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Dating : The 6 dating rules that helped me meet my husband — They might not be what you expect

h2>Dating : The 6 dating rules that helped me meet my husband — They might not be what you expect

Erin King
Photo by Ben Rosett on Unsplash

If you think it’s impossible to meet the right person on a dating site, think again. I met my husband of 14 years on a lavalife, and while that might not be the most popular site anymore, the experience is still the same.

This all took place 15 years ago after I’d recently gotten back on the dating market. I was coming off of a long stretch of being alone. I’d had a bad break-up and vowed not to date again until I figured myself out. It had been about six years since I’d been out there.

My sister, who’d been dabbling in online dating, talked me into joining.

I had a solitary job and was a recent transplant to the area. I hadn’t made many friends yet and wasn’t meeting any men, so why not.

My sister wrote me up a snappy profile, found some super cool pictures from my performing days, and we were good to go.

Photo by Alejandro Ortiz on Unsplash

Unfortunately, things didn’t go according to plan.

I had some weird first dates.

Photo by Chase Wilson on Unsplash

There was a guy who tried to kiss me in a coffee shop to “seal the deal.” Another who thought it would be cool to take a road trip the next day. One guy had to separate the different foods on his plate, and another who was about 20 years older than his profile picture.

I knew things weren’t going well, but for the longest time, I blamed the guys. In reality, it took a few changes on my end to turn things around.

I decided to take a breather and look at it from another angle. I focussed on the things that I could control and decided to institute codes of conduct that I’d date by. I found that when I started dating by these rules, everything changed.

Here are they are:

The profile my sister made for me was super cool and awesome but it read more like a press release. When I instituted the rules, I decided that the first thing I would do would be to change that.

I wasn’t really that person anymore, and even when I was, I wasn’t as cool in real life as I seemed on stage.

Photo by Elena Cordery on Unsplash

So I dialed it back and stated the facts. I said that I’m not skinny or fat, I’m not the life of the party, but I have a good sense of humor. I mentioned that I can cook, that I had a couple of hobbies that I’m not A-type and that there’s really nothing special about me, but I’m a decent person.

I think in trying to play up what my sister thought were my most interesting points, she may have inadvertently shot me in the foot.

There is a difference between putting your best face forward and trying too hard, and authentic people will be turned off if you are trying too hard.

I decided to be nice to everyone I met. No matter what.

Even if I didn’t like someone. If I wasn’t attracted to them, if they seemed like a dick or whatever, I was going to take responsibility for my own attitude and take the high road.

I figured that if I did this, the worst-case scenario would be that I could get out of something aggressive or awkward without making a scene, the best case would be possibly making a friend.

I finally had a revelation that I didn’t’ have to take it all so seriously.

Photo by Fernando Brasil on Unsplash

I decided to look at it as a grand experiment and try to learn a little something every time. I knew there would be bad dates, and my new mission was to learn to handle them with grace and gratitude.

It would be like doing a dating co-op.

I decided I would treat every guy, the way I’d like to be treated. Not necessarily the way he’s going to treat me because I have no control over that, but the way I’d like to be treated in a perfect world.

Sometimes being respectful causes a positive chain reaction. If someone feels validated, rough edges soften. I vowed that I would give each partner my full attention and be polite and courteous regardless of whether or not I was into them romantically.

Photo by Hu Chen on Unsplash

I decided that if I knew it wasn’t going anywhere, I would get in touch and let them know right away.

That didn’t mean telling someone halfway through a date that I’m not into them. For me it meant, phoning them the next day and thanking them for a lovely time but letting them know that I wasn’t feeling it.

I committed to not being an asshole. This meant facing up to the responsibility of returning phone calls even if I was dreading the conversation. Trying to disappear is the most cowardly way to break it off. Someone did it to me and it sucked. I did not want to be that person. It was a difficult but important thing to do. It forced me to live with integrity and actively respect every person I met.

You’re not into every person you meet, so don’t expect that because you like someone, they will automatically like you back.

Photo by Nine Köpfer on Unsplash

It doesn’t matter why they’re not feeling it. It doesn’t mean your ugly, or a loser or an idiot; it just means they’re not getting that special feeling with you. If someone doesn’t like you, don’t stew about it, don’t try to figure it out, don’t take it personally, just move on.

Most of them I wasn’t into, but a couple of them I was. When they didn’t like me back, I moved on.

I even made a good friend who I had a date with the week after I met my husband.

We’d planned to meet up before I’d arranged the date with my husband and I didn’t’ want to be rude. Since we’d just met and weren’t officially dating yet, there was no conflict.

I knew from the moment he opened the door he wasn’t for me. He knew it too, but we hung out and had such a great time that we ended up becoming friends and writing a movie script together.

My husband and I, however, had a 7-hour first date.

Photo by Cathal Mac an Bheatha on Unsplash

He said he knew from the moment he saw me cross the street to meet him that I was special. About 10 minutes into that date, I made a joke. He says that was the moment he fell in love.

I also thought something was up, but it wasn’t until we kissed on our 2nd date that I knew I loved him and that I would be with him for the long haul.

Dating is a numbers game.

You have to meet a bunch of people before you are exposed to the right one. The world is big, you can’t expect that you’ll meet that perfect person the minute you put yourself out there.

Photo by Clem Onojeghuo on Unsplash

You’re going to have to throw back a few before you make that big catch. You are even going to have to endure being thrown back a couple of times yourself, it is inevitable.

Dating is a process, not a party.

But having a few rules to live by can make it less confusing and give you some grounding in the world of online love.

Read also  Dating : Dating After 50 for Dummies [P.D.F]

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