Beyond First Impressions: 8 Questions to Objectively Evaluate Your Date
In brief: After a first date, our impressions are often skewed by cognitive biases: the halo effect leads us to generalize a positive quality to an entire personality, while confirmation bias pushes us to only retain what confirms our initial impression. Our attachment styles also color our perception. To objectively evaluate an encounter, Jay Shetty, a former monk turned relationship coach, proposes eight structured questions to be asked with a cool head. Among the most revealing: did you feel free to be yourself? Was the conversation balanced? Did you learn something new about yourself? How did you feel during versus after the date? These questions bypass our mental automatisms by replacing euphoria or diffuse doubt with a factual and rational evaluation of the encounter's true quality.
You're back from a first date. The atmosphere was pleasant, the conversation flowed, yet you can't quite pinpoint what you truly feel. Or perhaps the opposite: you're overwhelmed by intense euphoria, and a little voice whispers that you should probably take a step back before getting carried away.
In both cases, you lack a structured evaluation framework. This is precisely what Jay Shetty, a former monk turned relationship coach, offers in his book 8 Rules of Love (2023). His approach involves replacing diffuse impressions with precise questions, asked objectively, to evaluate the true quality of an encounter.
I'm Gildas Garrec, a psychotherapist specializing in CBT in Nantes. In my practice, I observe daily how much initial romantic impressions are distorted by our cognitive schemas, attachment wounds, and thought distortions. Jay Shetty's questions, enriched with a therapeutic perspective, offer a concrete tool to gain clarity.
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Why Are Our Post-Date Impressions So Unreliable?
Before diving into the 8 questions, it's crucial to understand why our brains play tricks on us after a romantic encounter.
The halo effect leads us to generalize a positive quality (the person is funny) to their entire personality (they must therefore be reliable, intelligent, kind). In CBT, this is called overgeneralization: drawing a global conclusion from a single piece of evidence. Confirmation bias causes us to only retain information that confirms our initial impression, whether positive or negative. If you've decided you like this person, you'll unconsciously filter everything that supports that view. Attachment styles also color our perception. Someone with an anxious attachment style will interpret a slight delay in response as rejection, while someone with an avoidant attachment style will feel discomfort with too much closeness, even if pleasant.The following 8 questions are designed to bypass these automatic responses and bring you back to a factual evaluation.
The 8 Questions to Ask Yourself After a Date
1. Did I Feel Free to Be Myself?
Jay Shetty emphasizes a fundamental point: a healthy relationship begins with the ability to be authentic. If you spent the date monitoring your words, playing a role, or adapting your personality to please, that's an important signal.
In CBT, this question explores your submission and approval schemas. The approval schema drives you to modify your behavior to gain validation from others. If you felt the need to fade into the background or overact, ask yourself: is this related to the other person's attitude, or to an old schema reactivating?2. How Did I Feel During the Date — and After?
There's an essential distinction between how you felt during the date and how you felt after. Some people are superficially charming but leave a sense of emptiness or unease once the date is over.
Shetty encourages observing both phases. During: were you relaxed, curious, energized? Or tense, on guard, exhausted? After: do you feel inspired, peaceful? Or anxious, doubtful?
In cognitive therapy, we work on differentiating between excitement and well-being. Intense excitement (the famous "butterflies in the stomach") can be a sign of healthy attraction, but also a signal of an anxious schema activating. Well-being after a date — a calm sense of satisfaction — is often a more reliable indicator.
3. Was the Conversation Balanced?
A date where only one person talks for 80% of the time reveals an imbalance. Shetty highlights that a balanced conversation — where each person asks questions, listens, and builds on what's said — is the first sign of reciprocal relational capacity.
From a CBT perspective, observe if your interlocutor practices active listening: do they rephrase what you say? Do they ask follow-up questions? Or do they systematically redirect the conversation back to themselves?
If you were the one monopolizing the conversation, also ask yourself: was it nervousness? A need to fill silences? Comfortable silences are paradoxically an excellent sign of compatibility.
4. Did I Learn Something New About Myself?
This is perhaps Shetty's most original question. A good date isn't just measured by what you learned about the other person, but by what the encounter revealed about yourself.
Did you discover a topic you're passionate about but never talk about? Did you realize you had a need you were unaware of? Were you surprised by your own reaction to a situation?
In CBT, this question aligns with the concept of metacognitive awareness: the ability to observe one's own thoughts and reactions. A date that teaches you something about yourself is a valuable date, regardless of its romantic outcome.
5. Am I Idealizing Them, or Do I See Them as They Are?
Shetty warns against the tendency to project an idealized image onto the other. After just one date, you don't know this person. You know the version they chose to show for two hours.
The question to ask: am I appreciating what I actually observed, or am I filling in the blanks with positive projections?
