Why getting dumped (when you’re single) is a good thing.

My office carpet has gotten wet many times with the tears of single men and women in the throes of intense pain felt from romantic rejection, usually asking, “What is wrong with me? Why didn’t they like me? What did I do wrong?”

It always pains me to see good people blaming a break up on themselves, and taking it so personally. My view is that getting released from a relationship that wasn’t meant to be is the same as being set free from a trap, so that one may live on and find someone who cherishes and adores them. In the end, it is wonderful news.

If a date you were interested in rejects you, it does not mean you are defective, and I find trying to figure out the puzzle of why a waste of time, but I know most people feel compelled to do it. Most rejecters will never reveal the real reason why you weren’t the one for them, either because the reason would cause you pain, or they themselves don’t know. What we can know is that for whatever reason, you two were not a match, and that’s OK, because for someone else, you will be.

Sometimes I tell my grieving singles that they might look at themselves as a type of animal, say, a dog, and the person who rejected them is a cat. Neither animal is defective, they are just not a match, and for all kinds of completely acceptable reasons. When you meet another dog who connects with you, who gets you, it’ll be a go. You’ll know it is a go because it will be easy, like a hand slipping effortlessly into a soft and luscious leather glove. A great love is never a difficult fit that needs to be squeezed or adjusted any which way, it just fits.

I have girlfriends who are with men I could never be with. They adore their man, and the men are very nice, and I like them and enjoy their company. They would not be for me. This is how it works. I’m OK with those men saying, “You know, I like Becky, but she would not be for me.” They are cats, I am a dog, it’s OK.

In graduate school I did a lot of research on what predicts a happy marriage, and what predicts divorce. Marriage and Family Therapists need to know these things as they advise individuals and couples constantly, and we obviously want to steer them toward the thinking and behaviors that predict happy relationships. One thing we know is that the more similar two people are along the major categories, like education, background, social status, age, attractiveness, power, interests, life stage, hopes and dreams, the more likely their relationship is to work over the long term. Some people may see this as shallow, but it is not an opinion, it is what the research has shown us time and again.

Think about it: Older wealthy Harvard graduate with very young high school grad with no income; wealthy trust fund woman with man from a middle-class background who works as a teacher; a young person longing for a family with an older person who has already done that; physician female with a stay-at-home male, A wealthy and established gay man with a young man who just wants to attach his trailer-car to that man’s engine.

No one in these groups is defective, but the circumstances are worth considering as potential obstacles in the relationship, as it takes two very special, well-adjusted people to be able to treat each other equally and respectfully when there are huge power differentials between the two, and not that many people have such solidness in how they see themselves.

Before I married again in 2013, I was single for about 11 years, and during that time I was rejected numerous times, and I also rejected numerous men. Never did I reject a gentleman because he was defective or not good enough. It was always because in some way, shape or form, we were not a match. Dog, cat, that’s it. Maybe I wasn’t feeling it, maybe his personality wasn’t right for me, maybe he traveled too much, but these were not defects. It was just that his traits were not a fit for me. These men were good people and would fit very well with someone else.

When I got rejected by men, I usually had a good laugh about it. The laughter was more about the ridiculous ways they would reject me rather than the dumping itself, but as I got healthier individually I always welcomed the news that a man didn’t see me as a fit for him, as it freed me to be available for someone who would.

In my head, I imagined that there was a finite number of men I was supposed to meet in the dating world, all standing in a line, and The One would be standing at the end – so in my mind, the sooner I made it through the line the sooner I’d find him. No need to waste any energy about why the guys in the line rejected me, or why I rejected them, it all boiled down to us not being a match.  The day did come when I found the guy at the end of the line, and it was exactly like I thought it would be – non-anxiety-provoking, solid, easy, respectful, caring, mutual.

In the dating world, when someone dumps you, lift your arms to the sky and say, hallelujah.

When you operate from the assumption that you are not defective, you won’t take rejection personally anymore, so to prepare yourself for healthy dating you might ought to be working on that, if you’re not already there. We are all unique and unlike anyone else, a little bit weird or quirky, definitely imperfect, but a perfect fit for the life we were meant to live. One day, you’ll look up and be face-to-face with the person at the end of line, so be ready.

 

Affairs – A marriage therapist’s (honest) opinion.

