Is Having A Man The Only Thing You Care About?

Name: Princess Leia
Age: 25
State: TN
Question: How do I end up with a guy who only sees me as an option, for now? I met this incredible guy 5 years ago and he has told me he is not ready for a relationship because he is a musician but not the “typical” musician. We only talk a few times a week and see each other rarely. He is extremely attracted to me and I to him. And even though, he says he wants to see me soon all the time he doesn’t make plans to. I understand he is living it up right now and I give him his space because I don’t want to pressure him, but I really like him and I just want to know he will one day be mine. :)

Any feedback is appreciated!!

I’m not quite sure what, if anything, is going on between you two. It sounds to me like you’re a tad obsessed with a guy who, for the most part, isn’t all that interested in you.

Being attracted to someone and actually caring for them are two different things. This guy says he wants to see you but never makes the time. There’s your answer. Hon, you’re not even an option to this guy. You’re just some young girl with stars in her eyes.I don’t say that to hurt you. I say that to snap you out of this haze you appear to be in right now. He’s never going to be yours. You’re not giving him space. That’s your way of rationalizing the the situation. In order to give him space you’d actually have to be taking up space in his life. You’re not. This is kind of like when women go on about how they broke up with a guy when really they just finally took the hint that the guy wasn’t all that interested and left. Sure, you can say you broke up with him. But that’s not really what happened.

Here’s a question for you: don’t you want anything else out of life? I’m not sure what the hell is in the water in Tennessee that makes girls from there so, I don’t now, dependent on men and marriage and having a man. Maybe that’s all they groom your for down there. I don’t know. But I have yet to come across a twenty something girl from Tennessee/The South who didn’t seem to want much out of life other than a man.

Don’t you have any passions or interests? Why are you worried about a man being “yours” at 25 years old? You have everything ahead of you. Why throw all of that to the wayside just for a guy? A guy who can barely manage to see you, no less.

I guess what I hate to hear in the letter is how your life seems to revolve around this barely present male. To me that just seems wrong. He’s just a guy.  I sound crotchety and old, I know. But really, don’t you have a plan for yourself? If not, you should. Do you know why? Because in these times it’s really, really unwise to rely upon a relationship to fulfill you.

Let’s say you and Mr. Rock Star do get together. What then? Marriage? Kids? What? What’s your plan?  You can’t wait until you’re 35 years old to suddenly wake up and remember that you forgot to get a degree, or choose a career path, or develop an identity, or have kids. This is stuff you have to put into action now. You can’t sit back and wait for some semi-employed jug band leader to wake up and realize you’re The One. He has lots of Ones, hon. Lots. You are one of many, many Ones. You don’t see him trying to balance a career and a relationship, do you? No. He’s out there living his life. Not sure what kind of a life it is, but it’s his.

Where’s yours?

You want to be in a position where you get to choose which door to open and what path to take. That’s where he is right now. He’s unfettered and living his life. You don’t want to settle down because that’s what you’ve been told is what girls like you should do. You want to do it because you’ve had various experiences and now choose to sacrifice certain things. That way there’s less of a chance you’ll have regrets.

In 5 years you’re not going to even remember this guy. You’re not even going to be the same person. You’re going to change. At least I hope. The idea of some young girl latching on to a guy at your age makes me cringe because there’s a really good chance that is going to stunt her emotional development in crucial ways. Then she’ll end up divorced at 30 or 35 and complete, utterly lost.

The first thing you need to do is be sure you can take care of and support yourself. That’s what your twenties are for. You need to develop an identity and independence. Then you find the guy and settle down. Don’t get me wrong. If you’re life goal is to marry and have kids, that’s great. That’s as valid and important of a goal as wanting to get an MBA and run a business. However, in either case, you want to be sure that you can stand on your own first. The last thing you want is to tie everything – your life, your identity, your future – to someone who quite possibly won’t be around in the long run.

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The Only 2013 Dating Resolutions You’ll Need

Let’s get right to this:

 

1. Stop asking “Why?”- To quote your parents, “Because. That’s why.” You’re never going to fully understand why someone wasn’t interested or why something didn’t work. It just didn’t. Don’t waste time trying to figure things out. That is, unless that one thing is a pattern. Then you should do some personal inventory and ask yourself (and friends you trust) some tough questions.

2. Give people a chance- Okay, so he wrote you and just said, “Hey’”or “How are you?” Some people aren’t very good with small talk. If their profile works for you, don’t let a wink, a flirt or a brief message with no personalization prevent you from replying.

3. Stop asking so many questions - Either take the leap or stay home.You’re never going to have a complete picture. Go big or go home.

4. Ladies, plan the first date once in a while - Stop leaving it up to the guy. It seems like 80% of the time, women get pissed for one reason or another about where the guy chooses to meet. If it’s so controversial take the bull by the horns and do it yourself.

5. Make up your own mind - Stop living by other people’s rules. They aren’t you. What works for them isn’t always what is best for you.

6. Stop caring what people think - I’m telling you, most of the judgments you hear and read come from people who absolutely suck at dating.They want you to fail.

7. Learn to enjoy the beauty of a dive bar - You haven’t really dated until you’ve had a night of beers, bad bar food and cheesy jukebox music. Every date doesn’t have to look like a scene from Sex and the City. Withhold judgment until you actually have the date.

8. Ladies, stop being afraid of being sexual/”slutty” – For the love of God, stop listening to your friends. I’m telling you that their heads have been in way more laps than they care to reveal.Fun fact: you’re friends won’t have anything to judge if you lie or keep details to yourself.

9. Guys, get rid of that stupid “I’ll only spend $20 on a first date” rule – Dating costs money. Get over it. Be more discerning when inviting women out if you find you’re spending too much money.Yes, you’re being cheap.

10. Don’t say “Yes” to a date unless you’re really interested – Be considerate of the schedule and time of other people. Setting vague plans and not following up is rude.Read a person’s complete profile before engaging them.

11. Don’t fear rejection or failure – You need the bad experiences to help you enjoy and identify the good ones. Unless you want to keep re-living the same date over and over, you have to see things through. Ladies, send that “thank you” email the next morning and suggest another date. Don’t wait for him to do it. Guys, if you like her then ask her out at the end of the first date.

12. Update profile photos regularly - No more posting pics from 2009! Make it a point to have friends take pictures whenever you’re out. You should be updating those photos every 3-6 months.

13. Have sex on the first date - Do it. Yes, relationships do come from it. You don’t have to do it all the time, of course. But don’t not have sex thinking you have cleared some imaginary hurdle. You haven’t.

14. Stop placing importance on empty gestures - It means nothing until it means everything. Remember that. Just because he paid the check doesn’t mean he’s sincere. Just because she accepted an invitation to dinner doesn’t mean she’s interested.We do things because it’s expected or as a means to an end.

