Dating got you down?

Join us on The Sunnyside of love!

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!

happy couple

Cultivating a Positive Dating Mindset

November 25, 20253 min read

BOOK LINK: Feeling Good by Dr. David D. Burns

VIDEO TEXT:
Hey friends, it’s Emma from The Sunnyside.

Today I want to talk about something that quietly sabotages more dating experiences than bad profiles or awkward first dates ever could — your thoughts.

Specifically, those sometimes pervasive, negative thoughts that whisper things like:

“Everyone on these apps is terrible.”
“I always get ghosted.”
“I’ll never find love.”

Sound familiar? We all have those thoughts from time to time.

Here’s the thing — those thoughts feel true in the moment, but they’re really just stories our brain tells to protect us from getting hurt again. And when you focus too much on negative thoughts, they can cause a spiral. They’ll start to impact your mood, your motivation levels, your behavior, and can even affect your physical health.

Lucky for us science has figured out ways to help us conquer our negative thoughts with a little tool called cognitive behavioral therapy, or CBT.

CBT teaches us that it’s not events themselves that cause our emotions — it’s the meaning we attach to them.

So, when someone doesn’t text back, your brain might jump to:

“I’m not interesting enough.”

But that’s a thought, not a fact. Therapists call these negative thoughts cognitive distortions because they are exaggerated or defeatist and are not actually accurate. There are different types of cognitive distortions such as “all or nothing thinking” and “jumping to conclusions” but we’ll go deeper into that another time.

The first step to shifting your dating mindset is simply noticing those thoughts in real time and catching them before they spiral.

Try this:
Next time you feel that wave of discouragement, pause and ask yourself three questions:

  1. What was the negative thought?

  2. Is it 100% true or is it distorted ?

  3. What’s a more balanced way to see this situation?

Example:
Instead of “Everyone ghosts me,” try:

“Some people ghost, but that’s about them, not me. I’m still open to meeting someone emotionally ready.”

You’re not pretending things are perfect — you’re choosing a thought that’s both honest and hopeful.

That’s the magic of CBT — it doesn’t tell you to “just be positive.” It teaches you to be realistic in a way that’s kind.

Because dating is emotional. It brings up old wounds and fears we sometimes didn’t even know we had.
But every time you challenge a negative thought, you’re literally rewiring your brain for confidence and resilience because neuroplasticity — your brain’s ability to form new connections — means that with practice, optimism becomes your new default.

So, next time you catch yourself thinking, “Dating is hopeless,” take a breath.
That thought isn’t the truth and you have the power to rewrite it.

If you’d like to learn more about how CBT can help you conquer negative thoughts and live a better, happier life, I strongly recommend this book – Feeling Good by David Burns. There’s a link to it below this video.

If you want help and accountability in reshaping your mindset or if you need guidance on navigating modern dating from a place of self-awareness, I’d love to support you through private dating coaching so feel free to get in contact.

Because the most powerful dating strategy isn’t a better app or opening line — it’s a better relationship with yourself and your thoughts.

datingmental healthcognitive behavioral therapycbtpositive mindsetnegativityloverelationshipromance
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