It’s common knowledge that women like to be complimented on the way they look among other things, and that they like to be with their significant other. But the question arises, how much is too much? When have we crossed the line of being extremely romantic and cross over into being clingy and over completmentative?
As with any friendship, and a relationship should be just that only more intense, spending too much time with someone will cause irritation problems between the parties involved. It usually takes longer the older we get to rub one of our friends the wrong way enough to piss them off past their threshold, and even longer when we are romantically inovlved with them. But none the less it is possible, and very easy to do. This threshold differs from person to person. Some people can withstand just a few small hours with each other before getting tired of one another, while others can days without becoming irritated.
One problem with this is that we all have different expectations. One person may want to hang out every other day, while the other person in the relationship may only want to hang out once or twice a week and ease into things. With most people it isn’t always easy to tell if they are becoming irritated or are growing tired of you, and so it is very important to be open with each other about how you are feeling.
Now you may not want to just flat out ask your partner about how they feel about you and the time you spend together, but instead you may want to start off small and talk about pas relationships and what you each liked and disliked about different relationships that you each have been in. Work off of those likes and dislikes to form a begining system for your relationship. If one of you is comfortable meeting with each other everyday leaving only one or two days for personal time while the other is comfrtable meeting only two or three times a week to start out, go with the two or three days. Don’t push your partner into something that they don’t really want to do.
However, it isn’t only the two parties in a relationship that make it work. Be sure to talk to your friends about their feelings on the situation. If your friends want to hang out three times a week, and you and your significant other want to be together three times a week, that only leaves you with one day of recouporation time. Be sensible and try to work out a solution with your significant other and your friends. Make suggestions such as on Monday and Wednesday nights you hang out with your friends only, while on Tuesday and Friday nights it’s you and your significant other. This leaves you with THursday, Saturday, and Sunday to choose from for any other times to meet. You could spend one of these nights with everyone. Significant others and friends all going out and doing something together. This way your friends are happy because they get to spend time with just you, and your significant other is also happy because they have time alone with you as well. Proposing solutions such as this will keep both your friends, your significant other, and yourself happy for a much longer time.
Don’t think that once you set a schedule that it can’t be changed. On the same note, don’t go randomly changing it either. It should be understood between both your friends and your significant other that sometimes schedules have to change, or sometimes something comes up almost last minute, yet it is still up to you to make up for any last minute changes. If you suddenly have to give up an evening with your friends for your significant other because they can’t do anything on a night that was predetermined as your night together, and instead have to meet on a night that you are supposed to be with friends, it is your responsibility to make up that time with your friends. Don’t just go and completely blow them off, as that will bring you down a lonely road without any friends. Then you’re just stuck back where you started only one significant other up.
So the question still remains, “How Much Is Too Much?” Well that depends on you and your friends as well as your significant other. Don’t anger your friends and don’t anger your significant other either. Both parties should be understanding especially if you explain things to them. Work out a deal between both groups and make sure that they all understand how things are going to work. If they can’t work with the proposed solution, work together to make a new one so that everyone ends up happy. That is where true friendship lies, in understanding and cooperation.