Relationship goals: how to win at dating, marriage, and sex

You cannot hit a target that you never name. I learned that lesson on a humid Friday in Austin. I asked a woman out without a clue about my own aim. We had fun, yet the evening ended in that vague limbo you know too well. She wanted a boyfriend. I looked for fresh friends. Both silent, we ghosted each other. Since that night I write my dating goal before every match. You should write yours as well.

Dating

🩷 Casual fun that stays light.

🩷 A steady boyfriend or girlfriend with room to grow.

🩷 Fast track to a wife or husband.

🩷 Skill practice so you sharpen flirting, banter, or intimacy.

Pick one. Speak it out loud. Type it in your profile. The dating goals lose power if you hide them.

Every woman I coach writes two lists: Deal Breakers and Must Haves. Deal Breakers may include smoking, chronic debt, or zero desire for kids. Must Haves cover honesty, shared humor, and matching libido. The list grants you speed. Swipe, chat, or walk away in minutes. The dating goals live in those pages.

Upgrade Skill, Not Just Profile Pics

Yes, lighting matters, yet skill trumps filters. Craft better openers, playful teases, and warm closers. I run live drills in Dallas cafes. We approach ten strangers, greet, compliment, exit. Women report a 40 percent rise in quality matches that week.

Quick Warm-Up You Can Do Tonight

Text three friends a one-line check-in with a quirky hook. My example: “Hey, rate your day in tacos 🌮.” You practice spark without risk.

Balance Softness and Standards

Hold kind eyes yet firm rules. A man who pushes your boundary at date one will smash it at date ten. State rules early. Good men respect, fake men flake.

Financial and Career Mirrors

I spoke with Clara, a Houston banker. Her love goals required a partner who matched her ambition. She screens for goals in relationships by asking, “What are you building this year?” The answers reveal grit in seconds. You can tweak that line for your field.

Quick Recap