keywor here is
We all have that friend: the beautiful, intelligent, driven woman wholike Katherine Heigl in every rom-comcan't find a decent date. Every guy she goes out with is an asshole; she consistently dates "below" her league, and she's on the verge of giving up on a committed relationship altogether.
below her league..
so uhm, a successful woman wants a successful man, correct?
so a housewive should go for an houseman?
and let's throw everything about romance in the closet?
frankly i'm more inclined to believe that simply there are
1) people interested in stability (family is given the prio): this type of person settle early (or not too late) and invest a lot in his personal life/ties
2) people (like me) more interested in career, that settle late (if ever) hoping to be able to recoup in their late years what they had left behind while younger in order to achieve career result..
issue with category two people, is that after achieving some SOLID result from the work pov, they feel entitled to expect to find a match with whom they can not only share mutual affection, but work achievments//dedication...
hello, a relation is just like a blanket, one that is barely enough to handle the whole family and that stretches at time to accomodate a new family member, but it's ultimately a tight fit for the member of the family itself..
so if you are two, the blanket is enough for two, if you have a children, it will be enough to accomodate the three of you.. but if you are two, and you want to have a blanket that can cover fully two half of the couple reaching the ground from both sides... well that won't really do..
this woman is amazing, etc etc I understand... but you know what's common for career-runner? working long hours, sacrificing the week-end, being sent around the company site to "bring his positive effects".. sure they (we) get paid more, but the downside is that
1) if we are in a relation, we expect (hope) that the our SO won't mind our lack of presence during period, or is aware that we might need to change city for a promotion//assignment for a few years, etc.. and frankly this is asking a LOT really
2) if we are not in a relation, we hope to fall romanticly endlessly in love, only to realize that when you are in a date, chirping around with a potential SO, having your flirting interrupted by call on your work phone that lasts 20-40 minutes, or askng a potential SO to "postpone" a date because something urgent (work) came up that will force you to stay awake.. that really won't do..
3) we assume that since we have achieved something, we expect that our SO must be equally amazing, often ignoring that they are amazing after their own fashion which might or might not include at all work achievements, salary, etc...
I'm speaking as I think I'll be in her situation 10 or so years from now, and I hope that I won't be that much of a problem child..
we all make choices, and we make choices consciously.. I preferred to assign a lot of priority to my work, while giving little priority to my own personal life... will I regret it later? maybe.. should I feel entitled to whine about it? not really..
just my two (loooooong) cents
