Tag Archives: dating advice
Sofia Richie and Scott Disick's romance is the 'real deal' and 'they're in love' says her best pal Vas J Morgan
SOFIA Richie and Scott Disick’s romance is the “real deal” and “they’re in love”, according to her best pal Vas J Morgan.
Celebs Go Dating star Vas revealed he leaned on loved-up best pal Sofia, who is the daughter of Lionel Richie, for advice before signing up to the E4 dating show.
Vas J Morgan has praised his pal Sofia Richie for her romance with Scott Disick as he revealed he got advise from her before doing Celebs Go Dating
In an exclusive chat with the Sun Online, Vas said: “When I came into this situation, actually Sofia was the first person I asked for advice. She’s so good at being in a relationship and so good at sharing her life.
“She gave me the best advice. She said, ‘Do you know what, be yourself.’
“‘Don’t be who they want you to be. Be yourself because if they don’t love you for you, they don’t deserve you.’
“And that’s how she takes herself into her own relationships.
Scott, 35, and Sofia, 20, got together in 2017
The loved-up pair are the real deal, says her best pal Vas
Vas told Sofia he had never been on dates before, and she told him to be himself on the show
“So she’s just being herself, she’s young and having fun, but she’s in love. I wish her and Scott all the best because she is in love.”
The former Towie star who has since launched his celeb-favourite restaurant Chrome in Essex, spoke to Sofia for dating advice.
The blogger has also launched his magazine Tings London – which had Sofia as the first cover star.
He said of his pal: “She’s so young, and she’s a loyal, beautiful person. I rang her and said I’m doing this show, Celebs Go Dating, and I’ve never been on dates.”
Speaking about his ideal love match, Vas said: “I’m looking for someone who is funny, who gets my energy and gets my banter.”
Scott Disick has shared a cheeky snap of Sofia Richie’s bump while on holiday in Greece
Sofia,2 and 35-year-old Scott‘ first got together in 2017 are back on track after they split up briefly last June.
They went on a romantic trip to Greece just a few weeks after they reconciled in July.
Sofia dumped Scott following claims he was getting cosy with other women at Kanye West’s album launch.
Soon after, The Sun Online revealed how Scott was “begging Sofia to forgive him.“
Scott has three children with ex Kourtney Kardashian, Mason, eight, Penelope, six, and three-year-old Reign.
Scott shot to fame on Keeping Up with the Kardashians – he has three kids with ex Kourtney Kardashian
Scott and Kourtney co-parent their children
Got a story? email digishowbiz@the-sun.co.uk or call us direct on 02077824220.
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Her Instagram account Bye Felipe exposes online-dating creeps; now she's turned it into a book
If you’ve been online dating for more than a hot second, you’ve probably encountered a range of joys and horrors. On the positive side, dating apps have introduced me to some pretty great men. On the depressing side, I’ve also matched with men who have said inappropriate things to me, sometimes before we ever met. At worst, I’ve – briefly, thankfully – feared for my safety.
Such is the burden of being a woman, looking for connection online. Alexandra Tweten knows this well. Her popular Instagram account, Bye Felipe, outs creeps for their bad online-dating behaviors. For the unfamiliar, she posts screenshots submitted by women who have been harassed by men on dating apps. Propositioning for sex, lashing out when they’re turned down, sending pictures of the male anatomy (or requests for racy photos) and calling women a slew of names are all-too-common online-dating scenarios. Since Bye Felipe’s creation four years ago, Tweten has amassed nearly a half-million followers.
A journalism major, Tweten never planned to be a “Feminist Tinder-Creep-Busting Web Vigilante” with a popular social media account, as she was originally hailed in 2014. Now, she’s back to her writing roots, exploring online dating and lending her best wisdom in a new “Bye Felipe” book, which is an ode to understanding and taking it all in stride.
I asked her why she originally started Bye Felipe, how she got the idea for a book and how online-daters can maintain a positive attitude through all the ups and downs.
Q: Where did you originally get the idea for Bye Felipe?
A: It was October 2014, and I was in a Facebook group for women in L.A. One woman posted a screenshot of a message she had received on OkCupid. She didn’t respond, and 12 hours later, she’d gotten a second message, (an insulting expletive).
I thought it was funny, and I’d gotten messages that felt similar before. There was one guy who’d messaged me for months and months, over and over, on OkCupid. When I finally turned him down, he said, “Why would you even respond?” You learn that you can’t not respond; they freak out. But if you do respond, they also yell at you. You can’t win.
