly everything gets easier. You can switch off from all the dating anxiety and throw yourself into all your passions guilt-free and love every second of it. You get PILES of precious free time. You can actually read books. You can fly to your college friend who lives 6 hours away just because you’ve always felt like seeing Budapest. It’s pretty damn enviable.

And just like that, ahhhhh. Relief.

2. Listen To Your Gut

Ok, but what if you are single and also out there dating?

Then you need to be smart about it.

Too many people in the single world waste time and emotion pursuing terrible leads.

They date men and women who don’t invest in them, they spend hours waiting for texts back only to get one-word answers, and they chase intimacy from people who only want attention/sex/validation.

So if you’re single and looking, and want to actually enjoy it (i.e. keep your self-esteem, self-respect, and NOT get burnt out with people in general), you need to listen to your gut more than you listen to what you’d like to be true.

I’ve written many times about how to decide whether to stay get into a serious relationship.

But let’s make it super simple. Ask yourself these 4 questions:

  • Am I REALLY REALLY attracted to them?
  • Do I REALLY REALLY like them and respect the way they live?
  • Do they treat me REALLY REALLY well (and make me feel wanted)?
  • Do we REALLY REALLY want the same things in the next 5/10 years?

Your gut knows the answers to all of these.

If it doesn’t, you’re still avoiding an important conversation you need to have. So listen to your gut and HAVE IT NOW.

Once you start listening to your gut, then comes the hard part…following it. 

In relationships, it knows where you need to go. Unfortunately, what it has to say is sometimes very pleasant and you want to punch it, especially when it says, “Now I want you to go break it off with that sexy person because they clearly treat you as an afterthought and trying to win them will waste years of your life and turn you into a ball of misery and resentment.” 

Your gut will help you drop the WRONG people faster, so you have space for the right person when they cross your path.

3. Be open about whom you meet, but picky about whom you invest in

This one idea changed my entire life. 

Why?

Because I’ve seen 10,000 single people do this the opposite way around. 

Most single people do dating like this: They swipe through profiles, go to parties, attend singles events, and in their head is a constant “NO”-monkey, telling them all the reasons they don’t want to talk to that person.

This monkey says things like:

  • He wears THOSE shorts with that shirt?
  • She’s into THAT stupid book?
  • His smile seems kind of cocky
  • I don’t like people who wear beanies. She’s probably an annoying hipster.

And so on, and so on…

Hey, you have standards. Great. But maybe also that monkey who keeps telling you a thousand excuses not to meet people hasn’t always got your best interests at heart.

Because here’s what else happens when that monkey kicks up a fuss and makes you dismiss everyone: you stop meeting ANYONE.

In fact, you meet so few people that the next time you finally bump into even ONE guy you really like, your monkey looks at him like he’s a magical never-ending banana tree, and screams at you “PICK HIM!!! OH MY GOD, HE’S AMAZING!!”, ignoring the fact that those bananas often disappear for three weeks, stop texting back, and then reappear kind of mouldy later saying “hey. U up?” (bananas can talk in this flimsy metaphor).

The smart way to date is to flip this around: Be open-minded about whom you talk to (even if it’s for 5 minutes), but be SUPER picky about whom you invest emotion in. 

That way, you train your monkey to examine the tree a bit more and see if it has strong roots i.e. if these bananas are the real deal or just a clever mirage.

4. Have some adventures

People always want to know if they should be on the “hunt” when they’re single.

As I said in point #1 – if you don’t want to date, don’t date.

This is a golden opportunity. Enjoy it now, before you wreck it all by falling in love and then have to take another whole human beings needs and desires into account! (you know you have to do that in a relationship, right?)

Put simply: Go. On. Adventures.

Obviously this applies whether your coupled up or not, but when you’re single? Now is the perfect time to take advantage of your relative freedom and seek out unusual activities, fun places, solo travel, and generally enjoy the fact you can show up to parties and leave exactly when you get bored.

Basically, you get to dive into as many things as you want, and then when they suck, you can say screw it and spend a weekend binge-watching those Seinfeld episodes you’ve never seen as you sip an oat milk latte while pondering an afternoon walk before treating yourself to some new books, just because, hey you’re single, who else do you need to spend the time and money on?

Don’t be that person who bemoans singledom. Be the person who is having so many fun adventures that they have to be convinced to bring someone else along for the ride.

