Rosenthal,IS LIVING TOGETHER W/O MARRIAGE STILL A COMMITTED RELATIONSHIP? (commitment, dating/singles issues)
Wk of July 1, 2007 wc: 581
IS LIVING TOGETHER WITHOUT MARRIAGE STILL
A COMMITTED RELATIONSHIP?
Dear Neil: I told a male friend I had sexual fantasies about him. At the time, he was living with a woman. I persuaded myself that if a man is a partner/boyfriend with a woman and not her fiancé or husband, he is actually available. I figured that if a couple isn’t married within two years of meeting, especially when they’ve spent almost every day together, that they aren’t going to marry—even though they are having sex and living together.
I was hoping he would drop her and be with me. I got swept up in lusty text messages, especially when he said he “wanted me.” But then he said he just wanted me for a physical thing. When I said no, he got angry at me and accused me of leading him on.
I wanted to be loved, and I loved the attention. I felt wanted. Yet his actions told me that he didn’t want me as much as his text messages told me. How do I go about getting love more healthfully in the future? How can I ask for what I need without pressuring someone, and how can I inquire what the other person needs?
Disappointed
in
Dear
Some people flirt with everyone, and it’s far less personal than you think. It’s a way of trolling, looking for what they might attract. (Fishermen sometimes throw a baited line in the water, accelerating their boat slowly just to see what might bite.) You cannot confuse flirtatious behavior with someone actually wanting a love relationship with you. Flirtatious is the package, not the product.
Here’s my advice: Don’t go after men who are taken. You’re likely to be rejected—or treated purely as a sexual object—because his real emotional connection is with the woman he’s built a shared life with, and therefore it’s going to be very hard on your ego. Find a man who is completely unencumbered and emotionally available. That’s your best chance for a happy, fulfilling love relationship. Then be direct and clear about what you want and need, and invite him to be just as direct and clear about his needs.
Also, perhaps telling a man you have sexual fantasies about him is not the best way to attempt to start a relationship, unless you just want a sex with him. A man will think he’s being propositioned, and of course they’re going to interpret that as a sexual come on.
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Neil Rosenthal is a licensed
marriage and family therapist in