What a splendidly hypocritical way for me to come back to
the blogosphere. Scolding relationship/dating experts who are desperately
seeking page views, shares and retweets. But this topic has been weighing on me
for some time and I wanna talk about it, dammit.
I’m completely disheartened by all the hookup
culture/end of courtship talk. I know I’ve been in a relationship for over
a year so it may seem that all of this should matter little to me. Especially
considering we didn’t have a real, take-me-out-to-dinner date until a few weeks
into our romance. But it makes me sad to think that singles everywhere are being
told to put aside any expectations they have about dating and put up with
inconsiderate, non-committal behavior.
It seems to be a byproduct of the constant lectures about
being too available to the people we’re attracted to combined with new technology,
stunted maturity and media that portrays hookup-only dating as the norm. But
I’m not sure it is the norm, just because Girls says it is.
Just as “we accept the love we think we deserve” the same
goes for the initial stages of that love. And the dating life we deserve/want
looks different from individual to individual so it’s really a matter of
finding someone whose expectations align with your own. If you want to be
wined, dined, pursued and made to feel special, that’s exactly what you should
demand.
That doesn’t necessarily mean writing off someone the second
they send you a text at 10 p.m. asking if you care to meet up with a group
rather than the one-on-one date you’d prefer. It’s about communicating those
preferences. It’s your job to make what you want clear to a prospective partner.
It’s their job to step up and comply or step down and leave you open to find
someone who can.
I know it’s never that simple. Lonely people make
concessions they shouldn’t. Deviant people make promises they have no intention
of ever keeping. But at least acknowledging that not everyone—male or
female—desires to be a part of the hookup culture is a step in the right
direction. There are no real norms in this world. Especially when it comes to
dating. So it’s a mistake to think you have to accept something that makes you
unhappy or uncomfortable just because it’s “the norm” according to some
relationship trend piece in a publication that will denounce the trend a year
from now in favor of more traditional dating norms. Because, you know, vintage!
The older I get (a year and a half from 30 so I’m basically
as wise as I’ll ever be) the more I shake off the expectations and norms I’m
supposed to embrace so I can focus on what’s going to make me happy, healthy
and well adjusted. And buying into every shocking new fad that crosses my
computer screen threatens that happiness more than anything.
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