Lost In Love
By Andrea Orr
Read the Article at russellgrant.match.com
ou might say the concept of not losing yourself in a relationship is overrated. You’ve already spent your share of Saturday nights at home alone, and you’ve stood out like the third wheel at dinner parties where everyone else was coupled up. Lately, you’ve always been the one who was there with nothing better to do than take your friends’ late night phone calls, take your grandmother to church or work the late shift. Now it’s your turn. You’ve finally found someone you want to spend every minute with.
So why not? If you disappear for a while, any good friend will cut you some slack. Won’t they? Your grandmother may not even want Live a little, go a little crazy and dive in. This doesn’t happen every day and you ought to drink up the experience. Do you think all those people who advise you not to let absolutely anything slide for a new love would really follow their own advice? Doubtful. Now, the warning. While it may be all right to shift from an overbooked schedule to an easy 9-to-5 routine, or beg off book club to accommodate the new man or woman in your life, you don’t want to fall into the trap of abandoning your old routine so entirely that you shift into a brand-new but equally predictable one. Variety really is the spice of life, and that’s true for coupled as well as single life. I once had an all-consuming, forget-your-friends kind of relationship where we enjoyed each other’s company better than anyone else’s to the point that we sometimes looked like a little cocoon unto ourselves. After a long and drawn-out split, I started dating someone else. I failed to notice that he had an entirely different style, including a number of projects and social commitments that didn’t include me. Right away, I started to do exactly what felt familiar. It was only a ridiculously short period of time before I told him that my ex still had the spare set of keys to my apartment but that I could easily make him another copy. At that, my new boyfriend physically backed away and got this look of shock and horror on his face that seemed to say, “Why would I want the keys to your apartment?” Of course, he was right. It was way too soon. A friend shares a more amusing story of the day her new doting boyfriend was transformed into a standoffish guy who couldn’t get enough space. It happened one morning when he was in the bathroom, brushing his “How did it come to this?” he sighed as his face went pale. Soon enough, that fresh canoodling intimacy always gets replaced by that old-sock feeling, so there’s really no need to rush it. It’s probably unrealistic to suggest you not change a thing in your life when a new boyfriend or girlfriend enters the picture, but follow these few rules, it should help keep your new love, as well as all your friends and your job. Be clear about what is really important It’s the same distinction between missing a girls’ night out and missing the funeral of a good friend’s parent. Leaving work on time versus not getting to work on time. Skipping that lecture at the local library versus forfeiting your tickets to the Madonna concert that your sister tried so hard to get. Not all distinctions are so dramatic, but you get the picture. Keep things somewhat unpredictable Take it slow with the super-intimate moves Andrea Orr is a freelance contributor to Happen. |
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ou might say the concept of not losing yourself in a relationship is overrated. You’ve already spent your share of Saturday nights at home alone, and you’ve stood out like the third wheel at dinner parties where everyone else was coupled up. Lately, you’ve always been the one who was there with nothing better to do than take your friends’ late night phone calls, take your grandmother to church or work the late shift. Now it’s your turn. You’ve finally found someone you want to spend every minute with.


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