So, we had an inside joke in the Facebook group that when something like that happens, we’d say, “Bye Felipe” – which is a play on “Bye, Felicia.” I started the Instagram as a joke just for me and my friends to make fun of these guys. Two weeks later, Olga Khazan at the Atlantic found it and asked to interview me. After her article came out, it blew up from there.
Q: Tell me about some of your personal online-dating horror stories. How did it compare to other women’s?
A: When I first started online dating, I received a handful of hostile messages. And the first thing I thought was, Is he a stalker? Is he going to come after me? You just don’t know. It can be scary putting yourself out there on the internet. I got a lot of thank-you messages from women who don’t feel so alone in that experience now. I felt the same way when I saw the messages that other women were receiving.
Q: Do you think “toxic masculinity” plays into the Bye Felipe phenomenon?
A: Yes. It’s definitely related. But we probably need a nicer name for it. Men hear the phrase “toxic masculinity” and think, “Wait, we’re not allowed to be men anymore?” That’s not what we’re saying when we talk about toxic masculinity. It’s really about redefining the social norms of what it means to be traditionally masculine.
Currently, “real men” aren’t generally allowed to step outside of a very rigid set of gender roles that basically say they should be strong, dominant and unemotional. Anger, violence and aggression are some of the only approved emotions men are allowed to have. They can’t be sensitive, sad or show any softer emotions. We expect men to be sexually aggressive, too, and this is a big reason that women experience so many hostile messages online. It’s ingrained in our society.
At the end of the day, a lot of the guys perpetuating these behaviors just have personal issues, too. Online dating is hard for everyone; however, the stakes are just a lot higher for women. Women experience it differently. It’s often a safety issue.
Q: Have you ever found success in online dating, personally?
A: Yes, I’ve met a lot of really great guys online dating; I was in a relationship with someone I met on OkCupid for 2 ½ years. I’ve met a lot of wonderful guys who turned out to be friends. I also have lots of couple friends who met online and are now married or engaged.
The point of Bye Felipe has never been to encourage women not to do online dating. The real message is that our society and culture are really broken; the evidence is that we have all these examples of men acting completely entitled, objectifying women and becoming aggressive. It’s not only in online dating, it’s everywhere: on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, gaming apps, message boards – it even happens in real life on the street or in the bar.
I think that online dating can absolutely be successful. We spend so much of our time online, so why shouldn’t we use it for dating? The fact that this behavior is coming up so often (online) is because it’s so easy to document.
Q: Let’s talk about your book. How did you approach creating a book from an Instagram account?
A: I got the idea for the book pretty shortly after the Instagram took off. It took me two years to finish the proposal, and then another year to write and publish it. Whenever I got submissions, I’d put them in folders in my inbox: mansplainers, fat-shamers, “nice guys” and so on. And then I analyzed them to see if they had anything in common to figure out what the best ways of combating them would be.
I wanted to create a handbook for how to handle any situation when you’re online dating as a woman. It ended up being an anthology of the best – or worst, I guess – Bye Felipe submissions, a guide to the best ways to respond to trolls, a collection of funny stories from my own dating experiences and then partly dating advice.
I also tried to answer the question “Why do guys do that?” It’s basically the book I wish I would have had when I first started dating, especially online.
Q: What did you want your big takeaway for women to be when they finished reading?
A: Don’t take online dating too seriously. Have fun, and let it go. You’re probably going to meet a bunch of jerks out there, but have a sense of humor about it. Make fun of them.
The No. 1 key to not letting harassment get to you is having self-confidence – which is really the most radical act of resistance.
Men are from cyberspace: this week in tech, 20 years ago
A few months ago, I mentioned that it was “unfortunately” too early to write about the release of beloved role-playing game Fallout 2. Well, Fallout 2 was released this week 20 years ago, and I am definitively not going to write about it — because I already spent half my summer immersed in the series while researching the never-released Fallout Online. Fortunately, Kotaku’s Kirk Hamilton has you covered with an entertaining analysis of Fallout 2’s first, frustrating level.
Instead, this week’s stories cover cyber romance, Y2K, and one of the year’s worst new TV shows.
HBO premiered a documentary last month called Swiped: Hooking Up in the Digital Age that explored the worst aspects of online dating — you can catch a fairly grim conversation with director Nancy Jo Sales on the Recode Decode podcast. But “cyber dating” wasn’t always an inescapable hellworld! In late September of 1998, Fast Company urged readers to “stop [their] snickering” and seriously consider some advice from the authors of Men Are From Cyberspace: The Single Woman’s Guide to Flirting, Dating, and Finding Love On-Line.
