The moment I stopped lying to men was the moment I stopped lying to myself. Not “lying” in the dramatic sense. I wasn’t spinning stories or pretending to be someone I wasn’t. But I was editing. Smoothing the edges. Avoiding hard truths like: I want to get married. I want to have kids. I want a relationship that feels like a partnership, not a performance. It turns out, the clarity I’d been afraid of was the very foundation of intentional dating. And it was the shift I didn’t know I needed.
For a long time, I thought that kind of honesty would scare someone off. That it was too much, too soon. So I leaned on chill. I dated with one foot out the door. I let things happen “naturally,” which often meant watching someone else drive the dynamic while I nodded along, pretending it didn’t matter.
But here’s what I’ve learned: intentional dating—the kind that requires clarity, honesty, and self-respect—isn’t about scaring anyone off. It’s about making sure the right people stay.
Over the past several months, I’ve started dating like the kind of woman I want to be in a relationship: grounded, clear on her values, and unafraid to speak up. Here’s what that’s looked like, the questions that helped guide me, and how honesty (both with men and myself) has changed the way I date.
Featured image by Kristen Kilpatrick.

The Mindset Shift That Changed Everything
Honesty isn’t too much. It’s the most respectful thing you can offer.
For years, I tried to be agreeable above all else. I didn’t speak up when I felt disappointed. I’d laugh off a hurt feeling or brush past a red flag, convincing myself that saying something would make me seem needy or dramatic. I thought staying quiet made me easy to be around—low-maintenance, the kind of girl who didn’t care too much. But I did care. And eventually, that disconnect—between what I felt and what I expressed—started to eat away at my sense of self. It wasn’t just about the men I was dating. It was about the way I’d been trained to believe that having needs, preferences, or expectations made me less lovable.
What I’ve learned is that honesty isn’t a liability, it’s a filter. When I stopped contorting myself to fit into someone else’s idea of easy, I felt immediate relief. Saying what I wanted didn’t make dating more complicated—it made it simpler. I wasn’t left wondering what someone else was thinking because I was too busy paying attention to how I felt. There’s a quiet power in being direct, in letting someone know who you are and what you’re looking for. Not because you need a guarantee, but because clarity is kindness, for both people involved.
Intentional Dating Means Knowing What You Want
You don’t need a 10-year plan, but you do need to be honest about the direction you’re heading.
For a long time, I thought naming what I wanted would trap me in it. If I said I wanted to get married, would that mean I had to pursue it with urgency? If I admitted I wanted kids, would someone take that as a timeline instead of a truth? But as it turns out, clarity isn’t constricting—it’s liberating. Intentional dating doesn’t mean mapping out your future down to the wedding hashtag. It just means being honest with yourself about the general direction you’re heading. Once I stopped judging myself for wanting something serious, I could actually relax into the process. I could show up without the performance, without the constant need to prove I was cool with something casual when I wasn’t.
If you’re not sure what intentional dating looks like for you, it might be worth sitting with a few questions: Do I want a partner or am I just craving connection? Do I want to build a life with someone or do I just want someone to like me? Am I leading with my needs, or am I constantly scanning for theirs? There are no wrong answers, only honest ones. The point isn’t to come to a conclusion overnight, but to practice tuning in, so you can stop dating reactively and start dating with intention.
Scripts That Helped Me Speak Up (Without Oversharing)
How I learned to express what I want, instead of waiting to be chosen.
There’s a subtle panic that can creep in on a first date, especially when things feel promising. You want to say the right thing. You want to be open but not intense, honest but not overwhelming. For a while, I mistook vulnerability for oversharing. I thought if I let someone in too quickly, they’d walk away. But what I’ve realized is that communicating clearly doesn’t mean spilling everything. It means anchoring into your own values and sharing them with intention.
These days, I think of it less as drawing someone in and more as drawing a boundary: Here’s where I’m at. Can you meet me here?
I’ve found that a few well-placed phrases can change everything. They don’t have to be heavy or rehearsed—they just need to be true. I’ve said things like: “I’m dating with intention right now. How about you?” Or, “I’m not in a rush, but I’m also not dating for the sake of it.” One of my favorites is: “I’ve learned to be honest upfront—it saves everyone time.” These lines aren’t scripts to be delivered perfectly. They’re invitations: to a real conversation, to clarity, to connection. When I stopped trying to be chosen and started choosing how I wanted to show up, dating got a lot less confusing, and a lot more fun.
I Stopped Mistaking Chemistry for Compatibility
Just because it feels good doesn’t mean it’s right.
For most of my twenties, I let chemistry call the shots. If we had banter, if we stayed up all night talking, if there was that electric, inexplicable pull, I assumed it had to mean something. And sometimes it did. But more often, it meant I got swept up in the high and ignored everything else. I mistook excitement for alignment, attraction for intention. I stayed too long in situations that looked like love but lacked the foundation to grow it.
One of the gifts of intentional dating is learning to feel the difference. Compatibility feels safe, steady, mutual. It builds slowly and doesn’t hinge on how many butterflies you get in the first hour. These days, I pay closer attention to green flags: Does this person ask follow-up questions? Do they seem emotionally available, or just emotionally articulate? Are they curious about my life beyond how I make them feel? The more I’ve grounded myself in what I want in a partner, the easier it’s been to walk away from chemistry that doesn’t come with consistency.
The Most Important Relationship Is Still the One With Myself
Radical honesty with men starts with radical honesty with me.
Intentional dating has brought me closer to others, but more importantly, it’s brought me closer to myself. The more I’ve practiced showing up with clarity and self-respect, the more I’ve been able to notice when something doesn’t feel good, even if it looks good on paper.
I’ve become less interested in whether someone chooses me and more curious about how I feel in their presence. Do I shrink or soften? Do I feel more like myself, or less? That kind of self-awareness doesn’t come from a single moment of realization—it comes from paying attention again and again.
At the end of the day, dating is never just about finding someone else. It’s about choosing to stay anchored in who you are. Every time I’ve said what I meant, walked away when I wasn’t being met, or risked being misunderstood in the name of being real, I’ve built trust with myself. That’s the relationship I’m most committed to protecting. And funny enough, when you treat your own heart with that kind of care, it becomes a lot easier to recognize when someone else is ready to do the same.
Final Note: What Intentional Dating Has Taught Me
The more I’ve honored what I truly want, the less I’ve felt the need to perform. Intentional dating hasn’t made me more rigid—it’s made me softer, more curious, more open to the kind of love that doesn’t require convincing or contorting. It’s taught me that clarity is not the enemy of romance. It’s the soil where real connection grows.
The truth is, being honest won’t scare off the right person. And even if it does? That’s information worth having. Because the goal isn’t to be chosen—it’s to choose yourself first, and then see who rises to meet you.