I have been in a long term relationship with my girlfriend but I keep getting overpowering feelings of wanting to date other people.

My girlfriend and I have been together almost 7 years now. We have a great life together and I love her dearly. She’s my best friend who I talk to all the time, we always have so much fun when we do things, we travel, great sex, etc. Recently talk of engagement has been popping up which I’m not ready for even though we’ve been together for so long. Despite that, I’m very happy with our relationship.

I do envision spending the rest of my life together and building toward a great future but recently I’ve been experiencing feelings of wanting to date around. I never dated before her. She’s my first partner and only women I’ve had sex with. As I’m getting into my late 20s I feel like I’ve missed out on dating and meeting knew people. Before my girlfriend I never had the confidence to ask girls out, I skipped all of my high school dances, and I had trouble talking to girls in person. I have a lot of regret because of my lack of confidence at that time.

Now I’m confident and much better socially. I just want to experience the thrill of dating. This is despite having a great partner who I love dearly. I’ve been trying to stop these feelings of wanting to date others for months but they’re stronger than ever. I know the grass is not always greener on the other side and dating is not easy. It’s also likely I won’t ever meet someone as good as my current partner. But I can’t shake these feelings. I don’t want to be 40 and having regrets when I already have so many.

What should I do? What other perspectives can I think of? Sorry for the relationship rant, but this site always gives great advice.

  • FourteenEyes [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    1 year ago

    I’m 37 and have never had any success with dating. A few first dates, never a second one, never a relationship. Worked on myself a long time without thought of dating, and I’m trying again, and it’s brutal out there. It’s hard to even match with anyone on these apps, let alone keep a conversation going. Once you do lots of times it just fizzles out and goes nowhere, and from what I’m hearing from others it’s not just the rejects that experience this. This is what hot people go through too. Lots and lots of just nothing. And it’s hard to meet people in other ways. We’re so atomized now, everything is monetized, everyone is overworked and underpaid and burned out, and from what I can tell, you have something that most people don’t. Don’t let this FOMO ruin it. You might go through with it and figure out quickly that you threw away a good thing for the dream of recapturing something you missed out on when you were younger. You can’t recapture it. Don’t try. Appreciate what you have and let this shit fade away.

  • AntiOutsideAktion [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    1 year ago

    There are dozens of really cool fun ways to spend your 20’s and you’re going to miss out on the majority of them no matter what you do. No doubt someone else feels the same way you do and would trade with you in a heartbeat. I would. Part of growing up is looking back at the path not taken. Don’t let it drive you crazy.

        • panopticon [comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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          1 year ago

          I struggled with making choices like this for a long time. It always felt like choosing one door was just artificially denying myself another. The difference was that “closing doors” was often just me not having the social infrastructure to be in the right place at the right time doing the right things to be able to grasp an opportunity.

          Hey thanks for putting this into words, it’s something I have struggled with a lot whenever I reach a fork in the road (the forks have a way of multiplying, the deeper you get)

  • ElGosso [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    1 year ago

    You’re gonna regret giving up a loving relationship more than you’ll regret not fooling around. Dating can be fun sometimes but it’s also exhausting and filled with bad experiences.

    The grass always looks greener, comrade shrug-outta-hecks

  • booty [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    1 year ago

    jesse-wtf

    like i get what you’re saying, to some extent, but the only thing at the end of this path is loneliness and regret. dont be a dumbass. you live in the present, the past is gone. you’re not going to get it back by ruining what you have now.

  • Commiejones [comrade/them, he/him]@hexbear.net
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    1 year ago

    I was once in a long distance relationship where we agreed that seeing other people was cool. When we got back together after a few months things were different and not in a good way. Its like the original oxytocin bond was broken by forming new ones with other people and then when we got back together it wouldn’t reform.

  • UnicodeHamSic [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    1 year ago

    :poly flag:

    Part of the ship part of the crew.

    I can write an entirely too long unconvincing post about how comp het includes comp monogamy and how we as a species were not meant for it and further how comunism gives us a tool for deconstructing these unhealthy dynamics. Really I doubt if there is anything I could write that would be any more meaningful than telling you that the posts do exist.

  • ilyenkov [she/her, they/them]@hexbear.net
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    1 year ago

    Nothing you do now can change the past. I know this is probably cliche or whatever, but therapy, journaling, self-reflection, and stuff are going to help you deal with all of those feelings about the past more than dating is going to. You can still meet new people, make some friends. Seriously, are you talking to a therapist about this?

    Dating is very fun, sometimes. But can be hard and heartbreaking too. Most people (not everyone, ofc) are basically doing it to try to get to the situation you are in. You won, I wouldn’t give that up unless either you don’t want to be with this person anymore (or have real doubts about that) or think you might be poly. It’s like if a kid sucked at basketball in highschool, but somehow got good and got offered a pro-contract, but gave that up to go dunk on highschoolers to get over feelings of inadequacy. You’re in the NBA dude, forget about highschool.

    The long distance is probably gonna suck, but like, idk get really into video games or something.

  • GaveUp [she/her]@hexbear.net
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    1 year ago

    Grass is always greener on the other side

    Sleeping around with a bunch of people is nowhere near as fulfilling as having a healthy secure relationship with good sex. And dating people you hardly know is nowhere near as fun as hanging out with a partner that knows you more than anybody else

    I’m 100% confident anybody who has experienced both would agree

  • American_Badass [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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    1 year ago

    There are certainly experiences you missed out on, and some of them would have been positive. But you’re also missing out on a lot of negative experiences by having someone where you both care a lot about one another.

    I’ve been with my wife since we were teenagers and it’s easy to reflect on what could have been, but we’ve also got a life built together with a lot of happiness that we can also reflect on and more importantly enjoy right now every day together.

    Just try not to let this turn into resentment for your partner. To me that would be what I would focus on through these feelings.

  • niph [she/her]@hexbear.net
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    1 year ago

    I have had similar feelings (though I did date a fair bit before meeting my partner) but I’ve never acted on them, and never would. Every time thoughts like that cross my mind I contemplate how insanely lucky I am that I’ve built a life and home with someone who loves me and respects me and has the same values and interests as me. imo no amount of thrills is worth jeopardising that for