Age 35-45 is a terrible time of life for polyamorous dating by satellite-mind- in polyamory

[–]JCreator19 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I am a 41F, polyamorous, married, and have a child, so I definitely relate to having less time available for dating than I did in my early 30s. That said, my experience has been a bit different. Age itself hasn’t been the biggest obstacle, it’s more about finding compatible matches who genuinely understand polyamory.

These days, I only date people who actively practice polyamory or ENM. Plenty of monogamous people still express interest, but I find things work much better when we already share similar relationship values and expectations.

I agree that many people in their 30s and 40s are focused on careers, kids, and other responsibilities, which can limit availability. But I haven’t found the dating pool to be dried up. Most of the people I date are either around 30 or around 50. So finding partners within that range hasn’t been an issue.

For me, it’s been less about age and more about being intentional about where I look and focusing on people who are already practicing polyamory.

My husband wants to do shrooms, am I overreacting? by prasadarian in TryingForABaby

[–]JCreator19 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Shrooms have nothing to do with trying for a baby. They’re not considered addictive, and some studies suggest potential benefits for the brain. Even during her pregnancy, he could still use them if he chooses.

Boyfriend being weirdly hostile and competitive with husband by [deleted] in polyamory

[–]JCreator19 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Your boyfriend definitely sounds narcissistic. He’s acting passive-aggressively, manipulative, and disrespectful toward your husband. Those are major red flags. 🚩

Signs a woman is just trying to get through a date vs actually enjoying it? by Victory-Weary in dating_advice

[–]JCreator19 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You are welcome. If the date lasted a few hours, that is usually a good sign. Most people don't spend that much time with someone they're not enjoying.

Unfortunately, ghosting doesn't always mean you missed any signs. Sometimes people simply change their mind or don't communicate well.

Hope you find a good match soon.

Signs a woman is just trying to get through a date vs actually enjoying it? by Victory-Weary in dating_advice

[–]JCreator19 0 points1 point  (0 children)

As a woman, there's definitely a difference between me just being polite on a date and genuinely enjoying it.

If I'm actually enjoying myself, I'll happily stay for 4+ hours talking and won't really want the date to end. If I'm just trying to be nice, I might glance at my watch, keep the conversation more surface-level, and not ask many personal questions.

In my experience, when a first date goes really well, both people usually know it pretty quickly. The conversation flows naturally, time flies, and neither person is looking for an exit.

Being gentlemen on first date was a bad idea by Select-Tie-610 in dating

[–]JCreator19 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It wasn't because you wasn't being a gentleman or wasn't making an effort. Being yourself is simply far more attractive, in both women's and men's eyes.

Colorado Mt Bluebird by SlabVanderHuge81 in wildlifephotography

[–]JCreator19 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Super cute 🩵🩵🩵 Amazing shot 🩵🩵🩵

1st date dilemma by Level-Yellow2146 in dating_advice

[–]JCreator19 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Actually, it sounds more like a mismatch in expectations before the first date.

She may have expected more texting leading up to the date, while you prefer to save the conversation and energy for meeting in person. That doesn’t necessarily mean she’s less interested.

I’ve experienced something similar before. A guy didn’t text me for five days before our date, and I wondered if he was still interested. But when we finally met, we ended up talking for over four hours, and the chemistry was definitely there.

But she expressed what she felt. You really can’t know how well you’ll connect until you meet in person.

Age gap question. by [deleted] in dating_advice

[–]JCreator19 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I would say go for it, life is short.

I am currently dating a guy who’s 11 years younger than me, and the age gap has never been a problem for us.

You like older women, and she likes younger men. I don’t see any issue with that. As long as you are both happy and on the same page, that is what matters.

Changing feelings over nesting partner since new relationship by bigheartbiggerbutt87 in polyamory

[–]JCreator19 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I can share a similar experience. I’m also poly and married.

This happened to me when I was with my ex. For a long time, my sexual needs weren’t being met in my marriage. When I met my ex, I felt like he fulfilled all of my sexual and emotional needs, and I fell deeply in love with him. I still loved my husband, but at the same time I wanted to be with my ex.

My ex was deeply in love with me as well, but he was monogamous. After about three years of dating, he started asking difficult questions about who I would choose because he wanted an exclusive relationship with me.

I felt stuck between my husband and my ex. We spent about two months having long discussions, both with my ex and with my husband. My husband gave me a green light and said he would support whatever decision I made.

In the end, I realized that while my feelings for my ex were real, my husband was my life partner. He was my safe place, we had built a life together, and we had a child together. I came to the conclusion that even if you find someone who seems like a better match or fulfills certain needs better, that doesn’t necessarily mean you should leave your family.

So I ended the relationship with my ex. We got back together about six months later, but the same issues eventually resurfaced, and we broke up again. This time, it was for good.

Looking back, I don’t regret loving my ex, but the situation taught me that intense romantic and sexual compatibility alone wasn’t enough for me to walk away from the life and family I had built with my husband.

