well
Well
Well
After reading this post....
It's obvious to me why you had a colossal failure in dating.....
And why you really shouldn't "date" more than one person at a time.
Make friends instead.
Friend zone EVERYONE.
Sure hugs can be just fine. Maybe a kiss on the cheek. But nothing more until there is more organically.
Because until you actually connect and identify with someone and are willing to be emotionally vulnerable it's a waste of everyone's time and emotions. A notch on the belt is rather meaningless. And people are worth more than that.
Sure, the stories are fascinating...and the cognitive dissonance is interesting...but that doesn't mean that they are ready for a committed relationship...just like you really aren't either. Because you have to be a "joiner" if you are to have a committed, long-term relationship.
When was the last time you were a fan of someone?
Is it the idea of a relationship with a person or the specific person themselves that you like?
Everyone of course likes the idea and ideal of what married life can do for you...but the nuts and bolts seem out of reach for some inexplicable reason (of course everyone not in one has reasons they believe to be true....but are they?).
When I was "single again" I had made a LOT of friends. I hugged those who were receptive...and those hugs meant a lot. Not really a sexual thing but more along the lines of an acceptance thing of caring...because singles often are alone and feel lonely at times. And some you ran to the other side of the church to avoid having to give them a hug...because many singles are borderline crazies you want nothing to do with.
From my wedding vows:
Is this person a ministry partner who assists in your ministries or a drag on tesources and keeps you from accomplishing ministry tasks. Are they the missionary or mission field? Are you comfortable helping them with their ministries? IE...are you joining two successful ministries or 2 planners of doing "something"?
You are either doing something or nothing.
If you've read through all the posts in this thread, you should have an understanding that getting to know people (seeing if they could even be a friend, so yes, friend-zoning,) is actually my idea of dating.
I wasn't a "colossal failure," as you put it, because I was trying to date everyone -- being single is not failing.
I was thinking back to that in-person dating service... I think I signed up for 12 matches, and yes, it was one at a time, and over a time span of something like a year or more, so there was no rush. But not a single meeting or talk went past the initial conversation. I saw it all as a learning experience. Like the guy I spent 3 hours on the phone with a guy for an initial "meeting" but we never met in person. He hadn't seen my picture yet and when he did, he must not have liked what he saw, because he called back. And that's ok. Rejection is all part of it.
I can think of another in which I spent hours on the phone with another guy but I didn't wind up meeting him because he spent the entire conversation talking about himself, and I really didn't want to have to bear that in person, too.
So no, I'm "dating" according to what you seem to be thinking. The in-person meeting never went past that initial first lunch or dinner (one guy tried to invite himself over to my place -- definite pass.) The time I got a guy's information mixed up with someone else was on an online dating site, so yes, you're generally talking to more than one person at a time there. Which is part of why I'm not on dating sites -- it was exhausting.
I'm also trying to remember when I met online matches in person, and I can only remember two. The others never went past the initial online or phone conversation.
Nowadays, when people say dating, so mean doing things with people -- and sometimes multiple people at once -- that most of us (here in this thread at least) wouldn't do unless it was a set relationship (even holding hands, kissing, etc.), so it's important to know what different people's definitions are.
I did none of these things with any of these guys, because my idea of dating is just getting to know people through a conversation. I'm trying to remember from the dates I did go on -- at most, I might hug, but I didn't hug very many. The first thing I look for in someone is whether we feel like we can talk to each other or not.
You mentioned snuggling up to your wife, in one of your posts, which is wonderful. Some people are made to be married. I had someone to snuggle up with once too. Until I came home from work, found half the house missing because he'd moved out without telling me, and sent me papers saying he was suing me for divorce. At the time, no one knew he had a girlfriend so I also had the lovely church people telling me I could never remarry.
I've had many guys tell me I must be single because I must be a dried-up old hag. Maybe. And it's fine if they think that. But I've learned not to bet the farm on finding someone, so if that's in God's plan, great, if not, I still have a full life. When I was married, we talked all the time about someday retiring and traveling -- I haven't lost sight of that goal. It's just that now it's for a party of one.
I've also mentioned many times that I'm at a stage in life where I know many people who had a spouse to snuggle up with, too -- but now they carry on alone, because much like Ezekiel, God took away the light of their eyes. And in general, this is what will happen to at least half of married people.
Marriage, even if accomplished, is only temporal. And most married people I know are hoping, sometimes even praying, to die first, so that they won't have to be the one to suffer being left alone. I find this interesting, because on the surface, it seems to be extremely selfish, and we singles are always told marriage means learning to die to self and to serve the other person.
Fortunately, God has found several ways for me to keep dying to self while serving others as a single. Even as a married, there are no guarantees. I read a few weeks ago about a man who married a woman 25 years younger, thinking she would always take care of him, but she died first, and now his worst fear of being alone in a nursing home has come true. I know a lot of people who just can't be alone. I used to be on of them. But God has taught me how to someone who can handle being alone, no matter what status I find myself in.
So no, I didn't "fail" because I was trying to "date" (according to what some might define it as) everyone at once. Anyone who knows me knows that the friendzone is my specialty.
It's different for everyone. Married people seem to assume singles are single because they can't find someone to marry, and that's not aways the case.
I'm not single because I can't find someone to marry. Ironically, I'm single because the wrong guys tried to get attached too quickly, or guys I've known for a long time that talked to me about getting married, and I just didn't have peace with the idea. And there have been some really great guys. One, if he keeps going, is on track to hit a 7-figure income in the next few years. But he also has all the stress and working hours to go with it, and one of the reasons I didn't want to get married was because I knew I'd never see him.
I wouldn't have wanted to hold him back from his goals, but I knew even if we were married, I'd still spend most of my time alone.
I've experienced loneliness in both marriage and as a single, and for myself, I think I handle it better as a single.
God has blessed me with a more flexible schedule, and I had told Him that one of my goals was to work for some of my friends' businesses just for fun (my "wages" include cool places to stay, all the homemade food I can eat -- which gets dangerous -- and trips to things like local museums.)
I make my own money so I'm used to making my own decisions, going where I want to go, and staying for as long as my priorities allow. If I were married, I could no longer do that, and I might come to resent having to always work around someone else's restrictions. I'm going to an in-person meetup event later this year and I'm looking forward to seeing another CC friend (who isn't here anymore) I've known for years, but this will be our first real-life meeting.
I feel very thankful to have had chances to get married. I'm still friends with two of the guys who have talked about marrying (at different times of course! Across different years of our lives.) One said even in the past year that if I ever changed my mind and said yes, he'd go out and buy a ring tomorrow. I'm extremely flattered that someone would even find me worthy.
So rest assured that some of us really are single by choice and not because we can't find someone good to marry, or because we've somehow "failed." I know other singles who are in this club as well -- The "I Could Be Married, But That's Not Where God Is Leading Me Right Now Club" is alive and well.
I'm very grateful to know that I could have gotten married.
But I'm also thankful that for whatever reason, God seems to give me peace in the direction I need to go, and so far, marriage has not been it.