I feel walls building between us...
By: Bryan Redfield
The following question was sent in to Bryan for dating and relationship
advice. Bryan is the creator of The
Redfield System, a proven relationship system that teaches
you how to find, meet and date that 'someone special'.
Question:
I had been involved with a man for over a year and a half.
Our relationship is was very deep and loving. We spent as much
time together as we could and discussed marriage plans in the
future. About 8 months into the relationship I began to feel walls
building between us.
I would try to discuss this with him. He would sometimes admit
that the walls were there, but would not help me to understand
why or what was going on. I kept trying, hoping to understand.
It became worse and eventually the relationship fell apart.
To this day I really have no idea what was wrong. I kept blaming
myself but I realize that it probably had very little to do with
me at all. We went our separate ways.
Now, after being apart for over 8 months with little to no contact,
he comes back into my life and says he wants to be friends. That
he misses my understanding and my love.
Well, at one time we had been very good friends as well as being
in love. I miss it too. So, I agreed. But, he seems unwilling
to let any of those walls down and to trust me. Therefore, I mistrust
him as well.
Any suggestions?
Answer:
From what you've told me, the problem is obviously not with you. It's with him. Here's
why I say that: When you felt there were walls, and he admitted they were there, you honestly
tried to resolve them and fix whatever he was uncomfortable about. So stop blaming yourself.
For whatever reason, he was (and is) unwilling to tell you the truth. The details don't
matter. All that matters is he won't be honest with you. An educated guess is he met another
woman, it didn't work out, and now he wants certain good' aspects of the relationship with
you back, but not the commitments.
As a result of his not being honest with you about these walls and where he's been these
last eight months, you justifiably don't trust him. Trust is like virginity: once it's gone,
it's gone for good.
Once the trust factor is not there, another powerful part of your self image comes into
play: your self respect. One of the most important Golden Rules I teach my students is,
Never compromise your self respect for any reason at any time. The man (or woman) does not
exist who is worth compromising your self respect for. And no decent man or woman who truly
cares about you would ever ask you to compromise your self respect.
When someone is not honest with you, you stop trusting them. When you stop trusting them,
you can't respect them. When you can't respect them, there is only one thing you should
put between you and them: distance, lots of it.
Sadly, he's also lost your friendship because one of the basic foundations of a friendship
is trust, too. And if your friendship isn't based on trust, honesty and respect, what can
it possibly be based on other than abuse?
If you value your self respect (and I hope you do), your relationship with him is over,
permanently.
In the future, the moment a man is not honest with you, and you've done everything you
can to reassure him you want the truth (and can deal with it), you should take it as an
early warning it won't work out and walk away with your self respect and your dignity intact.
Good luck and God Bless.
Bryan Redfield
Creator of The Redfield System
Secret Pathways To The Heart Finally Revealed
bryan@theredfieldsystem.com
http://www.theredfieldsystem.com
The opinions expressed in this article are those
of the author and not necessarily those of CyberDating.net, its
staff or management.
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