Relationship Tips We Discover Too Late
Be sure:
When your guy mention casually that he can't make it to dinner on Friday—even
though he already agreed with you a few
days before. Earlier, you may have taken three deep breaths to calm down, only
to snap like a candy cane from last Christmas, replying in a chilly voice:
"So, I presume this is your way of telling me this isn't going to work"
Or, you might have remained silent and cool on the outside, only to assume he
wasn't into you and privately resolved never to go out with him again.
This time, consider seeking
clarification. By this I mean just asking the guy what he means...but without
using that phrase, since it can come off as aggressive, as in: "What do
you mean, you can't come to dinner Friday?" A more specific, detailed
wording, like, "Um...I just need a little clarification. With my last
boyfriend, breaking plans was his way of saying ‘Let's break up.' So I'm not
sure, exactly, if you're telling me that this isn't working out, or if you have
some conflict with Friday night. Do you mind taking a sec to explain that one
thing?"
As with anything, saying this
calmly adds to its effectiveness, because what you're really doing is opening
the door to honesty, a door that slams shut when people are afraid. If he is
moving on, keeping your tone relaxed will encourage him tell you, because he
won't be scared of your getting upset (which will also allow you to move on,
immediately). But if he just has to go out of town to work at the
helpless-kitten orphanage, you will end the mystery and prevent yourself from
reacting to what may not even be happening. Seeking clarity—which, please note,
is not seeking the answer you have in your head or the answer you want to
hear—is also known as facing reality.
Check
Out his Silent Movie:: It's so rarely what they say, dear. In fact, your
particular guy—the one you've just spent the past seven years with—may have
said over and over, "I'm totally ready for commitment." But his
actions might have been telling you something completely different. This is why
you must watch him as if he were the lead in a 1920s black-and-white silent
movie, one whose gestures and facial expressions are his only means of
expression.
Silent-movie watching works
especially well in subtle cases, when even he might not be sure of the discrepancy
between his proclamations and your life together. Say the two of you are
attending a wedding, one during which other guests are openly asking when your
wedding will be. Watching him sweat more than the groom, gulp down three
glasses of champagne and exit the reception to sit on the beach and stare
moodily at the ocean may not fill you with joy and security. But it will inform
you that this movie has hit an unexpected plot twist and, though technology of
this sort didn't exist in age of Charlie Chaplin, what you need to do is hit
the pause button.
Don’t go away from bad Sex: There are times in life when sex is bad—and so many different ways in
which it can be bad. There's clumsy, embarrassed, first-time sex. There's
too-tired-to-have-sex sex. There's after-fight sex that you think will fix
things but doesn't because you're both still too mad. There's sex in the in-laws'
house, which makes you feel guilty and paranoid over breakfast the next day.
There are bungled shower attempts and misinterpreted fantasies and times when
kids walk in, their little faces frozen in mute horror.
No one in their right mind will insist that these are indications of a
wonderful relationship. But they are also "every once in a while."
They are not "every day." They are not "every week." And
they are not the "once-a-month" sex that you acquiesce to because
after a while, it's just so uninspiring or uncomfortable that you give up on
the activity. No matter how handsome, funny, honest, smart, kind and sexy a
partner is, bad sex isn't something that you can live with it. Fix it or face
up to the possibility that you may need a new partner.