15. Stop looking for signs - You know how you know a relationship (of whatever type) is working? You’re not watching or looking for signs. You’re too busy enjoying the moment and the experience.

16. Stop demanding honesty - Until someone is truly invested, they’re not going to risk conflict by offering total disclosure. Allow people to bow out of things in their own way. Yes, that sometimes means fading. Chasing them down and demanding an answer isn’t worth your dignity or self-esteem.

17. Stop dating assholes - This one is self-explanatory. The better choices you make, the better your experience. The people who complain and gripe all the time are doing that because the repeatedly date people that don’t treat them well. That’s because they focus on shallow criteria and don’t pay attention to the red flags..

18. Lower your expectations - Dating has become such a commodity these days that it’s counter-productive to need to feel special and unique on every first date.

19. Reply to messages quicker - No more trying to play it cool, folks! The process has now become so intensified that someone can email you on Monday and be smitten by Tuesday.

20. Stop being afraid of being alone - Listen. You’ve made it this far on your own. Maybe the love of your life is the love of *your life.* Appreciate and take advantage of the benefits of being single.

21. Date multiple people at once – Try it before you pass judgment. See how it fits.If it’s not for you, it’s not for you. But don’t turn your nose up at the idea until you’ve actually given it a chance.

2. Don’t make every first date an interview - Knock back a couple drinks and enjoy yourself. Stop being so worried that you might make some critical error that will turn someone off. If they’re interested, they’ll be interested the next morning unless you do something horribly offensive. Have fun! Get a buzz, flirt a little, tell a dirty joke.

Have any of your own?

 

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When Casual Sex Goes Bad

Let’s play Guess The Red Flags:

 

I’m not sure I have any questions about what I’m going to write, I just think I’d like to put all of it out there just so I can see how nutty it was, and see just how strange, if not bad, many of my decisions were. Perhaps to serve as a warning to others as well as for my own catharsis. I’ve never told the whole story at once.

I meet a PhD (biology) student via OKCupid, I’m 32 and she’s 26. Our first date we meet at a small, rather unique bar and have the typical conversation. I notice that she’ll rub her hands together intently—not necessarily furiously, but definitely with energy—over the candle, repeatedly. I blow it off, find it cute maybe. Walk her to her car, and that’s it. Figure what the hell, text her when I get back home a flirty message, get a response, not totally sure about the whole thing but interested. We set up plans to see the symphony, have a lovely time, I walk her to her door and she asks if I’ll kiss her—I do, and it’s hot, and she says she wants to see the orchestra again the next weekend. Her thesis defense winds up getting in the way and she cancels, and I bluntly ask if she actually wants to go out again, she says yes. Great. Later that night she sends me an email saying that she’s listening to the concert on the radio and wishes she could be there with me. We go out a couple days later, and almost immediately have sex.

Now it gets interesting.

About five minutes after the first time doing it (we wound up staying up til 4am doing it a few times), she says that she suffers from serious depression and has had suicide ideation in the past, talks about how she quit therapy due to frustration. I’ve been there, we connect about it. I see her both nights that weekend, lots of sex and some conversation. One night we’re getting started on her couch, and she claws into my back. The first time I sort of reacted, the second time I felt blood on my skin, which got more of a reaction. Then she does it again, on the same spot. Instinctively, I grab her wrists and hold them, and ask incredulously what she wants me to do. “This” she says with a smile. Wild sex ensues. And lots of cuddling after. She asks me in the middle of the week to go to the laundromat with her. Throughout all this, after she’s had a couple drinks she’d start telling me how nice I am to her and how I just make her feel so good about herself. At one point she asks how long I’d been on OKC (a month), and she says that she’s been using it for years, ever since it started.

That weekend we go out again, and she’s a bit colder. We go to her bedroom after getting home and she asks me why I’m so nice to her, and how do I know she deserves to be treated kindly. I brush it off. Wake up the next morning and ask her why she keeps bringing this up. She tells me that she’s not looking for a relationship. I say okay, I don’t really have the desire for something serious but how does she feel about continuing to sleep together. She thinks that’s fine. I leave. We see each other again a couple days later, and she’s very cold with me. No sex.

Later, she messages me online, complaining about a talk she has to prepare. I listen for a bit, and ask if she just wants me to listen, or if she’d like some feedback. She just wants me to listen, and continues to list her problems with the talk. It’s getting late, I say I have to go to bed, and that I’m sure she’ll figure out how to get through this because she’s made it this far anyway. That really pissed her off, and honestly, I can understand why, nobody wants to hear the old “you can do it!” schtick. I then write her a note apologizing, but seeking clarification about the nature of our relationship, because I’m not sure that “just sex” entails me listening to her problems or doing laundry together. She didn’t respond directly. I saw her again the night before I was leaving for a 2-week trip to New Zealand, and she was warmer with me.

A week later I’m in Auckland, working on some photos I’d taken earlier in my trip. It’s late. She im’s me, very friendly. Asking if I think about her. Said that she’s been thinking about me, and how last she saw me, she couldn’t stop staring ay my biceps. Flirty banter. Fun, light, cute. I go to bed.

A day after getting home, she asks me to come over. She hugs me, and asks me to squeeze her harder. I do. She wants it harder. I’m reluctant to comply. We have wild sex. Lying around, she tells me how she likes it when I squeeze her, and she’s pretty sure that I could squeeze her so hard it would kill her. She specifies that I should not do that. I agree. Neither one of us sleep that well with another person in the bed so we mutually agree not to stay over unless we’re too inebriated to drive home safely. We rarely get hammered, but occasionally do sleep in the same bed anyway—at one point, she tells me that she knows she’s very comfortable with me because she’s letting me sleep on the outside of the bed.

The following month or so features increasingly wild sex. We’d be undressed before getting inside her place. Most times afterward, we’d stay up cuddling and talking. Conversation ranged from typical pillow talk to some rather intense stuff—she talked in-depth about suicide ideation, being with a guy who yelled at her a lot and threw things at walls, getting pregnant at 21 just before starting grad school and having a painful abortion.

We go out from time to time. She texts frequently. She always texts the next day after we see each other about how much fun she had. She’ll also tell me she’s thinking about me, wishing she was in bed with me. Sometimes when I see her, once we start making out she asks me if I think about her, how often I think about her, what I think about when I think about her, and if I like thinking about her. Finally, curious myself, I ask how often she thinks about it: “all the fucking time” is her response.

Okay, cool. What part of this isn’t healthy, right? (<– sarcasm)

Periodically she’ll reiterate that we’re not in a relationship and it’s just sex, especially when it comes time for bed, and she wants me to leave. One time she notes that our sex sessions take a long time, and she says that if I want to “fuck her fast,” she’s fine with that; so I ask if she felt like that now, she did, so we partially undress and I finish quickly. She finds this extremely exciting, and immediately after I finish—while still inside her—she says, “now get the fuck out of here.” I gladly get off her, and start dressing. Then she softly says that she doesn’t want me to leave. I shrug my shoulders, kiss her, hug her, and say I’ve gotta get to sleep and head out the door.

