Online dating tips and relationship advice from Dr. Neder...
How Much
Should You Share With Your Date?
Hey Doc!
I've been dating off and on since my divorce a few years ago.
I generally am completely open with my dates, and willingly
share information about my life history.
I've just met a gal who is a Psychologist. She has challenged
my practice, saying that there are some things that are better
not to share with your dates. For example, she doesn't want
to know about sexual relations I had with my last partner,
and has been unwilling to disclose much about her own recent
sexual history. Her stated concern is that I might judge her
if I don't like something she's done in the past, or vice versa.
I am curious, is there a general position that psychologists
or psychiatrists take on sharing one's life history with people
you are dating?
------------- Hello!
I couldn't agree more - with her.
This belief you have in being totally open and honest; while
a lofty goal isn't healthy or practical; let alone possible.
There is a general belief that being totally open and honest
is somehow the cornerstone of a good relationship. That's just
not the case. This is an attempt by those with great fear of
being lied to and a lack of belief and trust in themselves
to deal with other's lies, to off-load their own responsibilities
onto someone else and to make that person responsible for their
personal mental health.
I'm not advocating the opposite here, but trying to be totally
open and honest may feel good on the surface but is not otherwise
healthy.
Here's the reality: everybody, but everybody lies. That's
just the way it is. Lying is such a part of the human experience
it's built right into our communication systems. In fact, it's
impossible not to lie! Likewise, it's impossible to be totally
open and honest too. Trying to hold someone else to a standard
of not lying isn't reasonable when we, ourselves can't even
meet it.
You're
taking that mistaken belief to an extreme by "outing
yourself" on things that your dates really don't need
or even want to know!
George,
nobody buys a novel only to turn to the last page to find
out who "did it", and then puts it on the
shelf, satisfied. Another part of the human experience is the
joy of discovering who our partners (and dates) are. This happens
over time as we gather information and build a picture - and
sometimes that picture gets changed in both subtle and some
not-so-subtle ways. This unfolding of reality helps us to "discover" the
other person and frankly, is more than half the fun.
You're trying to unload every truth up front as though your
dates will somehow benefit from the knowledge. They won't,
and frankly, that just puts far too much pressure on them anyway.
In fact,
this psychologist is spot-on. Don't feel that you need to
unload (more like "vomit") any part of your
life all over someone as though that's "healthy" and
will build a solid relationship - it's not, and it won't. Not
even if lying was what caused your divorce.
Best regards...
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