TheSolitaryMan said:
Do you keep in really frequent contact with your partner or are things more laid-back? Meet up regularly?
We're around each other all the time but we don't interact constantly. We're both introverted and quiet so he does his thing and I do mine. We talk to one another if we have anything interesting to say, and occasionally we go out and do things together. Yesterday we had lunch at a cafe in the basement of Macy's and discussed pheromones and electrical engineering. That's an average day's interaction.
Do you enjoy being in a relationship, or do you prefer the much-touted "freedom" of being single? Are there positives to both?
I've never been a single adult so my answer here is based on a limited perspective. I'd enjoy the freedom and privacy of being single but I'm not a natural loner. Over the years I've asked myself if I truly want or need a traditional relationship. I could easily find someone to hang out with me or have sex with me. Those things are fun, it's easy to find people willing to do them. It's the
not-so-fun aspects of life where having a deep bond with someone is useful. There's great comfort in knowing that someone is always watching over me.
What were/are the most magical moments of your relationship?
The "magical moments" are simple things. Today I woke up early and lay in bed snuggling and daydreaming for a couple of hours. When I noticed he was waking up I said "Aren't you gonna get up yet? Up and at 'em! Rise and shine..." and he joked about how perky I was this morning and we got up and I made coffee for us. On days when we're both happy there's a lot of banter and humor. Waking up alone, walking into an empty living room, and sitting alone in a silent apartment lacks that type of cozy charm. Other magical moments are retrospective and quirky, memories of misadventures and shenanigans.
What are the most trying?
Most of our arguments stem from typical points of disagreement (money, living arrangements, whose turn it is to check the mail :rolleyes2: ) and our mental health quirks. Shared life decisions mean compromises and debates. We're opposites in some ways. We both make mistakes. In my teens and early twenties I thought if I just had a soulmate who loved me that all of life's difficulties would disappear. It's not quite like that.
ShybutHi said:
Infact if you are feeling lonely and you are in a relationship then there is obviously something wrong.
I'll try to explain my perspective on that: Outside of my SO,
this is the only social contact that I get. He's been my only real friend for many years. We eventually ran out of substantial things to discuss with one another. Imagine having only 1 friend that you talk to for hours every single day, year after year, and then imagine that you both have the same experiences and agree on all major issues. If that's the only person you interact with, it'll get kind of boring.
For example, my SO doesn't read newspapers and he's not into politics or debate. I'm not particularly well-informed either, but once in a blue moon I might feel like arguing about politics. I'm going to want to do that with
someone else who has a fresh perspective and different experiences. To give another example, I've read all of the Harry Potter books and I've seen every movie but the last one. My SO has no interest whatsoever in Harry Potter. He'd be willing to watch the last movie with me but he has limited free time and entertainment doesn't entertain him. He doesn't watch movies or television shows or read novels. His hobby is studying advanced technical subjects, but it's not an activity that we can easily share. It'd be more fun to go to the movie with a fellow fan. Regular friends are great for that kind of thing.
My SO is a loner at heart, whereas my social requirements are minimal. It would be a bigger issue if I were a social butterfly who wanted to go out every night and party with a horde of friends, but I'm just not that social either. I'm not bitterly lonely, it's more of an occasional thing and I know that I'd have more fun in life if I just got out and did more things. The solution isn't to leave my SO, it's to leave my
house and talk to people now and then. That's difficult sometimes if you're in a serious relationship though, if I leave the house I get hit on by random guys and I'm wary of attending mixed social events alone. Add to that the desire to find genuinely nice people who have stuff in common with me rather than "just anyone", and a touch of social phobia, and you have someone who joins ALL.