Divorce, Dating, Relationship Support

Is He Your Future Husband or a Waste of Time? Here are 18 Differences

Reposted from: http://www.thebolde.com/future-husband-waste-time-18-differences/

Written by: Halle Kaye

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You’re seeing this guy. And you can’t tell if he’s the one or just a waste of your time, aka an asshole. We’re here to help:

1. Your future husband brings out the best in you. An asshole brings out the crazy, stalker bitch in you.

2. Your future husband values commitment and partnership. An asshole is just trying to hang out.

3. Your future husband sees your success as his success. An asshole needs to take you down a notch.

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My Year of Online Dating: A Postmortem

https://www.yahoo.com/style/my-year-of-online-dating-a-postmortem-118789676105.html

By Sarah Jio

My Year of Online Dating: A Postmortem

Photo: Sarah Jio

Shortly after my marriage fell apart and in those bleak days after my husband had packed up his belongings and moved to a new house, Natalie, one of my best friends, insisted that I sign up for Match.com. “You have to get out there,” she said. “It’ll be fun!”

Honestly, “fun” was the last thing on my mind. I was hurting and lost. My heart, smashed in so many places, wasn’t ready for new love, let alone fun. But somehow, I let Natalie convince me (over a few glasses of wine) to create an online profile. Match.com, I thought. Really? Was I really going to do this? (It helped to know that some people I admire had taken the plunge, too, like one of my favorite authors, Anne Lamott, who wrote about her year on Match.com here.)

Cautiously, I chose a few photos and wrote some stupid one-line description, which (don’t laugh), I believe went something like this: “Hi, I’m Sarah. I’m a writer in Seattle. Looking for the real and the epic.” (Yeah, I know. A little sub-par, given that I actually write for a living.) But that’s how my online dating roller coaster began, and was it ever a roller coaster.

On my first date, I nervously showed up 20 minutes early to a bar and suffered through an agonizing hour of conversation with a man who wouldn’t stop staring at my chest. Next! Date number two was better, although I had no idea what to wear, and ended up arriving at a sports bar in a Helmut Lang dress (he was wearing a T-shirt and jeans—oops). Eventually I got the hang of it all. Eventually it became, just like Natalie said, … fun.

There were bankers and lawyers, surgeons and sommeliers, actors and guitar players, and one unsettlingly handsome male model. I met all kinds of men and found that if I wanted to sit across a table with someone on any Saturday night, a date could be summoned by merely checking my inbox.

So I signed up for OKCupid, and, gulp, Tinder. I began to get used to, and become oddly fond of, the ping of my phone with notifications of interested men. “Seattleguy45 just liked you!” or “Marc just sent you a new message!” (by the way, have I shared my theory that every fourth person on Tinder is either named “Marc” or “Jayson”?).

I went on lots of first dates. I laughed my way through some, cringed my way through others. Some men got blocked for stalker-like behavior (no, it is never a good idea to send flowers to a woman’s house after one date), others became friends, and a few more intrigued me enough to go on second dates, and thirds.

I wasn’t really looking for anything, or anyone. And though a few people rose to the top, none were inherently right for me. I’d tell my friends that I wished I could pick and choose various traits from all of these dates to create the perfect man. But there are no paper dolls in dating, and there isn’t such a thing as a perfect man. And, frankly, if I’d met him back then, I don’t know that I’d have been in the right head, or heart, space to know it.

And so that year rolled along. And I stayed on the roller coaster, holding on tight when it dipped low and took me high. And then one day, I realized that I wanted … to get off.

I remember the moment I told a friend that I was thinking about deleting my various dating accounts. After a year of it all, I felt content being alone, tired of the endless dating hamster wheel. Really, just … tired. On any given Saturday night, I wanted to be spending time with my friends rather than struggling through a date with some man who talked incessantly about his cats. So, one evening, I set out to part ways with online dating.

But, while taking a final run through on Tinder, my eyes paused on a certain man’s profile. His face looked familiar somehow. After a few moments, I realized that he was someone I once met—twenty years ago, to be exact. I swiped right and we were an instant match. While I’d never write men first messages, I felt compelled to send him one. “Hi,” I said. “I could be wrong, but I think we met twenty years ago, when I was 16.” He wrote back immediately to confirm that he indeed remembered me, and how funny to think that after twenty years, one divorce and three kids each (uh, can you say Brady Bunch?), we’d find each other both washed up on the same shore, laughing about that time when we’d first said hello in Seattle’s Pioneer Square neighborhood.

We exchanged messages for a few days, and then we met for a first date. And a second. And a third. And then we lost track, because suddenly we were spending all of our free time together. Suddenly we were in it.

Each of us deleted our online dating accounts. And just like that, one chapter ended, and another began.

In Mexico last month, he took the above photo of me. I was standing there on a beautiful vista, waves crashing on the shore, thinking about the journey of my life, the long and winding road that led me there, with a wonderful man standing in the distance and a salty lime margarita waiting by the lounge chair.

I’m not sure why things work out the way they do. Fate? Faith? Time? Some random combination of circumstances? I don’t know. And I really have no idea what my future will hold; it’s too early to tell. But I’ve learned to be happy in the moment, happy for this day, and this time. Because I am.

