T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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215.1 | some people are too picky | YODA::BARANSKI | Searching for Lowell Apartmentmates... | Wed Feb 18 1987 12:17 | 22 |
| Well... It partially depends on what it takes to make you happy... If I define
what person I want for a mate including hair & eye color, height, weight,
interests, financial status, brains, looks, sexual stamina, etc... There's not
exactly a lot of those particular models around. And if I want one person in a
million, and the person I want wants one person in a million, chances are that a
reciprocating combination does not exist. Even if it does, you have to find
each other under the right circumstances...
The morale of the story is that the odds are not good, if you are over specific
as to what you want. I don't have a particular idea for what I want in a
mate... The closest thing that I have, is a few interests that I have which I
would like to be able to share with a mate.
What I do is go through life meeting people, and getting to know them. I
find that I enjoy learning other people's interests and aquiring a few new
interests along the way. I hope that by not having any preconcieved idea
of what I want, I will be able to enjoy life getting to know people, and
sometime meet someone special to me...
Enough for now...
Jim.
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215.3 | This is a less-than-ideal notes file, too | MINAR::BISHOP | | Wed Feb 18 1987 12:37 | 9 |
| You have to accept something less than ideal if you don't want to
wait (maybe forever). I have a less-than-ideal car, a less-than-ideal
house and a less-than-ideal wife. I also have a less-than-ideal
body and a less-than-ideal job. But I wasn't willing (or able)
to spend the time and money it would take to have the ideal car,
house, etc.. My decisions are what I must live with, and I think
(and hope) that I can do so.
-John Bishop
|
215.4 | Some happiness vs. none | MARCIE::JLAMOTTE | the best is yet to be | Wed Feb 18 1987 13:03 | 11 |
| It would not seem that one should ever have to compromise on happiness
and/or settle for a situation that would not make them happy. But
there is always the option of selecting what happiness is available
and enjoying that.
Two things could possibly happen...the first being the choice you
made was better than you initially thought and the relationship
is better than expected. The second is the limited relationship
adds to your self esteem and maintains some stability emotionally.
|
215.6 | preconceptions and generalities - all untrue. | SQM::AITEL | Helllllllp Mr. Wizard! | Wed Feb 18 1987 13:28 | 21 |
| Hmmm. I think this question, for me, depends on how I define
"ideal" and what I think of as being the most important for me,
now and in the future. Ex. my car. It is not a super-expensive
sporty model. When I went looking for a car, of course I drooled
over the expensive ones, but they didn't do what I wanted - they
couldn't be taken camping, they didn't get good mileage, they
weren't good for hauling stuff around, they weren't as reliable
as I needed a car to be ... and I couldn't afford them. I got
what is probably the ideal car for me for my purposes for this
point in time.
Ok, that analogy won't work fully for describing a lover/mate.
But - what's important, really? Once you answer that question,
you have determined what FOR YOU is the description of the
ideal love. The rest is frills - perhaps important in some
ways, but it's not part of your "ideal" description.
Then someone will come along who makes your heart sing, and all
your predefined descriptions will go out the window.
--Louise
|
215.7 | | FAUXPA::ENO | Bright Eyes | Wed Feb 18 1987 13:44 | 18 |
| re .0
The concept of settling for less than one really wants is a big
black hole. We all settle for less, because we all want the best;
but realistically the best doesn't exist. If we persist in believing
that it does, that the "perfect" person for us exists, we will always
be disappointed.
I believe there are any number of people in the world that could
be "right" for me, flaws and all. I was lucky to find one, but
I'm sure there is someone even better suited to me out there somewhere.
That doesn't mean I'm going to give up on my "second best" husband.
Happiness, in a compromise situation, is usually a choice. I can
be happy with what I have or I can choose to feel cheated because
I don't have the illusion of perfection.
Gloria
|
215.8 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Wed Feb 18 1987 13:50 | 13 |
| I think that Louise in .6 understands what I was looking for, even
if I did state it in a perhaps overly simplistic fashion.
Nobody is perfect, but it seems to me that many knowingly compromise
on some aspect that is important to them. To me, a perfect enough
partner is one who lights you up like a Christmas tree whenever
she (he) is near - one who makes you feel truly happy inside. I
think a lot of people settle for less than that.
