Welcome to Tough Love. Every other week, we鈥檙e answering your questions about dating, breakups, and everything in between. Our advice giver is Blair Braverman, dogsled racer and author of . Have a question of your own? Write to us at toughlove@outsidemag.com.
Q: I go to a very small high school and struggle to find potential girlfriends (or any friends, for that matter) who share my outdoor interests. Any tips for finding new (more-than) friends who share my outdoor passions?
鈥擲tuck in the Breakfast Club
I used to prepare a campfire breakfast for tour groups, and my hash-cooking mentor always said, 鈥淓veryone loves pepper, whether or not they know it.鈥 I think we all crave the outdoors, too, it鈥檚 just that not everyone knows it yet. If your high school doesn鈥檛 have anyone as experienced as you, you might share your passion by, well, sharing your passion. Be confident and patient, and invite friends鈥攐r a special someone鈥攁long on your next excursion. I promise you that in an age where most date asks involve 鈥渉anging out,鈥 your invitation to paddle a nearby river or traipse fencelines to look for antler sheds will stand out for its very specificity. You鈥檙e unique, which is鈥攁part from being generally awesome鈥攁 dating-market value proposition.
There鈥檚 also the fact that you can use the outdoors to take some of the pressure off your dates. Outdoors, you don鈥檛 have to worry as much about long silences or pressure to hook up, because you鈥檙e too busy doing stuff. If there is chemistry, you鈥檝e got freedom and space to explore it. If not, you get to hike a canyon with a cool person, which is 1,000 percent better than waiting awkwardly for the waiter to bring the check.
After high school, you can also consider applying to a . I鈥檓 big on sharing the little-known secret that anyone can attend these outdoorsy boarding schools tuition-free, and that they offer great gap-year adventure before college, or even aside from it. While an American student may have to pay for room and board, it鈥檚 a life-building experience that鈥檚 well worth that modest fee. (When I went to , I worked kennel chores in exchange for a steep discount.) Folk schools range in concentration from skydiving and fashion design to Arctic survival, and it doesn鈥檛 matter if you can speak Norwegian before you get there, as long as you鈥檙e open to learning. Whether or not you meet your soul mate at folk school, you鈥檒l find great friends who share your passion for the outdoors鈥攊n a nation that shares your passion for the outdoors鈥攁nd you鈥檒l come home with enough stories to share for a lifetime of first, second, or third dates and beyond.
Q: What do you say about men who seem to become intimidated by women who are outdoorsy and independent? I get a ton of interest in the initial discovery stage about how much I enjoy the outdoors and activities, but once they find out how proficient I am, it seems to scare them off. I often find myself downplaying my abilities on the first few dates so I don鈥檛 scare them off, which I feel is wrong.
鈥擳oo Brave for the Boys
I can relate to this鈥攎aybe a little too much, at least when it comes to offering answers. But luckily, I have access to a badass, supportive, outdoorsy husband with some personal insight into the male ego. Here鈥檚 what says:
You have some options:
- Stroke the male ego and embrace a tradition dating back to Eve鈥檚 first faked orgasm.
- Find someone who is clearly more competent than you are in all things聽and therefore never has to face his own insecurity.
- Find someone who recognizes your strengths and is not threatened at all.
Seems like you鈥檙e not that into Option 1: You prefer to be honest about your abilities, and who could blame you? Pretending that you can鈥檛 lift that pack on your own is one small step backward for womankind and one giant leap backward for you. Plus, it鈥檚 just too painfully awkward for us to watch.
The problem with Option 2 is that no one will be more competent than you in all things. Inevitably, you and your ultrastrong supersexy rock-star bodybuilder will be playing pickleball and he鈥檒l whiff, or you鈥檒l ice his ass all the way down the luge run or get the hotel key card to swipe when he can鈥檛, or you鈥檒l just draw a faster yak or a buckier bull, and it will be a rare but all the more painful wound to his ultrasensitive, unhardened ego, and all bets are off as to what happens next.
Option 3 is good in theory, but let鈥檚 face it: Men who have no insecurity when women outshine them are so rare in this heteropatriarchal culture that only like three zoos worldwide even have one anymore. I mean, if you find one of these, and you鈥檙e attracted to him, and he鈥檚 attracted to you, and you鈥檙e compatible in terms of language, geography, age, and interest鈥攇o for it!
But expecting to find someone who has done all the deep personal work of owning his shit even when boys just aren鈥檛 raised to deal with emotional labor or vulnerability鈥攖hat鈥檚 pretty tough. It鈥檚 like if a guy expected to find a woman who has no body-image issues whatsoever.
No, I think the best you can do is go for Option 4: Hold out for someone who is human and complicated and insecure at times, but who is always working on it. Yes, he will undoubtedly in weak moments be threatened by your superior competence, but overall he should be far more interested in celebrating your success. And if the going occasionally gets tough, and you need to help him carry his emotional pack, just keep in mind that he鈥檚 hiking toward the light.