Date Yourself Instead - I was LOVE BOMBED - a dating story time
Episode Date: May 22, 2023The first half of this episode talks about self worth, valuing yourself and to avoid jumping into a new relationship before you've processed a breakup. The second half of this episode talks about love... bombing and a story time of a guy I dated super briefly that was fucking obsessed with me for a hot minute and then put me in a really uncomfortable situation, and THEN vanished off the face of the earth. If you liked or could relate to this episode, follow me and dm me on instagram @lyss and stay updated on the podcast account @dateyourselfinstead. Xoxo.
Transcript
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Welcome to day yourself and set.
Day yourself and set.
What does it mean to day yourself and set?
I'm just gonna learn to love myself and that's it.
I strongly believe that you need to be completely alone
before you are ready for your soulmate.
Not single and entertaining a bunch of people at once.
Not having random, meaningless hookups
and swiping on dating apps 24-7,
not texting your ex for no apparent reason when you're drunk, I really believe
taking time by yourself and with yourself to really get to know who you are on a
deeper level is a crucial part of finding the one and finding your soulmate.
And some people might disagree with this, but I truly believe that you really need to know
how to love yourself and respect yourself
and value who you are and know what you believe in
and what you stand for,
and also know your boundaries before you meet your soulmate.
And this obviously doesn't mean
you can't have a good group of friends surrounding you
and you can't have good people surrounding you and supporting you. It doesn't mean isolating can't have a good group of friends surrounding you and you can't have good people surrounding you and supporting you.
It doesn't mean isolating yourself from the world completely.
It just means to stop distracting yourself from getting to know who you really are and
getting to really know how to love who you are.
It just means putting yourself first and prioritizing your own needs, and to stop sacrificing all your valuable time and energy
to people who don't deserve it.
When I was single in 2019,
I went through a very transformative process in my life,
which I didn't expect to happen.
I had just gotten out of a serious
four-year relationship with someone I deeply cared for,
and I was so used to having that person with me all the time.
And prior to that, I was in an eight-year relationship
on and off with someone I also deeply cared for.
So I was in two very serious relationships back to back.
And I never allowed myself the proper amount of time
to recover from my first breakup,
and then I jumped into the second relationship and then we broke up.
And by the second relationship's breakup, I was lost and I had no idea who the fuck I was.
But yet I continue to entertain more people after we broke up.
I never allowed there to be a healing process.
I never gave myself that room to grow and think about the relationship and heal from it
in healthy normal ways. So instead of healing properly and learning how to validate myself without
anyone, I immediately downloaded Bumble. It's a great app if you want to, you know,
meet a hook up and some people have met and got married from Bumble. I have nothing wrong with this, but I have nothing wrong with dating apps in general,
but I downloaded Bumble.
And the first guy I met, he was super attractive.
The first guy I swiped on, he was super hot.
I thought he was super attractive.
And I instantly threw myself into another situation.
And this means even texting someone
because that is a distraction away
from the relationship I just got out of, right?
So I was trying to distract myself
and do everything I can to move on
by jumping into another situation with someone.
And during that time period, I remember it felt right.
I felt like I was ready to date someone new.
But at the same time, I never took any time for myself
to really just focus on what I deserved
and to focus on what I really needed out of a relationship.
And what ended up happening was I got myself
in a sticky situation with someone who, although was very physically
attractive, he really hurt me.
And I spent the next seven months in an on and off up and down roller coaster situation
ship with someone that did not want true commitment, had no intentions of actually dating me for
real, and would string me along and make me believe that there was a potential relationship
coming out of it, but there was nothing.
And I believed everywhere he said,
and it's not that he was a bad person,
but he was just stringing me along
and didn't want anything serious,
and it cost me so much time and energy
because I wasn't being respected and valued
in the way that I needed to be.
And the issue wasn't that he was treating me badly. The issue was more that I was allowing
it. I was allowing him to come into my space, to take up all of my energy and time and
allowed him to waste my time for months on end. And every time I would try to bring up a serious conversation, I
was shut down.