It was his first visit, and my male client fidgeted as we went over his paperwork. Married over 40 years, grown children, grandkids, semi-retired with plenty of money, handsome and friendly face, he looked to be in great shape.

So, what’s the problem?

“I don’t know if I want to stay married,” he said. “I need you to help me decide what to do.”

Great. I like people to stay married if they can do so happily, so I listened as he described the verbal and emotional abuse, occasional slaps in the face from his wife, and how she seethed in contempt whenever he made attempts to connect, aka, have sex.

“This is not good,” I said. “Now I want to know whether she just started to behave this way out-of-the-blue, or have you done some things that have hurt her and the marriage that might cause her to feel contempt for you?”

“Uh,” he looked down at his hands. “Like what kind of things?”

“Things like ignore her, be a cheapskate, be controlling, judgmental, have affairs, be an asshole – any sort of stuff that we both know women hate.”

“I’ve done some of those things,” he said. “I’ve had many affairs, and I think she may have, too. When she yells, I yell back”

“Are you having an affair now?”

“Yes, but you can’t tell her. I saw in your paperwork that you don’t keep secrets if both spouses were to come in.”

“Well, that depends,” I said. “Are you in love with your lover?”

“I think I am,” he said.

And so it goes. When people are seriously contemplating leaving their spouse, they almost always prepare by lining someone up to fill the gap that the failing relationship will leave behind. After working with thousands of people over the years, I would say that it is true 99.9 times out of 100, though people in the 99.9 group will deny this until their last breath.

I really hate people to make a divorce decision when they are under the influence of a new and exciting relationship, especially when there are children involved. I have heard a joke among marriage therapists that when a person is having a mid-life crisis or affair, their IQ drops by 20 points, and to see how people make decisions and behave during these times, you might actually believe that it is true. I see part of my job to get people in an extra-marital love-trance, to make it through the craziness of euphoria-causing dopamine chemicals that course through their brain, without doing more damage than they have already done. It’s not easy.

My strong opinion is that a person cannot make a wise and thoughtful decision about much of anything when they are having an affair. I am well aware that the euphoric state cannot just be turned off like a bath faucet, so telling a person to end the affair and expect that to happen is a fool’s game. It takes time for the ecstacy of an affair to play out, and a person considering divorce needs to get to that place in order to not make some irreparably stupid decisions they will surely regret.

When I am working with a couple where one person is having an affair, it will go one of two ways – the cheating spouse will be so emotionally connected to his new amour partner and the drugged state it puts him or her in, that they won’t be able to resist the compulsion to reconnect despite promises and setting intentions to have no contact. The other possibility is that the spouse caught cheating is so mortified and ashamed of their affair, that they find it a relief to walk away. Guess which scenario has the best chance of marital recovery and reconciliation?

I looked at my client’s face when I talked about working things out with his wife, or to at least see if that was possible. He grimaced, and said that even mentioning working on marriage would likely end up with her to scream at him in outrage, “If you don’t like our marriage, then why don’t you leave!?”

No matter the circumstances, I told my client that I see affairs as an act of cowardice, of not having the courage to see if the relationship you have is one that can be renewed or repaired, before seeking someone else to fill the emotional and/or physical void you experience in the marriage. Deal with the relationship you have before you move on to be romantic with someone else. It must seem so easy for many to just plug the leaks of a sinking marriage with a new person, rather than do the hard work of facing the issues that are keeping two spouses from connecting in a healthy way.

In all the years I have seen adults and families, only twice has a spouse come in and told me they were contemplating having an affair. I laid out all the reasons not to do it, and gave them great advice: “Go tell your spouse you are so unhappy in the relationship that the thought of having an affair has actually crossed your mind.” If this doesn’t get their attention, nothing will.

If you’re not getting along with your spouse, don’t have an affair, get help for your marriage instead.

Of course, there are spouses who think it is all your fault that the marriage is unhappy, and others who absolutely refuse to go to marriage therapy. These stances are don’t leave much hope for growth and change, but you can always grow and change on your own and see if that doesn’t change the relationship. If you want to live a life of integrity and courage, then deal with the romantic relationship you’re in before muddying the waters with another.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

How tragic we even have to explain this. Take care of yourselves, people!

https://doctorbecky.com/2018/07/01/1609/