{"id":620,"date":"2025-02-18T13:23:39","date_gmt":"2025-02-18T14:23:39","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/guidestonefinancialgroup.com\/?p=620"},"modified":"2025-02-25T11:23:30","modified_gmt":"2025-02-25T11:23:30","slug":"dating-with-chronic-illness-and-what-ive-learned","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/guidestonefinancialgroup.com\/index.php\/2025\/02\/18\/dating-with-chronic-illness-and-what-ive-learned\/","title":{"rendered":"Dating with Chronic Illness (and What I\u2019ve Learned)"},"content":{"rendered":"<\/p>\n
Dating with chronic illness is no easy, straightforward feat for either party. Questions like this are all over Quora and Reddit: \u201cWould you date or marry a person with chronic illness?<\/a>\u201d. So I thought I\u2019d share my perspective, as a person who\u2019s chronically ill and disabled. Over the years, I\u2019ve been in long-term, short-term and even long-distance relationships. I\u2019ve also tried various dating apps, and met partners through friends. I much prefer the latter, but it does get harder the older you get!<\/p>\n P.s. The original version of this post was published on 26 February, 2017 (8 years ago!). More insights into dating, relationships, self-worth, disability and chronic illness have been added \ud83d\ude42<\/p>\n *Disclaimer: This article is meant for educational purposes, and is based on my personal experiences as a patient. Whilst I have done my utmost to be meticulous in research, I am not a doctor, and nothing in this article should be substituted for medical advice.<\/strong> Please consult your own doctor before changing or adding any<\/strong> new treatment protocols. This post may also contain affiliate links. It will cost you nothing to click on them. I will get a small referral fee from purchases you make, which helps with the maintenance of this blog. Read our Privacy Policy page<\/a> for more information. Thank you!<\/em><\/p>\n Pin to Your Dating & Chronic Illness Boards:<\/strong><\/p>\n I\u2019ve been fortunate enough to have had relationships with partners from extreme ends of the spectrum. It gives me insight into different perspectives, which enables me to identify and appreciate certain characteristics better. Their opinions about our future together were diverse, and so were their attitudes towards my daily health struggles. Before going further, I\u2019d like to state that the purpose of this article isn\u2019t to bash anyone at all. Everyone is entitled to how they want to live their lives, and who they want to do that with, for better or for worse.<\/p>\n My first relationship was with a guy whose greatest desire was to start a family of his own, and it troubled him that I never seemed to get better. He did not like the open-ended, variable timetable of my chronic illnesses. Neither did he want to start with a \u2018deficit\u2019 before even trying for a child.<\/p>\n I underwent a few surgeries whilst we were dating, and he felt tormented that he could do \u2018nothing\u2019 to make it better. Yet, he never provided any emotional support, and would often bail out on the bad days. I ended up having to be stronger for him, because \u2018it was difficult for him too\u2019. I would always give in to him, because I thought that I had less rights to my own opinions. It was already a burden for someone to be with me, what more could I ask for?<\/p>\n I\u2019ve also dated men who were willing to try things out for a couple dates, but who were constantly analysing my limits. This isn\u2019t too fair in my opinion for several reasons. First, I have good and bad days, and you might be seeing me during a bad week. Second, and this is applicable to healthy individuals, too \u2013 it takes a bit of time to truly know who a person is, both the good and bad. Third, their assessment of my capabilities is usually inaccurate, because it tends to be biased. Unfortunately, when you\u2019re chronically ill or disabled, people tend to hyperfocus on the limitations and judge you more keenly and immediately.<\/p>\n Then there are those dates where they see me arrive with a walking stick on a bad day. We have a short, polite chat, before they run for the hills and hide themselves behind a wall of silence. Whilst this feels unpleasant, I have learned to accept that it\u2019s all part of the dating game, sick or otherwise.<\/p>\n There was a period of time I said to myself, \u201cwell, let\u2019s wait for all the married men to get divorced. They should be wiser and more open-minded now, and realise that there\u2019s more to a relationship than chronic illness\u201d.<\/p>\n This turned out to be false. I obviously can\u2019t speak for all divorced men, but the ones I have personally interacted with were fairly extreme. They were either paranoid (\u201cyou haven\u2019t replied to my message in 24 hours, even though there are two blue ticks!\u201d), or fixated on a certain ideal (hyperfocused on a singular quality, to the exclusion of all other qualities). Chronic illnesses still bothered most of them. Divorced men are not necessarily wiser than an unmarried person. They are still human, with strengths and flaws alike.<\/p>\n\n<\/div>\n
Just Like Chronic Illness, Every Relationship is Unique<\/h2>\n
Partners Who Saw My Chronic Illnesses as a Liability<\/h3>\n
Dates Who Tried, Then Ran<\/strong><\/h4>\n
Divorced Partners are Not Necessarily More \u201cChill\u201d<\/strong><\/h4>\n