I recently received this in my "Ask the Singlescoach" section of my website and felt that I should share this with any of you who are struggling with the same problem. Staying in a relationship where you and your partner are on different paths is headed towards a messy disaster. Please keep reading...
Dear Singlescoach:
I too was in a relationship of convenience. I pretended that one day he would commit and to this day, we don’t even discuss the subject. Over 9 yrs. and I brought the subject to his attention and I was hurt when he told me he was afraid and not ready. I gave my heart and soul in this relationship. I knew it was wrong to always be available but I’m a loyal person. I truly care for him, but now I know that what I called a relationship was no more than an arrangement. I’ve faced this truth through several breakups but always went back. The 9 yrs weren’t consistent; I allowed this and feel so used. He told me he wanted time to himself but I didn’t listen. When we were together I let that go over my thinking and listening. I believed being w/me he would eventually change his mind. Not so. I haven’t talked w/him since Jan 3rd and I promised myself that if we had another communication break down, I will never speak w/him again. When he and I had disagreements, we’ve both dealt w/issues through no calls for months. I keep asking myself ”why do I go back when I’m more devoted than he is?” I’m on the path of moving on and healing. I keep praying and doing other activities that will promote better use of my time. Can you give some comforting advice? - Dana
Dear Dana,
First, I acknowledge you for allowing yoursef to face the truth about this nine year relationship that is all but dead. I’m afraid you’ve fallen into the dating trap of loving a wounded guy, and that has led you smack into the temptation of settling for less than a truly wonderful relationship.
It’s one thing for a guy to hesitate about marriage when he’s been hurt in the past. Emotional baggage is normal, especially in today’s high divorce world. It’s normal for a guy who is scared about marriage - which really means he’s afraid of having to go through the pain of a future imagined loss - to share that with you in the context of a committed relationship. Aligned as partners who want the same thing - a loving relationship for a lifetime - you discuss it until you reach resolution. That may take one discussion or it may take many discussions, sometimes over months and even years, all inside the boundary of a treasured relationship.
But it is completely different when a guy who is afraid uses his emotional wounds to avoid responsibility for doing the right thing. This is a guy who is not embracing his challenges in life and doing what it takes to overcome them. By backing away from a meaningful dialog about something that has a huge impact on your relationship - commitment and marriage - he leaves you to carry the emotional burden. By walking out on those discussions and breaking up with you rather than have them, he hurts you at an intolerable level.
Now here’s your next temptation, and one that you have the opportunity to overcome today: Taking the lead instead of taking your cues. It’s time for you to step back and give him the opportunity to step up to the plate, be a man, and make things right with you. If he doesn’t, read it this way: He doesn’t love you, not in the way a woman needs to be loved to be happily married.
If he does step up to the plate, he must earn his way back into your heart, and that should begin with a proposal and a ring. In the event of that miracle, I recommend at least a six month engagement without sex so that you can discover if he really means it and will follow through in a loving way.
This is, of course, a pretty tall order, and not likely to occur. So your real job is to focus on you, on your recovery - especially the recovery of your self-esteem. When a woman dates a wounded guy for a long period of time and settles for less, she loses self-respect over time. You must work on feeling better about yourself - forgive yourself for mistakes, and resolve to never again compromise your values for any guy.
Buy and read my new book, Temptations of the Single Girl, so you can learn exactly what you must do to avoid these dating traps in the future.






Comments
This is great advice! Thanks
By: SophieChanel Posted: 15 weeks 18 hours agoThis is great advice! Thanks so much for sharing it!
-Sophie
www.alphawomen.com