ROSENTHAL,Relationships End(Breaking Up)
Wk of Dec 1 03 wc: 635
WHY
INTIMATE RELATIONSHIPS END
Dear Neil: My boyfriend abruptly ended our two year
relationship. No real explanation was
offered—just that he decided that I wasn’t the one. There was no discussion about what went into
his decision, or what he was thinking or feeling about me—or about us.
But I’m sure we both loved and
cared about each other. I’m left with
this empty feeling of having to accept his decision, but it is complicated by the
fact that I don’t know what happened. I
don’t know why he ended things when they appeared to be so promising for
me. Can you help?
Lost
and Hurt in Vail
Dear Vail: I cannot tell from your letter what factors
went into your ex-boyfriend’s decision to end the relationship between the two
of you. Here are the most common reasons
intimate relationships break up:
- Lack of heart. The relationship isn’t close. There is a poor or superficial heart
connection for at least one of you, which allows the least involved or
committed partner to lose (or never to develop) a sense of belonging
together. So friendship, empathy
and sensitivity are lacking, and communication is more about information
exchange than it is about heartful feelings and emotions. Even
if the words “I love you” are used, behaviors and actions do not come from
a loving, caring or empathic set of emotions. Only one person needs a lack of heart in
order for the connection and intimacy to be sabotaged.
- Feeling poorly treated. Not feeling respected, valued or
cherished. Poor treatment can come
in many forms—disrespectful behavior, knee-jerk reactivity, too much
anger, mistrust or jealousy, or not enough TLC, nurturance and
affection—to name a few. Poor
treatment almost always entails one person not thinking about or valuing
how the other person feels, and therefore not behaving in friendly, caring
ways that allow the other partner to feel cherished, genuinely cared
about, valued and respected.
- Poor intimacy skills. Lack of effective communication,
conflict resolution, joint problem solving, negotiating, compromising,
giving benefit of the doubt and absence of malice, offering generosity of
spirit, loyalty, trust, good listening skills, empathy, etc.
- Very little affection and/or sex.
Affection is a glue that keeps
people bonded together, feeling close and connected.
- Betrayal. Once trust is ruptured in a
relationship, it is extremely difficult to patch things back together
again. The deception, insensitivity
and selfishness all lead to continuing mistrust—and mistrust is the death knell
of intimacy.
- Addiction. You can be addicted to a substance
(alcohol, drugs, food, etc.) or a behavior (watching TV, sleeping,
knee-jerk reactivity, anger, jealousy, etc.) or an attitude (unwarranted mistrust
or suspiciousness, fear of abandonment, selfishness, lack of reciprocity, etc).
- Lack of common goals or interests. This is not usually why your
relationship ends, although it’s frequently cited as a reason. It usually means the person wasn’t feeling
close and connected enough in order to develop
mutual interests and goals.
- Consistently not getting along. Arguing, bickering, lots of bad vibes,
mistrust and bad blood between the two of you—until one person cries uncle.
- Someone else has entered the picture. Such as a new love interest, with new
hope, new chemistry and no history.
- Losing (or not developing) respect for
the other person. Why might
you not respect someone you love?
For starters, how about all of the negative behaviors listed above.
One thought you might find
useful. Call your ex-boyfriend, tell him
the break up confused you, and ask him if he’d be willing to talk about what
happened.
===================================================
Neil Rosenthal is a licensed
marriage and family therapist in Boulder, Colorado. Call him at (303) 758-8777 or e-mail him from
his website www.heartrelationships.com