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APPLIED SCIENCE EXPERT AMY ALKON
Empowering you through science for your best health and boldest life
The Shoo Must Go On
Grey Ghost
I've been dating this guy long distance for six months. He'll often fail to return texts for an entire day or even a few days. I keep breaking up with him, but he keeps apologizing, acknowledging that he can be "distracted" and then offering convincing excuses or making me feel I'm overreacting. This is getting old.
--Annoyed
Is there some crater somewhere where all his promises go to die? There is sometimes a good reason your boyfriend can't return your text for days, like that it's 790 B.C. and there's a snowstorm and he's sending his eunuch with the bum knee over the Alps with a set of stone tablets. When there is no good reason, his acknowledging an error, like by admitting to being "distracted," is a first step in mending his ways. That is, except when he shows you -- repeatedly -- that it's his only step (perhaps because it's tricky to text you back when his other, more local girlfriend is sitting right next to him). Getting somebody to respect your boundaries starts with appearing to have them. Sure, there are sometimes allowances to be made, like for an all-nighter at work or illness. As a friend of mine once wrote: "Sorry I didn't respond to your email; I was in a coma." But a man who cares about you generally acts in ways reflecting that -- like by dashing off a text to tell you "sleepy - w/write u in am" or "kidnapped. w/be in touch w/ransom demand." Instead, this guy gives you yet another apology -- which basically translates to "Sorry that it'll be a few days before I can do this to you again." To have a caring, attentive man, you'll need to make room for him in your life. You do this the same way you make room for a new TV: by putting the old broken one out on the curb. It's tempting to keep believing the excuses, which allows you to believe that you're loved. Unfortunately, believing you're loved never plays out like actually being loved. The problem is, in the moment, our emotions are our first responder, and reason -- that slacker -- burrows under the covers, hoping it won't get called in to work. Overriding wishful thinking-driven gullibility takes planning -- having a pre-packed set of standards for how you want to be treated and then pulling them out at excuse o'clock and holding them up to how you're actually being treated. This is how you end up with a boyfriend who keeps his word. Keeps it and puts it on his phone and texts it to you -- as opposed to keeping it in a drawer with slightly used chopsticks, old answering machine tapes, and a Ziploc baggie of his sister's hamster's ashes.bottom of page