Posted on

Never say never when it comes to love

I recently received this comment from a post I did on Navigating the dating scene. “I have not gone on a date in over 20 years. I am over 40 but not 50. … Regardless of what happens in life with myself or outside me, never, never will I date again. NEVER!”

I get it. Like I’ve said before, dating can be really crappy most of the time. I think part of the reason is because society has changed so drastically. I also think that it’s harder when you’re very clear on who you are and what you want — accepting poor treatment and no manners becomes intolerable.

My response to this comment is the same thing I’ll say to you, I encourage you to stay open to the possibilities. Yes, dating is often crappy, but not always. (I’ve been on a few good ones in the last year.) There are beautiful experiences and people out there, and I don’t want you to miss out on that because of the negative ones.

Love by the numbers

I’ve said it before, and I’ll say it again — I believe that we were made to love and be loved by another person. We were created for relationships. I write all the time about different kinds of relationships, but most of us are seeking that deep, divine connection that only comes in the form of a romantic union. Why do you think that the most asked questions of therapists and spiritual practitioners are about love and money? The COVID-19 lockdowns really brought this to the forefront, in my opinion and observation. It was reported that dating app signups skyrocketed in the beginning of the lockdowns.

Pre-lockdown, Researcher Gunny Scarfo writing for Fox News in 2019 shared the findings of her research. “Unfortunately, according to a survey of 692 people across the country and dozens of interviews my research partner and I conducted last year [in 2018], many Americans feel isolated — surrounded by people in their lives but feeling that no one truly sees them … By the numbers, our findings are chilling,” she wrote.

“Nearly 45% of Americans reported dreaming of deep emotional connections with others, only to wake up with nobody in their real lives with whom to share those kinds of connections. Almost 30% report that they are unsatisfied with their ability to open up to people they enjoy being around,” she shared. Sadder still, 8% of respondents reported that they do not have a single close friend.

I encounter people all the time who have been severely hurt by others or have witnessed horrific behavior modeling by married people. These things have caused them to swear off commitment and relationships altogether. They’ve built fortified, unsalable walls with no way for a good person to enter into their lives and hearts. I can understand that.

Fear not

It appears to me that the root cause of all this resistance and wall building is quite simply fear. The fear of getting hurt can cause us to do all kinds of things to protect ourselves. There’s nothing wrong with protecting your kingdom — your body, energy and emotions. However, when you shut out all possibilities of allowing anyone to get close to you, that becomes a problem.

I’ve been accused before of having walls up. Every castle has one, and I see no problem with it — as long as there’s also a gate to allow the right people inside. This wall is expressed as boundaries. I recently wrote about how to set and enforce them, if you want to know more.

Melody Beattie seems to agree with me. In her book, The Language of Letting Go, she wrote, “Fear is at the core of codependency. It can motivate us to control situations or neglect ourselves.”

In case you’re wondering, shutting yourself off from dating for years is both controlling and neglecting yourself. I’m all for taking dating breaks especially after a disappointing breakup. However, those should only last a few months — not decades. Sometimes, you need to do the intense, internal work that requires you to shut yourself off from the rest of the world. It happens, but again, it shouldn’t last decades.

In his book, Pulling Your Own Strings, Dr. Wayne Dyer explained that banishing fear starts with taking action. “Doing, the antidote to fear and most self-debilitating behavior, is shunned by most victims who operate from weakness,” he wrote. “If you refuse to give yourself the necessary experiences, you are saying to yourself, ‘I refuse to know.’ And refusing to know will make you weak and assure your victimization by others.”

I don’t care what anyone says … Love is not reserved for only the young. When I was in graduate school studying Clinical Mental Health Counseling in the Oldest Town in Texas, there was a news report of a local book author who married her high school sweetheart at the church a block from my house. Both of them had their spouses pass away, and they found each other late in life — I think they were in their 80s. My aunt found love after my uncle died and got married for the second time when she was in her late 60s. Both couples seem very happy. Had they allowed themselves to dwell on their losses and stay in fearful, negative thinking, they would be in a state of constant depression and all alone.

Fear is the lowest, most negative energy there is. Faith, on the other hand, is a high, positive energy. Love, joy, peace and gratitude are also high, positive energies. If you’ve followed my work for the last couple of years, you know that I’m big on practicing gratitude daily and wrote a whole book showing you how to do it. Practicing gratitude — in every situation — has changed my life and my mindset. It can do the same for you.

Control your own mind

I firmly believe that you have to be in a positive mindset to attract the positive things you want to see in life. Great things can happen to you at any time. However, if you’re not in the right frame of mind, you may not be able to receive them. I’ve had something really wonderful happen to me recently. I always believed it could happen, but I was in total shock for an entire day when it actually did — even though I was positive, ready and grateful.

“If your goal is to experience more joy, you have to change your mental diet,” wrote Tommy Newberry in The 4:8 Principle. “If you are serious about making progress in this area, you must alter the exposures that trigger negativity in the first place.”

