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Topic: Emotional Chemistry Hard To Find?
peggy122's photo
Tue 11/14/17 08:03 AM
Edited by peggy122 on Tue 11/14/17 08:05 AM

I loosely define emotional chemistry as a massive interest/excitement to share your world/time with someone and have them share their world/time with you.

Have you ever found someone physically attractive and compatible with you in a number of ways and yet not feel an emotional chemistry with them?

Or have others ever felt that way about you?

Is mutual emotional chemistry harder to find than mutual physical chemistry in your dating experiences past anf present?








TxsGal3333's photo
Tue 11/14/17 08:08 AM
More then once it is why they are not around anymore...

I'm one that it's all in or all out when it comes to a relationship if the chemistry is not there I will not stay within a relationship and don't have a issue voicing my opinion~~~whoa

Ladywind7's photo
Tue 11/14/17 08:39 AM
I find emotional connection/chemistry with friends. As of yet, never found it in a spouse/partner.
And funnily enough, it is a huge want for women. Unsure if men want the same?

no photo
Tue 11/14/17 08:43 AM
If a woman has a nice a$$. I get physical and emotional chemistry coming out of my ears.

Does that count.
I’ll be back with a sensible answer when I’ve had a think.


no photo
Tue 11/14/17 08:45 AM
for me it's a large part. tho i think with us guys it is more kind of part and parcel of the cerebral chemistry. and yes i've experienced one sided if you will chemistry. both physical and emotional. for the long term neither is enough by it self.

Goofball73's photo
Tue 11/14/17 09:32 AM
I found an emotional connection with my cat. Pets love you and will be with you all the time. As for the women in my life? One day they would love me, then the next?......I burn the toast and all hell breaks loose. laugh laugh

no1phD's photo
Tue 11/14/17 09:36 AM
Well... how could you not !!.find me emotionally attractive..lol...
Even if it is mast under crazy..lol..
But yes finding somebody physically attractive but not emotionally attractive..
happens all the time or vice a versa..
Emotionally you really like them but physically not so much...
The dating World Tricky Tricky

Tom4Uhere's photo
Tue 11/14/17 10:46 AM
I think it depends upon the reason you are with someone...

For sexual relations, a physical chemistry is important

For love/compatibility relations, physical chemistry is important but the emotional chemistry has a higher value and influences the relationship in a greater degree over time.

That being said, emotional chemistry doesn't necessarily indicate emotional maturity.
Emotionally, people do not mature at the same rate.
This is why people are compatible at the beginning of a marriage but as time progresses, emotionally, they mature at different rates.

Thinking about it, I realize that is what happened to me.
My x regressed in emotional maturity as I matured.
That offset formed a rift that neither one of us knew how to handle and things went bad until they broke. (Hindsight is always 20/20)

It is said that most marriages fail around the 5 year mark.
Perhaps that is how long it takes for emotional chemistry to change to the point that it is noticed?

I do know that now, I am certainly very aware of emotional chemistry with those I date. I'm laid back and easy going and stressed out people repulse me. If she is full of drama and worried about everything, its just not going to work. No matter if there is a physical attraction.

Drama - don't need it, don't want it.
If I want drama, I just read M2 community forums.

SparklingCrystal 💖💎's photo
Tue 11/14/17 11:07 AM


I loosely define emotional chemistry as a massive interest/excitement to share your world/time with someone and have them share their world/time with you.

Have you ever found someone physically attractive and compatible with you in a number of ways and yet not feel an emotional chemistry with them?

Or have others ever felt that way about you?

Is mutual emotional chemistry harder to find than mutual physical chemistry in your dating experiences past anf present?

I think when it comes to love & relationship it goes hand in hand for me. If I'm not interested in their world/time I'm simply not interested in them at all.
If I'd be looking for an intimate encounter I suppose I'd only be interested in the physical, but I think that's exactly why an intimate encounter doesn't work for me.

Have other felt that way about you?
Yes. My narcissistic ex wasn't interested in me, nor in sharing his world/time with me. At first he made out to be, but that's the normal first stage of what these ppl do to get you hooked.

I belief mutual emotional chemistry is a helluva lot harder to find than mutual physical chemistry. The latter is fairly easy. The first not so much, the combination even less. Which in itself is a good thing otherwise everyone would be compatible with us. How would we choose? lol

To be honest, the first time I've experienced a genuine interest in me, my life, my past, is with the current man in my life. And yes, that was and is quite the eye-opener.
Not saying my 1st partner (not the narcissist) was a jerk, not at all. He was really quite sweet. But I think it's also a matter of growth/age from both partners. Emotionally maturity and stuff.

carlosacarvalho3's photo
Tue 11/14/17 12:44 PM
I am an old fashion 47 year old man that was never was married, no kids don't smoke or do no drugs your typical portuguese man that is looking for a single woman 28-49 years of age that doesn't smoke do no drugs. i have live my life very carefully, never was involved with no cops, or ever been in jail, I have always thought of the pros and cons that is why I never put myself in no situation. i have strong believes in all the decisions that I make no one can tell me different.

