If you have these relationship expectations, please stay single.
It’s okay to have some expectations about your relationship and your partner. But not all expectations are healthy, and some are downright toxic. If any of those listed below are on your list of demands, then you aren’t ready for a healthy, loving partnership. At all.
1. Wanting someone to take care of you like your mother or father does.
You often hear people talk about how they want their future spouse to take care of them like their parents do, whether it’s financial support, cooking and cleaning for them, or fussing over them like the prince or princess they are. If that’s how you feel, stay home with mom and dad.
2. The belief that one partner should be the “leader” and the other should play a submissive, supportive role.
People earn leadership positions through achievement; they don’t get into that position by default due to gender, educational level, income, or ethnic heritage. Partners should be equals, taking turns at leading and supporting each other depending on their personal skills and strengths. To do otherwise is willfully blind, and quite ridiculous.
3. Believing that your partner should end friendships with people you aren’t fond of.
Just because you dislike your partner’s friends doesn’t mean they should drop them to appease you. The same goes for wanting your partner to drop any friend of the gender(s) they’re attracted to. Your insecurities, petty jealousies, and controlling nature don’t get to dictate another person’s friendships or life choices.
4. Thinking that you can dictate aspects of your partner’s appearance.
Your partner isn’t a made-to-order toy that you can dress or otherwise adjust to suit your preferences. As such, you don’t get to dictate what they wear, how they style, color, or cut their hair, whether they have facial hair or not, or any other aspect of their appearance.
5. The idea that you’re in any position to “allow” your partner to do anything (or prevent them from doing so).
You may have come across rage bait posts on social media asking people whether they’d “let” their partner do something or not. A partner is neither a child, nor a pet: they’re an adult human being of equal standing, and thus don’t need anyone’s permission to do anything, including yours.
6. Assuming that it’s okay to go through your partner’s belongings without their permission.
This may include (but is not limited to) going through their phone to see who they’ve been talking to, digging through their bag or pockets for evidence of assumed wrongdoing, or anything else that breaches their privacy and autonomy. It also includes looking over their shoulder to try to “catch” them out.
7. Obsession with a “body count” below a certain number, believing it defines personal value.
A startling number of people (predominantly men) seem to be obsessed with the expectation that their partner should have only been intimate with an arbitrary number, or they’re somehow not worth dating. This reeks of insecurity and double standards, as they will rarely keep their own experiences to that same (low) number.
8. Thinking that you’re entitled to know every detail about their past.
Your partner lived a full life for years before they met you, developing or acquiring various skills, preferences, aversions, and so on. You’re not entitled to know all the details of their past, nor are they obligated to tell you about them. They’re with you now, and that’s all that matters.
9. Seeing them as a tool and platform in your life, rather than a person.
You may treat this person like an echo chamber, personal servant, pleasure giver, sounding board, and agony aunt, and then expect them to go away once you’re done with them. Behaving this way shows them that you see them as a tool to get your needs met, rather than a human being.
10. Wanting to be “chased” instead of ensuring a sincere dynamic.
Many people play ridiculous games when they’re dating in order to manipulate their partner into behaving a certain way, including being evasive or difficult so the other person “chases” them in order to prove their interest. This is both unhealthy and juvenile, and sets a foundation of inconsistency, insincerity, and unfair expectation.
11. Insisting upon a specific frequency for physical intimacy.
Intimacy ebbs and flows in relationships, and there are inevitably going to be dry periods, especially if illness, injury, life stress, and challenging hormonal cycles enter the picture. Stipulating that you need to be intimate on an established calendar schedule implies that your needs matter more than how your partner feels.
12. Expecting your partner to drop their interests in favor of yours.
If you’re into extreme sports and want a partner to do them with you, then date someone who’s already into them. You may be dating someone whom you’re insanely attracted to, but they prefer to read or paint than skydive or snowboard. That’s fine—don’t try to change them for your own benefit.