DEAR DR. NERDLOVE: I’m a gay man (26) dating another gay man (26). Or at least I’m beginning to wonder whether we’re dating or not. Or at least if he’s as into me as I am into him.
We’re open, which means that we’re both seeing other people casually. I’m more of a relationship hierarchy guy, so he’s my main focus. But my issue is that our relationship feels lopsided to me. I feel like I’m always the one having to propose dates or getting together and I’m almost always the one who makes the plans, decides where we’re going and all that. We also have to work around his schedule, which is legitimately tight, so we don’t see each other as often as I’d prefer.
When we get together, he’s fully present and we both have a good time. He’s warm, affectionate, playful and I don’t feel neglected or unwanted when he’s around. We message each other regularly and the blue ratio is pretty even and he’ll message me first to just talk about as often as I’ll message him. But it’s the getting together part that always makes me wonder if I’m more invested in this than he is. and if that’s the case, do I say something to him? Do I accept that I’m a lower priority as a boyfriend than some of the other folks he’s seeing? Do I break up and move on to find someone else who isn’t going to leave me feeling like a back-up option when nothing else is going on? Is that even what’s happening or am I just being a dramatic b--ch about it? Help?
Lost In My Own Head
DEAR LOST IN MY OWN HEAD: I’ll level with you, LIMOH: it’s very tempting to say that if someone sees you as a priority, they’ll treat you as a priority and declare that it’s time to ditch this guy. And maybe that’s what needs to happen.
But I’m at a point where that sort of black-and-white hardliner mentality seems to be less beneficial. Yeah, it’s got some real “don’t let anyone treat you as second best” boss energy to it, but it also doesn’t allow much room for nuance, circumstance or understanding how other people work.
One of the things we often don’t talk about when we talk about relationships and relationship dynamics is that not everyone behaves the way we do or the way we expect them to, and we often end up in unnecessary conflicts because we’re angry about who we think they should be instead of meeting them where they are.
Some people, for examples, are just bad texters. They don’t like to text or it doesn’t hit the same parts of their brain and so they aren’t always on their phone or quick to reply; they just prefer talking in person instead of over the phone. That doesn’t mean that they don’t like you when they don’t text back immediately or are the exact same level of communicative when they do. It just means that they’re not a texter. You can be upset with them for not… or you can accept them for who they are and adjust your expectations.
The same goes with the dynamic of a relationship. It’s very easy to fall into roles where one of you is the planner and organizer and so that person is the one who does the lion’s share of proposing dates, inviting the other person on them and so on. That doesn’t mean the other person doesn’t care or is less invested; they’re just not a planner on the same level and their brain doesn’t work that way.
Now that doesn’t mean that it doesn’t get tiring to always be doing the planning and proposing. Sometimes a dude wants to be pampered and taken care of for once. God knows I love it when I’m taken on dates instead of planning them; it feels special and validating when it happens. But as someone who tends to make the first move and makes plans… I’m usually the initiator, rather than the recipient.
And that may well be how your boyfriend is with everyone, not just with you. Or he may be the planner with others, but appreciates how you are the one planning your dates with him.
You know who could answer that question for you? Your boyfriend. Because unless you’re secretly dating Professor X, your boyfriend’s not a mind-reader. If you haven’t told him that this is how you feel, then he almost certainly doesn’t know.
This is a time to use your words and talk about your feelings on this. You don’t necessarily need to tell him that you worry that he’s not as invested in this relationship as you, but that you feel like you don’t see him as often as you would prefer, that you feel like you’re always having to ask him out and plan the dates and it leaves you feeling like maybe you’re not as much of a priority for him. Let him know that you would like to be taken on dates too, that you’d like to be the seduced instead of the seducer on occasion and what it would mean to you.
Now I realize that this is the sort of thing that feels like “if I have to ask for it, it’s not real.” That’s not true. We all like to think that our partners would just know, because they know us that well and care that much. But I refer you back to the whole “not Professor X” issue. If your partner fills a need after you tell him that you have this need, that doesn’t mean that it means less. It just means that until that point, he may not have realized it was a need you had in the first place. Just as he may well have needs that you don’t know about.
But nobody can know about them until someone says something. So stop reading the tea leaves and stop expecting your boyfriend to finally come into his mutant powers. Talk this out with him so that he knows this is something that’s important to you.
And then? Well, talk a bit more, so you two can understand each other a bit better and then love each other for who you both are, instead of who you feel like the other should be.
Good luck.
Please send your questions to Dr. NerdLove at his website (www.doctornerdlove.com/contact); or to his email, doc@doctornerdlove.com