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They moved abroad for work, then started looking for love. Here are their 5 best pieces of dating advice.

After Dena Roché’s first long-distance relationship went badly, she wasn’t up for doing it again.

2. Long distance can only last so long

Dena Roché’s first long-distance relationship lasted for three years and, at first, felt like a fairy tale. They would meet up in cities like Rome, London, and Paris and spend extended time in each of their hometowns, but she said it never felt real.

“While we did spend time in each other’s world, it still had that vacation-like quality. We had to maximize the little time we had with each other, we couldn’t be bothered with the mundane tasks that make up a life,” she said.

Luckily for Roché, the second time she met someone living far away, she was able to get him to relocate.

3. Plan a dating event

Candice Gallagher had faced challenges with dating in the US, England, and Switzerland, but she found it to be the most difficult when she moved to Singapore in 2019.

“I found there was a very small pool of people who fit into the same cultural space I operated in. It was like I was trying to go fishing in a very small pond,” she said about her experience.

When she came across a video on TikTok of a group in the US who had set up a dating event, she felt inspired to do the same in Singapore.

“I ended up hosting a dating event called ‘Singlepore.’ It was pretty amazing. It reflects a desire for offline, real-world ways to connect with people,” she said.

4. Find a therapist for emotional support

Danielle Marcano was bored with her life in Philadelphia and applied for a job in northern China. She made the move overseas in 2019 at 25, and although she was satisfied with her career progression, she found dating to be the most challenging part of her new life overseas.

Language barriers made it hard for her to date local Chinese men, and she said the majority of the single expats she’s encountered had little interest in anything serious.

Despite struggling through heartbreak and self-doubt, she’s determined to stick with it: “I’m confident that the support system I’ve built here — my therapist, friends, and life coaches — will help me build the confidence I need to return to the dating scene.” Weekly online therapy has become a staple.

Nicola Prentis moved to Spain in 2012 and says her real personality doesn’t come through when she tries to speak in Spanish.

5. Don’t expect dating to work the same way it did at home

Cultural expectations differ when it comes to dating, so it’s helpful to get some local insight.

On top of that, personality can get lost in translation.

Nicola Prentis, a single expat, moved to Spain in 2012. Over the years, she has tried dating in Spanish but has found that she never feels like herself.

“I’ve come to prefer people who speak English and don’t make fun of my Spanish, just so they get to know the real me and not this version of me who’s sometimes bolshy, sometimes overly agreeable, and often inattentive. After all, I wouldn’t date me in Spanish,” she wrote.

Who pays on first dates can also cause confusion. In the US, dating is typically casual, and in heterosexual relationships, it’s long been the norm for men to pick up the tab.

One woman who was single when she moved to Spain was surprised to find that most of the local men she went on dates with expected to split the dinner bill.

When local friends told her that was a common practice, she realized there was no need to get offended — or assume the man had no potential for her.

Read the original article on Business Insider

https://www.businessinsider.com/dating-living-abroad-tips-women-expat-looking-for-love-2024-9