Single forever

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G00WZ

Senior Member
May 16, 2014
1,313
447
83
38
#61
So, ive been talking to several people about the situation and I am perhaps not ready to date rn. My mental health should probably come first. Unfortunately thats a tall order
You can still socialize and make friends with different females though, that's what i was doing before i even started dating... It's good experience, and don't just socialize with all the pretty ones, it's actually best if you start with the ones you don't find sexually interesting.
 

Kojikun

Well-known member
Oct 5, 2018
4,658
2,719
113
#62
You can still socialize and make friends with different females though, that's what i was doing before i even started dating... It's good experience, and don't just socialize with all the pretty ones, it's actually best if you start with the ones you don't find sexually interesting.
Most of my closest friends are female. I have two female friends im very close with. One of them lived with me and my family briefly and shes like a sister. Im used to talking to females unless its coming from a dating perspective that I tend to screw up and overreact.
 
Jun 8, 2021
5
5
3
#63
Does it ever feel like God set you up for failure. Like you want to be his but he hates you and you can't do anything about? The Bible says get married if you burn with passion, yet finding a date with another Christian (one your attracted to) is almost impossible. The christian women i met that im attracted to have impossibly out of reach standards or are out of my league in every way. ,(it doesn't help im attracted to the unattainable the most and im very shallow) so basically my only option biblically is to marry, but because of circumstances its impossible, so is God going send me to a lake of fire because i cant stop and he gives me no way out? Does God make people so he can torture there "Evil" for eternity?
At the expense of seeming a bit harsh, I'd like to say something to help you reset your mindset:

*No one owes you anything. Not even God.*

Out of God's abundant grace he provided himself as your savior. Isn't that enough? He died for you. Must he also pet all your feelings and provide you with everything you wish for in life?

Presuming that you ought to have things and that God is evil for not giving you what you desire is a significant level of arrogance. (I know this because I have also been this person). Why are you owed anything by God?

You might be saying, "But you don't know me. I'm such a good person who lives so solidly for God." He still owes you nothing.

OR You might be saying, "In this-and-that verse of the bible it says that God sees and rewards this-and-that." Again, God owes you nothing.

Any virtue we have is only a manifestation of the work of the Holy Spirit within us. Any good deed we do is only the right response to God's work of salvation for us.

You've basically attached yourself to a behavioristic cycle that implies that God is some kind of Santa in the sky rewarding you with presents for your good deeds. You've extended this expectation to Christian women, presuming that they are some kind of human vending machine--if you insert the right coinage and push the right buttons, you'll get what you want.

All of this is about you and your expectations. None of it is about God or Christian women.

I spent an unfortunate amount of my early adulthood discontent and slightly bitter because I'd been so good. I'd been a model daughter. I regularly deliberated about doing what was right...and then choosing it, even when it was hard. I had rejected all the frippery of the world--drinking, drugs, sex, etc. I had eschewed fun and embraced responsibility. Underneath all of my "goodness," was a hidden expectation. If I did all this, then God would surely give me what I desired. This attachment to such expectation led me to disappointment when God, in fact, did not give me all I desired. This disappointment made me distrustful of God and deeply unhappy.

Until I realized that I was at fault.

It was deeply painful to admit that I'd been doing good as a means to manipulate God. (I truly am invested in doing what is right). I had to see a part of myself that was wildly corrupted, control-seeking, and blaming. And *spoiler alert* doing this work did not result in me getting what I desired.

But it did free me. It freed me to love God more transparently. It freed me from seeing others as commodities. It freed me to love others in a way that benefits them regardless of my own gain.

I hope it has made me more like Jesus.
 

Kojikun

Well-known member
Oct 5, 2018
4,658
2,719
113
#64
At the expense of seeming a bit harsh, I'd like to say something to help you reset your mindset:

*No one owes you anything. Not even God.*

Out of God's abundant grace he provided himself as your savior. Isn't that enough? He died for you. Must he also pet all your feelings and provide you with everything you wish for in life?

Presuming that you ought to have things and that God is evil for not giving you what you desire is a significant level of arrogance. (I know this because I have also been this person). Why are you owed anything by God?

You might be saying, "But you don't know me. I'm such a good person who lives so solidly for God." He still owes you nothing.

OR You might be saying, "In this-and-that verse of the bible it says that God sees and rewards this-and-that." Again, God owes you nothing.

Any virtue we have is only a manifestation of the work of the Holy Spirit within us. Any good deed we do is only the right response to God's work of salvation for us.

You've basically attached yourself to a behavioristic cycle that implies that God is some kind of Santa in the sky rewarding you with presents for your good deeds. You've extended this expectation to Christian women, presuming that they are some kind of human vending machine--if you insert the right coinage and push the right buttons, you'll get what you want.

