Hello, Internet! Welcome to Ask Dr. NerdLove, the only dating advice column that provides the FAQ to the dating sim of life.
Speaking of love and games, before I get down to this weekâs questions, a quick plug: if youâre going to be at PAX East in Boston this weekend and like overthinking the stories behind video games, come to my panel: Video Game Romance â The Stories We Love and the Lessons they Teach, Friday at 8PM in the Arachnid theater. Weâre going to talk about relationship mechanics in games, how they affect us and whether or not they can teach us anything in real life.
With that out of the way, itâs time to talk about what happens when relationships get complicated. Sometimes, seemingly minor issues can have major implications for the future of your relationship, and trying to navigate your way around them can be what makes the difference between a long, happy life together and an unpleasant break-up.
So letâs get down to it, shall we?
Dear Dr NerdLove,
I am a college aged student at a Christian liberal arts college in my junior year and have been dating a girl for 2 years. Everything is great, we love each other, want to get married when we graduate etc etc⊠However, she has outright expressed that she would not marry me if I wasnât a Christian (Iâm agnostic). We have had some tough talks and we both arenât willing to compromise on the issue. She wants to wait it out and see if God will talk to me or if I will change my outlook. I tell her it is probably not going to happen as I have wrestled with religion growing up and have come to my terms with it. Like I said, everything else is fantastic in our relationship, but I have been feeling like it will all be for naught. We truly believe that we want to marry each other but I donât want to squander the last years of my college lifetime. I try to explain to her that I think it could work with us not believing in the same thing but she does not. What should I do in this situation?
TL;DR Christian girl wants me to be a Christian before marriage, I probably wonât be. We both love each other dearly. Should we continue on?
Thanks,
Wrestling with religion
This is actually a thornier issue than you realize, WWR.
Every relationship is a matter of compromise. No matter how amazing a person is, you arenât going to be a 100% match for one another. Settling down means that youâre going to have to accept that there are things that you arenât going to get in that relationship and that there are things that you donât like that youâre going to be asked to do. Sometimes these are fairly minor issues and you can just write them off as the price of entry for the relationship because your partnerâs just that awesome. Other times, theyâre bigger issues and you and your partner are going to have to find a compromise that works for you both.
And then there are times that you run into areas where there canât be a compromise, where the ask is just too big to overcome and the only answer is for one person or the other to give in. Those issues tend to be dealbreakers, and they can sink a relationship.
And religion can be a major dealbreaker. This is going to be a major issue in your relationship, WWR, and in ways that I donât think you realize.
When youâre not religious yourself, it seems fairly simple; you do your thing and she does hers, no muss no fuss no interference. Maybe you bend a little and attend services at Christmas and Easter and all is well.
But for someone whose religion is that important to them, dating someone who isnât part of it can be difficult in the long run. To someone who is religious and for whom their religion is an important part of their lives, itâs more than just a question of where to go on Sundays or playing the game of âNah, buttstuffâs cool with Jesus because everyone knows Godâs totally known for letting people skate on technicalities.â Itâs a core part of their identity, their community and their life. You canât treat it like something you can compartmentalize or put aside because it informs everything about them. Having a long-term, serious relationship with somebody who doesnât necessarily fit into their lives like that can be incredibly difficult.
For example, thereâs the question of just how youâre going to fit into her community. If your values clash with theirs, that means thereâs always going to be tension there. Obviously, youâre able to go along with things, seeing as youâre an agnostic at a Christian college. But thereâs a difference between being at an academic institution, where a certain amount of debate and questioning is built in, and another when itâs her day to day life and community. How long are you going to be able to bite your tongue and not say anything when a topic comes up that you seriously disagree with?
Are you going to be OK with the feeling that you donât belong? Are you going to be able to put up with the feeling of being judgedâwhether thatâs happening or notâwhen youâre with her friends, her family, her community? Or with the pressure to convert?
And while you may be able to put up with any differences, what about your family? Will they be able to get along with her family? Is every visit with her parents going to end up being a debate about religion? Are family get-togethers going to be full of uncomfortable silences?
