How Situationships Develop in Pakistan
Pakistani dating culture has particular conditions that make situationships common:
- Fear of family disapproval — keeping things undefined means there's nothing to "explain"
- Fear of commitment — labelling it makes it real and therefore risky
- One party wanting more, not asking for clarity to avoid losing what they have
- Both parties avoiding awkward conversations because "things are good"
Are You in a Situationship?
- You spend significant time together but have never defined what you are
- You're uncertain whether you can see other people
- Conversations about the future are deliberately avoided
- You introduce them differently depending on the context
- You feel anxious about asking "what are we?"
What to Do If You're in One
- Get clear on what YOU want — before asking the other person anything
- Have the conversation — "I need us to talk about what this is"
- State your needs clearly — not as an ultimatum, but as information
- Accept the answer — if they don't want what you want, that answer was always there. Now you can act accordingly.
- Don't negotiate your needs away — "I'll take whatever you'll give me" leads to resentment
Situationships and Pakistani Values
In an Islamic framework, emotional and physical intimacy without commitment is not sanctioned. The situationship keeps people in a limbo that serves neither their spiritual nor emotional wellbeing. The path forward — whether toward commitment or toward separation — is better than indefinite grey.