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“High standards don’t scare away the right people.
They scare away the people who hoped you’d accept less.”
— Nichole Banks

High Standards Only: The Dating Rule That Changes Everything After Divorce
There comes a point after divorce when something shifts.
Not overnight.
Not because you suddenly “healed perfectly.”
And definitely not because some man rode in on a white horse holding emotional maturity and a Stanley cup.
No.
The shift happens when you finally get tired.
Tired of confusion.
Tired of mixed signals.
Tired of trying to decode behavior that should’ve been clear from the beginning.
And one day—usually while standing in your kitchen reheating coffee for the third time—you realize:
I actually don’t want chaos anymore.
That’s the beginning of high standards.
Not perfection.
Not becoming “hard to please.”
Not expecting a billionaire with abs and a therapy degree.
Just standards.
Healthy ones.
The kind that protect your peace instead of constantly testing it.
Women after divorce do this thing where they apologize for wanting basic emotional safety.
We say things like:
“Maybe I’m expecting too much…”
“Maybe I should just be more understanding…”
“Maybe this is just how dating is now…”
Girl. No.
Wanting consistency is not asking too much.
Wanting communication is not asking too much.
Wanting honesty, effort, kindness, emotional availability, and follow-through?
That’s called the bare minimum.
And if someone acts inconvenienced by basic respect, congratulations—you just found your answer early.
Honestly, that’s a gift.
Because wasting six months trying to “understand his potential” is exhausting.
Ask me how I know.
I remember standing in my kitchen reheating my coffee for the third time while overanalyzing a three-word text message from a grown man.
Was he pulling away?
Busy?
Losing interest?
Playing games?
Meanwhile, I was out here acting like I needed a decoding team and a whiteboard just to understand basic communication.
Whew.
Looking back now, I can admit something honestly:
After divorce, part of me was just relieved someone wanted me.
And that’s a vulnerable place to date from.
Because when you’re scared of being alone, inconsistency can start feeling exciting… and bare minimum effort can start feeling like love.
I wasn’t asking myself,
“Is this healthy?”
I was asking,
“How do I make this work?”
That realization changed everything for me.
Because healthy love doesn’t leave you confused all the time.
And high standards aren’t about becoming demanding—
they’re about finally becoming honest about what costs you your peace.
And listen… this part matters.
A lot of divorced women secretly think:
“I already had my chance at love.”
So they start accepting crumbs because they’re afraid asking for more means ending up alone.
That mindset?
Dangerous.
Because loneliness has talked a lot of smart women into tolerating nonsense.
The old version of you may have:
ignored red flags
over-explained boundaries
confused attention with effort
accepted inconsistency because “at least someone cared”
But this version of you?
She pauses.
She observes.
She notices patterns.
And she understands something now that she didn’t before:
Chemistry without consistency creates anxiety—not love.
Here’s the funny thing.
People think standards scare away love.
Nope.
They scare away people who were hoping you’d accept less.
Big difference.
High standards don’t make dating harder.
They make it clearer.
You stop wasting months on emotionally unavailable people because you recognize the signs faster.
You stop romanticizing bare minimum effort.
You stop calling “potential” a relationship.
And honestly?
You become calmer.
Because you’re no longer trying to convince someone to choose you.
You’re simply observing whether they naturally do.
That changes everything.
Let’s normalize wanting:
Consistent communication
Emotional maturity
Respectful conflict
Effort without begging
Clarity instead of confusion
Accountability
Peace
Mutual interest
Someone whose words actually match their behavior
Wild concept, right?
And no—you do not need to shrink those standards to seem “easygoing.”
The right person will appreciate the clarity.
The wrong one will call you “too much.”
Let him.
Here’s the rule I wish more women followed after divorce:
If it costs your peace, your confidence, or your self-respect… it’s too expensive.
That one sentence alone would save women years of emotional exhaustion.
Because love should not constantly feel like:
confusion
guessing
chasing
anxiety
proving yourself
earning basic decency
We’re not doing emotional Olympics anymore.
We’re grown.
You are not difficult to love because you have standards now.
You’re wiser.
There’s a difference.
And honestly?
The woman who finally says:
“I’d rather be peacefully alone than emotionally drained”
…is usually the woman who finally starts attracting healthier love.
Not because she became perfect.
But because she stopped abandoning herself just to keep someone else.
And that, girl, is the real glow-up.
If dating after divorce still feels confusing, exhausting, or emotionally messy… you’re not alone. If this spoke to you, don’t stop here.
✨ Listen to the Podcast – real conversations, real healing Here.
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👉 Choose what feels right for you and take one step forward
With love and strength,
Nichole Banks
Divorce Coach | Host of The Nichole Banks Podcast
💛 P.S. If this hit home… send it to a friend who needs it. You never know who’s quietly going through it too.
Follow Me:
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Website: nicholebanks.com
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Real talk for women ready to heal, rebuild, and rise after divorce. Expect laughter, inspiration, and those “oh-my-gosh-that’s-me” moments every week.