Anonymous wrote:So many of us make the fatal mistake of being an offer too good for a man who doesn't really want us to refuse. THey don't have to work or be their best or compete with other men but we make them very comfortable and secure. I will try to teach my daughters not to fall into the trap.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, this is the "best guy ever" because you've been out of the dating pool for so long.
I dated a guy like this for 5 years in my 20s. Ungodly gorgeous, brilliant, fascinating, and also totally immature and not ready for commitment. I moved on. I thought there was no one else like him but just 6 months later I met someone totally different,but better. Amazing, ready for commitment, even smarter, cute, loves all the things I love and treats me like a princess.
You deserve a life with a partner, not a whiner. Keep this guy as your friend -- it sounds like you get along. Find the partner for you. You'll never do it unless you break up with this guy and get out there.
This. There's a big difference between a guy who's great and a guy who's great for you, not to sound all self-helpy about it. But - if you are at the stage in life where you want to settle down, make a future - you really need someone who is going to be your partner, not just who's going to be entertaining and hot. And guys like that are out there. They may not be the flashiest, they may not be out at the bars you're hanging around in a lot, but they are out there.
On the other hand, if you're really looking for good sex and some drama to keep things interesting, then keep the hot guy.
I tell you this as someone who had a lot of tumultuous relationships up through my mid-30s, then settled down with a guy I'd have rejected outright when I was younger. I'm not sorry I had my fun. I sometimes miss my fun. I am grateful every singly day I didn't marry one of those other guys.
Good luck, OP!
So you got fucked by bad-boy, emotionally unavailable men, in all sorts of nasty, wild places and positions, for about 15 years, followed by finding a meal ticket man who you are not actually attracted to? Does hubby know he pledged his life to a woman who spent 15 years of her life spreading her legs for everyone but him?
You are seriously uptight about sex.
Anonymous wrote:Depression takes a toll on kids as well. If I knew what I know now, I would not marry somebody with depression and have kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, this is the "best guy ever" because you've been out of the dating pool for so long.
I dated a guy like this for 5 years in my 20s. Ungodly gorgeous, brilliant, fascinating, and also totally immature and not ready for commitment. I moved on. I thought there was no one else like him but just 6 months later I met someone totally different,but better. Amazing, ready for commitment, even smarter, cute, loves all the things I love and treats me like a princess.
You deserve a life with a partner, not a whiner. Keep this guy as your friend -- it sounds like you get along. Find the partner for you. You'll never do it unless you break up with this guy and get out there.
This. There's a big difference between a guy who's great and a guy who's great for you, not to sound all self-helpy about it. But - if you are at the stage in life where you want to settle down, make a future - you really need someone who is going to be your partner, not just who's going to be entertaining and hot. And guys like that are out there. They may not be the flashiest, they may not be out at the bars you're hanging around in a lot, but they are out there.
On the other hand, if you're really looking for good sex and some drama to keep things interesting, then keep the hot guy.
I tell you this as someone who had a lot of tumultuous relationships up through my mid-30s, then settled down with a guy I'd have rejected outright when I was younger. I'm not sorry I had my fun. I sometimes miss my fun. I am grateful every singly day I didn't marry one of those other guys.
Good luck, OP!
So you got fucked by bad-boy, emotionally unavailable men, in all sorts of nasty, wild places and positions, for about 15 years, followed by finding a meal ticket man who you are not actually attracted to? Does hubby know he pledged his life to a woman who spent 15 years of her life spreading her legs for everyone but him?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, this is the "best guy ever" because you've been out of the dating pool for so long.
I dated a guy like this for 5 years in my 20s. Ungodly gorgeous, brilliant, fascinating, and also totally immature and not ready for commitment. I moved on. I thought there was no one else like him but just 6 months later I met someone totally different,but better. Amazing, ready for commitment, even smarter, cute, loves all the things I love and treats me like a princess.
You deserve a life with a partner, not a whiner. Keep this guy as your friend -- it sounds like you get along. Find the partner for you. You'll never do it unless you break up with this guy and get out there.
This. There's a big difference between a guy who's great and a guy who's great for you, not to sound all self-helpy about it. But - if you are at the stage in life where you want to settle down, make a future - you really need someone who is going to be your partner, not just who's going to be entertaining and hot. And guys like that are out there. They may not be the flashiest, they may not be out at the bars you're hanging around in a lot, but they are out there.
On the other hand, if you're really looking for good sex and some drama to keep things interesting, then keep the hot guy.
I tell you this as someone who had a lot of tumultuous relationships up through my mid-30s, then settled down with a guy I'd have rejected outright when I was younger. I'm not sorry I had my fun. I sometimes miss my fun. I am grateful every singly day I didn't marry one of those other guys.
Good luck, OP!
Anonymous wrote:I'm dating someone, also thirty, and have been since we were twenty-two. About seven years and a little more. He has ADHD and depression and has struggled with it his whole life. It has been a problem and it's still undertreated. I've had depression in the past, but personally am doing a lot better. Because of the length of time we've been together, I've been putting the pressure on with regard to marriage and children, and he has taken my communication as an unwarranted ultimatum. He says he doesn't have his life together enough to get married and doesn't know when he will, but he wants to be with me and knows he'll never find anyone better. He had a salary and benefits, though he makes much less than I do, which I dont care about. He has some self-regulation problems and has at times drank and smoked too much, but has gotten much better as we've grown up. Do I break up with him and start looking for a marriage minded guy? Do I stay with the person I love and want to marry but risk that he won't actually ever be ready, and even if he does, I will struggle along with his ADHD issues for life? I'm admittedly a little scared to date because I feel like I don't connect on a romantic level with many men in general. I have a law degree, a good job, and am objectively an attractive girl who looks a lot younger than my age. I have been told that when I'm all done up I am "tv hot." What are people's thoughts on this? I feel like sometimes you get more honest responses from strangers than friends.
Anonymous wrote:Dump him. No contact for a year or more. Be friends after you meet and marry another amazing guy. That's what I did with the guy I thought was my soulmate in my twenties. Five years of dating....it can seem impossible to live without them but you can and will in fact be happier. I know it's hard to believe it now but it's true. If you want marriage, kids, etc find someone solid who is excited about that and excited about you. The guy you have now....you can love someone but if your visions of life don't match you will never be happy.