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Advice Goddess: Falling in love doesnít happen according to arbitrary schedules
Tuesday, 13 November 2007 10:29

The Advice Goddess
Amy Alkon
I met a guy a little over seven weeks ago. Days later, we were hanging out constantly, sharing life stories, and sleeping together. I began to ìfallî but didnít say anything about love because he didnít. Finally, on a trip, we had a talk about how we felt. I explained that I wouldnít have slept with him more than once if I didnít see a future for us. He said he couldnít BEGIN to think of ìloveî for many months and isnít very verbally demonstrative anyway. He basically wants to see where this goes, and thinks Iím kinda nuts for ìmoving so fast.î Yet, every boyfriend Iíve had said he loved me within a couple weeks of sleeping together. I feel sleazy for sleeping with a man five days a week and never saying more than ìHave a nice dayî afterward. Am I headed for disaster?
ó Put Off


Thereís falling in love and thereís trying to have yourself shot out of a cannon into it.
Too bad human emotion doesnít run on a bus schedule: ìLetís see ... two weeks, you love me, seven weeks, you let me measure you for your cage.î Out here in the confines of the real world, loving somebody takes actually knowing them, otherwise, what are you actually loving? Hmmm ... perhaps how well they fit into your plan to retire from dating and settle down with that special anybody?

The way you put it ó ìI wouldnít have slept with him more than once if I didnít see a future for usî ó that thing down there must only look like a vagina; itís really a crystal ball. Seven weeks in, you know him, really, really well ó just not well enough to have even an inkling of his approach to relationships: waiting until he develops some depth of feeling for a woman before committing to more than dinner plans for week eight. In other words, the guy seems to be looking for something real, as opposed to something real fast. Jeez, what a jerk!†

Midway through a seven-week sex marathon, itís a little late to inform a guy of the house rule: Only the first bagging is free. If sex that may turn out to be, well, casual, rather than formal, leaves you feeling gypped, you should end dates with a long, steamy handshake. Since youíre a bit beyond that now, the thing that should be giving you pause is not whatís probably a sincere ìHave a nice day,î but how you bought into all those week two ìI love youísî from boyfriends past. After all, if saying ìI love youî means two people have a future together, how come you and all those other guys seem to be having a future apart?

This guy doesnít sound like heís cold, withholding, or scampering off to the bar to ìHave a nice dayî with your replacement. Why push him in that direction? Itís understandable that you feel a need for ìsecurity,î but you canít contract out for it; it has to come from within. Also, lobbying to hear those ìthree little wordsî may cause you to miss those other three little words, ìAre you cold?î Or, those fourteen little words, ìHow about I come over this weekend and sand and refinish your hardwood floors?î (You say tomato, he shows you a tomahto ... and whoís to say the talkier way is right?) Itís okay to be looking for love, but for best results, remember to actually look, and not like you would for a suitcase nuke thatís about to take out Cleveland.

Talk to the handcuff
My girlfriend of eight months gets mad when I make plans with friends and tell her afterward. Even if I invite her along. Sheíll say, ìHow do you know we didnít have plans? Or, that I wasnít going to take you to dinner?!î Most of her friends are married heterosexuals, so I guess sheís used to couples planning everything together.
ó Very Independent Woman

ìHow do you know we didnít have plans? Or, that I wasnít going to take you to dinner?!î This hurts my head. When somebody wants to take you out, there are ways to let you know. Some ways ó e-mail, phone call, text message ó are more effective than others: mental telepathy and screaming, ìI hate you, I hate you!î as youíre going out the door to meet friends. Your girlfriend probably got together with you, in part, because she admired your ìVery Independentî spirit. Now, it seems sheís confusing ìVery Independentî with ìVery Independent From Her.î Gently inform her that nobody gets dibs on every moment of your life, but from now on, youíre setting aside a regular date night that always belongs to her. The bottom line: You care about her, and love spending time with her; you just donít want to feel like youíre serving it.
ï
Got a problem? Write Amy Alkon, 171 Pier Ave, No. 280, Santa Monica, CA 90405, or e-mail This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it (www.advicegoddess.com).

 



 


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