Connections
Click around these resources to connect with other humans having important conversation about dating and relationships.
“I think I love you” is marriage in a nutshell. Except not really.
This podcast is an ongoing dialogue about relationships at its core, just not in the way you’d expect. It takes the form of weekly episodes where a newlywed couple, Caro and Riley, hold themselves to recurring, honest, and recorded conversation about how they’re feeling that given week about the happenings in their lives and partnership. It’s couples talk therapy, but without the third party. You’ll feel like you’re on the wild ride (read: sitting across their kitchen table) with them. Start with any episode.
Low pressure dating is here to stay.
Here/Now keeps things casual. They want you to decide how your dating journey looks and feels through group dating experiences. This org believes that walking away with new friendships is just as successful as snagging a second date. Formerly in-person events turned virtual gatherings, dating has never sounded so, well, non-anxiety-inducing. Sign up for their newsletter or attend an event.
Dating dialogue with two badass hosts and their comic friends, I mean guests.
Molly and Erica know how to get what they want, except when it comes to men. Instead of giving up on love, they’ve made a pact to challenge each other to test modern and old school dating methods. Their honesty is the truest, plus the the interviews are relevant and real (and funny). Covering topics like the 5 love languages, dating in NYC and in quarantine, LDRs, STIs, and more, there’s something everyone can relate to.
Mari Andrew says and draws the thoughts in our head.
Mari’s a writer, illustrator, and speaker. She’s a faithful NYC resident, just check out her recent Love Notes to NYC on Insta. In 2016 she was searching for a new form of self-expression to lift her up after a season of grief. She made one drawing a day for a year and put up her work on Instagram to hold her accountable. She’s now followed by strangers far and wide, and encourages her audience to be real with their feelings of love, loss, and longing, and our assumptions of others.
Above all, she endorses putting pen to paper and writing or drawing it out.