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Why Do Some Guys Commit Too Fast?

A twentysomething's guide to taking your time and finding love

By Jason Ryan Dorsey Updated: Aug 20, 2009
Jason Ryan Dorsey
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I'm a Twentysomething. Many of my guy friends are about the same age and single. For a few of them, their lack of a significant other is absolutely unbearable -- and not just on Valentine's Day. These guys are constantly falling in love with women they barely know. One date, two dates, and then they use the "L" word after dessert and a movie.
What are they thinking?
I usually get a distressed phone call or text message a few days later when they can't understand why the woman they've just met (but know for sure they love) is not returning their calls. They've only left 41 messages -- and that's after another 16 hang-ups.
“Maybe their true love lost her cell phone?”
Maybe their true love lost her cell phone? No. Maybe they should drive by her house to talk personally? Heck no.
After a few more weeks and a dozen more whiny messages, these relationship-needy guys get the hint -- and so does the girl: stay away from guys who fall in love before the appetizer gets cold. For the next few weeks, my brokenhearted friends mope around like the world is over. They keep asking themselves why the relationship didn't work out. They thought she was perfect. They thought she would make a great wife. They thought she would make a great mother. Mother! They haven't even met her mother. They haven't spent a Thanksgiving dinner trapped at her parents' house to see what the family is really like. Yet they pine for this goddess of love whose middle name they do not know.
What has led these intelligent Twentysomething men to this position of neediness, clinginess, and recurring heartbreak? A few factors are at work.
Great expectations, instant gratification
Many Twentysomethings have grown up always getting what they want. They got the clothes they want. They got the car they want. And they're used to getting what they want immediately and on their own terms. They expect to walk into a coffee shop and get their triple-cream-mocha-latte with sprinkles made just for them. They also get their favorite DVDs delivered directly to their home, their emails forwarded to their phone, and up-to-the-minute weather bulletins displayed on their computer screen. They even have the option to get fresh groceries delivered, but they won't because they can't cook unless Mom helps.
In addition to being raised on instant everything, these consistently head-over-heels-in-love Twentysomethings have huge expectations.
“The real world hasn't always gone the way they wanted”
The real world hasn't always gone the way they wanted -- instead of making CEO in a year they make 4,000 copies in a day -- but they use their 12 credit cards to fill the self-esteem gap. The one area in particular where these frustrated Twentysomethings have not yielded their expectations is meeting that special someone, falling passionately in love, and spending a lifetime traveling the world while their kid's diapers are changed by a nanny (okay, so maybe that's my dream).
Now add to this mix of high expectations and instant gratification the reality that many Twentysomethings grew up spending little quality time with their parents. Instead, they learned how to have a healthy adult relationship watching a combination of He-Man and HBO. Luckily, their parents have a chance to make up for lost time, since these Twentysomethings still live with them. But mooching off Mom and Dad can only last so long, 35 at the max, which adds to the motivation to find that special someone who knows how to wash underwear without turning it pink. All of which leads back to them rushing into love on the first date and saying so on the third.
Advice for the lovelorn
Guys, if you're a Twentysomething and consistently heartbroken in three dates or less, here's some advice your friends are probably too nice to give you:
  • Raise your standards -- having a shadow doesn't mean she's perfect for you.
  • Start each relationship as friends.
  • Take it slow.
  • Recognize that someone out there is right for you.
The secret to keeping that special person is to not scare them off on the first date. Make her laugh, feel comfortable, and want to hang out with you again. Give her a call a few days later, not a few times the next day. Let the relationship takes its natural course.
If you're not feeling the love, move on. And if you are feeling the love, don't say it right away! Instead, invite her on another date. And maybe, just maybe, she'll tell you the L word first.
Leave a comment COMMENTS50 COMMENTS
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A Yahoo! Contributor
Easily the best article this little section of Yahoo - and worthy of a five-star rating. I don&#39;t know that I&#39;d agree with all of the ideals backing the solutions presented in Dorsey&#39;s book, but the presented in this brief article is excellent. Now, just how many twentysomethings are in search of love? It seems that the culture of gratification also ties into a culture of materialsim. Either we eschew traditional &#39;love&#39; in favor of short-term physical pursuits, or we pour all of our efforts back into workish endeavors that lend themselves to putting off life&#39;s priorities. Hopefully those who follow Dorsey&#39;s advice will find themselves in neither camp as they sprinkle greater doses of caution, stability and reality into their daily lives.
A Yahoo! Contributor
truthfully I agree with the advice given, especially the take it slow part...as a female myself, nothing creeps us out more than a clingy guy that declares his love after the second or third date.Actual love takes TIME. and it takes WORK, no matter what the circumstances.
