this post was submitted on 11 Nov 2024
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Time ago I asked about what sex feels like... Now I want to know the more sentimental part what is like... Curious

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[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 day ago

It's going to vary wildly. No two relationships are alike.

But, some of my favorite parts are coming home to the same place and getting a smile and a hug, deep conversations about random topics, weekend walks or am coffee trips. Planning your day/weekend/month/year, working towards mutual goals.

There's a genuine calmness when you're dating someone you can be yourself around. It's one of the best things about being in a relationship

[–] [email protected] 43 points 5 days ago

Once you're comfortable enough with the person? It's like being with a best friend that you can be intimate with.

[–] [email protected] 29 points 5 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago) (3 children)

Really really depends on the person you are with. My first boyfriend was my best friend, high school sweetheart, partner and the man of my life. He died when we were 23.

I dated other people after, even got engaged, and never had the same conection. One was too narcisistic so it would make me feel insecure and jealous, another was very calm but very differenr from me so it made me feel lonely and bored sometimes.

It's not the same experience everytime, but having someone say "I love you" and make plans for the weekend is really great

[–] [email protected] 13 points 5 days ago

That sounds like something that would be so hard to come back from. All the best to you. hugs

[–] [email protected] 7 points 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago)

Thank you for sharing. It really is a gamble.

Edit: oh gawd I missed that he died. You have my sincere condolences… I’m sending so much love.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 5 days ago (1 children)

At least you got to experience that connection. Some people never get that. It truly is better to have loved and lost someone. Than not to have loved at all.

Lots of Internet hugs from here. Let's beat loneliness epidemic together.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 4 days ago

yes that's how I think too. Better to have loved and lost than never to have loved at all

[–] [email protected] 25 points 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago)

Started dating like 3 years ago. Talked to girls on some apps and decided to meet 3 of them in person. The first one I didn't really feel a connection with, she used her phone a bit to much and it sometimes got too silent. Neither one of us wanted to meet again. The second one I felt that I really care about and we actually met two times. But she was more distant on the second date and eventually told me she didn't want to meet again. I was devastated then but now I can see that our livets move at very different speeds, she needs time to think and wasnt ready to meet someone yet. Then I went on my third date. She and I talked about everything, she didn't say no to my silly ideas to just walk out into the forest and find a rock to sit and talk on. I had my first kiss that night and we have been talking every day for 3 months now. We are together now and the only thing i want is to be with her.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 3 days ago

In my experience it was like making new friends but more stressful.

Dating felt a lot like looking for a job, trying to find prospects, going out on job interviews but with a relationship at stake instead of employment. You start with this rough pretext of wanting to get to know each other, and you ask questions about things that are important to you, muddling through small talk. You try to be entertaining, showing your best self until you get invested enough in each other. It's stressful but can also be exciting because when you find someone you get along with it can be exhilarating.

Then, if you know you like someone but are unsure about whether they reciprocate your insecurities go nuts. You live in two simultaneous imaginary universes where in one, things go well and you live happily ever after, in another they declare you unfit for their life goals and leave you hurting and back to the grind of searching. Then, if you get to it, there's the comfortable period of having your relationship defined and developing on what is ostensibly a good path and you can relax more and show your "real" self. If both of you can tolerate each other at your worst, that can lead to a proper partnership which and should feel like hanging out with a best friend. Your partner becomes your go-to person to enjoy things with and consistent companion, which obviously can be really nice.

[–] [email protected] 13 points 4 days ago

I'm not sure anyone can neatly tie up relationships in a little bow on here, or if they can they are a world class philosopher, lover, writer. It's humanity's oldest hangup, the first subject of our music, the basis for wars and religions and suicides. Some people have a detached, dutiful feeling towards relationships, especially the more fundamentalist types. They see a marriage as a contract, and a duty to God, and the 'sentimental part' is tertiary. Others are extravagant romantics, devoting the whole of their passions and agonies to expressions of love, episodes of hot sex and dazzling adventures. Most people are somewhere in the middle of these extremes. I don't think that any one way is right or wrong, as long as both parties are happy and there is no abuse involved.

For myself, I'm definitely a more passionate person. I am a deep feeler, I get rocked with sentiment and fears and all of the other emotions on a daily basis. My partner is a big part of my life, and it was crazy to imagine that when I had the realization. I've always been a loner, fascinated to and attracted to women, wanting sex with a burning need, and by the time I'd met her I had already slept with maybe five women, but the moment you don't just 'have sex' but actually make love with someone, it causes a change in your psyche that you can't really return from. It sets a benchmark for intimacy for your life.

My partner is a cool-headed, serene stoic. She has an impeccable sense of time management, she remembers birthdays and presents and wishes like nobody I've ever met. She's also far more muted in her expressions of love. She won't write a three paragraph message on a forum about romance like I am here, but she would write me a little note on the mirror saying "Have a good day at work, I love you". That push and pull of our different energies gives us so much fuel for our relationship. Someone to chase, someone to be chased. Tale as old as time...

