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Nicole interviews Laurie Berssack MSW of Carolina's Matchmaker, about how matchmaking can help people (especially post-divorce) rebuild confidence, get off the apps, and date with more intention. The conversation blends practical dating advice with Nicole’s legal lens on separation/divorce realities and how dating can complicate a case even when it’s technically allowed.
Key takeaways
0) The hardest part of matchmaking: unrealistic expectations
Lori says many clients come in looking for a “perfect robot” partner—hyper-specific, unrealistic ideals—rather than focusing on the foundational traits that actually make relationships work. When people cling to perfection, they often stay single.
0) “Foundations” matter more than the wish list
Lori’s core matching foundations include:
0) “Second partner” advice: don’t overcorrect
They discuss how many people pursue the opposite of their ex and swing too far. Lori recommends a “rebuild” phase: therapy/self-work, self-care, releasing bitterness, and owning your part in what happened. A major readiness red flag is anger/resentment with no self-reflection.
Lori’s core advice:
0) Dating “rules” and norms (with a lively debate)
10) Love bombing + early red flags
They define love bombing as “relationship-speeding” behavior (over-texting, big future plans, intense gestures early). Lori’s advice:
0) Body/fitness questions + honesty in photos
They discuss the reality that people use outdated/edited photos. Lori supports stating preferences like “fit,” but warns against requests like “send more pics” early—she frames that as a red flag and notes modern risks (including AI misuse). Her solution: professional, current photos (including full-length) so there’s no bait-and-switch.
0) Rapid-fire ending: the “one rule”
Lori’s #1 rule for choosing a partner: pick someone you feel safe with (physically, emotionally, financially) and attracted to—she says successful couples describe that “safe + attracted” gut feeling.
By Nicole SodomaNicole interviews Laurie Berssack MSW of Carolina's Matchmaker, about how matchmaking can help people (especially post-divorce) rebuild confidence, get off the apps, and date with more intention. The conversation blends practical dating advice with Nicole’s legal lens on separation/divorce realities and how dating can complicate a case even when it’s technically allowed.
Key takeaways
0) The hardest part of matchmaking: unrealistic expectations
Lori says many clients come in looking for a “perfect robot” partner—hyper-specific, unrealistic ideals—rather than focusing on the foundational traits that actually make relationships work. When people cling to perfection, they often stay single.
0) “Foundations” matter more than the wish list
Lori’s core matching foundations include:
0) “Second partner” advice: don’t overcorrect
They discuss how many people pursue the opposite of their ex and swing too far. Lori recommends a “rebuild” phase: therapy/self-work, self-care, releasing bitterness, and owning your part in what happened. A major readiness red flag is anger/resentment with no self-reflection.
Lori’s core advice:
0) Dating “rules” and norms (with a lively debate)
10) Love bombing + early red flags
They define love bombing as “relationship-speeding” behavior (over-texting, big future plans, intense gestures early). Lori’s advice:
0) Body/fitness questions + honesty in photos
They discuss the reality that people use outdated/edited photos. Lori supports stating preferences like “fit,” but warns against requests like “send more pics” early—she frames that as a red flag and notes modern risks (including AI misuse). Her solution: professional, current photos (including full-length) so there’s no bait-and-switch.
0) Rapid-fire ending: the “one rule”
Lori’s #1 rule for choosing a partner: pick someone you feel safe with (physically, emotionally, financially) and attracted to—she says successful couples describe that “safe + attracted” gut feeling.