I don’t know where to begin, so I’m just going to put words on ‘paper’

I’m 33 and got out of a serious relationship ~6 months ago.

I’m looking for someone to spend the rest of my life with, and recently met someone that is a perfect fit for me on paper in so many ways, however there is a thought or feeling I just can’t escape. I feel there is a lack of chemistry/attraction.

My new potential partner and I have been seeing each other for about a month, and have spent many days and nights together. She is objectively good looking and anyone would be lucky to have her multiple of my friends have said wow she’s really pretty when they’ve met her however I don’t feel the chemistry/attraction and I think I know where it comes from.

My ex was extremely feminine and we had insane chemistry from the start, the new potential partner I’m dating isn’t feminine and is quite masculine in physical and behavioral ways and I think that’s a turn off for me. I didn’t even realize femininity mattered this much to me.

I feel insane for thinking of breaking things off with an objectively attractive, successful women who’s logistics fit so well with mine it’s honestly like finding a needle in a haystacks.

I feel stuck constantly fighting questions like:

  • Am I just full of shit and looking for a unicorn that doesn’t exist?
  • Should I listen to my heart and feelings and let go of this because - it doesn’t feel right?
  • I’m getting old and want to settle down, should I priorities logistics and accept good enough?
  • Am I just overly picky? Can I afford to be this picky?

My heart is telling me one thing, my head another. Help

  • SuperNovaStar@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    2 months ago

    When I left religion, I had to grapple with the fact that praying had really worked for me. If I wasn’t talking to anyone, then why did prayer work so well?

    The conclusion that I came to is that it allowed me to open a dialogue with myself. In other words, it was what today we’d call “shadow work” or “talking to your subconscious.”

    Now that I no longer believe in god, prayer just doesn’t quite work the same. But I find tarot fills that niche pretty well.

    Unfortunately it’s hard to find other secular tarot practitioners.

    • Maeve@kbin.earth
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      2 months ago

      That may be a good thing. Too many clinicians and doctors latch onto the latest buzz without any real understanding of the actual psychology of the archetypes, like the fad diagnoses of the era (when everyone was bipolar, then BPD), and I don’t like it.

      If anyone is actually interested, they should look online and ask around for results-based reviews.

      Prayer does work, like meditation does, and we have eegs to back up that claim. I think it does allow our mental chatter to quiet so we can contact the deeper parts of our psyche, and actually sit with the discomfort, rather than running from it. It’s uncomfortable to recognize, let alone admit the behaviors that bug us most about people are also our own or because we allow the behavior into our lives, or remind us of unhealed traumas we shoved down to keep us let alone admit it and actively explore our triggers, to sort which and how much of some combination. And that’s the easy part! The hard part is finding tools and learning how to use them in a proper and efficient manner!

      • SuperNovaStar@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        2 months ago

        Oh! I meant “practitioners” like regular folks. Not therapists. I don’t need my therapist to do tarot with me, I can do that a home.

        But it would be nice to have a “coven” or “church” or whatever but where everyone recognizes that the rituals are psychological rather than actual magic.