When You Want Love but Cannot Bear Dating

You meet someone you like. You want to know whether they are taken. How would you find out? Would you ask directly?

Partnered people casually reveal their relationship status by mentioning their significant other in conversation. But single people usually do not advertise that they are single. Just because someone is not in a relationship, it does not necessarily mean they are looking for one. They might be recovering from a recent breakup or experiencing years of dating fatigue.

It can feel complicated to share your relationship status when you are single but not truly available.

It took years for me to acknowledge that I am not open to dating. It is a tricky position to be in, because I’m still dreaming of a lifelong partnership. But I am totally burned out by the conventions of modern dating, so I do not consider myself “available” in that sense.

After I broke up with my last longterm boyfriend, I signed up for all the dating apps I could find. I was not much of a dater before I met my ex, so I was ignorant of the fundamentals of choosing a good partner. So I went on casual dates through the apps for years, as a new thing to try, to occupy my weekends, and to gather data on how dating works.

The result? I am still single. I was disappointed, condescended to, and ghosted time after time. When I met someone I liked and felt hopeful again, the outcome was always the same.

My biggest takeaway: Single men prefer freedom and independence over commitment. They use dating apps for entertainment rather than for finding a partner. Relationships feel more like a convenience, a fun pastime, not something deeper than a weekend activity.

Most people in my age group are no longer pursuing marriage or starting families. To many, having a lifelong partner or raising children is a chore that adds little value to an already fulfilling life. There are countless enjoyable things to do that seem more appealing than being tied down by a nagging spouse and crying kids.

Even so, I still believe I can have a family someday with someone who truly loves me, even if most of my generation does not share that vision. These contradictions make it difficult to explain where I stand in dating. There is no easy way to say that I want a partner, someone to talk to and spend time with, yet have lost faith in the dating world.

How one friendship quietly faded away

I’d like to introduce Sarah—once a good friend of mine.

You’d probably like her if you met her. Wide-eyed and genuine. A little shy at first, but she’d warm up quicker than you’d expect.

We hit it off the moment we discovered we were the same age and equally passionate about reading. We’d spend hours over coffee or ice cream talking about the books we’d read. I was amazed that there wasn’t a single title on my shelf she hadn’t already read.

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All Jane Austen novels ranked

Bookish romances can be more satisfying than real-life dating 😂
No author gives me that joy quite like Jane Austen. Ever since I took a university course on her works, she’s become one of my absolute favourites—right alongside L.M. Montgomery.
To celebrate the 250th anniversary of Austen’s birth, and in anticipation of all the Austenite events to come, I decided to rank all six of her novels. Here’s my personal list:

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My Top 3 Favourite Memoirs

I love reading memoirs. They’re readable, relatable and accessible. If I were to write a book of my own, it would probably be some kind of memoir that tells a personal story.

On that note, I want to share three of the best memoirs I’ve ever read. These books made me fall in love with the genre and helped me feel deeply connected to people who’ve reached the top of their fields. That said, memoirs like these can give the impression that only “remarkable” people get to write about their lives. I’d love to explore memoirs by (relatively) ordinary people in another post—but let’s start here.

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