5. Be willing to TOTALLY change what you thought yesterday

One danger of being single is becoming stubborn.

You can easily get set in your ways, certain you know everything, or build up some idealized story of why you’re single in your head and NEVER want a relationship.

It’s easy to rationalise any situation and cling to a narrative that’s no longer true.

Which is why I’ve always loved the saying: “Strong opinions, loosely held”. 

In other words, be willing to let go of any belief that stops serving you. 

Maybe being single is working for you today and is amazing. But life goes through phases. And it doesn’t always have to be all-or-nothing.

Some of our beliefs that make us single now may not be true tomorrow:

For example:

“I’m happier alone than I am with someone” – Maybe. But maybe that’s just a belief you’ve adopted after a couple of not-so-great relationships, and the right person would make you fulfilled in a way you’d never have believed.

“I don’t have time for a relationship” – Maybe. Or maybe you just have other priorities right now. Or maybe you’re focusing TOO much on your career/friends/hobbies and would be better off trying to make time to meet a partner who would serve and support your goals.

“I can’t find someone who really gets me” – Maybe. But maybe that just takes time and it’s worth being open to people and what might happen, because life works in funny ways and you want to be ready if the day occurs when someone amazing walks into your world.

For the record once again: I have no dog in this fight. 

I’ve been happy single. I’ve been happy in relationships. 

But I do know the danger of clinging too hard to one position and using it to justify whatever we’re currently choosing (just look at the couples you know who rationalize why they’re staying in a crappy relationship and you’ll know what I mean!)

It’s a beautiful fact of life that the philosophy we followed yesterday can turn out to be completely wrong for who we are today.

Meet someone. Break up. Stay together. Go solo.

All can be happy roads, if chosen for the right reasons.

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27 Replies to “Don’t Get Into A Relationship Before You Read This…(Or: How To Be Single)”

  • To being single is your choice of being free from anything, it means you can do anything without anyone question you. And being married is a choice of two persons decision at least now you cannot do anything without the other, everything has to be divided and when I mean everything l mean everything in each person’s (couple) life, you can’t do anything without the other.. first of all I’m not a robot blood and water flow through my vein, and who say you can be single all your life anyway is your wish, choice to make. l have been single not until I was forced into marriage which makes me realize between being single and married, After so many years of divorced l come to understand that the decision of marriage in life is not only made for a single person, it’s made by two persons who come together to make up they mind to face the life ( world). That’s why communication play a very important roll before tiring the knot. I realized that marriage is not a joke anyone can play with. But the question is did the other person READY to face all the do and dots. To me l don’t think marrying the right person will make you go through all the tenure, in all this drama l learned that you will only experience all the tenure when you marry the wrong person ✌️

  • Stephen,
    I absolutely love this blog!
    Almost as much as the “Unrequited Love” blog
    Spot on!
    I am finally embracing and enjoying my singleness, I just booked a river cruise for March 2021, sailing down the Rhine river to Zurich
    I used to tell myself “I’ll wait til I meet someone before I do something extravagant “
    Then after listening to the Love Life webinar, I finally said “fuck that”
    Got on the phone with my agent and booked the last cabin for this cruise
    Solo cruise for me!
    Meeting my sister in London, we will fly over to Amsterdam to tour a couple of days before I embark and then I plan to do a 3 day post cruise to Italy

    I love this blog, I’m going to print it out

    Thank you Stephen & Matthew, and Harry

  • Why oh why aren’t these things taught in schools. Might make for happier individuals.
    I’m 58 soon and in a situationship where he tells me one thing but his actions don’t measure up.
    I think l was happier single and taking my own adventures(taking myself on Sunday drives, Waterfall hunting, Horse riding with girlfriends, Reading) eating out by myself at first uncomfortable but generally enjoyable and it’s amazing just how many people talk to you. My family & friends said l was weird and would look like l had no friends. My go to reply was always and your point

  • The best is point #5. Nothing is permanent. Stubborn behaviour is self damaging. Besides that, to be single and happy means knowing oneself, accepting themselves and having a healthy self esteem without any fear of the future. I was never happy single and I don’t think I can be. I have accepted this about myself and did something about it. Some people get anxious and are not meant to be single..

  • Thanks a lot for sharing this. I really like the point you made “I can’t find someone who really gets me” – look inwards rather than outwards.

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