Tag Archives: dealbreakers

The Potential Trap

I’m working on a pretty in-depth post about weight and dating and attitude and was hoping to post it today. And then I took my daily lunch blog break and caught up on Sex, Lies and Dating in the City. Simone posted a stunning story about a topic near and dear to my heart. Avoiding the “potential” trap. (Simone, please forgive me for not posting an entire article comment on your page since I decided cross-linking might be a better way to tackle how I feel about this one.)

The gist of the story. Boy meets girl. Girl and boy date. Ring and marriage is offered. Girl accepts with one caveat… she’ll only marry him if he changes X about himself. And proceeds to share that reason with anyone who asks when the wedding is. I definitely recommend sliding on over to Simone’s post if you want the whole story.

I searched through all my posts, certain that I’d written about the “potential trap” and couldn’t find it. And, of course, the whole concept ties in beautifully to my post on dating and weight issue. So, I decided to write a quickie (or, sigh, not so quick as it turns out) on potential today and perhaps make the one about weight a 2 part post for next week.

So, here’s my opinion on investing in potential:

Anytime someone says “I’ll love you if…” or “I’ll love you when,” the love becomes conditional. Period. Love isn’t something that can be parceled out like an abusive parent that loves you when you’re “good” and beats you when you’re “bad.” Because, no doubt about it, having conditions placed on you by someone who you love and trust feels like an emotional beating on the days that you don’t live up to their expectations. Continue reading

Everybody Lies

While catching up on some of my favorite blogs this weekend, I ran across an interesting comment string about truth and lies in dating. Simone, a NYC dating blogger, related a story about how she discovered that one of her recent dates lied about his age on his online profile. She went ahead with the date anyway, not caring about his actual age (it was well within her parameters) but a little more wary due to the initial lie about it. Assorted follies happened over the next week or two and Mr. Nicepost became a footnote in her blog history before they ever got to the third date.

But, as the comments got rolling, a definite dichotomy in opinion emerged. One side claimed that “everyone lies” so what’s the big deal while the other side Continue reading

Vulnerability: How and When Do You Share?

My group of friends circled around a dating issue this past week that we’ve all struggled with at one time or another… when do you let down your guard in a relationship? I realized that this may, in fact, be a largely determining factor in what kind of relationships you end up having with your sex of choice.

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This Chemistry is Killing Me!

You know what drives me nuts? Justifying obvious red flags because “chemistry” has turned your brain into cat food.

I know, I know… we ALL do it. Everything from ignoring that you’ve never actually spent time with the person when they are sober to the odd feeling that they aren’t *really* telling the truth about what they want in a relationship… it’s all been bypassed because “she’s hot” or “he’s a good kisser” or some other variation of “chemistry hijacked my brain and I’m along for the ride.”

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It may be a heart breaking economy but what’s the upside?

According to a survey released by  ING Direct on Monday, (don’t ask me why an international bank would be asking questions about romance on a survey… but anyway…) this recession is breaking American hearts. Apparently, we are weathering the storm less gracefully than our romantically inclined counterparts in other countries.

Survey says Continue reading

Meeting the Friends: A Survival Guide

Managing first impressions when you meet your date’s “friends” can be a challenge even for the most socially astute. I’ve never been an advocate of gamesmanship in the dating pool, but there are times and places for a bit less boister and a lot more tact. It’s a good idea to “be yourself” unless “yourself” is a boorish, fight-picking, butt-grabbing, inappropriate flirt. If that is the case, I’d suggest being the least amount of “yourself” as you can reasonably pull off.

Here are a few tips to catapult you to the positive side of the friend approval meter: Continue reading

3 Tips for Navigating Potentially Explosive Topics

Its so easy to pre-screen for things like faith, politics, children, etc. with online dating, but set-ups, bar hook-ups and random meetings don’t provide the same intel advantages. Most of the time, you’re going in blind when it comes to figuring out Potentially Explosive Topics (PETs) and if you’re not careful, fielding those issues can get a little crazy.

3 Simple Tips for Navigating PET’s: Continue reading

What to Do When the Ex Wants You Back.

After interviewing so many people, I’ve heard stories about how getting back together was the best decision they ever made or the worst train wreck in history that ended with someone in jail. And everything in between. I suppose it really comes down to the two people involved and the motives at the heart of it all to figure out if its going to stick or not. But what do you do when that person is you and your ex is trying to get you back?

If you’ve been avidly following my blog, you may have seen my post about being friends with the ex. Its possible to have a great friendship, but what happens when your ex starts breaking the “friends only” rules? Here you are, in a good relationship/new relationship/exciting relationship/recovered your mojo phase/etc and up pops your ex with talk about how great the two of you were together, what if you tried one more time… Continue reading

The Final Horseman of the Relationship Apocalypse: Horseman 4

I’ve been reading John Gottman’s book “Why Marriages Succeed or Fail” and found his four primary indicators of the eminent demise of a relationship fascinating. The first three indicators covered were criticism, contempt and defensiveness. Bringing all three to a culminating point, Gottman’s last horsemen for the destruction of a relationship is “stonewalling.”

He says:

Stonewalling often happens while a couple is talking. The stonewaller just removes himself by turning into a stone wall. Usually someone who is listening reacts to what the speaker is saying, looks at the speaker and says things like “uh hunh” or “hummmm” to let the speaker know he is tracking. But the stonewaller abandons these messages, replacing them with stony silence.

When we’ve interviewed stonewallers they often claim that Continue reading

The Four Horsemen of the Relationship Apocalypse: Horseman 3

Continuing from the posts referring to John Gottman’s Second Horseman: Contempt and First Horseman: Criticism from “Why Marriages Succeed or Fail,” today brings the third Horseman to the stage: Defensiveness.

The fact that defensiveness is an understandable reaction to feeling besieged is one reason it is so destructive — the “victim” doesn’t see anything wrong with being defensive. But defensive phrases, and the attitude they express, tend to escalate a conflict rather than resolve anything. If you are being defensive (even if you feel completely righteous in your stance,) you are adding to your marital troubles.

Examples of Defensive types of behavior:

  1. Denying responsibility: Your spouse tells you that you hurt their feelings and you reply that you said nothing wrong.
  2. Making Excuses: Always blaming outside circumstances for your own failings.
  3. Disagreeing with Negative Mind Reading: Reading into assumptions your partner makes about you and allowing it to raise your defensive reactions rather than accepting that the commentary is coming from their own issues.
  4. Cross-Complaining: Ignoring what your partner says and shooting back with your own complaint or criticism.
  5. Rubber Man/Rubber Woman: From the old “I’m rubber and you’re glue” saying, this behavior manages to not only defend yourself from attack but blame your partner. Its classic table turning behavior.
  6. Yes-Butting: And statement that starts off agreeing and then asserts a “but” to end with disagreement instead.
  7. Repeating Yourself: Instead of trying to understand your partner’s POV, you just keep repeating your own.
  8. Whining: Less about what you say as to how you say it. Childish, high-pitched nasal tone that stresses one syllable toward the end of the sentence.
  9. Body Language: False smiles, shifting body from side to side and folding arms across your chest.

The major problem with defensiveness is that it obstructs communication thereby escalating conflict.

Well, you can’t really argue with this one. Dealing with defensive behavior pretty much makes any relationship impossible. Being able to accept blame or to apologize always comes in high on my list of behavior that I not only want in a mate, but behavior that I strive to embody myself. Not always easy, but I’ve found, always worth the effort. An apology or sincere understanding of wrong-doing goes much further towards bringing two people together than any amount of “it’s not my fault!”