Girlfriend Refused To Be Exclusive Until Her Boyfriend Proposed

feferity

pepper dem gang
I am an empowered woman of the 21st century: I run a company, have a master’s degree and earn a handsome six-figure salary.

Yet at heart, I am and have always been a lover of old-fashioned romance.

There’s always been something very endearing to me about the idea of a man stepping up to claim me. It makes me feel special and cherished when someone makes an effort to win my heart, surprising me with flowers or jewelry or picking up the bill on a date — not because I can’t afford to pay for myself, but because he enjoys treating me.

I realized early on that this is how I wanted to date. I wanted to be courted. I wanted someone who would make an effort. I wanted a man who was willing to commit and offer me a ring — without taking years to decide if I was the one for him.

So that’s what I set out to get when I first met my husband, Chris.

After eight weeks of dating, Chris wanted me to be his girlfriend. It was very clear that we liked each other, that there was attraction and compatibility, and for him, exclusivity was the natural next step. But I thought his offer was weak.

With me as his girlfriend, he would get full access to me. He would sleep in my bed, lean on me for emotional support, show me off to his friends and enjoy my company at family gatherings. That would all be very nice, but it wouldn’t give me any assurance about the future, which was what I needed to feel safe. The offer I wanted included a proposal and being told I would forever be his one and only.

In his defense, you might ask, ‘How could he know so soon? He needs time to get to know you.’ That’s exactly my point. Why should I shut down all my options while someone “tests drives” me? I know many women don’t mind that risk — and often want the trial period with a potential partner themselves — I hold no judgment against them. But that path wasn’t for me. My past experience had taught me that once in the girlfriend zone, I started to hope the relationship would lead to marriage. And every time it didn’t, I got my heart broken.

So when Chris asked me to be his girlfriend, I refused. I told him I really liked him, but I didn’t want to be exclusive. I would continue dating him while also spending time with other men. And if things started to get serious with someone else, I would let him know — but I made sure he understood I didn’t plan on being any man’s girlfriend, so he didn’t think my refusal was just about him. My philosophy: May the best man win.

Lo and behold, the best man did win — and he turned out to be Chris.

After nine months of seeing me, Chris got down on one knee with the most gorgeous diamond and sapphire ring I’d ever seen and told me he couldn’t imagine his life without me. Today, we’re blissfully married and have been blessed with a healthy baby boy. I have everything I ever wanted.

We often sit together and laugh about how hard it was for Chris to date a woman like me, but also how powerful an experience I had created for him. He says I inspired him to dig deeper into his heart to consider whether I was the right person for him. Other women before me had been much easier to date, but they never forced him to think about settling down. And, he confesses, he was scared another man would sweep me off my feet if he didn’t gather his guts and commit.

Was all this easy for me? Hell, no. It pushed me way beyond my comfort zone. There were times when it was hard to believe there could be a man on the planet who would gladly accommodate me. A part of me feared my experiment might fail and leave me alone and heartbroken again. And yet, it felt so empowering to stick to what I wanted in love, to be able to articulate it, to draw boundaries — and, for once, not to care about what made a man happy, but what made me happy.

Sami Wunder is a dating and relationship coach, and the author of the e-book Your Feminine Roadmap To His Commitment. Read her advice on Facebook.

Motto hosts voices and influencers from various spheres. We welcome outside contributions. Opinions expressed do not necessarily reflect the views of our editors.

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Pics of the author and husband
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Nothing wrong this man's looks. He's just average looking like 85% of the men in this world. So long as he is meeting all her core needs and she's ok with his face in the morning with his morning breathe and eye boogers, she has done ok for herself. There are not that many extremely attractive men to go around for all the women that want them. Many of them are as dumb as a box of rocks anyway.
 
Nothing wrong this man's looks. He's just average looking like 85% of the men in this world. So long as he is meeting all her core needs and she's ok with his face in the morning with his morning breathe and eye boogers, she has done ok for herself. There are not that many extremely attractive men to go around for all the women that want them. Many of them are as dumb as a box of rocks anyway.

The author and her husband both look like they are at the age where they have gotten over the whole looks=winning misnomer. They want someone who is compatible with them in life above everything else. The author found someone who valued her and was willing to do what it takes to keep her so she won.
 
IMO, these ppl are equally yolked looks wise.

There seems to be a high emphasis on looks in this thread. Is this because some feel like this tactic would only work on an unattractive guy?

I think the key here is to get the man to see you as invaluable, so much that he cant risk another man having you forcing him to skip the usual song and dance and go straight to the proposal.

I think what she did was brilliant and risky, but it def paid off.
 
I can agree that most people are average, this dude isn't even on the chart.

He looks like Mr. Delivert's white cousin
And he had to think about it for 9 months lol. Okay dude. Sure. Like he's the catch here. I was more thinking about how long it took more than anything. I agree with her on everything else now that I'm at the stage where I want to get married, I will not waste time. No, either we are together or we are not. I'm dating until someone is ready to take me off the market. Now I say this after a huge pause for the last 7 months of getting my health together as I have had a doozy of a time and was not thinking about marriage, dating or anything, just surviving.

So anyways, from matchmaking background (that I have working for a previous matchmaker), I approve of this message and I read the opening like sure duh. That's what you do when you aren't playing games. I'm not your try out girl. You want me or nah. And guess what I'm in my 30'[s so I'm not going to be waiting around and dating you for 9 months anyways, you'll probably be rotated out at the beginning or within a few months if you aren't serious because a guy should dote on me, not the other way around (it could also be the libra in me. I need you to adore me and be enamoured with me. Everyone said that of my previous fiance and other boyfriends, and that's the way I choose em. Of course I now will look for a good mother in law situation so I don't have to get rid of anothr fiance but hey, that's for another discussion).

So anyways, if more women did this, we'd win. This is from a previously engaged person (I cut off the wedding) and who will be again soon when I find the right guy (wink). *I approve her message :lol:
 
IMO, these ppl are equally yolked looks wise.

There seems to be a high emphasis on looks in this thread. Is this because some feel like this tactic would only work on an unattractive guy?

I think the key here is to get the man to see you as invaluable, so much that he cant risk another man having you forcing him to skip the usual song and dance and go straight to the proposal.

I think what she did was brilliant and risky, but it def paid off.

He ugly and poor. Pick a struggle. I'm not dating or marrying someone who looks like that unless my grandchildren are going to pick which philanthropical endeavor they want to pursue as a career.

Pippa's dude looks like Smeagol but has 3 billion dollars, he has the right to be ugly. This dude is ugly, a time suck and has short pockets. You can find a cute/average dude whose nose doesn't look like it belongs to my vibrator.
 
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