• Voroxpete
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    2 months ago

    OK, serious talk for anyone under thirty who is really relating to this; you don’t even know who you are before you hit your thirties.

    I’m dead fucking serious here. Under twenty, you’re basically still in the oven, and your twenties are basically spent figuring out who and what the fuck you are. Thirty is when the good shit starts. Thirty is when you start to finally have a grasp on who you are as a human being. Dating in your thirties is so much fucking better. You’re past the idiocy and the drama and you’re into the part where actual human adults learn to understand each other.

    Please, please get out of this mindset that anyone over thirty is an ancient crone. You’re not even out of the fucking tutorial yet.

    • PugJesus@lemmy.worldOP
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      2 months ago

      But my 20s are my most handsome years and now they’re over! In a paltry ten years I’ll have some gray hairs and creases! 😭

      • LordAmplifier@pawb.social
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        2 months ago

        tbh I kinda feel that. Maturity has its own kind of sexiness that I can appreciate, but that doesn’t mean that I can’t be bummed out about my early 20s soft femboi twink years having gone unappreciated.

        • Voroxpete
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          2 months ago

          You can always be bummed out about ageing. It’s OK to mourn the loss of an identity that you’d grown into. I’m getting my first grey hairs in, and its not easy seeing that in the mirror. It brings a lot of complicated feelings. Humanity has spent our entire existence grappling with the finality of time.

          But my wife? She loves those grey hairs. She thinks they make me look even sexier. Time is unrelenting, and brutal. But love doesn’t care about time. Love, and joy, and friendship and kindness… These things will happen at every point in your life, if you let them.

    • PM_Your_Nudes_Please@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      Yup, I didn’t find my wife until we were both in our 30’s, but we’re both happier than ever. Finding the right person takes time and probably a lot of rejection.

      Out of all the high school sweethearts who got married young, I only know one couple who is still together and doesn’t hate each other.

      • Voroxpete
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        2 months ago

        Yeah, most of the people I know who got into relationships young ended up getting out of those relationships sooner or later. I can only think of one exception. But the relationships I see people building in their middle age are so much stronger and healthier.

        • PM_Your_Nudes_Please@lemmy.world
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          2 months ago

          Yup, we tell people they’re adults at 18, but the reality is that you do a lot of growing and maturing in your 20’s. I likely wouldn’t want to date any of my high school girlfriends if we met up again today, simply because we’re radically different people than we were in high school. And the same goes for college years as well; I likely wouldn’t want to date any of the people I dated in my early 20’s.

    • SuDmit@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      2 months ago

      Almost 30 here, can relate. Still have no clue what the hell I am, what I really want to be myself and what and who I’d like to see around. Though as time goes, the less I really want or care to figure those out, so… Ughh.

    • TheFriar@lemm.ee
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      2 months ago

      Hell yes. Dating in my thirties has been 10x better than my dating attempts in my twenties. Not to mention with how the trend is moving with gen z’s dating/sex lives? For them dating in their thirties is going to be…like, their main dating life.

    • Sombyr@lemmy.zip
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      2 months ago

      As somebody in my mid twenties, I primarily date people in their 30s for this exact reason. I need somebody mature with their shit a little more figured out. Dating people my own age can be fun, but they don’t really have the maturity required to deal with somebody who’s gone through as much trauma and mental illness as I have.

      Case in point, my longest lasting relationship with somebody within 5 years of my age was 1 month long. My shortest lasting relationship with somebody older than me by more than that was 2 years.

    • Gormadt@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      2 months ago

      Way younger than 30

      Shit 30 isn’t even old

      I don’t feel indestructible like I did at 20 but damn do I feel great

      • xploit@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        5 years later… “How the fuck did I manage to sleep wrong again and hurt my neck/back”

          • xploit@lemmy.world
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            2 months ago

            Well, what can I say, either you’re lucky or I’m unlucky. I think it might be the latter all things considered

            • LwL@lemmy.world
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              2 months ago

              27, slept wrong once and couldn’t get up without supporting my head with my hand. Didn’t fully go away for 4 days. I’m scared of this happening again lol

          • xploit@lemmy.world
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            2 months ago

            I think that definitely part of the issue and not just for me. In the sense that I am more prone to this due to lack of activity recently, as opposed to activity related sores, which I found maybe annoying but not ruining my days.

  • Technus@lemmy.zip
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    2 months ago

    Big mood. Just had the third person tell me, “I’m just not feeling any romantic chemistry” in as many weeks.

    Wondering if it’s time to give up.

        • Rekorse
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          2 months ago

          Well give it some thought, why be disappointed it didnt work out with people you weren’t compatible with?

          Give yourself some credit, you aren’t being rejected in the way you think.

    • itsnicodegallo@lemm.ee
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      2 months ago

      Not cause of your age. I got told that all the time in high school! And college. And after college.

      Anyway, I eventually got a partner, but having a consecutive string of meeting romantically incompatible potential partners is not age dependent.

    • evidences@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      Just to commiserate my neighbor once asked me if I was going to die alone. In her defense she was high and hasn’t asked since. That’s how it’s going for me.

    • pelespirit
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      2 months ago

      Have you heard of “sexy indifference”? A relative of mine mentioned it. It kind of makes sense. If you don’t seem desperate or greedy for a relationship, you’ll be more fun to be around and won’t care as much either, because you have your own thing going on.

      • Rekorse
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        2 months ago

        Most people just say don’t look desperate.

    • phdepressed
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      2 months ago

      Get a prenup if that’s your only issue. Married taxes are better, and being auto beneficiary is also useful (e.g. social security survivors benefits). With the right person insurances and credit score/limit are better. Sometimes just hospital visits require being a relation. Immigration for coming to or going to another country is easier.

      Marriage is showing your commitment legally/bureaucratically so that your bond isn’t questioned easily both individuals also gain financial benefits from it.

  • meep_launcher@lemm.ee
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    2 months ago

    As it stands now, you could give me an amazing person to be with who would check all my boxes and would be a perfect match

    And I would break up with them anyway in about 6 months.

    I have a VERY avoidant attachment style that I need to shake before I can get into anything.

    • meep_launcher@lemm.ee
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      2 months ago

      If it helps anyone in a similar situation, after a shroom trip two weeks ago, I realized my issue is a deeeeeep seated shame- my “Mr. Ethics” vibe is a facade and if you cross examined me long enough you would find out I’m rotten to the core.

      I know this is false, but it’s so engrained it’s hard to shake.

      In relationships, I’ll feel very anxious because I feel like “the jig is gonna be up soon, they’ll see you for who you are, you will hurt them” so I’ll usually drop and run.

      4 hours later

      Also I started this comment a few hours ago, but since have chatted with my friend over beers and he told me about “parts therapy”. Basically acknowledge there are many parts to you, there is no single you. There is the “superhero” you, the “deviant” you, the “artist”, the “lover”, etc. So in trying to identify this core I believe is rotten, I came up with “the sleezy politician”. I feel like I can manipulate people like hell- I can put on the charm to get what I want or to avoid risk. I can think of times when this version of me was necessary as a survival mechanism. Highschool was clique-city, and the theater department was a social minefield. My family had a heavy political side. Growing up I felt like I had a superpower to lie and get away with anything, it took me a while to realize it wasn’t a superpower but would hurt me so much more later. All that I learned through that is something I now need to undo, and that is to be comfortable with myself and not care about how others see me.

      Ooof sorry I kinda word vomited but thanks for being my prep for tomorrow’s therapy sesh.

      • daggermoon@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        So if I understand you correctly, I don’t hate myself. I hate only one part of myself? I think I’ve slowly been coming to that conclusion. I’ve been trying to be kinder to myself overall lately.

        • meep_launcher@lemm.ee
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          2 months ago

          Basically, but the next step is to forgive and love that part as well. That part of you developed for a reason. If you can name what that part of you is, you might be able to look back to a time where that part of you was what was helping you. Now that you are living a different life, the game is to tell that part to step to the side and let another part of you take the wheel.

          At least that’s what a gleaned from my conversation last night.

  • lightnsfw@reddthat.com
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    2 months ago

    I’m past thirty and I learned to ve comfortable alone a long time ago. For me to get married or even just start a relationship with someone they’d have to drastically improve my life. It’s very unlikely some random assigned by the government is going to do that.