All of this is about you and your expectations. None of it is about God or Christian women.

I spent an unfortunate amount of my early adulthood discontent and slightly bitter because I'd been so good. I'd been a model daughter. I regularly deliberated about doing what was right...and then choosing it, even when it was hard. I had rejected all the frippery of the world--drinking, drugs, sex, etc. I had eschewed fun and embraced responsibility. Underneath all of my "goodness," was a hidden expectation. If I did all this, then God would surely give me what I desired. This attachment to such expectation led me to disappointment when God, in fact, did not give me all I desired. This disappointment made me distrustful of God and deeply unhappy.

Until I realized that I was at fault.

It was deeply painful to admit that I'd been doing good as a means to manipulate God. (I truly am invested in doing what is right). I had to see a part of myself that was wildly corrupted, control-seeking, and blaming. And *spoiler alert* doing this work did not result in me getting what I desired.

But it did free me. It freed me to love God more transparently. It freed me from seeing others as commodities. It freed me to love others in a way that benefits them regardless of my own gain.

I hope it has made me more like Jesus.
Yes, I know he doesn't. He has given me plenty I dont deserve. I unfortunately get a tad dramatic when im backed into a corner. Its something I need to work on. Im taking a break from dating. Im looking to get a job so I spend less time thinking and more time doing things as my abundance of free time isnt helping me much. I always have some issue I struggle with as im a compulsive worrier.
 

Kojikun

Well-known member
Oct 5, 2018
4,658
2,719
113
#65
At the expense of seeming a bit harsh, I'd like to say something to help you reset your mindset:

*No one owes you anything. Not even God.*

Out of God's abundant grace he provided himself as your savior. Isn't that enough? He died for you. Must he also pet all your feelings and provide you with everything you wish for in life?

Presuming that you ought to have things and that God is evil for not giving you what you desire is a significant level of arrogance. (I know this because I have also been this person). Why are you owed anything by God?

You might be saying, "But you don't know me. I'm such a good person who lives so solidly for God." He still owes you nothing.

OR You might be saying, "In this-and-that verse of the bible it says that God sees and rewards this-and-that." Again, God owes you nothing.

Any virtue we have is only a manifestation of the work of the Holy Spirit within us. Any good deed we do is only the right response to God's work of salvation for us.

You've basically attached yourself to a behavioristic cycle that implies that God is some kind of Santa in the sky rewarding you with presents for your good deeds. You've extended this expectation to Christian women, presuming that they are some kind of human vending machine--if you insert the right coinage and push the right buttons, you'll get what you want.

All of this is about you and your expectations. None of it is about God or Christian women.

I spent an unfortunate amount of my early adulthood discontent and slightly bitter because I'd been so good. I'd been a model daughter. I regularly deliberated about doing what was right...and then choosing it, even when it was hard. I had rejected all the frippery of the world--drinking, drugs, sex, etc. I had eschewed fun and embraced responsibility. Underneath all of my "goodness," was a hidden expectation. If I did all this, then God would surely give me what I desired. This attachment to such expectation led me to disappointment when God, in fact, did not give me all I desired. This disappointment made me distrustful of God and deeply unhappy.

Until I realized that I was at fault.

It was deeply painful to admit that I'd been doing good as a means to manipulate God. (I truly am invested in doing what is right). I had to see a part of myself that was wildly corrupted, control-seeking, and blaming. And *spoiler alert* doing this work did not result in me getting what I desired.

But it did free me. It freed me to love God more transparently. It freed me from seeing others as commodities. It freed me to love others in a way that benefits them regardless of my own gain.

I hope it has made me more like Jesus.
Also I am NOT a good person in the slightest. Both me and God know that. Its also an issue in finding someone as I feel like because of who I am anyone I may love would probably leave because of it.
 

cinder

Senior Member
Mar 26, 2014
4,328
2,361
113
#66
Also I am NOT a good person in the slightest. Both me and God know that. Its also an issue in finding someone as I feel like because of who I am anyone I may love would probably leave because of it.
I don't know for sure how to measure how good someone is. But I'm pretty confident that if you haven't killed, abused, or exploited anyone this week then you aren't a contender for the worst person in the world either.
 

Kojikun

Well-known member
Oct 5, 2018
4,658
2,719
113
#67
I don't know for sure how to measure how good someone is. But I'm pretty confident that if you haven't killed, abused, or exploited anyone this week then you aren't a contender for the worst person in the world either.
Lately my worse probably is porn addiction (which I detest with a passion) Im hoping one day to get clean from that garbage. I may look into an accountability partner soon.