Love in Purgatory: Situationships
Dating these days feels like playing a game where no one wants to admit they’re keeping score.
Somewhere between casual hookups and full-blown relationships lies the gray area we’ve all come to know too well: the situationship. It’s undefined, unscripted, and unendingly confusing. And yet, like moths to a flame, we can’t seem to stay away.
At first, it seems perfect. You’re texting all day, sharing memes, and maybe even going on cute little dates. There’s chemistry, comfort, and ambiguity to keep you guessing. But over time, that same ambiguity feels less exciting and more exhausting. Are we dating? Are we exclusive? Are we just really close friends who occasionally kiss? It’s like trying to build a house on the sand: whenever you’ve found solid footing, the tide comes in and washes it all away.
I couldn’t help but wonder: when did commitment become so terrifying?
Blame it on our generation’s obsession with keeping our options open. We’re terrified of missing out, so we cling to half-relationships like they’re the perfect balance between freedom and intimacy.
We tell ourselves it’s modern, it’s progressive, it’s what everyone else is doing. But the truth is, it’s exhausting. You’re constantly analyzing every text, every interaction, every pause in the conversation, looking for clues about what it all really means.
And then there’s the part no one tells you about: the heartbreak of realizing you’re more invested than they are. It’s not the kind of heartbreak that comes with a breakup: it’s quieter, lonelier, harder to explain. You can’t grieve something that was never officially yours, and yet there you are, lying in bed at 3 a.m., wondering where it all went wrong.
But here’s the thing about situationships: they’re not inherently bad.
They can be fun, exciting, even fulfilling, as long as you both want the same thing. The problem is when one person wants more, and the other is content to stay in the gray. That’s when it stops being fun and starts being a slow, painful unraveling.
So what’s the solution?
Maybe it’s time we stop being so afraid of the labels we’re so quick to avoid. Maybe it’s time we start having honest conversations about what we want and what we're looking for. Perhaps it’s time to stop settling for half-relationships and start holding out for the real thing.
Because here’s the truth: you deserve someone who’s all in. Someone who isn’t afraid to define things, take the leap, and be vulnerable. You deserve more than a situationship: you deserve a relationship. And if that scares them away, well, maybe they weren’t the ones to begin with.

















