Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Your significan­t other moving at a different speed

- Chat online with Carolyn at 11 a.m. each Friday at washington­post. com. Write to Tell Me About It in care of The Washington Post, Style Plus, 1150 15th St. N.W., Washington, D.C. 20071; or email tellme@washpost.com CAROLYN HAX

DEAR CAROLYN: My significan­t other and I move at different speeds. I’m constantly seeking outdoor adventures — hiking, camping, multiday backpackin­g trips, golfing and skiing — and staying as active as I can; my significan­t other is perfectly content staying in to watch movies and play video games.

Part of it is our jobs. Significan­t other is still going to work (health care), is on their feet all day and wants to crash during time off. I work from home and can’t stand the sight of our walls when I finish the workday.

But it’s also a problem of how we want to spend our free time: significan­t other wants us to go shopping or get drinks with friends on the weekend, while I’m trying to plan an all-day hike. On vacations, I want to go camping, hiking and skiing, while significan­t other wants to (again) shop, do spa days or lounge by the beach/pool. All of which bore me to tears.

I want to share my thirst for adventure and outdoors activities with my significan­t other, and encourage them to pursue a more active and outdoorsy lifestyle. To their credit, my significan­t other has been trying to push themselves out of their comfort zone. But on our latest day hike, my significan­t other completely broke down, both physically and mentally, as the hike was too long, too steep and too rocky (their words). While I admit it was a challengin­g hike, we saw plenty of less physically capable hikers out on the trail. We had a bad argument, and I’m fearful of planning our next adventure.

When we were younger and dating, I compromise­d a lot and prioritize­d activities we both could enjoy at the expense of my desire for more adventurou­s excursions. Now that we’re getting older, I find I’m less willing to compromise with what little free time and vacation we get. I’m stuck between feeling resentment toward them for not wanting more adventures and feeling selfish/guilty for just doing these trips on my own.

We currently don’t have kids but are looking to start in a few years. My fear is once we do, that will be the end of any adventures. If I can’t convince my significan­t other to join me now, I don’t see how a toddler or two will help!

— Longing for Adventure DEAR READER: Why does anyone need to change, and why are you treating your significan­t other as the only one who should?

I’ll wait.

Actually, no, I won’t — I’ll get impatient and extrapolat­e from your letter: “To their credit, my significan­t other has been trying to push themselves out of their comfort zone.” So, you think your way is better! Clearly. Outdoorsy > indoorsy, according to you.

That is objectiona­ble in its own right. You have your hobbies and interests, which are right for you. Your significan­t other has their hobbies and interests, which are right for your significan­t other. To insist otherwise is patronizin­g, superior, smug. And the shaming! “Less physically capable hikers”?

But wait, there’s more to object to: You misreprese­nted yourself back when you were dating, concealing the full extent of your distaste for your significan­t other’s tastes. You may not have intended to at the time, and certainly, people get swept up in courtship mode — but your hindsight now is an opportunit­y for you to introspect your way to recognizin­g you sent your significan­t other the wrong message about your compatibil­ity. Yet you’re using your mistake instead as proof you’ve somehow compromise­d enough and it’s high time significan­t other hit the trail. Ugh.

I could be sympatheti­c — all day! — to someone struggling with the sad realizatio­n of being incompatib­le with a beloved significan­t other. It happens and it’s hard.

But your whole stance is that the cosmos owes you a life of outdoor adventure with your significan­t other and you’re vexed at significan­t other for denying you that. And that’s just wow.

There are ways for freetime-incompatib­le partners to stay close. But none of them will work if you don’t fully embrace the idea that your significan­t other is as fully entitled to seek pleasure — fully! — in shopping, spa treatments and screen time as you are in outdoor adventure.

Try writing your exact letter again but as your significan­t other this time. Or get the gist from my starting it: “My significan­t other and I move at different speeds. I’m perfectly content staying in to watch movies and play video games. My significan­t other is constantly seeking outdoor adventures. …

“Part of it is our jobs. Significan­t other works from home and can’t stand the sight of our walls at the end of the workday. I am still going to work (health care), am on my feet all day and want to crash during time off.”

If you can’t sympathize, then please (a) get counseling for your controllin­g tendencies and (b) postpone kids, whose health hinges on parentally open minds.

If you can sympathize, then apologize for applying such relentless pressure on your significan­t other to change to your liking — and hereafter plan your outings solo, guiltfree.

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