Have any of you dad's observed your adult children having difficulty in dating? I have a daughter who is educated, good job, works out, active in her church, and she has little to zero men asking her out. How common is this issue?
Very few real men out there in my experience.fatherof4 said:
Have any of you dad's observed your adult children having difficulty in dating? I have a daughter who is educated, good job, works out, active in her church, and she has little to zero men asking her out. How common is this issue?
fatherof4 said:
Have any of you dad's observed your adult children having difficulty in dating? I have a daughter who is educated, good job, works out, active in her church, and she has little to zero men asking her out. How common is this issue?
Hypergamy is a very interesting dynamic, seemingly across cultures. In China, their population control one child policy actually worked, and now they're facing demographic collapse. Working women there don't want to settle for a man that's equal to them, and culturally none of them have the slightest idea what living in a big family is like even if they didn't take to heart the generations of propaganda they were fed about overpopulation.Win At Life said:
There's a problem that's not just a Christian thing, but a bit more universal. Many college educated men don't mind having a wife who is not, but college educated women will rarely accept a blue-collar working man, which dramatically reduces their dating pool by their own choice. Here is where OP comes along and says that doesn't apply to them.
Bob Lee said:
A lot of men see marriage as a raw deal or a risky proposition, wherein women aren't bringing anything to the table anymore because they increasingly want to be independent and take on masculine roles in society. They want to be seen as men's equals in the workplace. So they forsake their roles in the home. And if marriage stops benefitting them personally, women stand to benefit financially from leaving. And they can leave for any reason or no reason at all because of no fault divorce, leaving men no recourse. It's that easy to effectively destroy the lives that men have built for their families.
fatherof4 said:
I appreciate all the input. I used the term educated more to indicate the she is not lazy, that she's accomplished things. My observation is that young men, 25-30, don't act the way I did at the same age. I find it odd that guys don't walk up to a girl, introduce themselves and just talk. It's just different.
fatherof4 said:
I appreciate all the input. I used the term educated more to indicate the she is not lazy, that she's accomplished things. My observation is that young men, 25-30, don't act the way I did at the same age. I find it odd that guys don't walk up to a girl, introduce themselves and just talk. It's just different.
I think dating in general has changed the last few generations. I know my daughter and many of her friends their entire time in high school without going on even just harmless dates that we would approve of. So when they get to college, its all new.fatherof4 said:
Have any of you dad's observed your adult children having difficulty in dating? I have a daughter who is educated, good job, works out, active in her church, and she has little to zero men asking her out. How common is this issue?
Junction71 said:
To the OP. Please send phone #.
Just kidding! I have a 36 year old son, unmarried and never has been. A&M grad and works for the county plus has his own IT business. Protestant church member, Deacon and a teacher in the church to high school students. They love him. But no social life to speak of in this small town (Junction) of 2500 people. Christian girls few and far between probably like many small towns across Texas and U.S. Most young women leave or just flat dis-interested in spiritual things. He handles his situation well but social life is frustrating. He is considering a re-location to the Dallas area where he has many of his A&M buds, who with the exception of one, are all married.
Has she tried online dating?fatherof4 said:
Have any of you dad's observed your adult children having difficulty in dating? I have a daughter who is educated, good job, works out, active in her church, and she has little to zero men asking her out. How common is this issue?
Agree completely.Win At Life said:
As for "Christian" dating, I've seen the most selfish, petty, bickering people in my life at churches. I'm not saying these are ax murder types. But, dang, it does seem like you're just about as likely to meet a truly "good" person who actually puts others before themselves outside of churches as you are inside churches.
Win At Life said:
As for "Christian" dating, I've seen the most selfish, petty, bickering people in my life at churches. I'm not saying these are ax murder types. But, dang, it does seem like you're just about as likely to meet a truly "good" person who actually puts others before themselves outside of churches as you are inside churches.
BluGorseShu said:
I think dating in general has changed the last few generations. I know my daughter and many of her friends their entire time in high school without going on even just harmless dates that we would approve of. So when they get to college, its all new.
Amen. I firmly believe God has the perfect person picked out for everyone if you will allow His will to be done.barnag said:
God is good. God has a plan. Getting down on your knees and surrendering everything to Him and trusting Him fully is the only answer in my humble opinion. There are so many distractions, dating apps, not any other Christian singles in the small town you might live in. So many factors, but getting plugged into a local church, becoming a member and praying for His will to be done and not ours is a great start. Also, being content and seeing singleness as a gift is a great perspective to have. And if God has a future husband for your daughter, amen. All in His good timing.
"It is not good that the man should be alone" (Genesis 2:18), but also Paul tells the unmarried and the widows that "it is good for them to remain single, as I am" (1 Corinthians 7:8). Paul, when looking at the new-covenant community, doesn't see marriage-lessness as a curse, but as a gift.
dermdoc said:Amen. I firmly believe God has the perfect person picked out for everyone if you will allow His will to be done.barnag said:
God is good. God has a plan. Getting down on your knees and surrendering everything to Him and trusting Him fully is the only answer in my humble opinion. There are so many distractions, dating apps, not any other Christian singles in the small town you might live in. So many factors, but getting plugged into a local church, becoming a member and praying for His will to be done and not ours is a great start. Also, being content and seeing singleness as a gift is a great perspective to have. And if God has a future husband for your daughter, amen. All in His good timing.
"It is not good that the man should be alone" (Genesis 2:18), but also Paul tells the unmarried and the widows that "it is good for them to remain single, as I am" (1 Corinthians 7:8). Paul, when looking at the new-covenant community, doesn't see marriage-lessness as a curse, but as a gift.
Quote:
Our love is one in a million, you couldn't buy it at any price
But of the nine point nine nine nine
Hundred thousand other possible loves
Statistically some of them would be equally nice
Quote:
And look I'm not undervaluing what we've got when I say
That given the role chaos inevitably plays
And the inherently flawed notion of fate
It's abstruse to deduce I found my soul mate at the age of 17
It's just mathematically unlikely that at a university in Perth
I happened to stumble on the one girl on earth
Definitively designed for me
And if I may conjecture a further objection
Love is nothing to do with destined perfection
The connection is strengthened; the affection simply grows over time
Quote:
But I'm just saying I don't think you're special
I mean I think you're special but you fall within a bell curve
Quote:
But with all my heart and all my mind I know one thing is true
I have just one life and just one love and my love that love is you
And if it wasn't for you, darling you
I really think that I would probably have somebody else