Things go well for the next few weeks, and I take her out for her birthday. I got her some flowers, which almost had her in tears. We have a lovely dinner, and after having sex she coos at me to tell her something about me that she doesn’t know. I’m dumbfounded and don’t say anything. The rest of the week is fine, towards the end we had some very rough sex that wasn’t particularly great for either of us. The next day she starts telling me about how she has a deep-seated psychological need to be dominated as severely as possible. We hardly see each other for three weeks, she’ll make plans and cancel. I write her a brief note and say that I’m a little bothered by all this, that she’s been very curt with me, and that while I’d like to keep seeing her I’m thinking it may not be a good idea. She immediately apologizes and says she wants to keep seeing me. I say that this isn’t really as casual as we thought, given the emotional content of so many interactions, and she says that’s okay with her. We resume having sex, frequently. She asks for some amount of domination but I keep it in check.

She has a 3-week vacation coming up, and needed someone to come by her place, bring the mail in, etc. She says she doesn’t trust anyone else in her life around St. Louis, and asks me to do it. I agree. Things continue going okay, until she made an error in one of her experiments. She’s furious. She sends me a note saying that she would like to see me later that night, and she wants me to fuck her so it feels like she’s being punished. Before I go to see her, I get some flowers. Getting over to her place, things feel a little dicey, and we argue about an incident at a concert we’d attended earlier—basically, a couple of guys pushed a young woman in front of us, and I got pretty aggressive (though not physical) with the guys, and she disapproved of how I handled it. We settled it, started having sex, and just before it got to that time where I start “dominating,” she got a mildly fearful look and asked me to be gentle with her. Of course I was. I give her the flowers after, and get another near-tears response. It’s very sweet, and more cuddling.

She leaves for her trip a couple days later. She left me a small gift in her place, asked me to think about her, we talked a couple times after she landed in Europe and she was very sweet. That was virtually the last I heard from her during the entire trip. When she came back, she expressed zero interest in seeing me and we had a fairly ugly break-up sometime later. I was very sad about this, incredibly distressed but I somehow managed to stay focused on other things, get promoted at work and win a bronze medal in the national championships of the sport in which I compete. Emotionally I’m torn up. We tried “being friends” but it was awkward hanging out and not having sex. Much time passed and we stopped talking entirely.

A few months later, someone suggested to me that maybe this woman had Asperger’s and it made me question a few things, and it didn’t seem totally illogical though I’m wondering if maybe there was something more severe. I contacted her, she said she’d been thinking about me, we went out again and had a great time. We kissed and no more. A few days later we went for coffee, and she apologized for how she treated me after her vacation, and all the things she said during our breakup, and then apologized for how she handled our relationship. I said that much of it was indeed fucked up, but that I played a role too and that I felt badly about things I had said. She said that she wanted to start seeing me regularly again, but that she’d started seeing another guy who was into polyamory. He had a girlfriend, who herself was married. I said I thought that was odd, but that I didn’t want a committed relationship so I was up for seeing her whenever. I had a flight out of town shortly after this conversation was taking place, so no sex…we saw each other one more time thereafter, got into a fight about god knows what, continued the argument over the phone until our batteries died.

And that was it. I don’t remember much about the conversation, aside from her saying that she couldn’t be involved with me because she couldn’t have a boyfriend, and that she thought monogamy was an unnatural condition and a tool used to control women.

Three weeks later, I learned from a friend of hers that she’d slept with another guy on her trip, while I was watching her place. I went plaid. I was so angry I was shaking. I sent her a short, rather cruel note and told her to get fucked. She then started texting the person who told me demanding to know why this information was shared, which this person found unsettling. I called her, left a voicemail, and told her to leave this person out of it. So naturally, she called this person at 3am, which pissed her off. I sent her a note asking what part she didn’t understand about leaving the other one out of it and a few other (unnecessary) “choice” words. Never called her any names. I think I referred to her as a mockery of a woman. Typical angry BS.

It still bothers me from time to time. The relationship, what happened after, things I said.

But here’s what’s really strange. Since then, my life has improved dramatically, across the board, in every way. My friendships are rock solid, closer and warmer. I stopped having stupid arguments with my long-suffering parents. Until I settled down with my current girlfriend, without even trying that hard (I.e., wasn’t even on OKC) I probably hooked up with 12 women in three months. I got in even better shape, my creative work improved both at the office and personally. I’ve felt stable, healthy, composed, in control. But the experience I had with this woman still haunts me from time to time—there are likely no answers to any of it, no firm explanations. And certainly she’s not entirely to blame, I after all ignored red flag after red flag and at the very least enabled strange behavior.

The first flag was in her OKC questions. An insatiable sexual appetite, coupled with an interest in being the “slave” in a master/slave relationship. The second was right there in front of me, during our first date, as she kept methodically, rhythmically, intently folding and rubbing her hands together, over a candle, over and over again.

I could have walked away but I just couldn’t resist. Watch out for those rabbit holes. Sometimes it’s better to read the book than it is to be the story.

I can say one thing without any hesitation: before this relationship, I was happy to be one of those guys who “just kept finding the crazy girls,” and aw shucks why me. Little did I realize that I was probably behaving poorly myself in many instances, that I was ignoring flagrant warnings, and more or less finding a way to fulfill self-fulling prophecies when they didn’t fulfill quickly enough so that I could keep seeing the “crazy” ones and then wonder why oh why nothing ever worked out. Great method of dodging responsibility. High time I grew up. – BG

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If He’s The Type To Think You’re Easy, He’s Not Worth It

Name: Heather
Age: 34
State: California
Question: This is more of a “request” for discussion than a dating question, as you already posted a dating question for me this week, so I feel a bit rude posting in here twice.

I like what you said to me on Twitter:  “If he’s the type to think you’re easy, he’s still going to end up being a douche.”

Notice the progression of events here:

1) Guy X thinks you’re easy (WHORE), therefore..
2) Guy X treats you like crap.

This makes me want to reverse the whole thing (can you tell by now that I’m a PhD student studying rhetoric?)

1) Guy X thinks that you only sleep with Special Boyfriends (VIRGIN), therefore…
2) Guy X treats you like a Goddess.

Notice that in both scenarios, Guy X has the option to judge the woman and change his behavior based on that judgment. The woman, of course, has no power whatsoever.

I’m sure that’s not what you intended, but it does raise a fascinating issue for what I’m dealing with right now in the dating world:

I have a high sex drive. Very, very high. I enact it not only by being “easy” but also by being very giving, enthusiastic, and active in the bedroom. I tend to be pretty horny most of the time.

