Eddy1832 Posted April 4, 2019 Share Posted April 4, 2019 Why is it the moment someone breaks up with someone, they immediately start searching for a replacement? Do you/they need validation at all times? Are you insecure by yourself? Link to post Share on other sites
Garcon1986 Posted April 4, 2019 Share Posted April 4, 2019 Different people have different belief systems, that's all there is to it. As for me, I feel happier in a couple, but I am pretty bloody happy by myself, with the blokes, or with the ladies. That's the healthiest combination. Life is too bloody short to spend any significant amount of time being unhappy. Be really happy with yourself. Be happy around others. Know where you feel the most belonging. 2 Link to post Share on other sites
basil67 Posted April 4, 2019 Share Posted April 4, 2019 (edited) In some cases, instead of giving themselves time to recover, they are using other people to soothe the hole in their heart. I'm seeing it done in equal measures by both men and women. In other cases, the person is already very ready to move on by the time the relationship ends. I met my now husband when I was not long out of my previous marriage. I wasn't looking, but he was right and I wasn't prepared to walk past a great new option when I was feeling so great post divorce. Edited April 4, 2019 by basil67 3 Link to post Share on other sites
Blind-Sided Posted April 4, 2019 Share Posted April 4, 2019 ................ Are you insecure by yourself? Is this even a real thread? It feels like an attack on everyone. BUT............... It's human nature to be bonded to someone !! PERIOD ! 4 Link to post Share on other sites
alphamale Posted April 4, 2019 Share Posted April 4, 2019 I love being single 2 Link to post Share on other sites
amaysngrace Posted April 4, 2019 Share Posted April 4, 2019 Some people aren’t okay being alone. They’d rather focus outward than inward and being busy keeps them from ever really growing imo. Not everyone is that way but enough to make it noticeable when you come across them. Link to post Share on other sites
Blanco Posted April 4, 2019 Share Posted April 4, 2019 Patterns play a role in it, too, I think. After years of doing things a certain way, it's instinctual to respond to certain situations in the same way. After a breakup, I tend to stay single for a long time, often too long, because it's just how I've been after every breakup in my life. A couple of the women I've dated in the past are sort of the opposite, where if they get out of a relationship, they're right back out there looking for companionship. I actually asked one about it long after we broke up. She doesn't have many close friendships, so she's always just defaulted to the person she was dating to be the person she tells day-to-day things to. So when she doesn't have that, there's a more noticeable void than just the romantic relationship; she doesn't have that social circle she can share the daily stuff with, so she always just gets back out there and finds a new guy. Getting back to me, I would say despite some struggles, I'm pretty content with life, even though I'm single. But there are absolutely things I feel lacking from it because I don't have a partner. Friends and family are invaluable, but there's just something different about sharing life's little victories with a romantic partner. There's something invigorating about a Friday night out for a meal, drinks, and conversation with the person you love. There's an indescribable comfort in thinking at different points of any given day that there's that special someone out there probably thinking of you. 3 Link to post Share on other sites
CautiouslyOptimistic Posted April 4, 2019 Share Posted April 4, 2019 People can be single and happy. People can be single and unhappy. Human beings were designed for companionship, so it's not weird that some people don't like to be single. 3 Link to post Share on other sites
preraph Posted April 4, 2019 Share Posted April 4, 2019 Just like everything else, a person's need to be "with" another person is on a scale from low to high. There are people who want to be with another person so bad they will be with a total loser rather than be alone. And the person who does this may be an especially sweet nice person, but there's some weakness there making them that extreme that they just can't be alone at all and make bad choices. Most people are somewhere in the middle of the scale. They want to find someone they can make a family with and have a partner. Understandable. I just think it takes two really laid back flexible people to make a happy couple, because what I've mostly seen is one laid back flexible person with someone abrasive and uncooperative who most people wouldn't put up with. It's those cases (which are mostly what I've seen) that just make me scratch my head why bother at all if your life is just a struggle like that. But some would rather not be alone, period. And then some are just as happy alone as not. That's pretty much me. I'm social, but also need a lot of alone time and very independent and not at all ready to compromise much on anything. My mother said I was set in my ways by age 18. Example: I'd be happier alone than to fall in love with and move in together with someone who wanted to put his deer antlers or football memorabilia on my wall or put a leather recliner in my sixties modern living room in front of a huge tv. In fact, this type thing does come up. I had a LDR with someone I had met years ago, and we got down to the nitty gritty talking about ever trying to be in one place and living together, and it came down to neither of us wanted to live in the other's city ever (for him ever again) and trying to find a location we could both agree on. And then he couldn't see having anything but brown wood furniture in a house, and two rooms of mine have ornate ebony antique wood. People who have to have big discussions on this type stuff are better off living alone or with a roommate they already have brainwashed to their way of thinking. Negotiating makes me weary, when I could just be doing what I want all the time instead. Even when I was young, I used to say my ideal living situation with a man would be a huge mansion with two separate wings where we both set it up as we wished and could just sometimes eat dinner together and be together when we wanted. Unfortunately, never got rich so that that was a possibility. On top of all that, and I should have prefaced with it, when young, hormones drive both men and women to find a partner. I was really wanting one in my 20s and early 30s, but at the same time, not necessarily for marriage, just a relationship. 3 Link to post Share on other sites
