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Reliable Membership: The Essay — 102 Comments

  1. HI AL,
    IVE BEEN IN AN OFF AND ON RELATIONSHIP FOR TWO YEARS.EVERYTIME WE HAVE BROKEN UP IT WAS BECAUSE MY BF FELT OVERWHELMED BY ME.WEVE BEEN BACK TOGETHER FOR A MONTH NOW.WEVE BEEN TOGETHER ALMOST EVERY DAY SINCE OUR RECONCILE.NOW I FEEL HIM PULLING AWAY AND LAST NIGHT HE TOLD ME HE WAS UNHAPPY.HE SAID HE LOVES ME AND FEELS HE WANTS TO BE WITH ME BUT DOESNT KNOW HOW TO NOT GET ANNOYED WITH ME.I MUST ADMIT I AM A CLINGER ESP WHEN HE PULLS AWAY I JUST TRY HARDER TO GET THE LOVE I NEED OUT OF HIM WHICH OBVIOUSLY IS WHERE WE GO WRONG.IM GOING TO TRY TO GIVE HIM THE SPACE HE NEEDS.ITS JUST HARD BECAUSE I DONT HAVE MANY FRIENDS SO WHEN WERE APART I BOTHER HIM CUZ IM BORED OUT OF MY MIND,WHICH IN TURN IRRITATES HIM MORE.ANY ADVICE?

  2. Hi Friend,
    Welcome to any ideas I have that may be of assistance. Here are a few more.
    Seems that the vast majority of people who come to my website are currently clingers. They share in that they are in more or less panic and some partner is pulling away. And so you are, I believe, in good company.
    Another thought is that no one is a Clinger or an Avoider. These are postures we tend to adopt when we are either under-whelmed or over-whelmed by input or connection with others. Everyone who is in the dating scene seems to be in a clinger mode, and over time half of them will switch to avoider if their dating goes on very long.
    You also noted, about the world of avoiders, that your partner may be overwhelmed by your actions or those of others (work). Good noticing. The goal for you is to become the most underwhelming influence in his life, so that he runs from work to you.
    You might look at my paper on What to do when he/she leaves for more ideas. I think it is a matter of keeping your partner by a) not “needing” them but b) by enjoying them. Avoiders are really nice people except when they are overwhelmed. Just as we clingy people are nice when we don't get panicky and chase people.
    Good luck.
    Al

  3. Hi Al,
    I just found your website today and in a few short hours of surfing its pages I have been able to gain clarity on some issues that have been problematic for almost 10 years in my almost-10 year relationship. Thank you for so generously sharing your insight & expertise. I reached this Reliable Membership essay through the page “When He/She Won't Talk.” This is precisely my problem with my partner — as the Avoider, he shuts down & stops talking, and as the Clinger, I panic and pursue. Some background: my partner grew up with divorced parents and had an emotionally and physically abusive mother who kicked him out of the house at 15 (piled his things on the lawn while he was at school). There was no stability, no support, no validation. I grew up with married parents in a home where communication was pretty good; though not perfect, we talked out our problems and I generally felt well-loved. In our time together, my partner has shut down on me more than a few times – sometimes in response to an argument we've had, and sometimes in response to something that doesn't involve me at all (usually issues at work that impact his confidence/ego). Either way, since he absents himself from our relationship, usually for a period of a week or more, I think it is about me, something I've done, and I panic, trying to figure out what to do. In the past this has involved me making phone calls or sending emails, or having frustrating in-person interactions — in every case I am an open wound and he is steely, clenched-jaw sighs and terse words that offer no insight or connection, and the situation only feels worse. I understand that when I push/pursue, he retreats further. But if in fact my partner shuts down with me because he feels unsafe with me, and if efforts by me to reach him push him further away, what should I do in these times of no talking to help build safety? Right now I'm simply waiting for him to come out from behind his Space Wall; it's been nearly a week and, unlike in the past, I am not trying to contact him. I'm “living alone” and finding comfort/love in other sources. Is there something I should be doing now to help my partner feel safe? In the past he has always come around, but in the past I was not as resolute in my decision to 'give him space.' Thank you for whatever advice you can provide.
    J

  4. Hi Al,
    I'm just wondering if anything can be done to help very extreme avoiders? (i.e. People who would obviously like to be in a relationship with you but who just can't cope with closeness.)
    I am an ex-clinger who is trying to extract myself from a crazy situation without adding to the hurt.
    M

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