Rosenthal,Readers’ Betrayal Too Hard For Boyfriend To Overcome(dating/single’s issues, rejection, betrayal0
Wk of July 8, 2007 wc: 729
READER’S BETRAYAL MAY BE TOO HARD FOR
BOYFRIEND TO OVERCOME
Dear Neil: I’ve been in an on-and-off again relationship with a man I have two children with. I love him dearly and I want to be with him. But he wants to leave in order to determine what he really wants from our relationship and how he feels about me. He’s having a hard time dealing with the past. I had an affair with his brother, and he can’t get past it. I love him, and he means the world to me. Please help.
Lostlove
in
Dear
If he still can’t come back to you, or come toward you, the chances are that too much damage has been done, and he can’t let go of the ghosts of the past and forgive you.
Dear Neil: My boyfriend and I have been together for nine months. Every time there is a problem, he gets mad and calls me names. Then he says he’s sorry, that he does indeed love me. He does this every time that there is a problem. I don’t know what to think. He breaks up when things don’t go his way. He doesn’t act loving with me as much as I would like. Should I find someone that is going to give me what I want? He is a good guy, it’s just that I want someone who is more emotionally there for me.
Help Me
Dear Help Me: A man who is disrespectful and who fights dirty may or may not love you, but you’re certainly not going to feel loved by him, and you can bet the farm that you’re going to feel controlled and manipulated by him—that you have to be perfect and do everything his way in order to be treated well and valued.
It sounds as if you’ve answered you own question. If you want somebody more emotionally present, let the boyfriend go and go find what it is you want.
Everyone—including you—deserves to be wanted, valued, cherished and treated well.
Dear Neil: I am a single mom of three children. I met a man about a month ago. We are both Christian/Baptist and share the same values. One night we started to get intimate, and I stopped us because I thought it might be too soon. We had only been out on a couple of dates and I wanted to wait. He said he understood and promised to call me—but never did. Then he sent me an e-mail saying that he felt incredibly guilty over his behavior. He feels that, being the man, he should have had more self-control, should not have put us in such a compromising position. He said he needed to step away from the relationship with me until God could give him more self-control, and until then he won’t return my phone calls or e-mails. I really started to fall for him and now I don’t know what to make out of it. Is it possible he is telling me the truth? What should I do?
Heartbroken
in
Dear
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Neil Rosenthal is a licensed
marriage and family therapist in