By Slade Shaw
Author of Why Men Pull Away
Learn exactly what pushes men to leave…and how to NEVER feel abandoned or rejected
Why Men Pull Away…and What Makes Them STAY In Love
Should You Settle For Less?
Have you ever wondered if you should settle for “Mr. Good Enough”?
If you’re anything like me, you’ve met a dozen and a half men who COULD be great boyfriends, husbands, fathers, of your future children … but for whatever reason, you just couldn’t take that next step with them.
So many of us find ourselves stuck between a rock and a hard place: we deeply want a relationship, but not with any of the men we’re currently dating!
Have YOU ever felt pressured to settle for a guy you weren’t particularly into, simply because you didn’t want to be single?
Read on and discover why “settling” has its advantages as well as disadvantages, and you’ll be able to make up your own mind as to whether you should stick with Mr. “Good Enough.”
First of all, let’s talk about the kind of guy many of us are dating: Mr. Good-But-Not-Great.
Mr. Good-But-Not-Great would be a catch by anyone’s standards. He’s got his life sorted, has a financial plan for his retirement, and treats us with loving respect and admiration.
He cares a lot about us, and he shows it in small ways. He invites us to family gatherings, makes an effort with our friends, and would rather be crashed on our sofa watching movies than out carousing with his buddies.
Our mothers love him, all our friends are asking why we’re not married yet, and yet there’s a tiny voice shouting to be heard over all the congratulations, telling us to…
“RUN AWAY!”
Ever heard that voice yourself?
In my twenties, I heard it all the time. I wanted NOTHING so much than a boyfriend, but I was caught in a Catch-22. There were young men aplenty who had dreamy eyes for me, but none of them spurred a single iota of romantic excitement in me.
In fact, every time one of them “casually” stopped by to have a chat, the undercurrent of yearning in their voices made me feel the exact opposite emotion: I wanted to run away!
For a long time, I thought there was something wrong with me. Was I just too picky? Maybe I just needed to give these young men a chance.
So I said yes to a few of them. One tedious date after another confirmed my suspicions: it was better to stay home than go out with someone who’s head-over-heels in love with you when you’re not even remotely interested.
I’ve since discovered that my experience was quite normal. I get emails all the time from women who say that they’d LOVE to meet someone to have a relationship with. Unfortunately, they can’t seem to meet anyone who quite spins their wheels.
Some of these women believe that there’s something wrong with THEM for not feeling attracted to the single-and-available men they meet. They wonder if they’re too picky, or if they’re just over the singles scene, or if they’re “meant” to be single forever.
Other women believe that it’s the MEN’S fault. They think that the men they meet are too dull, too immature, or too self-absorbed.
But no matter WHOSE fault it is, the end result is the same. Those of us who desire nothing more than a loving, committed relationship are caught between a rock and a hard place…
…EITHER we settle for someone we’re not really into, OR we stay single.
So should you settle for Mr. Good-But-Not-Great?
Author Lori Gottlieb of TheAtlantic.com says you should. In her article “Marry Him! The case for settling for Mr. Good Enough” (Atlantic Monthly, March 2008), she argues that you should put marriage before love.
Her thinking goes like this. Many modern women believe that they shouldn’t settle for anything less than their soulmate, but, as they hit their thirties and start seeing their fertile years wane, they start to panic.
They start to realize that if they want to have a family, they’ll either have to do it themselves as single moms, or they’ll have to say yes to the next acceptable man who proposes.
According to Gottlieb, there’s nothing wrong at all with the latter option!
She believes that a lot more men are suitable husbands than we think. She says, “Marriage isn’t a passion-fest; it’s more like a partnership formed to run a very small, mundane, and often boring nonprofit business.”
So, even if we DON’T feel that spark or overwhelming romantic infatuation for someone, it doesn’t mean that he wouldn’t make a good husband for us – according to Gottlieb.
I would imagine that proponents of arranged marriages would agree. I’ve always been amazed at the number of women who were unable to select their husband, yet found that they could grow to love him as deeply as any man they’d selected on their own.
But is that what we REALLY want?
Do you want to tell your kids, “When I met your daddy, I thought he was a nice man. Then I married him, and I found out that he was … well, even nicer!”
I strongly disagree with the advice that you should settle for someone who’s “good enough,” and I’ll tell you why.
First of all, I believe that men deserve better than a wife who settled for them. When there is an imbalance of love in a relationship – when the man is completely head-over-heels with his wife, and his wife is merely comfortable – it’s visible to everyone around them.
If that women even mentioned just once to one of her friends that she felt like she was settling for her husband, it would eventually get back to him … and what a slap in the face! No man deserves to be in a relationship where everyone knows that his wife was “settling.”