Sometimes I like to try to “land” a boyfriend who (hopefully) also has a high sex drive, but more often than not I like to sleep around. As you know, OKC and POF make this stupidly easy for most women to accomplish. So I’ve had eight different casual sex partners since March. Always with no expectation of romance or a relationship, but occasionally the guys insist. Seriously I think some men need dinner and a movie to get in the mood :)

Anywhoo, I’m now to a point where I’m “sated” and ready to settle down with a boyfriend. I have a viable candidate in mind, and I’ve already told him that I haven’t had sex since February… because that was the last time I was in a committed long term relationship.

The thing of it is, I don’t like that I have to lie about this. I hate the Virgin/Whore dichotomy, and I hate that I’m buying into it by lying to this guy. But you said it yourself – a woman can’t be considered “easy” by a man.

I’ve never met a man who was willing to treat a woman with respect once he knew that she had been promiscuous in the past. And yet if a guy tells me that he had a bunch of casual sex a couple months ago, but now is looking for something committed, I would be happy to treat him with respect, and I would applaud his decision.

Is there any way out of this “judgment” trap that society set for us 4000 years ago? Or are we forced to play this game? I’m interested in your thoughts.

Thanks for your time,
Heather

Before my friend left to go home for the holidays, we cracked open a bottle of wine and had the “So, what has your OKC experience been like?” talk. We weren’t comparing numbers as much as we were comparing notes. He shared that, in the handful of months he’d been on that site, all of the women he went out with a second time had either had sex with him on the first date or on the second date. (I didn’t ask how many here were. That wasn’t the point of the exercise.) The ones who waited for the second date all did the “you’re not coming home with me tonight” thing that many women like to do. They wouldn’t sleep with him on the first date because first date sex, in their mind, was “bad.” They waited until the second date because, most likely, they rationalized that if a guy sticks around after one date with no sex then he must be truly interested.

What they don’t understand is that if a man is the type to consider a woman easy for enjoying her sexuality, one date isn’t going to matter. These guys want the woman to wait a long time so that they (the men) don’t have to fear that they are just one of many. That has nothing to do with gauging the woman’s virtue. That is all about massaging the man’s ego.

What women don’t understand is that men know what we’re thinking. They know we’re afraid of being considered “slutty.” Like anything else, they go along with our rationalizations and explanations knowing that we’ll eventually put out. These men understand that were merely trying to buy ourselves time so we don’t look “slutty.” As I pointed out to my friend, these women  – the ones who justify or qualify when they decide to have sex – usually go on to be far more trouble than they’re worth. Rather than own their own decisions and manage expectations, they project all of their insecurity onto the guy until things eventually implode.

I think that in the beginning of a relationship, both people need to keep their sexual history to themselves. Personally, I don’t find a man’s sexually history threatening. If my guy told me he had had a series of one night stands before we met, I wouldn’t care. I don’t want to know what he does after that point, of course. But hearing what happened before doesn’t faze me. I think a lot of this really depends on how the information is being shared. There’s something unseemly about a man or woman who brags about all the sex they have. It casts a rather sad light on the person doing the bragging. What’s funny is that if this information is shared publicly, like say on Twitter or a blog, the results are polar opposite depending on the braggarts gender.

A man can blog about all the sex he has and women will still want to be with him and try to date him seriously. Why? Because they like the idea of taming the beast and one upping the women who came before them. A woman, however, could not get away with it. She reeks of insecurity and sadness and ends up being passed around by various brahs who can’t be bothered to actually ask her out. Instead, she might get the last minute or late invite for drinks. She is considered a final option should no others arise. This is where things differ. A man can share his number and the woman will pretend to be intimidated or shocked, but she’s actually pleased that she’s found a man with so much experience. A woman could share her number and the man could be turned off. All of this hinges upon the security level of each person, of course. This is why I don’t advocate that these conversations be had. Ever.Frankly, I find the idea of counting or keeping track of lovers to be juvenile.

The only way out of this judgment trap is either to say nothing and never have this talk, lie or to only date men who have matured beyond the Madonna/Whore ideology. (Those men do exist, by the way. ) There is no logical explanation for why we even need to know about their sexual history beyond their last few test results. Numbers are inconsequential. We really aren’t entitled to know any of that. Whatever happened before you got with one partner should stay in the past out of respect for your partner. A story here or there isn’t an issue. More than that and you’re delving into “baggage” territory.

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3 Types of Men Who Are “Just Looking For Sex”

One of the more common questions I receive from female readers is how they can spot the men who are “just” seeking sex. 

My answer is simple. Don’t try and learn how to spot or avoid them. Instead, figure out how to co-exist with them. I also try to enlighten them on the different types of men that fall under the “Just Want Sex” umbrella.

First, there are the Casual Sex Seekers. These are the guys who are looking for a no strings sexual encounter. The classic sign to watch out for, that many women often fall for, is their “refreshing honesty.” They’re the guys who tell you, in the middle of what seems like a perfectly great date, that they’re not looking for anything serious at the moment. They’ll probably go further and tell you how cool/sexy/a-MAH-zing you seem and they feel like they can be honest with you about where they stand. Hear this: this is NOT a compliment. What they’re telling you is that they think you’re okay enough to sleep with, but not date.  Many women give guys points for being upfront about what they want and hook up with the guy believing his spiel about how different and unique she is. A man who admits in his dating profile that he’s not looking for anything serious is telling you who he is. Listen. Don’t make the mistake of praising him for being honest. People are supposed to be honest. If his profile is staggeringly offensive, it’s because he genuinely doesn’t care what women think of him. In a bad way. These are the men who will tell you that they think you’d make a great fuck buddy. Again this is not. a. compliment.

Next you have the Casual Relationship Seekers. Don’t be fooled by the label. These men do want a relationship. They just don’t want commitment. These men either don’t wish to agree to exclusivity or don’t have to. On top of that, we have all of the cultural and economic shifts that have played a part in women choosing to go their own way. They, too, don’t have to settle down. Like their male counterparts, they’ve begun to enjoy the benefits of romantic and sexual variety. The downside to this sexual liberation is that the value of sex has decreased in the sexual market place. That means that sex no longer can be used as a viable bargaining chip. For every one woman who chooses to hold out on sex until a man agrees to commit, there’s many others who don’t. Now men have enough options to keep them more than satisfied for the foreseeable future without having to give much up in return.

These men are looking for consistent companionship and sex. How will you be able to spot them? Only by telling them what it is you hope to come from the relationship and asking if he wants the same thing. Even then there are no guarantees that he’ll be honest.

Finally, you have the Long Term Daters. Yes, you heard right. These men actually do want a committed relationship. These guys often get confused with the Casual Sex Seekers because they choose to end the relationship soon after beginning a sexual relationship. Many women choose to believe that sex was what these men were after all along. That’s a much easier pill to swallow than admitting that maybe the man didn’t feel she lived up to his standards in some way.