The interview includes eminently reasonable tips like “don’t lie on your dating profile” and “don’t keep dating someone you only click with online,” as well as the perennial warnings about safety that basically haven’t changed in 20 years. For a master-level course on digital love, however, one might turn to the 1998 book The Joy of Cybersex — whose author did an achingly optimistic interview with Wired just two days later.
Some readers might have wondered whether online dating would even exist for long — the year 2000 was approaching, but because of a design shortcut taken decades ago, computers might decide it was 1900 instead. On October 1st, Congress passed the “Year 2000 Information and Readiness Disclosure Act,” part of an extensive government preparation effort.
The law offered legal protections for companies who shared information about Y2K issues, although CNET laid out criticism from multiple directions. Some people believed companies might still end up mired in lawsuits, and others thought it would stop consumers from filing legitimate grievances. Y2K did end up producing multiple lawsuits, but The Washington Post claimed that lawyers were actually upset about how few major complaints they were getting — which might count as a happy ending for this week’s news.
The fifth season of hit series ER premiered in September of 1998. Could another medical drama really distinguish itself from the most popular show on television? One network considered this question and decided the solution was “set it in outer space.”
According to reviewers of the time, that was the clear pitch behind short-lived UPN science fiction series Mercy Point, which premiered in early October. These reviews were, to put it mildly, not kind. The Los Angeles Times poked fun at the improbably attractive cast of far-future doctors and called the series “derivative on every level.” The Chicago Reader said it “couldn’t even be bothered to make up plots.” Variety mentions that HMOs — some of the most loathed organizations of the ‘90s — still exist in 23rd-century space medicine. The series seems to have mostly disappeared, but you can watch the intro sequence (and a couple of episodes) on YouTube.
In early October of 1998, 44-year-old Rick Rozar fell to his death while adjusting a rooftop satellite. As the Los Angeles Times wrote, Rozar was a philanthropist who devoted years to helping abused and neglected children — and one of the fathers of today’s massive data-mining industry. The former private investigator had founded computerized records company CDB Infotek, which condensed public records into digital dossiers, in 1978. Databases like Rozar’s boomed during the 1990s, giving rise to modern, expansive “people search” services like Spokeo and Whitepages.
The Economist published an extensive obituary covering Rozar’s sometimes controversial legacy. “What Mr. Rozar did was to recognize that the computer, and its cleverest offspring the internet, could be used to venture into individual privacy much further, more efficiently, and more quickly than had previously been possible,” it says. CDB Infotek itself was sold to credit reporting agency Equifax and later the data aggregator ChoicePoint — where Rozar’s diligent work provided businesses with a “wealth of information” to mine.
Horoscopes are a ubiquitous fixture of the internet today, and as The New York Times explained back in 1998, the field owes a lot to online astrology queen Susan Miller — a “personal computer devotee” who created the incredibly successful Astrology Zone website. ‘’I was afraid to tell techno-heads that I was into [astrology]. But they were into it,” said Miller in her Times profile, speculating that the internet created an easy, private option for people who would be too embarrassed to seek their horoscope offline.
Astrology Zone is still online today, complete with its long-running newsletter and some newer mobile apps. And fittingly, the Times profiled Miller again a few months ago — among other details, it turns out she’s bullish on cryptocurrency.
Ask Dr. NerdLove: My Girlfriend Wants To Open Up Our Relationship
Photo: Shutterstock
Hello all you frightening skin machines, and welcome to Ask Dr. NerdLove, the dating advice column that helps heroes navigate the complicated webs of love.
This week, it’s all about sex — the sex we want to have, the sex we think we shouldn’t have and the things we do anyway. Can a monogamous man accept an open relationship if it’s strictly physical, with no emotional ties? What about when a good Christian girl is caught between her desires and her beliefs? When the two come in conflict, what does it do to the relationship?
It’s time to swing into action. Let’s do this thing.
Hi Dr. NerdLove,
So I’ve been dating a woman for a few months now and we have decided we want a monogamous relationship about a month ago. We are both in love with each other, spend a lot of time together and have many connections, interests and passions for many things. I think as though I’ve found the woman I want to be with for the rest of my life, but there’s a catch….
From the get-go she told me that she is bisexual, but that it has been a while since she’s been with another woman. For the last 8 years she has been in open relationships with men and women, and she was married for 5 years where they started to experiment with “swinging”. She told me about all of this on the second or third date and my reaction and how I felt about it has obviously changed as my love for her and commitment to a relationship has also changed.
