Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

His flirting, her snooping are red flags for relationsh­ip

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

DEAR CAROLYN: My girlfriend and I recently called off our engagement due to some flirtatiou­s messages she found on my phone. I can say honestly that it was an isolated incident, but her anger was compounded by my other messages with platonic girlfriend­s, which I feel were taken completely out of context. This was not the first time she had looked through my phone.

I have of course apologized and worked on myself to make sure I never make such a mistake again, but I am left with the issue of trying to earn back her trust while feeling that she has violated my privacy multiple times. What do I do?

— G. DEAR READER: Take this implosion as a gift.

Everything good about marriage rests on trust. I don’t just mean trusting you’ll stay married or won’t cheat, either, because a couple who stick it out for 60 miserable years can be technicall­y honoring their vows. I mean trust that you like each other, and yourselves, for who you are; trust that you’re willing to set your interests aside for the other’s; trust that you know your worst tendencies and will work to keep them in check; trust that you’ll back down when you’re wrong and not back down when you’re right about something that counts. It’s a complicate­d social compact that’s worth getting right for its power to elevate you both.

It can bring confinemen­t, too, though, and collateral damage — to kids mostly — when people go into it ill-prepared or ill-matched. If I had to guess which of these you and your girlfriend are, I’d say a little of both. You’re not compatible enough, so you feel not-quite-right together, and aren’t mature enough to see that and walk away. Instead, you’re out flirting and she’s in snooping and you’re both feeling the other has done you wrong.

Here’s the funny thing. It’s not for everyone, obviously, but some strong, happy, intimate couples can flirt a little on the side and use each other’s phones. But they do so openly as a byproduct of higher-level trust in each other and in their union.

You two are doing these things furtively, as acts of self- preservati­on. Flirting might not seem like a protective act, but it often unwittingl­y is — for people who don’t feel fully themselves with, empowered by or appreciate­d by a partner.

And if either of you feels compelled to protect yourself around the other, then your relationsh­ip isn’t sound — so imagine the lack of intimacy when both of you are in self-preservati­on mode, as appears to be the case here.

You say you “worked on myself,” which says you understand the issue isn’t the flirty text, it’s the context. Good.

But as you suggest, such work is only as good as its results, and your result apparently is the same cognitive dissonance you started with: accepting blame as the untrustwor­thy one from a partner you don’t trust.

So, more work. Call her on the snooping. Ignoring it just to stay together will promote resentment, not intimacy.

Ask yourself beforehand, in fact, why you want her back, and what of your relationsh­ip you want back. It’s not enough for you to “be good.” What you create together must also be good for you both, or else its time has passed.

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

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States