Future Faking: When They Promise Everything But Deliver Nothing

Future Faking: When They Promise Everything But Deliver Nothing

If you’re reading this, you’ve probably:

  • Heard “We should move in together” for months with zero action
  • Been promised trips, dates, and plans that never materialize
  • Listened to them talk about marriage/kids/your future together constantly
  • Watched them make elaborate plans that disappear the next day
  • Felt excited about the future, then confused when nothing progresses
  • Been told “soon” or “when things settle down” indefinitely
  • Believed their promises while ignoring their lack of follow-through
  • Felt crazy for wanting actual plans, not just talk

Welcome to future faking.

Here’s what nobody tells you: Those promises aren’t plans. They’re manipulation tactics designed to keep you invested in a future that will never exist.

Future faking is how emotionally unavailable people lock you in without ever committing. They give you just enough hope to keep you around while never having to deliver on a single promise.

Let me show you exactly what you’re dealing with.


What Is Future Faking? (The Real Definition)

Future faking is a manipulation tactic where someone makes elaborate promises about the future to keep you emotionally invested, despite having no intention of following through.

It’s characterized by:

  • Grand promises: Marriage, kids, moving in, trips, meeting family
  • Vague timelines: “Soon,” “eventually,” “when things calm down”
  • Emotional intensity: They sound so sincere when they say it
  • Zero follow-through: Nothing ever actually happens
  • Repetition: Same promises, different day, no progress
  • Deflection: When you bring it up, they make YOU feel demanding

What future faking ACTUALLY is:

It’s a way to get relationship-level investment from you without relationship-level commitment from them.

They get:

  • Your loyalty while they keep options open
  • Your patience while they do nothing
  • Your time while they waste it
  • Your emotional investment without reciprocating
  • All the benefits of your belief in the relationship

You get:

  • Empty promises
  • Wasted time
  • False hope
  • Confusion
  • Eventually, heartbreak when you realize none of it was real

Translation: You’re being strung along with fantasies while they avoid accountability.


Future Faking vs. Genuine Plans: Know the Difference

Let’s be crystal clear about what you’re accepting versus what you deserve:

Genuine PlansFuture Faking
Timing: Specific dates and timesVague “someday” or “soon”
Action: Books tickets, makes reservations, takes stepsAll talk, zero action
Follow-through: Actually happens as discussedConstantly postponed or forgotten
Details: Concrete plans with logisticsElaborate fantasies with no substance
Progression: Each promise builds toward the nextSame promises repeated, nothing changes
Accountability: Takes responsibility if plans changeDeflects blame when nothing happens
Timeline: Clear milestones (3 months, 6 months)Indefinite “when things settle down”
Your role: Included in planning processTold about plans, not involved in making them
Excitement: Builds as date approachesFades because nothing ever happens
Reality: Plans align with their current actionsPlans contradict their current behavior
Cost: They invest money/time in the planCosts them nothing (it’s just words)
Obstacles: Addressed and solved togetherBecome reasons to delay indefinitely
Commitment: Required to make it happenAvoided entirely (that’s the point)
Pattern: Consistent reliabilityConsistent disappointment
Feeling: Secure and excitedAnxious and confused

If you’re in the right column, you’re being future faked.

And you need to stop believing the words and start watching the actions.

📥 Free Training: The 3-Step ‘No B.S.’ Framework to Break Free from Toxic Relationships and Heal


The 20 Signs You’re Being Future Faked

1. They Talk About the Future Constantly (But Nothing Changes)

What it looks like:

  • “We’re definitely going to Europe next summer”
  • “When we move in together…”
  • “Our wedding is going to be…”
  • “I can’t wait to start a family with you”

What they do: Nothing. No planning. No saving money. No actual steps. Just words.

What it means: They’re keeping you hooked with fantasy while avoiding the reality of commitment.

The test: Say, “That sounds great! Let’s look at dates/prices/apartments this weekend.”

Watch them backpedal immediately: “Oh, well, it’s too early to actually plan…” or “Let’s just enjoy talking about it for now…”


2. The Timeline Is Always Vague

What they say:

  • “Soon”
  • “Eventually”
  • “When things settle down”
  • “After I get promoted/finish this project/move/etc.”
  • “In the future”
  • “Someday”

What they never say: A specific date. A concrete timeline. Actual parameters.

What it means: Vague timelines are how they avoid accountability. “Soon” can mean never. “Eventually” means when they feel like it (which is never).