Anytime I brought up the idea of connecting on a deeper level with him, I was shut down.
And I realized that I was denying myself of true respect and happiness and love because
maybe I was just in a place where I didn't value myself and I didn't think I deserved
that.
And I closed my heart off because I had just gotten out of a serious relationship.
That being said, was it worth it?
Was it worth that experience of being in a long-term situation with someone and getting my heart
crushed?
Yes and no.
There are some things where I look back and I say, okay, it was a learning lesson, I grew
from it, and I learned not to make that same mistake again.
But at the same time, do I wish I had done things differently?
Do I wish I had protected my piece more and set firmer boundaries with myself?
And do I wish I had given myself the proper time to heal from my breakup?
Yes.
I wish I had done some things differently.
So that's why I'm creating this episode today because
I wanted to dive into two topics. One, to really give yourself the proper time to heal from a painful situation
in order to really know what you deserve for the future. And two, I wanted to talk about love bombing
and how love bombing is very common and it's something that a lot of people deal with
and have struggled with in past relationships.
And I'm sure there's a ton of podcasts on this,
but I wanted to personally share my experience
and how love bombing is something that I've dealt with firsthand
and I didn't realize it was happening
while I was going through it.
So let's dive right in.
If you're constantly, desperately seeking to validate yourself through people, it just
doesn't give you that proper amount of time to know how to validate yourself by yourself
and to learn how to love yourself in a way that you really could, but instead you're constantly
just trying to get that energy from other people,
and you're constantly trying to seek this external validation from other things and people.
When you have all of that love within yourself, but you're just not allowing yourself to
access it, you're not consciously allowing yourself to access yourself love when you're
continuing to seek it outside of yourself.
Because you have that potential and capability
of loving yourself so deeply,
when you actually learn how to love yourself so deeply,
you're not just gonna allow anyone into your space.
You're not just gonna allow anyone
to come into your life and hang out.
Your space is precious, it's a golden area.
And when you work on yourself and you really spend time alone,
you start to realize who's good for you and who isn't. You start to realize what friends are
worth your time and worth keeping around and what friends aren't. Because once you work on yourself
so much, you realize that people that are toxic and that are wrong for you and that aren't on the
same page as you are so draining.
And they're not who you thought they were.
It's like this fog has been lifted.
Once you truly love yourself and respect yourself enough to walk away from things that aren't
serving your growth, you'll realize that a lot of the people and situations and things you
use to tolerate are no longer tolerable.
It's actually insufferable to be around them.
And anyone that dates you or wants to be in a relationship
with you and wants to spend time with you,
they should be adding to your life in a healthy
and positive way.
It obviously should be a mutual exchange where you're
providing things, they're providing things,
and you come together and you can grow together in a healthy way.
But if you're constantly being drained by someone who's just not on your level, who's
not meeting you where you are, it's a sign to let them go.
And often, we only have that strength to let them go when we've put so much time focusing
on ourselves by ourselves without anyone else
around. And there's been so many times in my life where I've spent weeks by myself reflecting,
journaling, meditating, just doing things to give myself peace of mind. And as I spend
that quality time alone, I realized that there's certain people and things
that I was allowing into my energy and into my space that were draining the fuck out of
me.
And I was like, why was I even allowing that person to talk to me that way?
Or why was I allowing that guy to disrespect me in that way?
And sometimes we get so caught up in friendships and relationships and then we spend a year or two with someone
and we realize that we're just different after a year has passed or two years has passed.
Our contract has expired.
The energy exchange between us is just not the same anymore.
And if you're leveling up and you're working on yourself, you'll realize that a lot of people that you
allowed into your space are going to drop off the map. There's going to be a lot of people that
you're not going to be able to bring with you into your new version of you and your new era.
