Ask Angela: Relationship Advice for Love After Trauma

Dating After Divorce: Why It's So Intimidating and How to Know You're Ready

14 min · 2 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio Dating After Divorce: Why It's So Intimidating and How to Know You're Ready

Descripción

What if dating after divorce isn't about finding someone new—but about rediscovering yourself? For many people coming out of a long marriage, dating after divorce feels less exciting than exhausting. The culture has changed. The apps feel foreign. And stepping back into visibility, evaluation, and uncertainty after years of relational stability can feel overwhelming—especially when you're dating in middle age. You may find yourself wondering how long after divorce to date, or whether you're ready at all. In the Season 2 finale of Ask Angela: Relationship Advice for Love After Trauma, Angela Amias responds to a listener who feels deeply ambivalent about re-entering the dating world after a 15-year marriage. She doesn't love the idea of dating apps, feels nostalgic for the stability of her former relationship—even though it wasn't particularly happy—and isn't sure how to begin again. Angela explores: • Why dating after divorce often brings dread rather than excitement • How to date after divorce without forcing yourself into a timeline • The difference between pressure and readiness • Why dating in middle age can feel like entering a new culture • How approaching dating as an experiment lowers the stakes and builds confidence If you're newly single, unsure how long after divorce to date, or questioning whether you're ready to start again, this episode offers perspective, permission, and a grounded way to move forward at your own pace. ✑ Submit your own question at askangelapodcast.com [https://askangelapodcast.com] ✫ Because everyone deserves love, trust, and connection in their relationships—and you don't have to figure it out alone. Read more Ask Angela: Relationship Advice for Love After Trauma [https://alchemy-of-love.com/relationship-advice]

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36 episodios

episode Dating After Divorce: Why It's So Intimidating and How to Know You're Ready artwork

Dating After Divorce: Why It's So Intimidating and How to Know You're Ready

What if dating after divorce isn't about finding someone new—but about rediscovering yourself? For many people coming out of a long marriage, dating after divorce feels less exciting than exhausting. The culture has changed. The apps feel foreign. And stepping back into visibility, evaluation, and uncertainty after years of relational stability can feel overwhelming—especially when you're dating in middle age. You may find yourself wondering how long after divorce to date, or whether you're ready at all. In the Season 2 finale of Ask Angela: Relationship Advice for Love After Trauma, Angela Amias responds to a listener who feels deeply ambivalent about re-entering the dating world after a 15-year marriage. She doesn't love the idea of dating apps, feels nostalgic for the stability of her former relationship—even though it wasn't particularly happy—and isn't sure how to begin again. Angela explores: • Why dating after divorce often brings dread rather than excitement • How to date after divorce without forcing yourself into a timeline • The difference between pressure and readiness • Why dating in middle age can feel like entering a new culture • How approaching dating as an experiment lowers the stakes and builds confidence If you're newly single, unsure how long after divorce to date, or questioning whether you're ready to start again, this episode offers perspective, permission, and a grounded way to move forward at your own pace. ✑ Submit your own question at askangelapodcast.com [https://askangelapodcast.com] ✫ Because everyone deserves love, trust, and connection in their relationships—and you don't have to figure it out alone. Read more Ask Angela: Relationship Advice for Love After Trauma [https://alchemy-of-love.com/relationship-advice]

2 de jun de 202614 min
episode When People Pleasing Makes Your Partner's Disappointment Feel Unbearable artwork

When People Pleasing Makes Your Partner's Disappointment Feel Unbearable

What if your partner's disappointment isn't the real problem—but your fear of it is? For many people, people pleasing in relationships feels like love. You anticipate needs, avoid conflict, and work hard to keep your partner happy. But when your partner feels disappointed—especially because you've said no—it can feel unbearable. The fear of saying no or setting boundaries in a relationship can quietly turn into emotional over-responsibility, where their feelings start to feel like your fault. In this episode of Ask Angela: Relationship Advice for Love After Trauma, Angela Amias responds to a listener who finds herself overwhelmed by her husband's disappointment. Even though he's capable of handling his own feelings, she feels sick with guilt and dread whenever she has to say no. What looks like care on the surface may actually be people pleasing rooted in earlier experiences of shame, control, or conditional love. Angela explores: • Why people pleasing in relationships makes disappointment feel catastrophic • How fear of saying no interferes with setting healthy boundaries • The connection between childhood patterns and emotional over-responsibility • Why it's not your job to prevent your partner's feelings • How learning to tolerate discomfort builds intimacy instead of weakening it If you struggle to say no, feel responsible for your partner's emotional state, or find yourself avoiding boundaries to keep the peace, this episode offers clarity, courage, and a steadier way to relate—without sacrificing yourself in the process. Download the Feeling Wheel for Naming Difficult Emotions in Intimate Relationships [https://static1.squarespace.com/static/5ef8b7ea901d15663b8fcc2f/t/6998c6c2bbbf8a23f32bfa60/1771620034131/Feeling-Wheel-for-Relationships.pdf]. ✑ Submit your own question at askangelapodcast.com [https://askangelapodcast.com] ✫ Because everyone deserves love, trust, and connection in their relationships—and you don't have to figure it out alone. Read more Ask Angela: Relationship Advice for Love After Trauma [https://alchemy-of-love.com/relationship-advice]

