Dating Red Flag #6: Brings up Marriage too
Early in the Relationship
By Alan Stafford
Dating should be a fun and happy time. You
feel the excitement of meeting new people.
And, as you meet each new person you wonder
"could he be the one?" But, let’s
face it: of all the people you will date,
you will end up marrying just one of them
(well, for some of you, two or three of them).
So, dating is also a screening process.
A very healthy way of dating is to
assume that everyone has some characteristic
that makes him incompatible with you.
Your job during a date is to find out
what that is, and then to end the relationship.
That doesn’t mean being negative or cynical
during the courtship. It just means that
the odds are high that any given date
will not be your life partner.
Therefore, be a little skeptical. Don’t
be in such a hurry to fall in love. Remember,
to find Mr. Right you will need to screen
out a lot of Mr. Wrongs. Not wrong for
being themselves. Just wrong for you.
For most of us, this is a completely
different way of thinking. Typically,
a man or woman will date someone a time
or two. Then, that man or woman will try
to make the relationship work by ignoring
or minimizing the negatives aspects. Some
months or years later-and after the wedding-the
negatives build to the point where the
couple has severe problems. Problems that
become irreconcilable and lead to divorce.
Here is a fairly common example: the
situation where your partner brings up
marriage after only a few dates.
A common situation
Mary and John have been dating for a
few weeks now. They’ve been on three wonderful
dates and now they’re having dinner in
a restaurant. Just after the meal John
looks deeply into Mary’s eyes and says:
“I love you. Will you marry me?” Mary
takes a deep breath and…
Wow, a proposal of marriage! The chance
to be Mrs. Somebody. Every woman’s dream.
What could be wrong with that? After all,
that’s why you’re dating. Actually, that’s
a very big problem. In fact, it’s a dating
red flag. Some women would accept the
proposal, even on the third date. Mary,
however, quite sensibly feels that something
strange is going on with the relationship,
even if it seems that John is sincere
in his proposal of marriage.
Mary’s instincts are right – she’s in
a very dangerous situation. She needs
to slow the relationship way down, or
break it off altogether to find a less
needy man.
“I want to marry you” – what’s wrong
with this picture?
If someone starts saying things like
"when we get married" or "I
want to spend the rest of my life with
you" after a few dates, should you
be flattered? No, you should be scared.
Run away. No one can possibly make an
intelligent decision about a lifetime
partner in a few dates, a few weeks, or
even a few months.
There are only two possibilities: either
your partner is being dishonest with you
or he/she is desperate for a relationship
– any relationship. He may be dishonest
by telling you what he thinks you want
to hear so you will give him what he knows
he wants: money, sex, a place to stay.
If he really wants you to be his lifetime
partner after just three dates, you have
just found yourself a handi-wrap husband-a
clingy, needy man who will look to you
more as a mother figure than as an adult
lover. Either way, this is not the man
for you.
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Dr. Alan Stafford, Relationship Results
Coach I help Singles and Couples build
relationships that work www.relationshipsuccessexperts.com
Click here to ask Alan a question about
your biggest relationship issue http://relationshipsuccessexperts.com/askalan.htm
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©2005 Alan Stafford/Relationship Success
Experts
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