And John, I sure hope that Barbara doesn't see you calling her
"less than perfect"! She might get the wrong idea!
Steve
|
215.10 | depends on the people? | STUBBI::B_REINKE | Down with bench Biology | Wed Feb 18 1987 15:59 | 3 |
| re .9
But it is also possible and known to happend that the 'Christmas
effect' can survive fights and years......
|
215.11 | The compromises change with time | CADSYS::BURDICK | Ed Burdick HLO2-2/G13, dtn 225-5051 | Wed Feb 18 1987 23:00 | 23 |
| Just a quick comment. I have been married since I was 22. I am now 39. I
was very different, had different goals and ideas and and differnt outlook
17 years ago. Since I have been married to the same person for the vast
majority of my adult life, the compromises of 1970 are mostly insignificant
in my world of 1987. The important compromises NOT to make are in the area
of mutual growth, communication, trust, and all of the things that make a
relationship continue to grow. Yes, there are some compromises that don't
go away. For example my wife is not much into things like outdoor activities
like hiking, bicycling, etc, and I really enjoy them. Now I do them with my
kids.
A thing we "discovered" about three years into my marriage, was that we had
spent three years trying to change each other. Some of the compromises we had
made in committing to the long term relationship were still bothering us.
After talking about this off and on over a period of weeks, we came to the
conclusion that we would be better off assuming that each of us was not going
to change in the ways the other wanted, and accepting that fact. In a way,
this was recommitting to the compromises we had told ourselves we were willing
to make at the outset. Of course, some of the changes have happened over the
years, just because we grew out of some of the annoying behaviors. But this
sort of "contract" in which we share our own feelings of what compromises we
are making (and new ones keep coming along), is a power tool in making our
relationship continue to grow.
|
215.12 | Different Types of Compromise | APEHUB::STHILAIRE | | Thu Feb 19 1987 08:57 | 15 |
| I think there are two very differences types of compromise. One
type of compromise, such as that mentioned previously, is that of
being willing to make compromises with a person that you love so
that the relationship will run smoothly. Another totally different
type of compromise, and one that I meant in the topic on why woman
fall for "jerks", is making the compromise of having a relationship
with a person that you do not love - for companionship, affection,
love, security, whatever - because you can't seem to meet someone
you do love who loves you back. Making a compromise with somebody
you love in order to keep the relationship running smoothly is very
different from making the compromise of having a relationship with
someone who you don't love to begin with.
Lorna
|
215.14 | thank u | CEODEV::FAULKNER | my sharona | Thu Feb 19 1987 10:47 | 2 |
| the oak and the reeds
|
215.15 | Compromise on desired, NOT required qualities! | ENGGSG::WILKIN | | Thu Feb 19 1987 11:15 | 23 |
|
I think that a person should decide what qualities are required
for a potential SO and which are desired. It is important to identify
the required vs the desired. I don't think a person should compromise
the required qualities. For me required would be trust, faithfulness,
honesty, etc.
If you compromise on the required then you are signing up for
problems. Marriage is intended to last a lifetime. Why would anyone
want to go thru life being one with a person who doesn't meet their
requirements? Would we take a job that didn't meet the standards
we set for ourselves? Yet, we are surpposed to compromise on who
we spent most of our life with, I don't think so.
I for one would rather be single for a lifetime then compromise.
Some of you make being single sound like a dreaded disease. My
definition of H*LL is a bad marriage.
Life shouldn't evolve around a relationship. It should evolve
around what makes you happy and helps you become a better person.
Linda
|
215.16 | The 3rd Compromise | MARCIE::JLAMOTTE | the best is yet to be | Thu Feb 19 1987 12:44 | 7 |
| There is a third option in compromise which some of us are discussing.
A relationship with a nice person (as opposed to a 'jerk') who does
not meet all the requirements you have determined your partner should
have.
|
215.17 | I knew the daughter of this couple... | MINAR::BISHOP | | Thu Feb 19 1987 12:52 | 17 |
| Ok, let's try a thought experiment here:
Imagine you are a woman of 37, unmarried. You very much want to
have a child, but you don't feel up to having a child alone. You
have a boy-friend who is nice, honest, stable, and so on, but he
just does not excite you, even though he wants to marry you and
have a family. You think you would get along with him, and you
know you're not likely to find another man who is any better before
it is too late for you to have children.
