Swipe Left on Stress: How Christian Girls Can Avoid Toxic Relationships (Online & IRL)
- Layne McDonald
- Dec 16, 2025
- 4 min read
Your friend just showed you screenshots of her boyfriend's latest text tantrum, and you're thinking, "Girl, this is not it." But when it's happening to you? Sometimes the red flags look more like gentle pink suggestions. College is already stressful enough without adding toxic relationship drama to the mix.
Here's the truth nobody talks about in Sunday school: toxic people don't come with warning labels, and they especially don't announce their toxicity during the cute coffee dates or late-night FaceTime calls. Whether you're swiping through dating apps or meeting someone at campus ministry, learning to spot unhealthy patterns early can save you months (or years) of heartache.
The Christian Camouflage Problem
Toxic relationships exist within Christian dating just as readily as in secular dating. The fact that someone calls themselves a Christian, quotes Scripture, or attends church doesn't automatically make them emotionally healthy or relationship-ready. Sometimes the most manipulative people use spiritual language to justify their behavior.
A truly toxic relationship robs you of your joy, steals your hope, and gradually convinces you that mistreatment is somehow normal or deserved. Instead of experiencing the patience, kindness, and love that Scripture promises, you might find yourself constantly walking on eggshells, managing someone else's emotions, or making excuses for their behavior.

Red Flags That Should Make You Run
The Feedback Allergic
Watch how your potential partner responds to any form of feedback or gentle correction. A person's greatest weakness often shows up when they receive negative feedback. Early on, you might notice they shut down, grow cold, or become defensive when you express concern about anything. As the relationship progresses, this often escalates to anger, either explosive or passive-aggressive.
A healthy partner accepts feedback with humility and actually makes changes. If your dating partner rarely or never responds well to your concerns, that's not just a personality quirk, it's a massive warning sign.
The Control Enthusiast
Be alert to anyone who must have their way in all things. This might disguise itself as biblical teaching about leadership or decision-making, but healthy relationships involve mutual respect and consideration. In toxic situations, you gradually find yourself absorbed into their interests while your own are dismissed or minimized.
Red flags include:
Showing resentment when you spend time on hobbies that don't include them
Trying to pull you away from friends and family through jealous behavior
Making most decisions without considering your input
Pressuring you to abandon your values or boundaries
The Blame Shifter
Pay close attention to how someone handles their mistakes and your emotions. Toxic partners often:
Lack genuine remorse when they hurt your feelings
Apologize without changing behavior
Blame you for "triggering" their bad reactions
Expect you to make most of the sacrifices in the relationship
If someone justifies poor treatment by saying things like "I love you so much that my jealousy made me angry," they're deflecting responsibility rather than taking accountability for their actions.

Online Dating: The Wild West of Romance
Dating apps create unique vulnerabilities that require extra wisdom. The digital space allows people to curate their image carefully, making it harder to spot inconsistencies until you're already emotionally invested.
Speed Check
Be cautious of someone who moves extremely quickly from initial contact to declarations of deep feelings or detailed future plans. Love-bombing, the intense, overwhelming attention in early stages, is a common manipulation tactic. Genuine connections develop over time, not over a weekend of constant texting.
Consistency Audit
Take time to verify that their online presence aligns with their real-life character. How do they communicate about others on social media? Do they speak negatively about exes, family members, or friends? This often reflects their communication patterns and can predict how they'll eventually speak about you.
The Pressure Test
Online connections can create false intimacy quickly. Be wary of someone who pressures you for personal information, photos, or meetings before you're ready. Healthy people respect your timeline and boundaries from the very beginning.
IRL Strategies That Actually Work
The Service Staff Test
Before committing to dating someone, observe how they treat servers, cashiers, and other service staff. How someone treats people they perceive as "beneath" them reveals character in ways that staged dates cannot.
The Feedback Filter
Ask yourself directly: Does this person respond humbly to negative feedback? Can they admit when they're wrong? Do they take responsibility for their mistakes without making excuses? These are non-negotiable qualities for healthy relationships.
The Energy Check
After spending time with this person, do you feel energized and valued, or drained and anxious? Can you be fully yourself around them, or do you constantly monitor and manage their emotions? Your gut feelings are often accurate assessments of relationship health.

Building Your Defense System
Know Your Worth
The more clearly you understand your value in Christ, the faster you'll recognize when someone treats you as less than you are. Spend time studying what God says about you, beloved daughter, chosen, treasured, worthy of respect and love.
Scripture Saturation
Fill your heart and mind with biblical truth about love, respect, and healthy relationships. The more your thoughts align with God's Word, the quicker you'll spot spiritual and relational danger.
Boundary Setting
You don't need permission to step back from someone who treats you poorly. Boundaries aren't unkind, they're protective and wise. Practice saying no to small things so you'll have the strength to say no to big things.
Don't Date Potential
If someone is showing you who they are through their actions, believe them. Don't invest months or years hoping they'll change into who you think they could become. Healthy change comes from personal conviction and growth, not from your love or patience.
If You're Already There
If you recognize yourself in a toxic dating relationship, know that you were created for so much more. Take time to learn what healthy relationships actually look like. Seek support from trusted friends, family, or counselors who can provide perspective and encouragement.
Breaking the silence about toxic relationships within Christian circles is essential. Whatever is hidden in darkness finds healing when brought into the light. You deserve honest conversations about relationships and real support from your faith community.
Remember: walking away from toxicity isn't giving up on love: it's making room for the healthy, life-giving relationship God has planned for you.
Ready to build the confidence and wisdom you need for healthy relationships? Check out our resources and coaching programs designed specifically for Christian women navigating college and beyond. Don't face these challenges alone: you were made for community and support.

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