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Greg's avatar

This post made some things click for me. I agree with the attitudes described in the "Polyamory is the friends we made along the way" section and hadn't realized how unusual this is. You previously told me "I think the girls you'd be interested are less likely to be on apps or have a good experience on apps", and now I think I better understand why this is the case: not only do dating apps cater more to people who view dating as separate from friendship, but I participate in enough groups centered around shared interests that I'd be somewhat skeptical of my compatibility with any local woman who I haven't already met in at least one of these groups.

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Timothy Johnson's avatar

My friend group didn't look like any of these.

I'm a pretty religious Christian, and I went to a very small college for undergrad. So like your rationalist group, my friend group and my dating pool coincided. The majority of my friends from undergrad either married someone from our Christian fellowship, or (like me) went to grad school and married someone from a Christian fellowship there.

The main difference is that dating was understood to be a pretty serious step toward finding someone to marry. So most of the people I knew were only ever involved in one or two relationships. And of course, those relationships generally didn't involve sex until after marriage.

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