Anita18
DANCE FOR ME, FUNNY MAN!
- Joined
- Sep 26, 2005
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I know someone like Angel actually - my best friend's sister. She was immensely hung up about any physical contact AT ALL and was an emotional mess right up through college and even my friend was amazed/impressed that the guy who's now her bf was sticking around and waiting patiently. They're totally close now and very cute, but it took years. It's a very rare man who will do that.I worry that you are (not intentionally) making yourself unattractive to this guy before you've had a chance to truly date. He may be polite about it, but he's a man- he wants to engage in sexual activities. It doesn't have to be sex yet, but at least kissing and some groping. So far he's gotten nothing sexual from you, just emotional messes. That's worse than friend zoning, because he may not even want to end up being friends. Everything you're going to him with you should be talking to a girl friend about.
She's also matured to a point where she can mostly handle herself. Moving cross-country for a job will do that for you.
(Yes, we're all amazed she's still in one piece, but people are often more resilient than you take them for...)But her sister was in computer science and her bf was a fellow student. There's not a lot of women in CS so he probably figured he didn't have a whole lot of choices if he wanted to have a fellow CS student as a gf.
Not sure if Angel has something equally rare about herself where a guy would be happy to wait for her.I have a stutter and so I don't talk much. Because of that, I mostly handle my own issues, that's the way it's always been. My bf is not a talker himself and can't stand listening to other people's problems so he was willing to wait around for me, because not a whole lot of women are as taciturn.

Or likes your "flaws" the way they are, like I described above.A good relationship is when someone overlooks your flaws and cares for you despite them.
There's also a difference between being comfortable in a relationship and taking it for granted.
I remember very vividly that my stutter was EXTREMELY bad the first few dates I had with my bf. He didn't seem to care at all, while it would make a whole lot of people very uncomfortable. Having a stutter meant I wouldn't be able to talk up a storm with him. 
It's all relative, though. Some problems should involve the partner and some shouldn't.I disagree with this completely. I believe this is a really shallow way to handle emotional connection and support - to wait until after having sex. IMO, sex should be the outcome of having an emotional connection and support. Otherwise its very easy to have the mindset of merely "putting up with" emotional stuff for the sex.
If the you/he/her/they are not willing to be emotionally there for you, then they don't deserve you to be "physically" there for them.
Besides, it's really the little things that count.