245 - Plan First, Date Better

Resources for this episode

How to Write a Kick Butt Dating Profile Guide

Tell me what you want in a dating playbook.

The Five Stage Dating Success Framework is designed to guide people with disabilities through the process of finding meaningful relationships. Stage 1 covers foundation work and self-discovery. Stage 2 builds confidence and resilience, including the ability to handle rejection. Stage 4 is active dating, and Stage 5 focuses on navigating relationships. But Stage 3 — the strategic planning phase — is the essential bridge between inner work and real-world action.

The core idea is simple: if you plan ahead, you can be more present. When logistics are handled before the date, your energy is freed up to actually connect with someone rather than worrying about accessibility, communication, or safety in the moment.

Platform Research and Accessibility Evaluation

The first step is deciding how you're going to date — online, in person, or a combination — and then researching your options thoroughly. If you're using dating apps, assess how accessible and easy to use they are. Look beyond functionality too: does the community culture reflect inclusion and a welcome of diversity? If you're meeting people in person through groups, events, or regular activities, ask the same questions about those spaces.

Developing a Disclosure Strategy

One of the most complex parts of dating with a disability is knowing when and how to disclose. Kathy recommends a three-tiered approach. The first tier is what you share in your profile or early messages. The second is how you communicate your access and support needs before meeting someone in person. The third is how you navigate deeper, more personal conversations about your disability once a relationship begins to develop. Having this strategy mapped out in advance removes a huge source of anxiety and lets you move through early dating with more confidence.

Safety Planning with Disability Considerations

Safety planning goes beyond the standard advice of meeting in public places. For people with disabilities, there are additional layers to consider — backup communication methods if your primary one fails, whether a personal care attendant may need to be present or nearby, and having trusted people who know where you are and who you're meeting. Building this protocol before you start dating means it becomes a natural part of your routine rather than a stressful afterthought.

Budget and Financial Planning

Dating costs money, and for people managing fixed or limited incomes, that's a real barrier. This skill is about getting creative and realistic. Look at what you can genuinely afford to spend on dates each month, then research free or low-cost accessible options in your area — parks, free community events, coffee shops — that still offer a comfortable and safe environment. Budgeting also means accounting for any disability-related costs, such as transportation or accommodation needs, that others might not factor in.

Accessible Venue Research

Building a personal database of accessible venues in your area is one of the most practical things you can do before you start dating. Knowing in advance which restaurants, parks, and venues work for your needs means you're never scrambling on the fly or feeling anxious about an unfamiliar environment. The more options you have, the more flexibility and confidence you bring into every date.

Authentic Profile Creation

Your dating profile is often the first impression you make, and it should genuinely reflect who you are. This includes thoughtfully integrating your disability into your profile if you choose to. The goal isn't to lead with your diagnosis, but to present an honest, complete picture of yourself that attracts people who are truly compatible. Kathy notes this is one of the areas she's written about most extensively, and she links a dedicated guide in her show notes.

Milestones That Signal You're Ready for Stage 4

Reaching Stage 4 — active dating — isn't about perfection. The stages in this framework are fluid, not rigid. But there are clear indicators you're ready: you've selected platforms that feel accessible and culturally comfortable, you have a clear disclosure strategy across all three tiers, a safety protocol is in place, you've set a realistic dating budget, you have a working list of accessible venues, and you've created a profile that honestly represents who you are.

Action Items to Begin Right Now

Start by researching your dating platforms or in-person opportunities and evaluating them for accessibility and community culture. Then draft your disclosure strategy using the three-tier model. Map out what your safety protocol will look like, including any disability-specific needs. Set a monthly dating budget and begin identifying free or low-cost accessible venues in your area. Each of these steps can be taken independently and built on over time — and completing them means that when you do start dating, you're showing up prepared, grounded, and ready to connect.

Check out coaching in dating and relationships with me to get the support and relationships you want.

Take our Dating Success quiz.

Music by Successful Motivation

Artwork photo by Elevate