If you're stepping into your power and you're becoming a newer version of you, more often times
than not, you're going to lose a lot of people along the way because you're changing. You're evolving,
you're transforming and you're not going to tolerate shitty behavior, toxic behavior, you're not going to tolerate
people walking all over you, not valuing you, not seeing you for you. You're not going to allow
any of those types of situations or people into your life anymore, which is a positive thing,
but it could also be a little bit scary and weird because it's uncomfortable when change is happening.
It's supposed to feel that way. It's supposed to feel very uncomfortable when you're in the midst
of a huge transformation. Sometimes we just get so caught up in the instant gratification of being
able to call a friend at any hour, being able to call or text someone and get that instant dopamine
hit of a guy saying, let's grab drinks. I really want to see
you. I really like you. But the truth is, if you're not in a place where you truly, truly, truly love
and value who you are and you're not in a place where you've set firm boundaries with what you will
and will not tolerate, it can be so easy to get sucked into another situation. It can be so easy to
get sucked into another situation where you're
not really valuing yourself and you're not really allowing yourself to be respected or
be treated the right way because you're constantly giving your energy to people who don't
deserve it. Something really crazy that I've learned throughout my dating experiences, especially living in Manhattan, is that it's easy for a man to be nice.
It's easy for a man to be nice. It's easy for anyone to be nice. Some people aren't nice,
just by nature, by default, but it's easy to be nice. How hard is it to have a simple,
kind conversation with a human being? It's really not that difficult. And when a man treats
us nice, and he makes a little bit of an effort, and he's texting us consistently, and he tries to
make a plan, and he takes us to dinner, and he's doing and saying all the right things, it can be so
easy to just let all your walls come down, let all your boundaries drop and say, oh my God,
he's the one, he's being so nice to me, he's the nicest guy I've ever met.
Blah, blah, blah.
When it's really just bare minimum shit, it's really just the bare minimum treatment
that you're experiencing because your nice aren't you?
If you're a nice person, how hard is it for you to be kind to someone and treat them with respect?
It's really not that difficult.
And for some reason, when a guy treats us nice,
we suddenly think that this person is our soulmate
and he's the one and he's our future husband.
When meanwhile, he could be treating
10 other girls nice at the same time.
And I wanted to tell you an experience
I've had with this because it kind of ties into this idea of love bombing and
Getting caught up in this illusion that if a guy is nice, he's your soulmate, but in reality that's the fucking bare minimum
That's what you deserve
Regardless of who it is. It doesn't matter if it's a guy or your grandma,
you deserve to be treated nicely by anyone.
So if a guy is being kind to you
and making a plan with you,
don't be jumping up and down head over heels.
Oh my God, this guy is the love of my life
because he made a plan with me. That's what he should be doing.
And vice versa, it's really not that difficult to make a plan, to follow up with your plan.
It's really not that difficult to take a girl to dinner or take a guy.
It goes both ways obviously.
I don't want to just pin this on men but what I'm trying to say is
don't settle for bare minimum shit and behavior and think that
this guy is your soulmate right away. Obviously give it time maybe he is an amazing person maybe he is the
love of your life but don't base it off of just the initial dating process when you're getting to know him and he's taking you to dinner and texting you
because that is what you deserve.
And when you really spend time with yourself
and you spend time alone
and you start to work on who you are
without a man telling you your hot or beautiful
and he wants to wine and dine you,
you start to realize that that is bare minimum basic shit that anyone can provide for you.
And you need to stop settling.
And I've gone through this experience where I was shocked by the bare minimum treatment at times
because there were other guys who wouldn't even follow through to make a plan
and they'd just ghost me and ditch me and treat me like garbage. So when someone with some sort of decency and normal human behavior came in,
I thought it was this amazing grand gesture.
When in reality, it was just how I was supposed to be treated at the bare minimum all along.
Does that make sense?
So the point being, it's very easy to be nice and you should not be impressed by bare
minimum efforts because that's what you deserve and when you truly value who you are, you'll
realize that and you'll understand that and you'll be like, oh, okay, this is normal.
So I wanted to get into a story that kind of ties into this entire topic of discussion and it's a story time where a guy that I had met on
a work trip was super respectful and kind to me and he was super interested in me and
very invested and he didn't set all the right things.
