Love can come when you least expect it, and it can happen in situations that may not be the easiest to deal with, okay, if we’re just being real. One of those types of situations is a long-distance situation. More than at any other time in the history of life, we’re seeing more and more long-distance relationships, or people considering it, because we’re having people travel more than they ever had, we have people meeting online, we have people meeting through social media—all these different venues of people being able to connect across the world, across states, you name it. These relationships in itself can feel like, at times, a lot of work. Long distance can add a little bit more pressure, and I’ve gotten a lot of people constantly asking me, “What do I need to do to have a successful long-distance relationship? How any advice can you give, so on and so forth?” So, I figured, okay, it’s time for us to discuss this, especially because there are two big things—one of them at the very end of this article, a bonus that’s extremely important, so please read to the end.
Here are the top keys to a successful long-distance relationship, with practical steps to ensure your connection thrives despite the miles.
1. Make Sure You’re Not Getting Scammed
One of the top keys to a successful long-distance relationship is, first, make sure you’re not getting scammed. Let’s walk through this a little slowly because, for some of you who are in these situations, you may not even know it yet. This is going to be a tough pill to swallow. I’m not here to hurt feelings and make anyone feel bad, but I am here to bring you clarity and truth, and sometimes the truth hurts. Unfortunately, we have a lot of people—and of course, this won’t apply to everybody’s long-distance situation—but we have a scenario where there’s a lot of scammers out there.
How to Protect Yourself:
- Verify with Live Video: Make sure you get to see this person live. We live in a world where there is FaceTime, there is Zoom, there’s all kinds of video calls that can be done that will allow you to see somebody live. If you are talking to someone at a distance, I don’t care how great these conversations are, I don’t care how awesome it has felt, until you see them live, you got to be skeptical. If they refuse to engage with you live, that’s a huge sign it is probably a scam of some sort. Some people might be scamming for the hope of getting money and resources out of you; some might be scamming because they just want companionship too—they’re feeling lonely, they want someone to talk to, but they have no intention of you ever seeing who they are.
- Beware of AI Manipulation: This might sound super crazy to y’all, but because we live in a world of AI, I had a follower once send me a video that a scammer who got in contact with her and had her feeling like she was in a relationship with me or dating me of some sort sent her a video, and it’s me in the video saying, “Hey baby,” or something like that, like, “Hope you have a great day,” whatever, whatever. What the scammer did was they took a video from one of my videos floating on the internet and they put an AI voice on there to make it seem like I was speaking to that person. That is not sufficient. Someone should not have to send you a video—again, if they cannot jump on a live video call with you, this is a huge problem.
- Red Flag: Requests for Money: If they’re asking you for money and you haven’t met them in person yet, huge red flag. I don’t like the idea of men asking women for money as it is. I understand there’s exceptions to every rule; I’m not trying to demonize the whole thing altogether, but I am not a fan of it. When we add the layer of a long-distance situation with someone who has yet to even see you, it’s just very, very likely that they’re scamming.
Pro Tip: I don’t want y’all to beat ourselves up. I don’t want to make you feel horrible right now. I just want to wake you up from whatever you’ve been falling into so you can get out of it. Verify they’re real, they’re genuine, and then from there, once they’ve passed those tests, we can move on to the next points.
2. Be Honest with Yourself About What You Can Handle
Another big tip, and this is kind of more of a foundational thing for you to have a successful long-distance relationship, is you need to first be honest with yourself about what you can handle. A lot of times, people are willing to do long-distance because, of course, you fall for someone, you want them to be yours, you don’t want them to be entertaining other people, and so there’s this need to feel like, okay, we got to make an official relationship so I can lock them or lock myself into their life, right? But in the rush to do that, we many times overlook, can we really deal with the dynamics of long distance?
Key Considerations:
- Physical Intimacy Needs: Let’s say you are a very affectionate person; you value physical intimacy very much. If you ignore that and get into a long-distance situation and you’re not very honest about that in a way that can help navigate and manage those needs, there’s a very good chance you’re going to find yourself in a very unfortunate predicament where you may cross certain lines, or you may become very unhappy, and that unhappiness comes out of you in different ways that still sabotages the relationship.
