Section 3: Are you ready for dating?
This question comes up a lot on our forums. Often, as soon as we enter recovery and get through that initial jackhammer of pain, we allow our minds to wander in this direction.
What is a date? It's an arrangement between (usually) two people to perform some sort of activity together. Seems pretty simple. So what is dating? Ah, there's a label. We attach connotations to dating that mean different things to different people.
For the purposes of this handbook, I'll make a very loose definition of dating. It's when there's some romantic or sexual or even emotional connection attached to a date. It can apply to anything that we would not do with anyone other than our partner in an exclusive relationship.
A date can be as simple as setting aside time to make a phone call or a series of text messages. Dates don't require physical contact or sexual expression. In fact, two people can do something together, and it may be a date to one of them and not a date to the other one.
For example, a man and a woman can go to a baseball game together. For him, it's not a date - he simply enjoys baseball and enjoys her company. He wouldn't hide this from his wife, nor would he cross any emotional or physical lines during this activity. For her, it's a date - she may want to share complaints about her husband, or she may be hoping the night ends with a couple of hours at a motel. Infidelity began, for her, the minute she contemplated or embarked upon this date. For him, it's more a matter of recognizing and avoiding danger and infidelity may not ever take place in any form.
We can certainly reverse the sexes in that example.
The point I'm trying to make here is that a dating arrangement is in your own mind and may take many forms.
So, are you ready for dating? Yes, you are, as soon as you feel like you want to share any emotional or physical connection. The question is in what form.
Yes, you're ready for dating if you ask yourself or others if you're ready for dating. Should you be dating? That's a better question.
Dating, then, needs to be defined more precisely. What is it that you want to share on this date? What emotional needs are you looking to satisfy? What physical needs are you looking to satisfy? Is this an exclusive arrangement?
Most importantly, are you being honest with yourself and with the person you're dating?
If you're offering an exclusive romantic relationship and you're still hoping for reconciliation with your spouse, you are not being honest.
However, and here's where many may disagree with me, if you are in recovery - meaning very specifically that the exclusive nature of your relationship or former relationship is broken - then you have to decide for yourself what is appropriate.
This is not an easy determination. In fact, you will make plenty of mistakes. You have to decide for yourself (or ask others) if you can be honest with prospective dates. You have to decide how to handle your desires and needs.
Jumping into a committed relationship when you're still hoping for reconciliation is hard to justify. Someone who does this is undoubtedly having difficulty with the self-analysis required for healthy dating. With time and introspection, you become more accurate in assessing dating questions.
However, I doubt that anyone is capable of being completely honest about all these questions. No two people enter a dating relationship accurately able to answer every question about needs and desires. I'm not writing this to give you permission to lie about anything, or give you an easy excuse for making mistakes and hurting either yourself or someone else. I'm writing it to underline that there are no easy answers when it comes to introspection and dating.
Should you be dating? If you can define your needs and your desires and accurately and effectively communicate them with prospective partners.
My best relationship prior to meeting my wife was with a woman who was in a very similar stage of the healing process. We bonded by talking a lot about our marriages, which is taboo in a post-recovery relationship. We were long-distance, and our relationship consisted of intense, fun weekends. We were faithful to each other, loved each other, but both knew after the initial "wow, it's wonderful to have this" stage that there was no way to merge our lives. We were simply in different places in life. So it ended, and we genuinely wish each other well.
We were both ready to date. And we were honest with each other, to the best of our abilities. Neither of us were completely healed, and we understood that healing would probably take us in different directions.
The cliche here is that "broken attracts broken." There are no rules. I don't think this cliche works - attraction is mostly independent from internal development. But what we seek and need from a relationship while we're healing is very different from what we seek and need once we're there.