Dating got you down?

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Courses, coaching, and community for those in search of love!

Dating sure can be frustrating, but we're here to help! Check out our offerings below!

Courses

Currently, we primarily offer courses for singles, polyamorous folks, or those in early relationships (basically, those who are actively "dating"). Check out our current roster of courses!

Looking for more relationship-oriented courses? We do have things in the works so sign up to be notified about future course launches!

Coaching

Not interested in any of our group coaching? Need more individualized help? We take on a limited number of private coaching clients with packages starting at $1800 for 3 months of weekly coaching sessions.

At this time we do not offer one-off sessions, as we like to take a holistic approach and we know that change takes time.

Community

Want accountability in proactive dating? Seeking advice? Looking for the latest trends in the dating world? Or just want to vent?

We are building a community of love-seekers to commiserate, cheerlead, and help each other through the best and worst aspects of dating. Click below to sign up to receive the community launch announcement!

Looking for a (f)unconventional way to meet other singles?

Apply to be a contestant on The Game Show of Love! Each episode, 6 singles play games and answer questions to get to know each other. At the end, if two people pick each other, they're a match! It's also a fun way to put yourself out there to a larger community, as audience members can ask out contestants too!

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Meet your instructor

Emma Mankey Hidem is the creator and host of The Game Show of Love, an interactive dating game show, which she started in April 2020 as a pivot for her media production business, Sunnyside Productions, during covid-19.

The Game Show of Love created connection for people during an unprecedently lonely time and a community built up around the show. In her unexpected role of dating-show-community-manager, Emma hosted expert talks, lead discussions, and even ran a relationship book club.

As Emma dove further and further into the dating industry, she realized how much terrible advice was out there and she decided she needed to step up.

In her new capacity as a dating expert, she has been featured in Newsweek multiple times and on the nationally-syndicated tv show The List, to name a few.

Read Our Latest Blogs

Check out our blog or social media for dating & relationship advice!

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What Is Codependency? A Compassionate Look at Why We Lose Ourselves in Relationships

January 12, 20263 min read

For National Codependency Awareness Month

Codependency is one of those words that gets thrown around a lot — often incorrectly and almost always with judgment. It’s used to label people as “too much,” “clingy,” or “needy.”

But codependency isn’t a personality flaw. It’s a learned survival strategy.

For National Codependency Awareness Month, let’s talk about what codependency actually is, why it develops, and how awareness is the first step toward healthier relationships.


Understanding Codependency Beyond the Label

At its core, codependency is a pattern where your sense of worth, safety, or identity becomes overly tied to someone else.

This can look like:

  • Prioritizing others’ needs while ignoring your own

  • Feeling responsible for other people’s emotions

  • Struggling to set or maintain boundaries

  • Fear of conflict, abandonment, or disappointing others

  • Losing touch with your own wants, needs, or opinions in relationships

This doesn’t happen because you love too deeply. It happens because connection feels necessary for emotional survival. When staying close feels essential, self-abandonment can start to feel normal or even loving.


How Codependency Develops

Most codependent patterns aren’t created in adulthood. They’re shaped early, often in environments where love felt inconsistent or conditional. When emotional needs weren’t reliably met, many people learned to become hyper-aware of others. They learned to be helpful, agreeable, or self-sufficient in ways that earned closeness or avoided conflict.

Over time, the nervous system learns an important lesson: connection equals safety, and disconnection feels dangerous. As adults, that lesson doesn’t disappear just because circumstances change. It quietly follows us into our relationships, influencing how we attach, how we communicate, and how much of ourselves we’re willing to set aside to keep love intact.


Codependency in Dating and Relationships

In dating, codependency often shows up subtly at first. It can look like quickly centering another person, overextending emotionally, or rationalizing behavior that doesn’t quite feel right. There may be a strong urge to preserve the connection at all costs, even when your needs aren’t being met.

What’s happening underneath isn’t a lack of awareness or intelligence. It’s the nervous system prioritizing attachment over authenticity. When closeness is the only goal, it becomes harder to listen to your own discomfort or honor your own limits.


A couple hugging and laughing together

Moving Toward Healthy Connection

Codependency vs. Healthy Interdependence

Here’s an important distinction: Healthy relationships involve interdependence, not independence or codependency.

Interdependence means:

  • You can care deeply without losing yourself

  • You can support others without rescuing them

  • You can lean on others without losing your sense of value or self-trust.

  • You can tolerate discomfort or conflict without self-abandoning

The goal isn’t to stop needing people — it’s to stop disappearing for them.


Why Awareness Matters

Healing codependency doesn’t start with perfect boundaries or emotional detachment. It starts with understanding. When you can recognize these patterns with compassion, rather than judgment, you create space for change.

Awareness allows you to see that these behaviors once kept you safe but that they probably aren't serving you anymore. And when you honor that truth, you’re better equipped to gently choose something different — something more aligned with who you are now.


A Reflection for Codependency Awareness Month

If this resonates, let this be a reminder: you’re not broken, and you’re not too much. You adapted to the environment you were in. Now, with awareness and support, you get to build relationships that don’t require self-erasure to survive.

That shift doesn’t happen overnight. But it begins the moment you start paying attention with curiosity instead of shame.

If you’re noticing these patterns in your dating life and want support working through them without shame or pressure I offer private dating coaching focused on self-trust, boundaries, and healthier connection. You don’t have to figure this out alone.

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