Excepting reciprocal interest in you

    • Kissaki@feddit.org
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      1 month ago

      Would you accept fish scale?

      Is puking blobs that are on fire acceptable? Without distance propulsion.

  • underreacting@literature.cafe
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    1 month ago

    An immune system capable of dealing with my pets.

    Living nearby.

    A positive attitude or at least a attempting to improve on things that bother them in their life.

    Age.

    • Zorque@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      Ugh, yeah, I can’t stand all the ageless people around me. Get on my mortal plane, gosh!

      • underreacting@literature.cafe
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        1 month ago

        Exactly! Lol.

        Maybe more like “be of an appropriate age”. I don’t mind a fling or two with people on the extreme ends of appropriate age-range, but recently everyone I connect with seem to be at least ten years younger than me. It’s like my city had a purge of people of my age and I just slept through it.

  • Ceedoestrees@lemmy.world
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    Creative, fun and encouraging. Emotionally mature, respectful, and commited to ongoing self improvement. Everything else is peripheral, but bonus points for writers and artists who are into pc gaming and technology.

    My biggest issue has been men socialized with some kind of bias against women, who don’t examine their need to protect and try to make decisions for me. I’m pansexual but lean toward people with dicks.

    I learned how to use power tools when I was seven, I’m mechanically inclined, and built my own PC at eighteen. There are an unfortunate number of men who will start a conversation with me from a place of condescension. The last date I went on, he showed me his chainsaw, I asked to try it out and what he said started with “Okay, well it can be a little scary at first because it’s loud…” Another guy told me I was cracking eggs wrong when I made breakfast. I used to be a head chef.

    • s@piefed.worldOP
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      The condescension and man-splaining thing is difficult and is definitely a trained part of a male-dominated culture/sub-culture if it is based on prejudice. The chainsaw incident might have come from a genuine place of concern and caution since power tools can be dangerous, even variants of tools somebody has experience with. I personally struggle with gauging my expectations of how familiar any random person would be with something I’m bringing up, especially if it’s something I’ve had other people confused by in the past. I usually say “Have you heard of X?” or “How familiar are you with X?” to try to avoid either scenario of my audience thinking that I’m condescending them or them being lost about a subject they know nothing about.

    • TubularTittyFrog@lemmy.world
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      My biggest issue has been men socialized with some kind of bias against women, who don’t examine their need to protect and try to make decisions for me. I’m pansexual but lean toward people with dicks.

      This is because the so many women are actively seeking these things from men. They often want to be infantalized. FWIW it’s why most of my relationships fail, because I don’t treat women like children and they want that.

        • TubularTittyFrog@lemmy.world
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          1 month ago

          just look around you next time you go out to a bar or other social situation. observe it for yourself.

          or maybe ask yourself why is it that you are attracted to men who treat you that way?

          • Ceedoestrees@lemmy.world
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            1 month ago

            What, lol.

            My post was about how I’m not attracted to it.

            You might want to stop conducting gender studies at bars.

  • BurgerBaron@piefed.social
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    Depressive intellectual honesty is #1.

    No children ever #2. I didn’t like children even when I was one and that never changed. My sense of morality also disagrees with procreation.

    No deity beliefs or vague spiritualism #3.

    That’s it really, and yet I’ve barely ever met anyone like this. People don’t exactly advertise these traits that I’ve seen local to me.

    Edit: Oh and as far as physical goes I’m not body picky. It’s mostly about the face. I like angular, resting bitch face. Intensity. If you scare people I’m into it.

    • braxy29@lemmy.world
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      i think #3 is your greatest limiter. i expect more people have at least some kind of spiritual / meaning-making impulse than don’t, by a large margin.

      • BurgerBaron@piefed.social
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        I’d agree. Stats show I’ve already cut 75% off the global population with that preference alone just the religious! I’m sure it’s higher factoring in spiritual.

      • s@piefed.worldOP
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        1 month ago

        I think it really depends on the demographics of the immediate society somebody finds themself within. The presence or absence of specific spirituality or religious beliefs is really important to a lot of people and can make up a significant portion of who they are. Just as the commenter is requiring an absence of certain beliefs, there are others in the dating pool who are requiring the presence of these beliefs, and the commenter wouldn’t have a healthy relationship if they have to fake who they are to be with somebody.

