Guys: I challenge you to dating with integrity.
No, this does not refer to the book "Dating with integrity," however, runs along those lines. Most women date for the "Happily Ever After." What are you in the dating game for?
Be honest with yourself- if you are just in it to get the booty call, then do that. But just do that, don't try and string a nice girl along for the joy ride and dump scenario. It gets really old after a while, and thus makes the good girls really annoyed.
But if you are sincerely trying to date to find "The One," then date with that intention, and don't seal the deal or do anything that moves you into another level if that's not your intention with her.
In the Bible it says to "Run the race that is set before us." Men, think of the woman of your dreams as your race. She is your finish line. You start that race with the intention to marry her. You don't start that race and then not finish it.
The Bible also says to "Let your yes be yes and your no be no." What that means is to be firm in your decision to date with intention and integrity. If you have no intention on pursuing anything further, then you need to close that door. Don't linger, don't continue texting, don't continue to put yourself in a position where you are making it look like you have a continued interest in her.
The guy that continues to linger- the guy who wants to be around, and make his presence known, but with no commitment, is a huge douche. I dated one, three times. Shame on me the first two times. He spent 3 months on the phone with me, morning and night, Skyping, etc. He was also out of state, and I had just gone through back surgery, so the recovery period for me was what was taking so long for the first date. Anyways, we met, we had a great time together, etc. And we had planned on a second visit, which never happened. Then he slowed his calling, and then the calls stopped- they went to voicemail when I tried to find out what was going on. We decided to remain friends, and did keep in touch over the years.
Then I finished a really hard relationship, and he showed up about five (5) weeks later, and reclaimed my attention. He led me to believe that "in a year" we would begin a future. We went away for a weekend, and then a loss of a family member consumed his time. Then he never came back. I dated a few more people, and then told him that I was interested in more, and began to act that way. He then shut that down permanently, at his choice. He said he was firm about only wanting to remain friends. Remember- His Choice! I told him that based on his choice, I was going to close that door permanently. I was no longer going to linger on that hope that he was going to come back and be the man I wanted him to be. He had really hoped that I wouldn't burn the bridge, and to give him credit that he was upfront with me when he came back after my hard relationship, that he only wanted to continue a friendship. Yeah, how he wanted to be friends was how I perceived a relationship. So, with that, I told him that no credit was given, that I felt misled, and that I was permanently done with this situation. I told him he was not allowed to contact me via email, text, phone or Facebook ever again. I even blocked him from my Facebook page, along with the lovely friend that introduced us- I felt that her involvement and having had two strikes with people I had met from her was telling that I probably shouldn't be involved with her either.
Now, I have my new man, who took that challenge. He is actively running the race to make me his finish line. He's been upfront with me since Day One of his intentions, and he continues to show me that he intends to make me his finish line in the Great Race of Dating with Intention.
The discussions I've had with most couples that make it the distance in their marriage, are the ones where the man ran the race with intension. A guy I knew proposed to his wife with a diary of their dates, with her engagement ring tied to a few pages in the back. My parents were together since they were 14, and my mom was treated in such a decadent way, that she wanted no one else. My grandfather, my dad's dad, wrote my grandmother love letters while he was away at war. My cousin proposed to his wife, while they were in high school- the cheerleader and the football player- he proposed on a hill above the field on a Friday night that he was to play. My cousin's mom eloped and was married for over 50 years.
But these men ran with intentions on a finish line to have the woman they eagerly wanted at their side, at their side for the rest of their lives. I don't know of a single story in that list that ended in divorce.
Your love story doesn't have to be the grand soiree or the greatest dance ever, but it does have to be intentional, and that's what makes it special.
Dating with integrity is merely dating with intention to make the one you want for now and forever your finish line.
I challenge you, men, to that race.
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