- Trust and Security: If you’ve been in previous relationships where you were cheated on, there’s a very good chance that long distance might be very difficult for someone like you to deal with because it leaves a lot more room for overanalyzing, leaves a lot more room for concern because you’re not there to watch them or be in their presence as often enough to feel as secure in the relationship. That issue goes beyond just them and it being long distance—you got some things you got to heal from—but it speaks to the fact of you being real with yourself.
- Friendship as an Option: In being honest about what you can handle, you do have to ask yourself the question of, would we be better off just being friends right now? I know that is scary because being friends makes people feel like, well, what if they go meet someone else? What if they go find someone else to be with? I understand the fear and concern, but if there’s truly something special there, then I would argue, if you guys are honest with each other, you’re transparent, you make sure you express your feelings when they arise, I think it can still work out fine as friendship. At least with friendship, though, there’s less pressure, and maybe it’s just a matter of the timing is not right at the moment. When we get to a place where we can actually be together, then we can try to make some things happen.
Pro Tip: Be real with yourself because if you fool yourself into believing you’re going to be okay with this when you’re not, that’s going to lead to much more problems than you would prefer.
3. Create a Structure of Interaction
Another huge key is you have to create a structure of interaction. When we are dealing with a long-distance relationship, there’s just so much more we have to be mindful of because of the distance that’s between us. Naturally, because we’re not going to get to see each other as often as one would like or one may be used to in a regular relationship that’s local, not having proper levels of interaction can create greater opportunities for things to fall apart.
How to Build Structure:
- Define Communication Needs: We’ve got to come in being very honest and, I believe, structured when it comes to how often we need to communicate to be happy in this relationship. Some people feel like we should be talking every single day, maybe even multiple times a day, and to them, for someone to not naturally want to do that, they think something’s got to be wrong with you or you don’t really love me. Not realizing, no, that’s just your requirement, that’s just your standard. The next person may be okay with, alright, yeah, we can touch base, but we don’t have to have a full-blown conversation every day.
- Incorporate Video Calls: I say interaction, not just communication, because when we hear communication, most people will just go to phone time. There needs to be a level of phone time; however, because we have better technology nowadays, I think it’s important to even say how often we want to see each other through FaceTime or video call. Maybe we have a video night, maybe at least we try to do a video call once a week or a couple times a month, or whatever the two people are comfortable and happy with.
- Plan In-Person Visits: Discuss in advance how often do we need to see each other to be okay. Where there is no structure, and they’re kind of just going with the flow, months pass by, and they haven’t seen each other. Several months, a year has passed by, and it’s not simply always because one person doesn’t have the desire to see the other—it’s just life happens. Because we’re not planning in advance and creating a structure that we can be ready for, when that life situation hits, that money has to be used elsewhere. Planning lessens the chance of outside interference and allows people to make plans financially and with their time.
Pro Tip: Structure gives someone something to look forward to. If you’re in a long-distance relationship and you have no clue when you’re going to see your partner next, that can start to weigh on you. But when you’re having a long, lonely moment, you can say to yourself, “Oh, but next month is our month to actually see each other in person.” That can help you get through those moments.
4. Discuss Boundaries with Other People
Another huge key to having a successful long-distance relationship is, discuss boundaries and, more specifically, discuss boundaries of other people. One of the big mistakes people make is assuming that someone knows how they should behave or move or operate in a relationship with you, whether that be in-person or long-distance. When people don’t meet that expectation, it leads to a lot of frustration, resentment, hurt, you name it.
Key Areas to Address:
- Opposite-Sex Friendships: Let’s say you’re dating someone, and they have friends of the opposite sex. In your mind, when you’re in a relationship with someone, you feel like there’s certain ways you shouldn’t be moving with your friends. In long distance, it can skew how people manage that aspect of their life because, when people are local, face-to-face, there tends to be a gravitation away from their friends to their partner, at least to some degree. In long distance, not having your partner there means naturally more people are going to still be dealing with their friends at the same level. Those behaviors or that hanging out can lead to concern.