The reality: People who genuinely want something happen make it happen. They set dates. They make plans. They take steps.


3. Grand Promises Come After Arguments or When You Pull Away

The pattern:

  • You’re upset about their lack of commitment
  • They sense you’re pulling away
  • Suddenly: “I’ve been thinking, we should get engaged this year!”
  • You feel hopeful again
  • Time passes
  • Nothing happens
  • Repeat

What it means: They’re using future faking as damage control. The promise isn’t real—it’s a tool to reel you back in.

Why it works: Because you WANT to believe them. So you do. Again.


4. Every Milestone Gets Postponed

What happens:

  • “Let’s move in together in 6 months” becomes 8 months becomes a year becomes “when my lease is up” becomes never
  • “Meet my parents next month” becomes “after the holidays” becomes “when things are less crazy” becomes never
  • “Let’s take that trip in spring” becomes summer becomes fall becomes “maybe next year”

What it means: They never intended to follow through. The timeline was just far enough away to keep you satisfied temporarily.

The excuse: Always something: work, money, timing, family issues, stress. There’s ALWAYS a reason to delay.


5. They Paint Elaborate Fantasies (But Won’t Discuss Logistics)

What they do: Talk for HOURS about your dream wedding, the house you’ll buy, the kids’ names, how amazing your future will be.

What they won’t do: Discuss actual steps: Budget? Timeline? Meeting each other’s families? Defining the relationship officially?

The deflection: “Why do you have to ruin it by being so practical?” or “Can’t we just enjoy dreaming together?”

What it means: Fantasy is safe. Reality requires commitment. They’ll stay in fantasy forever if you let them.


6. You’re Always “Almost There” But Never Arrive

What it feels like: You’re on the verge of the next step—ALWAYS. But that step never actually happens.

Examples:

  • “We’re basically engaged” (but not actually)
  • “We’re pretty much living together” (but not officially)
  • “You’re basically my wife/husband already” (but won’t make it official)

What it means: They want you to FEEL like you’re in a committed relationship without them having to actually commit.

The trap: You stop pushing for actual commitment because you believe you’re “basically there.” Meanwhile, time passes. Nothing changes.


7. When You Ask for Specifics, They Get Defensive

What happens: You: “So when are we actually going to look at apartments?” Them: “Why are you pressuring me?” or “Can’t you just be patient?” or “You’re ruining it by being so demanding.”

What it means: They’re deflecting because they have no intention of following through. Making YOU the problem prevents them from being held accountable.

The goal: Train you not to ask for specifics. Train you to accept vague promises.


8. They Use Future Plans to Get Something from You Now

The manipulation:

  • “When we get married, I want you to…” (so act like my wife NOW)
  • “When we have kids…” (so be domestic NOW)
  • “When we move in together…” (so spend all your time at my place NOW)

What they’re doing: Getting wife/husband benefits without wife/husband commitment.

What it means: They want you to fulfill the role NOW based on promises of the future that will never materialize.


9. Every Conversation About the Future Ends With “But Not Yet”

What they say: “I definitely want to marry you… but not yet.” “I totally see a future with you… but let’s not rush.” “We’ll definitely move in together… but after [insert movable goalpost].”

What it means: They’re giving you just enough to keep you around without committing to anything.

The truth: If someone sees a real future with you, they take STEPS toward it. They don’t indefinitely delay it.


10. The Future Plans Contradict Their Current Actions

What they promise: “I want to build a life with you.”

What they do:

  • Won’t define the relationship
  • Keep you separate from their friends/family
  • Refuse to post about you on social media
  • Won’t make plans more than a week in advance

What it means: Their actions reveal the truth: They’re not building anything with you. They’re just keeping you around.

The rule: Believe actions, not words. ALWAYS.


11. They’ve Future Faked Before (And You Know It)

The history:

  • Promised their ex marriage (never proposed)
  • Talked about moving in with past partners (never did)
  • Has a pattern of long relationships that never progress

What they say: “But it’s different with you.”

What it means: It’s not different. You’re experiencing the same pattern their exes did.

The reality: Past behavior is the best predictor of future behavior. If they’ve done it before, they’re doing it now.


12. You’re Doing All the Relationship Work While They Do the Dreaming

The dynamic:

  • You’re researching apartments while they talk about “our future home”
  • You’re planning dates while they talk about “all the adventures we’ll have”
  • You’re trying to integrate your lives while they talk about being “soulmates”

What it means: They like the IDEA of a future with you but won’t do the WORK of building one.

