Archive for the 'Love' Category

Apr 01 2008

College Girls vs. Cougars: Does Age Really Matter? This Week on The Babe and The Bachelor

No matter how old you get, some tastes never change…

By THEBOSTONBACHELOR.COM / April 1, 2008

Tune in to The Babe and The Bachelor This Tuesday at 9 pm EDT as we discuss:

1. Does age really matter? Why do some people only go for those who are much older or younger than themselves?

2. What are the fatal flaws, ie the dealbreakers, when it comes to the opposite sex?

Call in during the show with any questions at (646) 595-3961.

See you tonight.

-The Boston Bachelor

No responses yet

Dec 24 2007

You’ve Lost That Lovin’ Feelin’

I love toast, I love you, I love lamp

By THEBOSTONBACHELOR.COM / December 24, 2007

In tribute to Christmas, Hanukkah, Kwanzaa, Festivus, Spanakopita Day, or whatever holiday you celebrate, here’s some brilliant words of wisdom from Owen Cook’s The Blueprint.  Enjoy.

* * * * *

A poor guy has an identity crisis.  Maybe the problem starts when he gets a feeling that a girl might like him.  He imagines a connection with her and all sorts of shared experiences that don’t exist yet.

He thinks that there’s all this unspoken sexual tension going on beneath the surface.  He even pictures his girl when he listens to all the romantic songs on the radio.  But inevitably, he figures out that his projection doesn’t exist in any shared reality that includes the girl.  To realize that it’s all in his head – that the girl doesn’t actually reciprocate the way that he feels… or think about him while he’s thinking about her…  It’s a hard pill to swallow.

Let’s imagine instead that our poor guy already has a girlfriend.  The problems start for him when he finds out that she’s been cheating.  He’d idealized the relationship.  It felt good.  In order to stay infatuated with his girl, he had screened out any sketchiness and focused on her best attributes and the most fun times that they’d had.  Together, he and his girl had come up with all sorts of shared idealizations that had made their relationship strong.

There were many things that they’d expressed to one another as a way of reinforcing their love.  They remembered the first place that they’d met, gone out, and had sex.  They had a special reason for why they’d met and were still together, that other couples didn’t have.  Their “thing.”  It wasn’t something that they could get from anyone else, so they could feel totally secure to feel their love without fear of loss.  It was not replaceable.

And to make it even stronger, they had continually re-articulated to one another that it would last… “FOREVER.”

What’s funny is that when it ends, all of these special feelings might still be there.  It’s just that there are now all of these new, bad feelings that go along with them.  He wants to feel like he did before.  His reality comes crashing down around him.  He reaches out for his girl to validate their old shared reality, but she is gone from him.  The girl that existed for him no longer exists.  She was a figment of his imagination.  The face that he saw was one of many faces that she had.

He doesn’t realize it, but he has many such faces himself.  We all have different faces for people who have a different value to us.  Are you the same person when you talk to a pushy vagrant asking for spare change as you are when you talk to your mother?  How would a person’s experience of you differ, depending on their value to you?  What he saw in her was the face that a person shows to someone who has value to them.  It is such an easy face to look at.  Like looking into the mirror, and seeing the most beautiful face in the entire world.

“Wait… She’s not seeing things clearly. What about our ‘thing?’  Doesn’t she realize that she can’t get it from him?  Nobody can love her like I can.  Hang on.  She fucked this new guy the first time they hung out?  OK, that just doesn’t make sense because she said that she always waited three months with a guy to make it special.  What?!  She fucked him on the couch where we had our first time together?!  No.  That was the special couch.  Doesn’t this bitch remember that that was the SPECIAL COUCH?!?!”

He rationalizes that she’s just confused.  He won’t give up on love.  He resolves to “win her back.”  But he has gone from being her boyfriend to being more like all those other guys from her fan club.  He is everything that her new guy is not.

And she feels a little bad for him, for sure.  But as she walks out the door from the “one last meeting” that he begged her for, her face of pity turns into a beaming smile for her new guy waiting outside to pick her up.

