4 March 2010
Four bad dating habits fixed
by eHarmony
Your past can tell you a lot about how you deal with relationships in the present. Here are four bad dating habits you make have picked up – read how you can correct them to make your next relationship much more fulfilling.
Print Email
Sometimes we view patterns of previous relationships as indicators of the kind of people we are, or the kind of people we fall for – and accept that those things don’t change. However, some relationship patterns are bad habits that we carry over into new ventures. The good news is that with a little self-awareness they can be fixed, giving your next relationship a much better start.
Here are four habits we’ve picked up on – what others have you encountered?
1. Getting in too deep, too quickly
Many of us will be able to identify with the heady early days of a new relationship, when sometimes you can’t get enough of each other. You are infatuated and commit to each other emotionally and sexually – often all too prematurely. This leads to ‘implicit commitments’ which can overshadow the rest of the relationship. Of course, some relationships pan out in a more measured and even way.
There’s nothing wrong with either approach, but it’s how you handle those feelings of intense emotion that will dictate the healthiness of your relationship. No couple can maintain those early intense feelings for long, and it’s the ‘come down’ that will show how you really behave in a relationship.
2. Picking up the pace
Relationships that speed through important events – such as that first kiss, or the first time you say ‘I love you’ – are often the product of insecure, overeager partners. Think about the pacing of your last few relationships; have these events all happened at a quick pace? And were you the instigator? Remember that there’s nothing wrong with taking things slowly, your partner isn’t going to vanish. And if they do, they’re not worth a moment’s thought.
3. Sticking to a bad type
You’ll often hear people say that someone is just their type, but often they have little concept of what that really is beyond the fact that they like blonde hair, or sporty people. And the fact is that by sticking to a type, we often stick to a bad type – someone who is unreliable, emotionally unstable or needy. Think about your past relationships, are these traits prevalent? If so, carefully consider your next potential partner. Chances are, if they have the traits of your previous partners, then the relationship will end up the same way.
4. Choosing partners with similar family backgrounds
Do your previous partners have similar family backgrounds? Our families shape the people we become, and if your previous partners came from broken homes, or had volatile relationships with their parents, then you should try and work out if that contributed to the problems with your relationship. Of course we can’t choose who we fall for, especially based on whether their parents were divorced or not, but you may be subconsciously choosing a certain type, and thwarting your chances at happiness.

1
bob
14 March 2010 16:33
Great – implies those of us who are blonde and sporty are bad – thanks!
2
Jayne
14 March 2010 16:37
No it doesn’t Bob!! My you are touchy! It’s just a generalisation, they could have just as easily said brown hair, musician. Geez.
3
David
14 March 2010 17:54
Very good advice and well worth taking note of. I have committed all four of these ‘bad habits’ in previous relationships. Now I am aware of this,hopefully I won’t make the same mistakes in the future.
4
Gary
14 March 2010 20:31
Yes good sound common sense advice and a really good yard stick to look back on. Top marks and well said.
5
Steve
14 March 2010 22:08
Well I haven’t committed any of these bad dating habits but still no luck, so where am I going wrong – ha ha!
6
Claire
14 March 2010 23:12
Yes I’m taking note of this too as I’ve made all of these mistakes before.
7
Christine
15 March 2010 17:00
Hi just read your article. I’m a relationship counsellor and the
advice you give is sound. Problem is I’ve been here for a while and can’t even get a reply so no fear of me making these rookie errors lol
8
Mike
17 March 2010 18:37
So, you’re a realtionship counsellor and you can’t get replies either? That gives me some hope. So far, I’m getting around 1 reply for every 20 attempts. Of those, most get as far as a few messages then we discover we’ve not got anything to talk about. The one person I did think I was really getting on with got cold feet over Xmas and decided she: “wasn’t ready for a relationship”, or however the excuse is worded on here.
BTW, Jane did you not see the smiley at the bottom of Bob’s message?
Mike
9
Wendy Harman
18 March 2010 11:44
Your luck Mike at least your getting a reply. I had one thinking we were getting on all right for a month and as the same with you not ready for a relationship or dating so if they are not then don’t get on these sites until you are ready. Was leaving but decided to give it another go..advice is good just wish people will say hi..Wendy
10
kat
8 April 2010 23:51
im starting to wonder if e harmony is going to work for me, i know its different for everyone but it sounds like as far as communicating with people that it can be few and far between. i’ll just see how it goes but im finding it a little frustrating that a lot of the profiles that im joined with dont fill in their profiles properly or show a lzy attitude to the infortaion they give, one was jst full of question marks and dots?
11
Amanda
18 April 2010 09:42
If it’s not working.. maybe you guys need to look at what you’re saying about yourselves or how it’s coming across?
as the saying goes.. you get out of life what you put in…!
12
Alana
28 December 2010 11:46
Noted the careful reverse away at point 4. from the statement that people with divorced parent’s may not be stable partners. I do take all of the advice in the spirit in which it is intended but would err on the side of caution when deciding on a partner based on their parent’s marital status. I know from experience that this has little to no bearing on one’s values, family or otherwise.
13
jo
28 December 2010 14:32
you cant choose how your family background works out . its the person you turn out to be that is important ,,
14
Claire
29 December 2010 16:58
I haven’t committed any of these mistakes either, but haven’t dated for quite a while! lol
15
sueashmore
30 December 2010 14:14
think positive and change the way you cary your bodies,the way you walk, learn to love yourselves, you will intantly become more attractive and who knows you may meet someone in tescos or at a bus stop not just on this site! happy new year and good luck!