The truth: If they wanted to build a future with you, they’d be building it—not just talking about it.


13. The Promises Get Bigger When You’re About to Leave

What happens:

  • You: “I can’t do this anymore. We’ve been together 2 years with no progression.”
  • Them: “You’re right. Let’s get engaged. Let’s move in together. Let’s start trying for a baby.”
  • You: Stay.
  • Them: Back to status quo within weeks.

What it means: They’ll say anything to keep you from leaving. The promises escalate when the stakes are highest.

Why it works: Because you’re desperate to believe them. So you accept promises you’ve heard before.


14. They Talk About the Future to Avoid the Present

The deflection: You: “We need to talk about [current issue].” Them: “I know things aren’t perfect now, but imagine when we’re married/living together/have kids. It’ll be so much better.”

What they’re doing: Using the fantasy future to distract from the problematic present.

What it means: They’re avoiding addressing real issues by dangling future promises.

The reality: If they can’t handle present problems, they won’t magically handle them in the future.


15. Friends and Family Have Stopped Asking About “The Plan”

What happened: Your loved ones stopped asking “So when’s the wedding?” or “Are you guys moving in together?” because they’ve realized nothing is happening.

What it means: Everyone ELSE sees you’re being strung along. You’re the only one still believing the promises.

The wake-up call: If the people who love you have stopped asking about your future with this person, PAY ATTENTION.


16. They Gatekeep the Timeline

What they say: “I’ll know when I’m ready” or “You can’t rush these things” or “It’ll happen when it happens.”

What it means: They control the timeline. You have no say. And conveniently, they’re never “ready.”

The power dynamic: You’re waiting for them to decide when/if your life together progresses. They hold all the cards.

The truth: In healthy relationships, both people work together toward shared goals. One person doesn’t hold the entire future hostage.


17. The Promises Sound Rehearsed

What you notice: They say the exact same things about the future repeatedly. Word for word. Like a script.

Why: Because it IS a script. They’ve said it before (to you and probably others). They know what works to keep you hooked.

What it means: These aren’t genuine aspirations. They’re calculated statements designed to manage you.


18. They Future Fake About Small Things Too

What it looks like: Not just big promises (marriage, kids) but also:

  • “We should go to that restaurant” (never goes)
  • “I’ll fix that thing for you” (never does)
  • “Let’s plan a weekend trip” (never happens)

What it means: If they can’t follow through on small promises, they definitely won’t follow through on big ones.

The pattern: Future faking isn’t just about the relationship. It’s their entire communication style.


19. You Feel Like You’re Always Waiting

The feeling: Your life is on hold. You’re waiting for them to be ready. Waiting for the right time. Waiting for things to settle down. Waiting. Always waiting.

What it means: They’re comfortable with you waiting. They’re not waiting with you—they’re making you wait FOR them.

The cost: Your time. Your prime years. Your opportunities. All spent waiting for someone who isn’t coming.


20. Your Gut Tells You It’s All Talk

The knowing: Deep down, you know these promises are empty. You feel it. But you override your intuition with hope.

The truth: Your gut is always right. If something feels like future faking, it is.

The choice: Listen to your intuition or waste more time hoping your gut is wrong (it’s not).


Why People Future Fake (And Why It Doesn’t Matter)

The Reasons (None Justify It):

Reason #1: Keeping You as a Placeholder They’re not sure you’re “the one” but they don’t want to lose you while they figure it out or find someone “better.”

Reason #2: Getting Benefits Without Commitment Why buy the cow when you can get the milk for free? You’re giving them relationship benefits without them having to commit.

Reason #3: Conflict Avoidance Breaking up is hard. Future faking keeps you happy (temporarily) and avoids difficult conversations.

Reason #4: Genuine Delusion Some people genuinely BELIEVE their own future faking. They mean it in the moment. But they never follow through because they’re emotionally unavailable.

Reason #5: Control and Power Keeping you hopeful keeps you manageable. You won’t make demands if you’re focused on the promised future.

Reason #6: Fear of Losing You They don’t want to commit, but they also don’t want to lose their option. Future faking keeps you around without them having to choose.

Reason #7: They’re Avoidantly Attached They crave connection but fear commitment. Future faking lets them have one foot in, one foot out indefinitely.