I once was terrified of dating (online and otherwise), of moving ahead, of the roller coaster ride of it all. But I rode it out; white-knuckled it at times. It was alternately fun and nauseating. But it was worth it all. Somewhere along the journey, my heart healed, and I learned that I could open myself up to it all again. And I have.

The Difference Between Needing, Wanting And Loving Somebody

Reposted from: http://elitedaily.com/dating/difference-needing-wanting-loving-somebody/936704/?utm_source=Facebook&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=EG&utm_content=EG_W2_936704

Written by: Keay Nigel

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Recently a close friend called to tell me that she’s breaking up with her fiancé, who she has been with for six years.

They got engaged just last year and were even planning to buy a new house together.

Of course, it came as a huge shock, as I had always thought everything was running so perfectly for her (or, at least, that’s how it seemed on her social media).

I remember she met her now ex boyfriend/fiancé during freshmen year of college. He was her “first love,” as she had never had a boyfriend before him. All her friends, including myself, were really happy for her.

The two of them stuck together for the whole four years of college, and even went on a graduation trip to Europe together afterward.

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Military Diet: Lose Up To Ten Pounds In Three Days

Reposted from: http://blessedmommy.hubpages.com/hub/Lose-Up-To-10-Pounds-In-3-Days-On-The-3-Day-Diet

The Original Three Day Diet Plan

Since I first published the Military Diet diet in 2007, countless people around the world have used it successfully to lose weight. Although there are copycats, this is the original, which is important because even a small change to this diet can set you up for poor results.

How did I come up with all of this?

A military gentleman who attended our church some years back introduced me to this diet. He said that military recruits use this diet when they need to get in shape quickly. Since then I’ve done extensive research and heard from countless people who have tried this plan. Combined with my own personal trial and error, the diet that follows is carefully tested and includes advice to help you succeed. Feel confident and see the results for yourself!

Here’s what I’ll be covering:

  • Doctor’s Approval for Dieting
  • The Three Day Diet: Breakfast, Lunch, and Dinner
  • How the Diet Works
  • Beverages
  • About the Food Choices
  • Allowed Additions
  • Important Information About Substitutions
  • Exercise
  • Tips to Keep the Weight Off
  • How to Make the Diet Work for You
  • Success Stories

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Struggles Only Independent Women Have To Deal With

Reposted from: http://www.rantchic.com/2015/05/05/struggles-only-independent-women-have-to-deal-with/?utm_campaign=RantDatingFB&utm_source=facebook.com&utm_medium=referral

Written by: Cassie Thompson

15. Seeing People Claim To Be Independent… When They’re NotNope. Nope. Nope. If someone else is paying your bills, I hate to break it to you, but you’re not independent.

14. Men Are Intimidated
Oh, no! A woman that doesn’t need a man! Now that is scary. Most guys see women who have it together and run for the hills. It’s a control thing.
13. People Always Asking If You’re Okay
I know it seems weird that I’m doing okay on my own, and this is hard to believe, but yes. I’m fine. I’m great.
12. People Think Mom and Dad Help You Out
No, honey. I bought this car on my own, I paid for school myself and my rent comes out of my own pocket. Thank you very much!
11. Very High Dating Standards
Dating can be hard when you already have everything you need… Except the right guy. You’ve got high standards (and should) but you sometimes chase your dates away a little early because you don’t want to waste time. Lighten up a little and try dating someone who does not meet every qualification.
10. People Think You Have Attitude
Sure independent ladies have attitude, the right attitude.
9. Seeing Women Use Men Upsets You
Get a grip, woman. You can earn your own money and buy your own drinks. You make all of us look bad!
 8. Other Women Are Jealous
Girl, you’ve got to take some risks to get where you want to be. Don’t hate the player, be one
7. Men Stereotype You
A lot of guys seem to think that all women are out to get them, which ends up affecting you too. Guys think you’re just like every other girl who has used them in the past. How unfair is that?
6. Your Pet Is Your Best Friend
Since you’re really busy, it can be hard to make or keep friendships. You turn into Snow White to compensate. It’s cool, cause animals are awesome.
5. People Want To Drag You Down
Being confident, self-assured, independent… These are all things that a lot of people don’t want to see in a woman and they will try to drag you down. Don’t let them. They are just trying to steal your happiness.
4. It’s Hard Work
The truth is, it can be exhausting and sometimes you’ll want to quit. You’ve got to keep at it.
3. Running Out Of Wine Is A State Of Emergency
Ladies that work as hard as we do sometimes need a glass of wine to function at the end of the day. To be out of wine is extremely depressing. Can you even watch Netflix without it? Is that legal?
2. Men Try To Buy Your Love
When you’re a woman who has got her own money, there is no need for anyone to pay your way. You can take care of yourself. A man has to bring more than that to the table.
1. Seeing Women Waste Their Potential
You know they’re capable of so much more. Someone should tell them there is more to life than being a pretty face or body. Society says women are sidekicks, the gender set to play second fiddle, to serve a supplementary role to men… It isn’t true. You can be independent and be happy.