Dating is a tough gig. No one really wants to be in the dating pool, after all; they’d much rather be out of it, sharing a living room with a long-term partner and their shared cat or dog, settling in to the quiet comfort of life as a unit. That’s why we’re here in the first place! Still, there’s a lot to derive from the dating journey – fun, experience, learning opportunities and self-love amongst them.
Of course, wellbeing can often come at the expense of the dating journey, whether certain self-care routines fall by the wayside or you inadvertently put yourself through some unnecessary health risks. How can you maintain your physical and emotional wellbeing while navigating modern dating?
Building Confidence Through Self-Care
Self-care can never take a back-seat, even if your dating journey is demanding attention from the forefront. This means, in amongst the dates and dejection, you need to be keeping to the same healthy habits – both for your physical health, and for mental wellbeing.
With some habits to lean on, you’re able to build some serious confidence – with your baseline of rituals and processes as comfort. Sleep is an often-overlooked but crucially important part of this, without which you’ll struggle to keep your best head on.
Communication and Setting Healthy Boundaries
From your comfortable, confident baseline state, you can start to ensure your wants and needs are being met while on your dating journey. Only from a place of self-care and self-love can you properly set the agenda when it comes to matters of open communication, mutual respect and personal values. Communication is the most important thing in relationships, and should be similarly important in the dating stage – as should your autonomy.
Taking a Proactive Approach to Personal Health
Dating means spending a lot of time with prospective partners, and potentially spending some quality time with them too. Fun as this stage always is, it presents key risks with respect to sexual health. Consent and communication are key, as are preventive contraceptive measures, but nothing is as objective as testing; ensure you get a HIV test to stay informed about your health, and ensure you continue testing between partners to catch infections before they spread.
Creating Healthy Habits That Support Long-Term Wellbeing
Finally, there’s no getting around the importance of habits to your long-term wellbeing. We’ve touched upon them before as an act of self-care, but good habits go beyond that. Socially speaking, good habit-forming makes you a more reliable dating partner, and gives you the best possible chance of putting your best foot forward. Positive habits are your way of wearing your passions on your sleeve, so don’t waste them!
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