- Example Scenario: If a woman is dating a guy, and the guy has male friends, they’re used to going out, hanging out with each other. Because the other friends are still single, he’s the one in a relationship, but because it’s long distance, there’s a very good chance he’ll be less inclined to not want to engage in going out with his homeboys still. To that woman, it might be, “Yo, you in a relationship. I don’t care if I’m not there, you better behave like a man in a relationship.” That can create tension, arguments, things of that nature.
- Random Interactions: In a long-distance relationship, there is a greater likelihood of unmet needs, feelings of loneliness, craving that physical intimacy. If people are not careful with the boundaries they are or are not establishing with others or how they carry themselves, it can open the door to people doing things they’re not supposed to do.
Action Step: Have discussions in advance. Be open-minded and understand that, when it’s long distance, it’s harder to be as strict with certain things. The more we can discuss things and lay it all out, the greater chance we can have success and eliminate friction, tension, and negativity.
Pro Tip: Establishing boundaries removes the misunderstanding layer and lessens the chance of anything going wrong or looking bad, even when it’s not bad.
5. Don’t Use Long-Distance as a Defense Mechanism
Make sure you’re not using this as a defense mechanism. A lot of people who have been hurt, who fear being fully vulnerable but still desire companionship, sometimes seek out relationships where there is some level of a buffer. Long-distance relationships allow them to keep a certain level of distance while still engaging and enjoying it for what they can.
Signs This Might Apply:
- You can have someone, but because they’re not here, you don’t have to constantly give of yourself. You can check yourself emotionally, keep yourself at bay from having to fall too deep and be at that potential place of being hurt.
- You’re not picking the person who’s truly best for you; you’re picking someone who is good enough to work with because, if you were too into them, you probably wouldn’t be able to handle being long-distance in that emotional state.
Action Steps:
- Reflect on Motives: If you’re attempting to have a long-distance relationship for this reason, you are setting yourself up for failure. You’re hiding behind this relationship in a way that blocks you from receiving the person who’s best for you and the life that’s best for you.
- Address Healing: You’re not allowing yourself to address those deeper issues that need to be resolved that will unlock a greater level of happiness. If this speaks to you, embrace the strength to move in the direction you need to move in because continuing like this is not healthy for you or them.
Pro Tip: At the end of the day, it’s not going to get you to where you belong.
6. Have a Plan for the Relationship
You need to have a plan for the relationship. What I’ve seen a lot is a big mistake a lot of people are making when they’re doing long distance is there’s no plan in place for the relationship itself. Right now, we’re long distance—what is the plan as far as when one of you will move to the other, or you guys will move to the same place, so you can actually physically, consistently be together? What is the plan as far as, do we want marriage, and how do we plan on getting to that point of being able to marry each other?
Why It Matters:
- A lot of people are just living in the moment of their relationship. Though I want you to live in the moment to the extent of enjoying yourself, you can’t lose sight of the overall bigger picture, especially in a dynamic like this.
- I’ve seen these situations go from one year, two years, five, and it’s still long distance, and it’s like, what are we doing here? How long can each person truly handle being at a distance and not entertaining other people, not crossing lines we shouldn’t cross? It’s a lot to ask of somebody over a long period.
Example Plan:
- If you’re dating someone internationally, and they need to get their papers, and it’s going to take a while, have a specific plan in place. I know of people who married somebody internationally, but they had a very specific plan: “We’re going to date for X amount of time; if we feel like it’s all good, the plan is we get engaged, we get married, we file the paperwork.” Everything was mapped out, and that’s why those people can be successful.
Pro Tip: If you’re finding that you have a partner who does not want to discuss it, that starts to bring into question how serious they are or if they’re simply not on the same page as you. Make your choice with full awareness of what you’re dealing with.
7. Include God in the Relationship
Make sure you are including God in the relationship. I don’t care if it’s long distance, I don’t care if it’s in person, I don’t care what it is—I’m going to always say to include God. That’s the bottom line. I’m going to always be a believer that that’s going to be one of the huge keys to success.
