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Have you ever held back from sending that text? Talked yourself out of being excited about someone? Wondered if you were "too much"—too eager, too open, too real?
This episode is for you.
I'm fired up this week. Recent pieces in The Cut and Time are celebrating the reclaiming of "cringe" in dating—and I love that. But I've been thinking deeply about how we got here in the first place. Because the fact that we even have a word like "cringe" for someone being emotionally available? That's a problem we need to talk about.
Wanting connection isn't a flaw. It's one of the most beautifully human things about you.
In this heartfelt rant, I dig into how, in dating culture, having an open heart became something to mock—how avoidance gets rewarded, how vulnerability gets punished, and how "the ick" has become a badge of honor for walking away from someone who simply cares or is being themselves.
In this episode, I cover:
Vulnerability is scary. Rejection hurts. I know that better than anyone. But you cannot build a real relationship without being a real person first. Your openness, your earnestness, your willingness to lay your heart on the table—those qualities are what attract people who are in alignment with you. And encourage them to stay.
So yes, be "cringe." And then let's work together to retire that word entirely. Because emotional availability isn't something to be ashamed of.
If this episode resonated with you, please take a moment to rate, review, and follow/subscribe to the show. As an independent creator, it truly means the world to me.
Healing resources for anyone struggling with anxious attachment:
Keywords: dating while anxious, emotionally unavailable partner, cringe dating trend, oversharing in dating, dating apps and mental health, coming on too strong, rejection sensitivity, anxious attachment dating, online dating culture, earnestness in relationships, rewiring dating patterns, authenticity in dating, modern dating culture, vulnerability in dating, dating apps, the ick
By Chris Rackliffe5
1313 ratings
Have you ever held back from sending that text? Talked yourself out of being excited about someone? Wondered if you were "too much"—too eager, too open, too real?
This episode is for you.
I'm fired up this week. Recent pieces in The Cut and Time are celebrating the reclaiming of "cringe" in dating—and I love that. But I've been thinking deeply about how we got here in the first place. Because the fact that we even have a word like "cringe" for someone being emotionally available? That's a problem we need to talk about.
Wanting connection isn't a flaw. It's one of the most beautifully human things about you.
In this heartfelt rant, I dig into how, in dating culture, having an open heart became something to mock—how avoidance gets rewarded, how vulnerability gets punished, and how "the ick" has become a badge of honor for walking away from someone who simply cares or is being themselves.
In this episode, I cover:
Vulnerability is scary. Rejection hurts. I know that better than anyone. But you cannot build a real relationship without being a real person first. Your openness, your earnestness, your willingness to lay your heart on the table—those qualities are what attract people who are in alignment with you. And encourage them to stay.
So yes, be "cringe." And then let's work together to retire that word entirely. Because emotional availability isn't something to be ashamed of.
If this episode resonated with you, please take a moment to rate, review, and follow/subscribe to the show. As an independent creator, it truly means the world to me.
Healing resources for anyone struggling with anxious attachment:
Keywords: dating while anxious, emotionally unavailable partner, cringe dating trend, oversharing in dating, dating apps and mental health, coming on too strong, rejection sensitivity, anxious attachment dating, online dating culture, earnestness in relationships, rewiring dating patterns, authenticity in dating, modern dating culture, vulnerability in dating, dating apps, the ick

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