Fickle-down economics
I’m a 29-year-old straight woman. I recently came to the odd conclusion that I have no idea what I want in a man. Over the past few years, I’ve been dating a variety of guys and hoping they’ll be right for me, and it’s not working. Some turn out to be nice guys, but some turn out to be jerks. One turned out to be a truly terrible person, but in hindsight, all were obviously wrong for me. In each case, the underlying problems were always there, but I didn’t identify them until things blew up months into the relationship or even a year in. Howcan I get clear on what I want?
— Lost
Looking for a boyfriend without knowing what you want in a man is like trying to order a meal without knowing what you like to eat: whether you live to put bacon on your bacon or you’re a vegan who stifles a sob whenever your mom cracks an egg for your dad’s omelet.
Standards are our tool for narrowing down what we want, from lunch to love. In love, it’s important to shrink down your potential partner pool, but without setting such high standards (per your own mate value and the current mate “market”) that the only boyfriend or girlfriend you’ll ever have is the imaginary kind. Though we tend to view having more options —“Sky’s the limit!” “The more, the merrier!” — as better than having just two or a handful to choose from, research actually finds that having numerous options is often the stuff human misery is made of.
Perhaps because the psychology currently driving us evolved in environments where situations rarely offered more than a few choices —“Bison breast or drumstick?” “Eat this bug or starve?” — research on decision-making has found we are unprepared for huge sets of options. We tend to suffer “choice overload”: We get overwhelmed, choose poorly, and regret our choice afterward. However, there’s a caveat. More choice can be better, explains psychologist Benjamin Scheibehenne and his colleagues, when, prior to making a choice, a person has “well-defined preferences.”
That’s where standards come in. Our standards for what we want in another person come in large part out of our values, though personality and genetics also play a role. Values are the principles we care most about: the standards we use to guide our behavior. Though most of us probably think of ourselves as good people with good values, the truth is, if asked to quickly name our values, we’d struggle to do it. Being unable to immediately call up our guiding principles means when we need to act quickly, we’re often clueless about what we should do, and we’re prone to act in ways we end up regretting.
Spelling out your top eight or 10 values will give you a behavioral map: guiding principles for how you’ll act and, ultimately, who you are. To write your list, you might look up “lists of values” online. Here are a few of mine (not in any order): 1. Courage. 2. Wisdom. 3. Kindness. 4. Integrity. ... 10. Seizing life (instead of blinking like a cow while it rushes by).
The person you want to be shapes the sort of person you should be with. For example, per my list of values, integrity is vitally important to me. So, when I came up with my standards for romantic partners — my “must-haves” for any man in my life — integrity was baked in: “Tall, evolved man of character who thinks for a living and cares about making a difference in the world.”
Likewise spelling out your standards for a romantic partner and vowing to stick to them should help you extract yourself when you’re magnetized by a Mr. Tall, Dark, and Manipulative: some hunky charismatic creep whose hotitude acts as a sort of sexual eclipse, blocking out what a terrible person he is. Assuming you include integrity in some form on your list, turning to your “must-haves” on a date forces you to look for evidence of good character, and when that’s missing, you’ll nix the guy and move on.
Of course, being clear on your values and narrowing down what you want in a man won’t always be enough. There are some clever sociopaths out there who are pros at hiding who they really are. Coming up with standards for character might not allow you to identify all dignity-crushing exploiters immediately. However, you should be able to do it much faster than with a more “openminded,” hope-driven approach: “Sorry, but I really have to draw the line at dating a man with a tail!”
39 Immigrant’s
subj. 41 Opposite of
“sans” 45 Proportion 47 Ms.
Longoria 48 Hotel security measure 52 — Lancelot 53 Craze 54 Soccer’s
Hamm 55 Eastern
path 56 Antlered
animals 57 Utter 58 NBC weekend show
ACROSS 1 Lucy of “Kill
Bill” 4 Mas’
mates 7 Welsh
pooch 12 Online chats, briefly 13 J.D. holder 14 Two-tone
cookies 15 — -jongg 16 Coatstorage area in a restaurant 18 Census stat 19 — Haute 20 Lowly
worker 22 Compass
dir. DOWN 23 Young 1 Succotash
whale beans 27 UFO crew 2 Mirror’s 29 Ran off to offering
wed 3 Theater 31 Bamboo worker
eater 4 Treaty 34 Thespian 5 Acropolis 35 Somnolent locale 37 Previously 6 Boat’s 38 “Roots” back
author Haley 7 Pepsi rival thing unique, or relief when you break away from restrictions.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
Enjoy good times with your tribe. If someone rains on your parade, it could be a sign that it’s not the right time to lead the band.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
If you’re compassionate and observant, you might be able to see beneath the surface and understand someone’s potential. 8 Hockey’s
Bobby
9 Old Olds 10 Sticky stuff 11 Belief 17 Manitoba
tribe
21 UPS rival 23 Winter quaff 24 Likely 25 Zodiac cat 26 Dime
portrait 28 Spigot 30 Trail the
pack 31 Unpaid TV
ad
32 100 percent 33 Formerly
known as 36 “Amen!” 37 “No One” singer Keys 40 Rose parts 42 Bulletproof
apparel 43 Perrier
rival
44 Yule tune 45 Some
HDTVs 46 Fine
48 Apt.
divisions 49 Feedbag
tidbit
50 — tear
(raging) 51 Russian
jet
IF JANUARY 8 IS YOUR BIRTHDAY:
An increasing enthusiasm for exploration and a fearless attitude toward challenges could make the next five to six weeks exciting. Your steady determination and focus on your goals may help you get through March. Don’t expect instant success in April. Continue to work hard, and in May an opportunity for advancement might fulfill your needs and address your dreams. Make financial decisions and changes in June.