People love to tell you your standards are “too high”.
That you’re picky. Unrealistic. Fussy.
But what if that’s not actually true?
What if your standards are fine… you’re just aiming at the wrong people, in the wrong places, in the wrong way?
Here are eight signs the problem isn’t what you want. It’s where and how you’re looking.
1. You keep chasing people who don’t want the same things
You say you want something real.
Then you match with people whose bios scream “not looking for anything serious”.
You tell yourself you’re the exception. That they’ll change their mind once they meet you.
Spoiler: they rarely do.
Your standard (wanting commitment) is completely reasonable. The issue is your aim. You’re fishing in the short-term pool, then getting confused when no one wants long-term.
2. You’re relying on environments that reward the opposite of what you value
If you care about depth, shared lifestyle and similar values, yet you spend all your energy on speed-based, looks-first apps, there’s a clash.
Those platforms are built for quick decisions, not thoughtful ones.
It’s like wanting a calm, connected relationship but only ever meeting people at 3am on a dance floor. Not wrong, just mismatched. Sometimes shifting to more curated options, like a proper dating service sydney style setup or even smaller, interest-based events, will align much better with what you actually want.
3. Your “no” list is clear, but your “yes” list is fuzzy
You know exactly what you don’t want.
No smokers. No party-all-weekend people. No one who hates exercise. No drama.
But if someone asked what you do want beyond “tall, kind, active”, it gets vague fast.
That means you’re excellent at filtering out obvious bad fits, but not great at spotting your actual people when they’re in front of you.
Your standards aren’t the issue. The lack of a clear, positive picture is. It’s hard to aim well when your target is a blur.
4. You get strong early chemistry with people who are clearly wrong for you
You’ve probably had this: instant spark with someone who lives completely differently to you.
You stay up late talking. The physical attraction is huge. It feels electric.
Then real life arrives.
You’re up at 5am and they’re online gaming until 2am. You’re saving for a home and they’re living paycheque to paycheque. Suddenly that spark feels more like static.
This isn’t “your standards are too high”. It’s your chemistry radar being loud and your compatibility radar being quiet. The aim is off when excitement keeps trumping alignment.
5. You keep giving second chances to obvious red flags
You see the signs.
Flaky communication. Weird stories about past relationships. Strange money decisions. A total mismatch around health or lifestyle.
You feel it in your gut, but you override it.
“They’re probably just busy.”
“Everyone has baggage.”
“Maybe I’m being too harsh.”
You’re not.
Your standards are trying to protect you, but your fear of being “too picky” tells you to stay. That fear is what keeps your aim locked onto the wrong people for too long.
6. The people who actually meet your criteria don’t excite you (at first)
Every now and then, you meet someone who ticks most of the boxes.
Similar values. Similar lifestyle. Kind. Stable. Communicative.
And you feel… fine.
Not blown away. Not obsessed. Just steady.
If you’re used to chaos, that can feel “boring”. It’s easy to decide your standards must be wrong, because this calm person doesn’t give you the same rush. In reality, your nervous system might just not be used to safety yet. Sometimes your aim is finally on target, and your brain hasn’t caught up.
7. You’re only aiming inside a tiny social bubble
You might be very clear on what you want, but only looking within one small circle.
Same gym. Same suburb. Same industry. Same friends-of-friends loop.
If it hasn’t produced a good fit yet, endlessly circling that same pool won’t magically change the odds. The standards aren’t the problem. The sample size is. To hit the target, you sometimes need new environments, new circles, new ways of meeting people that widen the field.
8. You feel pressure to “prove” you’re not picky
This one is sneaky.
If people around you keep saying you’re too fussy, you may start dating in a way that proves them wrong.
Agreeing to dates you’re not keen on.
Staying in situations that don’t feel right.
Talking yourself into “giving people a chance” long after you know it’s not a match.
You’re not lowering your standards because you want to. You’re lowering them to manage other people’s opinions. That moves your aim away from what’s genuinely right for you and towards what looks reasonable to everyone else.
If you read this and thought, “Yep, that’s me,” take a breath.
You probably don’t need to slash your standards or suddenly become a person who’s ok with half-effort connections.
You might just need to aim differently. New environments. Clearer positive criteria. Better filters up front. And a bit more trust that wanting something solid, aligned and on your level isn’t asking for too much. It’s just asking in the wrong places.