Then thereâs the pressure this puts on your girlfriend. Much depends on which branch of Christianity sheâs part of, but while some are chill and live-and-let-live, others can be very much âus-or-themâ. Can you understand the pressure that sheâs going to be under when it feels like all the important people in her life think youâre a bad influence on her? Itâs very easy to say that if she loves you she should be able to handle it⊠right up until there comes a point where the most important people in her life are avoiding her because of you.
Setting those aside, you also have questions about your future together. How are the two of you going to raise your children together? What faith will you raise them in? Will you be going with them to church on Sundays? How will you handle holidays? Can you set your skepticism aside while theyâre growing up so that you donât create conflicts between you, them and your wife?
And then thereâs just the question of how sheâs going to feel about you two in the long term. If your girlfriend is a true believerâand it certainly sounds like she isâyour being agnostic cuts you off from Heaven. As silly as it may seem to someone who doesnât share her faith, believing that you wonât be spending eternity with someone you love can be incredibly painful. You can do your best to convince her, but the nature and method of salvation is something thatâs been debated since the Council of Nicea in the 600s; unless youâre another Thomas Aquinas or C.S. Lewis, odds are you arenât going to budge her or her churchâs theology.
The other thing to keep in mind: to you, her religion is a small part of her. To her, it may well be everything. Itâs one thing when she believes thereâs a chance that you may come around. But the longer youâre together, the more your rejection of her faith can feel like a rejection of her as a person. Thatâs the sort of issue that can end up being a time-bomb in a relationship, building slowly until it reaches a critical mass and explodes messily and all over the place.
If the two of you are at an impasse, then yes, this relationship is going to end. No way around that. But I do want to take issue with the idea that staying together is somehow âwastingâ your college years. One common mistake people make is believing that unless one or both of you die in the saddle, the relationship was a failure or a waste of time. Just because you arenât going to get married doesnât mean that youâre squandering time spent with your girlfriend. Thereâs nothing wrong with savoring the time you have with someone you love, even if you know that itâs not going to be forever. You can enjoy what you have together, even knowing that itâs going to come to an end. In many ways, itâs actually better for you. Having an expiration date means that you can end things on your terms, rather than finding out that youâve outgrown the relationship or in bitterness and acrimony. And believe me: if your relationship ends and the two of you can still look back on the happy times and still have fond feelings for one another? Thatâs a successful relationship by my standards.
If you do decide to stay together, then go into it with open eyes and realistic expectations. Donât see it as a last-ditch attempt to change the other personâs mind; thatâs going to just leave you both frustrated and upset. Appreciate what you have and then part on good terms. And if you decide to end it: do it quickly and cleanly. The clean break does the least damage and heals the quickest.
Good luck.
Hey Doc.
My SO and I have been together five years. We have sex really frequently â on a daily basis, sometimes multiple times a day. But recently he shared that he masturbates 3+ times a day, in addition to whatever we do together.
He had a lot of shame relating this, which I feel is sad. I told him that masturbation is a healthy part of any relationship.
My SO then went on to say that he uses masturbation to relieve anxiety/insomnia (thus heâs masturbating multiple times in the middle of the night), and he also told me he thinks heâs maybe addicted to masturbation or quite possibly doesnât understand how itâs not an addiction for everyone as the release of endorphin is so massive for him.
Is my SO really addicted to masturbation? I know exercise addiction is a real thing â some people do get endorphin highs which leave drive their brains much higher than the average person, but in the hours after exercise, their brain will also dip lower, leaving them prone to seek out more of the endorphin producing exercise, so I feel as though similar things could happen with masturbation. Is there any research on addiction to masturbation and if it leaves similar peaks and troughs in the brain?
The other thing is that, I will say I can tell when my husbandâs penis is well rested. When Iâm the 4th orgasm of the day, the quality of our sex is simply not as good. Iâm willing to try to work through this but I donât know how. This is a behavior that he has had for years (6+ times a day before, even when he was in relationships), which decreased when we got together, but lately I feel it is the point that it is affecting our relationship negatively. I donât want to label either one of us abnormal â Iâm sure sexuality and desire have a spectrum. But I just donât know where the compromise is in this case either or why my husband insists on labeling himself deviant. He says that he wishes he could talk to friends about this but he just feels alone on needing to masturbate what he considers a lot, on top of a pretty active sex life with me.