Second of all, marriages are tough work. They’re not the smooth, tranquil walk in the park that Gottlieb paints them as. When you’re married, you’re going to come into conflict.
You’re going to find that your ideas don’t match. You’re going to argue and fight. You’re even going to wonder if you should separate.
If you NEVER believed that this man was “The One” for you, it will be much easier for you to throw up your hands and bid goodbye to the relationship.
Why go through all the pain and struggle of a challenging marriage when you always felt that you settled for him anyway?
If, on the other hand, you married him believing that this was the one for you in this lifetime, then that faith is going to carry you through your marital challenges.
You will still find things difficult, but you’ll remember how strongly you believed in this relationship and this man. That faith is will help you get through and STAY married.
And there’s something else that Gottlieb hasn’t considered. What happens if you settle for a man … then end up bumping into Mr. Right years down the track? Look at Tori Spelling.
Meeting “The One” while you’re still married puts you in a horrible position: either you’ll have to destroy your marriage and hurt your husband for the chance at true love, or settle for a lifetime apart from your true soulmate.
Settling for a man that’s not-so-perfect, just so that you can have a family and children before it’s too late, can open up an ugly and hurtful can of worms.
But does that mean that you should turn up your nose at any man who doesn’t seem like a potential husband?
Of course not.
I am a firm believer in the idea that every relationship is in your life for a reason. When you’re dating Mr. Good-But-Not-Great, you’re learning valuable relationship skills.
You’re learning how to cope when a relationship isn’t satisfying. You’re learning how to deal with an imperfect situation. You’re learning to clarify your own needs and take a stand.
So yes, go ahead and date men that you wouldn’t marry!
But just don’t MARRY him.
Do one thing for me: imagine yourself at your golden wedding anniversary. You’re sitting at a long table beside your husband and looking proudly at all your children and grandchildren. One of your grandchildren pipes up: “Grandma! Tell us how you and Grandaddy met and fell in love!”
What kind of story do you want to tell?
Do you want to tell a story about how your eyes locked across a table and you just knew you were meant for each other?
Or do you want to tell a story about what a good guy he was and how you decided to get married someday because everyone was expecting you to?
The choice is yours.
Let me know your thoughts and experiences with settling or not in the comments below!
If you’re ready to take the plunge and learn why men pull away – Click here to watch my free video presentation…
I’m so glad this article made its way to me. I’ve just come out of a 5 year relationship and I have no idea what its like out there in the dating world as I never had to date my ex’s as I already knew them. But you’re right, I dont need to settle despite me being in my mid-thirties already. I dont need to panic despite my age and I dont need to string a guy along just so that I can have someone in my life again. Maybe I will have to go through 15 guys (I certainly hope not) before I find the right one but it will be worth it in the end 🙂
I fully agree with you. I made the mistake of getting married because I believed that ALL men are the same. It was not a very loving marriage and today I rather stay alone than being in a loveless marriage. At this stage I do not even want to ever get married again out of fear to be stuck in a relationship that I cannot get out of easily. Maybe I am a coward but that is how I feel.
Thanks for your good advice.
I settled 33 years ago and then met my soul-mate 14 years into marriage. He also has the same experience. I am born again and I cannot cheat, but I am miserable with 5 grandchildren. I am about to retire, but I see myself single in old age.
I married my “soul mate” and guess what? He told me several months ago that he wanted out of our marriage. My best years are certainly behind me at 53 years old. All the men I see on dating sites are apparently searching for somebody who will look good on the back of their motorcycle, and apparently, that’s not me.
If I ever do find a man that is “Mr. Good-but-not-great” I will seriously consider whether or not to “settle” for him. If it’s a man I can respect and who actually has integrity in his most intimate of relationships, I think I’d snap him up in a heartbeat, whether sexual passion is involved or not.
I wish I had married my bestfriend!
I was 21 when my mother died. I decided
that I wanted to start my family and my
true love was already taken. We had broken
up.
I don’t regret my 4 wonderful kids and
their Dad is a good father to them but we
had no foundation to build on.
I’m divorced after 20 years and looking
for a great guy. At this age tho it is not as
easy.
I won’t settle again!
Interesting comments. So what do you do with a guy who says that you’re everything he wants but doesn’t have that over the top feelings for you? When you think that you could have a comfortable life and relationship with him. So, do you settle for this relationship? Or move on? Thoughts?
I thought I had married my soulmate. Then a year and half ago, I discovered a deep secret that he had been hiding from for 17 years. He prefers prostitutes to regular women. He would rather pay for dirty perverted sex than to have sex with his wife. He had been paying upkeep of a whore for the past year and calling her his girlfriend, the love of his life, but he let her go to pursue a better life.