Here’s why none of this matters:

Their reasons don’t change what you’re accepting:

  • Wasted time
  • Empty promises
  • False hope
  • Being someone’s option, not priority
  • A future that will never exist

Stop trying to understand WHY they’re future faking.

Start accepting THAT they’re future faking and walk away.


Why You Keep Believing the Future Faking

This is the real question.

Reason #1: You’re Desperate for It to Be True

The hope: You want the future they’re describing so badly that you choose to believe their words over their lack of action.

The reality: Wanting something doesn’t make it real. Believing promises doesn’t make them true.

The truth: Your desperation is the reason it works.


Reason #2: You’re Invested (Sunk Cost Fallacy)

The thinking: “I’ve already spent 2 years waiting. If I leave now, it was all for nothing. Just a little longer…”

The reality: Staying longer doesn’t change the outcome. It just wastes MORE time.

The truth: Sunk cost is sunk. Stop throwing good time after bad.


Reason #3: You Confuse Words With Action

The mistake: You think promises = plans. You think talking about the future = building the future.

The reality: Words are cheap. Anyone can talk. Watch what they DO, not what they SAY.

The lesson: If it’s not on the calendar, it’s not a plan. It’s a fantasy.


Reason #4: You’re Anxiously Attached

The pattern: Your attachment style makes you cling to potential and tolerate breadcrumbs while hoping for the meal.

The trap: You believe if you’re just patient enough, the promises will come true.

The truth: Anxious attachment makes you vulnerable to future faking. Heal the wound or keep getting hurt.


Reason #5: You’re Afraid of Starting Over

The fear: “If I leave, I’ll be alone. I’ll have to start over. What if I never find anyone else?”

The reality: You’re already alone. You’re just pretending these empty promises are companionship.

The truth: Starting over with someone real beats waiting forever for someone fake.


Reason #6: You Don’t Want to Admit You’ve Been Fooled

The shame: Admitting they’ve been future faking means admitting you were gullible. That you wasted time. That you ignored red flags.

The reality: Everyone gets fooled. The shame isn’t in being fooled once. It’s in letting it continue after you know.

The truth: Your ego is keeping you stuck.


What Future Faking Does to You

The damage is severe:

Mentally:

  • Constant second-guessing (are they serious this time?)
  • Obsessive overanalyzing (what did they mean by “soon”?)
  • Cognitive dissonance (their words vs. their actions)
  • Anxiety about bringing up the future (walking on eggshells)

Emotionally:

  • Hopelessness (will this ever actually happen?)
  • Resentment (building quietly over time)
  • Self-doubt (maybe I’m being too demanding?)
  • Grief (mourning a future that never existed)

Practically:

  • Wasted prime years (can’t get that time back)
  • Life on hold (waiting instead of living)
  • Missed opportunities (with people who would commit)
  • Damaged trust (for future relationships)

The cost: Your time. Your youth. Your belief in love. Your trust in promises.

Stop accepting future faking. You deserve someone whose actions match their words.


How to Stop Falling for Future Faking (The 7-Step Plan)

Step 1: Accept Reality (They’re Never Following Through)

Stop telling yourself:

  • “They mean it, they’re just scared”
  • “The timing isn’t right yet”
  • “They’re under a lot of stress right now”
  • “They’ll be ready soon”

Start telling yourself:

  • “They’ve had plenty of time to follow through”
  • “If they wanted to, they would have by now”
  • “Their actions show they’re not serious”
  • “I’m being strung along”

Write this down: “I am being future faked. This person makes promises they don’t keep. Their words don’t match their actions. I deserve someone who commits, not someone who just talks about it. I am done waiting.”


Step 2: Set a Deadline (And Actually Stick to It)

The ultimatum (to yourself, not them):

Pick ONE future-faked promise they keep making.

Give them ONE specific, reasonable deadline.

Example: “They’ve been saying we’ll move in together for 18 months. I’m giving this 60 more days. If by [specific date] there’s no CONCRETE ACTION (apartment hunting, lease discussions, actual planning), I’m leaving.”

Critical:

  • Don’t tell them about your deadline (they’ll love bomb/future fake harder)
  • Require ACTION, not more promises
  • When the deadline hits and nothing’s happened, LEAVE

What will happen: They won’t follow through. Because they never intended to.

What you do: Leave.


Step 3: Stop Accepting Words—Require Action

The new rule:

You don’t believe ANY promise until there’s concrete action backing it.

