Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Trusting your own voice essential in deciding compatibil­ity

- CAROLYN HAX Chat online with Carolyn at 11 a.m. each Friday at washington­post.com. Write to Tell Me About It in care of The Washington Post, Style Plus, 1150 15 th St. N. W ., Washington, D. C .20071; or email tellme@washpost.com

DEAR CAROLYN: I’ve been seeing a lovely man for a year. We eased slowly into the relationsh­ip — friends for months first — as we were both still hurting after recent divorces.

We are perfectly suited in so many ways — identical interests, shared friends, sameage children, parallel life experience­s — and we enjoy each other very much, despite the time restrictio­ns that running separate households and raising children entail. There’s a lot of laughter and a sense of relief and sanctuary.

So what’s the problem? I’m having a hard time trusting him. His longtime marriage ended because of an infidelity on his part. He takes full responsibi­lity.

But he often doesn’t take responsibi­lity for admittedly minor things between us — saying something hurtful, for example, or forgetting plans we’ve made, or other mild but annoying, inconsider­ate actions. There is always an excuse — a reason I don’t understand or somehow misinterpr­eted.

When I raise my concerns, he says he certainly understand­s but that’s just the way he is — spacy, no filter. And, well, he is charmingly socially awkward and absent-minded-professori­sh. Which is all fine if he would accept the impact of his actions on me.

I was married to an occasional­ly verbally and physically violent drug addict for 16 years with all the passion, intensity, gaslightin­g and insanity that sort of relationsh­ip entails. The two men could not be more different. I never gave up hope until the bitter end and nearly died from grief. My current relationsh­ip is a welcome, healing relief.

Am I oversensit­ive or seeing real red flags?

— Red Flags? DEAR READER: People who can’t or won’t admit fault are always a red flag.

There are judgment calls, always, but — forgetting plans? If one can’t simultaneo­usly be one’s unfiltered self and form the words, “Oh no! I’m sorry. No excuse. Please forgive me” — then that’s not a self around whom I want to spend much time.

But, also always a red flag: Coming out of 16 years of “passion, intensity, gaslightin­g and insanity” with a “violent drug addict” and still greeting your own distrust with, “Am I oversensit­ive?”

Questionin­g your reality is the emotional signature of gaslightin­g. You know this. It’s when you respond to something done to you that’s objectivel­y bad — as in, something you’d never encourage anyone you care about to put up with — by wondering if you’re the one at fault.

Plus, the reasons you cite for his suiting you — besides sanctuary, which I’ll get to — are ones of coincidenc­e, not character. Interests, kid ages, “parallel life experience­s.” These are important for compatibil­ity but they won’t help you trust an untrustwor­thy person or like an unlikable one. Commonalit­y and character count.

When you question your ability to judge character — especially when your history gives you cause to — then I urge you not to go it alone. Find a good therapist who can help you (re-)calibrate your boundaries and judgment.

That you find emotional relief in this man compared with your ex is a character point in his favor, and could mean one of us is overstatin­g the importance of your boyfriend’s defensiven­ess.

But he could just be less awful, too.

So there’s no overstatin­g how important it is to hear and trust your own voice. Please do not commit further, to anyone, until you do.

 ?? Washington Post Writers Group/NICK GALIFIANAK­IS ??
Washington Post Writers Group/NICK GALIFIANAK­IS
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