MNAus
Well-Known Member
I think some of the issue might be that you feel you have missed the boat. That there was a time to find a partner and now that time is over. So let's correct that.
Different people have different relationship patterns. Some barely spend a day without a relationship, some are happy on their own for their whole life. But importantly, that relationship thing starts pretty young. Teens already have relationships. So either everyone picks their life partner aged 14 (lovely for you if you did!) and you've missed the bus as you fear ORRRRRR (and let's be fair this is what actually happens) all those people you see in relationships started that relationship when the majority of the other people were already in a relationship.
I couldn't give an accurate stat on how many people end up with their first highschool sweetheart, but I would hazard a guess that 90%+ don't. So At least 90% of the people on the planet started a special relationship in a situation where all the guys/girls they like turned out to already have a relationship. Yet there they are, in a relationship, despite that. It would appear that there is no "missed the train" time.
You seem to see things as pretty transactional on relationships, so let's use a transactional analogy. You are coming from a direction like you're a gambler addicted to scratch cards that is spending their last A$50 on cards. As you scratch each one off and the jackpot doesn't show, you get more desperate, because you think "I've only got x cards left". Which just doesn't bear any resemblance to reality on this subject.
So it might take some time to find someone who is a) single, b) likes you, c) you like and d) is in mindset and position to have a relationship. But that's the same for absolutely everyone. In the meantime you have two choices: treat these interactions like scratch cards or b) enjoy genuine company. It would surely be a shame to waste time on the former?
Different people have different relationship patterns. Some barely spend a day without a relationship, some are happy on their own for their whole life. But importantly, that relationship thing starts pretty young. Teens already have relationships. So either everyone picks their life partner aged 14 (lovely for you if you did!) and you've missed the bus as you fear ORRRRRR (and let's be fair this is what actually happens) all those people you see in relationships started that relationship when the majority of the other people were already in a relationship.
I couldn't give an accurate stat on how many people end up with their first highschool sweetheart, but I would hazard a guess that 90%+ don't. So At least 90% of the people on the planet started a special relationship in a situation where all the guys/girls they like turned out to already have a relationship. Yet there they are, in a relationship, despite that. It would appear that there is no "missed the train" time.
You seem to see things as pretty transactional on relationships, so let's use a transactional analogy. You are coming from a direction like you're a gambler addicted to scratch cards that is spending their last A$50 on cards. As you scratch each one off and the jackpot doesn't show, you get more desperate, because you think "I've only got x cards left". Which just doesn't bear any resemblance to reality on this subject.
So it might take some time to find someone who is a) single, b) likes you, c) you like and d) is in mindset and position to have a relationship. But that's the same for absolutely everyone. In the meantime you have two choices: treat these interactions like scratch cards or b) enjoy genuine company. It would surely be a shame to waste time on the former?