Three Behavioral Rules to Break the Vicious Cycle of Obsessing Over Blind Date Text Replies
17 мая 2026 г.
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Even if you read Mark Manson's books and vow, "Alright, from now on, I'm going to be a non-needy person who doesn't obsess over the other person's reactions," reality plays out differently. The truth is, if the person you like hasn't replied to your KakaoTalk message for three hours, you find yourself staring at your smartphone screen, completely restless. The reason your mind understands this but your body doesn't follow through is simple: your brain is already conditioned to fluctuate between joy and anxiety based on external feedback. This is not a problem you can solve by memorizing cheesy pickup artist lines. You need a physical constraint mechanism that forces a change in your behavior.
To lower the anxiety that comes with obsessing over someone else's messages, you must first train yourself to find psychological stability during your time alone. Constantly remaining on standby, waiting for someone's reply, is the fastest way to make yourself the subordinate in a relationship.
If you don't have any plans this upcoming weekend, switch your smartphone to airplane mode for just two hours. Then, go to a restaurant you've wanted to visit and eat alone, go for a run around your neighborhood, or go swimming—immerse yourself entirely in a physical experience. When you physically block the dopamine stimulation provided by your smartphone, your hands will feel restless and you'll feel anxious at first. However, once you push past this phase, you will profoundly experience the sensation of your emotions remaining calm without the need for external feedback. If you follow this rule every weekend for just two weeks, your frontal lobe—which used to react unconditionally to KakaoTalk notification sounds—will begin to find stability.
When a blind date is scheduled, many men stalk the person's Instagram or look at their profile picture, letting their imagination run wild. This is exactly where the obsession to look good begins. You assign value to the person entirely on your own before you even meet them, and as a result, you end up walking on eggshells during the actual conversation.
From now on, open your smartphone notes app right before the meeting. Write down three of your own standards or preferences that you absolutely want to verify during the conversation. For example, things like: 'Do they have autonomy in their work?', 'Do they spend their days off productively?', or 'Do they have a respectful conversational attitude?'
When you go in with these standards written down, the purpose of the date completely shifts from 'scoring points with the other person' to 'verifying whether this person meets the standards for my life.' Even if a three-second silence occurs during the conversation, do not anxiously make things up just to fill the gap. You will find yourself with the composure to sip your tea with a comfortable smile. When the servility of trying to look good disappears, that attractive sense of initiative finally takes over.
When receiving a rejection text after a blind date that says, "You seem like a great person, but I don't think we're a match," some people break down, feeling as though their appearance, career, and entire worth as a human being have been denied. Replaying the conversation all night long and regretting it by thinking, 'I shouldn't have said that back then,' is the worst habit that eats away at your mental health.
When you face rejection, do not replay the scenario; turn off your smartphone immediately. Then, read the following sentence out loud three times: "Our preferences simply didn't align." This rejection has absolutely nothing to do with your intrinsic value. It is just very simple information, identical to being turned down when you offer Jjajangmyeon to someone who prefers Jjambbong.
After reading that sentence, wash your face with cold water or head straight to the gym to lift barbells and awaken your physical senses. You are suppressing the useless rumination digging into your mind with physical fatigue. Once you start accepting signals of rejection not as an attack on you, but merely as data, the resilience with which you prepare for your next meeting will become remarkably faster.