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And yes, I've had guys say their girl after me didn't measure up to me, that they were in love with me the whole time they were dating their girl before me, etc etc. That's because they were trying to get in my pants. It ain't rocket science, kids. |
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Not exactly acceptiing..some cases the person you date right afterwards can be like a 'rebound' person or something like that but in some cases, if something happens and you and that person aren't together anymore, they have set a bar to what you will accept out of the 'new beau" Let me add a disclaimer here too.... PLEASE DON'T TAKE THIS THREAD SERIOUSLY YALL..... When I saw the movie...me and my s.o. had a good laugh and talked about past relationships where things like this happened... heck...to tell the truth...the last really great relationship I had before where I am now was way back in 1995.......so....from 1995 to 2003. I met some good people but...no one I really saw as long term. yeah....if I could have played Dr. Frankenstein and took some quality parts.....well.... |
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It's really an insane question. Quote:
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The percentages are arbitrary and relative to the emotional landmarks...not concrete numbers. |
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What I refered to as "sad" was the point you made that people have just heard the 80/20 Rule because it was in some recent movie. I thought that anyone who attended college (and even people who studied economics, marketing, etc. in HS), or had a job, would be able to explain it.
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And I don't see it as "sad" at all. Many people who attended college or have a job have no use for knowing about this rule. People who took certain classes, have certain types of jobs, or randomly happened upon the 80/20 rule would know about it. That doesn't mean it is a important enough for everyone to know about it. I actually think it's a rather insignificant rule as it doesn't pertain to my professional and personal lives. |
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I heart Franklin-Covey... maybe just 80%, but it's enough to buy it. :cool: Back to your regularly scheduled thread. |
DaemonSeid, I really don't know what you're talking about. You are trying to discuss the 80/20 rule as it was presented in the new Tyler Perry movie, but you are presenting it incorrectly.
The theory was this: In a marriage you are most likely only getting 80% of your needs met...then you meet someone outside the marriage who offers you that other 20%...20% looks pretty good when you aren't getting it, so you are persuaded to leave your 80% for the 20% that you JUST HAVE TO HAVE...however in the end you feel foolish and shortchanged b/c at the end of the day you are now only getting 20% of your needs met. Its not the 'real 80/20 rule', but its the version presented in the movie with respect to relationships. They didn't at all discuss you breaking up with your 80% person and then moving on to find someone who is only 20% by default. I'm not sure from where that came. |
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Ree...he was discussing a completely different 'rendition' of the 80/20 rule...not the one that we are all most familiar with from corporate America. |
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I haven't seen this movie yet so I was getting confused between the original and revised "80/20 rules." |
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Wow. I mean, wow. Does anyone really think that what they're looking for in a mate at 20 is going to be the same when they're 25-30-35-40-50-60-years old? So, even if you find a person who's 99.9% of what you're looking for now, do you really think you're going to feel that way in another five years?
With the exception of having "Willing to grow in our relationship" or "Wants to grow old with me" as a main objective, I think you're really setting yourself for a fall, and should plan on a pre-nup. MysticCat, as usual, should Mrs. MysticCat ever lose her mind & leave you, I'm very high on the list of your admirers! ;) |
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I think the majority of the posters in this thread are well above the age of 20. And, yes, finding what we want at our age is often a pretty good indication of what we will want in our 40s, 50s, and 60s. If not, adjustments can and will be made. As adults, we know more about the "growing in our relationship" and "growing old together" thingie than we did when we were younger. |
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