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divine1966
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Default Mar 12, 2024 at 11:14 AM
  #21
I think it’s important to have clear deal breakers and stick to them. They are very subjective. So I’d not worry what other people consider deal breakers. Only what I do.for example, I’d not date anyone who drinks, does or did hard core drugs and smokes pot or ingest weed in any other ways. Nope. Never. Does it mean others shouldn’t? Of course not. It’s MY deal breaker.

I have other very clearly defined deal breakers. I think when you have those, you’d less likely to be in a bad relationship. Figure out what’s absolutely a NO for you and stick to it no matter what.
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Default Mar 12, 2024 at 12:46 PM
  #22
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Originally Posted by Tart Cherry Jam View Post
Then I am not clear why you are berating yourself. And my next questions, again if you do not mind:


- did you learn about his being sober for 12 years,

- his going to meetings sporadically,

- his being out of a 5 year on-and-off relationship with his ex gf, and

- his ex gf's "love of pills"


all during this old-fashioned date?
I don't trust myself to wisely chose a mate.

Does an old fashioned date mean he's a good guy and I should pursue him?

He told me all those things on the date and after

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Default Mar 12, 2024 at 01:14 PM
  #23
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Originally Posted by divine1966 View Post
I think it’s important to have clear deal breakers and stick to them. They are very subjective. So I’d not worry what other people consider deal breakers. Only what I do.for example, I’d not date anyone who drinks, does or did hard core drugs and smokes pot or ingest weed in any other ways. Nope. Never. Does it mean others shouldn’t? Of course not. It’s MY deal breaker.


I have other very clearly defined deal breakers. I think when you have those, you’d less likely to be in a bad relationship. Figure out what’s absolutely a NO for you and stick to it no matter what.
I do need to determine my deal-breakers. I'm learning though, and I think that's what dating is all about.

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Default Mar 12, 2024 at 01:41 PM
  #24
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I do need to determine my deal-breakers. I'm learning though, and I think that's what dating is all about.

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I meant you need to know your deal breakers before you date. Dating is for figuring if you are interested in a man, not what your deal breakers are.
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Default Mar 12, 2024 at 01:47 PM
  #25
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I don't trust myself to wisely chose a mate.

Does an old fashioned date mean he's a good guy and I should pursue him?

He told me all those things on the date and after

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Old fashioned date doesn’t mean anything, let alone that he’s a good or a bad person.

Some totally horrible folks have charisma and know what the right things to say to a woman or what kind of dates women prefer. Not an indication of anything
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Default Mar 12, 2024 at 01:55 PM
  #26
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I meant you need to know your deal breakers before you date. Dating is for figuring if you are interested in a man, not what your deal breakers are.
Oh, I see what you meant.
I guess I need to figure out my deal breakers then. I have some already, but then unique situations come up.
Such as NOT dating a recovering addict/alcoholic who rarely attends meetings.

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Default Mar 12, 2024 at 04:26 PM
  #27
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Oh, I see what you meant.
I guess I need to figure out my deal breakers then. I have some already, but then unique situations come up.
Such as NOT dating a recovering addict/alcoholic who rarely attends meetings.

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Maybe not but he might be using other recovery methods. Therapy? Doctor? Other recovery groups? NA or AA aren’t the only resources.
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Default Mar 12, 2024 at 06:54 PM
  #28
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Maybe not but he might be using other recovery methods. Therapy? Doctor? Other recovery groups? NA or AA aren’t the only resources.
I asked him and he said he talks to "the guys" when he needs to. Whatever that means. He also said he's been doing it long enough to know what he's doing.

Anyways, I told him I'd be OK just being friends

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Default Mar 12, 2024 at 09:09 PM
  #29
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Originally Posted by DeeeSchmeee68 View Post
I don't trust myself to wisely chose a mate.

Does an old fashioned date mean he's a good guy and I should pursue him?

He told me all those things on the date and after

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What I mean is that (thank you for clarifying answers) you essentially went on a safe job interview with the guy. You learned those concerns (I agree with Divine that they might or might not be deal breakers, depending on personal preferences) DURING that job interview. It is not even that knowing that there were potential red flags, you STILL accepted the date. No, you accepted the date to LEARN about the guy and you indeed LEARNED about him. How else would you have learned, after all? You are not a clairvoyant. So there is absolutely nothing to second guess yourself here.

