General13:41 · Jun 14

Why daters need emotional armor, not walls

Arutz ShevaRight
Translated & summarized from Arutz Sheva by baba
The story · English

The article argues that modern dating is emotionally draining, especially in later life stages when people bring more baggage and less patience. In coffee-shop dates and early conversations, small slights, distracted behavior, or awkward remarks can trigger self-doubt, but the writer says that taking every comment personally is unsustainable.

The piece says the central risk is emotional burnout. People who arrive at dates overanalyzing every text, silence, or gesture become cynical and guarded, which can leave them too exhausted to recognize a genuinely good partner when they appear. The goal, it argues, is not to build walls, but to develop "armor" that protects self-worth while keeping you open and engaged.

That armor is described as a form of "separating forces," meaning the other person's behavior usually reflects their own inner struggles, not your value. If someone is cold, stingy, or competitive, the writer says that is their issue, and the healthiest response is to notice it calmly, detach, and move on instead of absorbing it as a personal failure.

The article also urges readers to manage emotional energy like a limited budget and to keep enough reserve for the long term. It concludes that dating should feel like an opportunity to assess whether the other person deserves access to your life, not like a test you must pass. It adds that within "Project 252," this approach is said to be reinforced through tools, workshops, professional guidance, and a supportive community.

Read the original at Arutz Sheva
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