Archive for the 'Finding Partners' Category

Jump for Healthy Relationships: Sincere Dating Lessons in an Honest Journal

Thursday, August 20th, 2009

I never take for granted my delightful helpful young aunt, currently a non-profit CEO in Phoenix who puts hope in Great Expectations for living well. I’m always amazed by how she relishes charming her guests. If she fit a stereotype it would be absolutely an extraordinary dating persona, while I prefer to be a likably cyncial intellectual. That’s how we roll together like bananas and peanutbutter. However, the two of us recommend matchmaking with the responsibility and guidance of this Phoenix area dating service, Great Expectations Scottsdale. We’re convinced there’s no better way to date specifically for desirable singles.

Always a friend, she gave me these personally detailed notebooks on matchmaking insights, featuring her own hilarious first person tales. Many of these tips looked straight-forward but strangely ignored in today’s dating environment. This is why her tips resonate in well-timed pertinence with today’s Great Expectations Phoenix singles. Never meet new singles when you’re in a committed relationship! Just relax and be honest. It’s impossible to work towards a long-lasting, substantive relationship based on lies and not who you are. Obviously, avoid situations where you stand people up. Don’t issue commitments that you simply don’t care to realize, but fully embrace how you really feel.

Lastly, my friend scribbled that she turns to the safe relationship experts from Great Expectations Arizona. As you get started dating with Great Expectations, a talented matchmaker develops a sense for your dating personality and with the help of video dating, suggests honest singles around Arizona.

With due diligence, I joined and decided to do something different in my method to meet great singles. Great Expectations Scottsdale singles events enriched the most remarkable difference for my family. I was introduced to an amazing man at a Great Expectations singles event. We’ve dated steadily five or six weeks now. Not going to speak too soon, but I like him a great deal.

Doesn’t Take Much to Realize Having Optimistic Expectations Is Valuable for Meeting Singles

Friday, May 29th, 2009

You couldn’t describe me as downright comfortable living alone and be 100% truthful. But, I’m not unsatisfied with the reality of life, either. I only suggest it here as an appetizing little tidbit foreshadowing what I am about to discuss honestly.

Last Monday yours truly was talking to Sandy, considering buying a membership to a Dallas Singles dating service. Today, I stand to my readers as a surprisingly pleased member of the dating service. Totally, it’s true. Its very comfortable and full of nice people! If you know me at all, you may be wondering, “You got some ’splainin to do, Lucy!”

Here’s how it went down, I noticed this Great Expectations Dating site and can really get behind their approach. They’re for the serious singles who think dating isn’t a game.

Because in all honesty I’d never been a fan of whatever it is that most people have christened “dating.” I heard it more than anyone should. Day and night friends nagg, “Are you seeing somebody?” and “You should date!”

“That’s rubbish,” I reply, without missing a beat. “Take a look around, I’m not missing much.”

“Don’t be silly,” they reply. “How would you know, you haven’t seen Friday Night Magic in a year!”

That’s just my friend The One-And-Only :-P Sandy McCarthy. She sets rational thought directly to my core to put me back on course. Loved ones are always there for fresh advice. She made a good point, and I thank her for it.

Back to the point of this essay. As I selected from hundreds of combinations of outfits for my first singles event with Great Expectations, I acknowledged something true. For the longest time, I hadn’t entertained any emotional great expectations for dating in the serendipitous path of being alive. Single life has its perks, especially with healthy optimism. Having great expectations works terrifically on a cynics social life.

–Christy Rodriguez