Timing Is Everything: Times It's Best Not To Get Involved With Someone
Timing Is Everything: Sometimes It’s Best Not To Get Involved - Page 3
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When it comes to our careers, many people can agree that success occurs when preparation meets opportunity. One part of that you can control, and one part you cannot. You can take all the classes and get your portfolio in fighting shape and do all of the interview prep. That’s what you can control. You cannot control when you will meet just that perfect person to move your career ahead at an acquaintance’s New Year’s Eve party. You cannot control when the person who currently has the job you want walks out on her job, or whether or not anyone will tell you in time for you to swoop in. That’s all where opportunity comes into play. Missed opportunities sting, but you always have to remember that what’s yours will be yours. All of this is true for romantic relationships, too. A successful one will combine preparation (i.e. personal work) and opportunity (i.e. timing).
The problem is that so many people think that they can bypass the timing element of this – that somehow they will be the ones who make it work, when the timing is just trash. A very lucky handful of couples do make it work against all odds when the timing would have dictated otherwise. But, it’s not usually the best idea to make one’s plans in the hopes that they are the rare case. So, with the understanding that this isn’t always true, but it’s usually true, here are times it’s best not to get involved with somebody.
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When they’re separated
Dating someone who is separated is complicated. The type of separation will heavily dictate how messy things will be, and whether or not this is even headed for divorce (we cover more on that here). But ultimately, the “easiest” separation you can hope to get mixed up in is one where all the love is gone. There are no feelings left. That person is “technically” emotionally available. The problem is that…just because someone is no longer in love with their spouse doesn’t mean that they have emotionally disconnected from the life they built with that spouse, or the broken dreams they’d had for that union. Marriage is about so much more than feeling in love. It’s a partnership. It’s the foundation for one’s life. Mourning that is a long process, and getting involved with someone who is currently doing that will likely lead to heartbreak for you as you’ll never feel like top priority.
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When they just barely came out
Nearly anyone in the LGBTQ+ community today can tell you they’ve had this experience. It’s so common. If you identify as someone in that community, and you have for a long time aka you’re very comfortable with who you are and you’re completely out, you deserve to be with someone who is also in that space. So meeting someone who is just now realizing they are not straight, or perhaps someone who has known for a while but either A) just came out or B) still hasn’t come out to others, will usually lead to heartbreak. As many of my non-straight friends have put it, being with someone who isn’t fully out and proud about it can feel like getting “Pushed back into the closet”, as they ask their romantic partner to be secretive about the relationship. You didn’t put in the hard work of doing the personal work and fighting to be respected and honored for who you are, just to have someone ask you to…shut that down.
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When they’re in a 12-step program
Twelve-step programs can be incredibly effective. Research has even found they help alcoholics achieve sobriety better than therapy does. So if you are in one, consider following the leader’s or your sponsor’s advice closely. And if you meet someone who is in one, encourage them to do the same. Here’s the thing though: most 12-step programs will strongly recommend that members do not engage in a romantic relationship until the program is completed, and sometimes even for up to a year after that. Doing a 12-step program is part of a major healing journey, meaning someone likely still has wounds they need patched up. And as the saying goes, “Hurt people hurt people,” so…dating someone in such a program might hurt. Their recovery needs to be their first, second, and third priority, which puts their romantic partners fourth. That’s one of the reasons 12-step sponsors strongly discourage romantic relationships while someone is in the program.
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