Told me I don’t turn him on sexually. I was stunned and deeply hurt. The love of your life?? What a crock! Investigate your man before you invest your life.
Women should be the ones to pull away and fast.
Move on and settle for nothing less than a police check.
I have no idea Tammy. I was in a relationship for 12 and a half years, with a man that said he will do everything for me and he loved me so much – but when I suggested that we should marry – he was not keen to do so. It was then that I knew I needed to move on as that is what I wanted. Now at 39 I am in a relationship which I feel you do need to settle to make things work – since a lot of the men out there feel that they are all entitled to a trophy girlfriend, (ignoring the fact that they are not exactly an oil-painting). A lot of men out there will not consider a woman who is not under mid-thirties and tend not to consider one as marriage material unless they themselves are a good 20 years your senior! Besides, most men these days do not want to commit to a woman anyway so many women do find themselves as life long-term girlfriends since it is traditionally the man who is expected to propose. Yes – call me old-fashioned!
I’m with Karen, married my “soul mate” at 18. 35 years later, he wants out of the marriage. But I won’t settle. I had a good marriage, for awhile and I have great kids. I like a man’s company, but I will never marry less than the full deal. Otherwise, someone is always going to be looking around wondering…
I married my soul mate 25 years ago. We have 3 great kids and have had a mostly calm and fulfilling marriage. He is still fully in love with me but my desire for him is gone and it is sad. Feels like a roommate and business partnership. There are no guarantees it will stay even if you think you have found it so go with your best instinct at the time. But don’t marry the “red flag” men…don’t do that, the good enough is a much better option.
Hmmm. What do i want? Well, at 56 I know what i want but i also know that i won’t find it, so what to do? Ok, here’s what i want (don’t laugh – oh, what the hell, laugh – may as well have some fun with this) I want a “Jason Bourn” (you know, “The Bourne Identity”, but older): gorgeous, muscular, strong in body and spirit, courageous, a man’s man with a true respect for women, honest, principled with just a little bit of a need for me, but only me, no other woman. You must be doubled-over on the ground by now! I know, if ever i find him, i should let you know if he has a brother. It’s tough. We watch movies and see these men that we just can’t find in real life. Russel Crow in Gladiator (just watched in for the 100th time last night). Cling Eastwood in the Good Bad and Ugly, etc., etc. Where are these tough guys with all the characteristics a man should have but a soft spot waiting just for us. Well, i haven’t found one and I’ve been looking for over 35 years. They (men), on the other hand, watch porn or even just teenage girls with their skirts right up to their ying-yangs passing by on the street and they expect all women to look like this (men don’t have realistic expectations either). Everybody is disappointed. How much do we really need to feel satisfied? That’s the question. If a guy has all those wonderful characteristics but lacks hair on his head, is it really settling? I don’t know. Just asking. Worth a thought.
OMG! What a bunch of whiners! If you don’t like your life, change it. Change your attitude mostly, but change it. Look at all the positives you have in your lives. I married someone who I was madly in love with, but he didn’t have the same passion level as me. When he passed away I was left alone at 46. After a few years I decided that’s enough and started looking at myself as a whole person, not someone who’s looking for the other half of a couple. Guess what folks? They’re flocking to my door, in ages from 30 to 70. When you like and love yourself and KNOW you are the best of the best, that’s when Mr. Right shows up.
A lot comes down to it depending on what you mean by love. Initial passion doesn’t last: the test of time is to see how you feel (and how compatible you are) once it has gone. Some people make the opposite mistake, assuming that someone was NOT “the one” for them because they didn’t fall madly enough in love with them…. and a lot of people if they marry without living together first (or in the days when people didn’t live together before marriage) think they’ve made a mistake once they lose the initial passion OR they spend years trying to get “back to how things used to be”!
Mary’s right. The goal is to somehow like and love yourself. Seeing yourself as a whole person and not as half of a couple is a very interesting concept as many of us, myself included, struggle with an almost psychic loneliness. Hence, the giant self-help industry. 🙂
I may not fall exactly into this group as I married the same type of man twice and eventually realized I was reenacting my incest background, hoping it would come out different and it doesn’t. The solution is still probably the same, although I haven’t got that figured out either.
Another issue for professional women is how does your partner handle your success? My ex and current husband really were (and are) schizo on this topic vacillating between resentful because of their low self-esteem but still wanting the money. A solution then is to attack the cash cows self-esteem and so it goes. Probably a topic for another edition of the blog. 🙂