Tom4Uhere's photo
Tue 11/14/17 01:16 PM

I think online it is the opposite . People form an emotional connection first but often when they meet in person there is no chemistry ... usually something physical is a turn off or missing .. or there has been some form of misrepresentation .

I understand what you're saying.
A misrepresentation but also a mis-perception.
There are many that only see what they want to see and the reality conflicts with their expectations.

peggy122's photo
Tue 11/14/17 03:03 PM

More then once it is why they are not around anymore...

I'm one that it's all in or all out when it comes to a relationship if the chemistry is not there I will not stay within a relationship and don't have a issue voicing my opinion~~~whoa


I admire you for having the forthrighness to come clean with a guy on this issue Kristi. I think its incredibly difficult to do

peggy122's photo
Tue 11/14/17 03:11 PM

I find emotional connection/chemistry with friends. As of yet, never found it in a spouse/partner.
And funnily enough, it is a huge want for women. Unsure if men want the same?


Hadnt thought about the extent to which emotional chemistry would matter to the average guy Ladywind, but the idea intrigues me . Hmmmm,,,

peggy122's photo
Tue 11/14/17 03:12 PM

If a woman has a nice a$$. I get physical and emotional chemistry coming out of my ears.

Does that count.
I’ll be back with a sensible answer when I’ve had a think.




laugh

peggy122's photo
Tue 11/14/17 03:35 PM

for me it's a large part. tho i think with us guys it is more kind of part and parcel of the cerebral chemistry. and yes i've experienced one sided if you will chemistry. both physical and emotional. for the long term neither is enough by it self.


That's interesting what you said about the cerebral chemistry Eric. I almost have this image of a man only feeling emotional chemistry when he feels a compelling tug on his heart and the brain in his pants AT THE SAME TIME :)

peggy122's photo
Tue 11/14/17 03:41 PM

I found an emotional connection with my cat. Pets love you and will be with you all the time. As for the women in my life? One day they would love me, then the next?......I burn the toast and all hell breaks loose. laugh laugh


Emotional chemistry would have its ebbs and flows I think.... but it would really be great if it would be as consistent and unconditional as the affection of a pet :)

peggy122's photo
Tue 11/14/17 03:44 PM

Well... how could you not !!.find me emotionally attractive..lol...
Even if it is mast under crazy..lol..
But yes finding somebody physically attractive but not emotionally attractive..
happens all the time or vice a versa..
Emotionally you really like them but physically not so much...
The dating World Tricky Tricky


Its indeed a difficult combo to find Doc sad2

no photo
Tue 11/14/17 05:27 PM
I loosely define emotional chemistry as a massive interest/excitement to share your world/time with someone and have them share their world/time with you.

I'm not really sure how you are defining it in a practical sense.

I mean lets say you're with someone on a first date and you see a puppy.

If "emotional chemistry" is "interest/excitement to share your world/time with someone" does that mean:
- You both see the puppy and say "awwwww!" at the same time for the same reasons? Similar emotional associations so you want to share "world/time" to trigger similar emotions in a bonding process?
- You feel comfortable and don't really question your personal outburst of "awwwww!" you inherently trust that you can be emotionally vulnerable and expressive with them. So seek out "world/time share" for social hierarchy and acceptance, group forming.
- You're normally the type of person that tries to hide your emotional reactions behind a facade and you're looking for "chemistry" so you don't have to hide how you really feel, seeking someone that gives you permission through their indirect communication to get over your own insecurities. So seek out "world/time share" for emotional security.


Or are you defining it more like "I'm sitting here on the internet chatting with this person. I can't wait to meet them and go do things I like so I can ejaculate my emotional reactions on them, and I want to take them to do things so I can measure their reactions to see if they react how I think they should so I can determine if we have emotional chemistry."

Have you ever found someone physically attractive and compatible with you in a number of ways and yet not feel an emotional chemistry with them?

Not based on your "loose definition" of "emotional chemistry."
If I find them physically attractive, then I'm excited to spend time with them.
Of course sometimes that time/world I want to share is just a facet of the whole and revolves around my penis and the emotions specific to that.

Or have others ever felt that way about you?

Possibly.
If it's a short term relationship (e.g. focused on my penis) there's not a lot of focus on determining personal feelings regarding "emotional chemistry" and no one cares, so I wouldn't try to figure out if they felt "emotional chemistry" with me later.
If it's a longer term relationship, then there is "emotional chemistry" and the time to spend figuring that out.

Is mutual emotional chemistry harder to find than mutual physical chemistry in your dating experiences past anf present?

Maybe, depending on a less loose definition.
But from what I think I understand: Not really.
Part of what determines physical chemistry is a lot of indirect communication.
"Emotions" tend to be communicated indirectly long before they are vocalized or mostly consciously realized.