This is where CBT is particularly useful. Dichotomous thinking (all-or-nothing) pushes us to quickly categorize people as "THE one" or "it will never work." Reality almost always lies in between. Note the facts: what the person said, did, expressed. Separate facts from your interpretations.
6. Are Our Core Values Compatible?
Shetty distinguishes between preferences (musical tastes, hobbies, diet) and values (honesty, family, ambition, spirituality, commitment). Preferences can differ without consequence. Values, however, are the foundation of a lasting relationship.
In a single date, it's difficult to map someone's values accurately. But you can observe clues: how does this person talk about their family? Their work? Their friends? Do their life choices seem aligned with yours?
Our psychological tests allow you to explore your own values and relational style, which will give you a clear reference point for evaluating compatibility.
7. Would I Be Comfortable Introducing Them to My Loved Ones?
This question is a formidably effective cognitive shortcut. Shetty suggests visualizing the person in your real environment: at dinner with your friends, lunch with your family, in your daily life.
If the idea makes you uncomfortable, ask yourself why. Is it because you perceive a real mismatch (values, behavior)? Or is it related to a fear of judgment ("what will my friends think?") which stems more from your own insecurity?
In CBT, this distinction between a legitimate external signal and projected internal anxiety is fundamental. Both exist, and they don't call for the same response.
8. Do I Want to See This Person Again for the Right Reasons?
The last question is perhaps the most important. Shetty invites us to examine the motivation behind wanting to see someone again. Good reasons: genuine curiosity, a desire to get to know the person better, a feeling of well-being, an impression of value compatibility.
Reasons to examine: fear of loneliness, social pressure ("I need to find someone"), excitement related to novelty, a need for validation, physical attraction without any emotional connection.In therapy, I frequently observe people who go on dates not out of authentic desire, but to escape an inner void. Emotional dependency, an abandonment schema, or a compulsive need for reassurance can push someone to want to see another person again for the wrong reasons. If you recognize yourself in this mechanism, an emotional dependency test can be a first step towards awareness.
How to Use These 8 Questions in Practice
Jay Shetty recommends writing down your answers after each date. Not in the moment, but a few hours later, when the initial excitement or disappointment has somewhat subsided.
In CBT, this practice aligns with what is called a thought record: a tool that involves observing automatic thoughts, gaining distance from them, and evaluating them rationally. The simple act of writing down your answers to these 8 questions shifts your relationship with the situation: you move from reactive emotional mode to analytical mode.
Some practical tips:
- Wait at least 2 hours after the date before answering. Physiological excitement (adrenaline, dopamine) takes time to subside.
- Be factual: "he/she asked me 4 questions about my work and listened to my answers" rather than "he/she is really interested in me."
- Reread your answers before a potential second date. You'll be surprised by the clarity it brings.
- Compare your answers over time if you're seeing multiple people. Trends will emerge: do the same patterns repeat from one date to the next?
When Patterns Repeat: The Signal for Deeper Work
If, by regularly answering these 8 questions, you notice the same patterns — you systematically idealize, you never feel free to be yourself, you see people again for the wrong reasons — then it's no longer a matter of "bad choices" but a deep cognitive schema that unconsciously guides your relational decisions.
Early maladaptive schemas, identified by Jeffrey Young in his schema therapy, form in childhood and reactivate in adult relationships. An abandonment schema leads to clinging too quickly. A mistrust/abuse schema leads to seeking evidence of betrayal. A defectiveness/shame schema leads to believing one doesn't deserve to be loved as they are.
These schemas are not resolved with a list of questions. They are addressed in therapy, within a structured and supportive framework.
Conclusion
Jay Shetty's 8 questions are not a magic formula. They are a decentering tool: a way to step out of immediate emotional reaction to gain a clearer perspective on an encounter. Enriched with a CBT framework, they become a true exercise in introspection.
If you find that your romantic relationships follow repetitive patterns — idealization, dependency, avoidance, choosing incompatible partners — cognitive behavioral therapy can help you identify these mechanisms and build more balanced relationships. Feel free to book an appointment to discuss it.
Video: To Go Further
To delve deeper into the concepts discussed in this article, we recommend this video:
Rethinking Infidelity - Esther Perel | TEDTED
Full Guide: Discover our complete guide to modern dating and seduction for an overview.
To understand the scientific methodology behind this analysis, discover our dedicated page: The Gottman Model
Also read: Chronic Loneliness: Understanding and Breaking the Cycle
Recommended Readings:
- 8 Rules of Love — Jay Shetty
- The Seven Principles for Making Marriage Work — John Gottman
- Mating in Captivity: Unlocking Erotic Intelligence — Esther Perel
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About the author
Gildas Garrec · CBT Psychopractitioner
Certified practitioner in cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT), author of 16 books on applied psychology and relationships. Over 900 clinical articles published across Psychologie et Sérénité.
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