        • BurgerBaron@piefed.social
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          For sure, it’s not good news here. Hell, I’ve been called sub-human to my face for not being spiritual by one of my friend’s partners and she stopped hanging out with us when I invite him over. She’s not even religious. All it took was mentioning I wasn’t even spiritual at a backyard BBQ when the topic came up naturally ¯\(ツ)

  • Krudler@lemmy.world
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    I’m gender fluid, I describe myself as 70% male, 30% female gender identity. I’m straight.

    I am exhausted by women continually declaring what they want in men, but not really wanting that. I simply cannot act obsessive, possessive, or dominant. I want a woman to approach me on an equal footing. It continually shocks me how women demand toxic behavior in a dating context.

    • Ceedoestrees@lemmy.world
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      I was like this when I started dating. Popular media and family impacted how I viewed love and relationships, so accustomed to living with controlling narcissists I didn’t understand what healthy affection looked like.

      My first relationships were nightmares with similar people who reinforced those ideas. If I was approached by someone with a healthy, balanced mindset, I wouldn’t know what to do with them.

      Which is not to provide a solution, but rather some insight. In a sense it’s a good thing you recognize a toxic situation before it begins, in another sense it can be lonely and frustrating, and I can commiserate from the other side

      • Krudler@lemmy.world
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        I completely agree and I can validate many women I’ve met have been in very toxic relationships, and as much as they hate them, they do not know how to function in a healthy one

    • s@piefed.worldOP
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      women continually declaring what they want in men, but not really wanting that.

      That’s something I’ve noticed sometimes as well, and I hoped that there’d be women (or even some confused men or nonbinaries) answering this post and a discussion would follow which would help both them and others understand what they’re really after.

      demand toxic behavior in a dating context

      This is something I’ve seen as well, but I think of it as a separate issue as the previous one. If somebody wants a sugar daddy/mommy/whatever, that’s entirely different than an actual relationship.

      • TubularTittyFrog@lemmy.world
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        women who are more healthy tend to be in relationships that are stable and long term. they aren’t single going in and out of relationships. also true of men. healthy people seeking out healthy people and who have good priorities.

        all my best female friends over the years married young and never divorced. they chose the right people and valued other people for the things that actually matter, not the shallow bullshit that most people chase.

        a big thing is that most singletons want their partner to fix their lives for them. they are unhappy in their middle class office job and think a partner to elevate them to the luxury travel lifestyle they see on social media. That expecation is entirely unrealistic, but they don’t care about realism, so they shut themselves off from realistic partners and chase fantasies in their head or short term relationships.

        in short, healthy people don’t chase romantic fantasies, unhealthy people do, an are forever unfufilled.

    • TubularTittyFrog@lemmy.world
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      what women are emotionally attracted to is often anti-social and abusive behaviors.

      and they are actively disgusted by the behaviors they claim they want in a partner. caring, kindness, emotional openless etc.

      esp single women.

      • Krudler@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        It’s not a battle of the sexes thing. Both men and women are often attracted to the traits they outwardly disdain.

  • cybervseas@lemmy.world
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    Mostly free time to meet in person. Busy professional looking for busy professional gets difficult.

  • RBWells@lemmy.world
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    This thread has been interesting to read.

    I don’t worry about guys starting out with preconceptions about women, most of them do (as we do about men) but also recognize people are individual. it always has settled out for me over time, but maybe the guys I attract are not looking for traditional “femininity” as I don’t really ooze with it in looks or behavior. I’m delighted to be a woman for sure, but was not raised very differently from my brothers, my mom just treated us all the same.

    And the first two responses in the list when I look at it:

    “Having a sex drive as high as mine and not being bipolar.”

    And

    “Someone that is okay with not being able to engage in coitus with me.”

    Shows how different we are, really that gives me hope.

  • andrewta@lemmy.world
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    Haven’t dated in years.

    If I did: someone that would accept that in my spare time I like to video game (and won’t beat up on me for doing that).

