I’ve seen this more times than I can count.
A single adult wants marriage. They are willing to date. They want to build something steady. They’re trying to be thoughtful and faithful and emotionally mature about it.
And yet dating still feels repetitive and unproductive. Not because there aren’t people around or they are not going on dates. It’s more like something inside keeps saying, “Not yet. Not this person. Wait. Make sure.”
That voice can sound wise. Sometimes it even sounds spiritual. But it often produces the same results: hesitation, endless evaluating, and a quiet kind of stuckness that turns weeks into months and months into years.
Here are three patterns I see again and again among singles who date that keep them from moving forward.
1) The “grass is greener” reflex
This one rarely shows up as arrogance. It shows up as scanning or justified by the idea of “not settling” (which is a good idea, if you understand what “settling” means).
You can be sitting across from a genuinely good person—kind, stable, interested in you—and still find your mind drifting to the possibilities: What if there’s someone better? What if I commit and regret it? What if I’m settling?
Of course we should be careful. Standards matter. Compatibility matters. But there’s a difference between discernment and perpetual comparison.
The “grass is greener” mindset trains your brain to distrust what’s right in front of you. It turns dating into an upgrade hunt. It also keeps you emotionally half-out of every relationship, because you’re always holding space for an imagined future option.
Here’s what makes it so tricky: the “better” person is usually a mirage. People look perfect at a distance. They look perfect in your head. They look perfect on an app. Real life is different. Real people are different.
A healthier question than “Is this the best person for me?” might be: Is this a good person with shared values, strong character, and enough compatibility to build something real?
And if you don’t know yet, that’s fine. Dating is information. It’s how you learn what’s actually true, not what you fear might be true (or hope to be true).
But if your default setting is always “maybe someone better,” you can spend your whole life auditioning instead of choosing.
2) The soulmate myth
I know this one sounds romantic. It can even sound faithful: “There’s one person meant for me, and I just need to find them.”
But in practice, it often makes people fragile. Unfortunately, even people who proclaim to NOT believe in soul mates date as if they do. They are too quick to shut down a person when they find a single flaw or don’t have overwhelming attraction on day one.
If you believe there’s exactly one “right” person out there, or date as if you do, then dating becomes high-stakes in a way it was never meant to be. Every choice feels like the choice. Every no feels permanent. Every breakup feels like you just ruined your future. People start overthinking everything because the cost of being wrong feels unbearable. In many cases, this leads to ending potentially great relationships before you ever gave them a chance.
President Spencer W. Kimball said it plainly: soulmates are “fiction and an illusion.” That statement helps put the responsibility where it belongs, with you and your choices and your character.
Scott Stanley (a relationship researcher) describes how people can get trapped trying to locate “the best,” and how that mindset often backfires. He stated:
“If you’re looking for the best, this is a recipe for complete misery… research shows that people who think this way are less likely to be happy with their eventual choices than those who think more in terms of finding a good match… you can also search for so long and so thoroughly that you pass up a great match or never settle down…”
That matches what I see. Some singles are trying to optimize their way into marriage, not understanding that great marriages are built not entered into. They approach marriage like a major purchase: compare features, keep options open, don’t commit until you’re completely certain you’ve found the top model and the best deal.
But marriage isn’t something you buy. It’s something you build.
A soulmate isn’t found like buried treasure. It’s formed over time through commitment, repair, forgiveness, and a shared life of relationship investment. Two people become “the one” to each other because they decide to be over time.
None of this means “marry anyone.” It means stop treating the idea of “the one perfect person” as the gate you must pass through before you’re allowed to move forward.
3) Chemistry as the main filter
This one might be the most common.
People say it plainly: “I just didn’t feel it.” Or they say it in a more spiritual tone: “I didn’t get a confirmation.”
Let me be careful here. Attraction matters. It’s not wrong to want it. It’s not wrong to notice it. Some relationships really do begin with an obvious spark.
But “chemistry” is a messy signal. Sometimes it reflects genuine connection. Other times it reflects novelty, anxiety, or your nervous system reacting to someone hard to read. Some people interpret calm as “boring” when it’s actually safety. Some people interpret unpredictability as “exciting” when it’s actually stress. Sometimes it is simply sexual attraction.
Here’s the point: chemistry can be a bonus, but it’s a terrible foundation.
Also, chemistry isn’t always instant. Sometimes it grows after a few conversations. Sometimes it grows as trust grows. Sometimes it grows after you see someone handle life with maturity—how they treat people, how they respond to disappointment, how they manage responsibility. I’ve seen “meh” turn into “wow” plenty of times. I’ve also seen “wow” turn into “why did I ignore all the obvious problems?”
So no, you don’t need butterflies to say yes to a second date. You just need enough good to want to learn a little more.
If you only date people who create immediate fireworks, you’ll filter out a lot of stable, attractive options with strong character. Then you’ll wonder why dating feels so repetitive and unproductive.
The bigger invitation: stop waiting for perfect clarity
One of the easiest ways to stay stuck is to wait for total certainty before you act. Some singles want a feeling so clear that it removes all risk. They want dating to feel safe before they step into it.
But most of the time, clarity grows with movement. Confidence grows with practice. Discernment grows by doing the thing, not by endlessly thinking about the thing.
So here’s a very practical challenge:
For the next two weeks, do one of these:
- Ask someone out who seems solid, even if you don’t feel fireworks yet, or
- Say yes to a date you’d normally dismiss too quickly.
Go on the date without forcing a decision. You’re not signing paperwork. You’re gathering information.
Afterward, ask questions that actually matter:
- Do I respect this person’s character?
- Do I enjoy my time with them?
- Could attraction grow as familiarity and trust grow?
Then repeat.
Some people don’t need more intensity. They need reps. Dating is a skill. Choosing well is a skill. You build both by practicing in real life.
And if you’re worried about “wasting time,” I’ll say this: the bigger waste is letting fear turn your life into waiting.
You don’t have to be reckless. You just have to be moving.
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