Gay. I have a couple of friends like this; their families are very conservative, so they hide any dating life from their families. |
Yep. Anecdotally, I know a very attractive woman who was an only child and she took care of her ailing mother and father for many years and when they passed away, she got back in touch with her high school sweetheart who was by then divorced, and they married soon after they rekindled their relationship. |
Yup yup yup. This is me. Through my mid thirties. I was way too monogamous in way too many relationships that didn’t lead to marriage. Some of the the guys wanted to marry me and I wasn’t sure and dragged it out. Very unwise. |
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I'm married but I relate to many of the previous posts. I was the single friend who panicked and ran away every time a guy showed interest in me. Even if I had previously considered the possibility of dating him before, once he expresses interest, the situation suddenly feels suffocating, and I would come up with endless nitpicky reasons why I couldn't date him.
I realized I would end up alone forever if I continued down my path, so I did a lot of self-reflection and ended up dating my now-husband. I was surprised a handsome, nice, smart, and successful guy like him was single. He was nerdy and super awkward on our initial dates. So much so that I assumed he'd never had a girlfriend. It turns out he's had multiple long-term girlfriends and is in fact just very awkward. We connected over a shared nerdy interest. After kids, I discover that in addition to the ADHD I already knew about, he likely has mild ASD. The nerdy interest is actually a hyperinterest. Chaos ensues and I almost divorce him. Later on, someone on the spectrum casually suggests that I have mild ASD. I'm not 100% convinced about myself, but I realize both my parents have mild ASD. Our marriage works now with a lot of effort on his part. Most of the time, it's great. |
DP, but if you are a woman, I am so sad for you that you are reading “unrealistic expectations” into any of what PP said? |
Has he indicated that he wants marriage and family? Not everyone does. Also, you said self-made. Does he work a lot? My husband spent his 20s and 30s building his business and it didn't really leave room for much else. His self-imposed exile from the dating pool was good. He would have been an awful partner at the time. |
They don’t want to marry freaks |
Can anyone explain this behavior? All the people I know who are married were not afflicted by it. What explains the freak-out in response to a guy catching feelings for you? Is it like Mark Twain who said he wouldn’t want to join any club that would have him as a member? (i.e., you are hyperaware of your supposed unworthiness so there must be something wrong with a person who thinks otherwise? Or is it that you instantly feel that you would be settling because he wants you more than you want him, and therefore you are more desirable than he is, and therefore he’s clearly not good enough for you. I think the latter is the answer. But maybe some other dynamic is at play. |
There could be so many reasons from not feeling ready for restraining responsibilities, not finding someone worthy, other people not finding them worthy, higher education, focus on career, high debt, low income etc etc. Unlike people of majority race and religion, other people have less options. Lets say if you are are an ordinary looking first generation Hindu in a mediocre career, your options are very limiting. |
| I’ll add a reason I see to the pot….dating men who are married. I’ve got two friends who spent year with men who were “separated” only for the guys to return to their wife and kids. It puzzled me how they could spend their best years on a guy who isn’t even available to get married? |
| One very common factor is finding someone good and compatible early on but society telling you that you should have several partners before committing so letting go of your person and then not finding anyone as compatible. |
I wrote the long post a couple pages ago about my friends like this. I think it comes down to fear 1) fear that their life will change 2) fear of letting someone in 3) fear of being rejected They are very entrenched in their lives, very in their niche interests/groups etc. They are gossipy and obsessed with picking apart others, not just romantic interests, because (IMO) they are insecure about themselves and are constantly looking to put others down to avoid self reflection. One of them had a lot of childhood trauma, and one still lives with her parents (at like, 38). They basically just never stopped acting like teenagers, but the older and more mature the rest of us got, the bigger the divide. But truly I think it all just came down to a mixture of fear and insecurity. Which is sad. |
| This site keeps me unmarried. |
Yup. Don't think I'm missing out on anything. I do occasionally lie to mysrried friends and pretend I'm so done with being single though, it's easier that way. |
Attachment disorders stemming from early childhood could cause this. Small children have to go through a phase where they successfully learn to individuate from mother. If this does not occur successfully due to bad parenting, the person remains psychologically stuck in abn ambivalent state emotionally. Every adult relationship then becomes a reenactment of that failed emotional maturation process unless they get therapy to become consciously aware of why the behaviors occur and then learn behavior management techniques to adapt to a more successful pattern as an adult. |