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Good question! Let me think about an answer a bit and then come back ...PS: question to Pea, and all older singles... are their people in your past you regret not having "settled" for? Or just noone on the horizon? Do you feel your standards have ever been too high?
Good question! Let me think about an answer a bit and then come back ...
(Since you're here, and I'm here, I didn't want you to think I was ignoring you.)
PS: question to Pea, and all older singles... are there people in your past you regret not having "settled" for? Or just noone on the horizon? Do you feel your standards have ever been too high?

I think I'm just a lot more realistic than I used to be. I have realized that no one person will ever be everything to me, and I will always need my girlfriends and sisters, because there are certain things men just don't get. Not even my BF, who has shown more than once that he really is understanding and sensitive, even for a man.The paradox, of course, is that the more it behooves a woman to settle, the less willing she is to settle; a woman in her mid- to late 30s is more discriminating than one in her 20s. She has friends who have known her since childhood, friends who will know her more intimately and understand her more viscerally than any man she meets in midlife. Her tastes and sense of self are more solidly formed. She says things like “He wants me to move downtown, but I love my home at the beach,” and, “But he’s just not curious,” and “Can I really spend my life with someone who’s allergic to dogs?”
Short answer: No. I dated a lot of dweebs.PS: question to Pea, and all older singles... are there people in your past you regret not having "settled" for? Or just noone on the horizon? Do you feel your standards have ever been too high?
Standards too high? Possibly, though I don't know if it would have made a huge difference. There's only one guy I might've dated a bit longer to see who he was deep down, but he had some emotional problems that made it challenging. Timing really does govern a lot of relationship decisions, I think.
Heck, if someone's going to urge me to do something I don't want to do, she'd better have proof that *some* people who have "settled" are happy with their decision!
I think you hit the "fantasy" nail on the head. So the question becomes: What's essential? How do you know if the relationship is providing for you what you need in the long run? "Settling" may be defined as "giving up the fantasy," which I heartily agree with. But it would be something of a tragedy to give up on some essential qualities that truly would make the difference between a marriage that feels more like a business arrangement than a loving union.I think I'm just a lot more realistic than I used to be. I have realized that no one person will ever be everything to me, and I will always need my girlfriends and sisters, because there are certain things men just don't get. ... Do I continue to hold out for a man who will "understand and appreciate me completely, and be unfailingly fascinated with me?" That doesn't even describe my best friends - why should it describe my boyfriend? There are certain ways my BF and I are different, and although we may come to compromise, that's what it will be: compromise. Or I could continue to have all the details of my life exactly as I prefer them for the rest of my life, but go it alone.
I'm glad you thought I was perceptive.Hi Pea. OK, I read the article. What I find interesting is that the author advocates settling but then at the end of the article admits she can't do it herself.Heck, if someone's going to urge me to do something I don't want to do, she'd better have proof that *some* people who have "settled" are happy with their decision!
I actually found your comment about the article much more perceptive.![]()
I think you hit the "fantasy" nail on the head. So the question becomes: What's essential? How do you know if the relationship is providing for you what you need in the long run? "Settling" may be defined as "giving up the fantasy," which I heartily agree with. But it would be something of a tragedy to give up on some essential qualities that truly would make the difference between a marriage that feels more like a business arrangement than a loving union.
However, my constant "struggle" (if that's the right word to use) is the fact that between the two of us there are about 80 years of living where we had no idea the other even existed. How will we ever catch up on all that? There are sisters and girlfriends in my life I've known 20 - 35 years, and sometimes it's scary to think about pledging my life to someone I've known for such a small fraction of my life - and not just as a roommate, but in the most intimate partnership possible. I'm very comfortable with him, and more so all the time, but the fact is that when we stand at the alter (assuming we do) he STILL won't know me as well as my sisters or best friends do, and I need to "settle" for that, with the expectation that familiarity will grow over time. Hopefully that makes sense!I must admit that I haven't read the article yet but I was just saying almost this exact thing in the Why is...thread!!!! It's like people don't want to invest time in a relationship any more - if one thing is wrong then they move on - instead of really investing in a person and accepting them for their flaws and all. I'm not saying accept huge red flags but the little things like you're talking about Pea.Anyway, I'm certainly not advocating settling for a man with whom you feel no chemistry, or where the essential qualities aren't there! But I do think there are people out there who set some pretty high standards and then reject potential mates because one tiny thing didn't add up ... as she said, "But he likes the city, and I want to live at the beach ... " really, if everything else was wonderful, wouldn't you be able to work that out?

No regrets that I didn't settle. That word just sounds so negative. But, getting to know someone who isn't my "normal" type or who looks like a computer geek (fell for one of those) is something I am quite willing to do.PS: question to Pea, and all older singles... are there people in your past you regret not having "settled" for? Or just noone on the horizon? Do you feel your standards have ever been too high?
Makes perfect sense, Pea!I'm very comfortable with him, and more so all the time, but the fact is that when we stand at the alter (assuming we do) he STILL won't know me as well as my sisters or best friends do, and I need to "settle" for that, with the expectation that familiarity will grow over time. Hopefully that makes sense!