I absolutely agree with him. Sometimes, you have to take a break from broadcast media, social media, social gatherings and from negative people, in general. I know that I have to put myself in time out when certain people are draining my energy and causing me to think negatively about myself or life as a whole.

“Negative people poison your outlook, exhaust your energy and chip away at your potential for joy … become alert to who is lifting you up and who is pulling you down. This simple recognition raises your guard and reduces the spread of negative attitudes,” Newberry wrote.

T. Harv Eker reminds us in his book Secrets of the Millionaire Mind what psychology has already proven. “Thoughts lead to feelings. Feelings lead to actions. Actions lead to results … You were taught how to think and act when it comes to money [I will add: love, life and everything]. These teachings become your conditioning which becomes automatic responses that run you for the rest of your life. Unless, of course, you intercede and revise your mind’s … files.”

He’s talking about money, but this advice applies to love and every other part of life. We must control our own minds. I wrote a chapter about it in my first book and still plan to write an entire book about it. I can tell you that manifesting is real. I do it all the time and have done it my whole life. It doesn’t always happen exactly when I expect it to or how I expect it, but it does happen and sometimes exactly the way I wanted, as quickly as I wanted it. That only comes from being in a positive, receptive mindset. The opposite is also true. When you think and speak negatively, that’s exactly what you get.

A first date technique

Newberry offers an interesting technique that can be used any time you have to be around a negative person, but it could be especially useful for going out on first dates. He calls it the “Oreo Cookie Technique,” and it basically goes like this:

  • Before going out, give yourself ultra-positive exposures. He recommends exercising vigorously, talking with a positive friend, meditating, praying or reading something inspiring.
  • Go into the date with “a full tank of joy.”
  • Follow the encounter with some “extraordinarily positive inputs.” Do something that makes you feel good.

I would advise you not to dive head-first in a tub of ice cream or bottle of alcohol — a really bad date or being stood up can make this option tempting, but try to resist because the consequences could be pretty bad. No person is worth getting fat or having a hangover.

There’s a lot in life we can’t control, but the one thing we do have power over is ourselves. We can control our thinking, stop negative thoughts in their tracks and replace them with positive ones. We can also practice loving ourselves first in a healthy way so that we are more able to love someone else.

We can let go of past disappointments and fear of future failures and open ourselves up to dating again. I’m not suggesting you jump into a relationship with anyone, but I am suggesting that you be open to having new dating experiences. Make them as fun as you can for yourself. Find something to feel good about or just laugh at anything that doesn’t go according to plan. When you have a bad date, dust yourself off, and get back out there. Live in the moment and enjoy the good dates … They do happen even if you don’t end up living happily ever after with the person. The memories of those good dates will carry you through until the next one.

Do you have a question about life that you want Senée to answer? Leave it in the comments or email it to PrincessGuide@BecomingPublishing.com.

Senée Seale is a book author, mental health professional and life guide passionate about helping people create positive changes in their lives. Are you ready to start attracting positive things into your life through practicing daily affirmations? Get your free copy of The Princes Guide to Gratitude Affirmations. If you’d like to work directly with Senée, she’s accepting new clients.

Posted on

Navigating the dating scene — How can I know if I’m dealing with a good man/woman?

I was recently contacted by a man who said he was using a dating app to meet women, and he told me about a couple of them who he went out with. One, basically asked him to marry her on their second date, and another one spent two to three hours on the first date dumping all her problems on him while drinking a bottle of wine by herself, insulted him for not sharing anything about himself then asked him if he would be interested in having sex with her in her car. (He said no.) He asked me how can he know when he’s met a good woman.

“Good” is a relative term, in my opinion — meaning that each person has their own, different definition. Only you know what is good for you. Like I’m always saying and writing about … You have to go to the kingdom within and know yourself first, then you will know what is best for you. That isn’t something someone outside yourself can tell you. They may be able to point some things out for you, but you are the one who makes the ultimate decision.

The only way you can truly know if someone is a good person is to spend time in their presence. You have to observe their actions over time.

Divine/royal people vs. basic people

Dating is incredibly confusing today. You need more than a map, compass and telescope to get through these waters.

People aren’t always honest about their intentions, and months down the road you can find out that whatever it is that you are looking for, they don’t want it. I really appreciate the ones who say upfront that they aren’t a match. It saves a lot of time, a broken heart and disappointed spirit.

I mentioned Basic Broads/Basic Boys recently in a blog post about not allowing another person to define your worth. These types of people are often envious of anyone who radiates the internal beauty that only comes from doing the intense, internal work that most people are not willing to do themselves. In my experience and observation, they often:

  • Cause drama.
  • Make things unnecessarily difficult on other people.
  • Wait until the last minute to do things.
  • Have no regard for others or making things inconvenient for them.
  • Seek revenge and make things unnecessarily difficult for those they think wronged them.
  • Stalk others online or spread untrue rumors about people.
  • Do not do the right thing in a situation.

