Gabby Windey and Rachel Recchia are joining The Bachelorette, and entering the franchise together should provide a built-in support system. Recent years in Bachelor Nation have been plagued with toxic dynamics with disastrous results for leads' mental health. Fans of the show have long suspected that producers have a hand in spinning endless drama. However, stirring the pot may have started to go too far. Clare Crawley, Katie Thurston, Matt James, and Clayton Echard ended their seasons on messy terms. Matt specifically noted that he left his season and promptly started looking for a therapist. Now there needs to be a way to keep leads on track to find a happy, healthy relationship.

After Gabby and Rachel's season, they will need each other more than ever to have successful runs as Bachelorettes. Gabby and Rachel made it to the final three of The Bachelor. All seemed well until Clayton revealed to Susie Evans that he'd had sex with Gabby and Rachel. This was a deal-breaker for Susie, and she jumped ship. Then Clayton told Rachel and Gabby that he had sex with both of them and that he was in love with them and Susie. He failed to mention that he told Susie he loved her the most. Clayton and Susie eventually found their way back to each other in the real world after he rejected Gabby and Rachel in a two-birds-with-one-stone breakup. The wishy-washy ending was less than satisfactory for audiences.

Related: Bachelor: Why Susie Evans Was Still In Iceland After She Left Clayton

Now that Gabby and Rachel are sharing a season, hopefully, the sense of isolation previous leads' have experienced won't be an issue, and some peaceful happy endings could be on the horizon. Rachel was definitely in a bad place at the end of Clayton's season. She seemed to fall in love more deeply with Clayton than Gabby or Susie and couldn't fully comprehend he was sending her home. After an endless flow of tears, it might be concerning to cast her as a sole Bachelorette out of fear she wouldn't be ready for a brand new wave of overwhelming social dynamics. Gabby and Rachel as double leads could help ease the problematic trends of the franchise.

The Bachelor Clayton Susie Rachel and Gabby

Gabby didn't have the same emotional reaction to Clayton's child's play but was undeniably infuriated and hurt by the endless disrespect. After being led on and then thrown away at the last minute, heading into a new season alone doesn't seem like the healthiest dynamic for either of them. However, while having each other isn't a replacement for a licensed therapist on set, it's an added comfort where there usually isn't one. Since the leads have no one to talk to, they usually rely on producers or hosts for guidance and comfort. Gabby and Rachel will be in the exact same shoes as each other and potentially able to give unbiased support. Maybe they can end Bachelor Nation's downward spiral.

Things are growing more complicated with every season in Bachelor Nation. Bachelor In Paradise is quickly becoming the healthiest leg of the franchise as couples get the chance to get to know each other with weeks of interrupted time together on and off camera. Some fine-tuning has been needed for The Bachelor and The Bachelorette to resolve snow-balling issues. Having Gabby and Rachel experience the dating social experiment of a lifetime together might be the solution.

Next: Bachelorette: Jesse Palmer Replaces Tayshia & Kaitlyn As Host