[–] [email protected] 10 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago)

It's been one of three things for me:

  • Like having a cool friend you see a lot. Good memories, but never a relationship that lasted.
  • Someone working out how to twist my own mind against me, controlling me for their own gain and never actually understanding that a relationship isn't a transaction. (and hopefully that one isn't stalking me on lemmy again, otherwise I or one of my friends will get harassed and I'll be filling out an intervention order)
  • The most beautiful thing that I didn't know was possible, I thought I'd been happy before but when you meet the right person you really do just click and life becomes worth living. Never felt so good about myself as I did then, just hurt all the more to lose it so suddenly. I've written a lot about others I've only met briefly, songs about people who'd never think of me that way, but when it's true love I just can't. I don't think anything I can say could really capture that. There just isn't enough poetry in the world to describe how magical it is to look up at a pair of beautiful brown eyes swimming in a field of stars and hearing them say "I love you" for the first time.
[–] [email protected] 13 points 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago) (2 children)

It starts by being the best feeling in the world and then you just slowly get used to it and it becomes quite mundane. Some people intrepret the honey moon period ending as the amount of love decreasing but in reality it just changes. This happens to everyone. Also, the first time is usually the best feeling one, especially in the beginning, while probably not objectively best of all the relationships you're going to have.

[–] [email protected] 9 points 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago) (1 children)

That tracks with a lot of people I’ve been with.

With my current partner, every day is a new adventure. Some days are same-ey and those are amazing days. When we have to experience new things we’re both sus about. It’s always a shared version of “that was fucked” or “that was amazing.”

We’ve been together for 13 years.

It takes the right person.

Quick edit: every day is the best feeling in the world and I couldn’t love them more

[–] [email protected] 1 points 5 days ago

Just realized that you beat me to replying to the parent comment with a similar sentiment!

:fist-bump:

[–] [email protected] 2 points 5 days ago

Change happens, but my genuine appreciation of her never went away.

Now, I’ve been married well over a decade… and still… the best feeling is the time I spend hugging her in the morning.

We have ups and downs, lulls and adventures. Life’s not all beer and skittles. But, I don’t agree that it becomes mundane.

[–] [email protected] 8 points 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago)

I was a late bloomer and I still feel like my brief brush with religion in my late teens and early twenties crippled my social skills for over a decade. Having said that, I managed to have a few awkward dates here and there and fewer still became relationships. Something they don't tell you is that 80-90% of dates are awkward and terrible, but for many people including myself, when it clicks, it clicks.

I knew a woman at work once. I always stay very professional at work but I am friendly and nice to people. One day we were doing some bullshit paperwork and had a really good conversation and at some point when we were smiling and laughing I felt the vibes. We got a beer with friends after work. A few weeks later she got fired for some stupid shit but we stayed friends and dated for a month or two after. In this instance dating was primarily fun and adventurous. Getting to known each other etc. Bonus points because she had a cool roommate and her ex who came by for the kiddo once in a while was a cool too.

Another women I dated was already a longtime friend of mine. She went away to college and I saw her rarely for years. When she moved back, I invited her to hang out and we hit it off. We had a lot of fun and I felt the attraction, so I asked her out on a date. Because we had such a strong friendship beforehand, dating her felt like hanging out with my best friend, but more romantic.

For me, the thing that changes it from friend hangout to a date is:

  1. Intention, everyone has to know it is a date.
  2. A date typically has some hint of a potential romantic and or sexual interest, even if it's subtle, not stated overtly, or vague. Having said that, it's better to be bold and clear. When I first started dating I used to go in slow for the kiss when the vibes were right. I never misread the vibes too badly, but it's 2024, so now I always get verbal consent before I even kiss someone. I was honestly surprised at how often "I would like to kiss you," or "would you like to kiss me" gets a yes. If you get a no, most people are thankful to have been asked and that somewhat counteracts any awkwardness from being shut down.
[–] [email protected] 7 points 5 days ago (1 children)

I went the friend-to-romantic-partner route, so it was pretty much just like hanging out with any other friends.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 4 days ago

Yeah! A lot of times, hanging around with people you share things in common with leads to friendships. In friendships you might discover a few more things in common. No worries ... if it's fun and the chemistry is good, the rest will follow.

[–] randombullet 4 points 5 days ago (1 children)

First one, a lot of toxic codependency. Second one, is much slower and calmer.

A lot of careful communication since you genuinely care about them. It's not avoiding or not saying things but it's saying it because you love them and you care about how they receive it.

Also, someone's excited to talk to you and see you?? My bachelor days didn't prepare me for this.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 5 days ago

You probably mean mutual dependence, not https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Codependency .

[–] [email protected] 2 points 5 days ago

Yes, he was the popular boy in my class, a new kid (at the time the relationship started) whose family is Malagasy (like me, except my family is Kiwi, and I have always been the unpopular girl). Our relationship started as a joke (and we probably would've never sought each other out ourselves, me being aceflux and him genderfluid), but the joke forgot its identity and it became serious. I've grown to feel special as a girlfriend, it's like having a counterpart that makes up for all your shortcomings.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 5 days ago

The process of dating is inherently complicated just by the fact of coordinating the schedules of two people, more if one or more of the people involved have kids.

You can't just drop everything and choose to go do something, you have to plan it, in advance, with another person.

Planning something fun can often take all the fun out of it, you have to work harder to have fun.

But in the end, the shared experience of planned fun is worth it.

[–] [email protected] -1 points 4 days ago (1 children)

I just wanted to know what I'll miss in life. Sometimes hurts thinking about it but, hey I couldn't stop thinking about it.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 3 days ago (1 children)

What makes you think you’ll never date anyone? Have you talked to a mental health professional?

[–] [email protected] 1 points 20 hours ago