And he was almost too much to the point where I was kind of weirded out because he was
telling me that he because he was telling
me that he thought he was falling in love with me and we had never even been on a date.
We had met on a work trip and I ended up going back to New York.
He lived in the UK and he was texting me a lot.
And I was responding and I thought he was attractive.
I thought we vibed.
I liked his energy from the brief moment that I had spent with him when we were away.
And I never went on a date with this guy.
I never hung out with him one-on-one.
It was very platonic until I went home.
And then he started really investing a lot of time into communicating with me.
So he was texting me a lot.
He started sending me voice notes all the time,
he started calling me, and I think we even started face timing.
But all I can say is that it was the most attention I've ever received from someone
in years, even from my boyfriends.
It was like excessive, excessive attention where it almost felt like he had no other purpose,
which is fine because at the time I think it was refreshing to have a guy that was so
invested in talking to me because I hadn't been really treated that way before.
I had never had someone want to talk to me so much and in a way it felt
very validating, it felt really good. Looking back, I'm like, wow, that was fucking nuts because
he must have had so much free time on his hands, but he was always in contact with me and it was
all green flags to me at the time. So we were texting for maybe a month or two and then it got to the point
where he was basically telling me that he wanted to be in a relationship and I was just not really
having it. I just felt like it was weird because we had never hung out in person before, one on one.
I had met him in person but we weren't at that level where I could really feel out the
vibe and obviously there's so many factors in going to actually dating someone.
So I was just kind of like, I don't know if that's really happening, but we'll see.
And he ended up flying to the US and flying to New York on short notice.
And we had been texting for a while, but I was still
talking to other guys. I was kind of doing my own thing. I was in single mode. I wasn't really
looking for a serious relationship. But he was just excessive, like to the point where he was
sending me gifts to my apartment and sending me letters.
And I don't even know.
I can't really, I would have to go back in my phone and like look at the actual
conversations, but it was just, I remember just feeling so overwhelmed.
But at the same time, I was so fascinated and curious because I was like,
maybe this is how it's supposed to be.
Maybe a guy that really likes you is really this supposed to be the success of with you. That was obviously not true, but he ends up flying to New York and I didn't know
what love bombing was at the time. Okay. I didn't know the definition of it. I didn't know what love
bombing was at all because we didn't really have TikTok and I feel like TikTok has made
us all more knowledgeable and we get all of our facts and information from
TikTok nowadays. And yes, I was familiar with the concept of being obsessive,
but I didn't know that love bombing was an actual thing that men do to
manipulate women into sleeping with them.
And I just, I guess I was a little naive.
I was a few years younger, so I just really didn't have an idea of what I was getting myself
into.
I'm just trying to lay out all the details, so you understand what frame of mind I was
in, where I was in my life.
I just was naive, And I'm going to admit
that and be super transparent about it. I really didn't know that a man was capable of
doing what I'm about to tell you. So love bombing is a manipulative tactic that is used
in the early stages of dating someone. And someone will do this to you and shower you with love and shower
you with excessive attention and be basically obsessed with you and show you that they're
like, you're one and only soulmate type of energy when you don't even know them. And it doesn't
even make sense because you're like, consciously, we haven't even spent time together. Why are you so obsessed with me?
That's what love bombing is.
It's creating this false illusion of a strong attachment and a bond to someone when it's
really just being used as a manipulative tactic to either sleep with you or get close to
you or control you.
There's different reasons why people do this.
But usually it comes down to controlling
the other person. So this guy was up my ass like in love with me and I was 100% sure that
he was in love with me and wanted to marry me. And maybe he did like me, okay, I'm going
to give him the benefit of the doubt because at the end of the day,
he didn't destroy my life.
This wasn't something that left a huge imprint
on my life at all whatsoever,
but it's just a crazy story.
He flew to New York and he asked to see me
and I was really not on the same page.
I had just gone on a date a couple nights before that.