What do you do? On the one hand is companionship and family, on
the other is the remote chance of a "soul mate".
It seems to me that marriage in these circumstances is a compromise
with reality, and a perfectly reasonable thing to do.
-John Bishop
|
215.18 | no problem here! | DONJON::EYRING | | Thu Feb 19 1987 13:25 | 4 |
| Re: number 17
Have the baby and skip the marriage!
|
215.19 | | APEHUB::STHILAIRE | | Thu Feb 19 1987 14:13 | 10 |
| Re .15, I agree with you.
Re .16, Another type of compromise is that you could fall in love
with someone who doesn't meet your basic requirements in a
relationship. Then what?
Re .17, I agree with .18, she should have the baby and skip the
marriage.
|
215.20 | a tough nut to crack! | YODA::BARANSKI | Searching for Lowell Apartmentmates... | Thu Feb 19 1987 15:54 | 7 |
| RE: .19
Ouch! I think that that is the hardest type of compromise to make! You
really want to, but chances are that you'll go crazy a few years down the
road...
Jim...
|
215.21 | | MANTIS::PARE | | Thu Feb 19 1987 16:13 | 17 |
| So many of us have these illusions that there is a check list of
requirements necessary for happiness. And if we are somehow able to
be happy without having obtained or attained every point
on our subconcious checklist then we are compromising ourselves.
Where did this belief come from? From our parents? From the movies?
From our society and culture? Webster's even defines happiness
as "characterized by good fortune, prosperous".
Maybe the real key to happiness is to throw the subconcious list
away and to take life and people as they come, appreciate the highs,
get through the lows, and simply enjoy life.
If I were the hypothetical woman I'd marry the guy. Real live men
who love you can be far more exciting than even our most enduring
fantasies. One definition of compromise is "combining the qualities
of different things",.......she could provide the excitement :-)
|
215.22 | Choice of the heart or of the mind? | MARCIE::JLAMOTTE | the best is yet to be | Thu Feb 19 1987 18:00 | 16 |
| .21
It seems to me from my own experiences and what I have observed
the best relationships, the relationships that endure and the
relationships that offer the most happiness come from couples who
have similar interests and common goals.
There is no guarantee to happiness but I feel that I have a real
responsibility to myself and any person I may consider making a
committment to...to insure that all the basics are there.
I could very easily fall in love with a person from France and agree
to live in France. If he were not rich (I am never going to be)
and I could not visit my family regularly I would be miserable and
the relationship would deteoriate.
|
215.23 | i hopes i'm misunderstandin this | CGHUB::CONNELLY | Eye Dr3 - Regnad Kcin | Thu Feb 19 1987 23:20 | 13 |
|
re: .18,.19
I hope youse characters are just kidding. Have the kid and
don't get married? Does the poor sap get any say in this or do you
tell a "little white lie" about using birth control to fake him into
giving you the necessary biological components?
Both prospective parents should be commited to having a
child. Tricking your partner into being a parent to a child that
he may not want (or might not want if he understood you had no
interest in marrying him) and will probably not get to have any
equitable parental relationship with, is just plain reprehensible
and slimo-to-the-max in my book. (Set flame /pilot.)
paul c.
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215.24 | on topic .0 | CGHUB::CONNELLY | Eye Dr3 - Regnad Kcin | Fri Feb 20 1987 00:30 | 19 |
|
The toughest advice is "know thyself". If you manage to do that,
then maybe you can figure out what areas are worth compromising
on and which ones are "No Surrender".
The trouble is most people start making compromises to please
other people before they really know what's important to themselves.
It can be habit-forming! (I'll let the Ayn Rand people explicate
on that whole topic more fully.)
Plus the less experience you have in relationships the less able you
are to know how "realistic" a given compromise is (vs. fatalistic or
defeatist or whatever). Is ignorance bliss in that respect?
Not only do you have to know yourself at some arbitrary point in
time, but you have to be aware of how you're continually changing.
Having a handsome/beautiful partner may seem like Priority 2 when
you're 17, but by the time you're 45 it may be down to Priority 10.