You went on an information seeking expedition in an environment that was totally safe, you did not sleep with the guy on the first date for goodness sake, and now, in the safety of your home, in an unrushed manner, and in the company of your online peers who might provide helpful suggestions, you are considering the information you acquired and whether this information constitutes red flags for you. So far so good. What did you do wrong in your opinion?

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Default Mar 12, 2024 at 09:16 PM
  #30
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Such as NOT dating a recovering addict/alcoholic who rarely attends meetings.

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Do you mean that you expect him to attend weekly meetings for life?

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Default Mar 13, 2024 at 06:58 AM
  #31
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Originally Posted by Tart Cherry Jam View Post
What I mean is that (thank you for clarifying answers) you essentially went on a safe job interview with the guy. You learned those concerns (I agree with Divine that they might or might not be deal breakers, depending on personal preferences) DURING that job interview. It is not even that knowing that there were potential red flags, you STILL accepted the date. No, you accepted the date to LEARN about the guy and you indeed LEARNED about him. How else would you have learned, after all? You are not a clairvoyant. So there is absolutely nothing to second guess yourself here.


You went on an information seeking expedition in an environment that was totally safe, you did not sleep with the guy on the first date for goodness sake, and now, in the safety of your home, in an unrushed manner, and in the company of your online peers who might provide helpful suggestions, you are considering the information you acquired and whether this information constitutes red flags for you. So far so good. What did you do wrong in your opinion?
When you put things that way, I guess I did nothing wrong this time. I have a history of choosing abusive partners, so my radar is off.
I live alone. My kids are grown (I struggle with relationships with them, too). I don't speak to family. And I have 2 friends.
My confidence is very low, and I don't trust myself to choose wisely.
That's why I come here and go to counseling

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Default Mar 13, 2024 at 07:03 AM
  #32
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Do you mean that you expect him to attend weekly meetings for life?
Hey, I'm still learning.
I was basing that comment off of @divine1966 comments to me.
Read what they wrote.
But, I can see that from my perspective, I don't feel as though he's healthy enough for me to pursue.

So I've moved on. Lesson learned.

I'll let you all know about the next date! Abandonment Issues
You can help me with that one! If I get one...

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Default Mar 13, 2024 at 08:52 AM
  #33
I looked up definitions:

A red flag is a warning of danger. A DEAL-BREAKER is someone or something that prevents a deal or arrangement from being reached or fulfilled.

Personally, I view a red flag as a sign that something worse may happen down the road. Sometimes, I see the red flag and get out of the budding relationship based on just the behavior I saw, without really knowing if something worse would happen. Sometimes, I missed the red flags and looked back in hindsight and then recognized they were there, after the bad things did happen in the relationship.

If being in a relationship, and maybe eventually marriage is the “deal”, then the deal breaker is something that person said or did that would cause me to slam on the brakes and get away from them. In reality, I did not know what all my deal breakers were until someone crossed the line. And I let people break them and break them, and kept letting them cross the line until finally enough was enough and the deal was actually broken. I’m sure I’m not alone in this, and others have done it too.

You say you don’t trust yourself to choose a good partner. Well, you do know a good one from a bad one. You do know what you like and dislike and what makes you feel good or bad. It’s a balancing act. Some people are of the mindset they will not tolerate anything that they decided against, and they stick to that. Others will put up with quite a lot, beyond what they tell themselves they will.

I think being a healthy person means having a good sense of what you will and won’t put up with and leaving some wiggle room for healthy enough, good intentioned but imperfect people.

Idk, what do you think?

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Default Mar 13, 2024 at 12:04 PM
  #34
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Originally Posted by divine1966 View Post
I think it’s important to have clear deal breakers and stick to them. They are very subjective. So I’d not worry what other people consider deal breakers. Only what I do.for example, I’d not date anyone who drinks, does or did hard core drugs and smokes pot or ingest weed in any other ways. Nope. Never. Does it mean others shouldn’t? Of course not. It’s MY deal breaker.

I have other very clearly defined deal breakers. I think when you have those, you’d less likely to be in a bad relationship. Figure out what’s absolutely a NO for you and stick to it no matter what.


I know a lovely woman, very beautiful and intelligent, and when we had lunch one day she ordered her steak well done with no vegetables.

I thought, "Who hurt you, that you do this to yourself?"

