Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP you just sound like a classical poly man type. Nobody would be ever good enough for you because you really can't have a monogamous long relationship. You need constant stimulation with new partner. There are many guys like that in their mid 50s still single on OLD.
LTR and marriage is not for everyone.
I don't think so. I like the idea of being with one person. And I realize that newness is always different. I'm not asking for butterflies all over again. But it comes down to effort. I try to live each day/week/year being the best version of myself I can be. I may not have the genetics to have an 8-pack and 20 inch arms, but I'm going to maximize what I can achieve with raw effort. I'm going to wear the nicest and most flattering clothes I can afford, and continue to groom in ways that maximize my attractiveness the same way I did on my first date night. What I don't understand is why I seem to end up with women who do backflips in the bedroom for the first year and are always wearing heels, bronzer, and "sexy" outfits on date nights but then trade that in for cardigans and duty sex a year later. I can't seem to find someone who wants to inspire me and vice versa so that monogamy is as fresh as it can be. I'm not asking for new, I'm asking for your best effort day in and day out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s not shallow. I applaud you for speaking your mind. Just look at all the miserable people on this board and you’ll be glad you’re not settling for someone that you’re not physically attracted to after the “honeymoon" period ends.
Yep.
Do not settle. If you do, you will be back here complaining about how the marriage is dead.
Be confident in what you are looking for.
I have a cousin who is like you. He is married to a real life doll. She is always well put together. Always. He is too: handsome, tall and muscular and does not mess with his workout and diet. They are a great match and are happy. They are nice people who just love to look great all the time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s not shallow. I applaud you for speaking your mind. Just look at all the miserable people on this board and you’ll be glad you’re not settling for someone that you’re not physically attracted to after the “honeymoon" period ends.
Yep.
Do not settle. If you do, you will be back here complaining about how the marriage is dead.
Be confident in what you are looking for.
I have a cousin who is like you. He is married to a real life doll. She is always well put together. Always. He is too: handsome, tall and muscular and does not mess with his workout and diet. They are a great match and are happy. They are nice people who just love to look great all the time.
so basically… appearances above all else? I wonder if OP is willing to forgo all other qualities to find this “living doll” (and also wonder if he makes the same effort with his appearance.) And is he going to demand she be a “living doll” always, and get upset when she is 2 months post-partum still wearing nursing pajamas to bed?
I know a guy like OP who had similar unreasonable standards about women being “living dolls.” We dated for a while, but I couldn’t take it an broke up. I his case, it went along with a deep vein of “traditional” expectations about women, and serious insecurity on his part. It was sad because he was otherwise a person I really liked and we had a great time together. Oh, forgot to mention, the sex was BAD. If a woman gets the idea her appearance is being criticized in bed, it’s not gonna be fun.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:One thing to also factor in is aging.
What matters to you in your 20's and 30's changes in your 50's and 60's.
I know that you cannot understand how you will change over time...but you will. Or you should (i.e. with life experience, your priorities should mature/evolve).
This. OP, consider the fact that in the not too distant future, neither you nor your partner will be physically attractive. Parts will sag and wrinkle. Hair will gray and fall out. Teeth will get weird. You will shrink, and get that old person smell. Joints and members won't work that well. The mental and emotional connection is what will endure.
I hate this argument. That's like saying that someone should miss out on what it's like to have a vibrant physical connection (while many other people get to enjoy that) since we're all headed to death's door anyway. In the long run we're all dead, as Keynes said. Sure, but can't one want to have what others experience along the way?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's one thing if this is happening well into a relationship, but 6 to 10 months for the attraction to go from a 8 to a -2? That suggests you aren't that attracted in the first place or there is something else that is going on beyond her behavior.
Could OP be gay? It’s not normal to lose sexual attraction after not even a year just because she wears sweatpants and less makeup.
Anonymous wrote:It's one thing if this is happening well into a relationship, but 6 to 10 months for the attraction to go from a 8 to a -2? That suggests you aren't that attracted in the first place or there is something else that is going on beyond her behavior.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s not shallow. I applaud you for speaking your mind. Just look at all the miserable people on this board and you’ll be glad you’re not settling for someone that you’re not physically attracted to after the “honeymoon" period ends.
Yep.
Do not settle. If you do, you will be back here complaining about how the marriage is dead.
Be confident in what you are looking for.
I have a cousin who is like you. He is married to a real life doll. She is always well put together. Always. He is too: handsome, tall and muscular and does not mess with his workout and diet. They are a great match and are happy. They are nice people who just love to look great all the time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't mean this is a negative way, but sounds like OP needs therapy. Since I doubt all these women had massive changes in physical appearance within 6 months, it sounds like OP is not liking things like women wearing comfy clothes (read sweats) at home, not wearing makeup all the time, etc. And that is so horribly unfair to the women he is dating and sounds very much like an issue OP needs to address within himself. Part of life is time to let down and relax and your partner should be a safe place to do that. I would never consider a relationship with a man who wouldn't let me be in sweats and no makeup after the workday is over without finding me a -2 on the attraction scale.
OP here. I agree there is a time for downtime. But the reverse is true too! Women often complain that men stop "dating them" when they get comfortable. Not me, in several multi-year relationships, I have kept taking my partners out for dinners at upscale/new restaurants. The only difference is when I did this during the first year of dating they made an effort to look sexy and keep the romance. After about a year all of them would start wearing flats, comfy clothes, and then want to crash after dinner. I don't begrudge anyone sweatpants time, but if you don't make an effort to have date nights with some sizzle whereas you advertised you were into that originally, you're phoning it in.
Anonymous wrote:It’s not shallow. I applaud you for speaking your mind. Just look at all the miserable people on this board and you’ll be glad you’re not settling for someone that you’re not physically attracted to after the “honeymoon" period ends.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't mean this is a negative way, but sounds like OP needs therapy. Since I doubt all these women had massive changes in physical appearance within 6 months, it sounds like OP is not liking things like women wearing comfy clothes (read sweats) at home, not wearing makeup all the time, etc. And that is so horribly unfair to the women he is dating and sounds very much like an issue OP needs to address within himself. Part of life is time to let down and relax and your partner should be a safe place to do that. I would never consider a relationship with a man who wouldn't let me be in sweats and no makeup after the workday is over without finding me a -2 on the attraction scale.
OP here. I agree there is a time for downtime. But the reverse is true too! Women often complain that men stop "dating them" when they get comfortable. Not me, in several multi-year relationships, I have kept taking my partners out for dinners at upscale/new restaurants. The only difference is when I did this during the first year of dating they made an effort to look sexy and keep the romance. After about a year all of them would start wearing flats, comfy clothes, and then want to crash after dinner. I don't begrudge anyone sweatpants time, but if you don't make an effort to have date nights with some sizzle whereas you advertised you were into that originally, you're phoning it in.
Anonymous wrote:I don't mean this is a negative way, but sounds like OP needs therapy. Since I doubt all these women had massive changes in physical appearance within 6 months, it sounds like OP is not liking things like women wearing comfy clothes (read sweats) at home, not wearing makeup all the time, etc. And that is so horribly unfair to the women he is dating and sounds very much like an issue OP needs to address within himself. Part of life is time to let down and relax and your partner should be a safe place to do that. I would never consider a relationship with a man who wouldn't let me be in sweats and no makeup after the workday is over without finding me a -2 on the attraction scale.