Dating Red Flags5 min readBy Red Flag Archive
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Quick answer: Shrekking is choosing a partner specifically because you assume less conventional attractiveness means safer, better treatment. Settling is choosing a partner despite real reservations because you believe you can’t do better. Genuine attraction outside your usual type is a real, positive connection that simply doesn’t match your prior assumptions about who you’d be drawn to. All three can look similar from the outside — the difference is entirely in your own reasoning.

What Is Shrekking?

Shrekking describes choosing a partner who isn’t conventionally attractive specifically because of an assumption that they’ll be more loyal, more grateful, or less likely to mistreat you than someone considered more conventionally desirable. The reasoning is strategic rather than purely relational — the partner is selected, at least in part, as a hedge against being cheated on, taken for granted, or rejected.

The flaw is structural: attractiveness has no reliable relationship to character, loyalty, or emotional availability. A partner selected primarily as a “safer bet” can still mistreat you, still reject you, and still fail to meet your emotional needs — the strategy simply doesn’t protect against the things it’s meant to protect against, while also treating the partner as a calculated choice rather than someone genuinely wanted for who they are.

What Is Settling?

Settling describes choosing to stay with or commit to a partner despite real, specific reservations, driven by a belief that you won’t find something better, that you’re running out of time, or that your standards are unrealistic. Unlike shrekking, settling isn’t necessarily about appearance — it can involve compromising on values, treatment, ambition, or emotional compatibility.

The core marker of settling is an internal sense of resignation rather than genuine enthusiasm — choosing a relationship out of scarcity thinking or fear of being alone, rather than out of a positive assessment that this specific person is right for you.

What Is Genuine Attraction Outside Your Type?

This is the healthy version of surprising yourself — falling for someone who doesn’t match your previous assumptions about who you’d be drawn to, whether that’s about appearance, personality, career, or lifestyle. This is closely related to the “curveball-crushing” trend, and reflects real, positive attraction built on getting to know someone’s actual character rather than a strategic calculation.

Side-by-Side Comparison

How to Tell Which One You’re Actually Experiencing

Why This Distinction Actually Matters

All three patterns can produce a relationship that looks identical from the outside — a couple that doesn’t fit a conventional attractiveness mold. But the internal reasoning predicts very different outcomes. Genuine attraction outside your type tends to be one of the more durable foundations for a relationship, precisely because it isn’t built on a strategic assumption that needs to hold up under pressure. Shrekking and settling both build a relationship on a premise — safety through lower attractiveness, or “this is as good as it gets” — that tends to erode as soon as real relationship challenges arise, because the premise was never really about the actual person in front of you.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is it wrong to date someone who isn’t conventionally attractive to you at first?
Not at all — attraction can genuinely develop over time as you get to know someone’s character. The concern is specifically the strategic reasoning behind shrekking, not the outcome of dating someone outside conventional beauty standards.

How do I know if I’m settling versus just being realistic about compatibility?
Realistic compatibility assessment still involves genuine enthusiasm about the actual person. Settling involves resignation and an absence of real excitement, even if the relationship is objectively “fine” on paper.

Can shrekking turn into genuine attraction over time?
Yes, this is possible — but it’s worth being honest about the starting point. If the relationship deepens into real, earned attraction based on getting to know someone, that’s a positive development regardless of the initial reasoning.

Is it selfish to want both attraction and good treatment?
No — wanting both is a completely reasonable standard, not an unrealistic one. The false premise behind shrekking and settling alike is that you have to choose between them.

If you’re trying to honestly assess whether your reasoning for a relationship is genuine attraction, shrekking, or settling, writing down what specifically draws you to someone — and revisiting it honestly over time — with something like the Red Flag Log Tracker can help you see your own pattern clearly.

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