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But the individuals in the majority (60%+) of long-term successful marriages began their loving relationships as "friends first". (I can dig up the reference on this.)
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Could you please? I'll file it in a better place next time so I can grab it more easily when I need it.
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"I want to be friends first" implies that someone tried to skip the whole friendship step and move right to romantic interest.
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I don't agree. I'm with Spirit, who asked "if you're a person seeking a prospective long-term partner, let's say for marriage, wouldn't you want him/her to be your true friend first". Absolutely!
Once you twig to the realization that much of infatuation and 'romantic love' is a scam perpetuated on you by your reproductive system whose only interest is to procreate, you grow sufficiently distrustful of the way relationships are usually conducted to want no part of it. 'Friends first' is the only way I'll consent to relationships now. There's a distinction between 'friends first' and 'just friends', however. I haven't found men willing to be 'just friends' so you have to be clear when you utter the 'friend' word that you don't mean 'never anything more' but rather 'candidate for lifelong best-friendship'
If I run into someone that I think I could fall for, I do my best to become friends so if I fall and he doesn't, at least I won't lose him entirely.