Anonymous wrote:Good tipper.
Never parks in fire lane or worse, handicapped spot even to run into the cleaners.
Sits to use bathroom. Doesn't tinkle on seat.
Calls mom. But not too much.
Donates to charity/alma mater
Doesn't spend too much on his own clothes or care too much about his own appearance
Buys girl scout cookies
Holds door for strangers/gives up seat on metro
Anonymous wrote:Good tipper.
Never parks in fire lane or worse, handicapped spot even to run into the cleaners.
Sits to use bathroom. Doesn't tinkle on seat.
Calls mom. But not too much.
Donates to charity/alma mater
Doesn't spend too much on his own clothes or care too much about his own appearance
Buys girl scout cookies
Holds door for strangers/gives up seat on metro
Anonymous wrote:-- Spoke kindly of everyone in his life and saw the best in them. He's not a doormat -- just patient and kind to other people.
When we were dating I saw it in the way he treated our parents and friends, his work colleagues, and even the waitress who got our order wrong etc.
Now that we're married and parents together, this is the trait I appreciate the most. It's so simple, but it matters day to day. I would hate being married to someone who was cynical or critical of me, DC or others in our lives.
-- Didn't need to be "right" all the time. He was able to listen to another opinion and even agree with it if it made more sense than what he first thought/said.
-- Responsible . He took good care of his home, managed his money well, planned vacations, cooked decently enough. Basically he didn't need a woman to "take care of him, which is great. The way I see it, we're both able to take care of ourselves and each other, so there's lots of support all around.
Anonymous wrote:-- Spoke kindly of everyone in his life and saw the best in them. He's not a doormat -- just patient and kind to other people.
When we were dating I saw it in the way he treated our parents and friends, his work colleagues, and even the waitress who got our order wrong etc.
Now that we're married and parents together, this is the trait I appreciate the most. It's so simple, but it matters day to day. I would hate being married to someone who was cynical or critical of me, DC or others in our lives.
-- Didn't need to be "right" all the time. He was able to listen to another opinion and even agree with it if it made more sense than what he first thought/said.
-- Responsible. He took good care of his home, managed his money well, planned vacations, cooked decently enough. Basically he didn't need a woman to "take care of him, which is great. The way I see it, we're both able to take care of ourselves and each other, so there's lots of support all around.
Anonymous wrote:If he jokes around in a mean way, he's an asshole. These can be comments directly to you or something he says in front of others. I had an ex who used to sing the Jell-O song when I wore shorts...like my ass was jiggling like Jell-O--and I was not overweight at all. When I told him it hurt my feelings, he said he was just joking and that I shouldn't be so sensitive. That reminds me of another one: does he take your feelings seriously or does he dismiss them?
My husband is a great guy and has never said an unkind word toward me. Ever. It goes both ways. I don't say hurtful things to him either.
Anonymous wrote:I think you have to have sex before you marry. If you are not sexually compatible, your marriage is more likely to fail.