And we were in no means committed to each other, exclusive to each other.
Keep in mind, this is the first time I'm really hanging out with him in person.
And once I met up with him, I made the mistake of sleeping with him.
And I hate saying that out loud because I regretted it, the second I did it,
I deeply, deeply, deeply regretted it because after that everything switched. The energy shifted
immensely. It felt so uncomfortable and so weird and there was just other things that happened in between that experience that I'm not going
to share because it's way too personal, but it was just mortifying. I felt so uncomfortable. I don't
know how, like it was one of those situations where it happened and I don't even know how it happened.
It was one of those situations where I didn't really want
to do it, but I caved in and did it
because I had this sense of guilt
that he flew all the way to New York to see me.
And I'm not confrontational.
I didn't have clear boundaries.
I obviously didn't respect myself enough at the time.
And I was just in such a vulnerable place in my head and thinking
about all the things he was telling me and texting me and calling me and just making such a grand
effort to see me and hang out with me that I felt this sense of like obligation to sleep with him.
And I'm sure other women have experienced this. So that's why I'm sharing it, but it's really personal
and it's, it feels a little bit humiliating because you're like, why the fuck did I do that?
With someone that isn't my boyfriend,
or isn't someone that I'm committed to, and I love.
At this point in my life, I'm only intimate
with people I'm in love with,
and I've made that rule for myself,
because I've gone through all the hookups,
I've gone through all the shitty experiences
being treated like garbage after sex,
and it's just not fun,
it's not something I wanna relive ever again in my life.
And I have those strong boundaries now
because I'm 30 years old, but at the time I was younger,
I was more naive, I was more vulnerable,
and I got myself in a situation where I felt bad.
For no reason, there was no reason for me to feel bad.
I could have kicked him out.
I could have said no.
I could have done all these things, but I didn't.
And I beat myself up over it in my head for weeks later
because after that, things just got really weird.
I never saw him again.
I told him he had to leave because I was just someone
comfortable and we never ended up him again. I told him he had to leave because I was just so uncomfortable and
we never ended up speaking again. And I realized that in that moment, I told him politely
that he needed to leave and I was just super uncomfortable. I didn't feel like I had made the right decision by sleeping with him. And
it just felt like such an intimate moment that I didn't necessarily want to share with
him, and I made a mistake. It felt like I had made a huge mistake, which looking back,
I think I had made a mistake. And that's why I'm also sharing this because
if it could help anyone feel less alone, if they've been through this, that's great. So,
I just told him he had a leave because I felt so exposed and embarrassed that I had
slept with him and we weren't dating. There was no connection in person. It just
felt weird. I didn't click with him the way I had expected to and I wasn't
attracted to him. But yet I had been intimate with him. And I felt shame. I just
felt like I had to shower 3,000 times because I felt this like weird
sense of shame and guilt and I felt like something was just off in my body and I was going
to regret it indefinitely. And for a while I did, I felt super depressed and I felt super
weird and I felt shut down and I didn't want to talk to anyone about it and I felt super weird and I felt shut down and I didn't wanna talk to anyone about it
and I never planned on speaking about it publicly ever.
Like I just wanted to forget that it ever happened.
And he never reached out really again.
He never spoke to me again after that.
He, I think he might have texted me a couple times
apologizing for making me feel uncomfortable,
however, that was the end of that.
It was one of those situations
where I knew I had been aggressively love bombed
because if all of those things he had said
were super genuine and honest and real,
I don't think he would have just backed off right away
and never spoke to me again.
It was like once he went home and he left, that was the end of that.
It was over, it was done, it was cut off, and looking back at our messages and everything
that we had exchanged in communication, I had been completely loved bombed because there
was no communication after that.
We had sex and that was it.
It was a done deal.
Even though I didn't want to have sex with him ever again because I was grossed out and I just
wanted to forget it ever happened, he made no real gesture or indication that he really cared
anymore. I think he might have been a little
bit upset because I think he knew that I didn't enjoy it, but there was no communication
after. There was no indication that he really wanted to make something happen with us.
