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  • Break-ups are almost invariably difficult, but that isn’t to say there aren’t different

  • degrees of complexity at stake in different constellations. Nor does it preclude the existence

  • of a cataclysmically painful but too-little known type whom we can call the hardest person

  • in the world to break up with. A relationship with them begins like this:

  • youre very drawn to them. Perhaps they very much attract you physically and their

  • personality is compelling as well. You admire them and, in areas, feel a lot of sympathy

  • for them too; there’s probably something in their past which really interests and touches

  • you. You have no desire to break up, and in fact, you’d love this to last till the end.

  • For their part, they seem to be keen on you. That’s what theyve said on a number of

  • occasions. They show no interest in leaving you. They want this to be for the long-term,

  • perhaps forever. And yet there is a problem, a problem so grave

  • and yet so hidden, so damaging and yet so hard to grasp, that you can only bear slowly

  • to face up to it. You start to realise that the partner whom you love and who says they

  • love you is having a grievously detrimental effect on your mental or physical well-being.

  • What wrong might the partner be perpetrating? It is a spectrum. At one end, they might be

  • hitting you. But the spectrum is long and it contains all sorts of far more insidious

  • ways in which, without ever raising a hand, let alone a finger, one human can badly damage

  • another. They might be having affairs, or spending too much money. They might be addicted

  • to something. Or, and this is properly hard to get a grip on, they may be constantlyabsent‘.

  • They show no reliable warmth towards you, they never initiate any touch, they may never

  • hug. They are present but not really there. Probably, as soon as these problems first

  • arose, you started to complain. But you did so softly, or sarcastically or bitterly. Not

  • head on. After all, you love them and youre a good boy or girl. It can take a long time,

  • years, decades, before you finally dare to find your voice and come to a place of being

  • able to raise an adult objection. What then happens when you at last ask these types to

  • face up to the harm you feel they are doing to you? There are two main responses, both

  • of them are appallingly hard to master, the second is the very hardest.

  • (i) They Confess it Fed up at last, you tell them that youve

  • had enough of the violence, affairs, addiction, financial spend, distance, lack of intimacy,

  • lack of sexYou raise an ultimatum. If they don’t finally raise their game, youre

  • going to be leaving (even though, of course, it’s the last thing you really want; you

  • love them!). You may be shaking and flushed after you have spoken. Youre feeling you

  • might be crazy (surely it’s crazy to threaten to leave someone you love who says they love

  • you!). You’d expected all sorts of dark responses on their partbut something

  • that is on the surface rather lovely now happens. They admit it! They confess! They say, my

  • goodness youre right, I hadn’t really fully realised until now, until you made me

  • finally open my eyes to how I’ve harmed you. Baby, I hear you! Baby, I’m so sorry!

  • The person promises that they will now change. They just need a bit of time, they just need

  • your understanding. They suggest getting themselves a therapist, once a month or so. And then

  • theyll get on top of their issues. Their ready candour is deeply movingand suggests

  • they really have a handle on their psyches. You are, in any case, desperate to believe

  • them, they have a very willing audience indeed. The problem is that, despite their promises,

  • the person doesn’t change at all. They make a short term adjustment, strong enough to

  • ensure you won’t leave them on the time-scale you were threatening, but not profound enough

  • to correct the problemand allow you your freedom. And in the gap between their promise

  • to change and your realisation that they haven’t got the ability (or perhaps intention) to

  • do so, children may have been born (they wanted kids to keep you around; you wanted them as

  • a token of the happy future that was being promised). Commitments pile up, and there

  • are fewer options left in the world beyond. You might not be so young any more.

  • (ii) They Deny it However hideous all the above sounds, there

  • is an even worse kind of relationship to leave than that. This is one with the same dynamics

  • but with one extra twist at the end. When you finally confront them with the problem,

  • they don’t confess: they deny it! They tell you youre dreaming: youre imagining

  • it, not remotely, the problem lies with you, they say. At the same time, they get very

  • incensed and offended at the suggestion youre making: youre so cynical about me, don’t

  • you trust me?! How rude you are about me! Why don’t you have more faith in me and

  • in us? And they push back: youre just as neurotic as you say I am. The problem is with

  • you and not meThis is mine-field territory. Relationships and their interactions are generally

  • not filmed. So it’s very hard for you to back up your claims or even be sure of your

  • verdicts, when they are relentlessly challenged: is the loved one spending too much money;

  • or am I just nagging? Are they actually flirting; or am I just jealous? Are they failing to

  • initiate sex; or am I just insecure? The partner whom you love and really don’t want to leave

  • and who says they love you adds to the difficulty you face by enthusiastically telling you,

  • with authority, that you really are a bit crazy, that you are seeing things, that you

  • are too demanding, that there’s something wrong with youProbably, youre an open

  • minded, nice, intelligent personand open-minded, nice, intelligent people tend to give others

  • the benefit of the doubt. After all, such types know they aren’t perfect, theyre

  • aware of everything they get wrong, they don’t feel theyre brilliant in every way. Therefore,

  • perhaps it’s quite plausible that here too, you may be seeing things that aren’t there.

  • Why insist, especially when you love your partner and want to be with them? Here is

  • a nice person telling you you are a bit mad and imagining things? It’s a dispiriting

  • message, but if disregarding your impulses (and your emotional needs) is the price you

  • pay for keeping a relationship aloft, maybe it’s worth it. Maybe it’s worth thinking

  • of yourself as a bit insane. At least youll still have a partner. So, more time passes,

  • and you stay putand in that time, probably there are more children, more entanglements,

  • and less of life left for you to build on afterwards. There is also highly likely to

  • be a destruction of your sense of reality. You will probably start to feel as mad as

  • youre being subtly told you are. You might have a breakdownwhich isn’t an ideal

  • backdrop against which to leave anyone. All that said, in both of the above cases,

  • eventually, you will have to leave. Your long-term mental well-being depends on it. But it isn’t

  • a picnic, having to leave someone you love; who says they love youand who is either

  • falsely promising to change or denying they need to change because youre the defective

  • one to begin with. You will feel extremely alone with this decision.

  • You will be left to wrestle either with feelings that you are nasty (for leaving someone who

  • is promising again and again to change) or that you are mad (for leaving someone who

  • tells you youre demented to doubt their sincerity). You will have to destroy a relationship

  • that might have children in it on the basis of nothing more firm than an inner sense that

  • your partner is doing something seriously deficient to your wellbeing and cannot stop

  • themselves doing itdespite telling you they love you.

  • And yet you will have to leave. In order to leave, you will need to think in your mind:

  • I am in love with someone who is damaged. They cannot realistically change and may even

  • be using me as a reason not to change. Or they are in denial and are abusing my credulity

  • and self-doubt not to look more honestly into themselves. And you will have to think: there

  • is probably something in my past, a history of putting up with intolerable situations,

  • which makes me a long-term sucker for this sort of suffering.

  • Mountain climbers know that certain peaks cannot be climbed on one’s own. You need

  • a climbing buddy, and in this context, let’s call them a psychotherapist or a very very

  • good friend, the sort who can put in the time to reassure you of your sanity and who can

  • be there for you at the inevitable moments when you feel like youre making the worst

  • choice in the world even though, despite your self-hating feelings that youre impatient

  • or getting everything wrong, you are in fact in the process of taking the very best decision

  • of your life.

  • Deciding whether to stay in or leave a relationship is one of the trickiest and consequential decisions we can face.

  • Our Stay or Leave card game can help us towards an answer. Click now to learn more.

Break-ups are almost invariably difficult, but that isn’t to say there aren’t different

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