By the time a woman reaches her mid-forties and beyond, she has usually survived some things. She has loved people who did not love her well. She has spent years becoming everyone else’s safe place while quietly wondering if she would ever fully feel safe herself.
Then one day she looks up and realizes she is back in the dating world again, or maybe she never left, and suddenly it feels like the entire landscape changed while she was busy building her life.
Now it’s apps and situationships and men who text “good morning beautiful” every day for three weeks without making an actual plan to see you. It’s fifty-year-old men saying they are “still figuring things out.” It’s people wanting wife-level loyalty while offering casual-level effort.
And honestly, I think one of the hardest parts for women over forty-five is that nobody really prepared them for how emotionally exhausting modern dating feels. These are not insecure little girls anymore. These are women who have raised children, built careers, survived divorce, buried parents, regained their confidence after betrayal, and learned how to hold entire households together emotionally and financially. They are wiser now, stronger now, and far more emotionally intelligent than they were in their twenties, yet many women feel more insecure dating at fifty than they ever did at twenty-five.
Why?
Because modern dating has a way of making even healthy people question themselves. It creates ambiguity where there should be clarity, rewards emotional unavailability, and teaches people to keep one foot out the door at all times. After enough disappointing experiences, many incredible women begin internalizing rejection that was never actually about their value in the first place.
This is exactly why I wrote Modern Dating Sucks. Not because love sucks and not because marriage is impossible, but because modern dating has convinced people to tolerate confusion that would have never been acceptable a generation ago. Nobody taught people how to date with wisdom, discernment, and emotional health. Nobody taught women that attraction without alignment creates chaos, or that loneliness can make red flags look green really fast. After forty-five, you cannot afford to waste three years “seeing where this goes” with somebody who already knows they do not want commitment.
And let me say something mature women desperately need permission to believe. You are still allowed to want romance. You are still allowed to want chemistry, passion, attraction, companionship, flirting, affection, emotional connection, and deep partnership. Somewhere along the way, many women started acting like after a certain age they should simply settle for a “nice enough” companion because they are lucky somebody wants them at all.
Absolutely not.
One of the most beautiful things about dating in midlife is that you finally have enough life experience to recognize what actually matters. You begin understanding that butterflies are not always compatibility, and that sometimes the relationships that feel the most intoxicating are actually activating your anxiety instead of bringing you peace. You begin realizing that a man who communicates consistently, follows through on his word, creates emotional safety, and intentionally integrates you into his life may not initially create the same chaotic spark as the emotionally unavailable man you spent years chasing, but he creates something much more valuable. He creates trust, stability, safety, and the possibility of real partnership.
I have personally watched women in their late forties, fifties, and sixties meet extraordinary partners after years of believing their opportunity had already passed them by. The issue is rarely that there are no good men left. The issue is that many women are still using outdated dating strategies in a completely changed dating culture.
Many women in midlife are still dating from a place of proving instead of choosing. They are over-functioning, over-giving, over-accommodating, and emotionally auditioning for relationships that should require mutual effort from the very beginning. They are spending months or years in undefined situations hoping clarity will magically appear instead of recognizing that emotionally healthy men bring clarity and security much sooner.
One of the reasons I teach women to date like a matchmaker instead of dating like a fantasy-driven romantic is because a matchmaker pays attention to patterns. A matchmaker understands that somebody can be attractive, successful, charming, spiritual, and charismatic while still being emotionally unavailable and completely unequipped to build a healthy relationship. A matchmaker watches consistency instead of getting hypnotized by potential. That shift alone changes everything because it allows women to stop personalizing other people’s dysfunction and start recognizing incompatibility much earlier.
The truth is that dating in midlife is not hopeless, but it does require a willingness to stop romanticizing inconsistency. It requires women to stop seeing themselves as leftover or undesirable because of age, divorce, blended families, body changes, or past mistakes. Some of the most magnetic women I know are women in midlife because confidence, wisdom, resilience, femininity, self-awareness, and emotional intelligence are deeply attractive qualities when fully embodied.
Modern dating may be broken in many ways, but that does not mean your love story is broken. It simply means you need a better strategy, a healthier mindset, and the courage to believe that your best chapter did not expire with your twenties.
Modern dating may be broken in many ways, but that does not mean your love story is broken. It simply means you need a better strategy, a healthier mindset, and the courage to believe that your best chapter did not expire with your twenties.
Jackie Dorman is the author of the bestseller Married in 12 Months or Less and the upcoming Modern Dating Sucks. She has successfully empowered over 1,600 singles to achieve engagement and marriage since 2020, helping them trade self-sabotage for a legacy of healthy partnerships.
Top Bigstock photo by EpicStockMedia