What concrete action looks like:

  • Trip? They book tickets/hotel
  • Moving in? They look at apartments with you
  • Meeting family? They schedule the date
  • Marriage? They discuss timeline and start planning

What doesn’t count:

  • Talking about it
  • “Looking into it”
  • “Soon”
  • “I’m working on it”
  • More promises

The response: When they future fake: “That sounds great. Let’s make a plan this weekend.”

Watch them deflect. Note it. Remember it.


Step 4: Call Out the Pattern (Once)

The conversation (ONE time only):

“I’ve noticed a pattern. You talk about [future thing] regularly, but there’s been no movement toward it. For example, [list 2-3 specific instances]. I need to know: Is this something you actually want to do, or are these just things you say?”

Their response will be one of three:

Response 1: More promises “You’re right! Let’s do it! Let’s start planning!” → Watch if ACTION follows within 2 weeks. It won’t.

Response 2: Defensiveness/blame-shifting “Why are you pressuring me?” / “Can’t you just be patient?” → This IS your answer. They’re not planning to follow through.

Response 3: Honesty (rare) “I don’t know if I’m ready for that yet.” → Thank them for honesty. Then leave. They just told you they’re wasting your time.

After this conversation: No more discussions about the future with them. Just watch their actions.


Step 5: Stop Planning Your Life Around Their Promises

What you’ve been doing:

  • Not taking job opportunities in other cities (because you’re “moving in together soon”)
  • Not dating other people (because you’re “basically engaged”)
  • Not making long-term plans (because your life is on hold waiting for them)

What you do now: Live YOUR life. Make YOUR plans. Pursue YOUR opportunities.

If they ask: “You keep talking about our future, but nothing ever happens. So I’m living my life until actual plans are made.”

What this does: Forces them to either commit or reveal they never intended to.


Step 6: Document the Pattern

Why: Because when they future fake again (they will), you’ll be tempted to believe them (you are). Documentation prevents that.

What to track: Date + What they promised + Deadline (if given) + What actually happened

Example:

  • 3/2024: Said we’d move in together “this summer” → Nothing happened
  • 7/2024: Said we’d look at rings “before the end of the year” → Nothing happened
  • 11/2024: Said we’d take a trip “in spring” → Nothing happened
  • 1/2025: Said we’d talk about moving in again “soon” → [still waiting]

When you want to believe them again: Read your documentation. The pattern is clear.


Step 7: Walk Away

When: After your deadline passes with no action. After you’ve called out the pattern and nothing changes. After you’ve read your documentation and realized it’s been years of empty promises.

How: “I’ve realized I want someone who builds a future with me, not just talks about it. Your promises don’t match your actions, and I’m done waiting. This is over.”

Then: No contact. Block everywhere. Don’t engage when they lovebomb or future fake to get you back.

They WILL reach out with bigger promises: “Let’s get married!” / “I was about to propose!” / “I’ve changed!”

Don’t believe it.

If they were serious, they’d have done it before you left.


What Happens After You Leave

Week 1-2: Relief Mixed With Doubt

You’ll feel free. Then you’ll doubt yourself. “What if this time they really meant it?”

Reminder: They’ve had countless chances to mean it. They didn’t.


Week 3-4: The Hoover Attempt

They’ll reach out with THE BIGGEST PROMISES YET.

“I’ve realized what I’ve lost. Let’s get engaged. Let’s move in together. I’m ready now.”

What it means: They’re panicking because their safety net (you) is gone. The promises are more urgent, but they’re still empty.

What to do: Don’t respond. You’ve heard it all before.


Month 2-3: Clarity

You’ll realize how much time you wasted. How obvious the pattern was. How many red flags you ignored.

This is healthy anger. Channel it into growth.


Month 4+: Freedom

You’ll date someone who makes PLANS, not promises. Who takes ACTION, not just talks.

And you’ll realize how exhausting it was living in fantasy instead of reality.


How to Recognize Someone Who Makes Real Plans

They:

  • Say “Let’s do [thing]” then immediately pull out calendar
  • Book things in advance
  • Follow through reliably
  • Don’t need to be pushed to progress the relationship
  • Want to integrate you into their life (meet friends/family early)
  • Have specific timelines (“I’d like to be engaged within a year”)
  • Take concrete steps toward shared goals
  • Don’t make promises they can’t keep
  • Under-promise and over-deliver (not the reverse)
  • Want you as invested as they are

The difference: With someone genuine, you don’t wonder IF. You discuss WHEN and HOW.

