Ahh, the “Type.”
This is the limiting umbrella under which all our
romantic prospects must fall.
Perhaps you can recall a time you could have
clicked with someone, only to be burdened with that thought in the back of your
mind: “Ugh, but they’re not my type.”
I can certainly say it’s happened to me.
Flash back 7 months before.
He had to be conventionally handsome, bad boy kinda
type, and impeccably successful, man who smoke, party people and bla bla bla.
Indeed, he had to be an obvious catch you bring
home to your family, and brag about to your friends.
Here I am today, smitten and going strong with the
quintessential “good boy type.” That totally different than I ever thought that
I would date someone like that.
Isn’t life funny?
Enough talk about me and my relationship, though.
What I’m really here to tell you is how you’re
potentially missing out on someone who could be perfect for you.
We all crave change every now and then.
Typically, we satisfy it in safe ways. We dye our
hair, order something new off the menu or take a vacation. It is rare we do
something as drastic as open our hearts to novelty in human form.
Dating someone outside your type is nothing short
of a journey. It flips your world upside-down, changes your perspective and
gives you a run for your money.
I’m not going to tell you it’s easy.
You’re going to have naysayers, your patience is
going to be tested and you’ll question facets of your character you didn’t know
existed.
But if you haven’t learned by now, it’s amidst
adversity that we find ourselves. If we’re lucky, we find genuine love, too.
Here are five reasons you should date someone
outside your type:
1. Comfort zones are danger zones.
We, as a society, love being comfortable. We take
the road most traveled for fear of being shaken up.
Throwing off our routine, thinking in ways that
don’t jive with our set beliefs and dating people who don’t fit our
requirements scares the hell out of us.
Not only is it immature to navigate the dating
world through the lens of your type, it’s dangerous.
“Growth and comfort do not coexist.”
2. You miss out on the opportunity to grow.
Experience is the universal way we grow. You stifle
that growth by limiting yourself to consistently similar experiences. This can
be directly applied to dating.
Whether dating someone outside your type ends up
being a massive failure or the greatest love of your life, it’s always
worthwhile for the sake of experience.
Say, for example, you only date girls with college
degrees.
You could be missing out on that tough-as-nails
waitress who could open your eyes to see intelligence can’t be measured in such
narrow ways.
She’ll lend you mind-bending books and captivate
you all night with conversation and good wine.
You’ll laugh in disbelief that you dated three
different blonde sorority girls named Katie prior to this.
3. It makes for an excellent conversation piece.
What’s better than having something new and
exciting to share with your loved ones? Trust me when I say your friends and
family will take notice.
Maybe they’ll be proud, or maybe they’ll be weirded
out.
Nonetheless, you can exuberantly entertain them
with the ups and downs of being with someone who doesn’t quite get all the
check marks off your mental list.
4. You can expand your friends’ circles.
Dating someone outside your type brings uniqueness
to your circle. More often than not, birds of a feather flock together.
When you introduce someone you wouldn’t typically
date, it adds vibrancy to the mix.
Not only you will grow from the experience, but
your friends and family will, too.
5. It will make you a better person.
All in all, dating someone outside your type makes
you a better person.
Maybe your “type” is strictly comprised of physical
features. Taking the leap with someone who doesn’t match that will make you
ultimately less shallow.
Your type is the manifestation of an image in your
head.
Breaking away from that makes you more open,
thoughtful and a better person.
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