Hmm...Seoul, this doesn't sound hopeful. I know there are a lot of poor examples of "happily ever after" out there. I had hoped for some group brainstorming. The man who suggested arranged marriages had a decent idea, but at our age, or at least at my age, my parents have been gone longer than some of you have been alive, so there's nobody to do the arranging, unless I can recruit my adult kids, some of whom are grandparents too. Notwithstanding, the pickings are getting slimmer with each obituary. There were 20 in our small town this last week.
I am glad this thread created an opportunity for discussion and I've learned about several people from their stories on this thread and others. It served a good purpose for me, being new here. And your comments have been consistently affirming since I first showed up. I notice you're that way with most people, and I don't want you to think THAT goes unnoticed.
But...what if we found another angle to view this? Like...well...
How about marketing? What are the options and how does one manage them effectively? What about dating apps, social media pages, social opportunities (church, civic groups, volunteer opportunities) or anything else that anyone has tried?
Or how about introspection? What about me is interfering with what I want to accomplish and how can I work to align who I am with what I want?
Or qualities? What qualities are important in the person you seek? Where is that kind of person likely found? What are the tolerables, and what are the deal-breakers?
Do any of those sound like fodder for further discussion?
If so, have at it. I look forward to hearing your thoughts.
Hi Lady,
I apologize in that I might not be able to give the answers you are looking for. You're asking wonderful questions, and I really appreciate you asking, but I'm sorry to say you might not get as much response as you might be looking for.
The people who have been here in Singles a while are used to seeing these questions asked quite often, so they might not answer simply from burnout. You'll likely get more responses from newer members, which is fantastic -- but unfortunately, we don't seem to retain people here for very long.
I don't know if you will find this helpful, but when it comes writing threads about some of the heavier topics (tolerables and deal-breakers for example, as you mentioned,) I tend to center a thread around a main topic, then ask about 3 sub-questions at the end of the opening post to try give people something specific to answer.
I've found that putting too many questions or generalities in one thread often kills it, because people will read all the questions but not know which ones to answer first, or will get overwhelmed by so many topics being opened at once that they won't answer at all. This is just me though -- you might find things to be different.
I also love that you are so attentive to what others write, and that you're getting to know people through their stories.
I personally would not want an arranged marriage at all. I love my parents, but they have a very different personality profile than I do and would pick someone based on who they are rather than who I am. For instance, I am obviously a deep communicator; my parents are wonderful, but don't value layered communication or social cues the way that I do. Could you see them trying to pick someone out for me? It would be a disaster, and result in the death of a major part of my soul.
As for all the questions about dating -- in my own way, I have become a jaded old lady, and am very much going to sound like one.
I didn't have many relationships, but they were each terrible in their own way. And I'm sure the other person involved could say the same of me.
Years ago, determined to find a spouse, I hit the dating scene in full force -- both a real-life dating service and those online. I was at church 5-7 days a week, involved in most everything they had to offer. And all I found was that for me, being an active part of the dating world was lonely, disappointing, and expensive.
One of the main reasons I'm single, if I can put it bluntly, is because for whatever reason, most of the guys I was interested in had an attraction to pornography they couldn't shake, and I know from past experience, I can't compete with that.
As I wrote in an earlier post, I've talked with other Christian women and they may find a guy they like who can talk Scripture and prayer all day and night -- eagerly trying to "lead" them -- and then in the next text, want to send them naked pictures of themselves, and ask them to send naked pictures in return.
It's something that I think is rampant in the dating world, Christian or not, that no one ever talks about -- and that's been my frustration with the Christian community all my life -- the things people gloss over, but no one ever talks about.
People can call me a Jezebel or whatever they want, but I can't see myself "being led" or "submissive" to a guy who recites Bible passages in one breath and wants to send pictures of his nether regions in the next -- then is glued to a screen full of "Not Safe For Work" (another modern term for porn) images in between.
And I think there is a lot more of of this out there than anyone in the Christian world will discuss -- for both men and women. With OnlyFans (people's own personal paid porn performance channels) being pushed as an actual "career", it's no wonder that both men AND women are caught in this trap of wanting to see and be seen. Social media enforces it as the norm.
Now, I'm certainly NOT trying to condemn anyone who struggles with any of these things. And I am definitely NOT trying to say that all men struggle with this. As I said, I know it can be for both men and women. My whole life, people have talked to me about their sexual struggles, so I'm very familiar with talking to people about these kinds of topics and praying earnestly for them.
Because of this, at one point, I thought God probably had it in mind for me to marry someone who had these kinds of struggles. But I found out in my few relationships that I am not built to try to fight this kind of thing if someone brings it into my own personal life. I have my own struggles like anyone, but God seems to place strict boundaries on what I can and cannot deal with, and like most, I've had to learn my limits in the toughest ways.
I can be friends with most anyone; but as for whom I allow to get close to me, I have to be far more discerning or I will start to sink into a downward spiral and take the other person with me.
I also want to emphasize again that I surely know not everyone -- man or woman -- struggles with these things, but for whatever reason, the guys I know who don't have this issue have all been just friends.
I don't know what God has for me, but I have to be honest -- when it comes to dating, no, I'm not all that hopeful.
For myself, and I can only speak for myself, is that I have to just live life -- and if I meet a few awesome people along the way to make the journey worthwhile, I am extremely thankful.