19 de may de 202615 min
episode Dating After Mistakes: How to Own Your Past Without Letting It Define You artwork

Dating After Mistakes: How to Own Your Past Without Letting It Define You

What if the very thing you're afraid to share is the thing that makes you trustworthy? For many people who've done deep personal work, dating again brings a new kind of fear—not of repeating the past, but of being rejected because of it. When conversations turn toward former relationships, mistakes, or painful histories, it can feel risky to be emotionally vulnerable. You want to be honest, but you don't want your past to define you—or to look like a collection of red flags in dating. In this episode of Ask Angela: Relationship Advice for Love After Trauma, Angela Amias responds to a listener who worries that talking about his past behavior will scare away potential partners. After years of therapy and self-reflection, he's ready to date again—but fear of rejection in a relationship makes sharing his history feel high-stakes and intimidating. Angela explores: • Why fear of rejection is a natural part of dating—and how to build resilience around it • The difference between secrecy, oversharing, and healthy emotional vulnerability • How taking responsibility for past mistakes can signal growth rather than red flags in dating • When and how to talk about difficult relationship history • Why dating after trauma requires balancing honesty with discernment If you're afraid your past will disqualify you from love, or you struggle with how much to share when you're getting to know someone new, this episode offers perspective, steadiness, and a grounded way to approach dating with integrity and self-trust. ✑ Submit your own question at askangelapodcast.com [https://askangelapodcast.com] ✫ Because everyone deserves love, trust, and connection in their relationships—and you don't have to figure it out alone. Read more Ask Angela: Relationship Advice for Love After Trauma [https://alchemy-of-love.com/relationship-advice]

5 de may de 202618 min
episode How do I ask my partner to change with upsetting her? artwork

How do I ask my partner to change with upsetting her?

What if the real issue isn't what you're saying—but how it's being heard? Some of the most painful relationship communication problems don't begin with bad intentions. They begin when one partner tries to ask for change and the other feels criticized or blamed. By the time the conversation unravels, both people feel misunderstood—and what started as a simple request turns into defensiveness, hurt feelings, and distance. In this episode of Ask Angela: Relationship Advice for Love After Trauma, Angela Amias responds to a listener who is struggling to communicate effectively after moving in with his girlfriend. Although he believes he's making reasonable requests, his partner experiences them as critical and judgmental. As tensions rise and conversations turn into fights, he begins to question his ability to communicate at all. Angela explores: • Why relationship communication problems often intensify after major transitions like moving in together • The difference between intent and impact in close relationships • How subtle criticism can show up—even when we don't mean it to • Why defensiveness in a relationship is often rooted in past experiences • How couples can work together to improve effective communication instead of assigning blame If you've ever tried to ask for change and watched the conversation spiral into conflict, this episode offers a grounded, compassionate approach to navigating relationships and problems—without losing your voice or escalating defensiveness. ✑ Submit your own question at askangelapodcast.com [https://askangelapodcast.com] ✫ Because everyone deserves love, trust, and connection in their relationships—and you don't have to figure it out alone. Read more Ask Angela: Relationship Advice for Love After Trauma [https://alchemy-of-love.com/relationship-advice]

21 de abr de 202619 min
episode When little misunderstandings keep becoming big relationship battles artwork

When little misunderstandings keep becoming big relationship battles

What if the fight wasn't really about what you thought it was about? Some of the most frustrating conflicts in intimate relationships aren't rooted in deep differences or real disagreements. Instead, they begin with misunderstandings—misread comments, incomplete information, or assumptions that escalate before we have a chance to slow down and catch up with what's actually happening. By the time clarity arrives, hurtful words have already been spoken and both partners feel wounded. In this episode of Ask Angela: Relationship Advice for Love After Trauma, Angela Amias responds to a listener who feels stuck in a cycle of arguing in a relationship over misunderstandings. Small moments quickly spiral into huge fights, often fueled by mindreading in a relationship and jumping to conclusions in a relationship. Even when the conflict turns out to be based on faulty assumptions, the emotional fallout lingers. Angela explores: • Why mindreading in a relationship happens so quickly and feels so convincing • How jumping to conclusions in a relationship fuels unnecessary arguments • What emotional containment looks like in real time • Why curiosity is the antidote to relationship communication problems • How to slow down arguing in a relationship before small misunderstandings escalate If you and your partner keep fighting over things that later turn out to be misunderstandings, this episode offers practical communication tools and a calmer way to break the cycle—so you can stay on the same side even in moments of tension. ✑ Submit your own question at askangelapodcast.com [https://askangelapodcast.com] ✫ Because everyone deserves love, trust, and connection in their relationships—and you don't have to figure it out alone. Read more Ask Angela: Relationship Advice for Love After Trauma [https://alchemy-of-love.com/relationship-advice]

7 de abr de 202616 min