Thanks for all you do Dr. Nerdlove!!
Frustrated Spouse
I donât know if Iâd label him an addict, FS, because thatâs a fairly loaded term that gets thrown around freely without really thinking about it. A lot of addictive behavior has less to do with the behavior itself and tends to be a form of self-medication instead.
So Iâd have a lot of questions before Iâd label this a problem, never mind an addiction. The first being: is he doing active harm to himself? Is he masturbating to the point of chafing or damaging the skin of his penis? Does his desire to masturbate get him into trouble â that is, does he do it at times when he shouldnât? Does he get anxious or uncomfortable if he doesnât masturbate several times a day? Is it possible for him to skip a day or two days without getting distressed?
And another important question: is he forgoing sex with you to gratify himself instead? Is he invested in your sex life together, or is he only up for quickies with you instead of something more involved and mutual?
Iâd want to have answers to those questions before Iâd even feel comfortable labeling this as a problem, never mind an addiction. Is it unusual? Yeah, Iâd say so. Donât get me wrong, sex drives fall on a spectrum from the asexual to the satyrs but maintaining a level of activity that most people can only achieve in the early years of puberty is impressive. But unusual doesnât mean bad, especially if itâs not interfering with his life or his relationship with you.
One thing that I think is a problem is the way he labels himself a deviant. We still live in a profoundly sex-negative culture and one that teaches men and women conflicting ârulesâ and insists that if we donât have sex in the âproperâ manner, weâre bad people.Itâs shockingly easy, especially if he grew up in a religious household, to view any non-standard (for suitably arbitrary definitions of âstandardâ) mode of sexual expression as being proof that heâs a bad, diseased or otherwise broken person. I suspect that he has a lot of shame surrounding his sexuality⊠especially when damn near everyone masturbates.
Now, if his masturbatory habits arenât interfering negatively in his life, then itâs not necessarily a problem. It doesnât sound like heâs neglecting you sexually, although if itâs affecting his performance, he really should commit to giving himself a break and being with you instead of a couple rounds of wham-bam-thank-you-glans. Thatâs being selfish on his part but not necessarily a relationship-threatening behavior. Itâd be another story entirely if he would rather just get himself off than have sex or if he treats you like a human fleshlight instead of his partner.
That being said: some of the behavior makes me cock an eyebrow. Six times a day every day? He jerks it several times an evening in order to get some sleep?! This makes me suspect that it has less to do with any addiction or any endorphin rush than it does dealing with having high levels of anxiety that heâs trying to relieve. If thatâs the case, then heâd be better off talking with a therapist than just pounding it out every 20 minutes.
To be perfectly honest, I think itâd be good for him to talk to a therapist, regardlessânot because of how often he masturbates, but the way he feels about it. If he really feels isolated and carries a lot of shame and guilt over his masturbation habits, then working with a therapist can go a long way towards easing his mind overall. You can find a sex-positive therapist via the American Association of Sex Educators, Counselors and Therapists referral system. Hopefully that can bring him some peace and make sure his habits are healthy instead of harmful.
Good luck.
Have you had an interfaith relationship? Have your sexual habits interfered with your relationship? Share your thoughts and experiences in the comments and weâll be back in two weeks with more of your dating questions.
Ask Dr. Nerdlove is Kotakuâs bi-weekly dating column, hosted by the one and only Harris OâMalley, AKA Dr. NerdLove. Got a question youâd like answered? Write [email protected] and put âKotakuâ in the subject line.
Harris OâMalley is a writer and dating coach who provides geek dating advice at his blog Paging Dr. NerdLove and the Dr. NerdLove podcast. His new dating guide New Game+: The Geekâs Guide to Love, Sex and Dating is out now from Amazon, iTunes and everywhere fine books are sold He is also a regular guest at One Of Us
He can be found dispensing snark and advice on Facebook and on Twitter at @DrNerdLove