You can't keep trying to live up to a 17 year old's agenda forever.
|
215.25 | It's a dumb game, but I sometimes play it | BOBBY::REDDEN | More Ancient than Myth | Fri Feb 20 1987 11:50 | 7 |
| A game I catch myself playing goes kinda this - If I had what I
really wanted, then I think I would be happy. When offered something
close to what I really want, I reject it, with appropriate
rationalizations. Inside my head, I am afraid to get what I want.
What if it didn't make me happy, then who could I blame. It seems
safer to blame unhappiness on having compromised than to accept
the responsibility for choosing to be unhappy.
|
215.26 | What poor sap? | SUPER::MATTHEWS | Don't panic | Fri Feb 20 1987 12:16 | 4 |
| re .23 Calm down. That's one reason we have such a thing as
artificial insemination.
Val
|
215.28 | Why hurt a "nice" person? | BIZET::COCHRANE | Send lawyers, guns and money. | Fri Feb 20 1987 12:28 | 15 |
| Marrying "nice" people. So who gets hurt in the end?
The one who truely believes in love and loves his partner?
Or the one who is never quite sure that the decision was
a good one? Or both? Or the soul-mate who eventually
comes along later? Or who came along first and got rejected
out of hand? And married someone "nice" of their own? Who
also is set up to get hurt? And on, and on, and on...
"Oh what a tangled web we weave, when first we practice
to deceive..."
Don't do it.
Mary-Michael
|
215.29 | Can't hide from hurt..it's part of the package. | MANTIS::PARE | | Fri Feb 20 1987 15:17 | 17 |
| At some point in our lives we all have to make key decisions.
Unfortunately, life does not come with guarantees. The decisions
we make are what seem to be the right ones to us at the time we
make them. Nothing more. Love isn't something you believe in...
like religion. Love is something you feel. Just like anger and
sorrow and hate, there are different degrees and expressions of
love. And love grows and changes as we do. Sometimes love isn't
fair and sometimes love isn't nice but all the time love is a
reflection of what we are, as people.
>So who gets hurt in the end?
We all do, Mary-Michael. We all get hurt somehow,... sooner or later.
We all pay our dues. But life, if not lived to the fullest...means
nothing. Sometimes people have to take risks to experience all
life has to offer..that's really what it's is all about you know.
But to have lived a whole lifetime and never to have experienced
love at all..... ah,..Now that would be a real tragedy.
|
215.30 | Love is love - nice is nice | BIZET::COCHRANE | Send lawyers, guns and money. | Fri Feb 20 1987 15:36 | 25 |
| re: .29
My issue isn't with love - God knows I've experienced that
emotion more than once - possibly once too often. My issue
is with marrying "nice" people as opposed to holding out for
a sole-mate, when you don't think you love them the way they
love you. That's where the hurt comes in. Being in love is
risking hurt, that's a given. But there is nothing worse
than finding out the one you love never shared that feeling
for you or lost it long ago and just neglected to tell you.
That's a hurt no human being should have to experience, and
it's *not* a given risk with love.
Marry someone because they are nice to you? Because you are
getting older and lonely? Because you don't think you'll find
anything better? God, those are awful reasons! What you are
risking is a life that tastes like soda left out too long...
flat and dull.
Mary-Michael
|
215.31 | Clarification | MARCIE::JLAMOTTE | the best is yet to be | Fri Feb 20 1987 15:49 | 12 |
| .30
We may have some different interpretations within the replies
to this note.
I do not think anyone has said that they would compromise in
marriage...I certainly wouldn't. I think for the most part
people are talking about relationships.
At least I am...
|
215.32 | Using people isn't nice | MANTIS::PARE | | Fri Feb 20 1987 15:53 | 14 |
| Now we are talking about ethics, about honesty, and about
communication. Is it right to "use" someone else for your
own convenience? Of course not. Is it right to lead someone
on and let them believe you care about them when you don't?
Of course not. If we view marriage not as a relationship
but as a solution to one or more of our problems we might
indeed be tempted to deceive someone else. But marriage isn't
a solution to any problems. Marriage is a very special relationship
built on trust and respect that generates problems of its own.