How to Include God:
- More Than Rituals: When I say include God, I don’t simply mean pray together, which is a beautiful thing. I don’t simply mean watch sermons online together or read scripture together, have Bible study together, which is all good.
- Personal Prayer: Go to God in prayer yourself and make sure: one, you should even be in this situation; two, this is the right person for you; three, what’s so important is, in a long-distance relationship, there’s so much room for overthinking, assuming, worrying, feeling lonely, all these things because we’re at a distance. Pray before you react. If you don’t learn how to calm yourself down through talking to God, through letting God guide you in those moments where you’re struggling, it’s going to make things more difficult for you. You may react in a way that can start to sabotage the relationship.
Pro Tip: Including God is a way of keeping yourself accountable, making sure you can stay in the right state of mind, and ensuring you’re taking the right approach in the various moments that we have to deal with.
Bonus: Create an Extended Period of Being in Each Other’s Presence
Here’s something that I need every person entertaining a long-distance relationship to remember: you need to create, at least if possible, an extended period of being in each other’s presence. I’ve seen many people do long distance and feel like they’re so in love with each other, and this is the person, the relationship is so great, and they have great communication. But when they do see each other, it’s for a day, it’s for a weekend—maybe you’re so excited to see your person that it’s only good feelings. There’s a great chance that you will overlook things or be riding the high of the excitement of finally getting to be around them.
Why It Matters:
- Then, I’ve seen these same people, one day, actually be in the same place, move in together, get married, or whatever, and realize, “I do not like them like that. They’re annoying when they’re always around, or this is not what I was fantasizing.” The reality of it hits them different because now they’re past the whole just being excited when they see each other.
- The only way to achieve that is by extending the period of actually being around each other. Try to get like a week, two weeks, where you guys can consistently be around each other—a long vacation with each other or one of them coming to the other for an extended period of time—so you can really see how much you two enjoy each other’s presence and enjoy each other at the core, past all the surface-level things that can be distracting you from that reality.
Pro Tip: That way, you can make a more informed decision on if this is truly the right fit, and you two can go on to have an amazing, successful long-term relationship.
FAQs About Long-Distance Relationships
1. How can I make sure I’m not being scammed in a long-distance relationship?
Make sure you get to see this person live via FaceTime, Zoom, or other video calls. If they refuse to engage live or ask for money before meeting in person, those are huge red flags. Verify their identity early to avoid scams.
2. How do I know if I can handle a long-distance relationship?
Be honest with yourself about what you can handle. Ask if you can manage limited physical intimacy, less frequent in-person time, or potential insecurities from past experiences. Consider friendship first if the timing isn’t right.
3. How often should we communicate in a long-distance relationship?
It depends on your needs. Some people feel like we should be talking every single day, maybe multiple times a day. Others are okay with touching base less frequently. Create a structure of interaction, like daily texts, weekly video calls, and planned visits, that works for both.
4. What boundaries should we set in a long-distance relationship?
Discuss boundaries of other people, like how you interact with friends of the opposite sex or behave in social settings. Be clear about what makes each of you comfortable to avoid tension or misunderstandings.
5. How do we plan for the future in a long-distance relationship?
Have a plan for the relationship itself. Discuss when one of you will move to the other, or you’ll move to the same place, and what your goals are (e.g., marriage). A clear timeline, like dating for a year before getting engaged, helps keep you aligned.
6. Why is spending extended time together important?
You need to create an extended period of being in each other’s presence, like a week or two, to see how you enjoy each other’s presence at the core. Brief visits can mask compatibility issues, so extended time helps you make an informed decision.
Conclusion
Long-distance relationships can feel like a lot of work, but with the right approach, they can thrive. Make sure you’re not getting scammed by verifying their identity live. Be honest with yourself about what you can handle, create a structure of interaction, discuss boundaries of other people, don’t use long-distance as a defense mechanism, have a plan for the relationship, include God for guidance, and create an extended period of being in each other’s presence. These steps will help you navigate the challenges and build a strong, lasting connection. Thank you for reading, and I pray this was helpful to you.
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