She goes on and enjoys her life without a thought.  He sits around thinking about her, pining for a girl who doesn’t share his reality anymore.  And though he will never admit it to himself, deep down he sees the worst of himself in her.  Because under different circumstances, he knows that he might have done the same thing.  Maybe if their relationship had staled.  Or if he had met a certain other girl.  So he mopes around for a while, until the feelings of emptiness start to subside.  Then, once he’s ready, he begins the process of re-establishing himself.

He shifts his focus from his loss to superficial areas in which he can improve himself.  He focuses on his status conveying intermediaries such as his credentials, career, property, vehicle, clothing, jewelry, and so on.  He’s a together guy.  He’ll get it under control.  Time passes.  His life improves to an extent.  But he is still alone.

Through our social conditioning, we come to understand “love” in a way that’s often more focused towards idealism than it is towards accurately defining the phenomenon.  Writers and philosophers have long debated the meaning of the term, without ever coming to any consensus.  In some cultures, there are even multiple words used to define “love.”

Many people conceive of love as having supernatural properties. They might believe that every person has only one perfect soulmate. Or that true love will always last forever. Or that people can fall in love only a certain number of times. They might even believe that fate will cause love to “just happen” when the time is right. With faith that there are such powerful forces at work, it isn’t surprising that people will often intensify their feelings with the belief that they are following their hearts.

Think back to the last time that you felt that you were in love.  How did you know?  Was it a feeling of attraction?  Was it a feeling of connection?  Was it a feeling of lust?  Was it feeling of physical attachment?  Was it a feeling of underlying one-ness?  Was it feeling of anxious emotional co-dependence?  Was it a combination of those things?  Is love an old couple sitting on their porch, comfortable in their long established routines?  Is it two teenagers locked in passion in the back seat or their car, scrambling for a condom?  Is it a pair of newlyweds, gazing into each other’s eyes as they take their matrimonial vows?

It’s often said that love is self-hypnosis; a beautiful psychosis that takes hold and prompts us to act in ways that we would otherwise not even consider.  Love is not something that is caused by another person.  We cause it in ourselves.  As we loop our thoughts over and over around our concept of a particular person, our mind shifts the way that we perceive them and finds ways to make sense of it.  Suddenly, everything seems so simple.  It’s love.  And as it takes hold, our physical body follows suit, spinning and intensifying our emotional chemistry until we are fully enraptured.

For some people, love can be an opportunity to have a partner on their journey.  It can be a chance for them to fully experience and understand another person, and to have that person do the same for them in return.  A loving relationship between two people can be healthy and cultivate spiritual and physical growth.  It can be one of the most pleasurable and important experiences that a person has over the course of his or her entire life.

But that depends on whether or not the person is ready for it.  Because the idea of love can also be destructive.  For some people, it can be a self-deception that they can focus on as a way to avoid facing their shortcomings.  People will often rationalize that any strong emotional reaction that they feel towards another person is a sign that they are “in love.”

They might have worked themselves into an infatuation with someone who doesn’t reciprocate their interest, and rationalized that it’s something that would make them feel complete.  They might desperately crave a person’s attention, and rationalize the anxious feeling of need for their approval as being love-butterflies fluttering around in their stomach.  In a relationship, they might leave their partner, because they rationalize that their loss of novel infatuation is a sign that they have fallen out of love.  And later, they might have trouble finding someone new, and rationalize that they lost the love of their life.

There are people who will fall in love with anyone who will have them.  They are eager, and in love with the idea of being in love.  There are other people who fear falling in love.  They are jaded, and create emotional barriers to prevent themselves from being hurt in the future.  Ultimately, people process their experiences through a fog of emotions, and create and intensify these occurrences in their own minds.

As we said, a person can feel an increase in their sense of acceptance by being in a specific situation.  And in the same way, a person can feel an increase in their value by being with a specific person.

