Anonymous Wrote:Im just wondering what the difference is. I have a guy.. we both like eachother but he says we are dating rather than in a relationship. Whats the difference? mile:
Dating is actually the fact of going out with someone on a date... ie restaurant, bar, disco, cinema, whatever, or even maybe at one your the datees' homes. As such, dating someone is already a type of relationship, one which is akin to (at least) a friendship, especially if you meet several times. That's why a blind date corresponds to the meeting of two people who have no idea who the other one is. If they decide to meet again, they are probably dating. The old term for dating was actually "courting", when you found the other interesting enough to pursue some form of socialising on an emotional, sexual, romantic or other level.
The relationship to which you are referring is an emotional relationship, I'm guessing, and one in which some forms of commitment have been made. These commitments, if honoured, lead to the relationship you are mentioning (thus you can say that you are "in a relationship").
Language is strange in that there can be a slight shift in the definitions. When dating you are already in a relationship or at least in relation with someone. When the two of you have decided on some forms of exclusiveness, then I think you can call yourselves partners in a relationship. The fact of saying you are "in a relationship" also probably implies that you are not looking to form another couple with someone else, as you have found (at least for the moment) the other half of your couple. Extended to other forms of socialising, you could be in a relationship with two people at once or more, a threesome that lives together, maybe or that has commitments to the other two partners, for example... But examples of such relationships are probably rarer as society seems to impose a sort of monogamous norm. But in the seventies (for instance) when free love was more widespread, I suppose people would have said they were commited to several people at any one time.
I don't think, however, that being "in a relationship" necessarily entails having said or saying "I love you" to the partner. Some people find those words hard to utter. However lots of "relationships" seem to entail more spending of time together, doing things together, deciding things together, and often actually living under the same roof, although that sort of commitment is not necessarily one that counts. I am in a relationship with my man but we often don't live under that same roof because of circumstances mainly. I suppose you could say that being in a relationship entails a certain amount of trust, like other classical forms of relationships such as marriage.