Besties. Iāve officially spent more time this week thinking about red flags in romance novels than I have in actual therapy. And honestly? That feels on brand.
Because letās be real; my real-life dating history has been beige on beige with a splash of oatmeal. Boring. Predictable. Nobody has ever growled āyouāre mineā at me in the Target candle aisle (thank GOD). But my fictional dating life? Pure chaos. Fated mates, fake dating, and exes who keep crawling back like cockroaches after the apocalypse. I read this stuff, eat it up, and then sit here pretending I donāt see the š©š©š© like Iām color blind.
And I know Iām not alone. You all comment on my posts, DM me, leave me reviews like, āsame bestie, Iām color blind too.ā
So today we are going there. Weāre unpacking the Holy Trinity of Romance Red Flags That Would Ruin My Actual Life But I Love Anyway:
⨠Fated mates⨠Second-chance romance⨠Fake dating
Hereās the thing: in books, these tropes are serotonin wrapped in angst paper. They make me kick my feet, twirl my hair, and believe in love like Iām thirteen again. But if they happened to me IRL? Youād be listening to this story on a true crime podcast instead of a bookish one.
I love it. I crave it. But if a man ever came up to me in real life and said, āyouāre mine, the moon goddess told me so,ā Iād be calling 911 before he finished the sentence. Twilight had us all believing that imprinting was the most romantic thing ever. Looking back? No. Just no. If a guy I barely knew growled at me in Target, Iād be hurling a three-wick Bath & Body Works candle at his head and sprinting. Fictional fated mates = swoon. Real-life fated mates = ankle monitor.
Do you know what taking an ex back actually is? A rerun. And not even a good rerun. The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over expecting different results, and baby girl, thatās not romance ā thatās HBO Max recycling Friends.
And yet⦠I EAT UP a second-chance romance book. Something about reuniting lovers just hits. But in real life? If my friend told me she was remarrying her ex-husband, Iād stage an intervention. Unless he went to Mars for ten years and came back a changed man, keep that man in the rearview mirror.
And yes, Iāve taken my own ex back before. Over and over. Cheating, drugs, gaslighting, rinse, repeat. It was a whole clown circus, and I was the ringmaster. It took years to snap me out of it. So yeah, I get the appeal of the fantasy. But in reality? Iād rather date a traffic cone. At least the cone doesnāt cheat and it glows in the dark.
You cannot tell me fake dating isnāt the most delicious trope of them all. One bed? Forced intimacy? A kiss thatās ājust for the bitā? Inject it into my Kindle immediately.
But letās be honest ā fake dating doesnāt happen in real life. Outside of Hollywood PR stunts, who is doing this? And even if you tried? Absolute disaster.
Fake dating your lab partner so you donāt fail chem? Disaster. Fake dating your barista so you stop paying $8 for coffee? Disaster. Fake dating your landlord so rent is free? BABE. Thatās not romance. Thatās a Dateline special.
So yeah. Fated mates, second chances, and fake dating. In fiction? They are catnip. In real life? Restraining orders, side-eyes at Thanksgiving, and Dateline specials waiting to happen.
Thatās the magic of romance tropes though. Theyāre safe to play with in books. They let us feel chaos, danger, and passion without any of the actual consequences.
So buckle up, besties. This oneās unhinged, a little feral, and 100% fueled by caffeine.