Unfortunately, it appears that many people on this planet are basic people wearing paper crowns pretending to be royal and demanding royal treatment. Let me tell you the qualities of a royal person. Royal/divine people:

Senee Seale The Princess Guide
  • Operate from high, royal, moral character and integrity.
  • Show love to others, even in the face of rejection.
  • Love themselves first and are equipped to love others fully while setting and enforcing appropriate boundaries.
  • Are grateful for everything that happens to them — good and bad.
  • Learn their lessons in life and take responsibility for their mistakes.
  • Consciously stay in positive energy.
  • Are easy to be with — being in their presence makes others feel good, accepted and worthy.
  • Know who they are and hold themselves to a higher standard.
  • Do not seek revenge or to hurt others — they know every person will get back to them what they put out into the world.

One of my spiritual girlfriends is always calling me “queen” and “empress” — The divine in her recognizes the divine in me, and vice versa. She recently said to me, “He thought you were going to be like all the other women on the dating site. No, you met a Divine Feminine. We’re spread all over. So, you never know where you’re going to meet us.”

Good people are everywhere. I believe it’s easier to recognize royal/divine people when you’re in the same room with them. With today’s technology, people can fool you. An attorney friend of mine used to tell me when I started the online dating thing years ago, “Trust, but verify.” If a person can prove they are who they say they are, then they’re a good person.

What is a quality person?

I go back to the post I wrote recently on How to recognize a quality person. As I mentioned in that post, no one is perfect. However, a quality person will have many or all of these characteristics:

  • Integrity.
  • Ambition.
  • Honesty.
  • Loyalty.
  • Self-sacrifice.
  • Self-control.
  • Accountability.
  • Always forgiving/Asks for forgiveness.
  • Makes things right.
  • Is generous with time, money and energy.
  • Has consistent positive actions and good intentions.

I’m always saying it, but it’s incredibly important to always be the best version of yourself — regardless of how others act. You’ll thank yourself for it. If the saying is true that “Like attracts like,” then by focusing on being a quality person yourself, you will eventually attract quality people.

Get clear on what you really want

I wrote in 2020 about How to get clear on what you want in life. You must know your core values, character, ambition, wants and desires. Once you determine that, you need to look for someone who has similar characteristics. However, you don’t want to be with someone who is exactly like you. It’s important to share things in common like interests, experiences, goals and ambition level, but the most important quality you should look for is shared core values. When those align, everything else is basically insignificant — or the small stiff that you shouldn’t sweat.

As I explained in the post on getting clear about what you really want, I’m big on list making because it combines thinking, writing and reading. These three things are known in Cognitive Psychology to reinforce learning. So, I encourage you to make a list of all the negative things you’ve experienced in past relationships. This man’s list could look something like this:

I don’t want a partner who …

  • Dumps all her problem on me on the first date.
  • Insults me without a good reason.
  • Has so much baggage that she can’t have a friendly conversation without mentioning it.
  • Asks me to get intimate with her after insulting me or the first time she meets me.
  • Is afraid to be alone.
  • Isn’t independent and can’t handle her own problems (or seek professional help to handle them).

Now, you know I don’t believe in focusing on the negative aspects of anything. So, after you make your negative list, I want you to make a positive list based on this one. Turn all the negatives into a positive so that you can easily and clearly recognize the behaviors and treatment you’re seeking. This man’s list could look something like this:

The person I’m seeking in my life will …

  • Be fun to be around and make me feel heard and appreciated.
  • Act interested in my life, and will not intentionally insult me.
  • Have some baggage (like everyone), but will only talk about it in positive terms when asked and focus on solutions and the lessons she’s learned from them.
  • Act like a lady, allow me to be the masculine and pursue her.
  • Not be afraid to be alone.
  • Be independent and can handle her own problems (or seek professional help to handle them).
  • Want to be a partner with me and share a balance of good and bad — not just one or the other.

Once you have your list, then you will be able to easily and quickly identify the person who is best for you. Be honest with yourself when you make it. Realize that no person can meet all your needs, but you can find someone who will fill the majority.

There is not a perfect person on this planet. However, there is someone out there who is perfect for you. You must trust your intuition and discernment when it come to finding a partner. Like my best friend’s friend used to say, “If it don’t feel right, it ain’t right.” Trust your feelings and listen to yourself — you know, deep down inside, what and who is best for you. You’re so powerful. Trust that royal kingdom within you to give you all the answers you need.

Do you have a question about life that you want Senée to answer? Leave it in the comments or email it to PrincessGuide@BecomingPublishing.com.

Senée Seale is a book author, mental health professional and life guide passionate about helping people create positive changes in their lives. Are you ready to start attracting positive things into your life through practicing daily affirmations? Get your free copy of The Princes Guide to Gratitude Affirmations. If you’d like to work directly with Senée, she’s accepting new clients.