Date three. You mention the ex. A lot. And then the hard work of naming it, addressing it, and learning the difference between sharing and processing.
Part of
The First Date →
The date is going medium. You're six minutes late. You knock something over. You say something weird. Learn that social confidence isn't having perfect moments — it's recovering from the imperfect ones with grace.
Skills you'll build
What happens in this story4 scenarios
Date three. They ask about your last relationship. You meant to say 'it ended amicably.' What comes out instead is a twelve-minute monologue with a timeline, a villain, and too many details.
The day after. The silence from their end is deafening. You're scrolling back through your own texts looking for evidence that you didn't ruin this — and not finding much.
Date four. You walk in knowing you have to name what happened last time. Not apologize endlessly — just acknowledge it, directly, without making it another performance.
There's a difference between sharing your story and processing your trauma out loud at someone. You're learning where that line is — and it turns out the line is made of trust, not time.
More stories in this course
View all →Commit to the Bit
The date is going medium. Things keep going slightly wrong. Learn that social confidence isn't having perfect moments — it's recovering from the imperfect ones with grace and maybe a little humor.
4 scenarios →The Second Impression
The day after. The silence. The ambiguity spiral. And then — the second date, where you find out what's actually there.
4 scenarios →The Honest Conversation
Four dates in. You know what you feel. You know what you want. The only thing left is saying it out loud to someone who could say no.
4 scenarios →The Overshare
Date three. You mention the ex. A lot. And then the hard work of naming it, addressing it, and learning the difference between sharing and processing.
Start free →4 scenarios · 80 min · No account required to try