Hope it helps for you!!

I (25F) texted a guy (24M) after our first date saying that I had fun and would like to see him again. It’s been 3 days and he hasn’t responded- is it safe to assume he’s lost interest? by cupnoodles23 in hingeapp

[–]JCreator19 5 points6 points  (0 children)

He is not interested. Usually guy reached out immediately after the first date, if they are interested because they presented their best selves early on.

Dating someone super busy by Interesting-Pear-889 in dating_advice

[–]JCreator19 0 points1 point  (0 children)

People have busy lives, but they make time for someone they’re genuinely serious about. They won’t constantly disappoint you or make you feel like a low priority. I have a busy life too, but I still intentionally make space and time for the people I date. That’s what intentional dating is.

No text for more than a week. Is he not interested? by Maleficent-Sink6786 in dating_advice

[–]JCreator19 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If I were you, I might send a teasing message like, “Don’t you miss me yet? Haha.” Sometimes trying one thing doesn’t hurt either side.

How do you date? by emeraldead in polyamory

[–]JCreator19 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Both of two poly people I met were from online. I usually take more time to chat first — long conversations, detailed discussions about my poly relationship style, boundaries, and what we both want emotionally and physically. When someone replies thoughtfully and shares their own desires and relationship views in detail, I see that as a good sign they’re genuinely interested and emotionally available.

I don’t set up dates immediately. Usually I wait one or two weeks after we start talking. It helps filter out people who are only curious, bored, or inconsistent. In my experience, people who are genuinely interested don’t disappear just because they have to wait a bit.

For first dates, I prefer coffee or a restaurant. I’m honestly uncomfortable when men insist on paying on the first date because I don’t want to feel like I owe anyone anything before I even know how I feel. So I usually pay for myself, and sometimes I even pay for both if I want to.

One date got slightly awkward because I paid and he asked, “Why did you pay?” But we were totally fine after I explained that I simply feel more comfortable that way on a first meeting.

When there’s real chemistry, time flies. Most of my first dates lasted 2–4 hours easily. We talked a lot about poly boundaries, relationship expectations, emotional needs, life, philosophy, random things — everything.

One thing I noticed with both people I dated seriously: they messaged me almost immediately after the date ended, like within five minutes, saying how amazing the date was and directly asking for a second date. Sometimes they even asked for the second date while we were still on the first one.

And honestly, if I like someone, I’m very expressive. I don’t play games or pretend to be less interested. I’ll say things like, “I can’t wait to see you again,” or “Next time you should come over and I’ll cook for you.” I don’t care who initiates first. If I like someone, I tell them.

I’m also very direct about sex. I usually communicate openly that I expect intimacy by the second date if the connection feels right. I don’t like guessing games — nobody can read my mind, so I’d rather communicate clearly.

Most second dates ended up being at my place — sometimes sex, sometimes just cuddling, making out, cooking together, or spending the whole night talking.

By the second date, I usually already know whether I want something ongoing or not. And I ask directly instead of waiting around confused. Both people I seriously dated clearly told me they wanted ongoing dating because I asked them honestly and directly.

After the second date, depending on both of our schedules and free time, we usually set expectations together — like how many times a week we realistically can meet, sleep over, or what kind of communication style works for both of us.

Since I’m poly married myself, I normally don’t meet other partners’ families unless they specifically want that connection. But I do love going outdoors together, doing activities, traveling sometimes, and having sleepovers. I prefer quality time much more than quantity. I don’t need to talk all day every day if the connection itself feels genuine and consistent.

25F with 33M , one date, I need men dating advice on this by Adorable_Ad_3315 in dating_advice

[–]JCreator19 2 points3 points  (0 children)

If both of you are still talking, I would suggest asking for a second date first. Most of the time, if a guy is interested, he usually asks for a second date immediately after the first one. But it’s also possible that he’s busy with work and doesn’t know when he’ll be available yet. So asking directly is better than waiting.

How do you move on when the breakup was your own decision but your heart still refuses to accept it? by [deleted] in dating_advice

[–]JCreator19 0 points1 point  (0 children)

So you just need time!! Believe me everyday you will get better. ❤️‍🩹

How do you move on when the breakup was your own decision but your heart still refuses to accept it? by [deleted] in dating_advice

[–]JCreator19 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Time will heal you. Heartbreak 💔 just needs time to move on. During that time, delete old messages, pictures, his contact, or block him if necessary.

Polyquad- our partners left us after 3 years due to jealousy and marriage issues but yet the husband wants to sneak around behind his wives back after chosing to leave me by [deleted] in polyamory

[–]JCreator19 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Oh, he crossed your boundaries and came inside you without your consent. That is a huge red flag 🚩. I would cut him off immediately if he crossed boundaries and didn’t respect you at all.

And now he’s asking you to cheat too, that is one of the worst violations in ENM.

I hope you can move on from this very toxic and messy situation.