I hear this every week:
Ahh, the search for the rare breed of good men: The decent men who want a serious relationship.
You mean decently healthy, financially stable, well-groomed and clean, handsome enough, and ready for a long-term relationship.
At first glance, these seem like questions about the dating market. But, if they were, my answer “everywhere” would suffice.
Truth bomb: These questions are more about your state of mind.
Are there fewer emotionally available men in midlife than we’d like? And are they harder to find?
Yes.
Is the dating scene noisy, confusing, and sometimes ridiculous?
Also yes.
But when someone tells me, “There are no good men left,” I get curious because here’s what I know after coaching thousands of women:
When you believe there are no high-quality men, you stop recognizing them. You even turn good ones into frogs.
You scroll past the decent guy on online dating sites because he doesn’t look like the perfect man in your head.
You ignore the good catch in your extended social circle because he’s “not your usual type.”
You stay in your comfort zone, then complain there are no great guys in it.
You’ll put up with all kinds of nonsense, but you actually filter out a good guy when he comes around.
Yes, dating apps can feel like dehumanizing and comically difficult.
But, truth bomb #2: Apps don’t create bad men. They reveal the pool. And the pool is as varied as clothing items at the mall.
If you’re on online dating sites and all you see are fish pics, beer bellies, and men who can’t be bothered to string sentences together or “aren’t sure what they’re looking for,” that doesn’t mean there are no good guys.
It means:
Ouch?
Good.
I promise these truth bombs are good for you. Tough love is my brand. Have you come to the right place?
People love to say dating is a numbers game.
Swipe more. Date more. Meet new people. Try speed dating. Upgrade your subscription tier.
True: A bigger pool helps.
But if your mindset is cynical, exhausted, or secretly convinced that men are disappointing?
You could meet 100 decent men at a coffee shop, at church, at the gym, in real life – and still miss your good match.
Why?
Because the real numbers game is this:
How many emotionally available women are out there looking for emotionally available men?
I coach men, too, and they are JUST as convinced that women are the ones who are not available! Mind your own stats before believing that the stats of the other gender are what’s getting in the way of you finding healthy, lasting love.
When you shift your state of mind, you shift your results.
Ah. Now we’re getting somewhere.
Many women say they want a good man, but what they mean is: “I want a man who is exciting in the exact way my ex was – but emotionally stable.”
That’s not a true dream, it’s a reaction to pain.
Some of the nice guys you’re overlooking? They’re not boring. They’re calm, and there’s a difference.
Chemistry built on anxiety feels electric. Chemistry built on compatibility feels warm.
If you keep saying, “Where are the good men?” I might gently ask: Are you equating calm with dull?
Because some of the great guys you’re dismissing could build a long relationship with you – the kind that feels secure, not dramatic.
Another way you obscure the good men from becoming apparent to you is by idealizing “the perfect man.”
Sure, they do it to us, too, but that’s no excuse.
There is no perfect man. And good, because you aren’t looking for that. You are looking for a good match.
And a good match is someone whose values, pace, and vision for a long-term relationship align with yours.
He might not:
But he might:
That’s a good man.
They exist. I hear about them every day in my practice.
If you keep asking, “Where are the good men?” ask yourself three questions:
Nothing is the fault of circumstance, your environment or dating apps. But your clarity and purpose affect them all.
When you know the kind of relationship you want, you stop wasting time on men who can’t offer it. And suddenly you start seeing good men everywhere. At the coffee shop. On dating apps. At dinner parties. Through friends.
They were never extinct. They were just invisible to a mindset shaped by negativity, fear and disappointment.
The question isn’t:
“Where are the good men?”
It’s:
“Am I positioned to recognize and receive one?”
You don’t need a new subscription tier. You don’t need to swipe harder. You need awareness and alignment — of head, heart, and hoo-ha.
And that’s when dating stops feeling like a losing battle… and starts feeling like an exciting adventure.
If you’re ready to stop wondering where the good men are and start becoming magnetic to the right one, watch my free webinar: 3 Secrets to Finding and Maintaining Healthy Love Without Repeated Disappointments.
It will change how you see the entire dating market – and yourself.
Are you really open to dating? Do you think you are emotionally available? Have you been complaining there are no good men out there?
Tags Senior Dating Advice
Thank you for this article. I believe I am open to dating. It has always “naturally” happened, meeting people through hiking groups, walking groups, and other activity/hobby groups I join and attend. I believe I am “not overlooking a lily while searching for a rose” as my late husband used to say. I’ve actually stepped outside my comfort zone and dated men I never through I would date. It’s certainly not easy out there for either of us. I believe in love and taking the risk, so we will see what happens. Having come out of a 2 year relationship 2 months ago, I’m a little hesitant but I’m starting to believe I’ll find someone to share my life, energy and just enjoy doing things and spending time together.
thanks for sharing your experience here!
Do you mind if I start with the photo attached to this article? A handsome SILVER haired man with way more eye-wrinkles (ooh, sexy!) than the BLONDE he is with, who appears maybe 20 years younger than him? That’s answer #1. Answer #2 is this: STOP LOOKING
for a romantic, sexual partner and just look for compatible friendship instead. THAT’S what happened for Meryl Streep and Martin Short. For Suzanne Pleshette (gorgeous) and Tom
Poston (plain and boring). Take classes, do volunteer work, go to church, joing Meet-Up groups and you won’t be lonely. Love happens when you stop desperately looking for it.And you may find you are just as happy having dinner and a movie with friends and groups. When did we become desperate seniors? My 70-year-old sister is so happily involved with a million friends, she ATTRACTED men by her attitude of, “I’m fine. How are you?”
sounds right to me vis a vis mindset! Neediness is repellent across genders.
Thanks for a thoughtful article. First, I do Not want anyone remotely like my ex. Let’s get that right out of the way.
Honestly, I have not really been open to dating, haven’t considered it much (at 72), am not looking for a deep relationship since I know I’m moving cross-country in a couple of years.
That said, I woke yesterday morning from a dream. I was standing in the front yard of her home with my friend. Her partner wanted to introduce me to a friend of his and called the other man over – he was clearly aiming for us to date – but the other fellow had been painting and his t-shirt and jeans were a mess. The poor guy looked totally embarrassed. Then I Woke Up!
Maybe it was a ‘sign?’ I’ll keep my eyes open. :D
you are definitely too young to be sure it’s time to give up ;)
Seems like the men I’ve met need caregivers. I am 74 yo and looking for men between 60-80 yo.
some want caregivers, some were caregivers, some like being caregivers and most healthy couples who age together end up being co-caregivers.
That is the truth of it, Laurie. And it’s true of women, too. One never knows when they will end up needing a supporting hand. You might be healthy today and end up in the hospital tomorrow. If you’re too selfish to care for someone else’s needs, what is to guarantee that anyone would care for your needs when that time comes…
But to each their own, I suppose.
thanks for the back-up and reality check Vanya!