Oops. It seems that I have been neglecting this blog a bit too much over the last month. My apologies, I’ve been busy.
Let me sum up. Since last time, I’ve traveled to Pa., Delaware, Chicago and back again. I’ve turned 21. I’ve rekindled a dying flame. I’ve experienced my last first day of school. I’ve quit my job. I’ve cut my hair. That might be it.
Really, the time I have had for writing has been devoted to the blog of my dear friend Nathan, In Pursuit of the Trivial. So check that out if you missed me that much.
Today I’m going to think/write about long-term relationships. Not necessarily my own, but that of other people I’ve observed.
We’re at an age where a lot of people are starting to think about long-term relationships. Sure, people still enjoy the random flirting and random hookups, but it seems that when entering into an actual relationship, many of my peers are seriously considering the longrun. They don’t want to waste their time dating someone who they can’t see themselves with in 5, 10, 40 years. Mostly, I think, it’s because they are afraid that if they date a person who it won’t last with, they might miss an opportunity with someone who it will.
So once the relationship starts, people try extra hard to keep it going. Even when things start to go sour, they strain to see the good over the bad in an effort to feel that time was not wasted. They turn a blind eye to squabbles and spats thinking, ‘I’ve put 3 years into this relationship, I’ve gotta make it work.’ They’ve come to identify so much as the partner of their significant other, that they can’t picture themselves alone.
Now, don’t get me wrong. There are plenty of people my age that are in healthy, happy, long-term relationships, and I applaud them. But to me it seems that more often than when we were young, people are staying in relationships for the wrong reasons. My advice is this: We’re still young. No one our age should be ‘settling down’ in the very near future. So be a little selfish. If your relationship sucks, get out of it. If you’re worried about time wasted, think about the time you’re wasting staying with this person who you’ll inevitably divorce anyway. Enjoy your youth and have fun finding a positive relationship in which you don’t question wasted time.
Alright, enough of that. Guess I just needed to articulate the thoughts that have been running through my head.
In other news, this is a clip from a movie I watched tonight called Me and You and Everyone We Know. It was a decent movie, nothing spectacular. But I really enjoyed this scene, so I recommend you watch it and believe in love.