xenologer: (we dine)
[Error: unknown template qotd] Not monogamously-oriented. It's fine for people to have openly non-monogamous relationships. Just not ones involving me. Some people need non-monogamous relationships, but I shouldn't be dating them.

Poor problem-solvers. If my partner cannot sit and have a face-to-face discussion with me about our rough patches, and if they cannot do so rationally and productively... it's not worth it. I know people who get in real spitting cursing nasty fights with their partners, and I'm sorry. But no. If I have to fight with my guy because he's infuckingcapable of accomplishing actual problem-solving... he's not worth my time, and I shouldn't be dating him.

Hypocrisy. Not necessarily the hypocrisy itself, since everyone has moments where their reasoning is inconsistent, but being unbothered by hypocrisy is a dealbreaker. If the fact that my partner is grossly unfair when it comes to their expectations of others and of me... no. Not going to keep them in a position to shape my life. [livejournal.com profile] archmage_brian  and I have discussed the fact that most of the people we consider intolerably "stupid" are hypocrites (though the causality on that is still up for debate--whether they're hypocrites because they don't think well, or whether they don't think well because they're hypocrites). If I think someone is "stupid," I shouldn't be dating him. 

Lack of reflexivity. This is related to the hypocrisy thing, and the problem solving thing. Often it's the root problem that destroys both. When my partner cannot honestly evaluate his behavior (and I've only dated men, so it's always been "he"), there is no point in attempting to clear with him about our problems in the good problem-solver, conflict-resolution, women's-empowerment-circle sort of way. Because even if I say what I feel, what I'm thinking, and what would make me feel better, if I'm talking to someone who doesn't even pay attention to himself, how can I expect them to care what's going on with me? If I can't expect the same amount of thought and reasoning with regard to our relationship as I am putting into it... I shouldn't be dating him.

So I guess these (with the exception of the first) come down to problem-solving style. To me it's the most important compatibility issue with a couple. More than religion, more than sexual lifestyle, more than political background, more than whether they agree about whether to have kids (and I've faced all of these). All couples will not deal with these hitches, but all couples will have problems. People who deal with problems by slinging venomous personal insults should date someone who appreciates and responds to that--since someone out there has to dig it, right? People who verbalize and problem-solve should be dating other people oriented toward that as well, people who won't think they're too "confrontational" because they confront problems (as opposed to not confronting them, I guess).

I don't think problem-solving approaches can be mix/matched. Of course I'm inclined to think that my way is best (since if I didn't I wouldn't be doing it), but I'll be a good and fair reporter and say that--even assuming all problem-solving approaches are equal in worth--those approaches are often incompatible in very fundamental and essential ways. As a result, the couple that can't solve problems together is a couple that will have problems as long as they're together that don't get solved. And uh... hell no. If that's my future with a significant other, once again... I should not be dating him.

Incompatible problem-solving approach is my biggest dealbreaker. It's been a dealbreaker for me before, and I see no reason to stop ending relationships that come up against this roadblock. It's one of those things that cannot be resolved without at least one of the people involved changing the way they do things, and I don't believe in dating someone with a caveat like, "--as long as they change X." If I would have to change him to be fulfilled with him, I clearly don't really like him, do I?

So yeah. Insurmountable, in my experience. Couples should be able to solve their problems in a style that works for both of them, and if those styles are incompatible, someone has to change. And if I want to change him or he wants to change me so that we can be acceptable to one another... what the hell are we doing?
If you don't have an account you can create one now.
HTML doesn't work in the subject.
More info about formatting

If you are unable to use this captcha for any reason, please contact us by email at support@dreamwidth.org

November 2017

S M T W T F S
   1234
567891011
121314 15161718
19202122232425
2627282930  

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jun. 20th, 2025 07:36 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios