Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Motorcycles.
BASE jumping.
Online gaming (obsessive not casual)
I love motorcycling. Why is it a red flag?
Anonymous wrote:I don’t care what the hobby is, I care about the level of obsessiveness. I do actually want someone who cares about their hobby so fantasy figurines, CrossFit, whatever are all good with me — it makes people interesting and they’ll understand why I want to do my hobbies too. I can’t stand people whose hobbies are things like reading and hanging out with friends and listening to music which imo are just. Things everyone does. But I also don’t want to be with someone whose hobbies are more important to them than their relationships and who can’t see the value in things other period want to do/think their partner should always prioritize their hobby.
Anonymous wrote:Seems like the issue is obsessiveness.
Generally speaking, hobbies are better than having no interests and spending time surfing on screens or watching TV. But not so much it interferes with life.
Generally I think exercise hobbies are the best, then intellectual / artistic / productive (e.g., woodworking, knitting). I don’t like collecting (waste of money), obsessive fandom (better to live and produce) or anything destructive (drinking, drugs, sex stuff, video gaming, endless social media or message boards, stewing over politics).
Anonymous wrote:Being a football fan obsessively and caring too much. As if their athleticism somehow transfers to your couch-shaped ass, as if you're represented by them. As if CTE doesn't exist. It's tacky.
Anonymous wrote:Wow, interesting timing for this thread for me! I just had a date last night with a man who said he loves rail fanning. He didn't get too into details, but it seems like they're people who spend time watching trains. Should this be a red flag?
Anonymous wrote:Motorcycles.
BASE jumping.
Online gaming (obsessive not casual)