"Right for you" isn't selfish: it's honest
We're scared of asking whether something is "right for us," as if asking whether a relationship is right for you were cold or calculating. It isn't. It's the most honest question you can ask yourself: does what I'm living add to my life or wear me down? Loving yourself well is also that — looking at whether the relationship leaves you better than it found you, instead of holding on out of habit, out of fear of being alone, or because of the time you've already invested.
It's not about putting the other person on a scale to judge them. It's about looking at yourself: how you are, how you sleep, how you treat yourself when that relationship is in your life. That's the data that matters, and no one has it but you.
The trap of idealization
The problem is that your mind doesn't show you the relationship: it shows you an edited version of the relationship. When you like someone, your brain fills the gaps with what you want them to be. You idealize the potential ("once they're less stressed it'll be different"), you forgive patterns that keep repeating, and you hold on to the snapshot of the best night instead of the real average across the months.
On top of that comes the recency bias: if the week was lukewarm but last night you had a beautiful conversation, today you swear everything's fine. If there was a cold encounter recently, you feel like it's all falling apart. You decide based on the last scene, not the whole movie. That's why the answer changes from day to day and never quite settles.
Signs it adds to you vs. signs it wears you down
There's no universal list, because different things matter to different people. But there are patterns worth looking at closely:
- Adds to you: you leave your time together with more energy than you arrived with, not less.
- Adds to you: you can show what you're going through without weighing every word so you don't make them uncomfortable.
- Adds to you: there's consistency — what they say and what they do look alike.
- Wears you down: you're more in your head (analyzing, waiting, justifying) than actually enjoying it.
- Wears you down: your needs are always put off for later, and you've already gotten used to it.
- Wears you down: the "good version" of the relationship shows up more and more spaced out, and you wait for it the way you wait on the weather.
It's not about labeling anyone. It's information about how you feel inside the relationship, which is the only thing you can honestly assess.
Intensity isn't the same as consistency
Here's one of the hardest knots. We confuse intensity with deep connection. But intensity — the high, the rollercoaster, the "I can't stop thinking about this person" — often coexists with instability, not security. What makes you feel alive isn't always what makes you feel good.
Consistency is quieter, and that's why we underrate it: showing up, holding steady, being available without drama. It has no fireworks, but it's what lets you build on something solid. Asking yourself whether a relationship is right for you is, in large part, asking yourself whether what you feel is intensity or something you can actually live with every day.
Record how you feel AFTER, not how you remember it
The trick almost no one does: instead of trusting your memory, write down how you felt after each time together, in the moment, before your mind edits it. Two lines are enough. "Had a good time today but left with a strange knot because they canceled plans at the last minute again."
Why "after" and not "during"? Because during the time together chemistry takes over and everything feels perfect. The truth shows up when you're alone with what you feel. And a month from now you won't remember that knot — you'll remember that you had a good time. The record freezes the real data before idealization retouches it.
Do it for several weeks and the pattern shows up on its own: whether those "afters" are getting better and better, or whether the same uncomfortable feeling you've been downplaying keeps repeating.
Data doesn't decide: it organizes
Here's what matters. Having your records in front of you doesn't tell you what to do or replace what you feel. Data doesn't decide for you — it organizes what you already know but aren't seeing, because idealization and anxiety make noise on top of it.
When you see, in your own words, how you felt time after time together, you stop fighting a tricky memory and start looking at something concrete. The decision is still entirely yours. But it's much easier to make when you have the real average of the relationship in front of you instead of the last scene your mind decided to keep.
In TuCora you define your own criteria, record per person how each time together leaves you, and the analysis gives your data back to you organized so you can see the pattern without anyone else reading it — all encrypted on your phone.