Walking Away

Sex is Overrated

Sex is overrated and overhyped. I understand why. It is wired into us at a basic level. None of us would be here without it. Nature prioritizes sex over everything except survival, and sometimes even survival is a casualty of sexual desire. Sex is undeniably important. Spiritual mythologies have been founded on it, not to mention tens of thousands of companies. Trillions of dollars flow into sex-based industries, whose combined income would dwarf the GDP…

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Walking Away

LTR: Values Analysis

Have you ever wondered, “Does an LTR (a long-term romantic relationship) support my core values?  Does it support what matters most to me in life, or does it undermine it?”  It’s a good question to ask. You want, I assume, to pursue things that are consistent with your deepest values and avoid the things that aren’t. I’d like to share with you a simple process for determining whether an LTR serves your core values or…

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Walking Away

Savor the Freedom

If you’ve been living the bachelor life for as long as I have, it’s easy to take the freedom for granted.  I thought it might help to remind us all of those freedoms.  Doing so might enable us to better appreciate those freedoms and maybe even utilize them better. I’ll divide the discussion into “freedoms from” and “freedoms to.”  Freedoms From Bachelors enjoy freedom from a long list of constraints, stresses, and problems that weigh…

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Walking Away

Relationships are Resource Hogs

Most people want to be in a good, healthy, long-term romantic relationship (LTR).  I get it.  I see the appeal.  I’ve been in relationships like that, and I’ve enjoyed them — for a time.  But a decade ago, I decided that I didn’t want to be a part of them anymore – not because I was “hurt,” not because something terrible happened, but because it didn’t seem worth the tradeoff. In the abstract, I want…

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Inner Work

Building Bachelor Self-Esteem (Part II)

In this piece, I will cover three additional principles for building self-esteem.  If you missed earlier segments in this series, check the menu under “foundations.” The three remaining principles are: Find Meaning Understand Uproot the Negative 1. Find Meaning Bachelors have to find their own meaning, because the sources of meaning that traditional men use are not available to us (e.g., marriage, children, work to support that).  We must find meaning off the beaten path. …

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Inner Work

Building Bachelor Self-Esteem (Part I)

We don’t get self-esteem by blowing ourselves kisses in the mirror.  I tried; it doesn’t work.  Building self-esteem (or “self-respect,” if you prefer) requires work, and it requires a certain kind of work, specific practices.  I will describe two of those practices in this piece and three in the next.   These practices emerge not from my posterior but from decades of reading and experience, personal and professional.  I will focus on the part we…

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Inner Work

Why Self-Esteem is Essential for Bachelors

The bachelor life isn’t for everyone.  In some ways, it’s a hard road. It comes at a price.  That is what this article is about: the costs of traveling this toll road, and how self-esteem can help defray those costs.  More broadly, I want to lay out the case that self-esteem is essential for bachelor contentment.  Before we get to the bachelors, though, let’s appreciate the importance of self-esteem in general, for everyone.  Self-esteem (or…

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Inner Work

Self-Esteem for Bachelors: Introduction

If you want to live a happy, contented life as a bachelor, there is no more essential internal ingredient than good self-esteem.  Conversely, if you lack self-esteem, your bachelor road will be rutted and difficult. It is worth spending some time thinking about and developing this quality.     Over the next several articles, I want to lay out the following: What self-esteem is and isn’t, and how you can distinguish the genuine article from the…

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Walking Away

Demythologizing Romantic Love

I’ve made many blunders with women, but here is the mother of all blunders — the blunder from which many other blunders flowed, like bad water from a tainted well: I idealized relationships.  I saw them as magical and transformative. I had way too high an estimate of what they could offer. I expected way too much of them (and by extension, of myself). I was trapped in a cultural mythology which paints romantic relationships…

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