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Cancel Your Match.com Subscription and Buy Yourself a Vibrator: A Real Guide to Healing After Divorce

Cancel Your Match.com Subscription and Buy Yourself a Vibrator: A Real Guide to Healing After DivorceCancel Your Match.com Subscription and Buy Yourself a Vibrator: A Real Guide to Healing After Divorce

One of the biggest roadblocks to healing after divorce? People-pleasing.

And you know exactly where that beast likes to rear its ugly head: dating.

Especially those early-stage, “don’t rock the boat,” smiling-even-though-you’re-dying-inside moments. You swallow your irritation, plaster on a grin, and fall right back into the patterns that kept you small in your marriage—because that’s just how you’ve always rolled.

Here’s the truth: every time you silence yourself to keep the peace, something else is taking the hit—something far more fragile.

Your confidence.

That super delicate, already-battered confidence leftover from the end of your marriage. And what is everyone telling you to do instead? Throw that fragile thing into the high-powered blender of online dating. Mix that with your increased need for love, acceptance, and validation (and who doesn’t need a little extra of that?) and it’s a recipe for disaster.

The process seems simple:
Post a super engaging profile.
Add a few pics.
Wait for the compliments to roll in.
Confidence boost, here I come!

Except… it doesn’t always work out that way.

Why Online Dating Can Crush Your Post-Divorce Confidence

When you jump back into dating too soon, you’re not just risking a bruised ego. You’re throwing that fragile, post-divorce confidence straight into a system that profits off your insecurity.

You’re tender. You’re rebuilding. And everyone around you is yelling, “Get back out there!

But let’s be honest: swiping when your heart is still in recovery mode is not a confidence boost. It’s a setup.

Because the minute your self-worth is hinging on whether some man texts you back, you’re already on shaky ground.

If Your Nervous System Is Screaming, You’re Not Ready

We’ve all been there:

• Reading between the lines of every message
• Re-reading the last text he sent (or didn’t send)
• Watching his Instagram stories to confirm he’s still alive
• Convincing yourself you’re “chill” while your nervous system is screaming

Add in the thrilling possibility that your online Romeo is texting five other women with the exact same lines?

Disaster cocktail.

Now listen—if you’re truly detached, if you can hook up casually and roll out emotionally unscathed? Then go get yours. No judgment, ever.

But if any of this makes your stomach drop, or your anxiety spike, or you find yourself questioning your worth, your sanity, or your damn identity…

Take. A. Hard. Pass.

The Real Goal After Divorce: Rebuilding Yourself

Because the goal of divorce is not to sprint into another shitty relationship that looks suspiciously like the one you just escaped.

The goal is to figure out who the hell you are now. To build a life so rich, so full, so deliciously yours, that anyone who comes in must meet you at the level you built—not the level you escaped.

Once you get there—and I mean really get there—you get to decide, intentionally, whether you even want to invite someone new into your life. And that kind of grounded, self-aware choice?

Pure gold.

And while you’re healing, let’s not forget: All those men posting photos of their sports cars, the fish they’ve caught, or the gym selfies?

Yeah. They’ve got some healing to do, too.

I’m Not Anti-Dating. I’m Anti-Dating-Before-You’re-Ready.

Because when you rush, you’re way more likely to land in round two of the same emotional chaos. You still feel like a failure for your marriage ending. You still doubt your worth. And hopping into someone else’s bed or praying a stranger texts you back isn’t going to fix that.

You need to know your worth—then double it.

No one gets to toy with your heart. This isn’t about commitment. It’s about respect. It’s about boundaries. It’s about refusing to measure your healing by whether or not you have a partner in your life.

No woman has ever gained confidence by being ghosted after sex.

That’s the patriarchy talking.

Smash. That. Shit.

Remarriage Isn’t the Finish Line of Divorce

Even though society pushes that story hard: “Dust yourself off, sweetheart. Find a soulmate. Don’t be alone too long.”

No.
Take your time.
Rebuild yourself.
Figure out who you are when no one else is laying claim to your energy.

When I first got divorced, I thought I needed someone to prove I was still worthy. That was the script I’d been handed.

But the longer I’ve been single, the clearer I am that I don’t actually want a man in my life—not right now. Maybe one day. Never say never. But when that happens, it’ll be on my terms—not because I’m trying to rewrite some outdated story.

And let’s be real: if he’s not bringing mind-blowing sex?
Hard pass.
I’ve had enough mediocre sex to last a lifetime. That whole “at least you won’t be lonely” argument gets old real fast.

Stop Outsourcing Your Worth

Here’s the truth:

Stop outsourcing your healing.
Stop outsourcing your confidence.
Stop outsourcing your worth.

You don’t need a date.

You need time.
You need strength.
You need a life that feels good as hell on your own.

And yes, maybe you need a vibrator. —Krysty

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