She says that she “craves” pussy and that it’s strictly the object of having sex with a woman and that there are no emotional ties if it were to happen while we’re in a relationship.
I have only had monogamous relationships in my life, along with several short-lived hookups, but have always been faithful to the person I’m with. I don’t think or know if I’m ready to have an “open” relationship or a polyamorous relationship, as I am 35 years old, she is 40 and we have talked about what we want in our futures and marriage and children are both on the agenda. I can’t picture having a polyamorous relationship and I don’t know how comfortable I would be with being in a “monogamous” relationship, yet letting her get her “craving for pussy” fix.
I believe that this would be considered cheating, as the partner is having sex with another human being, regardless of gender, whereas she doesn’t see it that way and doesn’t see how that could affect a committed relationship, marriage or whatever else we have. She sees this action not as cheating but strictly sex, almost as an object with no emotions attached to it, which I believe is dangerous and could be unrealistic.
I don’t want to be the boyfriend that sets rules or tells her that she can’t do certain things, but it’s hard for me to change my moral views on this and how it could affect our relationship. I feel pressured to either give her an answer that it’s OK that she freely goes and has sex with other women, and I just don’t know how to handle it.
I could really use some help!!! Thanks!
Vanilla By Nature
There’re a few things to unpack here, VBN, but let’s start with this: I don’t think opening up the relationship would be a good idea for you for a number of reasons, and certainly not right now.
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As I’ve discussed regarding other similar letters in the past, opening up a relationship is something that needs to be done with care and consideration if you don’t want it to just be the prelude to the end of the relationship. Non-monogamous relationships of various stripes and flavors require trust, comfort, communication, communication and also communication. Right now, it seems like you’re missing at least two of those. You are clearly not comfortable with it, and it doesn’t seem like you two are communicating well, either.
You clearly have very different views about sex and sexual fidelity — and hey, that’s cool. Sex for some people is intrinsically tied up with love and emotional intimacy. For others, sex is sex, love is love, and while the two may co-mingle on occasion, they’re very separate beasts. You are the former, while your girlfriend is the latter. And right now these two different views are causing conflict.
In a sense, this is an issue of belief definitions; you’re defining any sexual contact outside of a relationship as cheating, period, full stop. Your girlfriend, on the other hand, sees sex outside the relationship within the agreed upon rules as just sex; breaking those rules (having sex with a man, for example) would be cheating by her view. You don’t believe someone could have sex without getting emotionally attached; she believes sex is something fun but separate from an emotional commitment.
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So who’s right? Both of you are. And therein lies the problem. Right now, you have two diametrically opposed viewpoints and, from the sounds of it, you’re not actually talking about this with her. She’s shared her side of the issue with you — her bisexuality, her relationship history of how she’s practiced non-monogamy with partners, her interest in some occasional opportunity to pursue some no-strings-attached sex with women — but you haven’t shared your side.
I get that you don’t want to be the guy who tells his girlfriend what she can or can’t do, but, my dude, you are allowed to have boundaries and dealbreakers. You’re allowed to be the guy who says “hey, you know what? I’m really not comfortable with the idea of an open relationship, even if you’re only sleeping with women.” If this is a hard line for you, which is completely legitimate, then you need to be willing to say that to her.
That’s vital because this part of your letter really leapt out at me:
I feel pressured to either give her an answer that it’s OK that she freely goes and has sex with other women.
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I want to know exactly how this pressure is coming across, because from what you’ve shared with me, it sounds like you either haven’t said anything or you’re afraid to speak up and say how you feel. And I’m here from the future to tell you: regardless of your reasoning, if you don’t speak up now, then things are going to just get worse later on. If you’re afraid to share how you feel, then your swallowed feelings will just turn into bitterness and resentment over time.
If you’re feeling pressured because you don’t feel that you have the right to tell her that you’re not cool with this, then you’re contributing to your own misery; you have to be able to advocate for your own interests and comfort within this relationship and any relationship you have in the future. If she’s putting active pressure on you to give your blessing, despite your discomfort with the idea… well, that’s not good for the relationship as a whole and you need to seriously reconsider your relationship with her.
But regardless of what’s going on here, you need to — say it with me now — USE YOUR WORDS. This is going to be a source of conflict in your relationship going forward if you don’t sort this out now. And the only way that you’re going to work through things is if you two actually talk about this. Especially if she doesn’t know how uncomfortable you are with the idea of opening things up.
