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Can You Be Happy Dating Someone Who Isn’t Adventurous?
Iโve always pictured myself with a partner who wants to explore the world with me, that stereotypical romantic vision of a soulmate with whom to share all the epics: learning to surf in Hawaii, skiing in Argentina, backpacking across Nepal. Even just heading out for a last-minute backpacking trip together, or a post-work mountain bike ride.
Iโve had that here and there, with seasonal boyfriends and travel affairs. In between were stints of being single in which I traveled solo or with friends, and stop-and-start dating episodes not worth making long-term adventure plans for.
But I recently stumbled into a healthy relationship. Heโs everything Iโve been looking for: intelligent, motivated, caring, hilarious. Iโm so attracted to him I can barely stand it.
Thereโs just one problem. He wonโt go on adventures with me.
I keep thinking that if Iโm patient, the vestiges of the adventurer he apparently was before I met him will re-emerge and then heโll actually be everything Iโm looking for. But heโs too married to his work to make time for playing outside anymore.
Iโve started to wonder…is this a deal-breaker?
I live with the philosophy that thereโs so much to see and learn and experience, and Iโve structured my life around exploring the world. I work for myself so I can operate remotely at trailheads or from the road. Itโs one of the reasons I donโt want kids, so I can adventure all over the globe (and even out the back door) at a momentโs notice. Iโve always expected to fall in love with someone with a similar lifestyle.
In the mountain towns that so many of us live in, that expectation isnโt far-fetched. Iโve looked wistfully at those many relationships where each is the othersโ built-in adventure buddy: my sister and her husband hitchhiking on sailboats together through the South Pacific or my two best friends planning an epic float down the full length of the Colorado River where they first fell in love. Those relationships are stronger for their shared experiences, built on the magic formula of wonder, adrenaline highs, connection to nature, and the inevitable troubleshooting and hardships (which, admittedly, can just as easily break a relationship) that defines adventure.
Beyond that, the rise of social media has offered up a whole new playing field for comparison with an unprecedented look into other peopleโs lives. Particularly in the outdoor sphere, itโs all too easy to watch couples having incredible adventures on blogs and Instagram (albeit on an often highly-curated level). Itโs created a special brand of romantic FOMO that can often leave us feeling lonely in our own, perhaps less adventurous, relationships, or extra lonely in our singleness. I admit I often catch myself thinking: I wish I had a partner like thatโmy own built-in travel buddy to share the experience, help with planning, inspire further journeysโbasically, meet the need for companionship in this huge priority of exploring.
But the fact that itโs a priority also means that Iโve surrounded myself with other people who love to explore, who can meet my need for companionship in adventures. I hiked the Na Pali Coast with my sister and snorkeled the Great Barrier Reef with my dad. I backpacked in Patagonia with my best friend. Iโm heading to the Yukon to mountain bike with my regular riding crew of a dozen women, and joining my two best friends floating the Colorado on their leg through Desolation Canyon.
So at heart, the question is: Should my partner really need to be my adventure buddy, when he meets literally every one of my other needs? Iโm actually shockingly content lounging on his couch at home and talking for hours, or in the most mundane tasks of making dinner and walking the dogโwhich meets my up-to-now unknown need to be still between gallivanting off to kayak and ski and generally exhaust myself in the mountains.
Iโve come to realize that real love, the lasting kind, isnโt the first day of your most exciting adventure. Itโs not even the worst day, when youโre tired and lost and everythingโs gone wrong. Love is a thousand ordinary weeknights, the sum of which make you happier that you ever thought possible.
We canโt control who we fall in love with. We canโt force it to conform to our preconceived notions, like my hypothetical vision of adventuring around the world with my imaginary soulmate. The real thing is right in front of me, and the deal-breaker would be my failure to see itโadventurer or not.
Words by Cassidy Randall // Photo by Holly Mandarich