|
Post by alexandra on Aug 2, 2020 22:19:41 GMT
She's making two main points.
The (unaware / unhealthy) FA is unable to engage in healthy communication.
The FA may double down on that bad communication by being disconnected from self and not understand their needs, so then they really can't communicate properly because they're misattributing them.
So instead, they test and push and pull, and at the base of that is trust issues that may or may not even have anything to do with you or reflect what they really want. But since they don't have the tools to deal with any of that, you can only be self-assured and consistent and respond in kind (pulling back when they do, it not mattering to you if they're not showing up during deactivation) if you want to keep the dance going.
But she's not suggesting a partner mind read or enable this. She ends it by saying, the partner does whatever while the FA has to do the heavy lifting of communicating and connecting more securely if they want satisfying relationships.
It was much easier for me to understand FA motivations and dynamics and what a healthy boundary looked like once I'd had a really firm understanding of my own attachment style. Then I had a solid and stable enough foundational perspective of one set of patterns to start looking objectively and really understanding how another individual set of completely different motivations and thinking could manifest. Understanding FA still really only helps in how engaging in that dynamic relates to you, as the goal is you as an individual having healthier interactions with people of all types. Whether the FA understands or doesn't why they're doing something doesn't really matter for you, as the outcome of that deactivation situation will always end up the same over time no matter what you do. What changes the dynamic is if they're working on their side of things, as Gibson ends the video suggesting they try to do.
|
|
|
Post by serenity on Aug 4, 2020 23:32:48 GMT
Hi Caroline, I just read your update, and felt very sorry to hear that he became active on tinder, then ditched your relationship when you expressed healthy boundaries with that. I'm sorry for the pain it has caused you, after all the love, time, and understanding you put into your relationship with him.
Regarding your question about deactivation versus moving on... I think the real point is a man who loves you won't be looking for other women, whether he is successful at finding others or not. His looking is a real problem, and being avoidant he has a deep drive to this, as well as a sea of opportunities via social media and dating sites. You don't need to live with this kind of pain, and you certainly don't deserve it. Being benched or bread crumbed while a man explores his options with others is not something you need to ever endure.
No contact is the quickest, surest route out of this hell. Its hard and takes discipline, and you will grieve. But it will give you a clarity and strength , and put you on a joyful path in life again. Please don't second guess yourself on this. Stay true to no contact as much as you are able right now. You'll get better at it as the months pass, and hopefully by the end of the year you will be happy and free again. Thats what I hope for you , dear one. You're a beautiful loving person and I want the best for you, always. <3
|
|