For those of you who have been reading this blog over the last 2 years or so, you will know that, having thought I had found my soulmate, I found that I hadn’t, apparently. At the end of it I thought that, given my age and, having already done it all twice before, I wouldn’t even be able to find someone else to live with but then I changed my mind. I decided that I DID need to be with someone and that there had to be someone out there, somewhere, who was looking for me. I did the internet dating thing to save myself having to go to bars and clubs, seeing it, as I do, as an alternative to those social places.
I was determined. I don’t know that I ever thought I would find my soulmate or, even, if that was important. What was important was to find the ‘person for me’. I had some preconceived ideas about who that would be. The criteria narrowed after a short while. They couldn’t be too young nor too old. In the end I found someone and, to be honest, that someone was a surprise and (partially) unexpected. But I remain intrigued about how people find their soulmates and, even, if that really exists or if it is your soulmate but only for a period of time (that period being undetermined and indeterminable).
I remember my sister. She, as I told her more than once, always tried too hard. Her criteria, it seemed, was always non-existent. If they moved and were male it was enough. Now I look back on that as probably her trying to hard to be straight and conform, since she has a girlfriend now.
I was at a friend’s house on Sunday. She is setting up this internet dating lark. She is very clear. She doesn’t expect to find the perfect man on the internet – only to determine exactly what she DOES want. To be able to refine her criteria. But, I wonder, is she just saying that?
Anyway, I was interested to read this:
Relationship gurus expend enormous amounts of energy debating whether “opposites attract” or, conversely, whether “birds of a feather flock together” – largely, it seems, without stopping to reflect on whether relying on cheesy proverbs might be, more generally, a bad way to think about the complexities of human attraction. Should you look for a partner whose characteristics match yours, or complement yours? The conclusion of the Pair Project, a long-term study of married couples by the University of Texas, is, well, neither, really. “Compatibility”, whether you think of it as similarity or complementarity, just doesn’t seem to have much to do with a relationship’s failure or success, according to the project’s founder, Ted Huston: the happiness of a marriage just isn’t much correlated with how many likes, dislikes or related characteristics a couple does or doesn’t share. Compatibility does play one specific role in love, he argues: when couples start worrying about whether they’re compatible, it’s often the sign of a relationship in trouble. “We’re just not compatible” really means, “We’re not getting along.” “Compatibility” just means things are working out. It simply renames the mystery of love, rather than explaining it.
According to the US psychologist Robert Epstein, that’s because a successful relationship is almost entirely built from within. (He cites evidence from freely entered arranged marriages, arguing that they work out more frequently than the unarranged kind.) All that’s really required is two people committed to giving things a shot. Spending years looking for someone with compatible qualities may be – to evoke another cheesy proverb – a classic case of putting the cart before the horse.
For F, of course, his most ‘successful’ previous relationship was with a blue-eyed, English, Taurean. He cites this often as if to explain why he is with me. He is saying that it is ‘inevitable’ that we would be together. Conversely, of course, it could also be inevitable that we will split up!
I look for things that we like ‘together’ and find few. I worry that we don’t have enough in common, the most obvious being my love of all food whereas he is so picky. As I said to my friend (mentioned above), if F and I had met in some bar or club, I’m not sure that either of us would have given the other a second look. We met only because we had chatted for some time first.
Yes, the pictures I saw of him – he was sexy. But, mainly, he was funny – he had the ability to make me laugh and feel better. He still does and may it long continue.
As his friend R said, he was ‘ready’ when we met. So was I. We both wanted the same thing and so, together, we can get the same thing from each other.
And, I suppose, that’s why V and I split up. We no longer wanted the same things. F is not V in any way. V wasn’t M in any way. F and M are not similar either. Being compatible or not seems, as it says, to be unimportant as to whether it works or not. You (both) just have to WANT it more than anything and be prepared to step off the deep end and see how it goes.
And that, together with making those small sacrifices to make your partner happy seem to be the only requisites to have a happy and loving relationship – for however long that lasts.
For the above ‘piece of advice’ plus other tips (that can replace your New Year’s resolutions) go here and enjoy
I’m intrigued by the way you met F.Before reading your story, I thought that online dating was good only for people looking for sex. Now I do have a different approach although -I must confess- that it is not something I’d do if I were single. Maybe it is because I am a woman which makes online dating -I think- more “dangerous”. However, reality is as tricky as virtuality and meeting face-to-face do not ensure total safety.
I am impressed that you were determined to find the “right one” as it never worked for me that way. I wasn’t determined to find someone when I met G. Let alone (not formal, isn’t it? but it works here) when I met my ex C. (we met in Mexico but he lived close to Milan!).
Anyway, good for both of you Andy
You seem happy and relaxed.
I can understand you would be reluctant to use it. Many of the people on line ARE just looking for sex, of course. But, surely that’s the same when you go to a club or a bar? Rules should be followed (which I did not, of course ) and if I were a single female I would be ‘careful’, for certain.
It’s like anything else. Looking for a house or flat, a new car or a new boyfriend – hahahahahaha – or, at least, given the logic of my mind, that’s how it is. And that’s how I approached it. I set down (in my head) what I wanted and then found someone who did not meet all the really important criteria and ignored everything and went with it – just like I do with a house or a car!
I do feel that most people don’t go out with a ‘plan’ to find the right person – because a) they don’t have a really logical mind (one could say ‘nerdy’) and b) MOST people don’t believe in this crap – i.e. that there is a ‘right one’ out there or that they will ever find ‘the one’. My friend, from the other day, certainly believes that. It’s like people want to ‘put a brave face on it’. Who does believe in the Cinderella story anyway? Oh, except me, of course
Nope, it’s not really formal
Yes, I’m very happy and relaxed, thank you.