While being cautious doesn’t necessarily hurt, it can lend to a false sense of security. That’s what gets women into trouble. Focus gets shifted to the innocuous and usually empty gestures. There is no amount of Facebook creeping that will save you from the Pump & Dumper. Just because he pays for all the dates doesn’t mean he’s genuinely interested. A post-coital am text after sleeping together for the first time is usually done because men know women expect that.  Much of that stuff is just a means to an end, the end being more sex.

Many women have been programmed by girlfriends to believe that being the victim of a pump a dump is the worst possible thing to happen to a single woman. You know what? That’s a lie. If anything, women need to endure this and various other dating disappointments in order to collect experiences and learn from them. There are no blue ribbons awarded at the end of our lives to the women who were pumped and dumped the least. The best thing a woman could do is tune out all the white noise they hear from friends about having sex too soon and how a man will deem you a slut for it. Have sex when you want to have sex, because you want to have sex. Those are the only rules you should follow. There are plenty of men who won’t judge you for choosing to have sex “too soon.” If they are intimidated by that, then that is about their own ego and personal insecurities. It has nothing to do with you.

The take away here should be that there really is no sure fire way to avoid men “just” looking for sex. If you’re truly afraid of encountering a man who will dump you after you sleep with him, then the only remedy for that is to stay home and never date again.

The real solution is to understand how men think. Accept the premise that men in general do not have expectations about sex other than more sex.  And, men will generally always take sex if offered or available, even if they have no special expectations or intentions about the relationship becoming “more.”  If you can commit these two points to memory, then you’ll have nothing to fear. You’ll have appropriated your expectations, thereby alleviating the potential for embarrassment or disappointment. What’s the point in having sex if you can’t fully experience and enjoy it?



gg

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The Only Expectation Men Have After Sex Is More Sex

Name: Kelly
Age: 44
State: AL
Question: Hi, Moxie: I wrote to you last week re: sex on the first date. I wanted to follow up and get some additional feedback if possible. I’m sure you’ve spoken to this many times before, but I guess I need a refresher. I’m kind of mad at myself, sorry to hijack your blog, just not sure how to get a handle on some things.

Lost Sailor made a comment:

“If you want to sleep with a guy after only one date, please, by all means. I think the trick is to carefully and clearly manage your expectations. Sleeping with the guy isn’t going to fundamentally change where the relationship was ultimately headed. If he didn’t see you have long-term potential before sex, he’s not going to see you as long-term potential after sex. By the same token, if he is into you and open to commitment before sex, he’s likely to still be open to it afterward. Guys just really aren’t that complicated. The danger in first-date sex not what he thinks of it, but what you think of it. If you go into it thinking that it will solidify a relationship, you’re going to be disappointed more often than not. After only one date, you’ll have no idea of the potential for commitment or whether he is just in it for the sex.

Basically, the guy did call me, and we did see each other again. He texted me every day since the night we first met. He asked me last weekend when I wanted to get together again so we planned for the following Thur or Fri. Then on Tuesday, he called and asked if I wanted to have lunch. All good things. We went out again last night for the Thursday date. Had sex again. Again, I initiated it.

Some background: He has been married (to a much younger woman) and divorced about a year and a half, I think. Said he had just ended a six month relationship a month earlier. So he does do relationships it seems. He is a very successful business guy in our town, drives a nice car, fancy house, knows a lot of the “right” people.    He almost seems to brag a little but in a way that makes it seem like he’s insecure, not in a douchey way, more like I want you to think I’m cool, but not in a way that turned me off. Also to note: he’s short. I’m 5’9, and he was about 5’7ish.  But very cute.

While we were out at dinner, he was looking at a text and asked me what are you doing NY Eve? I had mentioned that I was coming to NYC for a birthday on the 5th of Jan. I said nothing planned yet. Then he proceeded to tell me that his group of friends was having a party at this private country club. So in my mind I’m thinking, are you asking me, or why would you mention that? He had also waited until 4:15 yesterday to text me about where we were going and what time, and when he did, he just said something like, Hey, what’s up, and then finally got around to saying what do you want to do, almost like he wanted me to bring it up first. So rather passive-aggressive?

My issue with myself is this: After the sex, which is really good btw, he didn’t seem to want me to stay. Not that earth-shattering, but I felt strange. I said I guess I need to go and he was up like a shot. And here is where I brought the “crazy.”  I said I like you but I’m not sure that you feel the same. I know, high school. I am so out of practice, haven’t had sex or dated after that long-term, bad breakup over a year ago. He said you don’t know that I don’t, and I don’t really know you. I know that I feel really comfortable with you. So we were kind of laughing but I was actually serious. He walked me out and I just said thanks, had fun, bye. He says, are you just going to leave and not hug me??! So I did and then just drove off.

Going back to what Lost Sailor said, am I nuts, or am I just out of practice? How do I stop myself from a) not having sex if this is going to freak me out or b) being able to handle it? I’m way too old to act this way, I’m rather mortified. And haven’t gotten any text this morning. I don’t plan on contacting him. He had also friended me on Fbook last week.

Sorry again for this long letter, understand if it’s too long to post.

 

I tend to agree with most men that most of us females are a little “crazy.” We just are. The way we think and communicate and interpret things is just different than how most men do. It is what it is. It’s not that we’re nuts, we just require more handling.

Some background: He has been married (to a much younger woman) and divorced about a year and a half, I think. Said he had just ended a six month relationship a month earlier. So he does do relationships it seems.

Exactly. It seems as though he “does” relationships.  Anybody can do a relationship. They can agree to be your boyfriend and you can go on dates and take trips and have the sexy time and even get engaged. It’s all just a series of promises. But if the person to whom we commit ourselves isn’t sacrificing anything, then it’s not real commitment. The relationship exists in name only. It’s just a promise. Big deal. He dated someone for 6 months. How is that proof that he does anything besides make open ended promises? Oh look. He married a much younger woman. He pledged to bang a young girl who probably wasn’t experienced enough to know when to challenge him. Big sacrifice there. And then he walked away from that commitment.

I can remember a guy once telling me, after he had cheated on his girlfriend(s) and began a new one with a girl fresh out of her teens, that he was “never going to cheat again.” As if that meant something. Swearing that you’ll never cheat again does not indicate a mature understanding of commitment. Acknowledging that you’re probably going to want to sleep with other people but will try your best not to because you think your partner is worth the effort is a mature understanding of commitment. Don’t get too excited about the potential that you perceive this guy to show. He’s not doing anything extraordinary.

You expressed concern about how this guy felt about you and this guy kind of danced around his answer then shuffled you out of his apartment. I would drop that subject  for awhile and just hang back and see how this unfolds. You should maintain exceptionally low expectations here.

How do I stop myself from a) not having sex if this is going to freak me out or b) being able to handle it?

Easy. You accept and understand how men view sex and mirror that. The only expectation that men place on having sex is having more sex. That’s it. If you’re going to continue initiating sex, this guy will take it regardless of whether or not he sees a future with you. Commit those two points to memory and your problems will be solved.

 

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What Do You Do When An Ex Publicly Calls You Out?

Question: What’s your advice to a man who was recently blasted on OK Cupid and Twitter (by username) by a woman he dated a few times? I met A. through OKC. She mentioned in her profile that she wrote for a website/blog. My curiosity got the better of me and I asked for the link. From there I found her Twitter and followed her. After a couple dates I got the feeling we wouldn’t be a good mix. I ended things after the 4th date. Looking back I should have followed my initial instincts and ended things before they went too far. We had sex on the third and fourth date. After that I told her I didn’t think things would work out. I thought I’d wait awhile before unfollowing her. The day after I “broke up” with her she updated her OKC profile and said she was off the market for a bit because of being humiliated by me. The same day she posted a link to my OKC profile on her Twitter feed telling everybody what an ass I was. This all happened two weeks ago and she’s still saying things. Should I contact her and try to smooth things over? – G., 33 – Facebook

 

Do not contact her. It’ll just give her more to bitch and complain about. Trust me. I know of what I speak on this matter. Any attempt to offer an olive branch will seem phony at this point.

I’m not sure how you found out that she said anything. Did someone alert you to this fact? Or were you creeping her pages just to be sure she wasn’t bad mouthing you? If it’s the latter, then stop that pronto. If she bad mouths you, she bad mouths you. As long as she’s not naming you by name, then who gives a shit? Disable your OK Cupid profile and start a new one. There. Problem solved. Could she find it and continue to bad mouth you? Yes. Again, who gives a shit? Just by outing you she looks psychotic and anybody who would listen to her isn’t worth your time. Just stop caring about this. If she finds out that you’re watching her, I guarantee you she will keep it up. I am absolutely guilty of this. When I found out that someone I was involved with was creeping all my social media, I made it a point to say things on Twitter (and only Twitter) that he could construe were about him. Petty? Counter-productive? Yes and Yes. Bite me. It felt great. I never used specifics or linked to anything, nor did I make it a daily or even weekly habit. The only reason he knew what I was saying was because he was watching. (I had changed all the URLs/usernames to my social media profiles because of him. The only way he would have been able to find the new pages was if he either a) made a point to find the new address or b) been following me under a fake profile all along. See how that works?) He eventually wrote me and warned me that his gf’s ex-cop uncle was monitoring my online activity across various sites. That’s why, OP, you shouldn’t say anything. You’ll be outing yourself as reading her stuff and end up looking stalkery (and flat out pathetic) yourself.

A few tips for venting about an ex publicly:

1. Never use specifics of any kind - You can’t be reckless in this day and age. No, you’re not being careful if you only reveal their unique first name. You’re doing it intentionally to make them look bad, and that makes you an asshole with impulse control issues. Be careful not to reveal anything that will lead people right to your subject. Remember this: the enemy of my enemy is my friend. If you’ve got skeletons of your own, you can be sure they’ll tumble out of that closet right quick.

2. Never use criticism to smoke someone out – If your ex refuses to reply to your attempts at contact, take that as a sign that they don’t want to talk to you. Running to Twitter, Facebook and YouTube to publicly reveal intimate details about their life in dribs and drabs is not the way to get them to respond.  Behavior like that makes you look like an awful, immature, vindictive crazy person, despite what your sycophantic followers tell you.

3. Have some dignity - Rolling around wailing on Twitter is not only unbecoming, it’s insufferable and unbearable to watch. If you get dumped, lick your wounds privately. Again, trust me on this, The last person you want seeing you so vulnerable is the person that you believed hurt you. It gives them far too much power over you. They’ll watch and wait and strike when they think you’re vulnerable.

4. Keep private matters private - Leave text messages and emails and profile info offline. Look, just because it didn’t work out for you doesn’t mean they aren’t a good person. Learn the difference between a good person in a bad situation and a bad person.

5. Remember that it’s a small world - Take, for example, an email I received the other night from a reader. They happened to be a reader of another blog. A recent post perked up their ears because the numerous specifics mentioned about the guy in question fit a regular commenter here. Sure enough, when I read the blog, I realized the woman was lambasting someone I knew. And while he absolutely brought it upon himself, she still looked bad for what she said and came off immature and spiteful.

 

Tips to avoid being bitchy blogger fodder:

1. Do your research - Your first clue that this girl was going to do something like this was that she admitted in her profile that she writes for a website or keeps a blog. That’s your cue. These are rarely isolated incidents. Meaning, this woman has undoubtedly done this before. If you read her website or tweets and she seems attention whorey, you can be sure she’ll eventually use you as bait to get it. If she does appear loose lipped, approach with caution.

2. Don’t lie about reading her blog or tweets – Granted, deep down, we know that it’s a lie. But if you tell us that you’re not reading, we’re going to test you. That’s when the rubber hits the road. Let me tell you, if we know we have you or anyone close to you as part of our audience, we’ll use this to our advantage.

3. Don’t put anything you don’t want public knowledge in writing – Keep all communication during the first few dates brief and innocuous. That person has to prove themselves to you. Before our first date, the guy I’ve been dating and I talked about what I do for a living. We even read some of the blog together. I was open to any and all concerns he voiced. As someone who does this for a living or for a hobby, you have to understand that what we do is really unsettling to most men.

4. Don’t date someone because of their blog - Oh, so you like to be written about? Remember you said that. Nobody likes to feel like an experiment.

5. Don’t follow them on social media until things get serious – That way, there’s no messy unfollowing or defriending.

I say you try and capitalize on this. Let this girl give you free promotion. The smart women will recognize that you dumped a Crazy. Or her hate followers will do what they can to get one over on her and try to date you so they can rub her face in it. Whatever you do, do not contact her and try to ignore it. She’s trying to get your attention because she hopes you’re reading. Don’t react and I assure you she’ll get tired of it and find another victim. Don’t unfollow her or block her, either. Do not reveal your presence at all. If she sees that she’d getting to you, she’ll keep it up.

 

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Sometimes You Have To Give a Guy a Chance

Name: TcV
Age: 34
State: Missouri
Question: I am trying to understand the intentions of the last guy I dated in order to avoid any potential future mistakes.  I don’t think I made a mistake here, necessarily.  But, feedback would be great.  I have been a serial monogomist for most of my life, and this is my first time in the dating world; I am also a single mother.  I want to play this game right and don’t want to waste my time, or anyone else’s with nonsense behavior.  That said, here goes. I contacted someone on okc, who replied, we emailed quite a lot online while waiting for the day of our date to arrive. This was the first time I felt a connection on any date and was thrilled (I’d been on 10 or so dates prior-mostly all first dates and happening in the span of about 3 months).  We went on 3 more dates in the next week or so and had a blast.  However, I did see some flags: He was already discussing the possibility of a relationship, saying we have such a strong connection we can’t ignore it.  I suspected he was being agreeable during conversation.  He interrupted me often and seemed to be most interested in either a)talking about himself b)talking about us in the future.  c)he has mostly young, pretty female friends and they mostly drink/party together.  This guy is 31.

