DiscoverThe Wrong OnesData Points & Dealbreakers: What I Learned From a One-Month Situationship
Data Points & Dealbreakers: What I Learned From a One-Month Situationship

Data Points & Dealbreakers: What I Learned From a One-Month Situationship

Update: 2025-11-10
Share

Description

In this episode of The Wrong Ones, we talk about how self-awareness changes what you tolerate, and how noticing small "data points" early can save you from months of confusion later. We unpack the subtle red flags—defensiveness, one-sided intimacy, lack of reciprocity—that often reveal more about someone's emotional capacity than any grand gesture ever could.

Through personal storytelling and psychology-backed insight, this episode explores what it looks like to stay present while dating, to stop romanticizing potential, and to actually believe people when they show you who they are. Because when you start loving yourself, your standards stop being negotiable.

In this episode, we cover:

  • Why "once a cheater, always a cheater" misses the real lesson: reflection matters more than reputation

  • The psychology of one-sided intimacy and what it reveals about empathy and emotional availability

  • Reciprocity signaling: why showing up empty-handed isn't about the wine—it's about awareness

  • The danger of rationalizing behavior early on ("he's just busy," "he's from the Midwest")

  • How self-respect changes your dating patterns from chasing potential to collecting data

  • Data-driven detachment: trusting patterns, not excuses

  • The moment you realize peace feels better than potential

  • How self-love quietly becomes the filter that removes confusion

Reflection Question of the Week:

What small "data point" have you been ignoring lately—and what might it be trying to teach you about your patterns?

Resources Mentioned:

  • Attachment Theory (Bowlby & Ainsworth; internal working models)

  • Reciprocity and Social Attunement (Gouldner, 1960; behavioral exchange)

  • Guilt vs. Shame Framework (Tangney & Dearing, 2002; emotional responsibility)

  • Avoidant Attachment and Deactivation Strategies (Levine & Heller, Attached)

  • Cognitive Dissonance and Justification (Festinger, 1957; self-perception)

-----

As always: if you're enjoying the show, please take a moment to follow, rate, and subscribe — it truly helps us grow and reach more listeners.

Come say hi on Instagram @thewrongonespodcast
An Operation Podcast production
Comments 
loading
In Channel
loading
00:00
00:00
1.0x

0.5x

0.8x

1.0x

1.25x

1.5x

2.0x

3.0x

Sleep Timer

Off

End of Episode

5 Minutes

10 Minutes

15 Minutes

30 Minutes

45 Minutes

60 Minutes

120 Minutes

Data Points & Dealbreakers: What I Learned From a One-Month Situationship

Data Points & Dealbreakers: What I Learned From a One-Month Situationship