
My friend Erin is a "foster" girlfriend. She’s what Urban Dictionary defines as, "A guy/girl who dates someone until that other person finds their forever partner."
The last four men she’s dated have each gotten engaged/married to the woman they dated directly after her, and she has specific characteristics that has made it difficult for her to have and maintain long-term relationships.
While some people might feel happy for their exes because they hadn’t seen a future with them, Erin didn’t feel that way. She’s beautiful, whip-smart, and responsible, yet time after time, she’s been upset about being just a brief footnote in someone’s romantic history.
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"Why am I the one to help these men find their wife while I stay single!" she’s said to me more than once.
She longs to find her "home," of feeling close and complete with another person. Yet she, and other "fosters" generally have some behaviours that make it hard for them to get "taken." They are:
- spending most of their energy focusing on their career or crossing things off their bucket list.
- communicating sporadically with the people they’re interested in.
- not enjoying the "romantic" part of romantic relationships.
- preferring to spend time alone.
- going on low-effort dates.
- never bringing up long-term plans.
If a "foster" really wants to be in a long-term romantic relationship, then their actions need to align with their words. There’s absolutely nothing wrong in being single, but if you want a serious relationship, here are ways to start moving toward that: