My girlfriend and I agreed that one day a week we will go out alone to meet new people.
My girlfriend is constantly booked for dates, either from her online profile or from going out and meeting people
You know that's two things, right? One is how many times a week she goes out, the other is how much time she's doing online networking or in-person networking.
How do you do your networking?
Has anyone closed a relationship out of dating frustrations? When I brought this up last night she was receptive, but thinks it would be counter productive to my/our goals. And I agree with that, but at the same time I can't handle not having any of the fun!
It isn't a race. And you each will have your own dating style.
Poly has a way of shining a light on different things.
Are you still making time to date each other? Or is she all distracted with the new poly dating and taking courting you for granted?
How is your social circle? Do you have one of your own? Or did you just piggyback on her friend circle? Do you need to invest in building that first, rather than dating? Because if you like axe throwing or mini golf or bowling with a buddy, and you happen to meet people doing that ther, great. If not, also great. You had some friend hang-out time.
When I am out at the bar I don't really get any eye contact. I end up sitting at the bar awkwardly alone. I can't even strike up a conversation with the bartender.
In my head, I flipped that. "I sit awkwardly alone in the bar, so I don't get eye contact from others." Which led me to wonder... what's your body language like? And if you aren't comfortable meeting people there and don't enjoy that environment, why be at a bar?
What do you when not working? you could do THAT to meet people. I like gardening, cooking, reading. So I'd try to meet new people in community garden volunteering, taking cooking classes, or joining a book group at a bookstore or attending library events.
I don't think my gf would think it was fair if I went out more than she does.
What would happen if she thinks that? Why would it be a problem?
Right now, you don't think it's "fair" she seems to schedule lots of dates with ease.
Take a step back and think on it. Isn't it
already fair that "both get to date other people," and how it goes is up to them?
Why are you keeping some kind of "fairness scorecard" in your head? It's ok to envy her skills, if she has some social skills you covet for yourself. You could do something about it, and grow your own skills.
HOW you each approach dating, WHERE you each go meet people, WHAT each of your social skills are for that, and each of your success at it... that part will vary because
you aren't copies of each other.
Like, if one kid finished a math quiz in 10 minutes, and another kid needed 20 or 30, so what? They aren't the same person and don't have the same math skills right now.
If she gets enough dating action with online profiles and going out one day a week, and you need more time to get results, or don't like the online thing, could you invest more time that you need do date in YOUR style? You are the one in charge of your calendar, right?
There are two sets of skills.
- Hinge skills -- being the person with more than one sweetie.
- Metamour skills -- dealing with your partner having other partners.
So what if she's good at the first set? How good she is with the second set remains to be seen.
And then, you also have to develop both sets of skills.
GG