Happy Lemming Posted April 4, 2019 Share Posted April 4, 2019 Why is it the moment someone breaks up with someone, they immediately start searching for a replacement? Do you/they need validation at all times? Are you insecure by yourself? Oh this one is easy to answer... Usually, when a woman dumps me, she no longer wants to have sex with me. Since, I enjoy sex I will immediately go out and try to find her replacement. It has nothing to do with being insecure or some type of validation, it is simply biology. 1 Link to post Share on other sites
Eternal Sunshine Posted April 4, 2019 Share Posted April 4, 2019 I love being single. I love spending time alone. Since I am an outlier, I spent a very long time pushing myself to be in relationships. I was miserable in every single one. I would count down the days and hours till I can be alone again. About a year ago, I finally accepted myself. I no longer have an OLD profile and don't look in any way. I am happier than I have ever been. I wish there are more people like me so that I can have friends I truly relate to. All my friends are obsessed with their romantic lives. 3 Link to post Share on other sites
hotpotato Posted April 4, 2019 Share Posted April 4, 2019 It can be very difficult to go from dating to single overnight. They've grown accustomed to being with someone-dinners, movies, sex, etc. Many times a dumper will go directly to the next person. It's a way to avoid depression. Other than that, yes, people can for sure be happy single. I think imma little too happy being single. 2 Link to post Share on other sites
JustGettingBy Posted April 5, 2019 Share Posted April 5, 2019 We are driven, biologically, to seek out a mate in order to have our species survive. Until humans either find a way to restructure our brains via surgery to avoid this pain, or learn how to reproduce asexually, we're stuck with this as part of human nature. Link to post Share on other sites
vinnyfl Posted April 5, 2019 Share Posted April 5, 2019 Single people can be happy. Problem is that no one is there to see it. 3 Link to post Share on other sites
Artdeco Posted April 5, 2019 Share Posted April 5, 2019 I loved being single, and lived that way for a long long time. I hardly ever thought about actively changing my status. I simply liked my life too much. Now that I’m in a relationship, I sometimes long for those days. 1 Link to post Share on other sites
CautiouslyOptimistic Posted April 5, 2019 Share Posted April 5, 2019 Single people can be happy. Problem is that no one is there to see it. Ha! Good point! Link to post Share on other sites
John101 Posted April 5, 2019 Share Posted April 5, 2019 People can be single and happy. People can be single and unhappy. Human beings were designed for companionship, so it's not weird that some people don't like to be single. People can be in a relationship and happy. People can be in a relationship and unhappy. Many, like myself have not found the right person for a long-term relationship. 2 Link to post Share on other sites
OatsAndHall Posted April 5, 2019 Share Posted April 5, 2019 I'm completely comfortable being single. I enjoy being in a good relationship but I don't need it. 1 Link to post Share on other sites
oceanblue12 Posted April 6, 2019 Share Posted April 6, 2019 I think that companionship matters for a variety of reasons: togetherness, having someone to confide in, romance, having someone to lean on, etc 1 Link to post Share on other sites
Mysterio Posted April 6, 2019 Share Posted April 6, 2019 For me being single is no problem. Dating is another thing. I think I am a little bit more happy in a relationship when I am getting physical affection. I feel restless without it. So for me. Until then. I will always lean towards being in romantic relationship over just being single. 1 Link to post Share on other sites
chillii Posted April 6, 2019 Share Posted April 6, 2019 Ha! Good point! Haaa yeah , that's a funny one really and how trues too actually. l remember thinking to myself a few times back when , shame really , people can have no idea how l live because there's no one else here to see it . Link to post Share on other sites
elaine567 Posted April 6, 2019 Share Posted April 6, 2019 I think many can be single and happy, but they need to have a certain personality to be truly happy. I think many tolerate single-hood and whilst they are not crying every day over being alone , they would in a perfect world prefer to have a partner to share their life with. 5 Link to post Share on other sites
CautiouslyOptimistic Posted April 6, 2019 Share Posted April 6, 2019 I think many can be single and happy, but they need to have a certain personality to be truly happy. I think many tolerate single-hood and whilst they are not crying every day over being alone , they would in a perfect world prefer to have a partner to share their life with. It totally comes to personality, busyness, and sex drive. 2 Link to post Share on other sites
chillii Posted April 6, 2019 Share Posted April 6, 2019 I think that companionship matters for a variety of reasons: togetherness, having someone to confide in, romance, having someone to lean on, etc Yeah , of course it's a no brainer really. Even most of the animal kindom have a mate in life, but eh , some do just eat and run though too. Funny really , same with humans. Personally l can well understand people choosing to stay single though it's often so much easier in so many ways. But l can understand most people preferring a mate in life too. Me l def; mostly prefer being with someone, but l also have always struggled with it a bit too, even now , 50s , l still do. Space l need and still hating having to answer to someone, or explain what your doing , things like that l do still struggle with. But if your living as two , even no matter how easy going things are, stuff like that is still just mostly unavoidable. 1 Link to post Share on other sites
todreaminblue Posted April 6, 2019 Share Posted April 6, 2019 (edited) i think you have to love your life whether single or together....might seem funny coming from me or hypocritical considering i have tried to end mine more than once.....i haven't wanted to end my life over loneliness though....i recharge my batteries with alone time.....my reasons were all about worth and not feeling like i deserve to or should be here.... but enough of that i know we get one chance just one to live our life on earth.....its a gift ....and we should love our lives passionately...to live with passion and gratefulness...regardless of single or coupled...status....i think when we start to covet what others have be that a person or object or money or whatever...is when our lives ...becomes less lovely.....less happy...deb Edited April 6, 2019 by todreaminblue 1 Link to post Share on other sites
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