Navigating the Pursuit, Capture, and Cherishing of Men's and Women's Hearts(tm)
A discussion of the best ways to locate, romance, and maintain relationships with, single women or men.

Presented by The Meeting Game Salon, sponsor of SF Bay Area singles events since 1999.
"Good laughs; fascinating people."(tm) www.MeetingGame.com


Contents Copyright? 2008 Journey Enterprises


Decipher the Signals You're Getting
Take Control of the Signals You're Sending

For the past 3 years, a rotating group of single men and single women has met every week to discuss how best to locate, identify, pursue, and capture the objects of our affection; to learn to identify and control the signals we're sending to – and better decipher the signals we're getting from – members of the opposite sex. Now, while this discussion group, Invincible in Love(tm), is on hiatus, the conversation moves to the internet.

My name is Joel Koosed, the founder of The Meeting Game Salon and facilitator of this discussion. Every week or so, I'll post one of 60 Principles I've identified that I think are worthy of your consideration in your quest to meet, to have, and to hold that special someone.

I come to this discussion as a fellow seeker on the path. I want to share with you the dating and relationship concepts I’ve developed or encountered as a result of my experience, my relationships, my reading, and the facilitation of our dating discussion group; to invite you to share your dating and relationship wisdom with others; and, when our weekly discussion group reconvenes, to invite you to join us in person for further exploration of this fascinating topic.

Meanwhile, I hope you can join us at one of our weekly Bay Area singles events where you can meet some of the most interesting single women and men in northern California! See our schedule of what's on tap for this week at The Meeting Game Salon.

I invite you to add your comments – positive or negative – and to contribute your own experiences, beliefs, and questions on this, a subject so near to the hearts of single men and single women everywhere. (Click Comments, below, to see what others have said, and/or to add your comments or questions.)


Sunday, September 7, 2008

Principle #6. Nurture your partner; set your limits; teach your partner how to treat you.


Men:
In order to properly nurture your partner, to come from a position of strength and power, you must first be able to set your limits — to set and maintain appropriate boundaries. (“Boundaries protect us by keeping our definition of ourselves separate from the ideas others have about us.” — Mapping the Terrain of the Heart by Stephen Goldbart and David Wallin
).

In other words, if what someone else thinks about you becomes more important to you than your feelings about yourself, you'll find getting your needs met in your relationship more difficult than it needs to be, and your partner increasingly less respectful of you and less satisfied with you.

Women: In order to nurture your partner without feeling resentful, you must be aware of your limits — and not extend yourself beyond them. Negotiate at the time of the transaction if there’s something you want or expect in return. Don’t keep a "secret deal” going — don’t do things for your partner for which you expect repayment, unless you negotiate the repayment at the time the “debt” is incurred.

Be mindful that members of each gender sometimes have a secret deal going on — men sometimes expecting sexual favors early in a "relationship" in return for money they've spent, for instance. Many women, having been brought up in a culture in which getting their needs met directly was, to say the least, not encouraged, may do things for a man in the course of their relationship for which he is then, unbeknownst to him, “indebted."

If and when a man is presented with such a “bill” it’s an opportunity to practice nurturing his partner, setting his limits, and teaching his partner how to treat him.

One man, having attended one too many boring – and regularly recurring – afternoon barbecues with the in-laws, in response to the latest invitation told his wife he didn't feel like going, whereupon he was met with her insistence that he accompany her, and presented with a long list of all the things she had done for him – to her way of thinking, running up a "debt" which was apparently payable on demand (a debt he didn't even know he had!).

Without the ability to set his boundaries in a healthy and flexible manner, this man may have been subjected to feeling guilty that, yes his wife did do lots of nice things for him, and maybe he should really go to the event even though he didn't want to (and even though he knew that she didn't really enjoy those gatherings, either!).

A man with healthy, flexible boundaries may have mustered the ability to respond in a loving manner, "Sweetheart, I'm sorry to disappoint you this time. I'm happy to visit your family occasionally, but not this weekend. I didn't know you were doing all those wonderful things for me in exchange for some expectations you had about me. I hope you'll let me know when you do things like that for me in the future so we can both be clear that you're doing me a favor for which you expect to be repaid." Or, some other variation on this basic,
“I’m sorry, sweetheart; I didn’t understand that when you did ____ you were expecting me to _____. I wish you'd have asked me at the time if that’s a trade I was willing to make.”)

(Then, of course, if he wanted to have sex with his wife that week, he'd have got up and gone to the barbecue!)

This "secret score keeping" often presents itself in people of either gender who feel uncomfortable with pursuing their own agendas in a more direct fashion; though men in our society are encouraged to get their needs met directly and women have often been discouraged from pursuing that course.

Many, if not most, women have encountered men who have their own secret deal going – one of the most common (in both senses of the word) being, "I'll buy you dinner and you sleep with me." This works best, of course, on women who are uncomfortable setting their boundaries.

A woman with healthy, flexible boundaries might respond to an insistent man, "It's been a lovely evening. Thanks again for dinner. Good night!" Whereas a woman without healthy boundaries may be more likely to give in to whatever psychological games such a predatory man might employ. (Thankfully all men aren't like that, are they? Are they...?)

Teach Your Partner How to Treat You
Simply put, if you let people walk all over you, many of them will. Setting your boundaries early lets people know you are someone who doesn't put up with that type of treatment. Treat yourself and your needs with respect and you'll command respect from others – and attract them into your life. (And if you lose some people along the way who don't consider your needs to be just as important as theirs, well, you won't have lost much.)

From who pays, to negotiating the safe sex talk, to asking for a pre-nup, boundaries come into play. Best to get started early in the relationship – once people get used to mistreating you they really get upset when you insist they stop!

Have you encountered dates or relationship partners that have a "Secret Deal" going on? Do you have an experience where you recall having to set your boundaries? We'd like to hear about your experiences. Click "Comments," below to see what others have said, and/or to add your comments. (Check out John Bradshaw's Bradshaw: On the Family for an eye-opening, life-transforming book on boundaries.)

And, if you, like many of us, find yourself between relationships, you can meet single women and men at one of our innovative Bay Area singles events this week. We never leave conversation to chance!(tm) Click to see our schedule: The Meeting Game Salon.



1 comment:

Anonymous said...

When I hear the stereotype of men wanting first and foremost to get their sexual needs met, I think of a fraternity party. I certainly like "good sex" when it's good, which in my experience takes some time, chemistry, and trust to share or make happen. I can say that I have NEVER treated a woman to dinner and, or, a concert as downpayment on 'getting off' later with her help. It's not part of my conditioning and not how I'm wired. I have looked forward to making love with someone I'm already in a close relationship with, but in that case the love making has already started during dinner or walking together down the street. I can't plan sex with a relative stranger no matter how attracted to her I might feel.

As for boundaries and emotional limits, I have a bottom line that says I want to be respected. If a woman wants to become enmeshed in an exchange of insults, I don't go there. I'm too old for that stuff, and I no longer think that absorbing digs without flinching makes me a feminist. Yeah, share resentments and all the rest, but kindness is crucial -- and so easy, really. I stay away from guilt inducers now that I'm "older" and don't feel as responsible for what transpires in a relationship.

I still think of myself as a feminist man, but that no longer includes accomodating women who seem bent on emulating the worst in men.