Anything we do comes back at us a hundred fold, the bad as well
as the good. Soulmates don't always find each other, but when they
do, they each other by the trust as well as the love.
|
215.33 | It's a poor workman who blames his tools... | HUMAN::BURROWS | Jim Burrows | Sat Feb 21 1987 09:17 | 51 |
| I think one of the most pernicious notions in this culture is
that there is such a thing as the "best" anything. We constantly
talk about "living to the max", "the perfect mate", "living life
to the fullest", "settling for less than true happiness" as if
there were a best, perfect, ideal, or unsurpassable person,
relationship or state of happiness.
Well, Virginia, it just ain't so. No matter how much of anything
you have in this world, there's always some you don't have,
always a little more you could have gotten. We aren't perfect
and we are limited in every dimension. Any feat you can perform
can be topped any record you set can be broken. No matter how
perfect your bliss, there's always something else that could
make it even better.
There's no such thing as the one-and-only perfect match for you.
For each one of us there are at least millions, if not tens or
hundreds of millions of suitable mates, of people with whom the
chemistry is right. No matter when in your life you marry, and
no matter whom you choose, someone with whom the chemistry is
more powerful, the experience more mystical, the rapport deeper,
can come along.
In the end, you compromise because there is no such things as
humanly attainable perfection. You compromise because there is
no choice, whatever you accept is less than perfect. You
compromise because you have to get on with your life and not
wait forever. You compromise because what makes a relationship
good is not the raw material involved, but the effort of the
people. It isn't who you love but how that makes it work, that
makes it strong, that makes it worthwhile.
As long as you are looking for the "perfect match" or refuse to
settle for second best you are doomed to failure. There is no
second best because nothing is first. The thing that looks like
it is in second place and the one in first are both really in
millionth or billionth or aleph-nullth place.
The way to happiness is to find a really good person, situation,
relationship, job or whatever are then make the very best you
can from it. When Michelangelo wanted to make a masterpiece of
sculpture he didn't start with a perfect piece of stone. He
found a very good one and then poured his heart and talent into
it. You make a marriage that way. You find someone good or great
or special; someone willing to commit to make a joint work of
art out of your lives and then the two of you lavish love,
trust, commitment and hard work on it.
"Compromise" isn't a dirty word--"perfection" is.
JimB.
|
215.34 | Right On! | CADSYS::BURDICK | Ed Burdick HLO2-2/G13, dtn 225-5051 | Sat Feb 21 1987 11:07 | 3 |
| re: .33
A strong second from me on that one!
|
215.35 | Yes! | NOVA::BNELSON | California Dreamin'... | Sun Feb 22 1987 15:36 | 10 |
|
Re: .33
I thought that was a beautifully written note that said it clearly and
succinctly! It was great! I can't think of a single thing to add or change!
Brian
|
215.36 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Sun Feb 22 1987 19:44 | 20 |
| Jim's comments in .33 are noble, but a bit simplistic. In particular,
the notion that wanting "true happiness" is the same as looking
for perfection disturbs me, because I don't believe they're related.
I agree completely that there can be many prospective partners out
there in the world who can make one very happy, and one just has
to keep looking. But what my base note commented on was the
attitude that many take - usually those who have become discouraged
- that they'll "take what they can get," even if it's clear to them
from the start that there's something important missing.
There's no exclusive franchise on happiness. It can be found in
many combinations. But too many have such a low opinion of their
chances of finding it that they consider making a choice they
aren't pleased with, just to have SOMEONE.
I was truly happy once. I will be again, I know it. I just have
to keep my eyes open. One never knows where love will turn up.
Steve
|
215.37 | I wish I could be happy all the time,I think? | SRATGA::SCARBERRY_CI | | Wed Jun 05 1991 18:27 | 15 |
| There are some relationships that are Utilitarian. From the beginning
of their relationship, romantic love was not an ingredient. The
partners did make a fair exchange and that was what kept their marriage
together. For some people this is what matters. Perhaps, woman
wants children, home, income enough from husband so she can stay
home and take care of children. Husband, works at career, goes
out with friends and has his children raised. These type of
relationships do exist and if they work for the couple, whose to
say it's wrong. For romantic love is not neccessary in the marriage.
The companship or the plain "it works" is enough.
To "settle" is not fullfilling innermost important "umpf" to a person.
This void will probably continue to haunt this person. I don't
know. Sometimes life seems like a business, you go for the best
possible reward or profit attainable and go from there.
|