Are
You Dating a Werewolf?
Dating
thru personals can find you love or a werewolf. American singles
should beware.
Remember "The Wolf Man"? It was old silver screen horror story
that may seem pretty tame by today's standards, but lately I find myself
thinking about it as I work with people struggling to create good,
intimate relationships.
Here's a plot summary: The lead character is warm and easy to be with --
that is, except during full moons, when he grows long teeth and hair, gets
angry and rips people apart. He can't help it; he is a good person, but
with a curse.
OK, so maybe your current flame isn't sporting the wild hair and teeth,
but something about the werewolf does remind me of certain stories I hear
about people on the dating scene. Here are some of the distinguishing
characteristics of psychological "werewolves":
-
They
seem to have two personalities; one is glamorous, charming, vulnerable
and winning, while and the other may be spoiled, envious, vindictive,
petty or mean.
-
They
want to believe -- and want you to believe -- that only the nice
personality is who they really are. That other part? That is just a
curse, a condition or a product of a disturbed childhood.
-
Behind
their words, you will hear and be moved by this emotional howl:
"Love me. I am lonely! Save me. I am suffering! Be careful. I am
dangerous!" The bottom-line message? "Be with me but be
willing to make some sacrifices for love."
-
They
like you. They do. They appreciate your company. Yet they have an
addiction -- whether it's gambling, drinking, flirting, shopping --
and they want you to ignore it.
The
worst part about werewolf types -- addictive, self-centered, charming and
exhausting -- is that they believe their own lies. This makes them hard to
figure out because you can't depend on them to act in their best interest
(or yours, for that matter). The main lie they believe is that the mean
things they do to others don't really count. "That's not the real
me," they insist. "The real me would never hurt a fly."
You have to be a little crazy yourself to love a werewolf. You have to say
to yourself, "The person I'm in love with is a much nicer person than
the person I'm in love with." It doesn't make sense, yet you believe
it. It's a spell.
It is a crisis for both partners, but that's how these relationships work.
He wants not just any love, but a love that can heal him. At the same
time, his girlfriend is trapped by her own ambition. She wants to think
that her love is powerful enough that it will save him.
In the movie, it is only after the woman has given her love to the
werewolf that he lets her know of the terrible bargain she's made. She
then learns that the only way the werewolf can be freed of his curse is by
being shot through the heart with a silver bullet by one who loves him
enough to do it. This is her test.
Similarly, in the real-life dating world, it is only after two people fall
in love that they learn what that love will require of them. To pass the
test and break the curse with a "werewolf," you have to be
willing to deliver an ultimatum. That's the silver bullet, an ultimatum.
In a loving relationship, you ordinarily don't give ultimatums. But loving
a werewolf demands it. You have to be prepared to end the relationship in
order to save it. It's paradoxical, but it's usually the only thing that
works.
An ultimatum is a non-negotiable demand. You have to communicate clearly
and precisely: "Wolfie, either stop the (name the specific behavior)
and take responsibility for it, or we have to part. It's that
simple."
This is a difficult process, yet the only way some relationships can work
is if you are utterly clear that you will leave if things don't change.
And often, you have to walk right up to that edge. You may have to get
outside support to help you. If you succeed, you both win. If you don't
succeed and the relationship ends ... well, ultimately you'll have won
then, too
This
article contributed by Philip Belove, Ed.D. of DatingMidlife.com www.DatingMidlife.com
You are a midlife adult now.
You can learn to create and manage your relationships.
You can get what you really want.
Why it's different
How to understand it
How to get what you want
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