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You and your girlfriend need to sit down and have an awkward conversation about your feelings about monogamy. Start with sharing your side of things: here’s why you’ve been afraid to bring it up, here’s how you feel about monogamy, here are your fears about what would happen if you were to say OK. Remember to make it clear that these are your feelings and anxieties, not a judgement about her. Then share what, in an ideal world, would work for you. Then it’s her turn and you let her have her say while you listen quietly.
Once she’s done and you feel like you have a grasp on her take and she has a solid grasp on how you feel… well, that’s when you decide what to do next. And that’s where things get tough, because it sounds like you know where you stand on this and you aren’t likely to change.
Is compromise possible? Sure, theoretically. Maybe there’s some way that she can scratch that itch without actually having sex with someone else. It’s also possible that, if you talk things out, you might feel a little more comfortable with the idea. Maybe if she can commit to monogamy with you for a time — a year, two years, who knows — to build up trust, then you might be able to revisit the question. Or you might not.
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This sounds like a pretty hard “no” for you and that’s fine. That’s perfectly legit. But that means that you and your girlfriend may just not be compatible with one another. This doesn’t make either of you bad people; it just means that you two have a fundamental difference in what you need from a relationship. While you may love each other… well, like the song says, sometimes love isn’t enough. And while that’s a damn shame, it’s better that you find this out now, when you’re only a month into this relationship, then to drag it out.
Good luck.
Hey Dr. Nerdlove,
I have a difficult situation I’d like some advice on. I am a 28 year guy who is pretty attractive, fairly fit, and lucky enough to work as a researcher in the tech industry. I’ve followed your blog and books for a while, and I believe I have gone from a needy/nice-guy attitude about relationships to someone with strong self-esteem and boundaries. Unfortunately, this growth hasn’t translated into any meaningful, long-term relationships yet, which is what is so frustrating about my recent relationship with a girl named R.
R is a 25 year old nurse who comes from a conservative, Christian family. We became friends about a year ago through one of my friend groups. She also hasn’t had many relationships, mostly due to her faith and the fact she still lives at home with her parents and brother. She also told me during the course of the relationship that she had no sex education other than a nursing school rotation, that she has never kept track of her menstrual cycle, and has never been to an OBGYN because she was never sexual with anyone else. I’m saying all this now because it becomes important later on.
When R and I first become friends a year ago, I was dating another girl in the group called J. J is also a conservative Christian and, as I later found out, had never dated anyone else but me. After just 2 or 3 dates, J sent me a letter professing her love and her desire to get married. I ended that relationship in short order and took a break from the group for about a month. Upon returning to the group, I found R and I shared many interests while hanging out as friends over the past year. About two months ago, we discovered that we both liked each other but we decided needed to talk with J before starting our relationship. This ended up becoming the first of two issues we had.
We talked with J soon after and she seemed ok with us going out, but she wanted to tell the rest of the friend group (she constantly wants to be the meditator of disputes in the group). R and I said ok at the time to be gentle with her. A couple weeks later, after several dates, we decided to put our relationship on Facebook and J freaked out that she couldn’t tell them anymore. She sent us more letters and bible quotes about hurting relationships, eventually so many that we had to block her. Several people in the group took her side after this and when I asked why, they hurled a lot of childish insults at us about breaking dating code.
Since I am pretty confident in myself, I just laughed off the insults and ignored them. Trying to be honest with R, I told her about the comments and how I ignored them, thinking she would also brush it off since she hears much worse in the hospital from patients. I was wrong. She accused me of not defending her and was further upset that I didn’t immediately say anything to them. I tried telling her gently that they weren’t good friends from their reactions and we shouldn’t let them define us or our relationship. She didn’t really accept that and after several days of discussion, said she forgave me for not defending her initially.
The second major problem was about sex. She had stated at the beginning of the relationship she didn’t want to have sex, which I was fine with. However, during one of our first dates she began grinding on me while making out, promptly breaking down crying from guilt when I asked if she really wanted to do that. She calmed down and we agreed we wouldn’t do anything like that again. But the following evening after another make out session, she asked me to take her shirt off and we proceeded to some mutual masturbation, with me checking that it was ok (she said yes). We did the same at the end of most of our dates the next few weeks, each time with me checking we didn’t do anything she wasn’t comfortable with. And each time when began making out, she said yes to the masturbation and whenever she no longer felt comfortable, we would stop. But she always felt guilty afterward and said she couldn’t control herself when she got turned on. No matter how much or little we did, it was the same routine. We would start making out and end up in the bedroom.