Real plans feel calm.

Future faking feels exciting then disappointing. Repeatedly.


Frequently Asked Questions

How do I know if they’re future faking or genuinely planning?

Look at their actions over a 60-90 day period. Genuine planning involves concrete steps: booking things, saving money, looking at houses, meeting families, setting dates. Future faking is all talk, zero action. The timeline keeps moving. Nothing ever happens.

What if they’re just scared of commitment?

Their fear is not your problem to manage. If they’re too scared to commit, they’re not ready for you. Walk away and find someone who isn’t scared—who’s excited to build a future with you.

Can future fakers change?

Rarely, and only with intensive therapy addressing their core issues (avoidant attachment, fear of commitment, emotional unavailability). Even then, it takes years. Don’t wait around to see IF they change. Find someone who doesn’t need to.

What if we’ve been together for years?

Sunk cost fallacy. The time you’ve already spent doesn’t justify spending more time. If they haven’t followed through in years, they’re not going to suddenly start now. Cut your losses.

What if they finally follow through after I leave?

Then they should have followed through before you left. And honestly? If it takes you leaving for them to commit, the relationship is built on the wrong foundation. You shouldn’t have to leave for someone to value you.

How do I avoid future fakers in the future?

Require action early. If someone talks about the future constantly but takes no steps toward it in the first 3-6 months, that’s your cue to leave. Don’t wait years to learn what you could have learned in months.

What if I’ve future faked too?

Then work on that. Figure out why you make promises you don’t keep. Get therapy. Be honest about what you actually want vs. what you say you want. Stop stringing people along.

Is it future faking if they genuinely believe they’ll do it?

Intent doesn’t matter. Impact does. If they keep making promises they don’t keep, regardless of why, the result is the same: you’re being strung along. Judge by outcomes, not intentions.


The Bottom Line: Stop Waiting for a Future That Isn’t Coming

Future faking is not:

  • Someone who’s scared but working through it
  • Someone who’s waiting for the right time
  • Someone who’s overwhelmed but will come through
  • Worth your patience

Future faking is:

  • Manipulation
  • Emotional unavailability disguised as hope
  • A way to keep you while avoiding commitment
  • A waste of your precious time

You deserve:

  • Someone whose actions match their words
  • Someone who builds a future, not just talks about it
  • Someone who’s ready NOW, not “soon”
  • Plans, not promises

Stop accepting future faking.

Stop waiting for “someday.”

Stop believing words without action.

Either they commit or you leave.

There is no third option.

Your life is happening now—not in some promised future that will never exist.


Your Next Step: Choose Action Over Promises

If you’re being future faked:

My book Win Your Breakup: How To Be The One That Got Away will show you how to walk away from empty promises and never settle for words without action again.

If you need help leaving:

One-on-one coaching will give you clarity, an exit strategy, and the accountability to finally stop waiting and start living.

If you want support:

Join the Natasha Adamo Community for courses on recognizing manipulation, setting deadlines, and requiring what you deserve.


Stop waiting for their promises to come true.

Start requiring proof through action.

And if they can’t deliver?

Walk away.

Your White Horse doesn’t make promises.

Your White Horse makes plans—and keeps them.


Written by: Natasha Adamo

If you’re looking for further and more specific help; if you’re tired of empty promises and ready to demand action, personalized coaching with Natasha Adamo is the answer. Book your one-on-one session today.



About Natasha Adamo

Natasha Adamo is a globally recognized self-help author, relationship expert, and motivational speaker. With over 2.5 million devoted blog readers and clients in thirty-one countries, she is a beacon of inspiration to many. Her debut bestseller, “Win Your Breakup”, offers a unique perspective on personal growth after breakups. Natasha’s mission is to empower individuals to develop healthier relationships and actualize their inherent potential.

If you’re looking for further and more specific help; if you’re tired of waiting to be chosen and ready to choose yourself, personalized coaching with Natasha Adamo is the answer. Book your one-on-one session today.

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Author of Win Your Breakup, Natasha Adamo

About Natasha Adamo

Natasha Adamo is a globally recognized self-help author, relationship guru, and motivational speaker. With over 2.5 million devoted blog readers and clients in thirty-one countries, she is a beacon of inspiration to many. Her debut bestseller, "Win Your Breakup", offers a unique perspective on personal growth after breakups. Natasha's mission is to empower individuals to develop healthier relationships and actualize their inherent potential.

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