A Yahoo! Contributor
I just ended a budding relationship with a guy for these exact reasons, only he was 36! It could have actually been a wonderful relationship, but he told me that he loved me on day 3 of us knowing each other. He was already talking about living together and wanting to get married as soon as possible. I told him that he didn&#39;t even know me yet, and I certainly did not share those same feelings that he had. I tried to tell him to back off but he didn&#39;t want to listen. The first time we split up I thought that maybe I had been a little premature and that if he would just give me some space we could make things work. We started seeing each other again, and that very same weekend when I told him that I didn&#39;t want him to come over because I had felt bad the previous evening, he demanded to know what was going on and why was I pushing him away. I told him then and there that it was OVER!! He still ended up messaging me about 12 times after that. That is just crazy!
A Yahoo! Contributor
I just ended a budding relationship with a guy for these exact reasons, only he was 36! It could have actually been a wonderful relationship, but he told me that he loved me on day 3 of us knowing each other. He was already talking about living together and wanting to get married as soon as possible. I told him that he didn&#39;t even know me yet, and I certainly did not share those same feelings that he had. I tried to tell him to back off but he didn&#39;t want to listen. The first time we split up I thought that maybe I had been a little premature and that if he would just give me some space we could make things work. We started seeing each other again, and that very same weekend when I told him that I didn&#39;t want him to come over because I had felt bad the previous evening, he demanded to know what was going on and why was I pushing him away. I told him then and there that it was OVER!! He still ended up messaging me about 12 times after that. That is just crazy!
Pamela
This is certainly something I have encountered, but unfortunately not just with the young men, I am 62 and a widow, so you know they are all above 55. One man who e-mail or IM only, will not talk on the phone. The other e mailed 3-7 times a day and when we talked on the phone he never wanted to get off. Both told me they were desperately in love with me, want to live with me and want to get married, before they know me. At my age I think they either want a &quot;Nurse with a Purse&quot;, or are totally insane. After telling them to SLOW DOWN several times,as in each e mail or IM, and having no results, I finally stop the communications. I am sure they have unresolved issues, but I am not a therapist.
A Yahoo! Contributor
I totally agree with your comments and advice. As a 33 year old single mother of 3 children I have also had such experiences. As Pam above has commented, it is not just the twentysomething men that are this way. I recently had a 40 year old tell me that he wanted to &quot;make love&quot; to me after the 3rd date. There is a big difference between love, and lust and I think that lots of people simply dont know the difference.
A Yahoo! Contributor
It&#39;s about time someone figured this out. So true, so true.. Great advice!
Shane
I fall too fast and i have scared a great woman away... I am a intense person.. when i get involved into anything i am in it 105% I have learned to hold back the emotions and take it slow... anything worth having is worth working for.. take is slow and things will develope it the are going too.. if not it was not ment to be and you have to keep going.. don&#39;t dwell in the past..... learn from your mistakes and keep living.. they is someone out there for everyone......
A Yahoo! Contributor
I have to disagree with the comment &quot; Give her a call a few days later, not a few times the next day&quot;. I&#39;m sure it&#39;s just me but if he does not call the next day (one call not 7) and waits a few days to call, I would think he was not interested in me and I would be turned off when he did end up calling a few days later.
A Yahoo! Contributor
Just for the record... women do the same thing as the men in this article do. I&#39;ve been in a relationship where the guy said he &quot;needed&quot; me (in his case he was afraid to be alone... now, he&#39;s married to the first girl who crossed his path after I left him... he wasn&#39;t interested in getting to know other people, he just wanted to be married so he wouldn&#39;t be alone). I believe that in any relationship, if you start off as friends or start dating each other (let things happen the way they are going to), you&#39;re chances of survival will outweigh the those of the &quot;need&quot; machines. Let&#39;s face it... if you &quot;need&quot; to be with someone it&#39;s unhealthy. No one &quot;needs&quot; to be with anyone, except those special few who can&#39;t think for themselves or be alone. There is nothing wrong with being by yourself. If you don&#39;t want to be alone, you can always call up friends and hang out with them or go visit family. There is a different between being self-sufficient and being alone (or loneliness). Every relationship should be an added bonus in your life. You&#39;re life should be complete or pretty close to complete before you decide whether or not you &quot;want&quot; to be with someone. A relationship should be an added bonus in your life. The proverbial cherry on the sundae of life. Remember, you weren&#39;t always in a boyfriend/girlfriend relationship. You&#39;ve had many other relationships (friends & family). Being in a relationship (of any kind) is a choice. It&#39;s part of life. Isn&#39;t it better for someone to choose to &quot;want&quot; to be with you, not &quot;need&quot; you to be there?
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