I went out of town for a few weeks and we continued to email often.  I am beginning to notice lots of disclaimers and some possible contradictions, then later intentional vagueness about where he would be or who with, and repeating things he had told me in the past.

I return and we have one or two dates before having sex.  In the end this relationship was about 2 months and we had sex 3 times.  In this time, he contacts me nearly daily, has dis-activated his okc profile, is pushing to declare us bf/gf, has paid for everything, and is open to spending a little time with my son.  A lot of work for just sex, in my mind.  He is thoughtful, kind, and makes a genuine effort to communicate.

Well, I decided to end this relationship because he became very defensive and angry if I questioned any of the things that seemed like partial truths, or cover-ups regarding his relationship with these girls (not going to list it all here), and it seemed like he was trying to transition the relationship to one where we stayed home exclusively – never going out together.  His excuse was he spent so much time/energy going out with his friends already.  He also made an excuse about why I had never been invited to his home.

Was I obviously dating someone who was trying to establish a booty call while he stayed out scouting new tail other nights of the week?  Do you see what I was seeing?  Or was I being inappropriately pushy way too early on?  After all, he was the one moving us into relationship mode – not me!  I just suspect he was trying to build a false sense of intimacy between us so I could become a sitting duck to be used.  Or is it just totally normal for things to be this way sometimes in a healthy “just dating” relationship?

Either way I know I made the right choice for myself here.  I just find the getting to know you stage to be so hard and would love to learn from this.  Thank you!

 

Hmm. I found myself alternating between which of you I was siding without throughout this. That means that I feel you both contributed to the demise of this relationship.

In general, I find guys who are overly effusive on the fist few dates kind of suspect. I always tell women that it takes time to determine potential compatibility. I feel it’s the same for men. 3 dates and he’s talking about a “strong connection?” Personally, I don’t trust situations that start off that way. As I said to some friends recently, sometimes that intense, gotta have ‘em all the time pull isn’t necessarily a good thing. There’s something to be said for not being “head over heels” right away and building up to that. Flames that burn that bright and strong almost always burn out pretty quickly. Plus, such an intense attraction can cloud your judgment. It could be that this guy was getting defensive because he felt he had been doing everything right and you weren’t appreciating it. Maybe he wasn’t hiding information as much as refusing to give it to you because he’s already given so much, in his mind.

As for you, you sound like you might be a tad paranoid. It’s great to be cautious. I highly recommend that. But sometimes you just have to bite your tongue and see how things unfold. Needing to know the answers to every little thing will make you seem like, well, a paranoid nag.

You’re right that this sounds like an awful lot of work just to set up a booty call. My guess is one of two things:

He’s just really awkward and bad at relationships and moves too fast only to screw things up.  The reality is that sometimes one person in the relationship has more experience or is just more confident and they have to take the lead.

OR…

He was still dating other people and trying to keep his worlds separate. If he had a room mate, and he’s trying to keep things organized, that would explain why you weren’t invited back to his place.

Do I think that something with him is off? Yes, I do. Between the partying with female friends, to wanting to stay in to not inviting you to his apartment, something sounds fishy. But…it could be that he has an ex he’s trying to prevent from finding out about his new relationship. Or maybe he’s just really bad at relationships and likes to keep things on the down low. Who knows? My point is that sometimes you have to give a guy a chance. You can’t be looking for monsters around every corner. You should be wary and careful and pay attention. But you also have to have a full read on someone – including a baseline – to determine what’s what. You can’t bail every time something seems off. You saw red flags because I suspect you were looking for them. Trust me, when you look for them, you will almost certainly find them. So stop looking for them, pay attention and file things away until you get a more complete picture.

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How Will She Get Her Panties Back?

Name: Rebecca
Age: 23
State: New York
Question: Last week, I went out for drinks with a man I’d met online. From the get-go, we had great chemistry and conversation. There was never an awkward moment, and things quickly progressed to the more personal. He confessed he had been married; I confessed I’d been engaged. We told each other all kinds of secrets. And, being both very sexually open people, we started talking about sex and making out. Although I put up a little bit of a fight, I ended up going home with him, and we had sex.

Even after the sex, things seemed to be going well. He said he was “excited” about meeting me. We both wanted the date to continue, so we went out for late-night pancakes. I had to go home to my dog, but he gave me his sweater to wear. We realized I’d accidentally left my panties somewhere in his apartment.

The next morning, he texted to see if I’d gotten home okay and said he’d found my underwear. He suggested a trade-back and came over that afternoon to hang out. We had sex and I returned his clothes, but he forgot to return mine. He sent me a flirty text afterwards saying that I’d just have to see him again if I wanted the underwear back.

A few days later, we exchanged a bunch of cute text messages (in which he was asking questions, engaging in the conversation, etc.) and he hinted he was bored. So, I decided to take initiative and ask him out. “My dog and I are about to go have an adventure, if you’re feeling bored.” Well, I never heard from him again.

If this guy really just wanted a casual hook-up, fine – but then why keep leading me on with flirty texts? Did he actually want something more serious but I spoiled it by sleeping with him? Did I spoil it by asking him on a date?And maybe most importantly–will I ever get my panties back?

 

We both wanted the date to continue, so we went out for late-night pancakes.

Hmm. I have a theory here. I can remember reading a woman’s blog a couple of years ago and she was talking about some younger dude (she was 40) that she had met online. She and this guy had had sex for a series of Sundays (like 3) and so she referred to him as Sunday Boy. She was terribly proud of the fact that she managed to get this young brah to sleep with her on a somewhat weekly basis. She said that she and the guy would get together at his place, have sex and then they’d go out to grab a bite to eat after. This was the drill every time. I can remember thinking, as I read her story, that going out to eat after the sex was more a sly way to get her out of his apartment than any sort of gesture of genuine interest.

If I’m following your story correctly, you and this guy met up for a first date and then went back to his place for the sexy time and then you two decided to go for pancakes, yes? Ok. Here’s a novel way for a date to continue: sleep over. Having to get up and get dressed and leave a warm bed post-coitus is kind of the opposite of continuing a date. (Dog or no dog.) The post-hook-up chit chat and lounging around and falling asleep together, in my opinion, is the best part. That’s where things begin to take a more substantive turn. It is by no means an indicator that he wants to be your #omigahboyfriend, but it is a sign that he enjoys your company beyond the sex or is at least willing to pretend to. This guy wasn’t even willing to pretend. It was sex and then exit stage left. The line was drawn.

