#7-Love: An incomplete guide
(Part 2)
Only read if you don’t mind being offended.
Do read part 1 before reading this.
How close
of a relationship do you want? How physical of a relationship do you want? How
do you receive love and how do they?
How much
do you enjoy a casual conversation with your date? How much do you enjoy being
around them with others?
How well
do you work with them at your lowest points? How well do you work together at
your highest points?
Do you
feel relaxed around them? Could you spend day after day with them in your life
and not grow tired?
I think
all of these things are extremely important to consider. But also that it's a
bit of give and take. It's very possible to have a lot in common with someone
on paper. Same interests and goals. But then find it a challenge for one to
keep up with the other, being on a different wavelength. I think it's extremely
important to be comfortable with someone. It's not bad to have to adapt some,
but if naturally you find their company enjoyable but draining or boring and
comfortable, why bother? I think it's good to have a large focus on finding
someone who you enjoy being with even in the dull moments. Life is full of dull
moments.
It's easy
to take someone on dates, disconnected from the rest of each other’s lives and
have a good time -- whether you are rather compatible or not. I think it's no
magic to fall for someone on a cruise or dating only on Friday nights. It is
much more special to fall for someone over the little things. Conversation over
a walk, over a longer period of time. When you're stressed, when they're stressed.
Getting along in the good times is much less notable than getting along in the
average and bad times. Couples don't break up at their best moments -- it's at
their worst.
I do
think situation and independence is important to have figured out beforehand.
But if you find someone truly special who you admire, enjoy, who helps you
grow, and you are passionate about, if you aren't willing to have some
inconveniences in your life then you probably aren't ready or they aren't the
right one. On the other hand even a brilliant relationship can be stressed to
the max if other elements of life do not line up. It could be one person
working too many hours or being far apart with little opportunity to connect.
But life situations can change. General chemistry is unlikely to change.
I would
highly recommend dating very casually, seeing others as friends. Not getting
attached or romantic until the basics have been worked out. But also not being
overly pessimistic. If you're pessimistic you're both more likely to miss
what's in front of you and to scare away what could be in front of you. But if
you are overly optimistic you are just going to get hurt and hurt others. It's
a bit of a balance and a struggle that no one probably has the right answer to.
On the
same topic, the world seems to be deluded on the topic of sex. You have many
people waiting till marriage, while trying to walk the line as precisely as
possible over terminological exactness. If it's not intercourse you can't get
hurt from it, right? Absolutely false. Sex starts to happen very shortly after
the most simple of kisses do on a scale. I am not saying kissing can get one
pregnant, of course. But that the one can easily turn into the other. And that
may be okay, but I would caution most not to wait till marriage for sex but to
wait a longer time before kissing and making any notable physical or
non-physical sexual contact. Perhaps a candid conversation on the topic to
determine your desires in the area, but I think it is likely better to sleep
with 5 people than mostly do the act with 20.
A good
relationship requires a lot of introspection and understanding. It's good to be
able to understand your weaknesses and why you do things the way you do them.
And always improve them of course, but know where you are likely to make
mistakes and why. If you feel the relationship is a bad idea or you think it's
a bad idea, it probably is. But if you think and feel it's a good idea, you
have a slim chance. In general your odds are slim and it's important to realize
that. But part of what makes love special is the uniqueness. Falling for
someone at the wrong time and the wrong place, but who you can't stand to be
without. Falling for someone who will steal your shoe and play with you rather
than giving you a dumbfounded look when you try to do the same.
There's a
lot of must-haves and then there's a lot of wiggle room. I think no one knows
who will be perfect for them. And I think the person perfect for you probably
doesn't also have the easiest situation to work with yours.
I've
barely scratched the surface but I hope this helps someone. There's much to ask
and consider.
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