Physical attraction for men and women is based on procreation.
Who is going to provide the best DNA for babies, provide the best parenthood and therefore protection for babies, the greatest social position and therefore social security (subsequent perpetuation) for babies. (or DNA if you don't want to believe "babies)

People are social animals. Their "time/world" is defined by the groups they identify with.
Based on the "loose definition" from the op a lot of what is inherent in the question is "how much relevance does social/cultural training of emotional association play in compatibility."

That is picked up via physical attraction. Amount of makeup, laugh lines, body shape (e.g. gym vs. work body), tooth color, clean clothes, work uniform, or dirty kmart dumpster wear, haircut, facial/body hair.
e.g. like when "fat" was sexy because it represented "rich" which also represented "happy."

There is a component of "emotional chemistry" inherent in physical attraction.
Without it the attempt at dating/mating tends to be relabeled "stalking" and "clingy" and "psycho" and "too busy with work" and "bipolar" and "meathead" and "just not feeling it" and "RBF" and "skank" and "player."




Other than that, like anything else relating to human traits, one persons global emotional existence can be disseminated into may parts that someone can delude themselves into believing they can discretely isolate and idealize and say "we're compatible in all the good emotions!"

I think online it is the opposite . People form an emotional connection first but often when they meet in person there is no chemistry

Online people form an emotional connection with their own bias.
They've filled in all the missing indirect communication with their own stereotypes, biases, prejudices, hopes, dreams, fears, ideals.
90% of what they form an emotional connection to is themselves.
The other person simply provides a shallow avatar that develops a plausible verisimilitude to a real person.
When meeting a person can either be close enough to that delusion to take over or the mating process can be strong enough to make it not matter.

When people meet in person and there's "no chemistry" it's either because:
- it was never about forming an emotional connection, just fulfilling a perceived need. (i.e. filling the hole of loneliness, find a fake relationship, following through to kill it to maintain the self image of being a good person they're not responsible it's "chemistry's" fault, so they can go back and do it again)
- the reality could never live up to the fantasy built up in one or both persons head.
- each or one person wants the other to put in more effort to make their fantasy real. They've "paid" for the relationship they want by forming the pseudo emotional bond, now it's the other persons responsibility to fulfill the bargain by doing more "real life" work to provide what was "paid" for.


And other other than that, lots of people like to sit and try to disseminate the dating and mating process as a means of discretely isolating variables in order to come up with a hierarchy of what's "harder" or "more difficult" as a means to spot a path they think they can control as a means to make themselves more "special" and therefore better than others.
e.g. Anyone that has ever said "we can lie about where we met" or people that have to work on a "story" of how they met, or want to find "true" or "real" love.

technovative's photo
Tue 11/14/17 07:01 PM


I loosely define emotional chemistry as a massive interest/excitement to share your world/time with someone and have them share their world/time with you.

Have you ever found someone physically attractive and compatible with you in a number of ways and yet not feel an emotional chemistry with them?

Or have others ever felt that way about you?

Is mutual emotional chemistry harder to find than mutual physical chemistry in your dating experiences past anf present?


As you know Peg, my experience is extremely limited. The few times a connection was developing between myself and a woman, I felt more emotional or intellectual resonance than physical attraction. Sometimes toward her, and sometimes from her.


peggy122's photo
Wed 11/15/17 04:45 AM
Edited by peggy122 on Wed 11/15/17 04:56 AM




For love/compatibility relations, physical chemistry is important but the emotional chemistry has a higher value and influences the relationship in a greater degree over time.



I totally agree



That being said, emotional chemistry doesn't necessarily indicate emotional maturity.
Emotionally, people do not mature at the same rate.
This is why people are compatible at the beginning of a marriage but as time progresses, emotionally, they mature at different rates.



I can see how incompatability in maturity rates can adversely affect emotional connection.




Thinking about it, I realize that is what happened to me.
My x regressed in emotional maturity as I matured.
That offset formed a rift that neither one of us knew how to handle and things went bad until they broke. (Hindsight is always 20/20)

It is said that most marriages fail around the 5 year mark.
Perhaps that is how long it takes for emotional chemistry to change to the point that it is noticed?





In addition to behaviors changing as a result of emotional progression/regression, people's needs often change too leaving them dissatified with the previous incarnation of their mate. You fall in love in your present skin with your mate in their present skin. As you already know, you cant predict how your needs /priorities will change over time and vice versa and how that will impact the chemistry between you emoti
onally and physically




I do know that now, I am certainly very aware of emotional chemistry with those I date. I'm laid back and easy going and stressed out people repulse me. If she is full of drama and worried about everything, its just not going to work. No matter if there is a physical attraction.

Drama - don't need it, don't want it.
If I want drama, I just read M2 community forums.


Thats true for most of us at this age tom. The older we get, the less drama we wantdrinker

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