When you suggest taking things to a non-sexual/more emotional place, he disappears. There is your answer. He’ll resurface, I’m sure. But the flirty text exchange was really just a way for him to try and get you to hook-up again and nothing more.

As for your panties, forget ‘em. That’s like when women”accidentally” leave earrings at a guy’s place. Sometimes you genuinely forget. More often it’s done somewhat intentionally so as to provide an excuse to contact the guy.

I would play it cool and let this guy come back around. Just understand that he’s not looking for anything terribly involved. He’ll text you in a few days, once he feels there’s been enough distance and you’ve detached a bit.

I eagerly await all of the comments from folks who tell you how stupid you were for having sex with the guy and how he doesn’t respect you and you were a pump and dump. Even if you hadn’t slept with him his respect level would be exactly the same. The sex was not why this guy behaved the way he did. He was going to do this whether you slept with him after one date or after ten.

It’s unfortunate, but you just can’t read too much into anything that is said or done in situations like this. Offering up confessions and revealing secrets is often just a strategy. It’s done to establish or create a sense of intimacy. You can’t place much emphasis or importance on something like that. Sometimes the mood just takes over and we feel comfortable. Other times we are intentionally looking for a way to establish a connection. If someone just wants a meal or attention or sex, they’re going to do whatever they need to do to ensure that they get what they want. There’s no guarantee that if they do/say XYZ that they’re being genuine. It’s all part of the process. The only thing we can do is remain detached and only give of ourselves what we can without regretting it after the fact. We’re not wrong or bad or stupid for believing or trusting or going with a particular flow. The more we do this, the more we build up a tolerance and understanding of how things work.

Take a few steps back and go meet someone else. It’s as easy as that. If he comes back around, great. Throw him up on the board as a possible option as you continue filling your roster.

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Why Does She Keep Attracting Unavailable Men?

Name: M
Age: 28
State: TX
Question: I’m an attractive 28 year old single girl, and I seem to attract married men or men in relationships moreso than any of my friends, and moreso than I seem to attract single men. I don’t seek out these taken men, but I have entertained their advances at times and have definitely “gone there” with a few, though never with the intention or expectation that it would turn into anything serious, because obviously I could never trust them as a boyfriend or anything but if I’m sexually attracted to them and the timing is right, you know… whatever (in one case I found myself getting attached so I ended it to prevent a truly ugly situation).

I only really ever entertain the advances of taken men because I feel like they are the only ones I ever get, and to me its just something to keep me busy until a good single guy comes along. Some of my friends have told me because I’m really confident, carefree and give off a kind of “I don’t give a fuck” attitude, this is very attractive &amp; exciting for men who aren’t looking for something serious and are probably tired of their nagging wives/girlfriends. And they say it’s this sort of demeanor that keeps away the single guys because I just come off as someone looking for fun. But this confuses me, because at the same time everyone says guys are totally unattracted to girls who seem like they really want a boyfriend and it’s usually when you’re not looking and are content to be on your own is when people find you most attractive and I’m definitely content &amp; confident on my own. So which one is it?? I am a little quirky, have a “strong” personality (I am told) definitely smart and have been told I’m really funny, but shouldn’t that make me equally as attractive to single men as married/taken men? Or are married men just more brave about approaching me (or any woman) because they know their status makes them sexually non-threatening and I’m the one who attracts them by actually entertaining their advances??  Why is this happening and how do I turn this tide? Please help!

I don’t seek out these taken men, but I have entertained their advances at times and have definitely “gone there” with a few.

Okay. There’s your answer as to why you “seem” to attract a lot of married or otherwise available men. These men will hit on anybody. It’s not something special or unique about you. But they pursue or push the issue with you because you entertain them. I’m not judging. While I’ve never gone the married man route, I’ve absolutely engaged and involved myself with men who had girlfriends.I liked the idea (aka the lie) of fulfilling something that the man’s girlfriend didn’t. The compliment was in the delusion that they were somehow choosing me over someone else.  It wasn’t until one particularly toxic and unfortunate situation that began almost 6 years about that still rears its ugly head to this day did I really understand how insulting and disingenuous these types of advances are. Right now, you think these men get involved with you because there’s something special about you. Something better than their “nagging” wives. Newsflash: A man could be very happily married and love his wife and still want sex with other women. The two can be mutually exclusive. That “I don’t give a fuck” attitude your friends suggest that you have? That’s not a compliment. Not from your friends and not from the men. What they are telling you is that maybe people see you as someone with no moral compass. It’s one thing to behave that way. It’s another to demonstratively show no shame in behaving that way.

These men are not honing in on your because of your carefree attitude or strong personality or sexuality. They aren’t honing in on you at all. They just take it to the next level with you because you allow it. Why do you allow it? I don’t know.Only you know that. You’ve convinced yourself that you’re so just so incredible that available men don’t have the stones to approach you. When, quite possibly, you don’t want them in the first place.

I only really ever entertain the advances of taken men because I feel like they are the only ones I ever get, and to me its just something to keep me busy until a good single guy comes along.

Maybe you don’t want a single guy? Like I said above, I’ve been in your shoes and that’s how I used to think, too. “Oh, I’m just biding my time until an available guy comes along.” There are available guys everywhere, if you look for them. But I wasn’t looking for them. I wasn’t looking for unavailable guys. I just wasn’t looking, period.

How do you turn the tide? You start by being honest with yourself about what you want and are capable of giving. There are a lot of grave mistakes that women make as they search for love. One of the biggest is the constant cognitive dissonance under which they function. They tell themselves one thing, but their behavior and actions say the complete opposite. If you truly wanted an available guy, you’d be with one. You choose unavailable men because those men work for you. Why? Well, I’ll throw out a few of possibilities. One, you like the attention and ego stroke that comes from convincing yourself you somehow are better than their wives. Two, you like your freedom and don’t need a serious commitment. You can get through life’s more trying moments on your own, but enjoy a little company now and then. Three, you like to know what you’re getting. Screwing an unavailable guy comes with instructions and an expiration date. You like that. There are no guessing games. You know it will end.

But this confuses me, because at the same time everyone says guys are totally unattracted to girls who seem like they really want a boyfriend and it’s usually when you’re not looking and are content to be on your own is when people find you most attractive and I’m definitely content &amp; confident on my own.

Just because you’re available doesn’t mean you’re desperate. You probably are content on your own. So much so that you don’t want or need much more than that. There’s no rule that says you have to seek a relationship. I’m sure there are plenty of guys who don’t have wives or girlfriends who can deliver what it is you seek. It seems implausible to me that you don’t ever seem to meet them. They’re everywhere. Which leads me to think that there’s something specific to these entanglements with unavailable men that attracts you. Maybe it’s the understood and inevitable end. Or maybe you just don’t like other women. I don’t know.

You get something from sleeping with married men. Figure out what that is and you’ll have your course of action as to how to change the path.

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