When a person’s sense of acceptance and identity is tied up in another person, they are dependent on that person to feel good about themselves.  And because of that, they become reactive in their relationship.  They focus their thoughts more towards the pain of possibly losing the other person than on the pleasure of being themselves.  Once that happens, their behaviour becomes less attractive to their partner, and their partner’s feeling of love towards them begins to subside.  Perhaps then, it is only the person who doesn’t need social acceptance to feel good, who can really appreciate being in love.  Is it possible, that it is only when you don’t need love that you will find it?

* * * * *

-The Boston Bachelor

One response so far

Nov 19 2007

Still Have Feelings for Your Ex? Let Us Shake Them Out of You This Tuesday Night

A V knows.

By THEBOSTONBACHELOR.COM / November 19, 2007

Catch us now live every Tuesday night at 9 pm EDT.

This week on The Babe and The Bachelor:

1. What does gender equality really mean these days? We share our thoughts…

2. What the hell do you do if you still have feelings for your ex? We put our friend (and guinea pig) V under interrogation as we attempt to exorcise that lingering love potion from his body.

3. An update on our online dating experiment.

4. What do “good manners” really mean in today’s dating world, and when should they be used? We debate this hotly contested topic…

5. Questions from our callers.

AND MORE…
You can call in anytime during the show at (646) 595-3961.

See you then.

-The Boston Bachelor

3 responses so far

Oct 03 2007

The Top 10 Irrefutable Truths about Women and Dating - No. 5

Number 5: Cupid Is Dead

I shot Cupid

By THEBOSTONBACHELOR.COM / October 4, 2007

In fact, the fat bastard never even existed in the first place.

To the men (and women) out there who keep dreaming of the day that the fates will conspire to bring their soulmate into their laps: keep dreaming, and keep waiting. Because you’ll have a better chance of meeting Godot and Jimmy Hoffa before you ever meet an attractive partner, let alone your “soulmate.”

I remember freshman year in high school lying in my bed at night, praying to God that my high school crush would reciprocate my “love.” Now I’m neither religious nor atheist, but let’s face it: Jesus, Buddha, Vishnu, and the spirit of Jim Jones would have all been disgusted at that display.

As the years passed, I’ve come to realize the following about this crazy little thing called love:

1. There’s no third-party force out there that conspires to turn people into lovers. If you don’t know this already, then please turn off whatever Meg Ryan movie you’re currently watching. If a past relationship didn’t work out, it’s not because “it wasn’t meant to be.” Fate, karma, or the way the furniture in your house was arranged had nothing to do with it. It’s because your expectations of the relationship were different than hers. Or because plugs and sockets were being placed in other plugs and sockets. Or sometimes, it’s just the normal conflicts that result when two people live separate but mutual lives.

2. Love is simply a strong emotional bond that occurs over time—nothing more, nothing less. It’s the strongest of all bonds, and it’s not out there howling dangerously in the wind, looking to turn unsuspecting passerby into couples. So don’t ever think of it as this big, mysterious, abstract cloud beyond your control—or reach.

3. Love at first sight does not exist. But attraction at first sight most definitely does. And attraction is something you can easily trigger in another person, once you know what you’re doing. And attraction, eventually combined with affection, can lead to love.

4. Love is not going to fall into your lap. Sitting in the corner of a Starbucks all day pretending to type something important on your laptop isn’t going to work. Neither is standing against the bar and staring at the sea of women on the dance floor like a starving hyena. Neither is downloading 2.7 gigs of porn from worldsex.com each day (no, they’re not an affiliate). You have to get out there and approach. And I’ll be the first to admit that this first step can be the most difficult to take.

And that’s all you need to know about love.

Except… for one last very important thing:

5. In 1967, they composed one of the greatest albums of all time, Forever Changes. Give it a spin before you die.

In memory of Arthur Lee.

-The Boston Bachelor

You can meet a lot of fun Boston singles at this online dating service right now. Meet the best women in Boston at our dating portal and chat with them on the internet dating forums today.

9 responses so far