What I learnt about love from a 73-year-old dating coach
At 55 I was finding Hinge and Bumble a minefield – that is, until Stephen came to the rescue
![Journalist Suzy Walker took coaching from psychotherapist Stephen Ellerker](/https/www.telegraph.co.uk/content/dam/family/2024/06/11/TELEMMGLPICT000375828305_17181258658170_trans_NvBQzQNjv4BqsR13_boM5S_AettM-v2RpDHL5Qyaq7XocK8wn2vsuBs.jpeg?imwidth=350)
At 55 I was finding Hinge and Bumble a minefield – that is, until Stephen came to the rescue
Decades-long romances, Covid connections and wedding playlists... This is the lasting impact the treasured radio host had on Britain
Amiable, enthusiastic, up at the crack of dawn... The trick to travelling with gal pals is to bring back this all-important role
If even France, with its mighty reputation, is losing interest in getting frisky, what hope do the rest of us have?
A new year's trip into Exmoor leaves two old friends lost in the wilderness – unable to find the words they had been longing to say
The pandemic has left many people isolated, but there are tried-and-tested strategies for expanding your social circle
The ‘funny man’ is a British national fantasy – but cracking a joke on a first date may not be a winning evolutionary strategy
We all know A-listers can make bad romance choices – so we’re here to help…
Three Telegraph readers reveal how their lasting love affairs took shape on the slopes
I was told by Telegraph readers that a sure-fire way to find love is on a ski trip. So what happened when I followed their advice?
Telegraph readers have their say on what you can do to achieve happiness no matter your relationship status
Just like in the Christmas film The Holiday, our writer swapped lives with a stranger – and hasn’t looked back
A string of high-profile beauties have found Pete Davidson impossible to resist, but miffed men can’t work out why he’s such a charmer
With author Neil Gaiman heading for the divorce courts, can non-monogamous unions ever work? One woman shares her experiences
Faxes may be heading for the scrapheap, but they helped a generation declare their love one slowly-printed line at a time
Inspired by Charlotte Higgins’s book, this Pitlochry Festival Theatre premiere sits at the lighter side of the Scottish playwright’s oeuvre
The death of close friends lent new meaning to her impending birthday, so she decided to seize the day – with a whole year of celebration
Is it acceptable to invite an ex to your wedding? The Midults discuss...
I had always thought of weddings as expensive, old-fashioned and unrealistic – but now I’m engaged
As The Telegraph's Agony Uncle, I weigh in on your dilemmas – the good, the bad and the ugly
On paper, our reader's partner is the dream but she lacks an attraction to him. She asks if she should stay for a child
In our 'Parenting Confessions' column, anonymous mothers and fathers share the family secrets they would never talk about in public
The etiquette around befriending colleagues is complicated, but well worth the effort for our overall wellbeing