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Is It Wrong To Date Someone Extremely Similar To the Last Person You Dated?

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To bring it back to you, Mike: there’s nothing wrong with having tastes and preferences, as long as those tastes and preferences don’t box you in. Generally speaking, I like women who are readers. My girlfriend isn’t a reader. Generally speaking, I prefer women with liberal politics. My girlfriend comes from a right-wing military family. Generally speaking, I like curvy brunettes. My girlfriend is a curvy brunette – but most of my girlfriends have not been.

So don’t worry about your formulas or what it’s supposed to look like. Worry about whether it feels good and whether this woman brings out the best in you.

So don’t worry about your formula or what it’s supposed to look like. Worry about whether it feels good and whether this woman brings out the best in you. If so, you can laugh about your differences, and laugh about the fact that she’s a lot like your ex-girlfriend.

Put another way: If you’re a consistent and sound decision maker, it should be no surprise that your girlfriends possess similar qualities. It would be far more striking if one was a corporate attorney and the other was a punk rocker.

 

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10 Responses to “Is It Wrong To Date Someone Extremely Similar To the Last Person You Dated?”

  1. Jules Dec 3rd 2007 at 09:45 am 1

    Evan,
    Great advice as always. I love that your girlfriend is 38. How old are you if you don’t mind me asking? I am 32 and am always delighted to hear men dating women in their 30s. It gives me hope that they are not just interested in the twenty-somethings (not that there’s anything wrong with that!).

  2. Markus Dec 3rd 2007 at 11:32 am 2

    Agreed on the great response. I’m pretty outdoorsy and am looking for that but one of the dates I’ve liked the best over the last couple years wasn’t into hiking, biking or skiing. But because of all the other things I liked about her I fell hard. The question becomes, how do you narrow your parameters if at all? You can’t date everyone.

  3. Selena Dec 3rd 2007 at 01:45 pm 3

    I’m curious as to why Mike and the previous girlfriend broke up. I’ve found a couple times over the years that I dated someone who was alot like a previous boyfriend, and that I seemed to fall into the same kind of *pattern* with them, due to personality–and it wasn’t necessarily a good thing. This was always after the breakup, I didn’t see it at the start.

    If the women are so similar, might the course of the relationship be similar as well? And might not the outcome be the same?

  4. mrs. vee Dec 3rd 2007 at 01:54 pm 4

    Happy birthday, Evan’s girlfriend! How is Evan at spanking? ;)

  5. Evan's Girlfriend Dec 3rd 2007 at 02:35 pm 5

    Thanks for the birthday wishes, Mrs. Vee! And for the record, Evan is not opposed to spanking in a playful, it’s-your-birthday, let’s-be-a-little-naughty kind of way.

    As for the blog topic, I have found that, although my long-term relationships have all been different, there are always some common threads and similar personality traits in the men I have chosen to date. I think that is a good thing if they are good traits.

    In Selena’s post, she posits that similar mates might beget the same outcome, ie. an eventual break-up. That CAN be true, but I think the important thing is to realize WHY you broke up. It may have had very little to do with all the good qualities your ex had and more to do with a few areas of incompatibility. Or, in Evan’s case, timing. That goes for me, too. I have to believe that if I had met Evan right out of college, I would not have been ready to (1) date a younger man, or (2) date outside my religion. Timing is everything in that case. Even so, Evan has many of the traits I loved about my previous boyfriends, and I don’t think that means we are doomed — just that I am consistent in my attraction to thoughtful, affectionate, flirtatious, outgoing men.

    Good luck to Mike and the new girl that has all the nice qualities of his ex!

  6. mrs. vee Dec 3rd 2007 at 05:16 pm 6

    For a really compelling theory on why we keep repeating life’s choices (even the unhealthy ones), see the film “What the Bleep Do We Know”. It’s a campy movie with questionable funding, but it still interestingly suggests that repeat patterns stem from our becoming chemically addicted to our emotions (i.e. the neurotransmitters that produce them). We find ourselves unconsciously maneuvering ourselves into situations that will reproduce those feelings we’ve grown dependent on, whether the emotion is self-pity, suspense, the feeling of being indulged like a child, etc.

    It goes a long way to explain how we end up in the same types of relationship scenarios over and over again.

  7. Markus Dec 3rd 2007 at 08:19 pm 7

    Evan’s GF,

    I respect and appreciate your family’s service to the country. Know that my own family has served quite a bit and I work as a contractor. All that said, Bush really is the worst ever. What a mess.:(

  8. Jen from NYC Dec 5th 2007 at 01:39 pm 8

    No. No. and No. We are creatures of habit and familiarity. I totally agree with Evan in the respect that if you are dating the same “type” of women who are wrong for you, than yes, you are ulitmately not going to be successful. But overall, we like what we like. All of my boyfriends (and crushes) have been tall, dark, hairy, and handsome Jewish guys. No really. And some of them have had similar characteristics and thank gd the one I am with now, the best one I could have ever asked for, has different qualities and traits than the ones that I thought I should have been with. Does that make any sense?

    We all think we have this ideal, and in my oppinion that usually means we tend to like what he we know and feel familiar with. It is only when that familiar feeling is something unhealthy, like girls dating men who are abusive b/c perhaps they had an abusive father or man in their lives, when it becomes a problem. Major problem.

    When it comes to dating the single most imortant factor that trumps anything you can possibly think of is do you know yourself and are you honest with yourself? So many relationships fail because so many people have no ability to be introspective about their own issues and expect that having a boyfriend or girlfriend will make them and their lives better. It just does not work that way. I have come to understand that it takes a lot of work that you have to be willing to do to “find yourself.” Once you get to that place, you will find you will have healthier and more fulfilling relationships.

  9. Mike Dec 6th 2007 at 09:15 am 9

    Whoa, it’s weird to see your own question up on this site. The two girls were enough alike on paper - even living four blocks apart - that I was seeing dating the second girl as a continuation of dating the first. As many things the two girls had in common, I suppose taste in men was not one of them. Things didn’t go anywhere with the second girl. She had a trip planned for the weekend we should have gone out and we didn’t reconnect with me after she got home, despite two emails to her.

    To answer Selena’s question: the first girl broke up with me at the three month mark because she wasn’t that into me. She was going through hell at work, but I think the reasons she didn’t want to continue were that I was too boring and too conversationally slow. We haven’t talked at all since we broke up but we didn’t break up with any hostility.

  10. Selena Dec 8th 2007 at 04:37 am 10

    So Mike, would you say the similarity in the women extended to a similar outcome? That it took the first girl 3 mos. to determine she just wasn’t interested enough, but the second girl figured that out rather quickly?

    Sorry it didn’t work out, but maybe for you (like on occasion, me) this is a pattern of being attracted to someone who just isn’t quite right for you?

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