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Sunday, July 18, 2010

Dating Tips

4 Reasons Why Dating Is So Hard

I think most of us can agree that our negative experiences outweigh

our positive experiences in dating. “Connection” is elusive. Each

negative experience leaves a scar, making us reluctant to stay in

the game. With enough disappointments, our youthful positivity

turns into “I can see that it’s a lie.”

Growing up, all the times I thought love was coming my way, I was

somehow let down. At this point, I’m numb to it. There have been

enough letdowns that I no longer expect things to work out.

Cheating and abuse are examples of big events that contribute to

shying away from dating. Luckily, the traumatic events are

uncommon. There are, however, small letdowns that are not only

barbs that poke at your emotional well-being, but they are also

annoying. And these little events occur more often. After enough

of these types of letdowns, you might start to lose your faith in

dating:

You Think About Them All The Time, but You Know They Are

Barely Thinking About You

There’s often a girl I’m thinking about: What it would be like to

take her on dates, or even marry her. At the same time, we

barely know each other, she has a boyfriend, she’s far away,

or some other barrier exists. In light of this barrier, I know she’s

not thinking about me like I’m thinking of her. It makes me feel

stupid and insignificant.

`

It’s Day 3, and They Haven’t Contacted You

For awhile I actually believed that every woman who gave me her

number would call me back. After enough ignored calls, I’ve lost

energy and hope for this process. In the old days, day 1, day 2,

day 3 went by (my friends would tell me “start worrying after day 4″)

and I’d get more and more incredulous: “How can she just ignore

my call?” Now I’d be incredulous if she actually called back.

They Are Interested in Your Friend

I set myself up for this because I integrate all my friends: work,

college, high school, etc. My guy friends are refined versions of

me. They know when to turn off the “crazy switch.” My first crush

in fourth grade told me she liked my best friend when I finally

admitted I “liked” her. She started a long string (at least five times)

of crushes who like my closest friends instead of me.

I’m Into It, I’m Out of It

When the object of your desire gives you hope by going through

the initial motions of dating before pulling out, it’s frustrating.

Eventually, it’s tough for you to trust because so many people

flaked out on past potential relationships with no explanation.

It’s safer for your mind and heart to be pleasantly surprised

instead of having hopes to kill. Maybe it’s good that I’ve gotten

to that point of no hope. Anything good that happens will be a

pleasant surprise. Maybe part of growing up in dating is

losing hope.

What little letdowns in dating make you lose faith? Do you agree

the things above happen much more often than having it actually

work out? Do you try not to have hope, or are you always hopeful?

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