He just kind of disappeared and fell off the map
and I unfollowed him and that was it.
And we lost touch and that was the end of that.
There was no further communication.
And in that moment, I realized that I had been love bombed.
Really, really hard.
Like this man was nonstop calling texting,
telling me how he wanted to be with me, all
these crazy things that turned into absolutely nothing.
It was like a flash in the pan situation where once we had sex, it was done.
It was completely over.
The fire burned out and it was a done deal. And that's okay, because honestly,
I could see that there was no future with him anyway.
It wasn't like I met him and I fell in love
with him on the spot and I thought we were gonna be together
and he led me on to believe that.
And I was devastated.
I really didn't want to ever see him again,
but it was the fact that I had gotten caught up
in this illusion and this fantasy that maybe it was something
for so long.
We had spoken for two months,
and in those two months I was in this fantasy bubble
in my head that he was amazing,
and he was a great guy because he was up my ass obsessed with me.
But the truth is, those were just words.
Those were just empty words and promises. And once we
got physical, it felt like all of that had died. It felt like it was gone. And it was pointless
and meaningless. And everything felt dirty. And I felt so much shame around it. And being
love bombed, when someone's telling you that you're the one and you're beautiful
and perfect and you're so different from every other woman and you're like,
God, pretty much. And you're getting fed all these amazing words and compliments on a golden
platter 24-7. And then it gets stripped away, and it dissipates overnight pretty much.
You feel ridiculous.
You feel stupid.
You feel embarrassed and humiliated
and like something shifted that was your fault.
When in reality, it wasn't your fault
that I'll begin with.
People who do this often have to be completely honest,
mental issues.
I don't want to say them the wrong way, but people who often do this have something
severely wrong with their head. I don't understand it. I don't understand the concept of
wasting so much time and energy to manipulate someone to control them just in order to
just to pull the rug out from under them and never speak to them again.
I don't really understand it and I don't know why people engage in this behavior,
but it happens so often and it's crazy to me.
I had a friend who was talking to a guy on a dating app and he was doing the same things to her,
obsessed with her, calling her, FaceTiming her, up her ass. She was convinced that they were getting married.
And he would say and do all the right things to her, was treating her right, was just making
her feel so special. At the end of the day, she felt good, she felt special with him. And then
she flew to him. And I think that was the first mistake because I truly
believe that if a man wants to see you, the first interaction you have, especially if it's
on a dating app, he should be the one flying to you. 100%. But whatever. Okay. So she made
the decision to fly to him. And after they had been intimate,
he completely shifted energies, stopped talking to her,
was being flaky with her, was being super weird with her,
and treated her like total garbage,
and she felt so at a place and so dumb,
and so embarrassed for entertaining it for so long,
because she realized that he was not the person
that he had proclaimed to be for the last few months
when they were talking
and communicating and she had wasted so much valuable time with someone who was just straight-up,
love bombing her. Another situation, my best best friend who I've known since preschool,
she met a guy on a dating app, he was also from the UK, which is really interesting. I don't know
what's going on with these UK guys, but he was from the UK, which is really interesting. I don't know what's going on with these UK guys,
but he was from the UK and
she was talking to him for a few weeks and she even told me about him and said
he was perfect, he was texting or calling her and
like so excited to talk to her every day and they were having these amazing deep conversations, whatever. I don't really know the specifics of what they talked about, but I
amazing, deep conversations, whatever. I don't really know the specifics of what they talked about,
but I remember she was telling me that he was great
and that they were planning on meeting up at some point.
And he just kept putting all plans
and being weird and flaky.
After they officially agreed to meet,
he started acting weird and distant
and being honestly fucking crazy, she sent me the
screenshot of the text messages that he was sending her.
He sounded like he was on something.
He was definitely on some sort of drug because he was being out of his mind weird and blew
her off and ditched her after weeks of saying that he wanted to see her and was treating
her right.