The last week of our relationship, we weren’t being careful during one of these physical encounters and had a small scare about her becoming pregnant. We didn’t think there was anything more than a tiny chance something would happen but she didn’t really want to talk about it. Additionally she got upset she I suggested an emergency contraceptive, stating those pills are abortion. I was still concerned the next few days considering her lack of understanding about sex and her menstrual cycle, and how her family would react if it did happen. I strongly encouraged her to talk to someone and she eventually agreed to talk with her mom about it. I decided after our discussion to talk to my dad, a healthcare professional, about the situation as well.
Neither of them were angry but both encouraged us to be smarter about it in the future. R told me the following day that she had her period and the conversation went well with her mom, but she got extremely upset over the fact I spoke with my dad. She said she still felt that I didn’t defend her against the friends group, that I pressured her into talking with her mom, that I embarrassed her by talking with my dad and that she didn’t want to talk with anyone about the situation, ultimately I should have known she didn’t want to do anything sexual, and I shouldn’t have started “instigating” any physical contact when we were making out. At the end, she said she wanted to break up. This was all about a month after we started going out.
That was just over a week ago and I’m still frustrated and disappointed by what happened. I feel I tried to do my best to be honest with her, to not cross any boundaries she had, and cultivate a healthy relationship. I felt talking with someone more experienced about our scare was the right thing to do, just as I thought talking with my dad was the right thing for me to do. I asked a couple friends and family members since the breakup whether I did the right thing in these situations and all have agreed that her overall reaction toward me was very immature and an excuse to run away from the situation. But I’m still a little unsure and confused. Did I do the right things in this relationship? Like telling her about the friend insults and not responding to their childish insults, trying to work with her to stay in her sexual boundaries, and getting advice in a scary situation? Is there anything I could have done better?
We haven’t spoken since that phone call and she has deleted all social media pictures of us together from our relationship and our friendship. However we still remain friends on social media and I’m the only one she is friends with from the original friend group. I really believe we both loved the non-sexual parts of our relationship (going on dates, spending time together, etc), and it feels terrible that the end is defined by this. Do you think there any path back to a new relationship or friendship? Is it even worth bothering to try?
Lost and Confused
Y’know, LaC, I originally had a lot to say about the dynamics around dating in friend groups and the conflicts between sexual desire and religion and the like, but then I noticed a couple of things.
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First of all: y’all are in your mid to late 20s and you’re having to justify your relationship to your social circle? Violating dating code? This is high-school drama, not something you should be doing as grown-ass adults. The fact that this was even an issue is kind of absurd. I could see people being upset if they thought you were cheating on your previous girlfriend with R or that you’d treated her badly in the break up, but honestly this is the sort of thing that would suggest to me that you need a better class of friends. Preferably ones who’ve grown out of rules of “well you can’t date X because you dated Y” and “you made it Facebook Official before we were cool with it.”
Second of all: you went through all of this in the span of a month?? Just…. dude.
Look, I’m sure R is a lovely woman. But one of the rules of relationships is that you have to be in good working order and R doesn’t seem like she is. If she’s not able to take ownership for her own sexual desires or reconcile her own feelings with her religion, if she’s upset about your discussing issues like a pregnancy scare with your family… well, it sounds like she still has a lot of growing and maturing to do, and you’ve saved yourself a metric fuckton of drama down the line.
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You did everything right. It’s a shame that things didn’t work out. Yeah, you may have enjoyed things when everything wasn’t on fire, but again: holy hopping sheep shit that’s a lot of drama to squeeze into a single goddamn month. Be grateful that things ended when they did and move on. And next time, maybe don’t date conservative Christian women from your social circle.
Good luck.
Did you make an open relationship work? Did you survive relationship drama, with your partner or your friend group? Share your story in the comments below and we’ll be back with more of your questions in two weeks.
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Ask Dr. Nerdlove is Kotaku’s bi-weekly dating column, hosted by the one and only Harris O’Malley, AKA Dr. NerdLove. Got a question you’d like answered? Write doc@doctornerdlove.com and put “Kotaku” in the subject line.
Harris O’Malley is a writer and dating coach who provides geek dating advice at his blog Paging Dr. NerdLove and the Dr. NerdLove podcast. His new dating guide New Game+: The Geek’s Guide to Love, Sex and Dating is out now from Amazon, iTunes and everywhere fine books are sold He is also a regular guest at One Of Us.
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He can be found dispensing snark and advice on Facebook and on Twitter at @DrNerdLove.