    Someone that doesn’t smoke or vape

    Someone that will not get mad that I have a 5.1 theater on the main TV, or that I use a TiVo to record my shows.

    Someone that isn’t ugly. Sorry but if I don’t find you attractive then the answer is no.

    You don’t need large breasts but you need something there.

    Also someone that can handle that I like sci-fi and fantasy movies.

    And you need to make about what I make a year. It can be more, but not less. If you make less , then that means financially you can’t pay your monthly bills. I can support myself but on my income I can’t support two people.

    • YappyMonotheist@lemmy.world
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      Unless you’re barely scraping by, I don’t understand how not making the exact amount of money you’re making at least means they can’t pay their monthly bills. 🤔

      • andrewta@lemmy.world
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        That’s basically what it means. I get my monthly bills paid and have enough left over to put into a retirement fund, with a little more for a trip every 2 or 3 years.

        If she is making less then that then which of those three do I give up? Retirement? Life (doing something other than working)? Monthly bills?

        • s@piefed.worldOP
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          A shared life is probably cheaper than two separate lives. Two people paying for one home tends to be cheaper per person than one person paying for one home. If you both are going to an event, then you only pay for the gas that goes into one car instead of two cars. Insurances and taxation might vary from place to place as to if they are cheaper per person as a couple.

          She might also have a different lifestyle that is overall less expensive (ex. more frequently cooking at home instead of eating out, shopping at cheaper stores).

          • andrewta@lemmy.world
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            So please explain to me why it is bad for me to say that I do not want to lose one of those three?

            • Randomgal@lemmy.ca
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              1 month ago

              It’s not. It is just short-sighted and misses the point of relationships.

              Jobs change, tomorrow it might be you unemployed. A relationship is about working together as a team, over time and through changes, and about the valuable experience of sharing those experiences with another person.

              Otherwise why bother. Just get a hooker or find causal sex partners.

              • andrewta@lemmy.world
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                Yeah, times changed and things change. And yes, relationships are good. But why would I date somebody who makes so little money that they can barely feed themselves? All that does at the end of the day means I’m basically Support them and not really be able to add to my retirement fund or any of the other things that I’ve listed.

                Maybe in your country, the government supports you when you stop working. In the United States they don’t. You don’t have enough money to retire on and you are well and truly fucked. Please don’t even try to say oh but you have Social Security, Social Security with the way it’s going probably won’t exist by the time I go to retire. Even if it does exist, it’ll have so little money in there would be pointless anyways.

                Here’s a good question for you. Would you date somebody if you knew that you’re dating them would cause them serious financial hardship.?

                • Randomgal@lemmy.ca
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                  1 month ago

                  So you would be okay with being dumped the moment you lose your job or don’t make ‘enough’ money for the other person’s tastes? Happy even, for the other person?

                  It’s just incredibly naive to believe that relationships work like that. What is going to make it or break it is the every day interaction and how you relate to each other as humans. Not only what you are but what you can be, jobs come and go. You are selecting a person to share your days, your time outside work.

                  But sure, I hope your ‘if you’re poor you’re not enough for me’ sigma grindset mentality finds you happiness.

  • Emi@ani.social
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    I was never in a relationship and am very awkward in social interaction so I would probably want someone who will be patient with me and be alright with random info dumps/sharing YouTube videos about random tech and such.

  • Krudler@lemmy.world
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    Okay here’s another one and this does not describe all of my potential dating partners, but a big amount of them.

    People who have kids and declare that the kids are their whole lives; people who do not have kids, but talk about their dog like it’s their baby.

    It’s wonderful to love your kids, and it’s wonderful to bond with your dog, but to define your entire being around those is so unhealthy.

    Many parents whose kids are already in university, and don’t want much to do with them can often not let go. Often will spend their entire weekend fretting about their daughter or son who doesn’t even want to talk to them and won’t reply to their messages. Get on with life, lady. Get one actually.

    And I love dogs, and I’ve tried to set aside and compromise on the “my dog is my baby” mentality, but it always comes down to that person being so completely disconnected from their own emotional core, you can never actually know them.