You meet someone new, you hit it off, and the journey begins. Getting to know each other and finding out what makes each person tick. Retelling some past hurts, opening healed wounds and starting the process. But, how do you go about scaling the walls of trust?
Nobody warned you it was going to be this hard. Your parents did not tell you. Your friends glossed over it. The movies sold you grand gestures and perfectly timed rain. You figured it out the same way everyone does: by getting burned, building walls, and dragging the wreckage of old relationships into every new one you try to start.
Here is the uncomfortable truth: it does not get easier with age. It does not get easier with experience. The game just changes shape.
You are forty-three years old. You have been through a divorce, a few near-misses, and more first dates than you can count. You sit across from someone at dinner, and you are already scanning for red flags before the second glass of wine arrives. That is not wisdom. That is scar tissue.
The Baggage We Never Check
Every teenager/adult who has loved and lost is carrying something. Past hurts do not heal cleanly. They calcify. You tell yourself you are over your ex, but you flinch when a new partner takes a phone call in another room. The name that keeps appearing in their notifications does not go unnoticed. Deep down, some part of you is already bracing for the moment this one falls apart, too.
This is not a character flaw. It is a learned response. The problem is that learned responses are almost impossible to turn off consciously. You cannot logic your way out of a conditioned fear. The brain does not know the difference between a real threat and a pattern it once associated with pain. Protection kicks in whether you want it to or not.
The guarded heart is not cold. Exhaustion built those walls. It has been through enough that openness feels less like vulnerability and more like standing in front of traffic with your eyes closed.
What Social Media Did to Trust
Ten years ago, cheating required effort. Secrecy, logistics, time. Today it requires a few swipes and a private inbox. Instagram DMs, Snapchat, WhatsApp, and a dozen other platforms have turned infidelity into something almost frictionless. This is not a moral panic. The problem is structural.
Social media did not create the impulse to stray. But it turned that impulse into something instantly actionable. Someone is always available. A comment thread, a reaction, a message that starts harmless and migrates somewhere else. And because it all happens on a screen, it is easier to rationalize. Just talking. Just liking a photo. Just nothing.
The gray zones have multiplied. Emotional affairs that never become physical. Online flirtations are defended as friendships. A whole ecosystem of connection that exists just outside the edges of a committed relationship, and everyone decides for themselves where the line is. So we enter relationships with our phones face down and our trust already running on empty. That is the baseline now.
And it is not just cheating. Social media is doing something more corrosive than infidelity. It is a manufacturing comparison. You scroll past someone’s highlights reel and suddenly, your actual life, your actual partner, your actual relationship feels inadequate. The perfectly curated couple on your feed is not showing you their arguments or their silences or the nights they went to bed without speaking. You are comparing your reality to their fiction. And we do this compulsively, every day, and wonder why nothing feels like enough.
Overthinking Is Not a Personality Trait
Somewhere along the line, analysis became a substitute for trust. If you can figure out what is really going on, you can stay ahead of the pain. So you read into the tone of a text. You track response times. You interpret silence as a signal. You run every interaction through a filter of what it might mean rather than what it probably is.
Overthinking is not stupidity. It is a trauma response. When someone has blindsided you before, your nervous system files that away. The next time things feel slightly off, it starts working overtime. The cruelty of it is that the overthinking itself damages the relationship. You pull away to protect yourself. Your partner feels the distance and pulls back too. You interpret that withdrawal as confirmation of whatever fear triggered the spiral, and you are both locked inside a dynamic that neither of you fully understands.
Nobody Gets Out Unscathed
Here is what experience actually teaches you about dating: everyone is walking around with some version of this. The confident person across from you who seems completely at ease has their own version of guarded. Their own version of scan and assess. Their own story behind why they went quiet when a certain topic came up.
The difference between people who manage to build something real and those who do not is not the absence of damage. It is the willingness to be honest about it. Not to weaponize it, not to wear it as a shield, but to put it on the table at some point and say: this is what happened, this is what it left behind, and I am working on it.
That kind of honesty is getting harder to come by. Because we live in an age where everyone is performing their best version of themselves online, the gap between who we present and who we actually are keeps widening. Authenticity is disappearing from dating the same way it is disappearing from social media. We are all out here presenting a highlight reel and wondering why nobody connects with the real thing.
Dating has always been hard. It has always involved risk, disappointment, fear, and the occasional catastrophic loss of faith in human beings. But somewhere in the last decade, the tools we built to connect also became the tools most likely to destroy what we are trying to build. That tension is not going anywhere. Pretending otherwise does not make you optimistic. It just makes you underprepared.