You get the point, he flipped a switch in an instant. And then I think he
just like moved out of the country and they never ended up meeting up. Now she has a boyfriend,
she probably could care less, but it was just one of those things where I'm like, why
would a man spend a month of his time buttering you up, making you feel like the most special
person in the world, devoting his time and energy to you, and then ripping it out from under you at the
last second. Like how much fucking time do you have on your hands? Do you have a
job? Do you have work? Like how are you and how are you doing this? How are you?
How do you have the energy and the time to be stringing a woman along like that?
It doesn't even make any sense in my head.
And I have a theory that any man who has the time to love Bommu 24-7 has no goals or
aspirations for his life that he has to attend to.
So on top of just being a total dick, he probably had a lot of free quality time on his hands
to mess with her because he was texting and calling her all fucking day.
I'm like, do you not have work?
Like what is going on?
How are you devoting so much time to fucking with someone's head?
And that was just another example that I could think of.
But this happens to people all the time. And if you don't
value yourself, tying this back into the first part of the episode, if you don't know how to set
boundaries and love yourself 1,000%, you're going to tolerate shitty things like this. And you're
going to allow things like this into your life unintentionally. Sometimes it just kind of happens
because you don't have a clear sense of boundaries in your life.
And the second I feel is something slightly off with anyone that I choose to talk to or entertain from this point forward in my life.
I'm like, it's a deal breaker. If something feels off, if something just gives me a gut feeling that you're not being truthful,
you're not being genuine, and you're just trying to
that you're not being truthful, you're not being genuine, and you're just trying to kiss my ass so you could sleep with me, it's just not going to work because I see right through
the bullshit.
There was another situation with a friend of my mom's that happened at this age like
she's in her 60s and it still happens with men who are in their 60s.
And that's a wild thought and concept to wrap your head around because you'd think by the time you're 60,
you'd stop playing games, but it happens at any age. And that's why I'm bringing this up for people who are closer to that age,
who listen to the podcast. My mom's friend was dating a guy who was obsessed with her,
met him on a dating app, they hit it off.
They went to dinner like five nights in a row.
And the one thing she did mention to me was that
he had just gotten divorced recently.
And that was an instant red flag to me.
I was like, I don't know if you should trust this guy
right off the bat because if he just got out of a divorce and it's fresh,
I don't think it's a good idea to rush into anything.
And she agreed.
And that's why she kind of kept her guard up a little bit.
And thank God she did because within a few weeks, he ghosted her.
He ditched her. He said, I don't want to do this anymore.
And he was quick to run.
And prior to that, he was quick to run and
Prior to that he was texting calling her non-stop saying, you know, you're amazing. I love you like all this crazy shit where she was
Honestly like this is too good to be true because she's much older and you know
When you're that age and you're dating you really don't have time're dating, you really don't have time for bullshit.
You really don't have time for games.
You don't want to deal with someone who's gonna love bomb you.
Yet, it happens.
And she went through it and she was really hurt.
And it just showed me that this could happen at any time
at any given period of your life.
If you do not do the inner work to set clear boundaries
and value and know who you are,
it could happen to anyone at any age at any time.
So it's just a learning lesson to really protect your piece
to know who you are and what you're gonna tolerate
and to trust your intuition and trust your gut,
because if someone hasn't seen your worst sides yet, who you are and what you're going to tolerate and to trust your intuition and trust your gut because
if someone hasn't seen your worst sides yet and it's only been a couple of weeks and they're telling you that you're the love of their life proceed with caution. It doesn't mean that this isn't someone
great because it could turn into something serious for sure and this has happened to me too,
but if someone really doesn't know anything about you and they're obsessive, it's a red flag.
If they're obsessed with who you are and they don't know you personally and they haven't
seen all sides of you, just proceed with caution.
That's my best advice.
And with that being said, I think that concludes today's episode.
Thank you as always for listening to the podcast.
If you haven't already, be sure to follow me on Instagram at lists, LYSS, and on the podcast
account at date yourself instead.
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I love you.
Thank you so much for listening and stay tuned for next Monday.