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Default Mar 13, 2024 at 12:10 PM
  #35
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Hey, I'm still learning.
I was basing that comment off of @divine1966 comments to me.
Read what they wrote.
But, I can see that from my perspective, I don't feel as though he's healthy enough for me to pursue.

So I've moved on. Lesson learned.

I'll let you all know about the next date! Abandonment Issues
You can help me with that one! If I get one...

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So....

How YOU doin'?

Sorry.... Please laugh.

Yeah, you gotta look for those green flags.

It was me who asked about how old you were when you were adopted and what your experiences were like.

I'm learning too. I'm of an age where I'm going, "That looks like a good pension plan", and I'm still learning.

I think it is important that you (anyone) feels safe and relaxed. If you come from an environment where you feel heightened and unsafe, it's easy to end up back in that because it's familiar, not because it's good.

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Default Mar 13, 2024 at 12:39 PM
  #36
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Originally Posted by TishaBuv View Post
I looked up definitions:


A red flag is a warning of danger. A DEAL-BREAKER is someone or something that prevents a deal or arrangement from being reached or fulfilled.


Personally, I view a red flag as a sign that something worse may happen down the road. Sometimes, I see the red flag and get out of the budding relationship based on just the behavior I saw, without really knowing if something worse would happen. Sometimes, I missed the red flags and looked back in hindsight and then recognized they were there, after the bad things did happen in the relationship.


If being in a relationship, and maybe eventually marriage is the “deal”, then the deal breaker is something that person said or did that would cause me to slam on the brakes and get away from them. In reality, I did not know what all my deal breakers were until someone crossed the line. And I let people break them and break them, and kept letting them cross the line until finally enough was enough and the deal was actually broken. I’m sure I’m not alone in this, and others have done it too.


You say you don’t trust yourself to choose a good partner. Well, you do know a good one from a bad one. You do know what you like and dislike and what makes you feel good or bad. It’s a balancing act. Some people are of the mindset they will not tolerate anything that they decided against, and they stick to that. Others will put up with quite a lot, beyond what they tell themselves they will.


I think being a healthy person means having a good sense of what you will and won’t put up with and leaving some wiggle room for healthy enough, good intentioned but imperfect people.


Idk, what do you think?
Very well said! I like this. I can see how much thought you've put into it.

I can use all the above for future references too!

You all are so kind and helpful Abandonment Issues

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Default Mar 13, 2024 at 12:46 PM
  #37
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Originally Posted by RDMercer View Post
So....


How YOU doin'?


Sorry.... Please laugh.



Yeah, you gotta look for those green flags.



It was me who asked about how old you were when you were adopted and what your experiences were like.


I'm learning too. I'm of an age where I'm going, "That looks like a good pension plan", and I'm still learning.


I think it is important that you (anyone) feels safe and relaxed. If you come from an environment where you feel heightened and unsafe, it's easy to end up back in that because it's familiar, not because it's good.


RDMercer
Aha...you're the joker in the bunch!

Pension plans are important!! Who's going to help me walk to do my errands? Or put up with my poor hearing?
Abandonment IssuesAbandonment Issues

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Default Apr 13, 2024 at 07:54 AM
  #38
Hello
Does this seem like a red flag?

I guy I'm talking to said someone tried to kill him once by putting fentanyl in his drink. He OD from it and the EMS used 3 does of NARCAN.
This doesn't seem right to me...and it makes me uncomfortable too
What do you think?

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Default Apr 15, 2024 at 08:35 PM
  #39
Do you mean to say that you want to avoid relationships with men whose contacts can be violent to the point of plotting a murder? Of murdering him, in particular?

Or do you mean to say that the story doesn't ring true and you are concerned that you are dealing with a liar?

Or something else altogether?

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Default Apr 16, 2024 at 03:14 AM
  #40
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Originally Posted by DeeeSchmeee68 View Post
Hello
Does this seem like a red flag?

I guy I'm talking to said someone tried to kill him once by putting fentanyl in his drink. He OD from it and the EMS used 3 does of NARCAN.
This doesn't seem right to me...and it makes me uncomfortable too
What do you think?

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YES, a definite red flag - he likely made that up. And, very importantly, it made you feel uncomfortable. Pay attention to how things make you feel in your gut. If your gut is telling you something is off, then something is off.

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